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Cold Paradise 07 Page 21
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Page 21
“You’re kidding. That was easy.”
“Not so easy, pal. She’s moving every day, and that’s going to make her harder to find.”
“Oh. Well, at least we know she’s really in town.”
“That, we know.”
“Will you call Eduardo and tell him that?”
“Okay, I guess.” Dino did not like dealing directly with his father-in-law, but he seemed willing to make an exception this time. He picked up the phone and dialed the number.
Stone began looking in the phone book under airports, and when he found what he was looking for made the call.
Dino finished his conversation with Eduardo. “What are you up to?” he asked Stone.
“I told our friend Mr. James that I was on the west coast of Florida, a couple of hours’ drive from the Palm Beach airport. I want him to go on thinking that until we get this settled.” He made the arrangements he required, then hung up. “There, I guess I’ve done what I can.” He picked up the phone again. “I’ll make some of the hotel calls. You don’t mind if I use your name, do you?”
“When did I ever mind?” Dino asked. “When did you ever care if I mind?”
45
AT MIDMORNING, STONE DROVE NORTH ON I-95 AND took the well-marked exit. Soon he was at North Palm Beach County airport, a small general aviation field a few miles from Palm Beach International. He found North County Aviation and parked his car.
Inside, he told the receptionist why he was there, and she made a quick phone call. “Don will be right with you,” she said. “You’re taking the Warrior, is that right?”
“That’s correct.”
“Then if you’d like to give me a credit card we can take care of that while Don is on his way.”
Stone gave her his American Express card and watched as a Piper Warrior taxied up to the apron of North County Aviation and a young man got out and came inside.
“Mr. Barrington?”
“That’s right.”
“I’m Don. There she is.”
Stone looked at the neat little airplane. “Looks very nice.”
“Can I see your license and medical, please?”
Stone handed the man his private pilot’s license and his third-class medical certificate. They were inspected and returned to him.
“How many hours do you have in type?” Don asked.
“A little over a hundred, but it’s been a while. I did most of my private ticket training in a Warrior, and I’m real comfortable with it.”
“Come on, then, and let’s do a little checkride.”
Stone signed his credit card chit, pocketed the card and followed Don outside.
“You do the preflight,” Don said, handing him a fuel cup.
Stone put his briefcase into the airplane and walked slowly around it, running through a mental checklist. He drained some fuel from each wing and inspected it for dirt or water, checked the oil and handed Don back the fuel cup. “Looks good to me,” he said.
“Take the left seat, then.”
Stone climbed into the airplane, followed by Don. He started the engine, listened to the recorded weather from PBI, checked the wind sock and taxied to the active runway. He pulled into the run-up pad and did his final check of the airplane, then, looking for traffic, he announced his intentions over the unicom frequency and taxied onto the runway. He pushed the throttle forward and, watching his airspeed, started down the center line. At rotation speed he pulled back on the yoke and left the ground. It was a fixed-gear airplane, so he didn’t have to bother retracting the landing gear. Announcing his intentions at every turn, he climbed crosswind.
“Just stay in the pattern,” Don said, watching his every move closely.
Stone turned downwind, reduced power and prepared to land. He turned onto the base leg, then onto final and set the airplane lightly down on the runway.
“Okay,” Don said. “You can fly it. Just drop me back at the FBO, and you’re on your way. How long will you be gone?”
“Just a couple of hours,” Stone said.
“You understand there’s a four-hour minimum on the rental?”
“Yes.”
Don hopped out of the airplane, and Stone taxied back to the runway and repeated his takeoff. He climbed to a thousand feet, listened again to the recorded weather, then called the PBI tower. “Palm Beach Tower, this is November One-two-three Tango Foxtrot,” he said, reading the airplane’s registration number from a plaque on the instrument panel. “I’m ten miles to the northwest, VFR, looking for landing instructions. I have the ATIS.”
The tower called back. “Enter a right base for runway niner. Traffic’s light today. You’re cleared to land.”
Stone followed the instructions and ten minutes later he was taxiing up to Signature Aviation, between a Gulfstream III and a G-IV. He wondered how long it had been since anything as small as his rental had parked here.
He got out of the airplane. “The brakes are off,” he told the lineman, knowing they wouldn’t leave it where it was. “No fuel. I’ll be about an hour.”
He went inside the handsome lobby and walked up to the huge desk. “I’m looking for Mr. Frederick James,” he said to the young lady behind it.
“Oh, yes, you must be Mr. Barrington,” she said. “Mr. James and his associate are in the conference room, right over there.” She pointed. “You won’t be disturbed.”
“Thank you.” He walked across the reception room to the door and knocked on it.
“Come in,” a man’s voice said.
Stone opened the door and entered the room. A man, who had been seated alone at the conference table, stood up to greet him. Stone recognized him immediately.
“Mr. Barrington, I’m Edward Ginsky,” he said, offering his hand. He was dressed in a beautifully tailored, double-breasted blue blazer and white linen slacks, his shirt open at the collar.
