The Appeal

Read The Appeal for Free Online

Book: Read The Appeal for Free Online
Authors: John Grisham
Tags: Fiction, legal thriller
from the trial?” she finally asked.
    “The jury nailed us,” he said.
    “I’m so sorry.”
    “We’re fine.”
    “How much?”
    “Forty-one million.”
    “Those ignorant people.”
    Carl told her little about the complicated and mysterious world of the Trudeau Group. She had her charities and causes and lunches and trainers, and that kept her busy. He didn’t want and didn’t tolerate too many questions.
    Brianna had checked online and knew exactly what the jury decided. She knew what the lawyers were saying about the appeal, and she knew Krane’s stock would take a major hit early the next morning. She did her research and kept her secret notes. She wasgorgeous and thin, but she was not stupid. Carl was on the phone.
    The MuAb building was a few blocks south, between Fifth and Madison. As the traffic inched closer, they could see the popping flashes of a hundred cameras. Brianna perked up, crunched her perfect abs, brought her new additions to attention, and said, “God, I hate those people.”
    “Who?”
    “All those photographers.”
    He snickered at the obvious lie. The car stopped and an attendant in a tuxedo opened the door as the cameras swung to the black Bentley. The great Carl Trudeau popped out without a smile, then the legs followed. Brianna knew precisely how to give the photographers, and thus the gossip pages and maybe, just maybe, a fashion magazine or two, what they wanted—miles of sensuous flesh without revealing everything. The right foot landed first, shoed with Jimmy Choo at a hundred bucks per toe, and as she expertly swung around, the coat opened and Valentino cooperated upward and the whole world saw the real benefit of being a billionaire and owning a trophy.
    Arm in arm they glided across the red carpet, waving at the photographers and ignoring the handful of reporters, one of whom had the audacity to yell, “Hey, Carl, any comment on the verdict in Mississippi?” Carl of course did not hear, or pretended not to. But his pace quickened slightly and they were soon inside, on somewhat safer turf. He hoped. They were greeted by paidgreeters; coats were taken; smiles were offered; friendly cameras appeared; old pals materialized; and they were soon lost in the warm cluster of seriously rich people pretending to enjoy one another’s company.
    Brianna found her soul mate, another anorexic trophy with the same unusual body—everything superbly starved but the ridiculous breasts. Carl went straight for the bar, and almost made it before he was practically tackled by the one jerk he hoped to avoid. “Carl, ole boy, bad news down south I hear,” the man boomed as loudly as possible.
    “Yes, very bad,” Carl said in a much lower voice as he grabbed a champagne flute and began to drain it.
    Pete Flint was number 228 on the
Forbes
list of the 400 richest Americans. Carl was number 310, and each man knew exactly where the other fit on the roster. Numbers 87 and 141 were also in the crowd, along with a host of unranked contenders.
    “Thought your boys had things under control,” Flint pressed on, slurping a tall glass full of either scotch or bourbon. He somehow managed a frown while working hard to conceal his delight.
    “Yes, we thought so, too,” Carl said, wishing he could slap the fat jowls twelve inches away.
    “What about the appeal?” Flint asked gravely.
    “We’re in great shape.”
    At last year’s auction, Flint had valiantly hung on to the frenzied end and walked away with the
Brain After Gunshot
, a $6 million artistic waste but one thatlaunched the MuAb’s current capital campaign. No doubt he would be in the hunt for tonight’s grand prize.
    “Good thing we shorted Krane last week,” he said.
    Carl started to curse him but kept his cool. Flint ran a hedge fund famous for its daring. Had he really shorted Krane Chemical in anticipation of a bad verdict? Carl’s puzzled glare concealed nothing.
    “Oh yes,” Flint went on, pulling on his glass and smacking his

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