The Street Lawyer
By John Grisham
Doubleday
(C) 1998 Belfry Holdings, Inc.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 0385490992
Meet Michael Brock, a rising star in one of Washington's biggest law firms. But when a homeless man takes nine attorneys -- including Brock -- hostage, it changes Brock's life in ways he can't imagine.
CHAPTER ONE
The man with the rubber boots stepped into the elevator
behind me, but I didn't see him at first. I smelled him
though--the pungent odor of smoke and cheap wine and life
on the street without soap. We were alone as we moved
upward, and when I finally glanced over I saw the boots,
black and dirty and much too large. A frayed and tattered
trench coat fell to his knees. Under it, layers of foul
clothing bunched around his midsection, so that he appeared
stocky, almost fat. But it wasn't from being well fed; in
the wintertime in D.C., the street people wear everything
they own, or so it seems.
He was black and aging--his beard and hair were half-gray and
hadn't been washed or cut in years. He looked straight ahead
through thick sunglasses, thoroughly ignoring me, and making
me wonder for a second why, exactly, I was inspecting him.
He didn't belong. It was not his building, not his elevator,
not a place he could afford. The lawyers on all eight floors
worked for my firm at hourly rates that still seemed obscene
to me, even after seven years.
Just another street bum in from the cold. Happened all the
time in downtown Washington. But we had security guards to
deal with the riffraff.
We stopped at six, and I noticed for the first time that he had
not pushed a button, had not selected a floor. He was following
me. I made a quick exit, and as I stepped into the splendid marble
foyer of Drake & Sweeney I glanced over my shoulder just long
enough to see him standing in the elevator, looking at nothing,
still ignoring me.
Madam Devier, one of our very resilient receptionists, greeted me
with her typical look of disdain. "Watch the elevator," I said.
"Why?"
"Street bum. You may want to call security."
"Those people," she said in her affected French accent.
"Get some disinfectant too."
I walked away, wrestling my overcoat off my shoulders, forgetting
the man with the rubber boots. I had nonstop meetings throughout
the afternoon, important conferences with important people.
I turned the corner and was about to say something to Polly, my
secretary, when I heard the first shot.
Madam Devier was standing behind her desk, petrified, staring
into the barrel of an awfully long handgun held by our pal the
street bum. Since I was the first one to come to her aid, he
politely aimed it at me, and I too became rigid.
"Don't shoot," I said, hands in the air. I'd seen enough movies
to know precisely what to do.
"Shut up," he mumbled, with a great deal of composure.
There were voices in the hallway behind me. Someone yelled, "He's
got a gun!" And then the voices disappeared into the background,
growing fainter and fainter as my colleagues hit the back door.
I could almost see them jumping out the windows.
To my immediate left was a heavy wooden door that led to a large
conference room, which at that moment happened to be filled with
eight lawyers from our litigation section. Eight hardnosed and
fearless litigators who spent their hours chewing up people.
The toughest was a scrappy little torpedo named Rafter, and as he
yanked open the door saying "What the hell?" the barrel swung from
me to him, and the man with the rubber boots had exactly what
he wanted.
"Put that gun down," Rafter ordered from the doorway, and a split
second later another shot rang through the reception area, a shot
that went into the ceiling somewhere well above Rafter's head and
reduced him to a mere mortal. Turning the gun back to me, he
nodded, and I complied, entering the conference room behind Rafter.
The last thing I saw on the outside was Madam Devier shaking at her
desk, terror-stricken, headset around her neck, high heels parked
neatly next to her wastebasket.
The man with the rubber boots slammed the door behind me, and
slowly waved the gun through the air so that all eight litigators
could admire it. It seemed to be working fine; the smell of its
discharge was more noticeable than the odor of its owner.
The room was dominated by a long table, covered with documents and
papers that only seconds ago seemed terribly important.
A row of windows overlooked a parking lot.
Two doors led to the hallway.
"Up against the wall," he said, using the gun as a very
effective prop. Then he placed it very near my head, and said,
"Lock the doors."
Which I did.
Not a word from the eight litigators as they scrambled backward.
Not a word from me as I quickly locked the doors, then looked at
him for approval.
For some reason, I kept thinking of the post office and all those
horrible shootings--a disgruntled employee returns after lunch with
an arsenal and wipes out fifteen of his co-workers. I thought of
the playground massacres--and the slaughters at fast-food
restaurants.
And those victims were innocent children and otherwise decent
citizens. We were a bunch of lawyers!
Using a series of grunts and gun thrusts, he lined the eight
litigators up against the wall, and when their positions suited
him he turned his attention to me. What did he want? Could he
ask questions? If so, he could get anything he damned well pleased.
I couldn't see his eyes because of the sunglasses, but he could see
mine. The gun was pointed at them.