Stone shook it. “Of course. I’m glad to meet you.” Ginsky was a famous New York lawyer, known mostly for his expertise in representing women in divorce cases. He had handled a number of high-profile divorces, and his clients had always done very well from his representation.
“I’ve heard of you, too,” Ginsky said, sitting down and motioning Stone to a chair. “Bill Eggers speaks well of you, in fact.”
“That’s kind of Bill,” Stone said.
“Well,” Ginsky said, “enough chitchat. Shall we get to it?”
“Let’s,” Stone replied.
“I trust that now you won’t need the identification you requested.”
“No, not for you, but for your client.”
“Ah, yes. Trust me when I tell you that, before our meeting is concluded, you will have adequate proof that I represent Paul Manning. May we proceed on that basis?”
“For the moment,” Stone said, “but I should tell you that I will not come to any agreement until I am satisfied who I am dealing with.”
“Understood,” Ginsky said. “Now, what do you have to propose?”
“Are you acquainted with Mr. Manning’s activities with regard to the island of St. Marks some years ago?”
“I believe I have all the relevant facts.”
“Then you will know that your client and mine were married at that time and, in the absence of a divorce, still are.”
“You could put that light on it,” Ginsky said.
“I hardly know what other light to put on it.”
“I think you are aware that my client is, if not dead, then no longer legally alive.”
“You could put that light on it,” Stone said.
Ginsky allowed himself a smile.
“Still, he exists, my client exists and legally, as I’m sure you’re aware, their marriage still exists.”
“I assume your client would like that marriage to end,” Ginsky said.
“You assume correctly. She wishes the marriage to end and she wishes not to see her husband again or hear from him.”
“I think that could be arranged,” Ginsky said
. “Under appropriate circumstances. What is your offer?”
“My client is willing to pay your client one million dollars in cash, wire-transferred to any bank in the United States, in return for a signed property settlement to that effect and a contractual agreement that your client will never contact her again, nor knowingly inhabit the same city at the same time as my client.” Stone knew that he had already put several stumbling blocks in the way of a settlement, one by omission. The two lawyers were circling each other, metaphorically, feeling each other out.
“I see,” Ginsky said. “Of course, hardly anything you’ve said is acceptable.”
“Tell me what you’re willing to accept, and let’s go on from there.”
Ginsky threw his first punch. “Your client achieved a windfall of twelve million dollars as a result of my client’s efforts. He wants half that.”
“Your client masterminded a criminal conspiracy, and when it went wrong, left my client to hang by the neck until she was dead,” Stone parried.
“She did not hang,” Ginsky said.
“Neither did your client,” Stone reminded him. “And, when your client murdered three people and was arrested in New York and extradited for his crimes, and was sentenced to hang himself, my client interceded on his behalf, paying half a million dollars to save his life. She could have done nothing, and we would not be having this conversation.” Stone heard the door behind him close; he had not heard it open. He did not turn around. “It seems to me that your client is deeply in my client’s debt.”
“I don’t owe her a fucking thing,” Paul Manning’s deep voice said from the door. “And don’t turn around.”
Stone felt cold steel pressed to the back of his neck.
46
STONE DIDN’T MOVE, NOR DID HE ALLOW HIMSELF TO show any concern.
“Paul,” Ginsky said, “that is entirely unnecessary, and moreover, unacceptable. If you want me to represent you in this matter, put it away and sit down.”
“I’ll put it away,” Manning replied, “but I’ll stay where I am. And, Barrington, if you turn around I’ll use it on your skull.”
“Mr. Ginsky,” Stone said, “perhaps it would help if you explained your client’s tenuous position to him.”
“Let me explain something to you, Barrington,” Manning said.
“Shut up,” Stone said. “I will not deal with you, but with your attorney. If you can’t accept that, then I’ll leave now.”
“Get in your little airplane and fly away, huh? Maybe I should have a look at that airplane. You know how good I am at fixing them.”
“Paul, be quiet,” Ginsky said. “If you say another word I will withdraw from this meeting, and we’ll all be right back where we started. Mr. Barrington, you have not mentioned your previous offer to resolve any legal difficulties Mr. Manning might have.”
“No, and I won’t mention that until we are agreed on all other points, except to say that to resolve the legal difficulties is within my power.”
“Very well,” Ginsky said. “The offer on the table is for one million dollars in cash, a signed property settlement and, I assume, a divorce, and an undertaking not to see or speak to Mrs. Manning again. Is that correct?” He looked toward the door and held up a hand to stop Manning from speaking.
Ginsky had not mentioned that the transaction would take place through a U.S. bank. “You left out a couple of points, but I won’t quibble,” Stone said. “That’s substantially it.”
“The money is not enough,” Ginsky said. “Let’s cut to the chase. Make your best offer.”
“A million and a half dollars,” Stone said.
“If you will offer two million dollars, I think I can recommend the deal to my client.”
“My client has already paid half a million dollars for his benefit; that makes a total of two million.”
Ginsky looked at his client, then back at Stone. “Surely she can do better. She walked away with twelve million, tax free.”
“My client has had many expenses over the years, and she has paid her taxes.” He had advised her to, anyway.
