They had carefully gone through all the Sunday papers. Adam was moving up in every poll. With a few exceptions, the media were for Adam. They liked his style, his honesty, his intelligence and his frankness. They kept comparing him to John Kennedy.
Adam sprawled in front of the fireplace, watching flame shadows dancing across Jennifer’s face. “How would you like to be the wife of the President?”
“Sorry. I’m already in love with a senator.”
“Will you be disappointed if I don’t win, Jennifer?”
“No. The only reason I want it is because you want it, darling.”
“If I do win, it will mean living in Washington.”
“If we’re together, nothing else matters.”
“What about your law practice?”
Jennifer smiled. “The last time I heard, they had lawyers in Washington.”
“What if I asked you to give it up?”
“I’d give it up.”
“I don’t want you to. You’re too damned good at it.”
“All I care about is being with you. I love you so much, Adam.”
He stroked her soft dark brown hair and said, “I love you, too. So much.”
They went to bed, and later, they slept.
On Sunday night they drove back to New York. They picked up Jennifer’s car at the garage where she had parked it, and Adam returned to his home. Jennifer went back to their apartment in New York.
Jennifer’s days were unbelievably full. If she had thought she was busy before, now she was besieged. She was representing international corporations that had bent a few laws and been caught, senators with their fingers in the till, movie stars who had gotten into trouble. She represented bank presidents and bank robbers, politicians and heads of unions.
Money was pouring in, but that was not important to Jennifer. She gave large bonuses to the office staff, and lavish gifts.
Corporations that came up against Jennifer no longer sent in their second string of lawyers, so Jennifer found herself pitted against some of the top legal talent of the world.
She was admitted into the American College of Trial Lawyers, and even Ken Bailey was impressed.
“Jesus,” he said, “you know, only one percent of the lawyers in this country can get in?”
“I’m their token woman,” Jennifer laughed.
When Jennifer represented a defendant in Manhattan, she could be certain that Robert Di Silva would either prosecute the case personally or mastermind it. His hatred of Jennifer had grown with every victory she had.
During one trial in which Jennifer was pitted against the District Attorney, Di Silva put a dozen top experts on the stand as witnesses for the prosecution.
Jennifer called no experts. She said to the jury: “If we want a spaceship built or the distance of a star measured, we call in the experts. But when we want something really important done, we collect twelve ordinary folks to do it. As I recall, the founder of Christianity did the same thing.”
Jennifer won the case.
One of the techniques Jennifer found effective with a jury was to say, “I know that the words ‘law’ and ‘courtroom’ sound a little frightening and remote from your lives, but when you stop to think about it, all we’re doing here is dealing with the rights and wrongs done to human beings like ourselves. Let’s forget we’re in a courtroom, my friends. Let’s just imagine we’re sitting around in my living room, talking about what’s happened to this poor defendant, this fellow human being.”
And, in their minds, the jurors were sitting in Jennifer’s living room, carried away by her spell.
This ploy worked beautifully for Jennifer until one day when she was defending a client against Robert Di Silva. The District Attorney rose to his feet and made the opening address to the jury.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” Di Silva said, “I’d like for you to forget you’re in a court of law. I want you to imagine that you’re sitting at home in my living room and we’re just sitting around informally chatting about the terrible things the defendant has done.”
Ken Bailey leaned over and whispered to Jennifer, “Do you hear what that bastard’s doing? He’s stealing your stuff!”
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