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Authors: Carolyn Wheat

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Hezekiah Puckett. There but for fortune. That was the key, I realized. That was how to convince a jury of twelve sober citizens that my client was no burglar, just a pathetic old drunk who'd needed a place to sleep it off. Trespass at most. No intent to steal, just as he'd said. Just the sad, sordid, day-to-day compromises of a man who measured out his life in Thunderbird bottles.

My mind raced ahead to the trial. Voir dire—jury selection—the part of the trial some defense lawyers call the most important. The part where you choose the jurors, where you first expose them to your defense, where you sell yourself and your client.

Could I do it? Could I take twelve people with jobs and clean sheets—in both senses of the word—and
show
them the life of Hezekiah Puckett? Bring them to the point where they could look at his red, watery eyes, his shaky hands, his loose, working mouth and say, There but for fortune? If I could, I would win the case. It was as simple as that.

The beautiful part was, I realized with mounting excitement, that all the negative things about Puckett, all the things I'd hope to hide from a jury, were now aspects of the man to be revealed, to be displayed as evidence of what he was—and was not. I could hardly encourage him to come to court drunk—not that he'd needed much encouragement in the past—but if he did, it would simply constitute proof that he was an alcoholic, not a criminal. Would he sit on the park benches in front of the courthouse with a bottle in his hand, in full view of prospective jurors? Let him; they'd see for themselves how pathetic he was. Would he ramble on the stand? So much the better. They'd understand how a mind like that would be incapable of forming an intent to steal. They'd hear his own story, and after they'd seen him, they'd believe it.

I began pacing up and down the Promenade. Only I wasn't on the Promenade anymore; I was in Part 6, standing before the jury box. I'd use the Phil Ochs lines, in voir dire and on summation. There but for fortune would be my theme. We could all have been Hezekiah Puckett.

I strode along the Promenade, lost in thought, my mind asking questions of invisible jurors, my hands making the sweeping gestures I would use in the courtroom, my internal voice eloquent. Suddenly I stopped short.

Damn, I thought. Damn, damn, damn, damn—like Henry Higgins. I'm
good
at this! I'm fucking
good
. I began to laugh. Goddamn it, Nathan, I laughed in shocked surprise. I'm good, just as you said I was. What a revoltin' development
this
is. Here I've been spending all this time and energy trying to convince myself that this is not my life, and all the time I'm really good at it. Does that mean you were right about the other thing, Nathan? Involved is involved. Because I can get it up for Hezekiah Puckett, I have more to put into my photographs? Concentration and compassion strike again.

It was my own personal piece of the moon.

Turn the page to continue reading from the Cass Jameson Mysteries

1

The morning sun poured through the window like a blessing, suffusing everything it touched with a golden glow. It reminded me of Sunday services when I was a kid, except that this halo was produced not by Presbyterian stained glass, but by a thick coating of filth. One of the many differences, I reflected, between church and Family Court.

I glanced at my client. She sat primly in her chair, her tiny feet barely touching the floor, her hands folded in her lap, gazing at the judge with the rapt expression of a kid with a crush on the teacher. She was the picture of a child whose parents were fighting for her custody. On closer inspection, the truth emerged. It was the kindly golden sun that softened her hard edges; the deliberate schoolgirl pose masked a profound sexual awareness. Linda Ritchie was the mother.

I didn't like Linda. She was the kind of woman who came alive only around men, who boasted that she had no women friends. Yet I had to respect her. She'd gone from high-school dropout–battered wife to congressman's secretary with no help from anyone, least of all her ex-husband. Now Congressman Lucenti wanted her on his Washington staff, and Brad Ritchie was doing everything possible to stand in her way.

I looked at Brad, sprawled in his chair, his football player's legs wide apart. Strands of dishwater blond hair fell across his forehead. His face was set in its habitual pout. From star high-school athlete, Brad had gone on to screw up his college hopes. He dropped out to marry a pregnant Linda, and the cycle of lost jobs and wife-beating began. If Linda was playing teacher's pet for the judge, then Brad had never outgrown his role of class bad boy, always on the edge of expulsion.

