Sandra pulled out into traffic and whipped around a driver that had slowed down in front of the Uptown Theatre, an art deco remnant from the fifties with a wraparound marquee above the doors. Mason had gone there as a kid to watch monster movies. It had been rehabbed into a venue for rock bands, Bar Mitzvah parties, and book signings, one of each advertised for the coming week.

Sandra was dodging traffic and Mason's questions. He wasn't going for a ride with her without pushing harder for answers.

'Eight of the twelve jurors who acquitted Whitney are dead,' Mason said. 'One was named Sonni Efron. She was shot in the face last week. Frances Peterson was another one.

She was shot in the face today. Dress it up all you want, Sandra. Whitney's a bad man and you know it.'

She gave him a sharp glance that said she'd considered the possibility enough to worry about it. 'You think he's bad enough to kill the people who acquitted him?'

'I do,' Mason said. 'Especially if he fixed the jury and didn't want anyone to find out.'

'Whitney was seventeen years old when the trial took place,' she said, the words a last plea with herself, not an argument with him.

'So he was a child prodigy,' Mason said.

Sandra slipped through traffic, winding through the shops and restaurants on the Plaza. She stopped for a string of tourists crossing the street aiming for the Cheesecake Factory, gunning her Lexus past the last straggler. Someone pulled out of a parking space on Ward Parkway along Brush Creek. Sandra cut off another driver to snag the spot. She got out of the car, slammed her door, and walked to the edge of the creek, arms folded over her heaving chest.

Brush Creek was a quiet canal, broad grassy banks sloping up to the street on either side. The Plaza was on the north shore, its Spanish-inspired architecture and outdoor sculpture lending a cosmopolitan backdrop. Postwar brownstone apartment buildings converted into condos lined the south shore. People jogged on paths alongside the water, ignoring the heat. Gondolas floated past, carrying passengers who had nothing better to do with twenty-five dollars. The last fingers of sunlight laid golden tracks on the water.

'Daniel Boone trapped beaver on this creek in the early eighteen hundreds,' Mason said, standing at Sandra's shoulder. 'Can you believe that? Tom Pendergast paved it with concrete in the ninteen thirties. Some people think he tossed a few of his political opponents into the cement before it dried.'

'You'd make a great tour guide,' Sandra told him, biting her lip, not looking at him.

'I can't help you if you don't talk to me,' Mason told her.

Sandra turned to face him, her hand on his cheek, a quiver rippling along her jaw. 'Good old Lou,' she said. 'You'll be using that line on women until you're too old to remember why.'

Mason took her by the wrist, pulling her hand away. 'If it's about Mary, where she is, what's happened to her, you've got to tell me.'

'I don't know anything about Mary,' she said, sticking her hands under her arms, studying Mason, arguing with herself, giving in. 'Look, my firm represented Whitney and his family for a long time before I was hired. I spent the weekend reviewing the family files.'

'You need to get a life,' Mason told her with a teasing smile.

'I know you, Lou. You're going to sue Whitney and you're going to dig up every rock the family laid down before and after Graham and Elizabeth Byrnes were murdered. I was just getting ready.'

'What did you find?'

She raked her fingers through her hair, tugging on the ends. 'The more money a family has, the more twisted things get. I may have tumbled onto something that puts me in a very bad spot.'

Despite what many people assumed, lawyers are governed by complex ethical rules that try to balance more than one right thing at a time. A lawyer can't disclose a prior crime by a client revealed in confidence but must disclose a client's intent to commit a crime in the future. If disclosing the future crime would reveal the prior crime, things get complicated. If the disclosures could get you killed, survival becomes more important than ethics. Mason read Sandra's dilemma in the flutter of her eyes.

'Whitney's past runs all the way to the present,' Mason said gently, 'and you can't cut one off from the other.'

She nodded, adding, 'It's not just Whitney.'

Sandra's cell phone rang. She took it off the clip on her belt, answering and listening. Her chin was on her chest, her shoulders slack. 'Okay. I understand,' she said with a grim voice. She closed the phone and started toward her car. 'Come on,' she added over her shoulder. 'We're late.'

'Was that Whitney?' Mason asked, barely closing his door before Sandra was back in traffic.

'No. It was Dixon Smith. He's a former federal prosecutor who's on his own now. We're representing defendants in the same case,' she answered, keeping her eyes straight ahead, enforcing a brittle calm.

'Okay,' Mason said. 'Let's get back to Whitney and his family's files.'

She tossed her head as if she was shaking off the tremors, giving him a weak smile. 'Later,' she said. 'Let's see how it goes with Whitney.'

Mason couldn't tell whether she was concentrating on the cars in front of her or whether she just didn't want to look him in the eye when she lied to him. Mason knew Dixon Smith, had banged heads against him when he was in the U.S. attorney's office. Smith usually defended people accused of violent crimes, leaving the white-collar variety to lawyers like Sandra. Sandra's lie was that Dixon had called her about another case. She was about to tell Mason what she had found in the King family files until Dixon called.

Sandra continued south, cutting east a few blocks then south again on Holmes Road, an artery that would take them to Whitney's office some fifty blocks away.

'Why is Whitney working late? Just to talk to me?' Mason asked.

'Hard as it may be to believe, he might prefer that to going home to a big empty house.'

'Where does the lonely rich boy live?'

'Burning Oak, that new golf course project in Lenexa,' Sandra answered.

The metropolitan area was bifurcated by the state line between Kansas and Missouri, wealth accumulating in a string of cities that ran together in Johnson County on the Kansas side. Lenexa was one of them, wedged into the western part of the county. Burning Oak offered golf course lots priced at a quarter million on which buyers could build a house for a million-five more and lay down fifty grand to join the country club.

'So what's he doing at the office? Counting his money or stalking jurors?'

Sandra banged her hand on the steering wheel. 'Damn it, Lou! Give it a rest!'

He did, keeping his mouth shut the rest of way, his thoughts staggering back to his parents, shredding fabricated images of their lives while Sandra parked outside Whitney's office building. She didn't move for a moment, finally turning the ignition off and taking a deep breath.

'Okay, then,' she said. 'This is it.'

The parking lot was empty, no sign of Whitney's car. Mason assumed there was underground parking or that Whitney had parked on another side of the building, which was one of several in an office park ringed by mature trees with a jogging path laid among them. Park benches and picnic tables were scattered along the outer wall of greenery.

The building was ten stories, packaged in reflecting glass that made it impossible to see inside. It was past nine o'clock, dark, and no one was working late. They were at the entrance to the building when Sandra's cell phone rang again.

'Yes,' she said, pausing. 'Hello, Whitney. We're outside your building now. Where are you?' Mason tried the door, jiggling it so Sandra could tell that it was locked. 'We're locked out,' she said. 'How long before you'll get here? Fine. We'll wait.'

'What's the story?' Mason asked as Sandra stowed the phone and looked around.

'His mother is in a nursing home. He took her out for dinner and has to take her home. He'll be here in about twenty minutes and he wants us to wait. Let's try the bench over there,' she said, pointing to one in the shade of the trees lining the jogging path.

'I thought she was in a psychiatric facility,' Mason said.

'It's both, really,' Sandra said. 'Nice place for crazy old people. They have an Alzheimer's unit. Whitney says his mother has a reservation.'

The bench was made of a forgiving heavy plastic or light metal. Mason couldn't tell which, only that it was

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