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Not that Patrick blamed them. He’d do exactly the same.
“I don’t think I have to tell you what needs to be done,” Kraft said.
Patrick knew. Shit, yes, he knew.
“And if I don’t?”
“I’m already taking heat because of this, Patrick. Don’t make it more difficult than it already is.”
Patrick understood. Alton Kraft had been his biggest supporter for partnership. If Patrick looked bad, he looked bad. The partners had probably told him to give Sullivan a choice: Stick with the sims or stay with the firm. Mutually exclusive options.
The decision should have been a no-brainer except for the inconvenient fact that he’d become attached to the Beacon Ridge sims. He enjoyed visiting them, liked the feelings that rolled off them—probably the nearest thing to worship he’d ever experience.
But all that was going to end. Because on his next visit he’d have to tell them he was dropping their case. He’d make up something good, and they’d believe him, and they wouldn’t hold it against him, because Mist Sulliman the best, Mist Sulliman never lie to sim, Mist Sulliman never let sim down.
Yeah, right.
Mist Sulliman feel like slime mold.
He fought the urge to grab Kraft by his worsted lapels and shout, Fuck you, fuck the firm, and fuck all its candy-assed clients!
Instead, he sighed and nodded. “All right.”
He’d lost his house, his girlfriend, and a shitload of clients. He couldn’t afford to lose his job too.
“Good man,” Kraft said. He rose and thrust out his hand. “I’ll tell the others.”
Nowthe handshake. Patrick made it as perfunctory as possible and beat it the hell out of there. Or maybe crawled was more like it. Or slithered. He felt like he’d just ratted out a friend to the police. If the carpet had been shag he would have needed a machete to reach the door.
As he passed Maggie again she cocked her head toward the waiting room farther down the hall.
“New client. No appointment. Wants to know if you can squeeze her in.”
“Anew client? No kidding? What’s my morning look like?”
“Empty.”
Figured. “Then by all means, ‘squeeze her in.’”
A few minutes later Maggie showed a statuesque brunette into his office and introduced her as Romy Cadman. Short dark hair, dark eyes, full lips, and long legs. Dressed on the casual side in a sweater and flared slacks under a long leather coat, all black.
Patrick’s spirits lifted. Nothing like a new client, and a beautiful one to boot.
Maggie placed the woman’s card on his desk:Romy Cadman—Consultant.
“I won’t take up much of your time, Mr. Sullivan,” she said as he rose to shake her hand.
Patrick fixed on her eyebrows, so smooth, so dark, tapering to perfect points. Penciled? No, just naturally perfect. But he couldn’t find much warmth in the deep brown eyes below—at least not for him. All business. A woman with a mission. Aconsultant with a mission.
“Take as much as you need,” he said, thinking, I’ve gotaaaaall day. He gestured to a seat. “Please.”
“That won’t be necessary.” Because she remained standing, so did Patrick. “I understand, Mr. Sullivan, that you’ve come under a lot of pressure from SimGen lately.”
“SimGen?” What was she talking about? “No…I haven’t heard a thing from SimGen.”
“Indirectly, you have. They’ve been contacting all your clients and either cajoling or coercing them into dropping you.”
Patrick decided he’d sit now. It sounded so paranoid, but only for a second or two, and then it made terrible sense.
“How do you know? Howcan you know?”
“Not important,” Ms. Cadman said. “What matters is whether they’re succeeding.”
“What do you mean?”
She cocked her hip and released an exasperated sigh. “They want you to drop the sims. Are you going to stand up to SimGen, or cave in?”
Cave in…hell of a way to put it. At least he knew where Ms. Romy Cadman’s sympathies lay. So no way was he going to tell her he’d decided to do just that: cave in. His eyes drifted to those long legs. They looked strong.
“May I inquire as to your interest in this?”
“I want to see the sims get a fair shake.”
He glanced at her card again.Consultant …to whom?
“Are you with one of those animal rights groups?”
“My interest is personal. So what’s your decision, Mr. Patrick Sullivan, attorney at law?”
The subtle little twist she put on those last three words gave Patrick the impression that somehow she’d already guessed the answer.
“I haven’t come to one yet.”
She stared at him a moment, her expression dubious. Then she put her briefcase on the table and released the catches.
“Very well. If you’re sitting on the fence, perhaps this will tip you toward the sims.”
She gave the briefcase a one-eighty swivel, lifted the top, and Patrick found himself nose to nose with more cash than he’d ever seen in one spot in his life—he’d handled bigger checks, sure, but this wascash .
Hoping his eyes weren’t bugging, he lifted a packet and fanned it.
“All twenties, Mr. Sullivan.”
“How—?” The words seemed to catch in his throat. “How many?”
“Exactly twelve hundred and fifty. To spare you from doing the math, that’s a quarter of a million dollars. When I have your assurance that you will continue the fight, I will deposit all of it into the sim legal defense fund.”