
She drained half her glass before answering. “My victim isn’t just scum, he’s dead scum, and Jo-Jo is cute and stupid. The women jurists looked at him, Linds, like they wanted to breast-feed him.”
I’d stopped by the courtroom to watch Yuki’s closing argument, and I had to agree. Dr. Lincoln Harris was dead slime, and while Jo-Jo Johnson was hardly better-he was alive. And he looked like a man without a clue.
“Asher could actually win,” Yuki wailed. “I quit private practice for this? Help me, Linds. Should I find a good-paying job in a corporate law firm?”
My phone vibrated on my hip again. I looked down at the caller ID. Jacobi. My ex-partner and current boss, whose gut reaction to everything is to call me. Old habits die hard. I keyed the button and said, “Boxer,” into the mouthpiece.
“There’s been a double homicide, Lindsay. It’s got ‘psycho’ written all over it.”
“Did you call Paul Chi? He’s back from vacation. I’ll bet he’s home right now.”
“I want you on this,” Jacobi growled.
After more than ten years of working together, we were almost able to read each other’s mind. Jacobi sounded freaked out, like someone had walked over his grave.
“What’s this about, Warren?” I asked him, already knowing my best-laid plans for the evening were shot.
“One of the vics is a young kid,” Jacobi said.
He gave me the address-the parking garage near the galleria. “Conklin just left. He’ll be there in a couple of minutes.”
“I’m on my way,” I told him.
Chapter 8
I CLOSED MY phone and promised Yuki a longer, better talk about her career after the jury came back. I said, “Your closing was outstanding, girlfriend. Don’t quit.” I kissed her cheek and fled the bar.
