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Authors: Claire Matturro

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Chapter 15

Watching my back was
getting old.

Even Newly's protective presence had been tempered, as he had been forced to go back to work to earn money for all the ex-wives and for Karen the Vindictive, who got temporary support pending the divorce.

Leaving me even more vulnerable, Jack the Bear's attention and enthusiasm for protecting me had clearly fallen off in the last few days, so much so that I had Bonita take him to the vet on her lunch hour. I paid a royal ransom to learn he was probably just depressed over the change in his environment and I should see he got more exercise. As I plowed unprotected through the minutia in the discovery files in Dr. Randolph's case and made lists of information we still needed, Jack moped on the carpet near me, a melancholy sigh occasionally slipping out of his otherwise inert black and tan dog body.

There was still no trial date in the Dr. Randolph case, my deadline to amend the witness list was clicking closer and closer, and I'd yet to actually nail down a new expert witness.

Our expert witness—that is, our hired physician—would be critical in this case because there were compelling and obvious facts against us. The mother seemed like a nice, normal woman, and she was actually married, and her husband seemed like a nice, normal person. During labor, the mother had developed problems delivering, and the prevailing evidence in the depositions I'd reviewed indicated that Dr. Randolph should have performed a cesarean. The monitors showed fetal distress consistent with a lack of oxygen, and a lack of oxygen during labor is a known cause of brain damage in an infant.

So our expert witness would be vital in establishing, beyond a reasonable medical degree of probability, that the infant's brain damage had not occurred as a result of oxygen deprivation during a prolonged and traumatic delivery, but rather was a result of a failure of the infant's brain to properly develop in the womb, probably because the mother had contracted CMV, a virus known to cause precisely the type of brain damage this infant had, especially the small-head thing.

Our expert had to be good enough to overcome sympathetic plaintiffs and facts that tended to condemn the defendant. Such as all that deposition testimony about HMO incentives paid to the doctor to avoid surgeries like cesareans.

Our expert had to be a compelling enough witness to explain technical, boring, medical, and scientific information to a jury whose collective minds were probably made up against Dr. Randolph the moment they saw the spastic movements and vacant stare of the child, dressed as cute as a Gerber baby and sitting right there in his mother's loving arms.

Divorce work suddenly looked good.

Deep in my losing veggie baby files, I was nearly as morose as Jack the Bear when Detective Santuri dropped by. Bonita led him into my office while they discussed how her five-year-old, astonishingly, had not been in the least hurt by her jump off the roof. Jack the Bear disdained to growl at Sam but did at least open his eyes and stare at him. Naturally, I was sitting unglamorously on the floor, shoes off, reading depositions and aligning interrogatories in categories, to be memorized later.

“Nice photo,” he said, coming around my desk and looking at a snapshot of my apple orchard that Delvon had mailed me the previous week after his visit with Farmer Dave at my request to make sure Dave wasn't doing anything illegal on the property that would allow the government to confiscate the orchard. “Looks peaceful.”

“It is.”

“That dog okay?” he asked, stepping over the prone body of Jack the Bear, my guard dog.

“Yes. The vet says he is in great shape, just depressed.” Me too, but I didn't say that.

“I had a Rottweiler once. Great dog.”

“What'd you call him?”

“Bear.”

“Oh, well, what else?”

“I'd like to have another Rottweiler someday.”

“I know where you can get a wonderful puppy, great lines,” I offered, thinking of Emily and her brothers playing at Fred and Olivia's house.

“Not home enough.”

“Any wife? Kids? You know, to take care of a dog?” Oh, subtle, I thought, and wanted to kick myself.

“No.” But Sam, I saw, watched the way that information landed on my face.

“You run down anything on that widow, Elaine Jobloski?” I asked, feeling a blush creep over my cheeks as Sam stared at me.

“Yes. Thanks again for that report you sent me. It helped. We got a history on Mrs. Jobloski now. She had a classic nervous breakdown, what with the stress of losing her husband and the lawsuits. Some of her settlement money went toward an expensive residential counseling program. She got out of that program after six months, but then there was an involuntary commitment into a second institution. When she got out of that, she apparently fled the state. We're trying to find her. There's a trail to California.”

“California. That'd be a long drive to spike the good orthopod's marijuana, wouldn't it?”

Sam nodded.