Judge Bettinger interrupted my reveries. “Miss Jameson,” he said, “I believe you said earlier that your client is willing to make certain concessions with regard to visitation?”

“Yes, Your Honor,” I answered, quickly summoning up my notes. I was bleary-eyed and my reflexes were slow—a side effect of having my client living upstairs from me. I'd been up half the night trying to persuade Linda not to be a ballbuster or she'd risk having to choose between her new job and her daughter. Even now, she was only half convinced.

“My client agrees to visitation one weekend a month,” I began, hoping Linda wouldn't say anything to undercut me.

“Big deal,” sneered Brad. “Sure, give me one weekend a month when you know I'm out of work. How's Dawnie going to get here from Washington, huh? Answer me that!”

I did. “Mrs. Ritchie,” I addressed the judge, “has agreed to pay for Dawn's fare to and from Brooklyn,” I said calmly, keeping my eyes fixed on his face and away from Linda. I didn't want to call attention to the glare she was probably giving me; that particular concession had come only after serious arm-twisting at one
A
.
M
.

“Mrs. Ritchie also agrees to send Dawn to Brooklyn every other Christmas, Easter, and Thanksgiving,” I went on. “Plus she will let Dawn spend every summer with her father …”

“Sounds very fair to me,” the judge murmured.

I suppressed a victory smile. That was precisely the judicial state of mind I'd hoped to engender. Now came the hard part. The one
A
.
M
. argument over the plane fare for Dawn's visits had been a piece of cake compared to this one. In all honesty, I'd had to admit to Linda that it was going to be tough to sell the judge on it. Once she'd heard that, she was all for dropping it. Which wouldn't have been bad strategy, except that what we were talking about was the most important thing in her daughter's life.

I took a deep breath, aware of my own tension, heightened by the anxiety I felt radiating from Dawn. “Judge,” I began, “the only exception to the summer visitation will be the three weeks Dawn spends at tennis camp. Mr. Ritchie will also be responsible for seeing to it that Dawn gets to all her summer matches.”


Tennis
camp?” Judge Bettinger's voice boomed. “Do you seriously mean to tell me, Counselor, that this child is going to some fancy-shmancy tennis camp instead of spending time with her own father?” He snorted his indignation.

I wasn't surprised; everyone in Brooklyn Family Court knew Bettinger for a divorced father who lived for his kids' visits. It wasn't easy representing the mother in his courtroom.

The tension level in the courtroom jumped about ten degrees. I could sense Linda's I-told-you-so; I could feel Dawn's near-panic; I could even sympathize with Brad's ambivalence. He was proud of his daughter's accomplishments, yet at the same time he had to resent the fact that her tennis time would come out of his visitation.

I put on my mental blinders. I couldn't let myself be distracted by anyone else's needs. My whole attention had to be concentrated on the judge, on making him see what I knew—that tennis was Dawn's one talent, the thing that set her apart from other unhappy divorce kids. I found myself wishing I could show him a videotape of Dawn on the court. I'd gone to one of her matches with Linda's sister Marcy, and what I'd seen had taken my breath away. The slight heaviness, the twelve-year-old gawkiness of Dawn's body had disappeared. The Dawn I knew had been transformed into a white-clad sprite, who danced around the net, her racket flashing, her face knotted with concentration yet radiant with joy. It had been thrilling; if Judge Bettinger had seen it, Dawn could have lived at the tennis camp. Instead, my words had to do the job. For a moment, I wondered if they would be enough.

I'd done my homework. I'd dug beneath the surface of the Bettinger everyone knew, and discovered that he'd gone through college on a track scholarship. I played my trump card.

“Judge,” I began earnestly, “Dawn has a very special relationship with her father.” I tried not to think how Linda was reacting; I hoped at least that she wouldn't make her contempt obvious. “She loves her father very much and has no desire to cheat him out of visitation time.” Bettinger nodded his approval. I smiled. We were getting somewhere.

