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Authors: Sallie Bissell

Tags: #Mary Crow, #murder mystery, #Cherokee, #suspense

BOOK: Call the Devil by His Oldest Name
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one

Deckard County Courthouse

Tuesday, October 8

“CAN YOU SHOW us
the Popsicle Man, honey?” Mary Crow sat cross-legged on her of­fice floor, close beside Jasmine Harris, a five­ year-old who had lately reverted to the babyish habits of wetting her pants and sucking her thumb. Although the child was of normal height and weight, her huge brown eyes and woeful face reminded Mary of children she'd seen in ad­vertisements beseeching aid for Zimbabwe or Somalia. Jasmine, however, was American. She came from a poor section of Atlanta known as Bankhead and the chief disaster she and a num­ber of other children in her neighborhood had suffered was a forty-one-year-old white male named Dwayne Pugh, aka the Popsicle Man.

“Come on, Jasmine. Don't you stop talkin' now.” Danika Lyles, the young attorney who worked as Mary's assistant, spoke more gruffly to the child. “You be doing just fine till we ask you that question.”

Jasmine stuck her thumb in her mouth and stared down at the photos of four white men, spread out on the floor. For a long moment she did nothing but noisily work her jaws, then she began to edge one tiny finger up on the corner of the photograph third from the left.

Mary held her breath. For weeks, Child Protective Services had brought Jasmine here to be interviewed; for weeks, they'd come up against this block. The child was bright, answered their questions willingly—until asked to identify Pugh. Then Jasmine would stare at his photo­graph transfixed, as if the man's very image ren­dered her speechless with terror. Now, as they neared the end of Pugh's trial, Mary needed Jas­mine to do more than just suck her thumb as she gaped at Pugh's picture. Mary needed Jasmine to tell the jury exactly what Pugh had done.

“Look carefully, Jasmine,” Mary said. “Are you sure this is the man who gave you all those Popsicles?”

For a moment Jasmine just sucked louder, then she moved her finger away from the corner of the photo and tapped it on the man's right eye. “Good, baby.” Danika knelt down on the floor. “Now tell us what he did. Tell us how he hurt you.”

At first Jasmine stared at the photo, then she began to scream. Not weep. Not cry. But
scream
, like a small, helpless animal twisting in some predator's claws. The gooseflesh rose on Mary's skin as she reached instinctively for the terrified child, who scrambled into her arms with a death grip of her own.

“It's okay, Jasmine,” she murmured, the odor of feces drifting up as the child helplessly filled her diaper. “He's not going to hurt you anymore. I promise. Never, ever again. I promise.”

Jasmine shrieked on. Mary began to rock her back and forth, singing an old Cherokee song about why Possum's tail is bare. As Mary sang, Danika quickly scooped up the photographs and dropped them facedown on Mary's desk. By the time Mary had sung the possum song twice, Jas­mine had grown quiet.

“Guess what, Jasmine,” whispered Mary. “We sang the bad man away. He's not here anymore. You want to turn around and see?”

“No!” Jasmine howled, vehemently shaking her head.

“Okay.” Mary kissed her. “You don't have to. You want to go back to Mrs. Williams?”

‘'Uh-huh.''

“Okay. Here we go.” Mary carried her over to Alberta Williams, a sweet, bosomy woman who served as Jasmine's caseworker.

“She's going to need some diaper attention,” Mary said softly, handing the child over to Mrs. Williams.

“Don't she always.” Mrs. Williams rose from her chair with surprising grace, Jasmine clinging to her neck.

“Thank you for coming, Jasmine,” said Mary, resting her hand for a moment on the child's soft cheek. “You did a terrific job.”

