Evidence of Blood (18 page)

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Authors: Thomas H. Cook

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If the arguments for and against the death of Charles Overton had ever existed in a concentrated form, Kinley knew he was about to confront them as he drew the transcripts down from the vault shelf the next morning. Early in his work, he’d discovered the high drama which inevitably accompanied even the most mediocre of the closing arguments in capital cases. With so much at stake, the arena of the courtroom became a place of mythic struggle. The petty disputes which rang through the court day after day suddenly gave way to a form of solemn combat a Roman Emperor would have admired—fierce, dedicated, and at times, as Kinley had noted more often than he would have expected, strikingly poetic, as if ordinary voices had suddenly been made glorious and eloquent by the grave issue upon which they spoke: whether or not a human being should be put to death.

Kinley had learned enough about Thomas Warfield’s courtroom style by the time he opened the trial transcript to his closing argument to expect a fine performance. He was not disappointed.

For many pages, Warfield did what nearly all prosecutors found it necessary to do before making their final plunge into the lofty moral rhetoric with which their closing arguments would truly close. He had outlined his case again, massing one detail upon another, until the evidence stood before the jury like a great concrete finger pointing
directly toward the defendant. Then, and only then, had he taken flight.

What is the evidence in this case? It is what it should be in a trial for murder. It is flesh and blood. It is in Ellie Dinker’s blood on her dress. It is in the bits of flesh which clung to that tire iron Deputy Wade found in Charles Overton’s truck
.

The defense will tell you that we do not have a body. Mr. Talbott will tell you that we cannot even prove a murder has been committed
.

Well, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, look at that dress as we show it to you now, draped across the chair before you. Look at the blood which stains it. Ellie Dinker was sixteen years old. Ellie Dinker was five feet tall. Ellie Dinker weighed ninety-three pounds when Dr. Stark weighed her only a month before her death. Look at the amount of blood on that dress, and tell me in your hearts if a body that small could sustain an injury so profound as to stain a dress the way this one is stained, and still live
.

No, ladies and gentlemen, you know that Ellie Louise Dinker is dead. And the fact that Charles Overton to this day will not tell us where her body lies, that is a cruelty which he has inflicted upon Ellie Dinker’s mother that is almost as evil as the murder itself. He could tell us where she is. He could let Elite’s mother give her only daughter a decent, Christian funeral. He could tell us. But he won’t. He wants to save his life, and this is the only way he can save it. He can hope that you believe that because Ellie Dinker’s body has never been found, that she is alive, living somewhere, probably in one of the world’s great resorts
.

Do you believe that?

Is Ellie Dinker in Paris? Is she in Rome? Is she having a wonderful time bouncing in the sea, climbing mountains?

No.

Ellie Dinker will never see Rome or Paris. She will never see the ocean or the mountains. She will never marry or have children of her own. All the opportunities of life, all its beauty and sweetness are lost to her. They were snatched from her by Charles Overton, and they can never be returned
.

And you know why they can’t be returned. In your hearts you know why
.

Because Ellie Dinker is dead
.

She is—to use the terms of the law in this case—she is unjustly dead
.

You know what that means?

Unjustly dead
.

It means she did not die by disease or accident
.

Unjustly dead
.

It means that she did not die by negligence
.

Unjustly dead
.

It means that she did not die in the service of her country
.

Unjustly dead means that Ellie Louise Dinker was murdered
.

And we may not have her body, ladies and gentlemen, but by the grace and intervention of a just and wrathful God, we do have her killer in this room with us today
.

He is there. He is there
.

I raise my hand and point him out to you
.

He is there
.

And ladies and gentlemen, I don’t ask that you do to him what he did to Ellie Dinker. He put her to death—remember the words of the law—he put her to death unjustly
.

I will not ask you to do that
.

I will ask you to do justice
.

I will ask you to put to death Charles Herman Overton, not unjustly, the way he put Elite Dinker
to death, but justly, as you have a right, and an obligation, to do
.

I do not ask for vengeance
.

I ask for justice
.

I believe that you will render it
.

Thank you
.

 

It was good, Kinley thought as he turned the page, it was very good. It had everything a rural Southern courtroom would have needed in the winter of 1954. It had the high rhetoric and righteous fire that gave the whole argument a fierce Biblical grandeur. And, as Kinley realized, it must have swept over the jury like a mighty stream. In his mind, he could see the jurors nodding sagely as Warfield made his long stride back to the prosecution table, their eyes following him in awe and wonder before they finally slid distractedly over to where Horace Talbott now rose to address them.

Warfield had fully anticipated defense’s argument in the case, but that anticipation had not served to warn Talbott against making it. And in his closing remarks, Talbott addressed the issue as relentlessly as if he’d never heard Warfield raise it.

You have a problem in this case. You don’t know where Ellie Dinker is. That’s not a problem for me, because I’m not being asked to put a man to death. But you are being asked to do that. Mr. Warfield is asking you to do that. He is asking you to forget about the fact that you don’t know where Ellie Dinker is
.

Is she in Paris? I don’t know
.

Is she in Rome? I don’t know
.

And you don’t know either, ladies and gentlemen of the jury
.

And that is a very serious problem. Because you do not know for an absolute certainty that Elite Dinker is dead. You can look at that dress until you
turn blue, and you can look at the stains and think about how big or little Ellie Dinker was, what she weighed and her blood type and all of that, but it will not tell you for an absolute certainty that she is dead
.

Is she running around in the ocean? I don’t know
.

Is she out mountain climbing? I don’t know
.

I don’t have to know
.

