Micki Press agrees to a date with JL Martin when her long-term, seemingly stable relationship with an artist implodes. Now her unfaithful former lover is stalking her, and JL, who is the CEO of WatchDog, Inc. has more than one reason to feel protective.
Micki isnât ready for a new commitment, especially since sheâs trying to get promoted at one of the top corporate law firms in Chicago. But her social activist proposal to create a pro bono division in the firm doesnât go over well with the conservative partners.
JL has his own complications with a mother who wants him move back to Vancouver and marry someone French-Canadian, Catholic, and young enough to produce grandchildren. Micki wonât tick any of those boxes. And JL wants to get his deadbeat uncle out of his motherâs house and persuade her to move to Chicago.
Are JL and Micki ready to negotiate the twists and turns or will the challenges make them sing the Chicago blues?
Chicago, February 2014
One secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes.âBenjamin Disraeli
Micki
Todayâs the day. Best suit. Flawless hair and makeup. Every inch the polished senior associate. No four-inch heels, though. Frederick Lanscombe, managing partner, is a little sensitive about his height and this meeting is the crucial first step in the campaign to be the next partner at Miller, Lanscombe, Baker, Francis, Masters, and Hargrove.
The door to the small conference room is wide open, Fred at the head of table, eating a donut. My mentor, Rebecca Masters smiles and gives me a small thumbs up. Tyler Miller nods to acknowledge Iâm there. More than there. After a hundred years, this firm is still a boysâ club but I plan to crack into top echelon and become just the second woman to make partner.
I fly through the door and end up on hands and knees when Hayden Forbes-Cartwright barrels into me. When I look up, Fredâs donut is poised at his open mouth. Rebeccaâs hand is over her mouth. And Tyler laughs. âGreat entrance, Micki.â The censure I hear pricks my balloon of confidence.
A snigger erupts from Hayden as his big hand reaches down to pull me up. âSo sorry, Micki. Couldnât put the brakes on in time.â
Upright, balanced a little precariously on my toothpick heels, my glare has the heat of the Milky Way. Not that Hayden pays any attention. His bogus concern is yet one more layer of deceit. Still, points to him. Iâm the klutz and heâs the chivalric hero.âHave a seat, Micki, Hayden.â Fred gives each of us a once over. Dressing well is one of the unspoken rules. Haydenâs navy blue pinstripe is comparable to my silver gray jacket and matching pencil skirtâpoints even on wardrobe. My phone is in my lap and I pull up my spreadsheet. Iâve kept score since the first time we met. The advantage has seesawed back and forth, but weâre competing for the pinnacle in the stakes race, so Iâll have to up my game.
Hayden and I were adversaries from the get-go. We started here, on the same day eight years ago. Me half an hour early. Hayden fifteen minutes late strolling in with his uncle. All my muscles clenched when he looked me over with his trademark devil-may-care smile.
âI know you received the memo. With Sonny Philipsâ retirement, the firm will promote one associate to partner this year. As the two seniors, you will be the leading candidates.â
Hayden stops fiddling with his Chicago Yacht Club tie. âDoes that mean other associates might be considered?â
âTechnically, yes, but in reality you two are the only ones qualified right now. The partners will evaluate you on several criteria besides the competencies youâve shown in your time here.â
He pauses.
Hayden rushes into the short silence. âDoes every partner get a vote?â
âYou know they do,â Tyler chides his nephew impatiently.
âAnd are some votes weighted more heavily than others? Like seniority?â
âNo.â Rebeccaâs response is explosive. âPlease go on, Fred.â
When I glance toward Hayden, he shows no embarrassment, not even a slight flush. We all learn to put on a neutral face. I permit myself a very small smile. Minus five to Hayden.
Fred looks at the sheet in front of him, then from Tyler to Rebecca. They nod. âThe criteria include enthusiasm, treatment of others, the opinion of your mentor, maintaining personal control, commitment, successful building and protection of your reputation and that of the firm, consistent hard work, always available, constant improvement, and most importantâ being perceived as trustworthy.â
Haydenâs eyes dart like tiny silverfish, his tell when heâs scheming. on how to get the edge. While I put in the long hours and never turn down a request, Hayden skates by, taking credit for the work of junior associates. Boasting about staying late when he disappears in the middle of the day. When your uncleâs name is on the door, you have an extra pass. Tyler Miller will definitely push for Hayden to be the next partner.