When the two left the room, Mary moved to her desk and looked at the photograph Jasmine had finally mustered the courage to touch. A flaccid-faced man with thick lips and receding blond hair, Dwayne T. Pugh had originally been ticketed by the Deckard County cops for vend­ing food without a license. When Officer John Clark climbed into the back of Pugh's ice cream truck and found six tiny pairs of Winnie-the­ Pooh underpants stuffed among the Eskimo Pies, he grew suspicious. They took Pugh in for ques­tioning and got a warrant to search his home, a pricey condo in upscale Avondale Estates, far be­yond the means of most ice-cream vendors. That search turned up only one thing of interest: a key to a small brick bungalow off Ponce DeLeon Avenue. When the officers went there, they walked into two rooms of state-of-the-art servers, then two other rooms full of videotapes so sick, they made even the vice cops queasy. But what had gotten Dwayne T. Pugh remanded to the custody of Deckard County was his basement. A cinder-block room with a rusty drain in the middle of the floor, it held an array of expensive videotaping equipment and two large cages. In one barked a pair of snarling, starved Dobermans; in the other huddled Jasmine, nude and sobbing in her own excrement. Though Dwayne T. Pugh swore that he'd never seen Jas­mine, knew nothing about any dogs, and had rented the house for the past three years to a man named Harvey Barrett, the Deckard County detectives were convinced Pugh had earned his posh condo and a seven-figure bank account filming African-American children for an Internet porn business called Chocolate Non-Pareils. Now all Mary had to do was con­vince a jury of the same thing; for that, she needed Jasmine, the only person who could actually tie Pugh to all of it.

“Don't you think she did better?” Danika asked Mary hopefully.

“Well, she kind of identified Pugh,” replied Mary. “She's nowhere near taking the stand.”

“You keep on her, she'll quit that screaming. She just needs to toughen up.” Danika, who'd dribbled her way out of Jasmine's neighborhood on a basketball scholarship from UCLA, had less sympathy for the little girl, maintaining that the only way to survive the streets was to become tougher than the streets themselves.

“Danika, we're supposed to help the victims of crimes, not traumatize them further.”

The tall, stork-like woman snorted. “Better to traumatize one and keep twenty more out of that basement.”

Mary started to caution her zealous young colleague again, but the opening strains of the “William Tell Overture” started to erupt from her desk. She reached over and grabbed her new cell phone, a state-of-the-art gizmo that could receive photos as well as text messages. The new DA had passed out a dozen to his senior staff “so we can be in touch at all times.”

As she fumbled with the unfamiliar buttons, an instant e-mail message appeared on the screen.

My office. Now. Mott.

Sighing, Mary looked at Danika. “I've got to go see Mott.”

“You want me to call Jasmine's mother? Set up another interview?”

“No. Come over to my house tonight. We'll go over the evidence files and see if there's any­body else we can pull out of the hat.”

“Seven okay?”

“Seven's good,” replied Mary, fighting a deep, sucking feeling of defeat as she headed toward the door.

When Jim Falkner had, on the advice of his cardiologist, retired, Hobson T. Mott, or more correctly, Hobson T. Mott's wife Linda, had completely redone Jim's office, swooping down on the room with a Buckhead decorator and two suitcases full of upholstery samples. Within a week Jim's old red leather armchairs had been replaced by calfskin ergonomic seating systems. The
Georgia Code Annotated
now sat on chrome bookshelves, and where Jim had once sprawled at a battered mahogany desk, Hobson Mott perched behind a glass-topped table that seemed to float in midair. To Mary, going to Mott's of­fice felt like reporting to the bridge of the star­ship
Enterprise
. Mott, however, was no Captain Kirk. Originally from Indianapolis, Mott had spent his college years playing basketball for the chair-throwing Bobby Knight. He was still ob­sessed with the game—a crop of gold trophies sprouted from his credenza—and he often re­ferred to court with terms like “a slam-dunk case” and “an air ball defense.” Mary had heard that he'd hired Danika not because of her stellar law credentials, but because he needed a good center for the department basketball team.

She tapped on Mott's open door. “You wanted to see me?”

Mott raised his eyebrows. Though he was tall and broad-shouldered, he had an unfortunate cast to his skin that made him look like one of the clay heads over in forensic anthropology.

He motioned her forward. “Come in, Ms. Crow.”

Closing the door behind her, she perched on the ergonomic chair that most closely approxi­mated her favorite seat during Falkner's tenure. She repressed a sigh. How they all did miss Jim! Although the Deckard County DA now had a much trendier office, the Deckard County ADAs had sought justice much more happily when sloppy old Jim was in charge. They could do nothing about that, though. If the voters of Deckard County elected a jackass, you dealt with the jackass or sought employment elsewhere.

“How's the Pugh case going?”

“Okay.”

“Virginia Kwan throwing you any curves?”

