The Dom Perignon was still in the refrigerator when Zane's assistant called on Tuesday morning.
Not a summons — she said "Mr. Zane would like to see you at two, if you're available." The if you're available was courtesy. At Zane & Associates, that phrasing ant you were available.
I spent the morning on post-verdict correspondence — settlent confirmation, damages allocation mo for the families, a note to Maria ndez explaining the disbursent tiline. The kind of paperwork that ca after a win and reminded you wins had administrative tails. By noon my back ached from the chair and I'd gone through two cups of coffee and a granola bar from the bottom of my desk drawer that had probably been there since October.
[ Win Rate Calculator: Post-trial status. No active cases requiring assessnt. Passive monitoring. ]
I dismissed it and went to lunch.
Zane's corner office occupied the northeast quadrant of the fortieth floor and had a view of the East River that cost about $400 per square foot of rent. He was standing at the window when his assistant showed in, hands in his pockets, and he turned the way he always turned — unhurried, like the room had been waiting on him specifically.
He gestured to the chair across from his desk. Then he slid a docunt across the mahogany without ceremony.
I picked it up and read it. Not because I doubted him. Because I'm a lawyer.
Partnership agreent. Full equity, voting rights, profit-sharing comnsurate with billable production. The na on the letterhead — in draft, pending execution — read Zane & Roden.
"You won the hardest case this firm has ever taken," Zane said. He didn't sit. He stayed standing, which was its own form of respect — acknowledging this was a mont worth standing for. "You built the strategy alone. You withstood a mid-trial crisis that would have broken most senior partners, not just associates, and you ca back from 42% probability against Jessica Pearson, who does not lose." He paused. "I didn't hire you to be a senior associate indefinitely, Scott. I hired you because I saw a partner. The agreent reflects that."
I turned to the compensation section. The number was higher than I'd expected.
"The buy-in," I said.
"Waived. Your contribution to firm revenue over eighteen months qualifies as equity. My accountant worked it out." He sat down finally. "If you need ti to review—"
"I don't." I reached for the pen on his desk. Found the signature line and signed it. Slid it back.
Zane looked at the docunt. Sothing moved through his face — not sentintality, not quite. More like a man seeing a long-held expectation confird. He picked up his own pen and countersigned.
"When I arrived at this firm," I said, "I thought it was second-best. A consolation prize for losing sowhere else." My voice ca out steadier than I expected. "I was wrong. This is where I was supposed to be."
Zane reached across the desk and shook my hand. Firm, brief, complete.
"The na change goes to the printer on Monday," he said. "I'd like you in the forty-first floor office by end of month. Sarah Chen will need transition ti if you're taking over her ntorship — I'll leave that conversation to you."
"Understood."
"One more thing." He opened a desk drawer and produced a bottle — a Barolo, not Scotch, which was a considered choice. He poured two glasses and pushed one toward . "I don't do speeches. But I will say this: the Huntley decision, the transfer of evidence, the call you made when it would have been easier and more profitable not to make it — I noticed. I've always noticed. That's what a partner at this firm looks like." He raised his glass. "Welco, Scott."
We drank. The Barolo was extraordinary.
My first call was to Donna.
She picked up on the second ring, voice slightly muffled — she was at her desk and her office door was probably open, which ant Harvey's was too.
"He offered it," I said.
A pause.
"I signed twenty minutes ago." I leaned against the window of the office that wasn't mine yet, looking out at a city that looked the sa as it always did and felt different than it ever had. "Zane & Roden. It goes to print Monday."
The silence on her end lasted exactly three seconds.
When she spoke, her voice was doing the thing it did when she was trying not to cry in a place where crying wasn't an option. Controlled, but only barely. "You did it. You actually did it."
"We did it. You found the mo that saved the trial. This partnership has your fingerprints on it."
A short laugh — genuine, not performative, the real one she didn't use at work. "Don't make cry at work, Roden. Harvey will think soone died."
"Is he in his office?"
