Abruptly, Gregg stopped, as if he had lost track of the many reasons why his opinion was clearly right. When Tony looked to his side, the jurors were riveted.
âOh, yes,' Gregg added. âThe rock was lying in a deep indentation in the sand, as shown by' â he glanced over his shoulder â âExhibit D-5. Like it had landed hard.' He paused, as if aware that this was not his most compelling point; this hesitance made his demeanor, before somewhat robotic, suddenly quite human. It had been several trials, Tony realized, since he had seen a police department criminologist who seemed as credible.
âI guess that's all,' Gregg finished abruptly.
Stella paused for dramatic effect. âWhen you found her, Detective Gregg, was Marcie Calder wearing a watch?'
âShe was, yes. It was a blue Swatch â plastic and rubber.'
Stella held out a glassine bag, containing a watch. âIs this the watch â premarked as Exhibit 7?'
Gregg turned the bag in his hands. âI believe so.'
âAnd were you able to lift any fingerprints?'
âThere were three distinct prints. One print, as you might expect, was Marcie Calder's. Another was unidentified.'
âAnd the third print?'
âIt belonged to the defendant, Mr. Robb.'
Stella moved closer. âWith respect to the smear of blood which the police found on the steering wheel, did you also submit a sample of
that
blood to the coroner's office?'
Gregg nodded. âI did. For DNA testing.'
âAnd what, if anything, did the lab report to you?'
Once more, Tony was silent; to object would only worsen the inevitable. Gregg's gaze took in Tony and Sam, then the jury, their faces keen and attentive. âThat the blood on the steering wheel was the
victim
's, Marcie Calder's.'
In silent accusation, Nancy Calder turned to Sam Robb. âIt's all right,' Tony murmured to Sam. âIt's all right.'
âNo further questions,' Stella said.
Chapter 13
During the recess, Tony asked the courtroom deputy to put away Stella's exhibits. When the jury returned, and Tony commenced his cross-examination, Marcie Calder's photograph was gone.
Keep it short
, Tony told himself.
Get what you can get, and get out
. He was glad that Sue had not been in court to watch.
Rising, he faced Gregg with a look of puzzlement. âDid you test the
rock
for fingerprints?'
âYes, sir. There were none.'
âWhat about the third print on the watch, the one you couldn't identify? Did you run it through your own records, and those of other jurisdications?'
Gregg nodded. âWe did. We couldn't get a match.'
âAll right. You've already testified that the blood on the rock was Marcie Calder's, right?'
âThat's correct.'
âThere was quite a bit of blood on that rock, wasn't there?'
âYes, sir. There was.'
âAnd
you
believe that all that blood got on the rock when someone â you don't know who â bludgeoned Marcie Calder.'
Gregg smoothed a crease in his suit. âYes. I do.'
âBut you're not an expert in forensic medicine.'
âNo, I'm not.'
âSo your opinion is not based on the injury itself, but something else. Like that the rock was seven feet from the body.'
âYes.'
Tony put his hands on his hips. âThe sand on that beach was packed down hard, wasn't it?'
âIt was.'
âSo couldn't the rock have rolled there?'
âA rock that heavy? I don't believe so, and besides, there were no marks in the sand to suggest it had.'
âMight not the rain account for that?'
Gregg hesitated. âIt might.'
âAnd if the rock were knocked loose by Marcie's fall, it would have a certain momentum as it went down the cliff, correct? Especially one that heavy.'
âIt
could
. But enough to roll an additional seven feet? I doubt that very much.'
There was no more to be gained here, Tony thought. âIf, as you believe, Marcie Calder was struck by someone standing above the cliff, that would have created a spray of blood, wouldn't it?'
âIt might.'
âAnd
did
, in this case?'
âIt appears so, Mr. Lord. We found blood on both Marcie's sweat-shirt and her blue jeans.'
âDid you find any blood on the bluff itself?'
Gregg paused again. âNo, sir. We didn't.'
âWouldn't you expect to?'
