go?â
âIt was very contentious. Karl has taken leave of his senses. Heâs calling an emergency town meeting, or threatened to.â
âOh I see, youâre trying to inform me of the latest bombardment like itâs a routine event, like the gardener not showing up. Well itâs not. And Iâm not going to sit here week after week while you wreak havoc with the town. Itâs giving me an ulcer.â
âHeâs giving me one too.â
âYou love it when things heat up. I donât. And Iâm not going to spar anymore.â
Archer reached for his phone and made a call, leaving a voicemail while Miranda glared.
âTed, itâs Archer. Call me ASAP. Weâre having a problem with Mirandaâs service on the Conservation Commission. She says Karl Anderson, the Chairman, is calling an emergency town meeting to stop her plan to sell the Pierce Estate. This is getting out of hand, and I want to know what to do about it.â
âYou didnât have to do that. Iâm not doing anything illegal,â Miranda said.
âThatâs what you say.â
âYou wonât give me the benefit of the doubt?â
âWe both know that this is personal. Youâre baiting him.â
âSo youâre siding with him?â
âYou canât help yourself. You want to convince the town of Lincoln that youâre smarter than him, and you want to do it at an emergency town meeting. And we both know what youâre capable of in a situation like that.â
Archer sat back in his chair smugly, arms crossed across his chest, and waited for her to let loose with polysyllabic insults. She restrained herself and walked upstairs to the den, the only room with a TV, and watched sailing races on ESPN with Asa for an hour, then put him to bed. Then she went into her auxiliary bedroom and closed the door. A few minutes later she heard Archer come upstairs.
âWe have an appointment with Ted at 10:30 tomorrow,â he said from the hallway.
After Archer was in their bedroom suite with the door closed, she went down to her study and spent three hours researching the ethical issues surrounding the attorney-client relationship.
In the morning Miranda made breakfast, steel-cut oatmeal and carrot juice, as usual. Archer and the boys sat at the kitchen table; she could not bring herself to look at him and sat on a bar stool behind the island.
âWhat are you doing?â Cody asked her.
âIâm thinking. Finish up.â
âI suppose Iâll be seeing you at 10:30, right?â asked Archer as he grabbed his briefcase.
âIâll be there.â
âFine, see you then.â
Miranda drove downtown after the rush-hour traffic had died down, stopping at Rebeccaâs on the way.
She quickly got to the point. âKarl Anderson resigned from the bench and went back to teaching,â Miranda said. âIt means he canât stand conflict.â
âThatâs why we lost the Back Bay,â Rebecca replied. âThere were times we could have raised hell about the students and the high taxes and the city letting B.U. build dorms on Bay State Road. We didnât. Nobody had the stomach for it.â
âThey hadnât served in war?â
âYouâre damn right,â said Rebecca. âWeâve got it too easy in this country. Everybody expects things to be handed to them: benefits, subsidies, rights.â
âIs Archer going to leave me?â
âNo. He loves you. Youâre the only woman who can keep up with him intellectually. Youâve got some sort of power over him. Maybe itâs in the bedroom.â
Miranda laughed.
âHeâs taking me in to see Ted McFarland, his lawyer, for Godâs sake. This could be the beginning of the divorce for all I know.â
âHe doesnât have the guts to divorce you.â
Miranda left and drove on to One New England Center, the downtown office
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