“A U.S. bank is not acceptable for the transaction,” Ginsky said.
“Then we’ll wire it to your firm’s trust account, and you can disburse it.”
“Still not acceptable.”
“What’s the matter, doesn’t your client want to pay his taxes?”
“That’s beside the point.”
“Speaking of points, you haven’t addressed all of mine,” Stone said.
“He can hardly agree not to be in the same city with her; he won’t know her movements.”
“All right, he stays out of Florida and New York City, except to change airplanes.”
Ginsky looked at his client, then back at Stone. “We won’t give you New York, but you can have Florida.”
“Let me enumerate,” Stone said, counting off on his fingers. “Two million dollars. I won’t wire it abroad, but to your trust account. You can disburse it abroad, if you want to. He stays out of Florida, or he goes to jail for contempt of court. He signs a property settlement and a document acceding to a divorce petition, here and now.”
“Let me see the papers,” Ginsky said.
Stone unlatched his briefcase, selected the set of documents with the two-million-dollar figure typed in, then slid them across the table.
There was five minutes of silence while Ginsky speed-read the documents. He looked at his client. “This is good,” he said.
“I expect there’s a notary at this FBO,” Stone said, “and I want him to sign twice, once as Manning and once as whatever his current passport says.”
Ginsky nodded.
“Let me see the passport.”
Ginsky spoke to his client. “Paul, please ask the girl at the desk to send a notary in here.”
Stone heard the door open and close.
Ginsky slid a U.S. passport across the table.
Stone opened it, anxious to see the photograph. A postage stamp covered the face. He looked up at Ginsky. “How do I know this is Paul’s passport, if I can’t see the face on the photograph?”
“Do you doubt that the man who was just in this room was Paul Manning?”
“No, I know the voice.”
“Then you don’t need to see the face for purposes of identification, do you?”
“Your client is very shy.”
“He has his reasons,” Ginsky said.
Stone copied down the information on the passport: William Charles Danforth, a Washington, D.C., address. He riffled through the visa pages and saw a number of entry and exit stamps—London, Rome, other European cities. “He’s pretty well traveled.” He slid the passport back across the table.
Manning returned with the notary, and Stone pulled out additional copies of the agreement.
“Both names,” Ginsky said to his client.
Manning signed the documents on a credenza behind Stone, and the woman notarized them.
“When do we get your client’s signature?” Ginsky asked.
“She’ll sign today, and the documents will be FedExed to your New York office right away.”
Ginsky gave Stone his business card.
The notary left. “What about the money?” Manning asked.
“To be wire-transferred as soon as the judge signs the divorce decree,” Stone said.
“It’s in the documents, Paul. He’ll provide a release from the insurance company at the same time. The deal won’t be final until we’re in receipt of those two items.”
“I don’t like waiting,” Manning said.
“It can’t be helped,” Ginsky replied. “It’s how these things are done. Trust me.”
Stone heard the door open and close behind him.
“Sorry, my client’s a little edgy today,” Ginsky said.
“How’d you get mixed up in this, Ed?” Stone asked.
“I’ve known him since college. He popped up in my life only a short time ago, when he got the e-mails from yo
u.”
“Can you make him hew to the terms of the agreement?”
“I think so. He wants out of the marriage, and he wants the insurance matter off his back.”
“I’ll tell you, off the record,” Stone said, “that if he doesn’t stick to the letter and the spirit of the agreement, I’ll take it upon myself to expose him for who he is, and in a very public way.”
“Are you threatening me, Stone?” Ginsky asked.
“No, Ed, I’m threatening Paul Manning, and I mean it. You should know that he’s a dangerous man, and my advice to you is, when this matter is concluded, to stay as far away from him as you can.”
“That may be good advice,” Ginsky admitted.
Stone put his copies of the document into his briefcase and stood up.
Ginsky stood up, too. “We saw you taxi up and get out of the airplane,” he said. “I was expecting you to drive in. Where are you flying back to?”
“I’d rather not say,” Stone said.
“I don’t think you’ll have any more trouble from Paul. Where do you want to do the divorce?”
“Anywhere in Florida will do.”
“I know a judge here in Palm Beach, and I’m licensed to practice here.”
“Fine with me. I’m not licensed here, so I’ll get Bill Eggers to find somebody. He’ll be in touch.”
“I’ll look forward to receiving the signed documents tomorrow.” Ginsky held out his hand.
Stone shook it. “Thanks for getting him to see sweet reason, Ed.”
“See you around the courts in New York, I expect.”
“I expect so.”
The two lawyers walked out of the conference room and into the lobby. Paul Manning was nowhere in sight.
They walked out to the ramp together, shook hands again, and Ginsky got into a Hawker 125, parked near the door.
Stone assumed Manning was already in it. He walked a hundred yards to where his less imposing aircraft had been parked by the lineman. He did an especially thorough preflight inspection before climbing into the airplane.
He remembered Manning’s remark about knowing how to fix airplanes, and he wanted to be sure the one he was flying would keep flying. He started the engine, and he listened to it carefully before starting to taxi.