Reads Novel Online

Omens (Cainsville 1)

Page 123

« Prev  Chapter  Next »



"Um, no. I wouldn't sue for a clerical error." At least, I wouldn't as long as I was confident I'd get my trust fund on my next birthday.

"I will investigate in any event," he said. "I also have a lead on Pamela's case."

"Where'd that come from?"

"A gentleman never reveals his sources."

"Which is why I'm not asking one."

He tapped his coffee cup. "I have a friend in the state attorney's office," he said finally.

"You mean a contact you've groomed into thinking he's a friend."

"It was his idea."

I smiled. "I'm sure it was."

"In this case, I provided information that he wanted. Information of negligible value obtained through an informant, not a client. Perfectly legitimate. In return, I gave him a very strict set of parameters on what I was looking for in the Larsen case, and he found something. A friend of Peter Evans reported that Peter had learned something shortly before his death. Something that upset him greatly."

"Which was?"

"I have no idea. It was a comment gathered during initial interviews, and the police didn't pursue it because the friend claimed Peter never actually told him what he learned."

"You think the friend lied?"

"I read the transcript. His language suggests he did know and was waiting for the police to get it out of him."

"Make him talk, so he wouldn't be responsible for spilling his dead friend's secrets."

"Precisely. The detectives failed to see that. They'd made a note to return to it later. Then they arrested the Larsens and the interviews weren't revisited."

"Is the guy still around?"

Gabriel sipped his coffee.

"Okay," I said. "Presumably he's alive, but you aren't going to give me anything that might help me find him myself. I probably still could, given my special new relationship with Peter's father."

"Yes, you could."

I watched the cat travel to his food bowl. Then I looked back at Gabriel. "How much did Lores pay you?"

He sighed.

"I'd like an answer, please."

"It was, as you guessed, not a significant amount. The point, Olivia, is that my clients are often the subject of media interest, with or without their permission. If I know a journalist willing to conduct an unbiased interview, then I do not believe I'm committing any ethical violation of my client's trust by accepting payment for finding that journalist."

"No, but you are if the client makes it very clear that she does not want the interview and you push her into it for monetary gain."

"Not for monetary gain. You had agreed before changing your mind at the last minute. I have a relationship with Mr. Lores that I was unwilling to endanger by reneging--"

"Just tell me how much."

He hesitated before saying, "Five hundred."

"I want it. Not deducted from my bill. Not put against my laptop. Cash. Preferably twenties."

He looked to see whether I was joking.



« Prev  Chapter  Next »