EVIDENCE OF GUILT
By Jonnie Jacobs
1
In eight years of practicing law, I'd never had a client who gave me the creeps. I'd had clients I didn't particularly like, of course, ranging from the overly brash to the downright sleazy, but never one who caused goosebumps to rise along the back of my neck. And I saw no reason to start now with the likes of Wes Harding.
"Sorry," I told Sam Morrison, shaking my head in apology. We were having lunch together, something we did a couple of times a month. He'd waited until we'd finished our burgers and fries before raising the matter. "I appreciate the offer, but I don't think I'm interested."
"And why the hell not?" Sam leaned forward with both elbows on the table, oblivious of the catsup spill his shirtsleeves mopped up in the process. "Wasn't it only a couple of weeks ago you were complaining about how slow things were? Slow and 'megamonotonous' was, I believe, the way you put it."
He had me there. Solo practice is attractive as a concept, but the reality falls somewhat short. In the year since I'd
gone out on my own, my cases had been few in number and all rather pedestrian. Divorces, wills, a couple of DUIs and an occasional commercial dispute. Hardly life on the cutting edge of the law. Besides which, I was barely making a living.
"I'm offering you a piece of something big, Kali. Something that will jump-start those atrophied brain cells of yours and make you feel like you're practicing law again."
Sam can talk like that and get away with it--the prerogatives of age and experience. He's semi-retired now, slowed by the death of his wife three years ago and a more recent string of minor heart attacks. But Sam is still the best lawyer in Silver Creek, and one of the big names in California legal circles.
You wouldn't know it to look at him, though. He's overweight, ruddy in the face, and habitually, if charmingly, disheveled in appearance. His white hair stands in tufts over his temples, and the clean, freshly starched shirt he takes from the hanger each morning is rumpled and stained under the arms half an hour after he's put it on. Today, one of the lower buttons was missing, causing the shirt to gap around his middle.
"It's a high-profile case," he said, "a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."
I nodded, although I wasn't sure I viewed high-profile cases in quite the same light Sam did.
'There's a tidy sum of money in it for you," he added. "I'm not asking you to work for nothing, you know."
Handing him a napkin, I gestured to the spot of catsup on his sleeve. "Money's not the issue."
"What is it then? Are you like these folks in town who forget that accused and guilty aren't one in the same?"
I knew they weren't; still I couldn't help asking, "Do you think he's innocent?"
"He says he is."
"And you believe him?"
"I'm inclined to." Sam ran a thumb around his bottle of Bud, then looked up and caught my eye. "In any event, what I think doesn't really matter. Neither, I might add, do your own thoughts on the subject. The law says a man is innocent until proven guilty. And that means in a court of law, not over backyard fences and mugs of beer at the local tavern."
I couldn't have agreed with Sam more--in theory. But I'd known Lisa Cornell, at least well enough to say hello to. And I knew Wes. What's more, I'd seen pictures of Lisa and her daughter. Not the ones published in the paper, but the photos taken at the scene. It wasn't a case I could easily relegate to theory. Even here in the cafe, amid the lively bustle of the lunch crowd and the clatter of dishes, the memory of those pictures sent a shiver down my spine.
Sam raised the bottle to his lips, took a swig, then wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "A murder trial is an enormous undertaking. I could use your help, Kali. I can't do it alone." He paused. "Not anymore."
He didn't add, "You owe me," but I knew it was there, in my mind if not in his. Sam's daughter and I had been high school friends. We'd gone our separate ways after graduation, but we'd stayed in touch--until her death from a drug overdose three years later. Although I hadn't seen Sam in the interim, when I moved back home to Silver Creek last year, he took me under his wing as though I were his long-lost daughter herself. He'd introduced me around the local legal circuit, making sure I met everyone
from judges to clerks. He'd sent me clients, allowed me to use his law library at all hours of the day and night, acted as counsel and, above all, friend. It's not easy to refuse a friend.
I suspected that Sam's involvement in the case was of a similar nature. Jake Harding, Wes's father, was a fishing buddy of Sam's, as well as the doctor who'd treated his wife during her long, downhill battle with cancer. Jake needed Sam's help; Sam needed mine. I wasn't so sure Wes wanted any of us, but maybe that didn't matter.
Sam lowered his voice. "The cops never looked at anyone but Wes. They saw only what they wanted to see."
"There was plenty there for them to see."
"They never even let on that he was a suspect," Sam continued. "Never read him his rights. Not until after they had what they wanted."
I raised a brow. "That ought to make your job easy, then."
"Well, maybe they didn't cross the line, but they pushed it." Sam started to say something more, then closed his mouth and looked at me glumly. "I guess you don't need to hear the Defense Bar lecture on fair representation."
I shook my head. "I think I know it."
"But you're not convinced."
"Let me think about it, okay?"
He nodded, was silent a moment, then finished off what was left of his beer. "You and Wes were in school together, weren't you?" he asked finally.
"For a while."
Wes was with us through junior high and part of high school. I can't remember when he was sent away exactly, because we continued to talk about him long after. I don't even know why he was sent away, really. There were stories
that he'd molested a ten-year-old girl, that he'd gotten another girl pregnant, that he'd broken into the school at night and left a headless and disemboweled cat on Mrs. Heafy's desk. There were so many stories they've run together in my mind. And, of course, I never did know how many were true. Parents and teachers may have talked among themselves, but they never shared any of it with us.
What I do remember clearly is the way Wes would stare at you. Not mean, like the Armstrong boys, and not loony like old Mr. Wilks, but with eyes that would get under your skin and seek out the dark, uncomfortable places you tried to ignore. He was bad news; we knew that. And in case we didn't, our parents never failed to point it out.
But there was an undeniable fascination there as well. Wes was good-looking--dark hair, dark eyes, a full mouth that curled at the edges in an almost feminine manner. More than that, though, Wes had a way about him, something that pulled at you even when you tried to ignore it.
Can a fifteen-year-old feel lust and loathing at the same time? Because that's the closest I can come to describing the effect Wes Harding had on me. At night he would work his way into my dreams and leave me breathless with anticipation. By day I couldn't bear to look at him.
"The boy's had a rough time of it," Sam said, interrupting my thoughts as though he'd been listening in.
"He's hardly a boy," I corrected, knowing Sam undoubtedly referred to me, when I wasn't around, as "the girl." Language that might have earned him a severe tongue-lashing in politically correct San Francisco went largely unnoticed a couple hundred miles away in Silver Creek.
'Jake was sure he'd straightened out, though."
"Was?"I asked.
Sam smiled. "Is. He's standing behind his son one hundred percent."