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The Defender

Chapter 1 | page 1 | page 2 | page 3 | excerpts

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The Defender

Friday, August 28th – shortly after seven

St. Peter’s Church looked deserted. When Sadie Oliver had driven by a few seconds ago, there’d been no one on the steps. Her sister Juliana’s note had said to come at seven, but the only indication that there was anything going on was a dark colored van she’d spotted blocking the entrance to the little parking area behind the church.

There’d been something vaguely familiar about the man behind the wheel. But she hadn’t been able to draw up the memory. She was debating whether or not to swing back and ask him to move so that she could park behind the church when she finally spotted a space just big enough to squeeze her Miata into.

She hated being late, but a glance at her watch told her she’d slipped into the tardy zone by a full ten minutes. Grabbing her purse, Sadie scrambled out of her car, locked the door, and slipped her key into her pocket. She also hated feeling guilty. Maybe if she wasn’t so obsessive compulsive, she’d have been willing to leave some unfinished work on her desk over the weekend. But she was obsessive compulsive and late and feeling guilty.

Spotting her reflection in the driver’s window of her car, she added dowdy to her list of descriptive adjectives. Just the little cherry she needed to top off a very depressing sundae.

Sadie narrowed her eyes as she studied her image in the glass. Her long dark hair pulled back in a braid because she didn’t like to fuss with it. Her gaze shifted to her earrings and suit. They were definitely conservative and work oriented. She’d taken great care in the selection because she wanted to represent her family well. But the ensemble she was studying in the glass didn’t make the transition to after-five-wear easily. Not that she’d been an after-five kind of girl...well, ever. It wasn’t until she’d begun to work at Oliver Enterprises that she’d bought a couple of basic black dresses that were appropriate for the social functions that she was expected to attend with her family.

Finally she glanced down at her shoes and winced. They were...well...serviceable was the best word she could come up with. Dowdy said the little voice in the back of her mind.

Annoyed, she turned and hurried up the street. A few months ago, she wouldn’t have given a second thought to the way she looked. Her baby sister Juliana who’d taken after their mother had always been the girly-girl. Since Sadie couldn’t be petite and beautiful, she’d tried to do everything her older brother Roman could do, and in the process she’d become a bit of a tomboy. Being a “woman,” fussing with her clothes and her hair had always made her...uncomfortable. But she’d been satisfied with herself. Hadn’t she?

Sadie frowned. It had only been since Theo Angelis had stopped to talk to her in the courthouse two months ago that she’d caught herself glancing in the mirror more frequently and...what? Seeing herself the way Theo would see her? Dowdy, repeated the little voice.

“Stop being ridiculous,” she scolded herself as she picked up her pace. Theo Angelis didn’t see her as a woman. He saw her as a colleague. He’d sought her out to congratulate her on the way she’d handled a case, a case that she’d been surprised to learn he’d sent her way. Sandra Linton, the woman she’d defended that day, had stalked him and pulled a gun on him in his family’s restaurant. And Theo had been pleased that she’d gotten the woman psychiatric treatment instead of jail time. He’d said that he’d admired her work. She felt the same way about his.

Just thinking about the encounter shouldn’t have her recalling his scent – soap and something a little earthier. She was tall, but he’d been taller so that she’d had to look up to meet his eyes. Dark eyes with just a hint of danger in them. Just talking to him shouldn’t have made her knees grow weak. And shaking his hand – she could still recall the way her mind had fuzzed over just as if her brain had been replaced by a vat of cotton candy. It had been hot in the courtroom. That was why she’d felt heat shoot right down to her toes, and that was why her throat had gone dry.

What she’d experienced in that moment of contact had to have been...some kind of aberration, no doubt due to the rush of adrenaline she experienced at the end of every trial. Sure, it might have been enhanced by the fact she’d developed a sort of school girl crush on Theo Angelis – totally one sided and very self-indulgent.

And safe, nagged the little voice. Ignoring the voice, Sadie lifted her chin. It was just a hand shake, for heaven’s sake. She’d better get over it. She knew from experience that she didn’t have the...know how or the...equipment to attract a man like Theo Angelis. The kind of man she evidently appealed to was the practical, steady kind like Michael Dano who headed up the legal department at Oliver Enterprises. The kind she thought of as a mentor and a friend. Michael had waited almost six months to make a move on her...and then she’d felt nothing. Theo had made her feel more with one look. It was probably just her fate to only be able to “feel” things with a man who could have any woman he wanted.

And she’d do well to put him out of her mind. The whole San Francisco legal community was buzzing with the fact that Jason Sangerfeld, defense attorney to the stars, had offered him a job in Los Angeles.

Glancing at her watch again, Sadie broke into a run. It was now 7:12, and she was dawdling. Her sister Juliana hadn’t given her much notice. The invitation hadn’t arrived until shortly after four, and because she’d had a pile of work to finish, Sadie hadn’t had time to go home and change. Not that she knew what she was changing for. Her younger sister’s note hadn’t been very specific. All it had said was: Come to St. Peter’s Church at seven tonight. Please, Juliana. And she hadn’t been able to reach Juliana because she didn’t have her cell number.

As Sadie reached the foot of the steps, she felt another wave of guilt wash over her. Juliana and she weren’t close. Part of that was due to the fact that her sister was eighteen and she was twenty-six. The eight year difference in their ages had seemed even greater when they were younger. Growing up, Sadie had always preferred to play sports with her older brother Roman and his friends. Juliana had still been playing with Barbie dolls when Sadie had gone East for college and law school, and when she’d come back home to work in the legal department at Oliver Enterprises a year ago, Juliana had been away at boarding school.

When her sister had come home three months ago, Sadie’s goal had been to get to know Juliana better. But she’d let her work and perhaps her current frustration with it interfere.

Frowning, Sadie hurried up the last steps. For the last five months, ever since the “kiss,” Michael Dano had seemed intent on keeping her buried in busy work – real estate deed and title searches. And when she wasn’t doing that, her father and brother were insisting on her presence at various social functions.

No, Sadie gave herself a mental shake. She was not going to blame Michael Dano or her father and brother for the fact that she hadn’t taken the time to get closer to her sister. There was no one to blame for that except herself.

Pulling the door open, she stepped into the gloom of the vestibule and felt the silence of the church envelop her. Then she heard two gunshots in rapid succession. (continued...)

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