‘Uninvolved. Exonerated,’ responded Jane, looking invitingly at Geoffrey Davis.
‘I know this is bizarre,’ came in the firm’s lawyer, at once. ‘That’s exactly what it is, totally and utterly bizarre. You must believe me that all you can do – all any of us can do – is hang in there with Jane.’
Could she remain in charge, for – and of – everything she wanted to do? Had to do? She should feel drained, traumatized, from what she’d already gone through that day, but unaccountably she didn’t. Even more unaccountably she felt energized, sure she could go on and resolve everything. At last she was in a position, in a role, in which she knew how to perform. She was in charge. In charge of herself and her surroundings and of what was going to happen today. She wished she knew about tomorrow. And the day after that.
The full-featured man said: ‘What do we do?’
Jane said: ‘Wait! Say nothing, to anybody outside the office. Certainly not the media. But tell the FBI what you’ve told me. Open all your accounts to them. Co-operate in every way. You’ve got nothing to hide.’
‘Well?’ demanded Jane, when the door closed after the last departing partner.
‘I know them all,’ said Davis. ‘I believe them all.’
‘They sounded convincingly honest to me,’ endorsed Elliott.
‘They would, wouldn’t they?’ said Jane.
‘You gave them their chance,’ said Davis.
‘If one’s lying, they all go down,’ said Jane.
‘You can’t do any more than you’ve already done, on a personal level,’ encouraged Elliott.
She could, thought Jane. But not here and not yet with these two men. She said briskly: ‘Now let’s meet the FBI.’
Gene Hanlan was less able to hide his irritation at being kept waiting than Barbara Donnelly, visibly red- faced. He was cursory with the introductions to the two lawyers and said: ‘It’s good of you to see us at last!’
‘I told your people at the bank I wanted to talk to lawyers before I talked to you.’ Jane knew she was treading the slenderest of tightropes, not giving in to any bullying but at the same time not completely alienating the man or his organization. In the opinion of both Davis and Elliott, she was going to need the FBI as much – maybe even more – than they needed her.
There was a slight relaxation from the agent. He said to Jane: ‘You OK?’
Jane nodded. ‘Who were they, the people who had me?’
‘Big-time organized crime,’ predicted Barbara. ‘The man in the bank is refusing to talk without an attorney. The car that was outside the bank took off in too much of a hurry when the alarm sounded, right into the side of another car. The driver was still unconscious when our traffic guys got to him. The other one snapped an ankle and couldn’t run. There are witnesses to one guy running, though. The two we got are muscle: gofers. They’ll break.’
‘You with them against your will?’ asked Hanlan.
‘Damned right I was!’ Jane said, indignantly. ‘They threatened to cut off part of my tongue if I didn’t do what they wanted.’
‘Kidnap, prima facie,’ declared Hanlan, now totally relaxed, all irritation gone. He had a millionaire kidnap and a major Mafia investigation under wraps and life looked sweet, with the sun on his face.
‘And what did they want?’ asked the other woman.
‘I thought you knew,’ said Jane. She had to get more than she volunteered. Everything depended on it.
‘We need to hear it from you,’ said Hanlan.
‘This is not a formal deposition,’ broke in Burt Elliott. ‘Nothing said in this room, about anything, constitutes a basis of evidence. It’s all privileged.’
Hanlan sighed. ‘We’re asking for help, not for a formal deposition, not yet.’
‘What happened to Alice Belling?’ asked Jane. It was time.
‘We’re going to need a deposition on that, too,’ said Hanlan.
‘What happened to her?’ insisted Jane. ‘What has she told you?’
‘That you wouldn’t come in, without lawyers, when she decided to. So you took the car and she got a cab into Morristown from the truck stop and simply caught a train here. Some of it doesn’t square, though.’
‘Like what?’ They were telling her, which she’d feared they wouldn’t!
‘How you came to be in Morristown, where the Mafia picked you up, when she says you drove off in the opposite direction,’ said Barbara.
‘What more does she say?’ pressed Jane.
It was Hanlan who provided the summary and when he finished Jane said: ‘She told you all about the hacking?’
‘She acknowledges that it’s illegal but said it was the only way to get the proof she and…’ Barbara hesitated, then plunged on. ‘She and your husband needed.’
Jane smiled, humourlessly. ‘I know all about that.’
‘Yes,’ said Barbara, unembarrassed.
‘What does she say about me? Getting me from the apartment?’
‘She agrees that technically it was kidnap but that it was to save your life.’
‘Has she asked for the Witness Protection Programme?’
‘Several times,’ said Hanlan. He looked at the two attorneys. ‘Something else I guess we’re going to have to talk about. It’s all going to take time.’
‘Is Alice going to get it?’ demanded Jane.
‘She’s with her own lawyer now,’ said Hanlan. ‘It usually takes a while for our people to decide once we’ve made our recommendation. In your case, Mrs Carver, it’s a forgone conclusion…’ He allowed the gap. ‘We’re expecting your cooperation, of course.’
‘Not a foregone conclusion for Alice?’
‘I’m not sure what she’s really offering at the moment. What the recommendation will be.’
‘Do I definitely need to go into the programme?’ demanded Jane.
The two lawyers looked uncomfortably at each other. So did Hanlan and Barbara Donnelly.
Hanlan said: ‘Unquestionably, with the evidence you are going to be asked to give before a Grand Jury. And then in an open court.’
‘I want to see Alice,’ abruptly declared Jane. ‘See her alone.’
Everyone looked startled. Hanlan said: ‘Depending upon your deposition, you could be a prosecution witness against her!’
‘I don’t think it’s a good idea, Jane,’ said Elliott. ‘Let’s get some trial advice.’
‘That’s the deal, the only deal,’ insisted Jane. ‘My cooperation, based on whatever legal advice I get, in return for my seeing Alice Belling.’
‘I don’t want us to fall out,’ warned Hanlan.
‘Neither do I,’ said Jane. ‘So let’s not.’
‘You’re going to be very dependent on the Bureau, in the future,’ continued Hanlan.
‘The Bureau’s going to be very dependent upon me, right now.’
‘Why don’t we see what Alice’s lawyer says?’ suggested Elliott, anxious to mediate.
‘Now!’ said Jane. ‘Let’s see right now.’
‘They’d given your Miranda! Why did you say all that?’ The public defence lawyer was a young, dark-featured, eager man named Joshua Dutton who saw his so far impressive success ending as ashes around his feet with this case and was already wondering how he could get out of it. He threw aside in theatrical disappointment the transcript of Alice Belling’s earlier recorded interview with Hanlan and Barbara Donnelly.
‘I didn’t do anything wrong: not with any intent to do wrong! Isn’t that a legal principle, committing a felony with intent?’ Thank God she hadn’t said anything about England.
‘Ms Belling! You think any court will accept that, if they offer half the charges available against you?’
‘If I am charged with anything, will I still be able to get into a protection programme?’ She had to be! She had to safeguard the baby!
Dutton shrugged, shaking his head at the same time. ‘At the moment I don’t have the slightest idea. It’ll depend what I can achieve with plea-bargaining.’
‘I’ll be killed if I’m not taken in!’
‘That’s my plea,’ said the lawyer. Everything was going to be an uphill battle. He turned at a knock at the