any importance.
'Do you have to be back at the hospital soon?' he asked, as he poured coffee for them from the carafe of a well-used Mr. Coffee.
'I have some patients to sign out to the on-call doc, some dictation I need to do, and I have to get my bike. But I'm okay for a little longer.'
'Good. There are some things we ought to go over.'
'Like quitting?'
'Like understanding what we're up against here, and how malpractice underwriters like the MMPO operate.'
The tension that Sarah had seen develop in her lawyer over the course of the past six weeks seemed indelibly etched across his brow. When they had met initially, her innocence-their case-had seemed so clear-cut, so straightforward. Now? She sipped at her coffee and asked him to continue.
'First of all,' he said, 'I want you to know that I think something's screwy with this whole business. I know you're not convinced, but I believe someone set Kwong Tian-Wen up to make him-and you-appear responsible for those three DIC women.'
'But as things stand, we have no proof that he and I are not responsible. Only Tian-Wen's word.'
'And his family's. We can put together a defense based on the presumption that someone's out to make you look guilty. But without who and why, it won't hold up.'
'Meaning, if we pursue this into court, we'll lose.'
'Sarah, we're really up against it.' His voice drifted away. His fist was clenched.
'But, hey,' she said, 'aren't you the one who told me that more often than not, the legal system manages to sort out what's truth and what isn't?'
' 'More often than not' is still not always. Things aren't that simple in this case. Tian-Wen's frail. He gets confused a lot. I might be able to get a doctor's excuse to keep him off the stand. But that's a long shot because he's not that bad off anymore. And even if we succeed, Mallon will just depose him at home, maybe use closed circuit TV. One way or another, the jury will get to meet him up close and personal, as they say.'
'But how will Mallon explain why so many women who took my supplement had no problem?'
'I suspect you know the answer to that.'
'You mean he'll just claim that Tian-Wen messed up with some batches and not with others.'
'Or else that the incorrect herb or herbs reacted with some women and, for whatever reason, not with others. In this situation, he just has to have a response that works. It doesn't necessarily have to be right. With Lisa Grayson on their side, and Kwong Tian-Wen on ours, and the penchant of juries to think they're settling claims against megabucks insurance companies, not flesh-and-blood people, I'm afraid it's going to boil down to our having to prove in court that we're not at fault. I can just see Mallon now.'
He picked up his baseball and mitt, and began pacing, popping the ball into the pocket as he spoke.
' 'This lovely young artist, with two good, strong arms and a healthy fetus, puts her faith and trust in Dr. Sarah Baldwin. Dr. Baldwin does something unusual and irregular to the lovely, pregnant young artist with two good strong arms-something well beyond the accepted norm for her medical community. And suddenly, the lovely young artist loses her baby and her right arm. Since nothing else happened during our lovely young artist's pregnancy, Dr. Baldwin must prove to this court that she was not the cause of this tragedy.' '
'That sounds gruesome.'
'In legal terms, that little twist at the end is called res ipse loquitor-the thing, or deed, speaks for itself. It's a legal gun barrel that no defense lawyer ever wants to find himself staring down. But it happens-especially, from what I've been able to read, in medical malpractice trials.'
'I thought I was supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.'
'If Mallon gets a judge to accept res ipse loquitor, and we can't prove that you are not responsible, we're cooked. What's more, if we lose here, two more families are almost certain to go after what insurance you have left, and whatever else you own or may ever own.' He stopped pacing and sank back into his chair.
'What do you think we should do?' she asked.
'Well, before I answer that, there's one more thing you ought to know. It has to do with Willis Grayson. It's been troubling me almost since the beginning of this case. Finally, today, seeing him and his legal army in that hearing room, I think I know what it is. Sarah, he doesn't want just to see you lose this case. He wants to bury you.'
'I–I don't understand,' she said, feeling suddenly chilly.
'The way I see it, Grayson's got more money than God, right?'
'I suppose.'
'I'm sure he's not adverse to winning sixty percent of a huge jury award. But my guess is it still wouldn't equal the interest he earns on his personal checking account. The way I put it together, Mallon's in it for the money and to stick it to your hospital. But Grayson wants you, or whoever is responsible for Lisa's tragedy, to be put away for a long, long time.'
'I can't believe this. Willis Grayson out to destroy me. It's crazy, absolutely crazy. But do you want to know what's even crazier, Matt? The absolute craziest thing of all? I don't even know whether he's justified or not.'
'I told you how I feel about that.'
'I know. What do you think we should do?'
'Well, we can try for some sort of settlement without admission of guilt. I'm not sure I can get the MMPO, Mallon, or Grayson to buy it, but you never know. It's sort of a Mexican standoff. Our side says we would have won at trial, but the legal fees would have been higher than the settlement. The other side says that even though there's, no admission of guilt, the fact that the MMPO paid up implies that they were right to sue. Then the rhetoric dies down and everybody goes back to his life. Before you know it, the ripples go away and the big pond is still again.'
'We can do that?'
'We can try.'
'And you think we should.'
Matt pressed his fingertips into a steeple and stared out the window. The creases traversing his brow deepened.
'If they'd accept, the answer is yes,' he said finally. 'Yes, I think we should.'
'I need to think about it. How long do I have?'
'A week, maybe. A little longer if you need it.'
'Thanks.'
She felt distracted, ill at ease, and suddenly very tired. Kwong Tian-Wen… Mallon… Lisa… Willis Grayson… the hospital… goddamn Peter… criminal charges… further lawsuits… How could the case once have seemed so simple? She set her cup down and turned to go.
'I'll drive you back to the hospital,' Matt said.
'That's okay.'
'No. I–I want to. I want to very much.'
Sarah turned back to him, but he quickly looked away and began loading papers into his briefcase.
I want to. I want to very much. Had he really just said that?
'Offer accepted,' she replied.
Matt fixed his gaze on the rear end of the car ahead of them as he inched his red Legacy away from the city. Sarah would never have imagined a situation in which she was grateful for heavy traffic, but she was this afternoon. The ride from Matt's downtown office to MCB, which should have taken fifteen minutes, was going to take closer to forty. Except for some small talk unrelated to the case, they rode in silence. She looked at him directly when she was speaking, but continued to study his face out of the corner of her eye when she wasn't. The timing couldn't have been much worse, she told herself. Falling for the attorney representing her in a malpractice case was hardly the wisest thing in the world. But it was happening. And there really wasn't a damn thing she could do about it.
Though he hadn't actually said so, she sensed Matt was attracted to her as well. But there were ethical issues that would be pressuring him neither to act on those feelings nor even to voice them. Perhaps if they could settle her case, those considerations could be set to rest, and they could get on with the business of really getting