Page 45 of The Burden of Proof


  “You did?” asked her father. “Just like that?”

  “A month’s notice, but I have some vacation coming. I’ll go back for a few days next month to clean up. But last time I was here, I was looking at Katy, how tired she was, and it just sort of dawned on me, she’s having a baby and I’m going to be eight hundred miles away for no good reason. Why did I bother taking the bar exam in four states if I don’t go where I want to? I’ll find a job here. Do you mind?”

  “I should say not.”

  Fiona chimed in: Wonderful, wonderful—how nice for all of them. Stern found his head bobbing in agreement.

  “I have to call Kate,” Marta said. “I’m supposed to go see John and her later. Do you want to come?”

  “Not tonight,” said Stern promptly. “Please tell Kate, however, that I wish to have dinner with John and her later this week.”

  “God,” said Marta, “you sound so serious.”

  He supposed he did. Stern did not answer, and Marta galloped into the house. Both Fiona and he watched her go.

  “Did you take it she is planning to live here?” asked Stern.

  “It sounds like it.”

  “Dear me.” The thought of Marta and her vitamins and minerals in permanent residence provoked a moment of consternation. Fiona, in the meantime, had crept a bit closer to the hedge.

  “I suppose that you’re madder than hell at me,” she said quietly.

  “Hardly, Fiona. In truth, I received what I deserved.”

  “I was trying to warn you that night. When Nate came home. Honestly.” She tested Stern with a glance. “After all, Sandy, I had to say something when he found that letter. You put me in a helluva position. And I couldn’t stand to tell the little bastard that I’d had some respect for our marriage, when he didn’t have a bit. But do you know the worst part? When I told him that ridiculous story, I could see he was actually happy. Do you believe that?” Fiona shook her head gravely. “Why am I always so dumb?” she asked Stern, and looked at him momentarily as if she expected an answer. She stood in her garden, just over the property line, hopelessly lost to the misery of being herself, of making so often, like everyone else, the same mistakes.

  “He swears up and down, by the way, that those pills weren’t his,” Fiona said. “He kept saying they were for a patient. Finally, he told me if I didn’t believe him I could call the other doctor who worked on the case. Guess who that was.”

  Stern lifted his hands: no idea.

  “Peter.”

  “Peter?”

  “Your son. Isn’t that a coincidence?”

  The night was thick. The bugs were out now in mid-July, buzzing and biting, and Stern swung at something close to his ear while he thought of the look Nate had given him the other evening when they were parting. It was obvious what Nate had held back. Stern realized he had been right all along. At the thought of yet another showdown, he nearly groaned. Perhaps with Peter it was unnecessary.

  “Anyway, I’m sorry,” said Fiona.

  “Fiona, the apologies are all mine. As you say, I put you in a difficult position. And you more than made up for it. I appreciate your discretion with Nate when you spoke again.”

  “Oh hell, I figured what’s the point. I couldn’t give him any more satisfaction.” She remained glum, and continued shaking her head, overwhelmed by divorce, herself, the varied but momentous concessions of defeat that life just now was requiring.

  “Nonetheless,” said Stern, “I am sorry to have made you the victim of my state of disruption.”

  “Oh, it wasn’t so bad.” She looked up then, shyly, teasingly, beneath her penciled brows, a pretty fifty-year-old woman in her avocado gardening outfit, practicing the elusive, winsome look she used to give the boys. “Kind of gave me a boost.” Disconcerted by her prior remarks about Peter, Stern nevertheless could not keep himself from laughing aloud.

  “You have been very generous, Fiona.”

  “Oh, sure,” she said once more. She considered him pensively, some deliberation evident in the striking yellowish eyes. But he could see they had made their ways. His ship and Fiona’s were each headed off for their own channels. His tact, for once of late, had not failed him—truly, he was more and more himself. Moved by all this, he reached out and took Fiona’s dirty hand, which rested on the bushes, and kissed her palm.