Fred is still talking and I wrench my attention back to his droning monotone. âBesides the formal evaluation, the other piece will be assisting Rebecca with a high-profile insider trading case. Itâs more than usually sensitive because our client is a candidate for a Senate seat. He says heâs been set up. Not necessarily a strong or provable defense. Youâll be combing emails, social media, accounts, and documents to see what evidence you find.â
Bucket of nightcrawlers? Come on, Micki, try to show some enthusiasm. Canât jump up and down.
âWhat a great opportunity for us to show what weâre made of.â Haydenâs wide smile and crackling delivery is phony as a carney barkerâs come on.
Our managing partner nods his head approvingly. Hayden is his favored candidate too. Fred and Tyler have some kind of mutual admiration society and Hayden benefits.
Yeah, heâs a suck up.
My turn. Say something but avoid the gush. âThis is a amazing challenge. I really appreciate the chance to work on a case so important to the future and reputation of the firm and, potentially beyond, Fred.â
Rebecca produces a small smile, so I hope Iâve hit the right note.
As we walk out, she stops me. âMicki, I have a lunch appointment, but letâs have a drink after work.â She looks around but doesnât see anyone in lurking mode. âWe havenât had a good chat for a while.â
âGreat, Rebecca. Just come by my office when youâre ready to leave.â
Then I cancel my date for the evening. Work comes first, always.
*****
The Gage is lively at five thirty. After-work drinks have replaced the three-martini lunch, unless youâre Hayden Forbes-Cartwright. He indulges in both.
Rebecca manages to get us a quiet table in a corner near the tile fireplace. We wonât have to shout and have less likelihood of being overheard.
After the drinks are ordered, she pulls out a legal pad. âThought we could go over some strategies for the work. My thought is that youâll work on the emails, social media, anything online and whatever documents we can upload. That way, while youâre traveling, youâll have plenty of material to access.â
âThat would be great. Iâve been anxious about being away at such a crucial point in my career.â
The pencil between Rebeccaâs fingers moves up and down like a seesaw. âThanks to technology. Years ago we were tied to the office, the library. Iâm glad you can go to the awards ceremony. Kind of like the Oscars for authors.â
âYeah. Still five working days awayâŠâ
âOur new legal research assistant is already busy organizing everything as documentation comes in.â
A Paris Rose is put in front of Rebecca, who pushes her legal pad to the side, but not before a few drops splash onto the paper, leaving a light pink trail. My Jabberwock is in a coupe. She takes a sip just as the cheese board is deposited in the middle of the table along with a basket of fried pickles. Cheese is a magnet for me. My grabby fingers snatch some almost before the server gets the platter on the table.
âSimon Greenberg is an attorney with Talcott, Maier, and current Republican candidate for Senate from Illinois. The SEC received a tip claiming he made use of private information to trade stocks from several companies he represents. After an investigation, the Commission decided on civil charges. Unfortunately, because his candidacy has made him a public figure, criminal charges are pending as well. Maybe some questions about election finance too.â
âWait. Shouldnât Hayden be here?â Not that I want him, but if weâre a team, he deserves the same explanations.
âHayden has already been briefed.â
Be professional. In control. Pretend it doesnât matter.
âOh. I see.â But I donât. Not at all.
