Deposit Slip
166 pages
English

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Je m'inscris

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Je m'inscris
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166 pages
English

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Description

This Gripping Legal Thriller Is a Perfect Summer ReadWhen Jared Neaton grew tired of the shady ethics of his big law firm and left to go out on his own, he never expected the wheels to fly off so quickly. One big case collapsing on him has pushed him to the brink and it's all he can do to scrape by. He can't risk another bad loss.Erin Larson is running out of options. In the wake of her father's death, she found a slim piece of paper--a deposit slip--with an unbelievable amount on it. Ten million dollars. Only the bank claims it has no record of the deposit and stonewalls her attempts to find out more. This lawsuit, her last chance, has brought only intimidation and threats. Now she needs to convince Jared to take a risk, to help her because the money is real. And both need to watch their backs as digging deeper unleashes something far more dangerous than just threats.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 juillet 2012
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781441259844
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0259€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

© 2012 by Todd M. Johnson
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2012
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means for example, electronic, photocopy, recording without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-4412-5984-4
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
The internet addresses, email addresses, and phone numbers in this book are accurate at the time of publication. They are provided as a resource. Baker Publishing Group does not endorse them or vouch for their content or permanence.
Cov er design by Lookout Design, Inc.
I dedicate this book to my incredible wife, Catherine, whose love is not dependent upon the tides of fortune; And to my daughter, Libby, and son, Ian with the prayer that this fruition of their father’s lifelong dream will encourage them to never lose faith in their own.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35 36
37 38 39 40 41 42
43 44 45 46 47 48
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Ad
Back Cover
1

S eated in the cool vault of the Mission Falls Bank, Erin switched on an overhead lamp and opened the lid to her father’s safe-deposit box. A faint smell of motor oil wafted up from inside. The scent of it launched an image across her memory one so real it startled her. It was her father on a hot summer morning, coming into the kitchen from working on the tractor, leaning down to kiss her on the neck as she ate her breakfast.
How did a sensation so brief carry so much power, Erin wondered. She could feel the wet brush of his lips, the scratch of his beard on the soft skin of her neck; feel his heavy hand squeezing her shoulder. She forced herself to hold back tears, huddling deeper under her jacket against the chill.
With an effort, she forced her thoughts away from the image, letting them fade softly away.
Only now, alone in the stillness of the vault, Erin feared what else the box could lay bare.
She had already let several weeks pass since her father’s funeral, and knew she had no choice. Erin reached into the gray metal container and lifted out its contents: a small stack of papers topped with a photograph.
She held the picture to the light. It showed a young woman holding in her arms an infant wrapped in a patterned blanket. The pattern was familiar Erin’s favorite. The woman was not. Erin knew it was her mother, Sandra, but memories of her mother were muted; mostly gathered from pictures like this one. But if the face was only distantly recognizable, the expression on it was unmistakable: she was smiling with the open heart of a new mother.
Erin held the photo to her nose, wondering whether some faint trace of her mother might be lodged there. There was nothing and, after another long look, Erin set it aside.
She turned next to the pile of papers, lifting and rapping them on the table to even them before setting the stack on the table and forcing herself to begin.
A deed to the family farm was on top. Calligraphy flowed across the oversized paper, dated 1924. Erin recognized the name of the purchaser as that of her great grandfather. Other documents followed: there was an aerial photograph of the property, yellowed invoices for farm equipment and long satisfied mortgages, followed by new mortgages all tracing the financial ups and downs of the farmstead. They culminated in the most current bank mortgage in her father’s name. She set the farm papers aside.
Next in the stack was her mother’s death certificate, dated eighteen years ago.
The certificate was stapled to a crumpled receipt on ancient stationery, made out to Paul Larson. It affirmed her father’s payment for upkeep on a gravesite “in perpetuity.” It was followed by Erin’s birth certificate, dated twenty-six years ago next month, clipped to her report cards from first through twelfth grades. Erin smiled. She would not have guessed her father still had these.
Near the bottom of the stack, Erin found a series of three-by-five photographs attached to more documents. Several of the fading snapshots showed groups of young men posing in khaki uniforms, their fatigue sleeves rolled up, silhouetted against a backdrop of jungle. The boys were grinning, cocky, with close-cropped hair and arms slung across each others’ shoulders. Erin recognized her father in the center of the top photo, a cigarette draped James Dean–style from the corner of his mouth.
The last photo was her father again, still in uniform. In this shot he stood alone. There were tents and a gun emplacement visible behind him. He looked older in this picture, Erin thought. He stared at the photographer with distant, unsmiling eyes, and the swagger was drained from his face and form.
Attached to the photographs was her father’s honorable discharge certificate. There followed documents relating to his hospitalization for the injuries that ended his second and last Vietnam tour.
Reaching the bottom, Erin turned the papers over into a single stack and carefully paged through them once more, looking at each document individually. When she was done, she felt herself relax beneath a wave of relief. That wasn’t so bad, she thought. She pulled a bag from her purse and slid all of the papers into an empty folder inside.
Erin stood and reached to close the box lid then stopped. In the bottom of the box was a single rectangular piece of paper she had missed.
It was not much larger than a movie ticket. She removed it and held it to the light. It was a printed form with faded purple type across the center. She leaned closer to read it.
It was a bank deposit slip drawn on the Ashley State Bank. The colored machine-print lettering was faded, but legible. The top line was a deposit date of February 10, 2008, a little over three years before. The second line appeared to be an account number.
Printed at the bottom of the form was a deposit total. Erin read the number again and again then realized that she had sat down once more.
The deposit total was 10.3 million dollars.
2

