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Mistress of Justice

Mistress of Justice

Titel: Mistress of Justice Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jeffery Deaver
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firm—nearby. A faint whine of a door hinge maybe. Followed by the
snick-snick
of two metal objects faintly colliding.
    But then the elevator arrived. Reece stepped in and began once again reciting his scrolls of lists silently to himself.

     
    “I think we may have a misunderstanding,” Taylor Lockwood said.
    “Not really,” returned the voice, also female though much older, from the phone.
    Taylor dropped into her squeaky chair and rolled against the wall of her cubicle.
Not really?
What did
that
mean? She continued, “I’m the lead paralegal on the SCB closing. That’s at four today.”
    It was 8:30 A.M ., the Tuesday after the Thanksgiving holiday, and she’d just arrived back here after a few hours’ sleep at home, having spent most of the night at the firm, editing, assembling and stapling hundreds of documents for the closing this afternoon.
    Ms. Strickland, on the other end of the line, said, “You’ve been reassigned. Something urgent.”
    This’d never happened that Taylor knew about. It was general knowledge—as solid as Newton’s laws—that a law firm partner was incapable of handling a business closing without the presence of the paralegal who’d worked on the deal. Law is manifest in the details, and a firm’s paralegals are the gurus of minutiae.
    The only reason for a last-minute reassignment was if a major screwup had occurred.
    But Taylor Lockwood did not screw up and a cursoryreview of her ball-busting work on the case over the past weeks revealed no glitches the remedy for which would involve her summarily getting kicked off the deal.
    “What’re my options?” she asked the paralegal supervisor.
    “Actually,” the word stretching into far more syllables than it had, “there
are
no options.”
    Taylor spun her chair one way, then the other. A paper cut inflicted by a UCC security agreement last night had started to bleed again and she wrapped her finger in a napkin with a happy turkey printed on it, a remnant from a firm cocktail party the week before. “Why—?”
    “Mitchell Reece needs your help.”
    Reece? Taylor reflected. So I’ll be playing with the big boys.… Good news, but still odd. “Why me? I’ve never worked for him.”
    “Apparently your reputation has preceded you.” Ms. Strickland sounded wary, as if she hadn’t known that Taylor had a reputation. “He said you and only you.”
    “Is this long-term? I’m taking a vacation next week. I’m scheduled to go skiing.”
    “You can negotiate with Mr. Reece. I mentioned your schedule to him.”
    “What was his reaction?”
    “He didn’t seem overly concerned.”
    “Why would he be?
He’s
not the one going skiing.” Blood seeping through the napkin had stained the turkey’s smiling face. She pitched it out.
    “Be in his office in an hour.”
    “What sort of project?”
    A pause, while Ms. Strickland perhaps selected from among her quiver of delicate words. “He wasn’t specific.”
    “Should I call Mr. Bradshaw?”
    “It’s all taken care of.”
    “I’m sorry?” Taylor asked. “What’s been taken care of?”
    “Everything. You’ve been transferred and another paralegal—two actually—are working with Mr. Bradshaw.”
    “Already?”
    “Be in Mr. Reece’s office in one hour,” Ms. Strickland reminded.
    “All right.”
    “Oh, one more thing.”
    “What’s that?”
    “Mr. Reece said you’re not supposed to mention this to anyone. He said that was very important. Not to anyone.”
    “Then I won’t.”
    They hung up.
    Taylor walked through the carpeted cubicles of the paralegal pen to the one window in this part of the firm. Outside, the Financial District was bathed in early-morning, overcast light. She didn’t care much for the scenery today. Too much old grimy stone, like weathered, eerie mountains. In one window of a building across the way, a maintenance man was struggling to erect a Christmas tree. It seemed out of place in the huge marble lobby.
    She focused on the window in front of her and realized she was looking at her own reflection.
    Taylor Lockwood was not heavy but neither was she fashionably bony or angular. Earthy. That was how she thought of herself. When asked her height she would answer five-five (she was five-four and a quarter) but she had a dense black tangle of hair that added another two inches. A boyfriend once said that with her hair hanging frizzy and loose she looked like she belonged in a pre-Raphaelite painting.
    On days when she was in a

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