  “Here we go again,” said Fiona. She rolled her eyes and walked away. Stern called after her: let him know any way he might help. She waved bravely, then paused by the gray steps to her back porch. “Do you know that little son of a bitch has actually stopped drinking?” she asked Stern across the short distance and then, with the strength of challenge, resentment, her entire complicated persona, shook her head fiercely once more and pulled open the door.

  In his kitchen, Marta was replacing the phone.

  “How is your sister?” asked Stern.

  “Uneasy. There seems to be a lot of strain. She said John testified in the grand jury last week.”

  “So I understand. I spoke to Tooley today.”

  Marta asked for a description of John’s testimony. She had been reluctant to ask Kate.

  “My conversation was as one would expect with Mel. Very evasive. He made it a point to tell me that he had not been in the grand jury room—as if I thought he might have been. It seems, though, that it went very much as we would have thought. John blamed your uncle: Dixon gave all the orders; John carried them out, with no appreciation of their significance.”

  “Ugh,” said Marta.

  “Yes, indeed.”

  “And what about the safe?”

  “I do not have it,” said Stern simply.

  “Have you heard from Uncle Dixon?”

  “Not a word.”

  “Can you figure out what he’s up to?”

  “At moments I have an idea. Then, again, I am mystified.”

  “You let him know you’d file that motion tomorrow, didn’t you? To withdraw?”

  Stern said he had.

  “You better go through with it. You have to put some distance between yourself and him. That woman, Sonia, whatever her name is, she’s going to be screaming for your scalp. And Judge Winchell may give it to her.”

  “Yes,” said Stern. He had considered that, too.

  “So?” asked Marta.

  “So we shall see.” Stern walked across the kitchen and took his daughter in his arms. “Go meet Kate. Tell her about your change of residence. I am sure she will be delighted.”

  “What about you? You really don’t mind having your nutty daughter come back?”

  Stern kissed her. He thought of Peter, of John and Kate. Of Dixon. Clara.

  “You will be at home,” he said to her.

  43

  IT WAS NOT QUITE SEVEN when Stern arrived at the office on Tuesday morning. He had left Marta a note suggesting she come downtown this afternoon to plan as best they could for his grand jury appearance two days from now. He had heard her return late last night, but he had not risen to greet her. Another day could pass without hearing the latest of Kate and John.

  Inside the outer door, Stern waited. A sound? Some sense of disturbance. He paused at the door to his office, which was ordinarily locked but now stood barely ajar. From the threshold, he pushed it wider. Across the room, on Stern’s cream-colored sofa, Dixon was asleep. He had stunk up the space with his cigarettes and the effluvium of his slumbers.

  Beside him, on the carpeting, stood the safe.

  Quietly, Stern slipped behind his desk. He worked there for about fifteen minutes, until a client called, the defendant in the waste-dump investigation, a heavy-bellied fellow named Alvin Blumberg. Alvin was one of those types guilty as sin and paralyzed with fear; he wanted what he would never hear—a promise he would go free. Stern listened as Alvin ventilated, complaining about the prosecutors, his business partners, the intolerance of his wife. After some time, he broke off the call. He would have to introduce Alvin to Sondra. When he replaced the phone, Dixon was just sitt
ing up, stretching out, yawning, rubbing his eyes. He was wearing a simple cotton camp shirt and a pair of pleated trousers; a heavy gold chain was around his neck, and he immediately pounded at his shirt pockets looking for his cigarettes.

  “What time is it?”

  Stern told him.

  “I have to call Silvia. You mind?”

  Stern pushed the phone to the corner of the desk and watched as Dixon spoke with his wife: He had come down to Sandy’s, there were papers to look at, he had been here all night. “He’s sitting right here. He found me asleep. Ask him. You found me asleep, right?” Dixon turned the phone around. Stern, reluctant to be Dixon’s prop and his excuse for a night spent God knows where, murmured in the direction of the mouthpiece that Dixon had been asleep. “You see?” Dixon then ran through his schedule for the day with her, every meeting, each person he expected to see. “I love you,” said Dixon near the end of the call. Stern watched him, tanned, whiskery, the flesh beneath his jaw slackening. His wavy hair was beginning to thin. Age was overcoming him, but Dixon still brought to his conversation with Silvia all earthly interest. In their waning years, as they slipped into dotage, Dixon and Silvia would maintain their happy fixation on one another, aided, no doubt, by some inevitable dwindling of Dixon’s interest in other pursuits. The recognition, as usual, affected Stern: however thwarted or immature Dixon’s emotional life, it was no lie when Dixon told Silvia he loved her. After his discoveries on Sunday, Stern would have expected that witnessing this exchange, as he had so often over the years, would have driven him to rage, but his immediate sensation was of absence, pining, the sting of real envy—his own wife was gone.

