Authors: William Bernhardt
Tags: #Murder, #Police, #Attorney and client, #Legal, #General, #Kincaid; Ben (Fictitious character), #Suspense, #Traffic accident victims, #Crime, #Legislators, #Confidential communications, #Fiction
“What happened when Torres initiated the investigation?”
“At my suggestion, they traced her cell phone. I knew she’d have it with her. I was afraid it would be dead, but by some miracle, it wasn’t. Maybe she didn’t leave it on all the time, to conserve battery power. I don’t know. But they traced the signal. Turned out she went off the road not far from a signal tower, out in the backwoods of Skiatook. They were able to narrow her location down to about a five-mile radius. Given how few roads there were out there, that didn’t leave many possibilities. They found her in about three hours.” Dennis sat up straight, his back arched, his teeth clenched. “Can you believe that? She had been out there suffering … bleeding … for seven days. And they had the power to find her in three hours.”
“I’m so sorry,” Ben said. It was an almost impossible situation, trying to calm his witness down without seeming as if he was calming his witness down, because why would this nice temper-free man need to be calmed down? “That must have been horrifying. Were you there at the crash site?”
“Oh, yes. I stayed with them every step of the way. It was a dirt road, so there were no skid marks, but one of the other officers finally detected an unnatural depression, just at the lip of a sharp declivity leading to a ravine. Two officers went down. Her car had plowed through some thick brush. Blackberry bushes, I think. That’s why her car wasn’t visible from the road.”
“And your wife was down there?”
“Yes.”
“And she was still alive?”
“Barely. She was trapped in the car, bleeding and gashed—”
“Objection,” Guillerman said, but Ben noticed he was very quiet about it. “We’ve already heard expert medical testimony about Dr. Thomas’s injuries.”
“Overruled. The witness may proceed.”
“The police officers and the medics did everything they could for her. They had to rip the roof off the car to get to her. That took some time. Once she was out, the medics injected her with something—epinephrine, I think. They stopped the bleeding and treated all the major lacerations. But in only a few minutes, they came to me shaking their heads.”
“What did they say?”
Dennis’s head bowed. He trembled a bit the first time he tried to speak. When he lifted his head again, there was a tear in his eye. “They—they said she would never make it back to a hospital alive. And they asked if I wanted to see her.”
Ben’s voice grew quiet. “What did you say?”
“Of course I wanted to see her. I ran to her. I put my arms around her, as much as was possible. I told her that I had been looking for her and I apologized for not finding her sooner. I—I cried.”
Ben found it difficult to hold back tears himself. “Was there anything else?”
“She told me not to worry. She—she could see how this was affecting me. She told me to be strong and not to mourn for her. That was so like Joslyn, always thinking about others, even as she was dying. And—and just before she died—”
His voice broke. He turned his head away.
Ben cleared his throat. “We could take a break …”
“No. I can continue.” Dennis sat up straight and wiped his face dry. “She told me to outwit the stars. It was a phrase she knew from a famous teacher, a yogi. Part of her ongoing search for meaning, for peace of mind. I’m no expert, but I think it means, Don’t let yourself be controlled by outside forces. Or other people. Chart your own course. Your own destiny.” Dennis pressed his fingers against his forehead. “She wanted the best life possible for me. Even … even without her.” He covered his face. His shoulders heaved.
“Your honor …”
Ben didn’t have to finish his sentence. “Let’s take a fifteen-minute break, shall we?” McPartland rapped the gavel. “We’ll pick this up right where we left off.”
Ben took Dennis into a nearby deliberation room and left him there so he could collect himself in private. While he did, Ben and Christina conferred.
“How do you think it’s going?” Ben asked, knotting his fingers together.
“I think it’s going well. Hard to be sure.”
“That’s supposed to be your specialty.”
“This is a tough case. Too many nuances. I think they are genuinely moved by his loss. And that’s good. But I’m not sure they blame the police, certainly not enough to justify a murder. I think they like Dennis and believe him so far, but we really haven’t gotten into the tricky stuff yet.”
Ben ducked his head, hoping that the reporters in the corridor would leave him alone. “Bottom-line this for me, Christina. I don’t have much time.”
