6
Erin was not what Jared had expected. She met him in front of the farmhouse wrapped in a white ski jacket, wearing jeans and a baseball cap. She was slim and pretty, with curly auburn hair bunched in a ponytail. It took a few seconds before he realized what it was: There was too much “city” about her, standing in the shadow of the silo. She didn’t fit against the backdrop of acres of broken soil.
The farm lay at the end of a long rutted driveway off of County Road 3. It was marked by a weathered wooden board with Larson burned on its surface in a child’s lettering. Next to the mailbox was a For Sale sign from Ashley Realty.
The farm was a mix of care and wear. The bright red barn looked recently painted, but a stack of bricks marked unfinished repairs on its masonry foundation. The livestock pens were even and square, but missing fence planks made the empty pens unusable.
A sedan sat parked at the side of the house. Jared saw that the windshield was a shattered web of cracked glass.
He followed her through the side door. Once inside the house, Erin seemed more suited to the surroundings. She moved familiarly around the kitchen, setting store-bought cookies on the breakfast table with cream and sugar. Jared noticed that she referred to the farm as her father’s and never her own.
For a while they sat at the kitchen table with cups of steaming coffee, asking about common acquaintances from Ashley. It was a short exercise, as neither had many names to share, and it quickly became apparent to Jared why he hadn’t known her. Erin was two years behind him in school, and as Mort had said, she’d left Ashley High after ninth grade to finish in the Twin Cities.
“Right before tenth grade, my aunt Karen—she was Mom’s sister—offered to pay my tuition to Trinity High School in the Twin Cities. I jumped at the chance,” she said, describing the loneliness of growing up on a farm without a mother. Her father doted, she explained, but was quiet and withdrawn. When her aunt’s invitation arrived, her father didn’t resist. It must have been obvious she wanted to leave.
“I loved him dearly,” she sighed, “but I hated the farm. And in the end, the farm was all he had. I was fifteen, old enough to know my leaving would be hard for him. But I couldn’t stay. It was high school, you know? Dad offered me a car—because of the isolation—but that wasn’t enough. I wanted to be somewhere, and this farm was a corner of nowhere. It was quiet all the time with just the two of us. Just the chores and each other.”
She looked out the window and Jared followed her gaze. Beyond a pine in the yard, there wasn’t another break on the horizon for miles over the tossed soil.
Jared steered her away from the guilt-filled memories, asking what she did after high school.
She told him she finished college at the U of M, then went to work in advertising. She now had an apartment near the river in Minneapolis.
“I used to get up to Ashley every few months. Father was so grateful to see me, but there was always the parting a few days later.” The strain in her voice deepened. “I hadn’t spoken with him for a while before he died.”
What kind of man was her dad, Jared asked.
Erin went quiet for a time. “When I was very young, I wondered why he wasn’t a senator or the president. Maybe that’s how every girl feels about her father at that age, especially if he’s kind and gentle. Even without a mom, he tried hard to raise me like a daughter. When I went away to school, he never made me feel guilty.
“I always thought of him as this quiet, honest farmer and a war hero. He worked dawn to dusk, never complained, paid his bills. Treated people decently. When I was older, I knew that he had some rough times financially, but I never knew it growing up. That’s the kind of man I thought my father was.”
She paused, her face flat with an effort at composure. “But suddenly he’s gone, and I find this deposit slip. So what am I supposed to think now?”
No answer was expected, and Jared wouldn’t have shared the thought that came to mind anyway. He pressed on.
“Did your dad have any social life? People he spent time with?”
They used to belong to the Lutheran church, she explained, but after her mother died, they hardly went. There were the neighbors on the surrounding farms. He’d see them, help them out or get help in return on occasion. And he’d go to the Legion Hall sometimes. But few people came to the memorial service, and most of them she didn’t recognize.
“Any ideas about the money? Rich uncle pass away? Oil found on an old family plot? Thirty-year-old Apple shares surface?”
She rewarded him with a smile and a light laugh. “No. Nothing I know about. He didn’t have many relatives and fewer he kept in touch with. Just Aunt Karen—my mother’s sister.”
“No midnight calls from your dad three years ago talking about a windfall?”
“No.”
It was time to ask. “What do you want out of this lawsuit?”
