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Fatal Flaw Part 6

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"Nothing important."

"Tell me."

"Nothing you should worry about. Nothing that affects you."

I don't say anything. I hold tight and wait. She wanted to tell me before, she wants to tell me now, so I wait.

"It was last night," she says. "Guy. We were together in the Jacuzzi. There were candles, rose petals."



"I don't want to hear the details."

"He thought it was romantic. The candles. Like a commercial or something."

"Really, I don't want to hear."

"Then he asked me to marry him as soon as the divorce goes through. To marry him."

She says nothing more, and I say nothing, and the silence swells and stretches until it is as taut as an overinflated balloon that I can't help but p.r.i.c.k with my words: "And what did you say?"

"What could I say? I said yes."

Part Two

With Prejudice

7.

I COULD barely look at Guy as he sat next to me at the defense table, still in the clothes of the night before, the clothes, like Guy, now rumpled and stinking. I could barely look at his puffy face, his red eyes, the way his hands trembled. I could barely look at the fear that overwhelmed him as he began to understand the abject consequences of his single moment of uncontrollable rage. Whenever I looked at him, I wanted to strangle him, so instead I looked around the courtroom, at the bailiff, the guards, at the bored reporters scattered in the otherwise empty seats, at the detectives sitting in the front row behind the prosecution table, Stone leaning back, arms stretched out, Breger hunched forward in weariness. It was still early, the judge was not scheduled to arrive for another quarter of an hour, but it pays to be prompt when they are arraigning your client for murder. barely look at Guy as he sat next to me at the defense table, still in the clothes of the night before, the clothes, like Guy, now rumpled and stinking. I could barely look at his puffy face, his red eyes, the way his hands trembled. I could barely look at the fear that overwhelmed him as he began to understand the abject consequences of his single moment of uncontrollable rage. Whenever I looked at him, I wanted to strangle him, so instead I looked around the courtroom, at the bailiff, the guards, at the bored reporters scattered in the otherwise empty seats, at the detectives sitting in the front row behind the prosecution table, Stone leaning back, arms stretched out, Breger hunched forward in weariness. It was still early, the judge was not scheduled to arrive for another quarter of an hour, but it pays to be prompt when they are arraigning your client for murder.

The Montgomery County Courthouse was an old Greek Revival building with porticoes and pediments and a great green dome, all set in the county seat of Norristown. They had put us in Courtroom A, the building's largest room, with its high ceilings and wood paneling and big leather chairs at the counsel tables that squeaked with righteousness. The courtrooms in Philadelphia are fresh and spanking new, modern and streamlined, with a sense of the a.s.sembly line about them, and so it felt good to be in a place with heavy wooden benches and red carpeting, a place that exuded harsh justice of the old sort. That's the kind of justice I was hoping to find.

I let my partner, Beth Derringer, coach Guy through the procedure so I could stew blissfully in my own emotions. "This is just a formality, Guy, you know all this," she said quietly. "We'll waive the reading of the indictment, plead you not guilty, and get started building your defense."

Beth was not just my partner, she was my best friend. Sharp, faithful, absolutely trustworthy. So of course I couldn't trust her with all that had happened between Hailey and me and what had been decided the night before.

And what exactly had been decided? Justice, vengeance, take your pick, they both felt the same to me.

It all would have been simpler had I been able to go it alone, but this would be a trying case, I would need a.s.sistance, and so I had asked Beth to a.s.sist. And having Beth on my side had another distinct advantage. She could be my canary in the mine shaft. If I could keep her in the dark about what had happened and what I had decided to do about it, I believed I could keep everyone else there, too.

"What about bail?" said Guy. "I've got to get out of here. Do you have any idea of what it's like in prison? Do you have any idea of the way those animals inside look at me?"

"No," said Beth. "I don't. We'll try to get you out, Guy, but it's a murder charge, and you were trying to run. The judge will grant either no bail or one absurdly high. But how much could you put up if bail is set?"