He removed his filthy trench coat, folded it as if it were new, and
placed it in the center of the table. The smell that had bothered
me in the elevator was back, but not important now. He stood at the
end of the table and slowly removed the next layer--a bulky gray
cardigan.
Bulky for a reason. Under it, strapped to his waist, was a row of
red sticks, which appeared to my untrained eye to be dynamite.
Wires ran like colored spaghetti from the tops and bottoms of the
sticks, and silver duct tape kept things attached.
My first instinct was to bolt, to lunge with arms and legs flapping
and flailing for the door, and hope for luck, hope for a bad shot as
I scrambled for the lock, then another bad shot as I fell through
the doorway into the hallway. But my knees shook and my blood ran
cold. There were gasps and slight moans from the eight against the
wall, and this perturbed our captor. "Please be quiet," he said in
the tone of a patient professor. His calmness unnerved me.
He adjusted some of the spaghetti around his waist, then from a
pocket in his large trousers produced a neat bundle of yellow nylon
rope and a switchblade.
For good measure, he waved the gun at the horrified faces in
front of him, and said, "I don't want to hurt anybody."
That was nice to hear but hard to take seriously. I counted twelve
red sticks--enough, I was certain, to make it instantaneous and
painless.
Then the gun was back on me. "You," he said, "tie them up."
Rafter had had enough. He took one very small step forward and
said, "Look, pal, just exactly what do you want?"
The third shot sailed over his head into the ceiling, where it
lodged harmlessly. It sounded like a cannon, and Madam Devier
or some female shrieked in the foyer. Rafter ducked, and as he
attempted to stand upright the beefy elbow of Umstead caught him
squarely in the chest and returned him to his position against the
wall.
"Shut up," Umstead said with clenched jaws.
"Do not call me Pal," the man said, and Pal was instantly discarded
as a reference.
"What would you like us to call you?" I asked, sensing that I was
about to become the leader of the hostages. I said this very
delicately, with great deference, and he appreciated my respect.
"Mister," he said. Mister was perfectly fine with everyone in
the room.
The phone rang, and I thought for a split second he was going to
shoot it. Instead he waved it over, and I placed it squarely
before him on the table. He lifted the receiver with his left
hand; his right still held the gun, and the gun was still
pointed at Rafter.
If the nine of us had a vote, Rafter would be the first
sacrificial lamb. Eight to one.
"Hello," Mister said. He listened briefly, then hung up.
He carefully backed himself into the seat at the end of the
table and sat down.
"Take the rope," he said to me.
He wanted all eight of them attached at the wrists. I cut rope
and tied knots and tried my best not to look at the faces of my
colleagues as I hastened their deaths. I could feel the gun at
my back. He wanted them bound tightly, and I made a show of
practically drawing blood while leaving as much slack as possible.
Rafter mumbled something under his breath and I wanted to slap him.
Umstead was able to flex his wrists so that the ropes almost fell
loose when I finished with him. Malamud was sweating and breathing
rapidly. He was the oldest, the only partner, and two years past
his first heart attack.
I couldn't help but look at Barry Nuzzo, my one friend in the bunch.
We were the same age, thirty-two, and had joined the firm the same
year. He went to Princeton, I went to Yale. Both of our wives
were from Providence. His marriage was working-- three kids in
four years. Mine was in the final stage of a long deterioration.
Our eyes met and we both were thinking about his kids. I felt lucky
to be childless. The first of many sirens came into range, and
Mister instructed me to close the blinds over the five large windows.
I went about this methodically, scanning the parking lot below as if
being seen might somehow save me. A lone police car sat empty with
its lights on; the cops were already in the building.
And there we were, nine white boys and Mister.
At last count, Drake & Sweeney had eight hundred lawyers in offices
around the world. Half of them were in D.C., in the building Mister
was terrorizing. He instructed me to call "the boss" and inform
him that he was armed and wired with twelve sticks of dynamite.
I called Rudolph, managing partner of my division, antitrust, and
relayed the message.
"You okay, Mike?" he asked me. We were on Mister's new
speakerphone, at full volume.
"Wonderful," I said. "Please do whatever he wants."
"What does he want?"
"I don't know yet."
Mister waved the gun and the conversation was over.
Taking my cue from the pistol, I assumed a standing position next
to the conference table, a few feet from Mister, who had developed
the irritating habit of playing absentmindedly with the wires coiled
against his chest.
He glanced down and gave a slight tug at a red wire. "This red one
here, I give it a yank and it's all over." The sunglasses were
looking at me when he finished this little warning. I felt
compelled to say something.
"Why would you do that?" I asked, desperate to open a dialogue.
"I don't want to, but why not?"
I was struck by his diction--a slow, methodical rhythm with no hurry
and each syllable getting equal treatment. He was a street bum at
the moment, but there had been better days.
"Why would you want to kill us?" I asked.
