The Partner (Grisham novel)

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The Partner
First edition cover
AuthorJohn Grisham
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Subjectlaw
GenreLegal thriller
PublisherDoubleday
Publication date
1997
Published in English
1997
Media typeHardcover, paperback
Pages412
ISBN0-385-47295-1
OCLC38277014
813/.54 21
LC ClassPS3557.R5355 P35 1997

The Partner (1997) is a legal/thriller novel by noted American author John Grisham. It was Grisham's eighth novel.

Plot

The book in effect begins where several other Grisham novels (The Firm, The Runaway Jury, The Racketeer) end - i.e. with the protagonist getting possession of a large sum of money and managing to spirit it away to off-shore banking accounts. As the present book shows, that does not automatically guarantee a Happy ending, since the protagonist's past might catch up with him or her in unpleasant ways.

The book begins with a band of American and Brazilian thugs locating a man they had long hunted in south Brazil, and proceeding to kidnap him and subject him to severe electrical shocks in order to extract information about the whereabouts of a sum of million Dollars he had taken.As the plot continues, the reader gradually discovers what had gone before - though some some points of the past events are only clarified at the very end.

Four years earlier Patrick Lanigan, a junior partner in a law firm in Biloxi, Mississippi, gets wind of a plan masterminded by shipbuilding magnate Benny Aricia to defraud the U.S. government through an overcharging scheme. His firm is deeply involved in the scam and stands to gain $30 million, yet plans to keep Patrick from sharing the profits. He bides his time, secretly collecting evidence. He knows that simply stealing the money and running won't work, so he feigns his own death in an automobile accident. When the body is found, it is identified as Patrick, though it is badly burned, and subsequently cremated. Patrick watches his own funeral from a safe distance. His wife Trudy received $2.5 million in life insurance.

Although he pretended not to know, Trudy had been cheating on him throughout their marriage, and his daughter was the result of that relationship.

Six weeks later, $90 million vanishes from the law firm's off-shore bank account. The associates know that only an insider had the knowledge to pull it off and eventually they start wondering if Patrick is really dead after all. Without the money, the associates and Benny Aricia are in deep financial trouble. Benny hires specialist Jack Stephano to track down Patrick.

Over four years later, Patrick is finally discovered living a new life in Ponta Porã, Brazil, a small town on the border of Paraguay under the name Danilo Silva. His girlfriend is Brazilian lawyer Eva Miranda. Patrick is kidnapped and tortured by thugs hired by Jack Stephano. They try to get him to reveal the location of the money, which, conveniently, Lanigan doesn't know. Before he is tortured more or even killed, the FBI intervenes (tipped off by Eva). The FBI leans on Jack Stephano to hand over the fugitive and Patrick is repatriated. After arriving back in Biloxi in custody of the FBI, a series of legal battles ensue.

The insurance companies Monarch-Sierra and Northern Case Mutual that paid $2.5 million to Trudy, who has subsequently been a complete spendthrift as well as openly resuming her once-adulterous relationship, immediately sue and block access to the insurance money. Trudy is now in a difficult position, as she can no longer afford even the most basic trappings of her extravagant lifestyle. She sues Patrick for divorce, in hopes of receiving some financial compensation. The federal government sues Patrick for theft and fraud on charges of stealing the $90 million. The state charges Patrick with murder, because a dead body was found in Patrick's car.

One by one he defeats his opponents. He defeats the insurance companies by revealing that they colluded with Benny Aricia to find and torture Patrick. Confronted with this, they agree to let Trudy keep the insurance money, which satisfies her as well. He convinces the federal government by revealing that Benny Aricia defrauded them. An additional inducement to the Federals is that Patrick, having systematically wired the office of his former partners, has evidence implicating a senior Mississippi Senator who is on bad terms with the current Administration. It is hinted that at one point the affair got to the personal attention of the President, who instructed The FBI and Attorney General to lay off Lanigan in exchange for nailing the Senator. He agrees to give back the Federal government 113 million Dollars (the original 90 millions plus interest) which still leaves him with some twenty million Dollars accumulated during these past four years.

With the Federal government out of the picture, Lanigan finally he defeats the state lawsuit by revealing that he didn't murder anyone. The body he used was that of a former client of his, who had already died from natural causes. He makes a deal with the federal government to pay back all the money he stole, plus interest. In the years that he was on the run he had instructed Eva to invest the money. Even after his debts are paid, there are still millions left.

In the end, however, Patrick is defeated by his own clever scheme. As he knew he would be tortured if he was found, he gave Eva control over the bank accounts. When he goes to their pre-arranged rendezvous she does not show up. Finally he realizes that she has betrayed him, and that he will never find her (because he himself taught her how to disappear). Penniless and heartbroken, he heads back to his home in Brazil, where he would survive as an English teacher.

The book gives no clue to the reasons for Eva Miranda's treachery; in the scenes where the reader is given access to her thoughts, she seems deeply in love with Patrick and completely loyal and devoted to him. Moreover, she did honor Patrick's deal with the FBI and transfered 113 miilion Dollars to the US government, when she could have stolen that money as well.

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References