over at a document, then looked at the defendant. “Mr. Phillip Madison — ”

“Doctor, Your Honor,” Hellman said.

Barter removed his glasses and glared down at Hellman. “Doctor Phillip Madison. Detectives Jennings and Moreno have supplied me with the charges against you. Have you reviewed them with your attorney?”

“Yes.”

“You’re charged with two counts of vehicular manslaughter, which resulted in the death of Imogene Pringle and Otis Silvers. If convicted, the sentence would be a two- to six-year term for each victim. You’re also charged with two counts of hit-and-run, and one count of failure to render proper roadside assistance.”

“Your Honor,” Hellman said, “Dr. Madison requests bail.”

Barter turned his gaze toward the prosecutor. “Mr. Denton?”

“Your Honor,” he said, shaking his head, “this is a double murder. The defendant is accused of running down two people in cold blood. The woman was a single mother of two. Further, the defendant, a physician himself who could have rendered emergency medical assistance, left the scene of the accident. The people ask one million dollars.”

Madison leaned forward, his eyebrows rising with his voice. “A million dollars?”

“Mr. Hellman,” Barter said, “please ask your client to keep his remarks to himself.”

Hellman was already admonishing Madison in his ear by the time the judge had spoken.

“Sorry, Your Honor. Dr. Madison is...a little out of his element. The figure took him by surprise.”

“Well, make sure he doesn’t have any more surprises. Your job is to prepare your client so that he knows what to expect when he walks into this courtroom. I trust you’ll be more thorough next time.”

“Yes, Your Honor,” Hellman said, clenching his jaw. “I will.”

“Now, do you have an opinion on bail?”

“Yes sir, I do. Dr. Madison is a respected member of the medical community with a reputation that many physicians never achieve. He’s saved countless lives over the years, and is well rooted in the community. He serves as president of the Consortium for Citizens with Mental Retardation and has responsibilities to that agency. Dr. Madison has a wife and two children and does not pose even the slightest of flight risks. We request bail in the amount of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.”

“Very well, Mr. Hellman, Mr. Denton. I see no risk of flight. There is no prior history of criminal activity, am I correct?”

Denton and Hellman nodded.

“Very well. Bail is set at five hundred thousand dollars.”

“Thank you, Your Honor,” Hellman said.

The judge rapped his gavel on the desk and moved to the next file in front of him.

Hellman gathered his papers together.

“Now what?” Madison asked.

“Now we get to work.”

CHAPTER 5

“STOP IT! CUT IT out, Noah! Noah, I asked you not to do that,” Ryan Chandler yelled across the room.

“Ryan,” Denise said, “get off your butt and do something about it. He’s just ignoring you.”

“Denise, I am doing something about it.”

She looked up from her law book and removed her glasses. “I meant something effective,” she said as Noah, the four-year-old bundle of energy, ran by with the golden retriever plodding after him.

“You’re the one who wanted a kid,” he said as he walked into the adjacent playroom and started the DVD player.

A ball flew by his head; he ducked and it hit the armrest of the couch next to him: “Look, Noah — Cars,” Chandler said, pointing to the television where the Pixar logo had appeared.

“Saying I wanted a kid is a distortion of the facts,” Denise shouted from the other room. “You’re the one who jumped on top of me in the Caribbean. I told you I was ovulating.”

He walked back into the bedroom. “And I’m not sorry I did.”

“Me neither. But — ”

“But our lives have never been the same,” he said, locking the door. “Time to start trying for another one.”

“Wrong time of the month.”

“Then just for fun.”

“Not here — not now — ” she said, motioning toward the playroom.

“Cars is on. He’ll be busy for at least a half hour. He won’t even remember we’re home.”

“But I’ve got to get my outline done — ”

“Law school can wait.” He took her hand and led her over to the bed. He began stroking her shoulder-length chestnut hair as his lips trailed down her neck and —

The phone rang.

“Shit.”

“Just let the machine get it,” she said, taking his face in her hands and moving her lips toward his.

The phone stopped in the middle of the second ring. “Noah got it,” he said.

“Hope he takes a message,” Denise said while planting little kisses on his cheek.

Chandler rolled over and groped for the handset on the night table. “Hello — Hello — Noah, hang up, buddy. Daddy’s got it.” But Noah was busy talking, telling the caller he was watching Cars and playing with his dog.

Just then, Chandler heard the phone drop on the wood floor. It made an ear-deafening thud as it bounced a couple of times.

“Hang on a minute,” Chandler said as Denise took off toward the playroom.

“Daddy’s trying to talk, sweetie-pie. Let’s hang up now,” Chandler heard her say on the other end as she placed the handset on the receiver.

“Sorry about that.”

“No problem,” the caller said. “I’m looking for Ryan Chandler.”

“Who’s this?”

“Jeffrey Hellman. I’m an attorney in Sacramento, California. I’m calling about a case that you’d probably interested in working on.”

“Since you called me, you probably realize that I now live in New York. I don’t work on cases in California.”

“I understand that, Mr. Chandler. But this one’s urgent, and you might want to make an exception for it.”

“I doubt it. I’m pretty firmly entrenched here. I can’t really get any time off work, I’ve got a wife and kid...it’s just not possible.”

“Okay, I figured that’d be your response, but he insisted. My client’s very persistent.”

“Who’s your client?”

“Phillip Madison.”

“Phil? Mr. Hellman, what kind of law do you practice?”

“Criminal defense.”

“And Phil’s your client?”

“Unfortunately for him, yeah.”

“I see why you called me,” Chandler said as he stood up and walked over to the adjacent rolltop desk. Denise had returned to the room and sat down next to him. She mouthed, “What’s

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