Rebecca takes a huge swallow of the pink liquid. âNot by me. After our meeting, Tyler and Fred took Hayden to lunch and briefed him there.â
How does she know? Or is this an assumption? My heated protest escapes before I can rein it in. âBut itâs your case.â
She waves the comment away. âHe was so full of himself when he got back. Swanned into my office. âSimon Greenberg, huh. I wondered after the rumors flying around. Good for us.â Then he laughed and walked out.â Her scowl could freeze the Chicago River. âI was sure Tyler at least would make sure heâs up to speed and I wanted to get you in the loop right away. I wouldnât be surprised if Fred and Tyler didnât give Hayden some instruction on how to handle things and he will take advantage of the time you are away in April.â
My cocktail beckons and I chug it down, sputtering slightly. âShould I cancel the trip?â
She ignores that. âYouâll meet the client tomorrow, so make a strong impression. Youâll have plenty of work to do while youâre out of the office. Get your laptop set up with VPN. It will be your lifeline to the firm. Video meetings will help too. Make sure you can report on progress every day. A strong impression while youâre in Paris will give you a leg up.â
We see the waiter in the distance and Rebecca catches his attention. Once we have refills, she takes a sip, then leans forward. âShow youâre dedicated to the firm and the case and that you can work without supervision. Iâll try to schedule the meetings first thing in the morning to mitigate the seven-hour time difference.â
âAnd the other complications?â
âHayden is one, as Iâm sure youâve guessed. More in terms of your selection as partner. That will be decided long before the case is finished. But heâll push for every plum he can pluck. The other is that because of the election cycle, Greenberg is pushing to get this cleared up or buried quickly. News of the pending charges will hit the papers tomorrow.â
Why havenât they leaked already?
Rebecca must be a mind reader. âThe papers are planning front-page splashes with stories, commentary, and reactions on at least two inside pages.â
I can picture the Tribune. Huge headline and photos on their broadsheet front page. Stories about the investigation, the campaign, lots of background on the candidate, a piece where the rest of the field comments. Then an editorial on the op-ed pages. Maybe a political cartoon. The Sun-Times tabloid format will be just as comprehensive in a more compact form. âCollusion?â
âCooperation.â Her forehead wrinkles, brows touching. The corners of her mouth turn down.
âKeeping him from making incendiary comments is going to be a job in itself. We want as little coverage as possible while we work on clearing himâif we can. The damage to his reputation is a gift to the other contenders. Heâs been the front runner, the poster boy for the party.â
In two swallows, the Jabberwock has disappeared. I order another, then cram more cheese into my mouth.
âHey, guys. Didnât get the memo.â Hayden pushes into the tufted leather booth and reaches for a pickle, almost knocking me to the floor. âUncle Tyler thought you might be here, Rebecca. Said itâs your usual watering hole.â
âA casual afterwork drink.â Rebeccaâs voice is flat.
Hayden reaches over and taps her legal pad. âSure you arenât strategizing?â The twinkle in his eye shows malice, not amusement. âBy the way, I met Laney this afternoon. Sheâs a cutie.â
âLaney?â The name is unfamiliar.
With a leer, he says, âOur legal researcher. Fresh out of her paralegal program.â
The server comes by with my third drink.
âAre you running a tab?â
Rebecca nods.
âTwo Satanâs Whiskers. Need to play catch up with these two.â His smirk makes my skin crawl.
âHow appropriate.â
He snickers. My snarky comment bounces off his crocodile hide.
Before the drinks guy can take off, I hold up a hand. âIâd like to order something to go.â
Pad out, he looks a bit like a bird, head to the side.
âShrimp cocktail with no sauce, and the Apple Salad. Just put the shrimp on top of the salad with the dressing on the side.â
âYou got it.â
Hayden puffs out his chest like a pouter pigeon. âMe, I have a date as soon as I finish these truly spectacular drinks.â
âDrinks named just for you.â
He grins. âYou know it. Scary but seductive. And I have some seducing on tap.â
Probably with our new researcher. I push the sour feelings back. âHave fun.â
âOh, I intend to.â
Rebeccaâs warning look doesnât make any impression either. She grabs her coat off the empty seat. âOff to have dinner with my hubby. Heâs cooking tonight.â
I trudge to the office, takeout container in hand, ready for a little research of my own.
***
Excerpt from At the Ready by Sharon Michalove. Copyright 2023 by Sharon Michalove. Reproduced with permission from Sharon Michalove. All rights reserved.
Sharon Michalove writes romantic suspense and traditional mystery as well as being a published historian. After growing up in suburban Chicago, she spent most of her life in a medium-sized university town, working as an academic professional as well as teaching history. She was married to a composer and frequently uses her knowledge of music, history, and food to enrich her novels. A hockey fan, Sharon moved back to Chicago in 2017 so she could go to Blackhawks games and spend quality time at Eataly Chicago.
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