“Not really. I moved to allow taped testimony, given the age of the witnesses. She objected, saying her client has the right to see his accusers. Judge Cate sided with her.”

“You've gone up against Kwan before, haven't you?”

“I've beaten her once.” Mary thought of the last time she had faced off against Virginia Kwan, a diminutive woman of Chinese ancestry who wore stiletto heels and blood-red nail polish, and was nicknamed “Dragon Lady” by the denizens of the courthouse. Mary had won, but it had been a hard trial, and the next day Virginia had sent her a dozen yellow roses, with a card that read, “Your greatest foes are your best teachers. Next time! Virginia.”

“You know, Ms. Crow, I really feel like this case could set the tone for my administration.” Hobson took off his glasses and gave her a square, mah-jongg-tile grin. “A slam-dunk conviction would make the African-American population of Deckard County aware that I'll take their cases just as seriously as Falkner did.”

“I may not get a slam-dunk conviction, Hobson.” Mary grimaced as she recalled Jasmine's scream of pure terror. “I've got a mighty reluctant witness.”

“The Harris kid?”

Mary nodded. She always dreaded cases where she had to put children on the stand. “Danika and I have worked with her for weeks. She still can't look at Pugh and maintain any kind of control.”

“Control?” Hobson frowned.

“Bowel control. Jasmine Harris gets diarrhea every time she sees Pugh's photo. I don't know what I'm going to do with her on the stand.”

Hobson looked as if he might puke. “But you've built your whole case around that kid's testimony.”

“Yes,” Mary said, again feeling as if she were being sucked down into a dark hole. “I have.”

“Ms. Crow, I don't know if you realize this, but the U.S. Attorney is letting us try this case as a personal favor to me. It's garnered a huge amount of publicity. Right now you should be steamrolling toward a conviction, not wringing your hands over whether your witness can han­dle the stress of testifying.”

“She's five years old, Hobson. Pugh's already traumatized her back into diapers. I'm not going to turn that child into a total basket case for five minutes of testimony. Anyway, child pornography on the Internet is a federal crime. If Richard Johnson thinks he can do better, then let him go for it.”

Hobson leaned forward, squinting at her as if he'd discovered some kind of lesion on her nose. “Ms. Crow, when I came on board here, you were the number one ADA. Falkner's big three point shooter. You would have questioned the Devil himself if you thought it would win your case.”

“The Devil wouldn't shit his pants, Hobson.”

“Doesn't matter.” He smirked condescend­ingly. “Look, I know the last year took a toll on you…”

“Are you speaking of Judge Hannah's death?”

“Yes. I know you sought professional help in trying to overcome that trauma.”

Mary's cheeks grew hot. Almost a year ago the FBI had asked her help in protecting her friend Irene Hannah from a white supremacist group. She had failed. Ultimately Mary had sought psy­chiatric help to work through her grief. Never, though, had she allowed it to affect her work. “And your point is?”

“Frankly, I think the pressure of that and this case has combined to affect your judgment.” Hobson fondled a brass basketball that served as a paperweight. “I can't believe you would even consider not calling this kid to testify.”

“She's a kindergartener, Hobson.” Mary stared at him, incredulous. “That's coloring books and
Sesame Street
and—”

“Popsicles?” Hobson interjected.

Mary stiffened. Dwayne Pugh had used Popsicles to lure little Jasmine into his truck. He would use Popsicles to lure more children if she couldn't put him in prison. Maybe Hobson and Danika were right. Maybe she ought to gleefully sacrifice one Jasmine to save twenty of her play­mates. “Yes,” she admitted, her voice flat. “And Popsicles.”

Hobson sat back in his chair, now looking like a triumphant dummy from the forensics lab. “See what I mean, Ms. Crow? I'm beginning to won­der if you have the guts for this job anymore.”

“Of course I do.”

“Then put Jasmine Harris on the stand, and question her as you would any other witness.”

“But—”

“That's an order, Ms. Crow,” Mott sliced in. “Jasmine Harris goes on the stand.”

Mary looked at him, again longing for the sloppy honor of Jim Falkner's administration. “Anything else?”

He smiled. ‘'Just win my case, Ms. Crow.”

“I'll do my best.” With a single withering glare, she rose and let herself out of the office, leaving the new Deckard County district attor­ney counting all the votes he would reap on the back of one five-year-old child.

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