Trial Courtship. Laura Abbot
Читать онлайн книгу.Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed the boy shaking his head and thought he heard him mumble something that sounded like “Dumb.”
“Nicky lives with me,” she said matter-of-factly. “I’m his guardian.” She found his eyes as if to warn him not to ask any questions.
“Well, I...sure. That’d be good.” Watch it. Don’t get in over your head. He became aware Nick was studying the two of them intently. “Maybe Nick and I can talk some soccer.” The kid looked simultaneously guarded and pleased.
Later, strolling back toward his own vehicle after walking Nick and Andrea to theirs, he replayed the evening. Nick was a complication. And whatever had happened to his parents was obviously a sensitive issue.
Did he want to pursue this? What did he know about kids? Or want to know? But Andrea—she was something else. And, hey, this wasn’t the romance of the century or anything.
For the first time, he found himself wishing the trial would last more than a few days.
CHAPTER FOUR
ANDREA HURRIED INTO the jury room, breathless from her dash across Public Square and down the street to the courthouse. The bailiff was already assembling the jurors. Shayla waved and shot her a big smile. Leaning against the conference table, Tony, his brow furrowed in concentration, studied a sheaf of papers in his hand. As she brushed past him on her way to the coatrack, he reached out and grabbed her by the elbow. “Hey, good morning. What’s your rush? He’ll wait for you.”
“Who?”
He nodded in the bailiffs direction. “Our tortoise look-alike.”
She suppressed a grin. “Only because he has to. He’s not happy with me.”
Tony helped her out of her coat, then watched her as she hung it up. “That’s his loss.”
His twinkling eyes and approving glance made her feel buoyant. She pointed to the papers in his hand. “Cramming?”
He closed the folder decisively and laid it on the table. “In a sense. I’m here because duty calls, but I still have to attend to business.” A grim expression settled over his features. “Not enough hours in the day.”
With a feeling she only belatedly recognized as disappointment, she said, “Perhaps, then, it was presumptuous of me to ask you to dinner this evening. If you’d prefer to postpone—”
“Postpone? To put it crassly, I have to eat. That being the case, I’d definitely prefer to eat a home-cooked meal in the company of a beautiful woman. I’ll be there.”
The compliment both warmed her and made her vaguely uncomfortable. She really didn’t know this man very well. “And in the company of a nine-year-old boy, don’t forget.”
“Oh, yeah.” From his tone of voice, she had the distinct sense that he had forgotten.
“Listen up, people.” The bailiff’s drill-sergeant voice cut off their conversation. “Her Honor is ready for you. Quiet, now.” He marched them into the jury box.
Judge Blumberg removed her half glasses and smiled. “Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, be seated, please.”
Hoping there would be less technical forensic evidence today, Andrea picked up the pad and pencil in her chair and settled between Dottie Dettweiler and Roy Smith, the timid young man from the restaurant. The courtroom’s decor—burgundy carpet, oak paneling, gold-padded seats for spectators, indirect lighting—was distressingly anonymous, unrelieved even by a window. Maybe, Andrea reflected, it helped you focus on the people. Right now, the prosecutor was calling a Mrs. Ethel Innes to the stand.
Early testimony established that Mrs. Innes had been an eyewitness to the crime. Andrea leaned forward, listening intently to Mrs. Innes’s responses to the questions the prosecutor put to her. “Yes, I was in the store that night. My husband and me, we’d run out of cigarettes and when I got there I remembered we needed milk and... Oh, I’m sorry, sir. Yes, I was there.”
Andrea watched the woman twist her wedding ring nervously. Bedford backed away from the witness stand and said in a mild voice, “Now, Mrs. Innes, can you tell us to the best of your recollection what happened that evening?”
“Like I said, I needed milk, so I was in the back of the store near the dairy case, probably thirty feet or so from the register.”
“What happened next?”
“I’d just grabbed the milk when I heard voices. Somebody said, ‘Please!’ in a loud, pitiful voice. When I turned around, there was this man standing by the register with a ball cap pulled low over his face—” here she gestured as if pulling a hat over her eyes.
“Did this man have a gun?”
“He must have. He shot that poor clerk.” Her chin trembled with outrage.
“Let me rephrase that. Did you see a gun?”
“Well, he had his hand in his jacket pocket, you know, and it kinda looked like this.” The woman balled up her fist, extending her index finger.
“Did you hear the man say anything?”
“I sure did. He mumbled something and then, real menacing-like, he said, ‘...or I’ll kill you, old man.”’
“What happened next?”
Mrs. Innes rubbed her hands nervously. “The kid said, ‘Hand over the money.’ Just then a big display of soda cans that nearly reached the ceiling came tumbling down. Next thing, I heard a shot. My heart was beatin’ so fast I like to died right there.”
Bedford’s dry voice interrupted. “But what did you do?”
“I dropped the milk and fell to the floor.”
“And then?”
“The alarm went off, and I heard this voice yelling, ‘God damn it, what the—’” she glanced up at the judge “—I don’t think I’d better say that word, Your Honor.”
“I understand. Just substitute ‘expletive.’”
Mrs. Innes sighed, apparently in relief. “What the expletive .” She leaned against the back of her chair, obviously pleased to have remembered so accurately. “I laid real still until he ran outta the store.”
Bedford stood to one side, so the witness had a clear view of the courtroom. “Mrs. Innes, do you see the man you saw that night here today?”
Her mouth set with concentration, she straightened up and studied the teenager at the defense table. “That one looks about the same size, but—”
“Just answer the question.”
As if she’d failed a test, Mrs. Innes looked crestfallen. “No, I couldn’t be positive.”
“No further questions, Your Honor.” The prosecutor returned to his table.
Andrea tried to put herself into Mrs. Innes’s place. It must be difficult to recall accurately events that had happened so far in the past.
Slowly Ms. Lamb, the defense attorney, rose to her feet. “Good morning, Mrs. Innes. How are you today?”
The witness seemed uncomfortable, as if anticipating a trick. Andrea couldn’t help thinking that Mrs. Innes probably wanted the defendant to be found guilty. After all, she’d been scared out of her wits.
“Fine.” The woman’s chattiness was gone.
“What time of night was this?”
“About eleven-fifteen. My husband and me, we’d finished watching ER before he sent me to the corner to get him cigarettes.”
Andrea couldn’t resist a shudder at Mr. Innes’s apparent chauvinism.
“You say you could see