she had the added skill of making whomever she was talking to feel
important; their opinions were listened to if not necessarily followed.
She was a beauty who had no need to rely solely on that asset.
When you got past the eye-catching looks, there was a lot more there. Or
seemed to be. Jack would have been less than human had he not been
attracted to her. And she had made it clear, early on, that the
attraction was mutual. While being ostensibly impressed at his
dedication in defending the rights of those accused of crimes in the
Capital City, little by little Jennifer had convinced Jack that he had
done his bit for the poor, dumb and unfortunate, and that maybe he
should start thinking about himself and his future, and that maybe she
wanted to be a part of that future. When he finally left PD, the U.S.
attorney’s office had given him quite a send-off party, and good
riddance. That should have told him then and there that there were a lot
more of the poor, dumb and unfortunate who needed his help. He didn’t
expect to ever top the thrill he had felt being a PD; he figured times
like that came around once in life and then they were gone. It was time
to move on; even little boys like Jack Graham had to grow up someday.
Maybe it was just his time.
He turned off the TV, grabbed a bag of corn chips and went to his
bedroom, stepping over the piles of dirty laundry strewn in front of the
doorway. He couldn’t blame Jennifer for not liking his place; he was a
slob. But what bothered him was the dead certainty that, even spotless,
Jennifer would not consent to live here. For one thing it was in the
wrong neighborhood; Capitol Hill to be sure, but not a gentrifled part
of Capitol Hill, actually not even close.
Then there was the size. Her townhouse must have run five thousand
square feet, not counting the live-in maid’s quarters and the two-car
garage that housed her Jag and brand new Range Rover, as if anybody
living in D.C., with its traffic-strangled roads, needed a vehicle
capable of driving up the vertical side of a twenty-thousand-foot-high
mountain.
He had four rooms if you counted the bathroom. He reached his bedroom,
stripped off his clothes and dropped into bed. Across the room, on a
small plaque that had once hung in his office at work until he had grown
embarrassed looking at it, was the announcement of his joining Patton,
Shaw & Lord. PS&L was the Capital City’s number-one corporate firm.
Legal caterer to hundreds of blue-chip companies, including his
soon-to-be father-in-law’s, representing a multimillion-dollar account
that he was credited with bringing to the firm and that, in turn,
guaranteed him a partnership at the next review. Partnerships at Patton,
Shaw were worth, on average, at least half a million dollars a year.
That was tip money for the Baldwins, but then he wasn’t a Baldwin. At
least not yet.
He pulled the blanket over him. The building’s insulation left a lot to
be desired. He popped a couple of aspirin and washed them down with the
rest of a Coke that was sitting on his nightstand, then looked around
the cramped, messy bedroom. It reminded him of his room growing up. It
was a warm, friendly memory. Homes should look lived in; they should
always give way to the screams of kids as they dashed from room to room
in search of new adventures, of fresh objects to break.
That was the other thing with Jennifer: she had made it clear that the
sound of little feet was a distant project that was far from certain.
Her career at her father’s company was first and foremost in her mind
and heart-maybe more so, Jack felt, than he was.
He rolled over and tried to close his eyes. The wind pushed against the
window and he glanced in that direction.
He looked away, but then with a resigned air, his eyes drifted back over
to the box.
It held part of his collection of old trophies and awards from high