"I don't know. There's money in the account, there's Hailey's life insurance, there's the house. It's worth a mil or so."

"Whose house?" I said while still looking away.

"Mine. Leila's. Our house."

"That's not your house," I said.

As soon as I said it, Guy understood. We sat side by side in Property Law, I cribbed off of his notes for my outline. In Pennsylvania, when any real estate is owned by a married couple, neither spouse has any individual property interest, it is owned by the couple itself, and any disposition of the property must be agreed to by both spouses.

"Will Leila agree to put it up for bail?" asked Beth.

"Yes, of course. To get me out of jail, of course. Let me talk to her."

"Do you think she'd put up your children's house to give you a chance to run and leave them homeless?" I said without looking at him so he couldn't see the expression twisting my features. "Do you really think her father would let her?"

"Talk to her, Victor. You can get her to sign."

"I'm not that persuasive."

"Talk to her for me."

"All right."

"And tell her I want to see the kids. I need to see the kids."

Before I could respond, Beth continued. "You mentioned an account. What kind of account?"

"A brokerage account."

"In whose name?"

"In my name. And Hailey's."

I turned suddenly and stared at him, his pleading eyes, his mouth, jerked now and then by a twitch that had never marred his features before his arrest. Not so handsome anymore. "How much?"

"I don't know exactly," he said. "Depending on the markets, maybe half a million."

"Where the h.e.l.l did you get half a million dollars?"

"Hailey had a big case before we got together. Medical malpractice. The settlement was huge."

"If it was Hailey's money, why was your name on the accounts?"

"Because we were in love. We were going to be married, so we put all our money together. I added some, too. Part of it was mine."

I stared at him, suddenly even angrier than before, and then turned away in disgust.

"Do you know where the account is?" said Beth.

"Schwab. Hailey did some trading online. I let her keep track of everything. I didn't even know the pa.s.sword."

"That's okay, Guy. We'll find out exactly what's in there." She reached into her file and pulled out a piece of paper. "We'd like you to sign this power of attorney. It will allow us to access information about your financial accounts. It doesn't provide us the power to withdraw funds, but it will let us learn what we need to make bail or to convince the judge to set something reasonable later on."

I watched out of the corner of my eye as Guy reviewed the doc.u.ment. He had said the fee would be no problem, I wanted to make sure. I watched until he signed and handed it back to Beth, and then my disgust forced me to turn away again.

"And you said there was insurance?" asked Beth.

"Life insurance. I already had a policy where I switched my secondary beneficiary to her. She took a policy on herself and named me the beneficiary."

"Where are the policies?"

"I don't know. Hailey had them, maybe in her office or something."

"Okay," said Beth. "We'll find them, too. After the arraignment they're going to take you back to the county lockup, so we won't be able to talk right away. We'll set something up as soon as possible. What we need to know right now is if you have any idea who might have done this, if you have any leads you think we ought to investigate?"

I swiveled my head slowly until I was staring straight at him once again. This time he looked at me as if he were pleading for some answers. I had none, at least none he would like.

"I don't know," he said. "Everyone loved her. She was great. No one wanted to hurt her."

"Had there been anything unusual? Did you notice anything out of the ordinary in the past few months?"

"No. Nothing. There were some calls at the house, you know, calls I answered and then the caller hung up. Stuff like that. They ended about a month ago, but maybe something was going on. Maybe there was someone else I didn't know about."

I stood and left the table so he wouldn't hear the snort of disbelief that came unbidden from my throat. It was all too much to take, Guy professing his innocence, casting about for suspects, especially the thing about the phone caller who kept hanging up when he answered, since the phone caller who kept hanging up when he answered was me.

In the peanut gallery behind the bar, a tall man with a suit and a briefcase was standing in the aisle, talking to Breger and Stone. I took him to be the prosecutor and I stepped over to make the introductions. We were going to be a good team, I was sure, he and I, working together as we were toward a common goal.

