“For making you go to trial.”
“Hey,” said Jaywalker. “Going to trial is what I do.”
For a week and a half there was no word from Miranda. From what she’d told Jaywalker over the phone, he figured she should have been in New York at least three or four days by now. He called Jeremy’s mother half a dozen times. Half a dozen times she told him pretty much the same story, though it was hard not to detect a trend in the way she phrased it.
“Be patient. She’s gonna call me. Jew gonna see.”
“What can I say, Mr. Jackwalker? She told me she’d call me as soon as she get here.”
“I still don’t hear from her. So, how does the case look? Jew got to get him less time, Mr. Jakewalker. I know the other boy, he passed away. But still, an accident is an accident, and that’s the truth. Right? I hope she calls.”
“If it’s God’s will, she’ll call.”
“The wedding was yesterday, I found out. And still she don’t call me. That’s not right.”
“I don’t hear nothing from the little tramp.”
The packet of additional discovery material Katherine Darcy had given Jaywalker turned out to contain nothing new, with a single exception. That exception was a photograph of Victor Quinones, evidently taken at the time of the autopsy. It was a black-and-white head shot, not too gory, but it showed the entrance wound of the fatal gunshot, squarely between the eyes. It also revealed what a scary dude Victor had been in life. In addition to scraggly chin whiskers and shiny windowpaning that covered several of his front teeth, he had pockmarks on both cheeks, which Jaywalker took to be old acne scars. He slipped the photo into a subfile entitled
Now all Jaywalker had to do was figure out how to make it a close case.
So why had Katherine Darcy gone to the trouble of inviting him over to pick up the additional packet of discovery when she just as easily could have mailed it to him or waited until the next court appearance to hand it over? It certainly hadn’t been to show him the gun, which she must have known she wasn’t going to be able to introduce as the murder weapon, even if she thought it was.
So it had to have been the offer-the twenty years, maybe eighteen or nineteen-that she’d wanted to make but hadn’t gotten around to actually offering until he was ready to pay for their hot chocolates.
The Blink.
Interesting.
“She’s here.”
The clock by the bed told him it was 6:14 a.m. For Jaywalker, that would have been late to still be lying in bed had it been summertime, or even late spring or early fall. But it was the last week of January and still pitch dark outside, not to mention cold. Hibernating season. He rubbed his eyes and shifted the phone receiver from his left ear to his right, the one that heard better. And tried to place the gravelly voice.
“Who’s
“She. The girl, Miranda. She’s here, with me.”
“That’s good,” said Jaywalker, suddenly awake. “That’s
“Any time jew like,” said Carmen.
“How about ten?” Most of the lawyers would be in court by then, he knew. They might even be able to use one of the empty private offices.
“Too early,” said Carmen. “She’s jung. They like to sleep late in the morning, the jung people.”
“Eleven? Twelve?”
“How about two?”
“Two it is.”
So much for
They showed up at a quarter of three, Carmen literally leading Miranda by the hand into the conference room.
Try
And then you got to the eyes.
As blue-gray as Jeremy’s were, that was how brown Miranda’s were. And they were huge, disproportionally huge, making her look almost like one of those waifs that artist guy used to paint. Klee? Maybe. But his subjects ended up slightly freaky-looking, and Miranda was anything but that.
“This is Miranda,” said Carmen, perhaps sensing that Jaywalker was too busy staring to introduce himself. “And this is the lawyer, Mr. Jameswalker.”
They shook hands. Hers was impossibly thin. Again the word
“Pleased to meetcha,” said Miranda.
And immediately the spell was broken.
It wasn’t just the
He asked Carmen to go out to the waiting room so he could talk with Miranda in privacy.
“But I’m Jeremy’s mother,” she protested.
“That’s the point,” he explained. “I plan on calling both of you as witnesses. I don’t want the D.A. to be able to say we discussed the facts of the case together.”
She grumbled, but she went.
Still, it was impossible. As Miranda and he sat there at the conference table, lawyers who had rooms in the