âOrdinarily.' Gregg shifted his weight. âBut by the time we found Marcie Calder, it had been raining â or drizzling â for at least seven hours. As you pointed out.'
âBut you
looked
for blood, right? On the mud, on the grass â in fact, in a fifty-square-foot area surrounding the footprints and what you refer to as the “drag marks”?'
Gregg nodded; like any good expert, he knew when not to quibble. âWe found nothing, Mr. Lord.'
âAnd you also found no blood in Mr. Robb's home, or on the clothes and shoes he gave you.'
âNo, sir. We did not.'
âWouldn't the murderer, in the scenario you imagine, have a splatter of blood all over him? The same as Marcie?'
âI believe so, yes.'
âAnd yet you found no evidence that Mr. Robb discarded any article of clothing.'
Gregg adjusted his glasses. âAt this time, we're aware of none.'
âWhere did you search for discarded clothing?'
âIn the park, in the woods nearby, and, a few days later, at Lake City High School.'
Tony paused, considering his next question. Softly, he asked, âHave you searched any private residence
since
Mr. Robb was indicated?'
Gregg gave him a cool look. âWe have not.'
âAnd with respect to Mr. Robb, the only evidence of Marcie Calder's blood was on the steering wheel of his car.'
âYes, sir.'
Tony paused. âApart from whatever theory you may have, you have no
factual basis
for knowing how Marcie Calder's blood could have gotten on Sam Robb's steering wheel?'
At the corner of his vision, Tony saw Stella stir, then reconsider, placing confidence in her expert. âMy
theory
has a factual basis, Mr. Lord.' Pausing, Gregg considered his further answer. âBut no â I wasn't there. So I can't
know
how that smear of blood got there.'
Abruptly, Tony's manner became more relaxed, discursive. âLet me ask you, as an expert witness, to assume for a moment that what I tell you is true. All right?'
Gregg hesitated. âAll right.'
âWe'll keep assuming that this is murder, not something else. In fact, we'll assume practically everything that you
now
assume â that Marcie Calder was struck with this rock; that the murderer threw her body
and
the rock off the cliff where you found the footprints; that he or she got rid of blood-spattered clothes; and that the drizzle falling later that night washed away any blood on the ground. Still with me?'
âOf course.'
âLet's change one simple fact. Just assume â for this purpose â that I've proven to you that there's an innocent explanation for that smear of Marcie Calder's blood on the steering wheel. It could be a cut finger; that really doesn't matter.'
Gregg's face looked tighter, his cheeks more hollow. Softly, he answered, âAll right, I'll assume that.'
Tony cocked his head. âWhat does that do to the physical evidence that
Sam Robb
, as opposed to someone else, committed this hypothetical murder?'
Gregg grimaced. âWell, it weakens it. Assuming what you say â'
â
Weakens
it.' Tony's voice rose in incredulity. âThere
isn't
any, is there? Not a scrap.'
âNot true.' As Gregg paused, Tony watched him thinking. âThere's the defendant's fingerprint.'
âAh, yes. The fingerprint. Of course, you've no idea how
that
got on Marcie Calder's watch, do you?'
âNo, sir.'
Pausing, Tony asked softly, âOr who the
other
print belongs to.'
âNo, sir,' Gregg conceded. âI said that.'
Tony moved closer. âAll right. Let's get back to the smear of blood, then. When you sent the sample to the laboratory, did you ask them to test for foreign substances?'
âWhat do you mean? Like alcohol, or HIV?'
âNo.' Tony moved forward. âI mean any substance in the blood which is
foreign
to blood.'
Gregg looked concerned; for once, it was clear, he did not see where Tony was going. âNo,' he said defensively. âI didn't specifically request that, and the lab did not report any “foreign substances,” as you describe them.'
Tony nodded. âThank you,' he said, and sat down, feeling the jury's puzzlement, knowing that, in the last two hours, Gregg had pushed him closer to a defense based on Ernie Nixon.
