building where she had seen Anthony Zenni, parked in the $20 valet line and went up to the plush lobby of Adams & Threlkeld, the 350-lawyer powerhouse where Ted McFarland was a litigation partner. Archer was already there, seated on a coffee-colored leather couch and reading The Boston Globe . She sat down near him but far enough down so that he could not see what was on her laptop screen.
âHeâs running a little late, tied up in court,â he said.
âWhoâs paying for this?â
âNobody, heâs a friend.â
âHeâs sent us bills in the past.â
âNominal, just to appease his managing partner.â
âI see, so heâs kept it informal.â
âVery.â
âIâll remind him of that when he starts to threaten litigation.â
She picked up one of the firmâs glossy pamphlets from the coffee table.
There was a full-page profile for each partner, and Ted had a decade-old photo of himself above his career chronology:
1982 - Enters Harvard Law School
1985 - Graduates magna cum laude, editor of The Journal of Law and Economics
1985 - Clerkship for the Hon. Joseph T. Rubin, Third Circuit Court of Appeals, Philadelphia
1992 - Becomes partner at Adams & Threlkeld
2002 - Argues Federated Industries v. Kellerman, landmark securities case in the U.S. Supreme Court
She pulled out her red pen and wrote âAND LOST 7-2â beneath it. Then she added:
2000 - Joins A.A. (Wellesley Hills chapter)
2004 - Misses his fatherâs funeral for a deposition
2007 - Leaves wife for twenty-four-year-old graduate student
2008 - Finalizes merciless divorce decree after threatening ex-wife with disclosure of her manic depression
Then she put the pamphlet down and discreetly picked up another one so as not to draw Archerâs attention. She had introduced her point of view in four pamphlets by the time she saw Ted, six foot four, dressed in a loose-fitting poplin suit, show up at the other end of the room and wave. He wore rimless glasses hooked over steel-gray temples and had a dashing but diplomatic aura of strength. Had she met him twenty years ago, she would have been drawn to him, as other women still were.
âHi folks, Iâm terribly sorry, court, you know. Lateness comes with the job.â
âNo problem, old boy,â said Archer.
âCan I get you something? Weâve got Starbucksâ new blonde roast, you know, less potent.â
âIâm fine,â he responded.
âIâll take a cup,â she said, wondering if he would fetch it himself. He ignored her request and simply led them down a spiral staircase and a hallway to his office. He sat at a chair across the room from his massive desk and motioned for them to take seats at the couch. Miranda reached into her handbag and touched her cell phone, starting the voice notes recording function.
âThis seems like a more seemly place to talk to old friends.â
He made small talk about the boys and golf. His son was nine, already enjoying the game. He confessed to hitting a ball into a pond at the twelfth hole in Brookline.
âYou used to play a decent game,â he said to Archer.
âNot anymore,â said Archer. âTennis and our boat, thatâs enough. I spend more time writing now.â
âAnd I help with the economic analysis of urban development,â she said.
âI didnât know that. What exactly do you do?â
âRegression analysis on data to find the missing links in the reasoning. For example, data on the development of sewer systems in Brooklyn is sketchy. It was an independent city back then and it just didnât keep the records. I told Archer how statistics could predict how long it would have taken for the second and third stages to be built. Once he had that, the rest of his thesis fell into place.â
âItâs true, she runs circles around me in statistics.â
âAnd economics,â she
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