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Robert Parker - The Professional

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A knock on Spensers office door can only mean one thing: a new case. This time the visitor is a local lawyer with an interesting story. Elizabeth Shaw specializes in wills and trusts at the Boston law firm of Shaw Cartwright, and over the years shes developed a friendship with wives of very wealthy men. However, these rich wives have a mutual secret: theyve all had an affair with a man named Gary Eisenhower and now hes blackmailing them for money. Shaw hires Spenser to make Eisenhower cease and desist, so to speak, but when women start turning up dead, Spensers assignment goes from blackmail to murder. As matters become more complicated, Spensers longtime love, Susan, begins offering some input by analyzing Eisenhowers behavior patterns in hopes of opening up a new avenue of investigation. It seems that not all of Garys women are rich. So if hes not using them for blackmail, then what is his purpose? Spenser switches tactics to focus on the husbands, only to find that innocence and guilt may be two sides of the same coin. With its eloquently spare prose and some of the best supporting characters to grace the printed page, The Professional is further proof that [t]heres hardly an author in the crime novel business like Parker (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette).

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Robert B Parker The Professional Book 38 in the Spenser series 2009 For - photo 1

Robert B Parker

The Professional

Book 38 in the Spenser series, 2009

For Emma, who arrived; and for Gracie, who left.

Chapter 1

I HAD JUST FINISHED a job for an interesting woman named Nan Sartin, and was happily making out my bill to her, when a woman came in who promised to be equally interesting.

It was a bright October morning when she walked into my office carrying a briefcase. She was a big woman, not fat, but strong-looking and very graceful. Her hair was silver, and her face was young enough to make me assume that the silver was premature. She was wearing a dark blue suit with a long jacket and a short skirt.

I said, Hello.

She said, My name is Elizabeth Shaw. Please call me Elizabeth. Im an attorney, and I represent a group of women who need your help.

She took a business card from her briefcase and placed it on my desk. It said she was a partner in the law firm Shaw and Cartwright, and that they had offices on Milk Street.

I said, Okay.

You are Spenser, she said.

I am he, I said.

I specialize in wills and trusts, she said. I know little about criminal law.

I nodded.

But I went to law school with Rita Fiore, she said.

So the silver hair was premature.

Ahh, I said.

She smiled.

Ahh, indeed, she said. So I told Rita my story, and she suggested I tell it to you.

Please do, I said.

Elizabeth Shaw looked at the large picture of Susan that sat on my file drawer near the coffeemaker.

Is that your wife? she said.

Sort of, I said.

How can she be sort of? Elizabeth said.

Were not married, I said.

But?

But weve been together a considerable time, I said.

And you love her, Elizabeth said.

I do.

And she loves you.

She does.

Then why dont you get married? Elizabeth said.

I dont know, I said.

She stared at me. I smiled pleasantly. She frowned a little.

Was there anything else? I said.

She smiled suddenly. It was a good look for her.

Im sorry, she said. I guess I was trying to find out a little about your attitude toward women and marriage.

I try to develop my attitudes on a case-by-case basis, I said.

She nodded, thinking about it.

Rita says theres no one better if the going gets rough.

Uh-huh.

How about if the going isnt rough? Elizabeth said.

Theres still no one better, I said.

Rita mentioned that you didnt lack for confidence.

Would you want someone who did? I said.

I must have passed some kind of initial screening. She shifted in her chair slightly.

Everything I tell you, she said, must, of course, remain entirely confidential.

Sure.

She looked at Susans picture again.

Thats a very beautiful woman, she said.

She is, I said.

She shifted again in her chair.

I have a client, a woman, married, with a substantial trust fund, given to her by her husband as a wedding present. We manage the trust for her, and over the years she and I have become friendly.

He gave her a trust fund for a present?

Elizabeth smiled.

The rich are very different, she said.

Yes, I said. They have more money.

Well, she said. A literate detective.

But self-effacing.

She smiled again.

My clients name is Abigail Larson, Elizabeth said. She is considerably younger than her husband.

How considerably?

Hes sixty-eight. Shes thirty-one.

Aha, I said.

Aha?

Im jumping to a conclusion, I said.

Sadly, the conclusion is correct. She had an affair.

Lot of that going around, I said.

You disapprove? Elizabeth said.

I guess its probably better if people can be faithful to each other, I said.

Shes not a bad woman, Elizabeth said.

Affairs arent usually about good and bad, I said.

What do you think theyre about?

Need, I said.

Elizabeth sat back a little in her chair.

Youre not what I expected, she said.

Hell, I said. Im not what I expected. What would you like me to do?

Im sorry. I guess Im still testing you.

Maybe you could test my ability to listen to what you want, I said.

She smiled at me.

Yes, she said. In brief, the man she had the affair with took her for some money and ditched her.

How much? I said.

Actually, just enough to hurt her feelings. Restaurants, hotels, car rentals, a small gift now and then.

And? I said.

That was it, Elizabeth said, for a while. Then one day she saw him, in a restaurant, with a woman whom she knew casually.

Nest prospecting, I said.

Apparently, Elizabeth said. Anyway, she talked to the woman the next day to tell her a little about her experience with this guy

Whose name is? I said.

Gary Eisenhower, Elizabeth said.

Gary Eisenhower? I said.

Elizabeth shrugged.

Thats what he tells them, she said.

Them?

The two women talked, and then they networked, and one thing led to another, and in ways too boring to detail here, they discovered that he had exploited four of them, often simultaneously, over the past ten years.

Have you met this guy?

No.

Well, if you do, I said, be careful.

I think Ill be all right, she said.

So the seduced and abandoned have joined forces? I said.

Yes.

And what do they want?

Theyd like to see him castrated, Im sure, but thats not why Im here.

Oh, good, I said.

They came to me as a group because I was the only lawyer that any of them knew, and we agreed that pursuing him for the money would cause them embarrassment. Their husbands would find out. It might make a great tabloid story. So they agreed to move on, sadder but wiser, so to speak.

But, I said.

But he has returned. He has contacted each of them. He says he has proof positive of each adultery and will expose them to their husbands and the world if they dont pay him.

What kind of evidence? I said.

They thought they were being discreet, Elizabeth said. These women are not stupid, nor, I guess, inexperienced.

No letters, I said. No e-mails, no messages on answering machines.

Yes.

Hidden cameras, hidden tape recorders?

Elizabeth nodded.

Uh-huh, she said. I guess he was planning on shaking them down all along.

Maybe, I said. Sometimes people like to keep a record. Allows them to revisit these special moments, when things are slow.

So, Elizabeth said, maybe shaking them down was an afterthought?

Maybe, I said. They dont want to pay.

Dont want to, and cant. Their husbands control all of the substantial money.

So you want me to make him cease and desist, without causing a stir, I said.

Can you? she said.

Sure, I said.

Chapter 2

I MET THE FOUR WOMEN in a bigger conference room than we needed at Shaw and Cartwright. Elizabeth Shaw sat at one side of the table. The women sat two apiece on each side of her. I sat across from them.

Elizabeth introduced them.

Abigail Larson, Beth Jackson, Regina Hartley, Nancy Sinclair.

They each had a small notepad in front of them. And a ballpoint pen. Doubtless provided by the firm. They all smiled at me. All of the smiles displayed white, even teeth. They were all extremely well dressed. They all had very good haircuts. They all looked in shape. None looked older than thirty-five. It is easier to be good-looking when youre thirty-five, and even easier if youre rich. Though Elizabeth Shaw, who was probably neither, was holding her own. I smiled back at all of them.

No one said anything. They all looked at Elizabeth. Perhaps you could tell us a little about yourself, Elizabeth said to me.

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