Paul Levine

Kill All the Lawyers

One

FISH OUT OF WATER

Wearing boxers and nothing else, eyes still crusty with sleep, Steve Solomon smacked the front door with his shoulder. Stuck. Another smack, another shove, and the door creaked open. Which was when Steve noticed the three-hundred-pound fish, its razored bill jammed through the peephole. A blue marlin. Dangling there, as if frozen in midleap.

He had seen alligators slithering out of neighborhood canals. He had heard wild parrots squawking in a nearby park. He had stepped on palmetto bugs the size of roller skates. But even in the zoo that was Miami, this qualified as weird.

Steve glanced up and down Kumquat Avenue, a leafy street a mile from the brackish water of Biscayne Bay. Nada. Not a creature was stirring, not even a crab.

He checked the front of his bungalow, the stucco faded the color of pool algae. No other animals lodged in windows or eaves. No pranksters hiding in the hibiscus hedge.

A squadron of flies buzzed around the marlin's head. The air, usually scented jasmine in the morning dew, took on a distinctively fishy smell. A trickle of sweat ran down Steve's chest, the day already steaming with moist heat. He grabbed the newspaper, sprinkled with red berries from a pepper tree, like blood spatter at a crime scene. Nothing on the front page about a late-night tidal wave.

He considered other possibilities. Bobby, of course. His twelve-year-old nephew was a jokester, but where would he have come up with a giant fish? And who would have helped the kid hoist it into place?

'Bobby!'

'Yeah?'

'Would you come out here, please?'

'Yeah.'

Yeah being the oxygen of adolescent lungs.

Steve heard the boy's bare feet padding across the tile. A moment later, wearing a Miami Dolphins jersey that hung to his knees, Bobby appeared at the fishsticked front door. 'Holy shit!'

'Watch your language, kiddo.'

The boy removed his black-framed eyeglasses and cleaned the lenses with the tail of his jersey. 'I didn't do it, Uncle Steve.'

'Never said you did.' Steve slapped at his neck, squashing a mosquito and leaving a bloody smear. 'Got any ideas?'

'Could be one of those he-sleeps-with-the-fishes deals.'

Steve tried to remember if he had offended anyone lately. Not a soul, if you didn't count judges, cops, and creditors. He scratched himself through his boxers, and his nephew did the same through his Jockeys, two males of the species in deep-thinking mode.

'You know what's really ironic, kiddo?'

'What?'

'My shorts.' Steve pointed to his Florida Marlins orange-and-teal boxers, where giant fish leapt from the sea.

'You're confusing irony and coincidence, Uncle Steve,' the little wise guy said.

Twenty minutes later, Victoria Lord showed up, carrying a bag of bagels, a tub of cream cheese, and a quart of orange juice. She kissed Steve on the cheek, tousled Bobby's hair, and said: 'I suppose you know there's a marlin hanging on your front door.'

'I didn't do it,' Bobby repeated.

'So what's up?' Victoria asked.

Steve shrugged and grabbed the bagels. 'Probably some neighborhood kids.'

He had showered, shaved, and put on jeans and a tropical shirt with pictures of surfers on giant waves, his uniform for days with no court appearances. Before Victoria came into his life, he would have moseyed into the office wearing shorts, flip-flops and a T-shirt reading: 'Lawyers Do It in Their Briefs.' At the time, Steve's cut-rate law firm had the embellished name of Solomon amp; Associates. In truth, Steve's only associates were the roaches that crawled out of the splintered wainscoting.

Now it was Solomon amp; Lord. Victoria had brought a touch of class along with furniture polish, fresh lilies, and an insistence that Steve follow at least some of the ethical rules.

Today she wore a silk blouse the hue of a ripe peach, stretchy gray slacks, and a short jacket woven with intricate geometrical shapes. Five foot eleven in her velvet-toed Italian pumps. Perfect posture. Blond hair, a sculpted jaw, and bright green eyes. An overall package that projected strength and smarts and sexiness.

'You listen to the radio this morning?' Victoria asked.

Steve poured her a thimbleful of cafe Cubano, syrupy thick. 'Sure. Mad Dog Mandich's sports report.'

'Dr. Bill's talk show.'

'That quack? Why would I listen to him?'

'He was talking about you, partner.'

'Don't believe a word he says.'

'Why didn't you tell me you were his lawyer?'

Steve took his time spreading cream cheese on a poppyseed bagel. 'It was a long time ago.' Evading all questions about Dr. William Kreeger. Pop psychiatrist. Mini-celebrity. And now ex-con. 'What'd he say?'

'He called you Steve-the-Shyster Solomon.'

'I'll sue him for slander.'

'Said you couldn't win a jaywalking case if the light was green.'

'Gonna get punitive damages.'

'Claimed you barely graduated from a no-name law school.'

'The Key West School of Law has a name; it just doesn't have accreditation.'

'He said you botched his trial and that he'd sue you for malpractice, except he has no faith in the justice system. Then he ranted about O. J. Simpson and Robert Blake and Michael Jackson.'

'I saw O.J. at Dadeland the other day,' Bobby said, munching a bagel. 'He's really fat.'

'So did you screw up Dr. Bill's case?' Victoria asked Steve.

'I did a great job. The jury could have nailed him for murder but came back with manslaughter.'

'Then why's he so mad at you?'

'Aw, you know clients.'

'I know mine are usually happy. What happened between you and Dr. Bill?'

If he told her, Steve knew, she'd go ballistic. 'You did what? That's unethical! Illegal! Immoral!'

'Nothing happened. He did time, so he blames me.'

'Uh-huh.' She sipped at the Cuban coffee. 'Bobby, you know how I can tell when your uncle's lying?'

'His lips are moving,' the boy answered.

'He speaks very quietly and puts on this really sincere look.'

'I'm telling the truth,' Steve said. 'I don't know why the bastard's mad at me.'

Technically, that was true. Steve knew exactly what he did wrong in Kreeger's case. He just didn't know what Kreeger knew. On appeal, the guy never claimed ineffective counsel. He never sued for malpractice or filed disbarment proceedings. Instead, he went off and served six years, worked in the prison mental health facility, and

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