“And nothing to connect her to Dr. Randolph's shooting, right?”

Sam nodded.

“And there'd be no reason for her to mug me, right?”

And no reason for Widow Jobloski to rifle through my files, I thought, as Sam nodded.

Okay, so I wasn't being original. But I wasn't the homicide detective.

“We're trying to get a photo. You can take a look. See if she looks familiar.”

This time I nodded.

There didn't seem to be any reason at all for Sam to have dropped by. A point I made to Bonita after he left.

“Man's got his eye on you,” she said, without pausing in her typing.

I wasn't sure if she meant he wanted a date or considered me a suspect.

Chapter 16

Jennifer the Stairmaster wizard
was my new best friend, and, as with Newly's moving in, I didn't remember giving her an invitation either.

Standing in my kitchen, she was playing twenty questions about my work, telling me that Ashton says I am “so, so” smart. I was slicing carrots for a tray to take out to Newly and Ashton, who were eyeing each other like two fully racked bucks, circling for the charge to see which alpha male would win the doe herd.

When I brought the tray out, with dip made from soy sour cream we had to stop specially for at the Granary because Jennifer didn't “do dairy,” Newly's look seemed to ask why these people were in my house.

Frankly, I didn't know. It was late Saturday afternoon. Ashton and I should be at the law firm, working, and we had been, but he'd dropped into my office and Jennifer had beamed in from the ladies' room and chat, chat, chat, and now here they were.

Before they'd descended on my office, I had been working my way through the veggie baby file, my medical dictionary strapped to my hip, reading through the scientific literature on CMV. I was so frigging tired of this case.

But at least I had a potential expert now, a Dr. William Jamieson. Such a great, American-sounding name. Not only had he published the most definitive of the medical articles on CMV and brain-damaged babies, he maintained both an active practice and a place on the medical faculty at Emory. Dr. Jamieson had sounded great over the phone, and he was willing to meet with me and review the file. And, “Get this,” I had told Ashton as he and Jennifer pretended they cared, “this man has never been an expert witness before in his life.”

“A virgin,” Ashton had stated, a touch of envy in his voice.

Jennifer had giggled at that.

So it looked as if I had a pure, untainted doctor, one that the veggie babe's good-parents' attorney could not paint as some doctor whore who regularly supplemented his already outrageous income by testifying to anything he was paid to testify about.

All I had to do now was fly to Atlanta and meet him, check him out for visible defects, and grill him for composure. Of course, I would have done this already but for his own busy, busy schedule. Seems this potential expert was off summering at important conferences in Hawaii, and though I was chewing at the bit to meet him, it would be awhile before his schedule allowed a meeting in Atlanta. Thank goodness for my cumulative motions for continuances.

So, all in all, things had been reasonably tolerable that Saturday afternoon when Ashton and Jennifer had come into my office, and we moved to my house, where we were now munching carrot sticks, straining for conversation, and staring off into my backyard during the awkward silences while Jack the Bear curled morosely in a corner.

After one silence, Jennifer looked at my big live oak and said, “You know, if you took that tree out, you'd have room for a swimming pool.”

I let that pass.

“Ashton, here”—she reached over and patted his knee as if I didn't know who Ashton was—“he has a very big swimming pool.” Extra emphasis on
very big
.

“Good for Ashton,” Newly said, and in his voice I heard the faint tremor of stamping hooves on the ground.

“Jenn, here,” Ashton said, and reached over and patted not her knee, I swear, but one of her huge breasts, as if that identified to me who Jennifer was, “is an ace swimmer. She went to college on a diving scholarship and did competitive swimming.”

“Oh, a P.E. major?” Newly quipped, and I thought, Well, that would explain a great deal. I'm sure her breasts float, and that must help in the competitive swimming, whatever that was.

Jennifer took a bite of a carrot stick and then dipped it back in the soy sour cream, teeth marks plainly visible on the end that went into the dip.

“Oh, no, not P.E. I was a public relations major. But I never actually graduated.”

Well, no duh, I thought, and made a mental note to throw out the dip at the first opportunity and certainly not to take another bite of it.

“Tell her what you do now, babe,” Ashton said, and poked her breast with a carrot stick.

“Oh, later, sweetie, that's so
bor-oor-ring.
Why don't we all go over to your house, sweetie, and go swimming? I can show everyone my dance series of dives.”