  “You want to go get some breakfast?” Dixon asked him. He had cradled the phone.

  “What is it you have brought me, Dixon?”

  “You wanted the fucking safe? There’s the fucking safe. Are you happy now? Problems all solved?”

  “The government also wishes an affidavit from me stating that the contents have not been disturbed.”

  “So give them the affidavit.”

  “How am I able to do that?”

  “You want to see what’s in there?”

  “On the contrary. I am simply making a point.”

  “I want you to look.” The safe was facing him and Dixon spun the dial. After reaching in, he threw a single piece of paper down on the glass of the desk. It was Dixon’s check, folded in four, the one he had written to cover the debit balance on the Wunderkind account. Stern found his glasses and made a considerable show of studying the document.

  “No more?”

  “You know what the fuck you’re looking at?” Dixon had given up all sign of his civilized manners. He was his true self now, agitated and profane.

  “I believe I understand the significance of the check to the government.” If they turned over only this, Sonny Klonsky would accuse Stern of more bad faith, of conforming the contents of the safe to the contours of the government’s knowledge. Of course, that would remain one more private grief between them—she would never be able to tell Sennett what she had revealed. “The prosecutors seem to believe that there are account documents somewhere.”

  “Are?” asked Dixon, with one of his roguish smiles. He was stressing the present tense.

  “That would be most foolish, Dixon.”

  “Well, I kind of agree,” he said. “I was having a little bonfire, and then I had second thoughts, but that’s all I could save.” He pointed to the check. “They won’t complain. They’ll have my head on a platter, anyway, if they ever get hold of that.”

  “Assuming they have not obtained this check already,” said Stern.

  “Where would they get it?”

  “It is possible, of course, that this was what they were looking for with their subpoenas to your bank.”

  Absorbing that thought, Dixon proceeded to the obvious: Why bother with the safe if they could already establish Dixon’s control of the Wunderkind account? Tactics, Stern explained. Proof that Dixon was withholding documents would provide compelling evidence of his guilty frame of mind.

  “You mean I’ve fallen into their trap?” Dixon asked.

  “In all likelihood,” said Stern. He had his hands folded. He was relentlessly composed. He had never given a better performance. Dixon, in the meantime, stroked his chin thoughtfully. He sighed, pulled his nose; he shook his head.

  “You think I should plead guilty, don’t you? That’s what you said last time.”

  “If one is guilty, that is always an alternative that merits serious consideration.”

  “So what’ll happen to me? What kind of deal can you cut?”

  “The usual wisdom is to attempt to buy freedom. Negotiate for a heavy financial penalty and a lesser prison term.”

  “How much time?”

  “These days? With the federal sentencing guidelines, probably three years.”

  “And when do I get paroled?”

  “There is no longer parole in the federal system.”

  “Jesus.”

  “Very harsh.”

  “And I voted Republican,” said Dixon. He smiled stiffly. “How much do I have to give them to get this three-year bargain?”

  “One can only estimate, Dixon. Certainly millions. God only knows how much Stan Sennett will want you to forfeit. Probably some large portion of the value of your interest in MD. It will be very costly.”

  “Hmm.” Again he gripped his chin and, unpredictably, smiled. “They can’t forfeit what they can’t find, can they?” This thought, of what was hidden in the Caribbean, seemed to fortify Dixon for a moment. Silvia would be well provided for. Stern saw his logic.

  Dixon lit a cigarette.

