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Full disclosure : a novel

There's nothing Jilly Truitt likes more than winning a case, especially against her former mentor, prosecutor Cy Kenge. Jilly has her own baggage, the residue of a dark time in a series of foster homes, but that's in the past. Now she's building her own criminal defense firm and making a name for herself as a feisty, tough-as-nails lawyer willing to take risks in the courtroom. When the affluent and enigmatic Vincent Trussardi is accused of his wife Laura's murder, Jilly agrees to defend him, despite predictions that the case is a sure loser and warnings from those close to her to stay away from the Trussardi family. Determined to prove everyone wrong, Jilly investigates Laura's death, hoping to discover a shred of evidence that might give the jury a reasonable doubt. But she is confronted by damning evidence and uncooperative witnesses at every turn. Someone isn't telling the truth, but whom? With her reputation and Vincent's life on the line, Jilly tries to unravel the web of secrets surrounding Laura's murder. But every answer leads to another mystery, and as Jilly digs deeper, she uncovers a startling revelation that will change not only the case, but her life forever.

Book  - 2018
FIC McLac
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9781501172786
  • Physical Description 341 pages ; 23 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2018.

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Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9781501172786
Full Disclosure : A Novel
Full Disclosure : A Novel
by McLachlin, Beverley
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Excerpt

Full Disclosure : A Novel

Full Disclosure CHAPTER 1 WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN your client goes to jail? You do what you can, then forget. I look down the long corridor of the detention center and wonder how it will be this time. The guard, a burly man in uniform, spies me at the end of the hallway. A shadow crosses his hardened features. He doesn't like lawyers, particularly women lawyers with saucy haircuts and eyes that refuse to look down or away. The steel door behind him opens, a grating sound of metal on metal, and my client appears. Vincent Trussardi. Scion of the business world, patron of the arts. And as of yesterday, widower charged with the murder of his wife. Trussardi walks toward me, steps measured, shackled wrists crossed in dignified mien. Did he kill his elegant wife? Probably, I think to myself--I can hope, at least at the beginning, that I'm wrong, but a decade in criminal law has made me jaded. Not that it matters. My job is to get him out and get him off. The guard's right hand moves to his holster as the flat of his left nudges the prisoner forward. My client stops, half turns to resist, then resumes his calculated stride. For some perverse reason, they've put Vincent Trussardi--upstanding citizen, no criminal record--in cuffs. Whether he killed his wife, he's hardly likely to take the guards down and make an unscheduled run for the door. Prisons run on the dignity game--we take it; you keep it if you can. Most people can't. Maybe this man is an exception. Even in prison reds, he commands. The guard backs off a little, averts his eyes as he bends to unlock the cuffs. A uniformed woman appears from nowhere--a slight creature with brush cut hair--and scrabbles a key at the door of an interview room. Trussardi moves into the room; the guard waves me in. The door clanks behind us. We are alone, unless you count the shadow of the guard's face behind the window high on the wall. There's not much in the room--a table, two plastic chairs. They dehumanize these places. I motion to my client to sit down; he complies with a graceful shift of the torso. He's caught on quick; cuffs change the way you move. I scrape back the chair opposite and slide into it. "Thank you for coming, Miss Truitt," Vincent Trussardi says, his voice low and gravelly. His eyes--green, gold-rimmed, heavy like an ancient icon--assess me. I'm not used to my clients studying me. "Just get me out of here," they tend to say. I decide to stare back. Despite the onset of middle age, toned muscle shows beneath Trussardi's prison reds. His face is even featured, conventionally handsome. A mane of white-streaked black hair flows from forehead to chin; a black-russet mustache and beard frame full lips, the square of his jaw. His bearing is proud, his gaze lamenting. Why not, I think. If the papers are right, he has much to grieve for. I break eye contact and flip open the briefcase at my side. "Joseph Quentin called me," I say, signing in to my MacBook Air. "He says you want me to act for you." I open a document and type "Vincent Trussardi." "Yes, they tell me I must fight this charge and that to fight it, I must have a lawyer. I understand you are competent, Miss Truitt." His voice sinks to a whisper. "You will do as well as any. Who knows, perhaps better." I glance up from my screen. Is he guilty? Does he just want to get this over with? "I look forward to getting to know you," he says, as if we're agreeing to a merger. I launch into my spiel. "Mr. Trussardi. The law presumes you innocent, but a murder charge is serious. I'm here to help you." First lesson in client management: calm them down. "Relax, you're in good hands." He nods. "I understand you've been questioned by the police." "I told them the truth. I came home and found my wife dead." If Joseph Quentin, renowned counsel to Vancouver's elite, had had the sense to call me at the outset, Vincent Trussardi would have sat tight on his right to silence. No point in telling him that now. What's happened has happened. I just hope he hasn't sunk his case by revealing something he thought didn't matter. As if sensing my disquiet, he leans forward. "You shouldn't worry, Miss Truitt. I am not a fool--I know that innocent people go down. Not infrequently, despite your vaunted justice system. I appreciate your help, hope for the best--but you should know, I am prepared for the worst. If it comes to that." "And you should know, Mr. Trussardi, I distinctly dislike losing. If I take your case, I will win, or exhaust myself trying." He sits back. "Good, Miss Jilly Truitt. I approve. In fact, I think I am beginning to like you." I ignore the sortie. Don't patronize me. "The first thing we need to do is to secure your release--get you out of here. Then we can talk about the case and whether you want us to take it. If we work that out, we'll discuss what the Crown has against you and how we should handle your defense. We'll look after everything. All in due course." My little speech, honed to perfection, washes over him like water. He gives me an empty smile. I remind myself of the second lesson in client management: insulate yourself against failure. "I would be less than frank, Mr. Trussardi, if I did not tell you that on charges as grave as this one, the judges do not favor release on bail. However, we will do our best." "So what precisely do you need, Miss Truitt? To secure my release. Or try." "We need personal information--residence, income, someone who will act as surety, passport, that sort of thing. And we may need cash to make the bail." "Hildegard," he intones. "Hildegard Bremner, TEC Tower." He recites a phone number, and I write it down. "My personal secretary in the ancient sense of the word--keeper of the family vaults." "I see." But I'm not seeing at all. "The judge may want a tidy sum for bail." I think again of what I've read in the papers about the death of his wife. "Given the circumstances." He regards me levelly. "A matter of no consequence." "And I'll need a retainer. Ten thousand to start. More later." The third rule of criminal defense work: get the money up front. "Only ten?" He allows himself a soft laugh. "I'm sure you're worth much more than that, Miss Truitt. Hildegard can arrange the payment." "Very well." I slip my laptop back into its case. "Unless you have further questions, I'll get started. My associate, Jeff Solosky, will contact Hildegard and look after the details. With luck, we'll have you out of here today." "That would be much appreciated." His voice catches. "My wife's funeral is tomorrow afternoon. I wish to attend." "The press will be there. Paparazzi, photos all over the papers, wall-to-wall coverage on the six o'clock news. Are you sure you want to go, Mr. Trussardi?" "The funeral is for her--for Laura. For those who loved her." Once more, he fixes his eyes on mine. "For me." I consider the optics. Grieving husband at wife's funeral. Not bad. "Fine," I say. "Just wear black and keep your head down." Excerpted from Full Disclosure by Beverley McLachlin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.