And, I thought, your cute little Stairmastertoned butt and breasts by modern science. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Newly sit up and suck in his stomach, and I wondered if he was embarrassed to appear in swim trunks in front of Jennifer and Ashton. This from a man who'd been cavorting around my house in a pair of ladies' pink tap pants.

“No, tell us,” I asked, curious about what Jennifer did do. I had assumed, apparently incorrectly, that she was simply a professional blonde and that Ashton supported her.

“Oh, it is so
bo-oor-ring,
” she repeated.

“Tell us,” Newly said, and I thought, Oh, great, now we're begging her to tell us what she does for a living.

“Oh, okay. But I warned you. I work for a service that does medical transcriptions and billings for doctors.”

Yep, right, boring, I thought.

“That's how we met,” Ashton said. “I was deposing her boss in a case. Just background stuff, but Jennifer helped me understand the procedures.”

“You see, we do a lot of work for different doctors. Sometimes it's overflow, you know, stuff that their regular staff can't handle, and sometimes we do all the transcriptions and billings for the doctors. See, that way, the doctor doesn't have to pay all our, you know, benefits and salary and stuff and fool with all that paperwork of hiring staff. Instead they just pay us a fee.”

Okay, boring, I thought. Stop.

None of us said anything.

“Well, told you,” she said, and grinned. “So, let's go to Ashton's and go swimming in his big pool.”

“Sounds fine,” I said.

“First, though, where's your powder room?” Jennifer asked. “I can't hold it any longer.”

A huge, rowdy Rottweiler jumped all over Jennifer when we first stepped into Ashton's overly air-conditioned house. Why do people who live in the subtropics set their air conditioners at thirty degrees? Why don't they just move to North Dakota?

Jennifer and the dog had a love fiesta with each other, cooing and licking and petting and romping, while Ashton said, “This is Bearess, her dog.” You know,
Bear
but with the
ess,
like
actress.
” Even Ashton seemed sheepish about explaining that.

“Does Jennifer live here?” I asked.

“No, just stays over on the weekends. Her and the dog.”

“Her and the dog” were about done demonstrating their undying devotion to each other, and yes, it was sweet, but a bit overdone, and we followed Ashton inside, where he pointed out a changing room for Newly and me.

Ten minutes later, we were all suited up, gathered in the screened porch of Ashton's big pink stucco monster house, ready to dive into the very big swimming pool. Jennifer oooed a bit and then went into the kitchen to bring us wine, giving Newly a good view of her perfect butt, which I noticed he noticed even though he was turning blue from holding in his stomach. Bearess followed her mistress into the kitchen in a perfect show of doggy devotion.

Ashton was fuddling around, waving his arms, and being just way, way too manic even for him. I noticed his pupils were like full moons over the Gulf. He had not been that way at my house, but then he had taken a long time to change into his swimsuit, which I suspected had been chosen by Jennifer, as the average man of Ashton's age, even if he did do the YMCA with the rest of us, would rarely choose a suit that way, way too brief. Unless he was European, which Ashton, the native Floridian, was not.

His little swimsuit left few secrets, but that didn't particularly interest me beyond a quick assessment to see if he was falling apart since the last time I'd seen his body on display. I'd seen Ashton completely naked at a resort in Boca Grande, during a late-night drinking contest that ended up in the pool, much to the dismay of the management of that old, genteel plantation inn. Needless to say, the law firm of Smith, O'Leary, and Stanley went elsewhere now for our yearly firm retreats.

After noting that Ashton was holding up remarkably well for a man duking it out with his fifties and with questionable substance-abuse habits, I studied the pool in his backyard and checked out the new diving board. A bit high for my taste. Personally, I like to tiptoe into a pool, one inch at a time.

Jennifer came back into the screened porch wearing a pair of white jeans over her bikini bottoms, Bearess following in a tippy-toe fashion and looking oddly whimsical for such a big dog. “I'm so sorry,” she said, purring, “but we are just
sooo
completely out of wine. I need to run down to the ABC Store and get some more. Won't be but a sec.”

We made the usual protestations that we didn't need wine, but she was going to be a good hostess whether we wanted her to be or not, and she left. Ashton and Bearess followed her to the door.

