was time for old Roy to take a few punches. It was almost funny.
But she kept her cool. She slowly extended a skinny finger with white nail polish and pointed it at Roy. “If you get near my client again and attempt to obtain anything from him without my permission, I’ll sue you and the FBI. I’ll file an ethics complaint with the state bar in Louisiana and Tennessee, and I’ll haul your ass into Juvenile Court here and ask the judge to lock you up.” The words were spoken in an even voice, no emotion, but so matter-of-factly that everyone in the room, including Roy Foltrigg, knew that she would do exactly as she promised.
He smiled and nodded. “Fine. Sorry if we’ve gotten a bit out of line. But we’re anxious, and we must talk to your client.”
“Have you told me everything you know about Mark?”
Foltrigg and Trumann checked their notes. “Yes, I think so.”
“What’s that?” she insisted, pointing to the file McThune was lost in. He was reading about her suicide attempt, by pills, and it was alleged in the pleadings, sworn under oath, that she’d been in a coma for four days before pulling out. Evidently, her ex-husband, Dr. Cardoni, a real piece of scum according to the pleadings, was a nasty sort with all the money and lawyers, and as soon as Regina/Reggie here took the pills he
ran to court with a pile ot motions to get the kids. Looking at the dates stamped on the papers, it was obvious the good doctor was filing requests and asking for hearings while she was lost in a coma and fighting for her life.
McThune didn’t panic. He looked at her innocently and said, “Just some of our internal stuff.” It was not a lie, because he was afraid to lie to her. She had the tape, and had sworn them to truthfulness.
“About my client?”
“Oh no.”
She studied her legal pad. “Let’s meet again tomorrow,” she said. It was not a suggestion, but a directive.
“We’re really in a hurry, Reggie,” Foltrigg pleaded.
“Well I’m not. And I guess I’m calling the shots, aren’t I?”
“I guess you are.”
“I need time to digest this and talk with my client.”
This was not what they wanted, but it was painfully clear this was all they would get. Foltrigg dramatically screwed the top onto his pen and slid his notes into his briefcase. Trumann and McThune followed his lead and for a minute the table shook as they shuffled paper and files and restuffed everything.
“What time tomorrow?” Foltrigg asked, slamming his briefcase and pushing away from the table.
“Ten. In this office.”
“Will Mark Sway be here?”
“I don’t know.”
They stood and filed out of the room.
The Client
12
W ALLY BOXX CALLED THE OFFICE IN NEW ORLEANS AT
least four times every hour. Foltrigg had forty-seven assistant U.S. attorneys fighting all sorts of crime and protecting the interests of the government, and Wally was in charge of relaying orders from the boss in Memphis. In addition to Thomas Fink, three other attorneys were working on the Muldanno case, and Wally felt the need to call them every fifteen minutes with instructions, and the latest on Clifford. By noon, the entire office knew of Mark Sway and his little brother. The place buzzed with gossip and speculation. How much did the kid know? Would he lead them to the body? Initially, these questions were pondered in hushed whispers by the three Muldanno prosecutors, but by midafternoon the secretaries in the coffee room were exchanging wild theories about the suicide note and what was told to the kid before Clifford ate his bullet. All other work virtually stopped as Foltrigg’s office waited for Wally’s next call.
Foltrigg had been burned by leaks before. He’d fired people he suspected of talking too much. He’d
rcquircu poiygrapm 101 ail lawycib, paiaicgais, tors, and secretaries who worked for him. He kept sensitive information under lock and key for fear of leakage by his own people. He lectured and threatened.
But Roy Foltrigg was not the sort of person to inspire intense loyalty. He was not appreciated by many of the assistants. He played the political game. He used cases for his own raw ambition. He hogged the spotlight and took credit for all the good -work, and blamed his subordinates for all the bad. He sought marginal indictments against elected officials for a few cheap headlines. He investigated his enemies and dragged their names through the press. He was a political whore whose only talent with the law was