stopped, he just slept. This morning…like it was nothing. I brought him here.'
'Do you want…?'
'No! I'm just…'
'I know,' I told her. Like trying to sleep in prison. With the cell doors unlocked.
82
I left her there. Called the DA's office. They told me Wolfe was on trial, in Long Island City, Part L-3. Bureau chiefs don't try cases. I put it together. Threw on my lawyer suit and headed out to Queens.
When I walked in the courtroom, Mary Beth was already on the stand. That's the way Wolfe trained them: no prelims, no dancing— come out throwing bombs, try and drop the other guy soon as you hear the bell. Lola was leading the little girl through her testimony, her body language suggesting she was pulling softly, coaxing the child out past her fear. Bringing the monster into the light. Lola's slim body was a gently weaving wand in front of the little girl, pacing back and forth on her high heels, blocking the defendant's view of the witness box.
Sheba sat next to Mary Beth, the little girl's hand on her head. The dog's eyes followed Lola.
'Just one more question, Mary Beth. You told us what he did, what he did to you. It went on a long time— how come you never told anyone?'
'He said…he told me he'd make something bad happen to Mommy. He said he'd made her get sick and die. He showed me…in the paper where a little girl's mother got sick and died. He said he did that to her. Because the little girl told.'
'No further questions,' Lola said, sitting down as Mary Beth brushed tears off her cheeks.
The defendant's lawyer got to his feet. A fat, jowly man, his hair was plastered to his scalp with sweat, carefully combed up and over his head from one side to advertise his baldness.
'Your Honor, I again renew my objection to the presence of that animal while the witness testifies. The
The judge was a regal-looking woman, reddish-blonde hair cut stylishly short, square shoulders, almost a military bearing. I'd seen her before— she started out in Family Court, where they get closer to the truth. Hard to tell her age, but her eyes were old. 'Counselor,' she said, 'the court is familiar with the
'No, Your Honor. But…'
'The court has already ruled, sir. You may have a continuing objection, and your exception to my ruling. Ask your questions.'
Sheba watched the fat attorney like he was mutton in a three-piece suit.
The questioning wasn't much. The usual: Did she ever watch horror movies? Ever see a porno tape on the VCR in her mother's house? Have bad dreams? Anybody tell her what to say?
Mary Beth answered the questions. Sometimes the judge had to tell her to speak up a little bit, but she was getting through it. Patting Sheba, drawing comfort and strength.
The defense attorney asked, 'Do you know it's a sin to tell a lie, Mary Beth?'— stepping aside dramatically so the jury would understand it was his client being lied about.
'I know it's a sin,' the child said, calmly. 'I'm not lying.'
'She can't see me!' the defendant hissed suddenly, whispering for his lawyer's ear but loud enough for everyone to hear. 'She can't see without her glasses.'
Wolfe was on her feet and charging forward like they just rang the bell for the last round and she needed a KO to pull it out. 'Was that an objection?' she snarled.
'Yes, that was an objection!' the defense attorney shouted, scrambling to clean up the mess the molester made. 'My client is being denied his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation.'
'He doesn't want confrontation, he wants terrorism. The law says he gets to see and hear the witness— it doesn't say anything about her having to stare at the likes of him.'
'That's enough,' the judge snapped. 'Take the jury out.'
The court officers hustled the jurors away as everyone sat in silence. One of Wolfe's people took Mary Beth and Sheba out a side door. The judge turned to the lawyers.
'That will be just about enough, counselors. You both know better than to make arguments like that in front of a jury. I don't want to hear a lot of rhetoric now. Mr. Simmons, have you any authority for the proposition that the Sixth Amendment requires a witness to wear corrective lenses?'
'Not specifically, Your Honor. But if she can't even
'She already did that, counsel. On the prosecution's direct case, remember?'
'Yes, I remember. But she was wearing her glasses then.'
'What's your point?'
'My client has rights.'
'None that have been abridged by this court. Now…that won't be necessary, Ms. Wolfe…I have already ruled. Bring the jury back in.'
'Your Honor, in light of your ruling, I have no choice but to ask for a mistrial.'
'On what grounds, counselor?'
'Prejudice, Your Honor. The jury heard what my client said. A statement like that will poison their