Not two minutes later, Ashton came back out onto the porch. Bearess came with him, but she seemed all out of energy and mopey. Ashton had changed into a polo and jeans and said he needed to run out for refreshments too.

After an exchange of euphemisms, I basically figured out that he needed to run out to score some coke. I didn't need any, thank you, I told him, emphasizing that I didn't do street drugs, and Newly was noncommittal, no doubt trying to get a read on whether he'd get in trouble with me for snorting a line (he would!), but Ashton was adamant.

Poof—like little bunnies down a hole, our host and hostess were gone. Only Bearess, the oddly named Rottweiler, was left to keep us company.

“Pretty weird, huh?” I said. “They invite us over and then, one at a time, they leave us.”

All by ourselves. Except for the dog, who looked pretty permissive.

Not a hall monitor in sight. Kicking around in our bathing suits in the shallow end of a truly enormous blue-tiled pool. I felt a tingling rush start running up and down my legs, then heat gathering at the fulcrum of the rushes.

Newly, apparently thinking along the same lines, reached over and fingered the elastic in the top of my bikini bottoms, then tickled my flat stomach, which I kept that way by working like a son of a bitch on the evil crunch machine at the Y.

“You work out like you do for the job, to keep your stamina up? Or because you're afraid of getting old?” Pretty serious questions for Newly. But then he grinned. “Or just to look drop-dead in a bikini?”

“Because I'm afraid of being weak,” I said.

“Yeah, me too.”

Um, things are getting too heavy, I thought.

As if he read my mind, Newly grinned again and added, “And to catch young chicks like you.” Then he tickled my belly again, ran his fingers down low on my stomach and circled, not too low, but low enough to get me thinking about whether you could make love in a big blue pool and not drown.

“Skinny-dipping, anyone?” I said, and giggled, pulling away from Newly. I swam out to the center of the pool and floated, my face up to the security light overhead and my hair drifting out behind me like a dark veil on the water. Then I flipped over and dove under, my not-too-shabby butt pointed up in the air for a moment until I submerged and pulled my bikini bottoms off. Breaking the surface of the water, I threw my bottoms toward Newly, who missed them but definitely caught the spirit of things. A minute later his trunks were floating on the water, drifting toward the drain in what passed for a current in the pool, and Bearess jumped in, grabbed the trunks, shook the dickens out of them, and jumped back on the tile floor. She began to do that growly shake, rattle, and roll thing dogs like to do with your clothes.

We didn't care two whits about the dog and Newly's trunks. He wasn't going to be needing them for the next few minutes.

Newly started swimming toward me as if he were trying out for the Olympic swim team. I dove for the bottom. When I surfaced in front of him, he caught me and kissed my mouth and then my breasts, which were still modestly in the little bikini top.

The water made me buoyant as Newly rubbed against me, and then I remembered my safe-sex rule. “Condom,” I screamed. From the edge of the pool, Bearess stopped killing Newly's swim trunks and started watching us.

“Aw, hon,” Newly said. “Just this once won't hurt.”

The national anthem of the teenage pregnancy roster. No way I fell for that.

“Condom,” I said, pinching his nipples extra hard in frustration.

Newly swam to the edge of the pool and vaulted up on the tile next to Bearess, who jumped up and wagged her tail. Newly turned back and said, “Hon, I didn't bring any.”

“Look in Ashton's bedroom,” I shouted, and Newly ran off, trailing pool water through Ashton's house as Bearess ran after him. Good thing she was an affable dog.

He was gone so long I was about to lose interest. But when he came running back out, Bearess still running and wagging after him, he said, “Hon, you would not believe what all that man has in his night-stand. Want to try a French tickler?”

I convinced Newly that an ordinary Trojan would do fine, thank you, and to hurry it up. He complied and jumped back into the pool and swam over to me. On the side of the pool, on the wet tile floor, Bearess picked up his trunks again and started eating them.

Soon, I forgot to worry about the impact of nylon on the digestive track of a Rottweiler, as Newly revived my interest.

At my house the next morning, Newly raised the ante and asked the dreaded C question.

Children.

Technically, “it depends” is about the most honest and accurate answer a person can offer to most questions.

So when Newly had casually sipped his coffee, safely across the kitchen from me, with Jack the Bear playing chaperone, and then asked, “How do you feel about children?” I answered: “It depends.”

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