âSuicide looks bad,' Saul said that night.
Tony stared out Saul's window at Steelton's skyline, the lights flickering and irregular, like a power outage. He must not let his thoughts dwell on what had really happened, he reminded himself, but only on what
could
have happened that would make his friend and client innocent of murder. âYou're right,' Tony finally answered. âA pregnant girl in despair is a tough sell now, and the jury will remember that I tried it.'
Saul did not argue with him; among professionals, his look said, there was no point skirting the truth. âAt least you had something going by the end.'
Tony smiled a little. âSo what would you give me, Professor? Maybe a C?'
Saul smiled as well. âA B-plus for cross-examination and a D for dumb objections.' He sat back, serious now. âYou were okay. But you're looking tired. More tired than a trial lawyer can afford.'
It was true, Tony knew. During trial, adrenaline kept him going, but the nightly crashes were harder, longer, offering exhaustion without relief. âI'm not sleeping well,' he said.
Saul frowned. âIs it this case? Or is that the usual?'
âNo. It's not the usual.' It was pointless, Tony thought, to talk about nightmares: in the early hours of the morning, when he finally slept, sleep did not last long. He took a deep swallow of Saul's single-malt Scotch.
Saul, Tony noticed, was not drinking. âMaybe I can help,' Saul said at last. âTake a witness or two.' There was compassion in Saul's eyes, Tony thought, and, more than that, a need to prove to himself, and perhaps to Tony, that he was not a burned-out case. âOf course,' Saul finished, âspeaking personally, I don't give a shit about our client. But maybe that helps.'
This was so mordant, and so true, that it made Tony smile again. He gazed at Saul with real affection. âI'll hold the thought,' he answered.
Chapter 14
It was after nine when Tony returned to his hotel room, tired and hungry, meaning to order a sandwich from room service and outline his cross-examination of Stella's next witness, the coroner. Then he opened the door and found Sue Cash Robb sitting on the end of his bed.
She was dressed in a navy-blue suit, as though for court, and looked at him quietly before saying, âI hope this is all right.'
Closing the door, Tony stood there, feeling the tingle of surprise and alarm, yet pleasure in seeing her alone and away from the trial. âOf course,' he answered. âAre
you
all right?'
Almost imperceptibly, she shook her head. âI came back to court today. Without Sam and Jenn â I'm sending them home.'
âTony put his hands in his pockets. âI didn't see you.'
âI know. I sat in back, so nobody would.'
âHow much did you see?'
âMost of the prosecutor's questions. All of yours.'
âJesus, Sue.' Tony walked across the room and sat next to her, taking her hand. âYou've done enough. I didn't want you having to watch that.'
âDo you think I haven't thought about her?'
âNo. But
seeing
is different.' Tony paused. âI've seen hundreds of pictures like the one of Marcie Calder's face, many much worse. But that one bothered me quite a lot.'
She was quiet for a time. Though she still watched him, something in her gaze seemed inward, directed at her own thoughts; once more, Tony had the sense that she had come to tell him something that he did not wish to hear. But all that she said, finally, was, âMarcie Calder didn't kill herself, did she?'
Tony exhaled. âI don't think so, no.'
âThen it comes down to Ernie Nixon.' Pausing a moment, Sue finished softly: âOr a stranger.'
Tony did not answer directly. âI think I can win this, Sue.'
She turned from him, looking out his hotel window at much the same view, random lights in darkness, that Tony had watched from Saul's office. âWe've asked so much of you, Tony.
I've
asked so much. Much more than I knew.'
Tony smiled. â
De nada
,' he said.
âNo. Not nothing. Too much.'
She was plainly unsettled, Tony saw. âDoes Sam know you're here?'
âYes. I said I was going to buy you dinner, if I could. I'm still partial to the truth.'
The last phrase, Tony thought, had an indefinable edge â what puzzled him was whether it was directed at Sam or at herself. âHow has it been for you?' he asked. âWe've hardly talked.'