“They like and believe him, but that doesn’t mean they believe he was temporarily insane. And we need that. Without it, all we have is jury nullification. Dennis’s situation was horrible, but to impel the jury to let him go unpunished, we would have to also show that the police were unreasonable. If we could show that Detective Sentz had some deliberate reason for not investigating, some ulterior motive, that would be good.”
“But we don’t have that,” Ben replied. “And the mystery man in the police station isn’t going to be enough.”
“No,” Christina said sadly. “I don’t think it is.”
“So that leaves us with making the jury like him so much they want to let him off, or making the jury think he was temporarily crazy, which are rather contradictory goals.”
“Don’t I know it. And that contradiction is playing out big-time right now, inside the heads of each and every member of that jury.”
Ben stepped into the deliberation room. Dennis seemed to have recovered himself with surprising speed. Or perhaps he shouldn’t be surprised.
“I just talked to my investigator,” Ben said. “Did you know that the late Officer Sentz had a brother who worked at St. Benedict’s? With your wife?”
Dennis blinked rapidly several times, as if he was having a hard time processing the information. “No, I had no idea.”
“Surely she mentioned the name.”
“Not that I recall. But the name didn’t mean anything to me—until after she disappeared. And she was always careful to observe patient confidentiality.”
“It’s a heck of a coincidence,” Ben said, frowning.
“Does he know anything about the case? About what his brother was doing?”
“I don’t know. Yet. My investigator is looking into it. Unfortunately, I have to take you back into the courtroom and finish the direct. I’m beginning to wish we hadn’t moved to trial so quickly.”
“Could you get the judge to delay the trial?”
“A reasonable judge, maybe. This judge, no. But I’ll try.”
The hearing in the judge’s chamber took fewer than five minutes. Ben had said he was ready for trial and now he was going to have to stand by his word. Justice would not be delayed because “some investigator had a hunch of no apparent significance.” And so the direct examination of Dennis would proceed.
“Dennis, if you’re ready to continue, I have a few more questions,” Ben said.
“Of course.” He seemed a little steadier. His voice was almost back to normal, though his face was flushed.
“What did you do after they found Joslyn?”
“I kind of lost control at the scene of the accident. Detective Sentz finally showed up and he was angry and bellowing because Torres had initiated the search. The search that found her, if too late. That was just the last straw. I’m embarrassed to say I got in his face and he grabbed me and threw me to the ground. That’s when my face was scraped up. He later made it sound as if he had to take precautions to protect himself. That was a crock. He was covering his rear, once he saw how much attention the case got.”
“You had been through a horrifying experience,” Ben said. “Were there any further incidents?”
“Yes. After Joslyn died. I attacked him and I managed to get one good punch in before his buddies pulled me away. He had me arrested. I spent the weekend in jail. By the time I was released, Joslyn had been cremated. I never got to see her again. Never really got to say goodbye.”
“That must have been heartbreaking.” Ben was having to fight back tears, as were many in the gallery. “What about later? After you got home?”
“For days, I did nothing. I pretty much fell apart. Let myself go. I felt so bad. So … guilty. As if there were something I should have done. Something more. Beating myself up night and day.”
“I can understand that.”
“And I was angry at Detective Sentz. I will admit that. Thought about him all the time. But please realize—this man had the power to save my wife’s life. I didn’t! I couldn’t save her. But he could. He could and he chose not to. That was … that was a very hard truth to deal with.”
“You saw your therapist?”
“Yes, and he tried to help, but there was only so much he could do. I was totally consumed with these thoughts about Detective Sentz.”
“Did your therapist give you medication?”
“Yes.”
“Did you take it?”
“Of course. Couldn’t tell that it made any difference, though. I was too far gone.”
Not the words Ben would’ve chosen. Keep it moving …
“When did you obtain the gun?”
“I had it already. We lived out in the country, remember? Everyone has a gun. It isn’t unusual. It made Joslyn feel safer. But I never used it. Never once. Couldn’t even remember where it was at first.”
“But you did remember eventually.”