  “If you do not mind, Dixon, it would give me a better sense of our negotiating position if I had an idea of what actually transpired.”

  “You already know,” he said, but ran through it quickly: how he was informed of large orders to be executed in Chicago and immediately called the central order desk to place front-running trades in Kindle. He described his use of the house error and Wunderkind accounts to gather and shelter the profits. “Pretty fucking clever,” concluded Dixon, “if I do say so myself.”

  “What about that account, Dixon—Wunderkind? What was that?”

  “Just a corporate account. I’d had it set up for this.”

  “And what was John’s role in all of this?”

  “John? John is a lunkhead. He did what I told him. John would think it was raining if you pissed in his eyes.” Dixon looked at his cigarette and tapped his foot; he was wearing smooth Italian shoes of taupe-colored leather. He seemed at ease.

  “A man of your wealth, Dixon. It is—”

  “Oh, don’t start moralizing, Stern. That’s the markets, okay? Down there, we eat our young. Everybody does it. Shit, the customers do it—the ones who know what’s up. It’s humanity in the jungle. I got caught with my hand in the cookie jar, that’s all. I want to move on. I want to get this fucking thing over with.” He slapped his knees and looked at his brother-in-law directly—ruddy, vital, still handsome, Dixon Hartnell, colossus of the marketplace. “I want to plead guilty,” he said.

  Stern did not answer.

  “Okay?” asked Dixon. “What time is it? Give those assholes a call, will you? While I still have my nerve. I want to hear the sound of Sennett, that pompous son of a bitch, falling over from shock.”

  “I believe, Dixon,” said Stern, “that you seek to deceive me.”

  Dixon jolted visibly.

  “Me?”

  “Just so.”

  “You’re crazy.”

  “I believe not.”

  Dixon’s mouth hung open a bit.

  “You’ve been talking to that girl, haven’t you? What’s her name? Krumke.”

  “Alas, Dixon, your antics have cost me the confidence of the government. I have not been speaking with Ms. Klonsky.”

  Dixon stood up. He walked around the office, waving his cigarette.

 
“You want me to bleed, don’t you?”

  “I would welcome the truth, Dixon. If you care to tell it.”

  Wandering, Dixon paused at Stern’s spot by the window and looked down to the river, spangled and living in the morning sun.

  “There are some things about that account.”

  “Which account is that?” Stern asked.

  “Wunderkind, Inc. Whatever we called it.”

  “Yes?”

  “That was John’s account. Or it was supposed to be. I didn’t want to move money into an account that would trace to me. So I asked him to open one. You know, a corporate account, because of exchange compliance. It can’t be in his name. The KCFE has a rule that member employees can’t have their own accounts.”

  “So whose name did you use, Dixon?”

  Dixon turned around. He was in extreme discomfort.

  “Kate. She signed the account papers. In her maiden name. I’m sure she didn’t know a damn thing about what was going on. Goofball just told her to sign by the x.”

  “And what did John obtain by accommodating you in this fashion?”

  “Oh, he’s the village idiot. I ask him to jump, he says, How high. He wants to be a floor trader. He was waiting for me to promote him. Look, he’s a kid. He’s a noodle. You bend him in whatever shape you want. I told him to do things, he did them.”

  “You did not promise him even a penny in profit?”

  “I never talked to him about it. Frankly, I think he’s too dim-witted to ask. And there never was any profit, anyway. Not for long.”

  “Yes, Dixon, explain that to me. You stole money and then lost it?”

  “It was Las Vegas. Who cared? I lost, I got more. It was a fucking amusement, Stern.”

  “In which you embroiled my daughter and my son-in-law—your niece and nephew. A crime of curiosity in which you proposed to hide behind children—my children?”

  Dixon did not answer. He returned to the sofa and fired his lighter for another cigarette.

  “Did you not estimate, Dixon, that John would tell the government about that account and how it was established?”

  “Yeah, I estimated,” he said. “I just wasn’t real eager to tell you.” Dixon lay back and extended his feet. “I have the records at home. I’ll bring them in.”