Death Row (13 page)

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Authors: William Bernhardt

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BOOK: Death Row
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"I'll get right on it, Skipper."
"Good. She told us her testimony was false. She might've told someone else."
"She said she hadn't," Christina reminded him.
"Nonetheless. She might've let something slip. In therapy. At a pajama party, when she'd drunk too much. Even a hint. Anything would help."
"All right," Loving said. "Will do."
"Some of the people you interview may not be eager to talk to you. Especially after you tell them you're working for Ray Goldman. But I know you won't let that slow you down."
"I'll do whatever it takes, Ben."
"Good." He adjusted his chair. "Jones, I want you to dig up everything you can about the home invasion at the Faulkner residence seven years ago. Absolutely everything. We've already got extensive files on it. I want more. And I'd like it on my desk as soon as possible."
"Okay. Why?"
"It's a long shot, but there might be some clues there. Some hint of what really happened."
"Ben, what are the odds that we're going to find something seven years after the fact that the police didn't catch?"
"I'm a lawyer, not a bookie. I don't care about odds. I want facts."
Jones shrugged his shoulders. "Then you'll get 'em. But it seems like-"
"Remember, the police were certain, almost from the start, that Ray was their man. They might've overlooked anything that didn't point his direction. They might have even buried it." He gave Christina a knowing look. "Wouldn't be the first time, would it?"
"Not by a long shot."
"It's even possible Ray was intentionally framed."
"By the police?"
"By someone. We have to check every possible angle. So find out everything possible about the crime, Jones. And I'd like whatever you can scrape up about this suicide, too."
"Roger wilco."
Ben turned his chair full circle. "Christina, first and foremost, you've got to educate yourself on the law pertaining to federal habeas appeals. The attorney general's office has people who specialize in these. And most of the time, they win. You've got to go toe-to-toe with the big boys."
"Understood."
"They'll be wanting to beat you over the head with the 'presumption of finality.'
Barefoot
v.
Estelle
and all that. You have to be ready to counter them, point by point."
"Got it."
"But I'd also like you to get involved in the investigation of Erin Faulkner. I want your take on her."
"Really? Why me?"
"You're a woman."
Christina fluttered her eyelashes. "At last he notices."
"What would cause a woman to keep quiet for seven years while an innocent man sat on death row? What would motivate her to speak now, after all that time? If we had more insight on those questions, we might be able to figure out what happened."
"I'll do what I can."
"Pardon me for being the voice of reality," Jones said, "but I know for a fact that Ray Goldman's defense fund ran dry a long time ago. He hasn't got a dime to his name and he hasn't worked for seven years."
Ben and Christina exchanged a look. "Jones-"
"Forgive me for being so venal, but some of us like to eat regularly. Maybe we should let Indigent Appeals handle this. Are we going to make any money?"
"I don't know," Ben said, "and frankly, I don't care. Not at the moment, anyway. We can worry about practicalities later. First and foremost has to be the appeal. This is our last chance."
He looked at each of them, a grim expression set on his face. "Our time is running out. And if our time runs out-so does Ray's."

 

