Iâll be there in half an hour to go over your notes. But Iâm taking the meeting.â
Heâd be there in half an hour? Since when did Stephen Creighton get into the office first?
Since Neal had started falling further and further behind, his everyday caseload turning into one unheard-of delay after another. Since he couldnât sleep, couldnât focus, from thinking about the nonconversation heâd had two weeks ago with a certain Dr. Wilber Harden. Then Nathan had hung up on him the one time Neal had gotten through to the man over the phone, saying nothing but a few choice curses.
And what did Neal have to show for the aggravation? Finishing his Friday morning run with the added bonus of the wet-behind-his-ears lawyer heâd hired a year ago chewing on his ass.
âI donât know whatâs going on, man,â Stephensaid, taking another bite. âThis case is a no-brainer. If you donât have time for it, let me take over. Edgar Martinezââ
âMartinez is my problem until he goes to trial. And if I thought it was a no-brainer, I would have advised him to settle.â
âThe D.A.âs offer is a gift.â Not intimidated by Nealâs ex-con rep, Stephen plowed forward where other colleagues treaded more delicately. The kid had the pedigree of a philanthropist, but the guts of a street fighter. Nealâs kind of guts. âThe public defender wanted Edgar to take the plea a week ago.â
âItâs a crap offer, and weâre not taking it.â Nealâs legal-aid center, funded first by his motherâs exceptionally well-invested money, then by grants and donations from several silent partners from Atlantaâs legal community, had become the bane of Georgiaâs prosecutors. He took the cases of people who couldnât afford pricey defense attorneys, and he never plea-bargained until heâd squeezed the last ounce of concession from the district attorneyâs office.
The best lawyer heâd ever known had taught him that tactic.
âPush too hard on this one,â Stephen argued, âand our clientâs going to end up with no deal at all. This is a county D.A., and heâs not taking kindly to being put on hold. Neither is the public defender.â
âAnd Edgar shouldnât take kindly to them railroading his son. The public defender wants to plead this one out, to save herself a trip to Statesboro for the court date.â
âYou donât know that. You wonât even take her calls. I have, andââ
âWell, donât! Youâre making us look anxious to settle, and that cuts me off at the balls. Be ready to bring me up to speed, then stay the hell away from the meeting if you canât stick with the game plan.â
Neal ended the call and flipped the cell phone onto the heap of tangled sheets atop his bed, more angry at himself and his increasingly bad mood than anyone else.
Stephen was right. Heâd let the Martinez case slide. Meanwhile there was an eighteen-year-old kid sitting in a south Georgia jail, counting on Neal to get him out. Only Neal had spent more time away from the office than heâd been there ever since Bufordâs call, as he tried to first ignore, and then come to grips with, the reality that his father was sick. Damn sick, even if Doc Harden wouldnât say any more than it was about time Neal up and paid attention to the man.
Oh, he was paying attention all right. He was standing there soaked to the skin from the near-freezing rain outside, his teeth chattering for a hot shower, when where he should have been hours agowas in the office doing the job he did better than anyone else in town.
He kicked off his shoes and peeled out of his sweats. Turning the shower on full blast, he cursed every hour heâd let slip though his fingers since Bufordâs call. He should have followed up with Martinez days ago. Should have worked out Juanâs