me. I’ve got some business to finish with the lady.”
Was that me? It sounded not like the fellow I know so well, but the goat-man I’d heard described all week in court. Another moment passed, then the unmistakable voice of Kit Carson Cimarron, “Fool me twice, and you’re dead.”
The audio was clear. Better than I could have hoped. I kept listening.
“ Simmy, he forced me.”
Damn. Even her lies are consistent.
“ He hit me, just like he used to do. He tore off my clothes and just forced me.”
Then Cimarron’s voice, calm and dispassionate. “You knew what he was like. You told me yourself.”
I heard myself shout, “This is crazy!”
But who would believe me? Don’t all criminals deny their crimes?
Cimarron’s voice grew louder. “First you steal from me. Then you trespass on my land, and now you violate my woman.”
Why don’t I just hand the tape to McBain? He can play it for his closing argument. What else does he need?
When Cimarron started flinging me into the walls, the audio captured every thud.
“ No, Simmy! You’ll kill him! Don’t!”
She seemed to mean it. But then, if H. T. Patterson was right, she wanted me to kill him.
A cr-ack, the rail splitting, and the noise of the horse snorting and stomping its feet as I landed on its back and slid into its stall.
“ C’mon out, lawyer. I’m not through with you.”
No, he wasn’t. I listened to the rest, so familiar and yet so unreal. There was Kip crying out he was Spartacus, Cimarron taking away the pitchfork, Kip dashing out of the barn. There was the first shot from the nail gun, then Cimarron telling Jo Jo to reload a clip for him. The muffled whomp of another shot and then another. The noise from the corncrib, the sounds of two big men crashing into each other and whatever else got in the way. More whomps of steel into wood, and finally, after a pause, the last shot straight into the meat of a man’s brain.
I hit the stop, then rewound to the beginning and played it again. Something was bothering me, but what? I listened more carefully when I knew it was near the end, but still, it seemed out of sync. The timing of the last shot was off. I needed to count the seconds.
Again, I rewound the tape and listened. This time I closed my eyes and saw the scene. I was on my back, my hand curling around the nail gun and lifting it toward his chest. I remembered his hand grabbing it and my pulling the trigger, hoping for the blast and hearing nothing but a…
Click.
Then the sound of my own head being snapped against the floor by Cimarron’s fist.
A thud like a baseball smacking into the catcher’s mitt.
Followed quickly by a grunt.
I couldn’t place the sounds. I would have been already close to unconsciousness. Seconds passed. What was happening?
Whomp.
Silence.
I stopped the tape, rewound just a bit, and played the last few moments yet again.
I counted, a-thousand-one, a-thousand-two, a-thousand-three. From the time I was hit, three seconds, then the thud and grunt. Seven more seconds until the final whomp.
Ten seconds from the time I was hit! I couldn’t have fired it. At the time, I was drifting toward dreamland, having been battered into a fair-to-middling concussion.
I tried to figure it out.
Ten seconds.
What happened when I was sailing somewhere between pain and coma?
I was still thinking about it as the tape ran on. This time, I didn’t stop it.
Then I heard the voice. And I knew.
CHAPTER 27
I didn’t have time to shower and change. I rushed to the sheriff s department in the basement of the courthouse and found Detective Racklin at his desk. I told him what I needed. “A dummy?” he asked.
“ Two dummies, like they use in the crash tests.”
“ What for?”
“ Come to court, and you’ll see.”
I barged through the courtroom door carrying a brown paper sack from the City Market, and everyone turned toward me. Why were they looking at me that way? H. T. Patterson stood at the lectern, peering over his shoulder. Jo Jo Baroso was on the witness stand, and the jurors were in their places. The clock said nine-forty.
“ Ah, here you are,” Judge Witherspoon announced from the bench. “I was about to issue a bench warrant, but if you’ll take your seat, Mr. Lassiter, perhaps we can continue. Next question, Mr. Patterson.”
“ No!” I called out, plowing through the gate that separates the spectators from the gladiators.
“ I beg your pardon,” the judge said.
“ I mean, no, Your Honor. Respectfully, may we approach the bench?”
“ We, as in the lawyers and you?”
“ Yes, Your Honor. I’m an attorney duly admitted to the Florida Bar, attorney number 163327. Additionally, I believe I have a constitutional right to be heard in my own defense. I wish to be associated as co-counsel.”
Patterson hustled over and grabbed me just above the elbow. He had a good grip for a little guy. “Jake,” he whispered, “what the hell are you doing?”
“ Trust me.”
“ Trust you? You have straw in your hair, you look like you slept on a park bench…and what’s that on your shoes?”
I looked down. Oops. Never wear wing tips in the morgue or a horse barn.
“ Gentlemen,” the judge called out, a note of irritation creeping into his voice. “Would you please step forward?”
I put my paper sack on the defense table and joined Patterson, McBain, and the stenographer on the side of the bench away from the jury.
“ Your Honor,” I began, “I wish to take over the cross-examination of Ms. Baroso.”
The judge wrinkled his forehead. “Surely you know the old saw about a man representing himself having a fool for a client.”
“ This is different, Your Honor.”
“ Why?”
“ Because there are only two people in this courtroom who know what happened in the barn that night. One is sitting on the witness stand, and the other is me, and I only learned it this morning.”
“ That’s not good enough. The client always knows more than the lawyer about the case. I’ll give you fifteen minutes to consult with Mr. Patterson, then we continue.”
“ No, Your Honor. I have to do it myself. I’m the only one who can.”
The judge studied me a moment, his jaw muscles tightening. “I am cognizant of your right to defend yourself, but I have a duty to protect defendants from themselves.” He seemed to ponder the question of my competence, then sniffed the air, before turning to the clerk. “What is that godawful smell? Would someone ask the bailiff to