Saturday, 17 December 2011

2 THE MYSTERIOUS VISITOR


                         

It was an emergency meeting of all of the firm's members.   As we
squeezed into the main boardroom,  I   could tell that there was a
serious problem.       Old man Harding was the first to speak to the
assembled mass.
     "I'm afraid I have some very bad news.   Julian Mantle suffered
a severe heart attack in court yesterday while he was arguing the
Air Atlantic case.   He is currently in the intensive care unit, but his
physicians have informed me that his condition has now stabilized
and he will recover.   However, Julian has made a decision, one that
I think you all must know.   He has decided to leave our family and
to give up his law practice.   He will not be returning to the firm."
     I was shocked. I knew he was having his share of troubles, but
I never thought he would quit As well, after all that we had been
through, I thought he should have had the courtesy to tell me this
personally. He wouldn't even let me see him at the hospital. Every
time I dropped by, the nurses had been instructed             to tell me that
he was sleeping and could not be disturbed. He even refused to take
my telephone calls. Maybe I reminded him of the life he wanted to
forget Who knows? I'll tell you one thing though. It hurt .


     That whole   episode  was just   over   three   years   ago.   Last   I 
heard, Julian had headed off to India on some kind of an expedi- 
tion.  He told one of the partner s that he wanted to simplify his 
life and that he "needed some answers", and hoped he would find 
them in that mystical land.  He had  sold his mansion,  his plane 
and   his   private   island.   He   had   even   sold   his   Ferrari .   "Julian 
Mantle  as  an   Indian yogi,"  I   thought .  "The   Law works  in   the 
most mysterious of ways." 

     As those three years passed,  I changed from an overworked 
young lawyer to a jaded, somewhat cynical older lawyer. My wife 
Jenny and I had a family. Eventually, I began my own search for 
meaning. I think it was having kids that did it. They fundamentally 
changed the way I saw the world and my role in it. My dad said it 
best when he said, "John, on your deathbed you will never wish 
you spent more time at the office." So I started spending a little 
more time at home. I settled into a pretty good, if ordinary, exis- 
tence.  I joined the Rotary Club and played golf on Saturdays to 
keep my partners and clients happy. But I must tell you, in my 
quiet moments I often thought of Julian and wondered what had 
become   of him   in   the   years  since  we   had  unexpectedly parted 
company. 

     Perhaps he had settled down in India, a place so diverse that 
even a restless soul like his could have made it his home. Or maybe 
he was trekking through  Nepal?  Scuba diving off the Caymans? 
One thing was certain : he had not returned to the legal profession. 
No one had received even a postcard from him since he left for his 
self-imposed exile from the Law. 

     A knock on my door about two months ago offered the first 
answers to  some of my questions .  I   had just met with my last 
client   of   a  gruelling   day   when    Genevieve,      my   brainy    legal 


assistant,  popped her head into my small,  elegantly furnished 
office. 
     "There's someone here to see you, John. He says it's urgent 
and that he will not leave until he speaks with you." 
     "I'm on my way out the door, Genevieve," I replied impatiently. 
"I'm going to grab a bite to eat before finishing off the Hamilton 
brief. I don't have time to see anyone right now. Tell him to make 
an appointment like everyone else, and call security if he gives you 
any more trouble." 
     "But he says he really needs to see you. He refuses to take no 
for an answer!" 
     For   an   instant   I  considered    calling   security   myself,   but, 
realizing that this might be someone in need, I assumed a more 
forgiving  posture . 
     "Okay, send him in " I retreated . "I probably could use the busi- 
ness anyway." 
     The   door to   my   office   opened   slowly.  At last it   swung  fully 
open, revealing a smiling man in his mid-thirties. He was tall, lean 
and muscular, radiating an abundance of vitality and energy.  He 
reminded me of those perfect kids I went to law school with, from 
perfect families, with perfect houses, perfect cars and perfect skin. 
But there was more to my visitor than his youthful good looks. An 
underlying peacefulness gave him   an almost divine presence. And 
his  eyes.  Piercing blue eyes that sliced clear through me like  a 
razor meeting the supple flesh of a fresh-faced adolescent anxious 
about his first shave. 

     'Another hotshot lawyer gunning for my job,' I thought to myself. 
'Good grief, why is he just standing there looking at me? I hope that 
wasn't his wife I represented on that big divorce case I won last week. 
Maybe calling security wasn't such a silly idea after all.' 


     The young man continued to look at me, much as the smiling 
Buddha  might   have   looked   upon   a   favored   pupil.  After   a   long 
moment       of   uncomfortable     silence   he  spoke    in  a  surprisingly 
commanding tone. 
     "Is this how you treat all of your visitors, John, even those who 
taught you everything you know about the science of success in a 
courtroom?   I   should  have  kept my trade   secrets  to  myself,"  he 
said, his full lips curving into a mighty grin. 
     A strange sensation tickled the pit of my stomach. I immedi- 
ately recognized that raspy, honey-smooth voice. My heart started 
to pound. 
     "Julian? Is that you? I can't believe it ! Is that really you?" 
     The  loud  laugh   of the  visitor   confirmed  my   suspicions.  The 
young man standing before me was none other than that long-lost 
yogi of India : Julian Mantle. I was dazzled by his incredible trans- 
formation. Gone was the ghost-like complexion, the sickly cough 
and the lifeless eyes of my former colleague. Gone was the elderly 
appearance       and   the  morbid     expression     that  had   become     his 
personal trademark . Instead, the man in front of me appeared to 
be in peak health, his lineless face glowing radiantly. His eyes were 
bright, offering a window into his extraordinary vitality. Perhaps 
even more astounding was the serenity that Julian exuded. I felt 
entirely   peaceful just   sitting  there,   staring   at   him.   He  was   no 
longer an anxious, "type-A" senior partner of a leading law firm. 
Instead, the man before me was a youthful, vital — and smiling— 
model of change. 


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