"C'mon, Baxter," Mike implored. "We were just shootin' the breeze."
"Bull. You were shooting off your mouths, as a metaphor for shooting off something else."
"We were only having a little fun."
"That was not fun. That was not fun for me at all."
"Well... I'm sorry. But it was harmless."
"It was not harmless!" She whirled around, jabbing the heel of her palm into his chest. They had walked to the stairwell between the third and fourth floors of the downtown headquarters building. The stairwell was reasonably secluded, but whenever Baxter shouted, it echoed tremendously. Mike suspected the mayor could probably hear what she said three stories down.
"It was not remotely harmless. It was damaging to my reputation."
"Aw, no one takes that stuff seriously."
"I do! I'm new here, in case you haven't noticed. I'm still trying to fit in, to make friends. And I can't do that when you're running around trashing me."
"No one was trashing you."
"Just shut up and listen. You're one of the senior men in the department. People look up to you. If you act like you like me, or at least accept me, they will, too. But if you act like I'm a joke-then I will be."
"I think you overrate my importance."
"I know how it works. I've seen it happen before. And I'm not going to let it happen again!"
Mike dug his fists deep into his coat pockets. "Could we just... calm down here? If I made a mistake, I'm sorry. Let's just forget it happened and-"
"Oh, you'd like that, wouldn't you?"
"I'd-what?"
"You'd like to forgive and forget, since you have nothing to forgive. Let me tell you something, buddy. It ain't gonna be that easy."
Mike's eyes narrowed. "What do you mean?"
"I told you I wouldn't put up with any sexist crap, and I meant it. You're going on report."
"Now wait just a minute!"
"Too late, chumley. Too damn late."
"I have not done anything inappropriate."
She smiled. "Then you have nothing to worry about."
"Baxter, if you file a report on me, it could screw up my whole career."
"Well, I guess you should've thought of that before you started talking about your partner's panties, huh?"
Mike threw up his hands. "Fine. Do your damnedest. No one will take you seriously."
"Wrong as rain, slick. They don't have any choice. In case you haven't heard, sexual harassment is against the law. I could sue the department for big bucks and they know it."
"Sexual harassment! We didn't even know you were in the room!"
"Doesn't matter. It's called creating a hostile environment. And you and your buddies were in there doing it big time."
"I can't believe this!" Mike bellowed. "How in God's name did I get saddled with such a miserable-"
"Go on, say it," she dared. "Give my report a blockbuster finish."
"Arrrgh!" Mike pounded his fists against the wall. "I can't believe this!" He whirled around. "Was this all you wanted?"
"Actually, no. I wanted talk about the Faulkner case."
"That case is closed. Forget about it."
"I don't want to forget about it. I think you're wrong."
"Why am I not surprised?"
"I don't know why you're so anxious to close this investigation."
"If you'd seen as many suicides as I have-"
"But this one's different."
"They're all different."
She grabbed his arms and forced him to face her. "Would you listen to me?"
"I guess that would keep you from starting your report."
"You know as well as I do that women almost never use guns to commit suicide."
"Who's being sexist now?"
"It's true. Women use poison or pills or slit their wrists in the tub. Which, by the way, she had been in, minutes before her death. There was a razor close at hand. Why would she get out, get a gun, and blow her head to bits? It's just not what a woman would do!"
"Sometimes people don't act according to the statistics. Sometimes people do strange things. And this woman was obviously not thinking clearly."
Baxter held tight to his arms. "Second, her body was found naked."
"Thanks, I picked up on that already."
"Doesn't that seem strange?"
"No. She just got out of the bath."
"And shot herself? Without putting any clothes on? No way."
"Why not?"
"Because the one thing a woman knows with absolute certainty when she kills herself is that eventually her body is going to be found. Does she want to be found naked?"
"Evidently she didn't care."
"C'mon, Morelli, work with me here. There was evidence at the crime scene that she had just shaved her legs and underarms. That she painted her nails. She does all that to make herself look better-but then shoots herself without putting any clothes on? It just won't wash."
"Once again, I will remind you that the woman obviously was not entirely rational. I'll also remind you that we found marijuana at the scene and that it was in her bloodstream. She was high. You can't expect her to behave normally."
"What is this, a scene from
Reefer Madness
? No joint is going to make a woman so strung out she forgets to dress!"
"I'm sorry, Baxter. I admire your enthusiasm-sort of-but I don't agree with your conclusion."
"The gun was still in her hand."
"And your point-?"
"My point is that, as we both well know, that's not how it works. In movies and bad TV shows, they show suicides still clutching the gun, but in real life, even the smallest gun has recoil. And a person who's just blown a hole in her head is not going to be able to marshal the strength to resist it. Consequently, in most suicides, the gun is found a few feet from the body."
Mike took a deep breath. What she said was true. But he couldn't make himself agree with her. "I grant you, that's typical. But it's not a dead cert."
"There's no such thing as a dead cert. But when all the evidence points in a different direction-"
"Baxter, the paraffin test proved she had fired the gun."
"The bullet in the ceiling."
"She missed the first time."
"Yeah, she missed, but what was the target? Herself-or an intruder?"
"Baxter, you're living in fantasyland."
"Am I? Or do you just not want to admit I'm right because that would damage your fragile ego?"
Mike fought to contain himself. "You know, you really are insufferable."
"I don't much care. Just so I'm right. And I am."
Mike felt his entire body tensing like a much-too-tightly-strung guitar. "Look-let's at least think about this, okay? Give it some calm, reasoned deliberation. Before you file a report."
"Too late. I already did."
"What?"
"I filed my report. Explaining my concerns about your rush to judgment."
"I'm the senior officer on the case!"
"And you filed your report. Which was totally erroneous. So I filed mine as well."
Mike turned one way then another, as if searching for a rag doll he could shred. "If you've filed a report suggesting Erin 's death might not have been a suicide, Blackwell will have to keep the investigation open."
"I would imagine so." She slapped him on the shoulder. "Congratulations, partner. I think we're going to be working together for a good long while."
Chapter 11
Christina took another sip of her caffe latte and continued burrowing through the miserably thick file. She actually enjoyed bringing her work to bookstores in the evenings, and Novel Idea was just a mile south of their Warren Place offices. To some degree, coming here went against her natural instinct to avoid all things trendy, but hey-if you have to work late, at least you can have something to imbibe scrummier than that sludge Jones called coffee.
Although to get through a file like this one, she might need something stronger than coffee. She was wading through the police reports on the Faulkner home invasion, looking for any scrap of a hint of a detail that might lend some insight as to how to get Ray released. And it was making her sick.
Could there ever have been a more horrendous crime? This case had traumatized her profoundly the first time around, and now the nightmares were starting all over again. She closed her eyes and saw the crime-scene photos appear like some grisly slide show. Every single member of the family murdered, but for Erin, and in brutal and horrifying ways. Both parents, stabbed repeatedly. The father's leg broken, plus several ribs. Her brother, cut almost beyond belief. Her sister, crumpled on the floor, a lovely polka-dot skirt draped across her legs. The whole family in one bloody heap, except for the baby, who was in the nursery, and Erin, who had been chained down in the basement. One day, they were a happy, normal suburban enclave, and the next-they were virtually extinct. What the hell was the world coming to?
By the time she got to her third latte, Christina had scrutinized every page of the reports, photos, and tech analyses, but she was no nearer to solving any of the central mysteries of the case. Such as-why? The police called it a robbery that went bad; the Faulkners' considerable cash and jewelry had been taken (and never recovered). But surely that could have been accomplished without so much brutality, so much bloodshed. Couldn't they have gotten the goods without torturing those kids? Without killing them all?
And then there was a second mystery, the one that had drawn so much attention at the trial: Why was Erin chained downstairs while the rest of her family was killed in the living room? The prosecutor had suggested that Ray, in addition to being a brutal torturer/murderer and thief, was also some kind of sex pervert, and that he had put Erin away to enjoy later, like a chocoholic saving the last Godiva for a rainy day. But to Christina, that explanation only raised more questions. Such as: Why didn't he come back for her? The bodies were not found for several days, after Erin freed herself. There was no sign that the killer had been rushed in any way. Why didn't he return? Even if he decided against a sexual assault, why didn't he kill her as he did the others? Leaving her alive could only create a potential incriminating witness. Why?

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