mayo.'
Fifty-one
She was all alone.
Oh, the courtroom was filled. Reporters in the front row, a still photographer alongside. There were the regulars, retirees who cruise the building looking for cheap entertainment. A few local lawyers occupied the back pews, waiting for their own cases, grousing about handling D amp;Ds-drunk and disorderlies-instead of a juicy murder trial. There were unkempt old-timers, leathery as lizards, who wandered inside just for the air-conditioning. The jurors were stuffed into their box like eggs in a carton, their expressions ranging from bored to bemused to bitchy:
Alongside Victoria at the defense table sat Hal Griffin, not nearly as tan or hearty as when the trial began. Judge Feathers swiveled in his high-back chair, his clerk huddled over her desk below the bench. A paunchy, sleepy bailiff stood just inside the door, the courtroom's Medicare-eligible centurion. Sheriff Rask, placid as ever, sat directly behind the prosecution table.
One gladiator. A hundred lions.
Steve would know that feeling. It was part of their bond, the trial lawyer's steaming brew of terror and exhilaration.
One of his first lessons. Closely followed by:
Leading up to:
I'll try, she thought, knowing it would be easier with Steve by her side. But he was outside, pacing in the corridor. With the witness rule in effect, he was barred from the courtroom while another witness testified. And right now Leicester Robinson was striding toward the witness stand. He wore pleated black pants and a silk coral shirt open at the neck. His mustache was neatly trimmed, his twisted dreadlocks short and tidy. Wire-rimmed glasses gave him a scholarly appearance, but his broad shoulders and thick, callused hands did not fit the image of the history professor he had nearly become. No, this was a working man. Educated and articulate, but a man comfortable with heavy machinery and dirty boots.
At breakfast, Griffin had reacted with disbelief when Victoria told him about Fowles and Robinson.
'Clive would never betray me,' Griffin had said, shaking his head. 'And Robinson? That would take some
Victoria didn't think the tenth-generation grandson of pirates and salvors lacked the balls. Or the brains. Or the 'duality of evil.' The phrase Robinson used to describe the ship captain in Conrad's
Now, as Robinson paused in front of the clerk's table, Judge Feathers instructed: 'Just take your seat on the witness stand, sir. You're still under oath.'
Victoria stood and smoothed the skirt of her Philippe Adec suit. A color so dark, the saleswoman had called it 'anthracite.' Fitting for the gravity of the day's proceedings. And the difficulty of the task, turning coal into diamonds.
She scanned the courtroom. Junior was missing from his usual spot behind the defense table. Sheriff Rask caught her eye and winked. His second wink of the morning. Earlier, when she was draining a cup of coffee from a machine in the lobby, the sheriff had strolled over and good-morninged her.
Now Victoria walked to the far end of the jury box. She didn't want to be in the jurors' range of vision. Let them concentrate on Robinson, who sat waiting, staring at her.
Sometimes, with an adverse witness, you start slowly and softly. Nonthreatening. A neutral tone, a pleasant demeanor, a sunny path strewn with rose petals, concealing the sharpened bamboo in the pit below. Steve likened cross-examination to lulling a pitcher to sleep by taking a short lead off first, then stealing second with a furious, unexpected burst of speed. But early this morning, he'd said that Robinson would know what they were after.
'Do you own a Cigarette Top Gun Thirty-eight, Mr. Robinson?' she asked.
'Not personally,' he answered.
'In a corporate name, then. Does your Bahamian corporation own the boat?'
'It does.'
'And what's the reason you hide your ownership of that boat?'
'Objection. Argumentative.' Waddle couldn't know where she was headed but wanted to block the path getting there.
'Overruled,' the judge said.
'I didn't hide anything, Ms. Lord. The lawyers titled the boat that way for tax purposes.'
'Where's that boat today?'
'It was stolen from a marina yesterday. I've been told it was involved in an accident in the Gulf.'
'Did you report the boat stolen?'
'To tell you the truth, Ms. Lord. .'
'. . I didn't know the boat was gone until the Coast Guard told me it had sunk.'
'Do you know a man named Chester Lee Conklin, also known as Conchy Conklin?'
'Apparently, he's the one who stole my boat.'
'A stranger, then?'
'I didn't say that, ma'am. He's a welder, used to work for me.'
'Used to?'
'Conklin was unreliable. I fired him a few weeks ago.'
'Then what was he doing in Jacksonville less than two weeks ago?'
The question seemed to surprise him. Robinson wouldn't know about the traffic ticket, wouldn't know
they could place Conklin near the shipyard.
'Did you hear the question, sir?' the judge asked.
'You'll have to ask Mr. Conklin what he was doing in Jacksonville,' the witness replied.
'Come now, Mr. Robinson,' Victoria said. 'Surely, the Coast Guard also told you that Mr. Conklin's body was found in the wreckage of your boat.'
The jurors seemed to perk up at that bit of news. No one was snoring or staring at the clock.
'Sorry, it was just a figure of speech. I don't know what he was doing there.'
'Was he checking on your barge at Southern Ship-works?'
Robinson blinked. Maybe he didn't bend at the waist as if he'd been gut-punched, but his eyes flicked twice.
So far, Steve had been right. He'd studied the satellite photos. He'd cobbled together all the bits and pieces from Griffin and Fowles and handed her this shiny new toy. But Victoria still needed to wrap the toy in colorful paper and tie it up with a pretty ribbon.
'Ms. Lord, as I told you in my office, after Mr. Griffin was charged with murder, I had no choice but to cancel the barge order.'
'I wonder if 'cancel' is the right word,' Victoria said. 'Didn't you simply