It was the question that told the most about a client. Some groped for answers they thought their lawyer wanted to hear. Others told the truth, at least the truth of the moment. Even if they told the truth, clients’ desires from a lawsuit differed so much. Some wanted “justice”; others, just a chance to tell their story in court. Sometimes it was only about the money. And appetites evolved in a lawsuit. Jared had seen the meekest client morph into a Wall Street banker when it came to cash.
“I want to know what happened—where the deposit came from,” she answered, her voice growing stronger as she continued. “I want to know what it was all about. If the money was my father’s, I want it back. No matter what, I don’t want the bank to keep it.”
Her final statement came in a flat voice of resolve. It was a good answer, Jared thought, from a courtroom perspective. She didn’t claim she would fund an orphanage or try to end world hunger. He never trusted the self-righteous types—juries saw through them or they collapsed under cross-examination. There was no false bravado in Erin’s voice or face. Her goals were plain, believable, fair.
Juries were like sports fans: they wanted to pick sides. A jury would like Erin. It didn’t hurt that juries hated banks—almost as much as they despised insurance companies and lawyers.
Jared looked across the table at Erin, her hands wrapped around the cooling coffee mug. Her face said everything—the sad, small curve of her mouth and the mix of guilt and pain in her eyes. He understood her need to know about the source of the money.
“Where do you think the money came from?” he asked at last.
“I don’t know.” She shook her head slowly.
“You must have thought about it.”
Hesitation. “Yes, but I haven’t figured anything out.”
Jared glanced through the window at the car parked outside. “Someone thinks you don’t deserve the money.”
She grimaced. “The paper has an article a week about the suit, and they usually take the bank’s side. They make it sound like I’m trying to shut down the town. I never expected this kind of reaction. Not in Ashley.”
“Are you frightened?”
“No. At least . . . I wasn’t.”
“You know, apart from the harassment—there’s another risk if you keep going with the case now. You, or the estate, could get sanctioned if you lose.”
Erin shrugged. “I know about the Rule 11 business. I don’t care if they sanction me. I’m broke. The farm’s in foreclosure—by the bank, of all things. I’m trying to sell it, but no one’s shown any interest. There’s some equipment and a little livestock. The farmer who leased the land this summer is taking care of that now. But there’s not much to lose.”
Jared was silent for a few moments before Erin asked, “So are you interested in the case?”
The question shook him back into a cold sense of reality. Of course he was interested in a ten-million-dollar case. Even if it turned out the deposit was government money—or came from some other source—Jared knew he’d likely be able to keep a fee for recovering it. But first they had to recover it. And Erin had no concept of where Jared was financially or the impact of his Wheeler case. His gut twisted at another risky war against a team like Stanford and his pit bull Whittier. Especially one up here in Ashley.
He looked at Erin. She had taken his mug to the counter to refill it during his silence. He liked her and so far he believed her. He definitely liked the idea of a fight against a bank stealing money from a farmer—even illegal money.
Jared surveyed the room. It looked vintage seventies; probably when it was last remodeled. Maybe by Erin’s mother. The cabinets were pine, the scarred sink porcelain, and the counters lime green. A cookie jar in the shape of a bear sat on the window ledge over the sink. It echoed from back before the Larson family suffered the loss of a young man’s wife and the theft of a young girl’s mother. He wondered how much Paul Larson had changed after that. Was the father Erin knew when this room was frozen in time the same man who walked into a bank twenty years later with ten million dollars?
“I don’t know,” Jared answered when Erin sat down once more. “I need to do some research.”
Her voice grew strained. “You know I have until next Wednesday to find a new lawyer.”
“I know.”
She shook her head, her eyes fading to resignation. “It’s not fair.”
The look made him want to say yes. It was definitely time to go. Jared stood and reached for his jacket.
“I assume you want me to handle this on a contingent fee basis,” he said awkwardly. “I typically keep one-third of the recovery as my fees, and I cover the costs.”
She shrugged. “I have no other way to pay you. I’m living off savings and a couple of small life insurance policies my father had, and that’s running out.”
Jared nodded as he slipped on his coat. “All right. I’ll get back to you Monday.”
She looked him directly in the eye. “I’m not sure who to trust anymore. What advice to accept. Since I found this deposit slip, everything seems like it’s about the money. Is it?”
Jared didn’t respond and she didn’t press.
They parted in the yard shaking hands. As Jared drove away, he thought about the moment. Surrounded by bare fields, vacant pens, and the stillness of the barren farmyard, the suddenness of her warm skin felt like a fire in a cold and empty room.
The Deposit Slip
Todd M. Johnson's books
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