The Professional

The Professional by Robert B. Parker Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Professional by Robert B. Parker Read Free Book Online
Authors: Robert B. Parker
said.
    “Very likely,” Elizabeth said.
    “Then I won’t do it,” Nancy said.
    I looked around the room. All of the women were shaking their heads.
    “Couldn’t you just make him stop?” Regina said. “You know, beat him up or something?”
    “Several things against that,” I said. “One, I don’t like doing it. Two, it’s illegal. Three, I believe that if I did, he’d blow the whistle on you.”
    “Blow the whistle?” Abigail said.
    “Send evidence of your infidelity to your husbands,” I said.
    Everybody sat. No one said anything. Everybody looked at one another.
    Finally Regina said in a very soft voice, “Could you kill him?”
    “No,” I said.
    “Do you know someone who would?” she said.
    “Yes.”
    “Could you get him to do it?”
    “No,” I said.
    “But why?” Regina said.
    “That’s enough,” Elizabeth said. “There will be no more talk of that nature from any of you, if you wish me to continue as your attorney.”
    Everyone was quiet, as if they’d been chastised by the teacher.
    “I could try to arrange some kind of payoff,” I said.
    “He wants so much,” Beth said.
    “How much?”
    “Twenty-five thousand dollars a month,” Beth said.
    “From each of you?”
    The other women nodded.
    “I have access to some money of my own. Chet is very generous,” Beth said. “But I can’t keep paying out that kind of money without eventually having to turn to him.”
    The other women nodded in agreement.
    “Can you come up with one big payoff?” I said. “I might be able to persuade him to take it and move on, rather than have me on his case all the time.”
    “I can’t without Chet knowing,” Beth said.
    “Me, either,” Abigail said.
    The two others shook their heads. I looked at Elizabeth.
    “Counselor?” I said.
    “I’m a trust lawyer,” she said. “I don’t know what we should do.”
    I stood up.
    “Good luck,” I said.
    Nobody said anything, but they all looked at me mournfully as I moved toward the door. I shrugged.
    “Can’t win ’em all,” I said.

Chapter17

    HAWK AND I were having a “Thank God it’s late Thursday afternoon” drink at the far end of the bar in Grill 23.
    “What’s the book?” I said to Hawk.
    He looked at the hardcover on the bar beside him. The flap was keeping his place about one hundred pages in.
    “New one by Janet Evanovich,” he said.
    “Good?”
    “Course it’s good. Would I be reading it, it’s not good?”
    “You reading it, it wouldn’t dare,” I said.
    Hawk smiled.
    “Don’t suppose you want me to pop Gary Eisenhower for you,” Hawk said.
    “There’s nothing going on here,” I said, “that anyone should die for.”
    “Just an offer,” Hawk said.
    “Thanks,” I said.
    Hawk sipped some champagne.
    “What are friends be for,” he said, “they can’t scrag somebody for you now and then?”
    “I’ll take a raincheck,” I said.
    Hawk looked as he always did, as if he’d just been washed and polished. His clothes were immaculate. His shirt seemed to glow with whiteness. His shaved head gleamed in the bar’s light.
    “Maybe I should shave my head,” I said.
    “White guys don’t look good with their heads shaved,” Hawk said.
    “Why is that?” I said.
    “Don’t know,” Hawk said. “Don’t look as good with hair, either.”
    “Are you making invidious racial comparisons?” I said.
    “Uh-huh,” Hawk said.
    The bartender came down the bar and replaced our drinks.
    “You say he knew the names of the women hired you,” Hawk said.
    “Yes.”
    “How many women he working, you think?”
    “More than four,” I said.
    “So somebody tole him,” Hawk said.
    “Be my guess,” I said.
    “One of them don’t believe she ain’t special to him,” Hawk said.
    “You know this how?” I said.
    “Simplest explanation,” he said.
    “True,” I said.
    “People believe what they need to believe,” Hawk said.
    “Also true,” I said.
    Hawk sipped his champagne. I had a little scotch.
    “I

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