FBI. I want to believe them, but so much of it doesn't add up. Look at it this way - if The Firm had a rich client who was shady and worthy of FBI scrutiny, why would the FBI pick me, the rookie, the one who knows the least, and begin following me? What do I know? I work on files someone else hands me. I have no clients of my own. I do as I'm told. Why not go after one of the partners?"
"Maybe they want you to squeal on the clients."
"No way. I'm a lawyer and sworn to secrecy about the affairs of clients. Everything I know about a client is strictly confidential. The feds know that. No one expects a lawyer to talk about his clients."
"Have you seen any illegal deals?"
He cracked his knuckles and gazed around the dining room. He smiled at her. The wine had settled and was taking effect. "I'm not supposed to answer that question, even from you, Abby. But the answer is No. I've worked on files for twenty of Avery's clients and a few other ones here and there, and I've seen nothing suspicious. Maybe a couple of risky tax shelters, but nothing illegal. I've got a few questions about the bank accounts I saw in the Caymans, but nothing serious." Caymans! His stomach dropped as he thought of the girl on the beach. He felt sick.
The waiter loitered nearby and stared at the menus. "More wine," Mitch said, pointing at the glasses.
Abby leaned forward, near the candles, and looked bewildered. "Okay, who tapped our phones?"
"Assuming they're tapped, I have no idea. At the first meeting in August, Tarrance implied it was someone from. I mean, that's the way I took it. He said not to trust anyone at The Firm, and that everything I said was subject to being heard and recorded. I assumed he meant they were doing it."
"And what did Mr. Locke say about that?"
"Nothing. I didn't tell him. I kept a few things to myself."
"Someone has tapped our phones and wired our house?"
"And maybe our cars. Rick Acklin made a big deal of it today. He kept telling me not to say anything I didn't want recorded."
"Mitch, this is incredible. Why would a law firm do that?"
He shook his head slowly and looked into the empty wineglass. "I have no idea, babe. No idea."
The waiter set two new wineglasses on the table and stood with his hands behind him. "Will you be ordering?" he asked.
"In a few minutes," Abby said.
"We'll call you when we're ready," Mitch added.
"Do you believe it, Mitch?"
"I think something's up. There's more to the story."
She slowly folded her hands on the table and stared at him with a look of utter fear. He told the story of Hodge and Kozinski, starting with Tarrance at the deli, then to the Caymans and being followed and the meeting with Abanks. He told her everything Abanks had said. Then Eddie Lomax and the deaths of Alice Knauss, Robert Lamm and John Mickel.
"I've lost my appetite," she said when he finished.
"So have I. But I feel better now that you know."
"Why didn't you tell me sooner?"
"I hoped it would go away. I hoped Tarrance would leave me alone and find someone else to torment. But he's here to stay. That's why Rick Acklin was transferred to Memphis. To work on me. I have been selected by the FBI for a mission I know nothing about."
"I feel weak."
"We have to be careful, Abby. We must continue to live as if we suspect nothing."
"I don't believe this. I'm sitting here listening to you, but I don't believe what you're telling me. This is not real, Mitch. You expect me to live in a house that's wired and the phones are tapped and someone, somewhere is listening to everything we say."
"Do you have a better idea?"
"Yeah. Let's hire this Lomax guy to inspect our house."
"I've thought of that. But what if he finds something? Think about it. What if we know for sure that the house is wired? What then? What if he breaks a device that's been planted? They, whoever in hell they are, will know that we know. It's too dangerous, for now anyway. Maybe later."
"This is crazy, Mitch. I guess we're supposed to run out in the backyard to have a conversation."
"Of course not. We could use the front yard."
"At this moment, I don't appreciate your sense of humor."
"Sorry. Look, Abby, let's be normal and patient for