chapter 24

Jury selection is a tricky business under the best of circumstances, but up here the process poses a special challenge. The field of candidates clucking and tooth-picking in the hallway outside Courtroom 109 composes an unsightly logjam of humanity, their faces set by experiences and gene pools I'd prefer not even to consider. Uniformly hirsute, vinyl hockey jackets stained by a sticky, mysterious goo, noses and lips threatening to fall off from the abuses of grain alcohol and tobacco. Their loose-skinned expressions communicating less impatience than a pained confusion.

''No need to bring in the local intelligentsia, Pete,'' I say to Goodwin as I settle at the counsel table next to him.

''You're the one who wanted people from the surrounding area and not from town. I've only accommodated your request.''

''And for that you have my appreciation. I just had no idea so many distinguished members of society would have selected the woods north of Murdoch as the place to work on their memoirs.''

It's true that the field for jury selection was partly my own doing. We'd considered a change-of-venue motion early on to bring the trial down to be heard in Toronto, but Bert argued persuasively against it on the basis that in highly publicized trials of this kind, no town in the whole province could put forward a dozen people who weren't familiar with the reported facts. In fact, it was decided that requesting the Crown to gather a jury to be selected from the northern half of the district would render people with the greatest chance of not having a clue about anything in the outside world. In any other place Tripp would have already been unanimously villainized as the demonic child-snatcher. But up here, where creepiness of all but the most severe kind is largely put up with, the defense stands a reasonably good chance of pulling twelve blank slates from out of the trees.

''Well, what say we bring them on, Mr. Goodwin?''

Goodwin waves his forefinger at the court clerk, who sits in front of the bench with eyes already half closed. Having been interrupted from his clerkish dreams, he shuffles off to bring in the man designated to oversee the proceedings.

But it's not a man. It's Justice Naomi Goldfarb. This is very good news. Well known to be patient with the defense and strict with the Crown and, perhaps best of all, famously antagonistic toward all in the constabulary. Consistently overlooked for appointment to the Court of Appeal due, it is said, to her outspoken criticism of the Old Boys' Club that still runs the show in Upper Canadian halls of justice. I feel for her. The poor woman's been assigned this nasty business, necessitating a long stay away from her comfy Forest Hill digs, where I've drunk deep from the wine cellar at her annual garden party held for invited members of the criminal bar, my own invitation issued solely by virtue of my place of employ. I've appeared before her on a couple of minor matters in the past, though, so she'd likely be aware that this is my first murder. Another blessing. Now I can play the defense naif who needs his hand occasionally held in order to get him through the complicated unpleasantries.

''Good morning, gentlemen.'' Goldfarb sighs as she mounts the steps to the judge's chair, arranging the layers of her robes over the armrests. She has a rib-rattling voice and a sarcastic look permanently draped over her face, which, when she's seated, can barely be seen over the edge of the desk from where Goodwin and I sit in our places below.

''Good morning, Your Honor,'' I chirp in before Goodwin has a chance.

''Ah, the joys of jury selection! Mr. Crane, do you expect to exercise your right to twenty peremptory challenges of the jurors to be arrayed before you this morning? I ask only because it would be really nice if we could select our twelve before the end of the day, don't you think?''

I stand and give her what I hope to be my most accommodating Crane smile.

''While I reserve the right to challenge some of those I will make inquires of today, Your Honor, having viewed the candidates in the hall outside on my way in this morning, I have every expectation that the defense won't be holding up the proceedings, at any rate.''

''Very good, Mr. Crane. I applaud your optimism. Mr. Goodwin, please have the sheriff usher in the first of our lucky contestants.''

And so it begins. By lunch we've got eight suitably unbiased Neanderthals under our belt, and by midafternoon the full twelve plus four on reserve have been duly questioned and given full approval by yours truly. Four retired mine workers, a marina owner, two self-described ''lumberjacks,'' a manager of a Christmas-tree farm, and four bearded mumblers who, reading between the lines, are American draft dodgers who've been in self- imposed exile so long they haven't yet been made aware of the twenty-year-old pardon allowing them the full freedoms of the civilized world. All of them but the marina owner are men, and all, when asked if they had any knowledge of the accused, answered either ''No'' or ''Who?''

They'd do just fine.

''We're ready for opening submissions a week from today, gentlemen?'' Goldfarb winks as she gathers herself up from where she sits, visibly anxious to get in another few hours of city time before the coming Mondays-to- Fridays she'll be required to be stationed in the boonies. Again, playing Goodwin's physical disabilities to full advantage, I leap to my feet to offer my response first.

''Absolutely, Your Honor. And looking forward to it too.''

''Well, that makes one of us, Mr. Crane.''

I haven't called on Tripp yet to inform him of the hair and blood DNA results. The problem is that it's so easy to forget about him. Or, more to the point, it's easy to pretend to have forgotten about him. But it can be delayed no longer.

After Tripp is deposited with me in Interview Room No. 1 we manage to exchange some niceties--hellos, a bloody shame about all this rain, even a joke about prison food--and I wonder if today, now that it's coming down to the wire, he's prepared to offer me some help.

''I'll come right to it, Thomas,'' I start, then tell him about the DNA findings and outline their potentially grim connotations. For a time he appears to consider my words with an appropriate sobriety, places his hands together on the table. Then a mournful downturn hooks itself to his lips once more. Eyes straying away to the dream-in- progress projected onto the enameled wall.

''They had such nice hair,'' he inhales delicately, as though savoring the memory of its smell. ''But they'd laugh when I told them they should tie it up with a bow maybe, that they'd look even prettier that way. Just laugh at me when I told them that's how all the girls used to wear it, years ago.''

''That's amusing, Thom. But let's stick with the program a minute here, okay? First of all, is there anything we can say to explain how that blood got there? I mean, if you think the truth will sound bad, is there anything else?''

''If the truth sounds bad?''

''Don't you see how this looks? It's pretty obvious to me, and it'll be pretty obvious to the jury as well if we can't provide some way of answering the Crown's spin on it.''

Tripp winces, reshapes his mouth into a polite smile.

''Not sure I--''

''Do you think I'm stupid? The longer you play dumb, the bigger the shit we're both going to find ourselves in. And your pile will be far bigger than mine, I promise.''

I'm shouting now, louder than I intended, but Tripp only sits back in his chair and watches me with detached interest.

''How did you cut Krystal, Thomas?''

''I didn't do that.''

''No? Then how did it happen?''

''By accident.''

''Whose accident?''

''Krystal's!'' he shouts now himself. ''Horsing around with some of the boys out by smokers' corner after school and got in the middle of some wrestling match or other and scraped her knee. One of the other teachers brought her in and was going to call her father but I said I'd take care of it. Because I knew the trouble she'd be in if Lloyd found out that she'd been smoking with a bunch of boys instead of being inside at choir practice where she was supposed to be. She just hated going to choir practice! 'Only Christians go to choir,' she'd say, and stick out her tongue--like this!''

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