"He's been in his office all morning brooding about the Hessington verdict. He doesn't brood well." A small pause. "I'm so proud of you. I need you to know that."
"I know."
"Good." She exhaled, steadying herself. "Go do sothing appropriately understated to celebrate."
"There's an adequate granola bar in my desk—"
"I'm hanging up now."
The line went quiet.
[ Win Rate Calculator: Career Trajectory — Partnership achieved. Principle Over Tactics pathway. Professional reputation: Established. Next milestone: Unlocked. ]
I looked at the notification and then looked at the skyline, and dismissed it. So monts were just monts. They didn't need a percentage attached.
Sarah Chen appeared in the office doorway at four.
She was twenty-eight, two years into her second posting after clerking for a federal judge who'd called Zane directly to recomnd her. She'd been second chair on three of my cases in the past year, and first chair on two of her own. News traveled fast in any firm.
"Is it true?" she asked.
"Partner. Nad." I looked up from the correspondence I was still working through. "Sit down for a second."
She ca in and sat, holding a legal pad she'd brought out of habit and didn't need. Her expression was doing the thing junior lawyers' expressions did when they were calculating implications — happy for you, imdiately anxious about their own positioning.
"The ridian eting," I said. "Three weeks ago. When their CEO was being deliberately difficult and you redirected the entire conversation by referencing a precedent he thought he knew and didn't."
She blinked. "You were on the phone."
"I was on hold. I was listening." I set down my pen. "When I make partner, I'm going to need a senior associate who can run my cases when I'm in court. Handle hostile clients. Doesn't need at the door to function." I paused. "You're already doing that job. I'd like to make it official."
The calculation in her face resolved into sothing cleaner.
"Congratulations, Scott." She stood up. "You've deserved this since the month I arrived."
After she left, I called Louis.
He answered imdiately, which with Louis ant he'd been near the phone. "Tell you're calling to tell what I think you're calling to tell ."
"Partner. Nad. Zane & Roden."
The silence lasted approximately half a second.
"PARTNER? You're a NAD PARTNER? Scott, this is — I need to — what's your ring size? No, that's insane. I'm sending champagne. The good champagne. Not the kind Harvey keeps in his office, BETTER than the kind Harvey keeps in his office. I have a contact at Sherry-Lehmann who owes a favor from the Casablanca arbitration, this is exactly the mont for that favor—"
"Louis."
"—and I want you to know that when I told Jessica Pearson last August that you were going to be one of the best litigators in this city, she looked at like I was reading tabloid horoscopes, and I would like to formally register my satisfaction at having been correct—"
"Louis."
"—yes?"
"Thank you."
A beat. When he spoke again his voice was different — quieter, the one he used when he'd set down the performance.
"You earned it," he said. "Every bit of it. I watched you build that from the ground up and I know what it cost. I'm happy for you, Scott. I genuinely am."
"I know you are. That ans sothing."
A courier arrived at the apartnt at 7:43 PM carrying a temperature-controlled case with a single bottle of 2006 Dom Perignon and a card in Louis's unmistakable handwriting: For the newest nad partner in Manhattan. Don't share it with Harvey.
Donna was already in the kitchen when the buzzer rang. She read the card and laughed hard enough that she had to set it down.
We sat on the couch afterward with the glasses and the partnership agreent on the coffee table between us and the bottle opened, and the city doing what Manhattan did after eight PM — filling itself with the sound of other people's lives going forward.
She had her legs folded under her and a glass in her hand and she was looking at the agreent the way she sotis looked at things that had taken a long ti to arrive.
"Next step?" she said.
I looked at her and thought: there's a jeweler on 47th Street that Louis ntioned once, completely casually, during a conversation that was about sothing else entirely. I'd filed the information with the sa instinct I filed everything — because you never knew when a detail mattered.
"There are a few things I'm waiting on," I said.
She looked at , reading my face with the accuracy she'd always had.
"How patient do you need to be?"
"Not very."
She nodded and finished her champagne.
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