She looked in the mirror and decided the first thing she had to do was get her body back in shape. She had been dieting and exercising since shortly after Joshua’s birth, but now she went at it even more strenuously, and soon she began to look like her old self.
Jennifer started to interview housekeepers. She examined them as though each one was a juror: she probed, looking for weaknesses, lies, incompetence. She interviewed more than twenty potential candidates before she found one she liked and trusted, a middle-aged Scotswoman named Mrs. Mackey, who had worked for one family for fifteen years and had left when the children had grown up and gone away to school.
Jennifer had Ken check her out, and when Ken assured her that Mrs. Mackey was legitimate, Jennifer hired her.
A week later Jennifer returned to the office.
30
Jennifer Parker’s sudden disappearance had created a spate of rumors around Manhattan law offices.
When word got out on the grapevine that Jennifer was back, the interest was enormous. The reception that Jennifer received on the morning she returned kept swelling, as attorneys from other offices dropped by to visit her.
Cynthia, Dan and Ted had hung streamers across the room and a huge Welcome Back sign. There was champagne and cake.
“At nine o’clock in the morning?” Jennifer protested.
But they insisted.
“It’s been a madhouse here without you,” Dan Martin told her. “You’re not planning to do this again, are you?”
Jennifer looked at him and said, “No. I’m not planning to do this again.”
Unexpected visitors kept dropping in to make sure Jennifer was all right and to wish her well.
She parried questions about where she had been with a smile and “We’re not allowed to tell.”
She held conferences all day with the members of her staff. Hundreds of telephone messages had accumulated.
When Ken Bailey was in Jennifer’s office alone with her, he said, “You know who’s been driving us nuts trying to reach you?”
Jennifer’s heart leaped. “Who?”
“Michael Moretti.”
“Oh.”
“He’s weird. When we wouldn’t tell him where you were, he made us swear you were all right.”
“Forget about Michael Moretti.”
Jennifer went over all the cases that were being handled by the office. Business was excellent They had acquired a lot of important new clients. Some of the older clients refused to deal with anyone but Jennifer, and were waiting for her return.
“I’ll call them as soon as I can,” Jennifer promised.
She went through the rest of the telephone messages. There were a dozen calls from Mr. Adams. Perhaps she should have let Adam know that she was all right, that nothing had happened to her. But she knew she could not bear hearing his voice, knowing he was close and that she would not be able to see him, touch him, hold him. Tell him about Joshua.
Cynthia had clipped news stories she thought would be of interest to Jennifer. There was a syndicated series on Michael Moretti, calling him the most important Mafia leader in the country. There was a photograph of him and under it the caption, I’m just an insurance salesman.
It took Jennifer three months to catch up on her backlog of cases. She could have handled it more rapidly, but she insisted on leaving the office at four o’clock every day, no matter what she was involved in. Joshua was waiting.
Mornings, before Jennifer went to the office, she made Joshua’s breakfast herself and spent as much time as possible playing with him before she left.
When Jennifer came home in the afternoon, she devoted all of her time to Joshua. She forced herself to leave her business problems at the office, and turned down any cases that would take her away from her son. She stopped working weekends. She would let nothing intrude on her private world.
She loved reading aloud to Joshua.
Mrs. Mackey protested, “He’s an infant, Mrs. Parker. He doesn’t understand a word you’re saying.”
Jennifer would reply confidently, “Joshua understands.”
And she would go on reading.
Joshua was a series of unending miracles. When he was three months old he began cooing and trying to talk to Jennifer. He amused himself in his crib with a large, tinkling ball and a toy bunny that Ken had brought him. When he was six months old, he was already trying to climb out of his crib, restless to explore the world. Jennifer held him in her arms and he grabbed her fingers with his tiny hands and they carried on long and serious conversations.
Jennifer’s days at the office were full. One morning she received a call from Philip Redding, president of a large oil corporation.
“I wonder if we could meet,” he said. “I have a problem.”
Jennifer did not have to ask him what it was. His company had been accused of paying bribes in order to do business in the Middle East. There would be a large fee for handling the case, but Jennifer simply did not have the time.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I’m not available, but I can recommend someone who’s very good.”
“I was told not to take no for an answer,” Philip Redding replied.
“By whom?”
“A friend of mine. Judge Lawrence Waldman.”
Jennifer heard the name with disbelief. “Judge Waldman asked you to call me?”
“He said you’re the best there is, but I already knew that.”
Jennifer held the receiver in her hand, thinking of her previous experiences with Judge Waldman, how sure she had been that he hated her and was out to destroy her.
“All right. Let’s have breakfast tomorrow morning,” Jennifer said.