This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance by any character or situation to any actual person or event is purely coincidental. All characters presented in this narrative are over the age of 18.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE WEIGHT
"You're worn out. I get it," Ramesh Quereshi, the managing partner of Gladney & Watson's Cincinnati office said. "It happens. It also occurs to me that you haven't taken a vacation since you were an associate, and that was seven years ago. You're overdue for time off. Hell, take a sabbatical β six to nine months β if that's what you need."
I shook my head and kept staring at his desk table in his spacious corner office. Quereshi, a small man with penetrating, dark eyes, stared at me like a hawk. I didn't have to look at him to feel it.
"Les, let's cut to the chase. What do you need? You want a raise, a larger partner distribution? That's not a problem. Your review is up in just a couple of months and I'm sure it's going to be splendid. I know I can sell that to the Board of Partners. We can sweeten it even more by creating a work group within the practice that you chair," said Wilson Rush, who leads the Trusts and Estates Practice and flew to Cincinnati from the Philadelphia office for this meeting.
"Guys, I appreciate it. I really do. And this really isn't about money," I said. "And the last thing I want is to ride herd on some bullshit work group and have that many more internal meetings to attend and reports to read."
Quereshi tightened his lips, frustration beginning to show. He was known within the firm for a thin thread of patience.
"Then how are we supposed to help you if you won't even tell us what you want. You told Taylor Morton and a couple of others in the practice that β how did you put it? β 'you're just not
feeling it
anymore?'" he said.
"Yes, you've had a couple of months from hell, but some of this you brought on yourself. You should have told us about this one-dollar retainer you had with your high school chum. I know you were trying to do the right thing for him and, yes, it ended tragically, but ...," Quereshi said, stopping to restrain his tongue, "... you know this off-the-books work is highly frowned upon by this firm. Considering the unique circumstances, we're letting it pass."
I flashed a look at Quereshi and then back at Rush. I said nothing it was clear that I was not pleased. I flexed my jaw and nodded my understanding and acceptance. They knew nothing of the retainer I had executed with Kass, written on the back of an electrical bill.
"Look, Rami's right. Take some time before you burn yourself to a cinder. Go find a warm beach and get a tan. Get back into running. Drink a little too much. Pick up a cute piece of ass to help you get over the breakup with your girl," Rush said.
Now I glared at him. My
girl
? And the implication that she's a "piece of ass"? I'm sure the vein on my temple was pulsing. My nostrils may or may not have flared. I did have the presence of mind to override the impulse to clench my fists, but the vibe was unmistakable. And rather than back off, Rush doubled down.
"You've been very successful here at Gladney. We've done very well together and we want it to continue. But you've got to get it through your head that you are an
equity partner
with a major goddamn firm, not some country lawyer down in Bum Fuck, Kentucky, stroking pocket-change retainers on your own with folks off the street who don't have a pot to piss in or a window to toss it out of. That's not the kind of law we practice here," he said, leaning forward while perched on the edge of his chair, his voice rising and his face reddening.
"We had to call in favors with the feds and even create a few new IOUs to keep Gladney's name β and yours β clear of this crazy-as-fuck gay-bashers case, Les. This firm is going to take in more than one-and-a-half billion dollars this year, and that's 200 million over 2021's final revenues. The last thing our clients want to see is one of their top private wealth services attorneys wallowing around in some tawdry, hillbilly holy-rollers tabloid case. Are you getting the picture, Walker?" Rush growled as spittle flew from his snarling mouth, baring his unnaturally white ceramic crowns.
I stared at him blankly, my anger now somehow dissipating and my confidence buoyed by Rush's comically over-the-top tantrum. Instead, I was now suppressing the urge to giggle at the ridiculous spectacle before me: Rush, with his ruddy Irishman's face now flushed beet red and his eyes, rheumy from too many years of liquor and cigarettes, bugging out; and Quereshi sitting bolt upright behind his desk, petrified that he might have to break up a fistfight.
My silence gave way to a smile that momentarily unsettled both men.
"You're right, Wilson. On all counts. You've crystallized everything ... perfectly. I accept it fully and I assure you it will remain top-of-mind going forward," I said.
I'm sure Rush had expected pushback if not a fist to the nose. He was torn between surprise and relief, though it took a moment for the relief part to register. It was only after he smiled that Quereshi allowed himself to exhale and smile.
"Good," Quereshi said. "Very good! That's what I was hoping you would say. Wilson and I will get our pitch on your behalf ready for the Board of Partners meeting in mid-January."
"Thanks, gentlemen. I'll get back to you then about taking the time off you suggested," I said extending my hand for both men to shake. "Until then, a Merry Christmas to you both!"
βΌ βΌ βΌ
In most years, it would have been a cheery Yuletide scene, almost the stuff of a Currier & Ives print. Mom, who had driven up from Louisville two days earlier, sat in the recliner stirring a mug of hot cocoa with a cinnamon stick. The flame of my fireplace gas logs warmed her and Ry, who lay curled in a semicircle at her feet. I sat a few feet away by myself on the sofa under a blanket with the TV remote.
Mom and I had attended Christmas Eve services at my Presbyterian church in Oakley, not unlike our tradition back in Versailles when I was a kid. But even there, as we solemnly observed the birthday of Jesus by singing "Silent Night" and holding small, lit candles, sad memories stirred. The last time I had been in this sanctuary, it was at Kass's behest and at her side, both of us aglow with new love. Even remembering Christmas Eve services as a kid brought back memories of Kass, who would invariably attend the same service in Versailles with her parents, Emmett and Lorene Felson.
Now, with the holiday plans Kass and I had penciled in that Sunday afternoon discarded and scattered like dead leaves, Mom and I watched "It's a Wonderful Life" on television. It's a longstanding ritual with her, even though it invariably makes her sniffle at the end.
Ry heard it first and jumped from his warmed slumber and ran to the front window and began to growl, his hackles bristling.
"What do you suppose that is, Les?"
I bounded up and walked over to where Ryder was trying to peer around the Christmas tree in the front window at something just in front of the house. Given all that had transpired with Burnley and his ilk at the Ebenezer church, I took such incidents seriously. That's when the melody started.
"
Oh holy night, the stars are softly shining