'Mark Brower came to my client's home and attacked him.'
Sara gave up a smile. 'Really-so Mr. Dayton cut off Brower's finger in self-defense? And put his head in a noose? That'll be fun to hear you argue in court.'
Dayton frowned at his attorney, who then said to Brass and the CSIs, 'Whatever you may have in the Brower matter is beside the point. You can't really think you're going to successfully prosecute my client for events that happened a decade ago?'
Brass said, 'Mr. Dayton's DNA hasn't changed in ten years-and we have his DNA from then
'Stored under what conditions?' Deams said, waving that off as if it were nothing more than a bothersome gnat.
Warrick said, 'We have voluminous physical evidence, Mr. Deams, including the fingers your client harvested from his victims, which we removed from his little basement museum.'
Deams even shrugged that off. 'We believe Mark Brower planted that evidence in my client's home.'
'Well, then Brower must've made your client help him out,' Warrick replied, 'because only Jerome Dayton's fingerprints are on those jars.'
The attorney gestured with open hands. 'Circumstantial evidence. You have surprisingly little. Is there anything else?'
'You mean, other than your client running around bare-ass with blood all over him,' Brass said, 'stabbing a police officer whose presence was backed up by a warrant?'
Deams twitched something that was not exactly a smile. 'My client is…a troubled young man. He has a medical history, which includes medication that has been quite successful in curtailing his…problem.'
'Not lately,' Brass said.
'We will show that a physician recommended my client take a drug holiday-that's a common practice for patients suffering chemical imbalance, who have been medicated for many years. It would appear that this holiday was…ill-advised.'
'Ill-advised?' Brass said. 'Maybe we should prescribe your client's doctor a lethal injection, too?'
'No such barbaric thing will happen to my client, Captain Brass. In fact, I'm quite sure this particular case will never get to trial.'
'Your 'troubled' client,' Brass said, 'was institutionalized before, and yet he was out within three years. And now that Mommy and Daddy aren't around to keep him in a druggy haze, he's reverted to his 'barbaric' nature. No- even if you manage to convince a judge and jury that Jerry here doesn't know the difference between right and wrong…and I grant you he's a homicidal sociopath…he'll be in a state institution that'll make Sundown look like Club Med.'
Dayton finally spoke-three simple words, directed at Brass: 'I hate you.'
'Well, that can be your new hobby, Jerry,' Brass said, 'in your new padded pad.'
That did it.
Despite the cuffed wrists, Dayton came scrambling over the table at Brass, but Brass was ready and simply slipped aside, the killer sliding over the edge of the table, accidentally kicking his lawyer in the head before he landed face-first on the floor in an upended pile. The kick had sent Deams off balance, and he'd tumbled off his chair onto the floor as well.
A uniformed officer rushed in, but Brass waved him away, grabbing Dayton by the scruff of the neck and picking him up like a big plastic bag full of trash; then Warrick was on the other side of the prisoner and together they dragged the dazed Dayton around and sat him down in his chair, hard.
Sara had come around to help the flustered attorney to his feet, and Deams growled a thanks at her and proceeded to slap away at his expensive gray suit as if it had gotten filthy from his trip to the carpet of the spotless interview room.
Both CSIs and the homicide captain seemed more amused than frightened or even flustered by this lame attack from a known serial killer.
'Jerry,' Brass said, in a tone usually reserved for wayward children, 'you really must watch that temper- someday you may do something really violent, and who
'I object,' the lawyer squeaked. He had finally stopped brushing away imaginary dirt from his suit.
'You're not in court, counselor,' Brass said. 'Sit down!'
The attorney drew in a breath through clenched teeth; but he sat.
Deams turned to Dayton and, quietly, said, 'You don't have to say anything. This interview is over when we say it's over.'
Dayton was pouting; he might have been a six-year-old, stiffling tears. Stealing a glance at Brass, he said to the attorney, 'I'm not afraid of him.'
Deams shook his finger in Dayton's face. 'You should be!'
Dayton lurched forward and bit down on the lawyer's finger, just under the middle knuckle, viciously.
Deams was screaming and both Warrick and Brass came around the table once more, the uniformed officer who'd been stationed outside sprang in again, this time with gun in hand.
With Warrick behind him, holding on to him, Dayton released his toothy grip and the attorney drew his hand away; the flesh was broken but the digit was still intact.
The attorney, blinking fear and pain, said, 'Jerry, you need to be quiet…just be quiet….'
'You are
'Jerry, please-'
'I told you what he did to me, Deams, and you didn't do anything!' Dayton strained forward as a cool Warrick held him by the shoulders. 'You could have helped me! You let me go back to that house. Well, you're lucky I didn't make an example of you, too, counselor! Get out of my sight.'
Holding up his good hand, Deams said, 'Slow down, Jerry-you don't know what you're doing or saying. Your emotions are running away with you. You need to calm down, and look at this rationally. So
'You bleeding money out of me is at stake, you conniving asshole!' Looking across the table at Brass, Dayton said, 'Get him out of here-now!'
Sara was at the attorney's side. 'Let's get that finger looked at, shall we?'
Deams swallowed, nodded, and-after gathering up his briefcase and papers in his good arm-allowed Sara to take him by the elbow; but the attorney paused near the door to say pointedly to Brass, 'If you continue this interview, outside of my presence, with my client in his current mental state, I will-'
'He's not your client,' Brass said.
'Yeah!' Dayton yelled childishly, suddenly pals with Brass. 'I'm not your client!'
The attorney, who was holding the hand with the damaged finger out in front of him, as if hailing a cab, said, 'Tomorrow he'll come to his senses. Tomorrow he'll hire me back.'
'Today,' Brass said, 'you're not representing him. Good luck with the finger.'
Sara walked the lawyer out.
Brass gave the uniformed officer a nod, and he stepped out. Now it was just Brass, Dayton, and Warrick.
Dayton's breathing-which had accelerated to that of a sprinter crossing the finish line-began to slow; his shoulders relaxed under Warrick's grip, and suddenly it was like the CSI was giving the prisoner a massage.
'I'm okay,' he said, looking back at Warrick.
Warrick let go of him.
Dayton sat docilely, cuffed hands before him on the table. He slumped a little. He seemed placid now, and a little tired.
To Brass he said, 'You and I…we may be…antagonists, but…we do understand each other. Respect each other…right?'
Brass and Warrick exchanged tiny significant glances.
'Sure, Jerry,' Brass said.
'I'll talk to you. Tell you whatever you want to know. Start to finish, okay?'