"I'm not going to argue with you," he announced. No further
questions, Your Honor.
Because I'm a lawyer and live by the clock, I checked my watch
so that whatever happened could be duly recorded, if we somehow
managed to survive. It was one-twenty. Mister wanted things
quiet, and so we endured a nerve-racking period of silence that
lasted fourteen minutes.
I could not believe that we were going to die. There appeared to
be no motive, no reason to kill us. I was certain that none of us
had ever met him before. I remembered the ride on the elevator, and
the fact that he seemed to have no particular destination.
He was just a nut in search of hostages, which unfortunately would
have made the killings seem almost normal by today's standards.
It was precisely the kind of senseless slaughter that would grab
the headlines for twenty-four hours and make people shake their
heads. Then the dead lawyer jokes would start.
I could see the headlines and hear the reporters, but I refused
to believe it would happen.
I heard voices in the foyer, sirens outside; a police radio
squawked somewhere down the hallway.
"What did you eat for lunch?" Mister asked me, his voice breaking
the silence. Too surprised to consider lying, I hesitated for a
second, then said, "A grilled chicken Caesar."
"Alone? "
"No, I met a friend." He was a law school buddy from Philly.
"How much did it cost, for both of you?"
"Thirty bucks."
He didn't like this. "Thirty bucks," he repeated.
"For two people." He shook his head, then looked at the eight
litigators. If he polled them, I hoped they planned to lie.
There were some serious stomachs among the group, and thirty
bucks wouldn't cover their appetizers.
"You know what I had?" he asked me.
"No."
"I had soup. Soup and crackers at a shelter. Free soup, and
I was glad to get it. You could feed a hundred of my friends for
thirty bucks, you know that?"
I nodded gravely, as if I suddenly realized the weight of my sin.
"Collect all the wallets, money, watches, jewelry," he said, waving
the gun again.
"May I ask why?" I asked.
"No."
I placed my wallet, watch, and cash on the table, and began
rummaging through the pockets of my fellow hostages.
"It's for the next of kin," Mister said, and we all exhaled.
He instructed me to place the loot in a briefcase, lock it, and call
"the boss" again. Rudolph answered on the first ring. I could
envision the SWAT leader camped in his office.
"Rudolph, it's me, Mike, again. I'm on the speakerphone."
"Yes, Mike. Are you okay?"
"Just fine. Look, this gentleman wants me to open the door nearest
the reception area and place a black briefcase in the hallway.
I will then close the door and lock it. Understand?"
"Yes."
With the gun touching the back of my head, I slowly cracked the door
and tossed the briefcase into the hallway. I did not see a person
anywhere.
Few things can keep a big-firm lawyer from the joys of hourly
billing. Sleep is one, though most of us slept little. Eating
actually encouraged billing, especially lunch when the client was
picking up the check. As the minutes dragged on, I caught myself
wondering how in the world the other four hundred lawyers in the
building would manage to bill while waiting for the hostage crisis
to end. I could just see them out there in the parking lot, most of
them sitting in their cars to keep warm, chatting away on cell
phones, billing somebody. The firm, I decided, wouldn't miss a beat.
Some of the cutthroats down there didn't care how it ended. Just
hurry up and get it over with.
Mister seemed to doze for a second. His chin dipped, and his
breathing was heavier. Rafter grunted to get my attention, then
jerked his head to one side as if to suggest I make a move. Problem
was, Mister held the gun with his right hand, and if he was indeed
napping, then he was doing so with the dreaded red wire held firmly
in his left hand.
And Rafter wanted me to be the hero. Though Rafter was the
meanest and most effective litigator in the firm, he was not
yet a partner. He was not in my division, and we weren't in
the Army. I didn't take orders.
"How much money did you make last year?" Mister, very much
awake, asked me, his voice clear.
Again, I was startled. "I, uh, gosh, let me see--"
"Don't lie."
"A hundred and twenty thousand."
He didn't like this either. "How much did you give away?"
"Give away?"
"Yes. To charities."
"Oh. Well, I really don't remember. My wife takes care of
the bills and things like that."
All eight litigators seemed to shift at once.
Mister didn't like my answer, and he was not about to be denied.
"Who, like, fills in your tax forms?"
"You mean for the IRS?"
"Yeah, that's it."
"It's handled by our tax division, down on the second floor."
"Here in this building?"
"Yes."
"Then get it for me. Get me the tax records for everybody here."
I looked at their faces, and a couple wanted to say, "Just go ahead
and shoot me." I must've hesitated too long, because Mister
shouted, "Do it now!" And he used the gun when he shouted.
I called Rudolph, who also hesitated, and so I shouted at him.
"Just fax them in here," I demanded. "Last year's only."
We stared at the fax machine in the corner for fifteen minutes,
afraid Mister might start executing us if our 1040's didn't hurry
along.
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