“Yes.” His features seemed to slow as if he was trying to recall, trying to revisit someplace he didn’t really want to go. “I found it. Loaded it. I had become increasingly obsessed with Detective Sentz. I couldn’t think, read, watch television. I saw him everywhere I went. I just—” He looked skyward. His eyes were watering. “I wanted him to acknowledge that he did a bad thing. That’s all. Just wanted him to take responsibility.”
“So what did you do?”
“I went to the police station. Turned out he wasn’t there, he was on some kind of stakeout. So I made a stakeout of my own. I watched the police station until he turned up. When he did, I followed him, all the way to the Marriott. I went in and waited. If you sit in the central lounge, you can see the outside of every door on every floor. I watched and waited. Eventually, I saw him go into a room. I took the elevator up.”
“Did you meet anyone along the way?”
“Yes. That police officer. The one who testified. Shaw. He tried to stop me. But he didn’t try hard. I think he was sloshed. You know.” He made a drinking gesture with his hand. “I’d seen him sitting in the hotel bar swishing martinis for several hours. So I pushed past him and went on up to the hotel room. I wasn’t planning to hurt Sentz. I just wanted to force him to acknowledge what he had done. I wanted him to take responsibility for the death of my wife.”
“And what happened next?”
Dennis took a long deep breath. He seemed almost lost in thought, his eyes turned inward. “I don’t know. That’s all I can remember.”
“Nothing more?”
“I know I got in the elevator. I got off. I have a vague memory of seeing Sentz, of him letting me in the room. We talked. I don’t remember what was said. And that’s it.” He shook his head, obviously frustrated. “I woke up several hours later in the hospital. Apparently I blacked out.”
“Objection,” Guillerman said quietly.
“Sustained,” Judge McPartland replied. “The witness will limit himself to what he saw and heard.”
“Do you remember anything more?” Ben asked. “More than what you’ve told us?”
“No. Nothing. But I want to say this—I did not go to the hotel to kill that man. Yes, I took a gun. Maybe I even wanted to scare him a little. And definitely I wanted him to admit that he had been wrong, that his actions had killed my Joslyn. If there was something going on with him and that man at the station, I wanted to know about it. But I did not plan to kill him. Never in a million years. Joslyn would not have wanted that. And neither did I.”
“Thank you,” Ben said. “I’ll pass the witness.”
As Guillerman approached, Ben realized that his chore now was almost as difficult as Ben’s had been. This was cross-examination. The DA had to be aggressive. At the same time, if he came on too strong with a man who had just lost his wife in a horrible manner, it could well put off the jurors. He had to find a middle ground, at least until he uncovered some lie or inconsistency. Then, and only then, could he pounce.
“Mr. Thomas, you talked a great deal about your life after you lost your wife and what you did then. But aren’t you leaving something out?”
Dennis’s head tilted to one side. He obviously didn’t know what to say. Questions like that were insidious. The correct answer, of course, was no. But even the most confident witness had to wonder what the DA was about to spring on him. And nothing eroded confidence like uncertainty.
“I’m not sure what you mean.”
“You talked about seeing your shrink, going to the funeral … but for some reason you’re leaving something out. Aren’t you?”
“I’m still not aware of what you mean.”
“You saw Mr. Kincaid. Didn’t you?”
Ben sat up straight, ready to respond. Guillerman was entering dangerous territory. He could establish the fact of a meeting, but any questions regarding the nature or content of the discussion were strictly forbidden. And given that Guillerman had already narrowly escaped a mistrial motion for a closely related leak, he expected the DA to toe the line carefully.
“I—I saw my lawyer, yes.”
“And when did you see him?”
“Well …”
“It was the very day you shot—excuse me—when you were arrested on the charge of shooting Detective Sentz. Right?”
“Yes, it was.”
“How long did you and your lawyer chat?”
“Perhaps fifteen minutes.”
“That was all it took. Wow.” Guillerman shook his head from side to side, commenting without commenting. “Did you do anything else that day?”
“Only what I’ve already described. From there I went to the police station.”
“So after you had your little chat with the good senator, you went directly to the station, where you waited for Detective Sentz to arrive and then stalked him with a gun.”
“Objection!” Ben said.
Guillerman held up his hands. “I’m only repeating the man’s testimony.”