But you do have to know, ladies and gentlemen, because a man’s life is dependent upon your knowing where Ellie Dinker is at this moment. Not tomorrow, and not yesterday, but where she is at this instant
.

But since you do not know where Ellie Dinker is, I ask that you not send a man to death for killing her
.

Thank you
.

 

It had been short and sweet, Kinley thought after reading Talbott’s closing remarks, but he had done all that was left for him to do by that point in the trial. Before that point, however, one considerably more important was so obvious that Kinley felt no need to jot it down: Why had Charles Overton not testified?

He remembered the passivity with which Overton had faced his arrest, and he wondered if such passivity might have been the result of a shock he was never able to overcome, a state he’d entered as the handcuffs were snapped in place, and which he’d lingered in from then until the moment he’d shuffled across the floor of the execution, still moving, it seemed to Kinley, like a sacrificial lamb. He’d seen that happen before, a strange, eerie calm after the wave of annihilating violence had passed. He thought of Bundy still filing his meticulous briefs during the final, dwindling hours of his life; of the Birdman of Alcatraz poring over volumes of ornithology; of Mildred Haskell’s psychosexual texts, and last of Colin Bright, so peaceful
in his captivity, monkish and serene, his soft blue eyes entirely motionless as he’d offered Kinley his bit of worldly wisdom:
Be careful. You don’t always know who you are
.

He returned the transcripts to the box, then the box to its place on the top shelf. On the way out, he stopped at Mrs. Hunter’s desk at the entrance to the vault.

“I wanted to thank you for letting me look through the transcripts,” he said politely.

“Oh, no trouble,” Mrs. Hunter said. She drew a pair of glasses from her eyes and let them dangle from a black cord around her neck. “Did you find what you were looking for?”

“Not exactly,” Kinley told her, “but I made a start.”

Mrs. Hunter smiled. “You know, I didn’t know who you were at first.”

Kinley looked at her quizzically. “Who I was?”

Mrs. Hunter shook her head shyly. “I mean, if you were the Jackson Kinley they write about in the paper sometimes.”

Kinley nodded.

“Then Mr. Warfield told me, and I remembered seeing your picture from time to time,” Mrs. Hunter added. “He said you came down for Ray Tindall’s funeral.”

“That’s right.”

“Wonderful person, Ray was.”

“Yes.”

“Wonderful person,” Mrs. Hunter repeated idly.

“Did you know him very well?”

“Not really. He kept to himself.”

“Yeah, he did.”

“I think he was sort of close with Mr. Wade, though.”

“Mr. Wade?”

“He’s the Chief Investigator for the District Attorney’s Office,” Mrs. Hunter said. “Ben Wade.”

Kinley recognized the name immediately. “Ben Wade,” he said. “Is he the same Ben Wade who worked for Sheriff Maddox back in 1954?”

“Yeah, he was with the Sheriff’s Office back then,” Mrs. Hunter said.

“And he’s still around the courthouse?”

“Right upstairs,” Mrs. Hunter said.

Kinley smiled quietly. It was one of the pleasures of working the rural outback, he thought, the fact that everything was so inextricably connected.

SIXTEEN
 

 

Ben Wade was now over sixty years old, but the large, robust body Kinley remembered from the newspaper photographs he’d found in Ray’s file on the case was still very much in evidence. He sat behind a small wooden desk in a cramped office just down the hall from William Warfield’s far more spacious one, and the blank walls and worn carpet suggested that he had little use, and no money, for the more luxurious taste of the District Attorney.

“You’re Ben Wade, I believe?” Kinley said as he lingered at the open office door.

Wade’s head lifted, and Kinley saw the web of red veins that lined his nose, and the moist, heavy-lidded eyes that peered gently in his direction, giving the unmistakable suggestion that a bottle of Old Grand-Dad could probably be found in his desk drawer.

“I’m Ben Wade,” the man said. He leaned back slightly and drew in a long slow breath. He wore a white shirt, the sleeves rolled to the elbow, and Kinley could see a faint, purplish tattoo just above the right elbow, a sprig of vine coiled around a motto of some kind, but which he could not make out from his place beside the door.

“What can I do for you?” Wade asked.

“My name is Jack Kinley,” Kinley began. “I was a friend of Ray Tindall’s.”

Wade nodded. “Good man, Ray. I liked working with him. I thought he might try to play the big shot, having been Sheriff before and all, but he didn’t.” He nodded
toward a second wooden desk which was in the opposite corner of the room. “That’s where he worked, in case you’re interested.”

Kinley’s eyes swept over to the desk. It was almost a duplicate of Wade’s, and just as marked by age and indifferent use, honed down to its function, the way Ray had often seemed honed down.

“Ray sort of kept to himself,” Wade said, “but we got along pretty well.”

Kinley returned his attention to Wade. “Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?” he asked.

“Questions?” Wade said, surprised. “About what?”

“Just about Ray,” Kinley answered. “What he was doing the last few weeks of his life.”

“Sure, I got some time,” he said. “But I didn’t follow what Ray was doing all that close.”

Kinley walked further into the room and sat down at the small metal chair in front of Wade’s desk. “I’ve been reading the transcript of the Overton trial,” he said. “You remember it, back in 1954?”

Wade nodded, his face very still. “Yeah, I remember it,” he said. “We don’t have so many murder trials here in Sequoyah that you don’t remember them.”

“You must have been a young man when all that was going on,” Kinley said.

“I’d just turned thirty,” Wade said, “but I’d been around for a while by then.” His eyes narrowed somewhat. “How come you’re looking into that old case?”

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