“But,” I went on, “Dawn Ritchie is a nationally ranked tennis champion. Her coach thinks she's Wimbledon material. There's a good chance she could win a college scholarship. Her father is the last person in the world who would want to stand in her way. Why not ask him what he thinks?”

It was as big a gamble as I'd ever taken in a courtroom. I had no idea what Brad would say. His obsessive hostility toward his ex-wife definitely carried over to me as her lawyer; he'd made that clear every time I'd seen him. Yet he'd come alive on the football field the way Dawn did on the tennis court. Despite all that had come later, I hoped for Dawn's sake he could remember that feeling.

We were all the way off the Richter scale for tension. Judge Bettinger looked expectantly at Brad. Linda looked smug, waiting for the disaster she'd predicted the night before. Dawn seemed ready to faint; her face was white and she bit her lips convulsively.

Brad shot me a furious glance that gave me a momentary pang of guilt. What I was doing to him was, I knew, unconscionable. It was also necessary for Dawn's happiness, but I didn't expect him to recognize that in this decade. The irony was that he included Linda in his rage, little realizing that she'd fought tooth and nail against Dawn's tennis as a priority. Then Brad looked at Dawn. The anger in his face died, replaced by a tender sadness. As Dawn's tight face relaxed from within, my breath came out in a long sigh of relief.

Brad turned to the judge and nodded. “Okay,” he said in a thick voice that sounded as though it was coming through a lump in his throat.

“One more thing,” Judge Bettinger said. “I must be certain that this arrangement is in the best interests of the child.” He intoned the stock phrase as though he'd invented it on the spot. He turned to Dawn. My eyes followed to where she sat in a posture of unnatural stillness. It was easy to see Brad in her—the height, the broad shoulders, the gold in her light-brown hair, the full lips and slightly heavy legs. Her mother's contribution was more subtle—honey-colored skin, liquid brown eyes, and a way of holding herself. Dawn copied Linda's schoolgirl pose, hands folded, eyes straight ahead. But her hands showed quick-bitten nails, and she chewed her lips until small spots of blood began to appear. Dawn was not the teacher's pet but the shy child in the back of the room who wets her pants because she's afraid to ask permission to leave the room.

She was always like this on court days. Other times, she was just your basic twelve-year-old. Everything in Dawn's world was either “neat” or “yucky.” So far, although she never said so, I was afraid the move to Washington fell into the latter category. I was hoping she wouldn't choose this opportunity to express her feelings.

“So,” the judge began in a hearty-uncle voice, “you want to be another Billie Jean King?” I winced; even I, tennis ignoramus that I was, knew that younger heroines had supplanted the great pioneer. But Dawn, head down and face beet-red, mumbled, “I'll never be
that
good.”

“But you like the game?” the judge pressed her. “You're not just in it to please Mommy and Daddy?”

Dawn looked up with incredulous eyes. She had fought her mother over her tennis for as long as she could remember; Linda thought it was stupid to spend so much time on a pastime not geared to meeting boys. Brad, the failed athlete, supported his daughter, but from a distance created by circumstances. It was Marcy, Linda's unmarried sister, who paid for the coaching and the camp and saw to it that Dawn got to her matches. Dawn looked up, solemnly assuring the judge that she was not in tennis because of pushing parents.

Judge Bettinger relaxed, gave Dawn what passed with him for a fatherly smile, and said, “Submit order.” We had won.

Linda rewarded the judge with a dazzling smile, her tiny even teeth white in her dark face. The sound of chairs slamming behind me was Brad's only response. I thanked the judge and promised to get the order in as soon as possible. Now that the case was over, the adrenalin that had kept me going on four hours' sleep abruptly dissipated. I was bone-tired. I picked up my down coat and my leather briefcase, eager to exchange the dingy, overheated courtroom for the crisp January air.

BOOK: Dead Man's Thoughts
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