Seven Months Later Hennepin County Courthouse Minneapolis, Minnesota
T wenty minutes after eleven, and the bench was still empty. Lawyers’ time means nothing to a judge, Jared Neaton thought. Two lawyers him at a hundred seventy-five dollars an hour, his overdressed opponent three times that that was over two hundred dollars in billings for a judge twenty minutes late.
Phil Olney pushed Jared with his elbow. “When’s he coming?”
“Soon,” Jared assured him. But in the courtroom, the judge was the master of the universe. He’d arrive when he arrived. No point in fighting it you just had to learn to adjust.
“Counsel?” It was Blake Desmond, his opponent, seated at the next table, offering him a piece of paper that had slid onto the floor.
Jared thanked him with a nod, but thought, Don’t get friendly with me now. When Jared entered the courtroom half an hour ago, Desmond wouldn’t even accept his hand. He was one of those lawyers who had to show his client how tough he was. His type prowled the halls of the five Tigers, the biggest firms in the Twin Cities. With his thousand-dollar suit and Gucci shoes, Desmond exemplified the worst of the breed.
Jared glanced at his client. It had only been three days since Phil’s world took a significant turn for the worse when he’d stumbled over a second set of books his brother, Russell, had been keeping for the check cashing business they ran. The records revealed a secret bank account in Russell’s name holding $110,000 from the brothers’ business.
That discovery was upsetting enough. The crowning insult was the new Lexus Phil saw in Russell’s garage when he went over to his house to confront him. With a wife, two kids under six, and a mortgage two months overdue, Phil’s fury almost got him jailed.
He arrived at Jared’s office on the advice of another of Jared’s clients. Over three long days and nights, Jared had earned every penny of Phil’s three-thousand-dollar retainer check preparing a motion for a temporary restraining order to freeze bank accounts, pulling together affidavits, summarizing financials, preparing the backstory, and organizing an argument why the court should grant the TRO.
The arrival of this case and retainer had been welcome. Jared needed the money, and not having to wait thirty days to earn it was especially good news this month.
The panel door behind the judge’s bench opened. A matronly calendar clerk stepped through, a docket sheet clutched in her hand.
“Mr. Neaton,” she called, as she dropped into her seat, “are you still with Paisley, Bowman, Battle, and Rhodes? Because we have you listed at the Paisley firm.”
“No,” Jared answered, explaining that he was on his own now. The Neaton Law Firm.
Desmond stiffened slightly and turned to Jared. “When were you with Paisley? Did you know Michael Strummer?”
“Two years ago, and yes,” Jared tossed back, before turning to dig into his briefcase for an imaginary document. It was too late for respect.
Jared glanced at his fidgeting client, then settled back in his chair and tried to look calm enough for both of them. It took practice to project confidence while waiting for a motion he was likely to lose.
Another nudge from his client. The panel

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