But as I got closer, I realized the prosecutor and two detectives weren't talking so much as arguing. Stone was keeping her voice low, but her disgust was evident. Breger looked away, his mouth set with a disappointment that seemed expected yet still painful, like a kid on Christmas morning who finds beneath the tree a puzzle and not a pony. When Stone saw me approach, she stopped talking and gestured to the prosecutor. The tall man with the suit and briefcase turned around.

"You're Victor Carl?"

"That's right," I said. He was a handsome man, lean and athletic, and I thought he looked familiar but I couldn't be sure.

"Yeah, I recognize you from the paper." He was talking about this morning's Daily News Daily News. Beneath the headline-SHOT THROUGH THE HEART-was my picture, hand out warding off the camera, looking as guilty as a politician in a strip club.

"They didn't get my good side," I said.

"Well, you were facing the camera," said Stone.

Breger, staring now down at the floor, bowed his head sadly at his partner's impudence even as his shoulders shook with stifled laughter.

"Now, is that nice?" I said. "Here I am, trying to be pleasant, trying to forge a working relations.h.i.+p with the officers of the law, and you return my overture with insults."

"That wasn't an insult," said Stone, showing off her healthy teeth. "If I was meaning to insult you, I would have started with your tie."

"What's wrong with my tie?"

"Please. It's like you and Breger frequent the same thrift shop."

"I was just about to compliment Detective Breger on his neck-wear. It's rare to find a man brave enough to wear a plaid jacket and a plaid tie to go with it."

"If I may interrupt the soiree," said the handsome man in the aisle. "I'm Troy Jefferson, chief of the trial division in the DA's office here. I'll be prosecuting Mr. Forrest."

I looked up at him. "I saw you play," I said. "I saw you light us up for thirty-five when you could barely walk."

"You went to Abington?"

"I did."

"Did you play yourself?"

"No. I was barely coordinated enough the climb the bleachers."

"That's one game I'll never forget. I had an operation the next week and was never the same."

"You were a beautiful player."

"Thank you."

"Nice to meet you."

"Likewise."

I smiled at him. He smiled at me. I reached out my hand and he shook it. Troy Jefferson was the basketball star in our conference when I went to high school. He was fast, aggressive on the dribble, with a sweet jumper from the top of the key. He had led his team to a state champions.h.i.+p as a junior, and before his knee collapsed on him had been talked about as the surest thing since Wilt. He played college ball, I remembered, but was never the same as before the injury and went undrafted. I had heard he played in Europe for a few years before going to law school and becoming a prosecutor. Word was he was waiting for the right moment to turn political and leap into some public office, maybe attorney general, maybe higher. He had been a high school superstar, I had been a high school nothing, and now here we were, face to face in a courtroom, each of us smiling. We were going to like one another, Troy and I, we were going to be best friends. Who would have thought it a decade and a half before?

"Have you already entered your notice of appearance?" he said.

"Yes."

"Good," said my new friend Troy. "Do you have a minute, Victor? I have something I want to talk to you about."

I glanced at Breger and Stone, who glared not at me but at Troy, and then followed him out of the courtroom. We found a private perch on the marble stairway in the courthouse atrium, beneath a green stained-gla.s.s ceiling.

"I just wanted you to know that we're going to oppose any bail in this case," said Troy Jefferson.

"I expected as much."

"That thing with the suitcase and the pa.s.sport sealed it. And we're still debating whether to ask for this to be a capital case."

"That's your decision," I said, being as helpful as possible.

"The evidence against your client is overwhelming, and a lot of people, including the detectives in this case, think we should push for death. They don't like the fact that she was. .h.i.t before she was shot. Neither do I. And in case you didn't know, the only fingerprints we could lift from the gun you handed over were your client's."

"He picked it up after the killing," I said perfunctorily, because, as a defense attorney, I was supposed to say things like that, but I must say I admired Troy's righteous indignation. Juries respond well to righteous indignation.

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