Or at least tried to. Needless to say, that only made things worse. Now my client gets attacked by inmates on an hourly basis, and the C.O. s not only look the other way, they write her up for instigating. She's been put in an im possible position.'

'She's put herself in it,' said Burke.

Sobel ignored the remark. 'Okay,' he said, 'the first thing she needs is medical attention.'

'With all due respect,' said Jaywalker, sensing his opening, 'the first thing she needs is to get out of there.'

'Maybe my office could get her transferred to Bedford Hills,' said Burke. 'Or a federal prison.'

'There's a problem with that,' said Sobel. 'As soon as I do it with one, I set a precedent. Next thing you know, we'll have busloads of inmates showing up with selfinflicted wounds, looking to get transferred out.'

Jaywalker bit down on the inside of his cheek, willing any thoughts of self-inflicted wounds to evaporate from the judge's mind. 'Is there any chance you'd consider some kind of bail?' he asked. 'I'm afraid that if she doesn't get out, we're going to have another death on our hands.'

'Did you say bail? ' yelped Burke. For someone who should have seen where this was going, he seemed in credulous. 'This is a murder case.'

Sobel held up his hand, but Jaywalker decided it wasn't meant for him. 'Look,' he said, 'she's not going anywhere. Take her passport, strap an ankle bracelet on her, lock her up in her house.'

'This is a murder case,' Burke repeated. 'I've got a DNA match. You can't go and set bail.'

It was the wrong thing to say.

Turning to Burke, Judge Sobel spoke as calmly as ever.

But it was clear from his words that he hadn't particularly cared for being told what he could and couldn't do. 'Tell me,' he said. 'If this were any other kind of case, would we be arguing that this defendant presents a particularly significant flight risk?'

Burke hesitated for just a moment. Jaywalker could imagine the struggle going on within him. A less honest prosecutor would have immediately answered 'Yes' without blinking. Burke was trapped by his own decency. 'The point is,' he said, trying to address the question with out quite answering it, 'the murder charge is what gives her the incentive to flee.'

'That's a bit circular,' Sobel observed, 'isn't it? I mean, if the seriousness of the charge were the only considera tion, judges would have to deny bail in all serious cases. But we don't. As a matter of fact, we set bail in murder cases from time to time, if the circumstances are unusual. I myself remember setting bail in a murder case of yours, Mr. Burke, as well as in one of Mr. Jaywalker's. And nei ther of those defendants fled, as I recall.'

'But what are the unusual circumstances here, judge?' An edginess was beginning to appear in Burke's voice that sounded very much like the beginning of panic.

'Take a good look at the defendant for a moment, why don't you? Tell me that's not unusual.'

Burke looked, said nothing.

Jaywalker didn't say anything, either. He'd long ago learned what most lawyers never do, to quit when you're ahead.

It took the better part of the week, what with getting Judge Berman's order modified once again, tracking down the title to Samara's town house, and dealing with the bank where her account was. Banks, it seems, like to dot all the i' s and cross all the t' s before coughing up a hundred thousand dollars. Then there was the matter of surrender ing Samara's passport, and the necessity of getting her fitted with what one corrections official quaintly referred to as a 'Martha Stewart bracelet, only in petite.'

But that Friday afternoon, when Jaywalker walked out of the courthouse and into the early November chill, Samara Tannenbaum was at his side. This time the media were there in all their glory, video cameras running, still cameras clicking, furry microphones extended. Samara, who actually looked a bit better than she had three days earlier, forced a half smile but didn't speak. But Jaywalker, forsaking his usual silent treatment of the press, was posi tively expansive.

'Samara's going home to rest and recuperate,' he told them. 'We wish you all a very pleasant weekend.'

12

TWENTY-FIVE MIL

In terms of trial preparation, the difference between having a client in jail and having one out on bail is all the differ ence in the world. Conversations that would otherwise have to be conducted in whispers through bars or wire mesh, or over antique telephones, can suddenly be held in normal tones, unimpeded by physical barriers. Documents that would have to be copied and mailed, or slid through security slits, can instead be studied shoulder to shoulder. Friendly witnesses can be approached as a unified team, rather than by a solitary stranger bearing a dubious letter of introduc tion scribbled on a square of jailhouse toilet paper.

The very act of getting a client out of jail also tends to win the trust of that client in a way that little else can, short of actually winning an acquittal. Especially when the charge is murder, and the odds against getting bail set had seemed almost as prohibitive as those that it was someone else's blood besides Barry's on the items found in Samara's town house.

It was Jaywalker's hope, and in fact his honest expec tation, that he would be able to parlay that newly earned trust into getting Samara to level with him, to finally tell him the truth about what had happened the evening of Barry's death. While the terms of her release kept her largely confined to her home, they allowed her to travel to and from the courthouse, her lawyer's office and a short list of stores, so long as she phoned ahead to announce her intention, and received permission to come and go. The least infraction would land her back on Rikers Island, Judge Sobel had promised her. And should she attempt to remove the electronic monitoring device, or cut the bracelet that fastened it to her ankle, a signal would be automati cally transmitted to the corrections department, and she could expect to be apprehended within thirty minutes. Still, it was a lot of freedom, compared to the conditions she'd lived under for the previous month.

There was yet another reason why Jaywalker held high hopes that Samara would come clean with him. They were co-conspirators now. Each of them had played a role in a scheme to obtain bail under what amounted to false pre tenses. As was typical of his signature stunts, Jaywalker hadn't exactly broken the law, though he'd come about as close as he could without ever quite crossing the line. Nothing he'd said to Judge Sobel had been literally untrue. Samara had indeed become a target on Rikers Island. As much as Jaywalker hated playing the race card, the com bination of his client's whiteness, her prettiness, her size and her notoriety had been too much for the other inmates to ignore. She'd been taunted, cursed at, spat at, shoved and slapped around. Even the business about a sexual assault had been true, though it had amounted to little more than a hallway groping. What's more, Samara had called the corrections commissioners. But she'd done so only because Jaywalker had instructed her to, knowing full well that the commission's investigation would have the precise neg ative repercussions that it turned out to.

For her part, Samara had accentuated her physical decline by starving herself of both food and sleep. Her daily visits to the courthouse allowed her to miss her twoa-week showers; while she made a concession to that dep rivation when it came to deodorant, the absence of sham poo took a visible toll on her hair. As far as the shiner, the forehead gash and the bandaged hand were concerned, Jaywalker neither knew nor particularly wanted to know the details, but her rapid recovery from all three ailments strongly suggested they'd been greatly exaggerated, if not out-and-out self-inflicted.

So they were in this together, this soon-to-be-suspended lawyer and his malingering murderer of a client. And Jay walker had every reason to hope that, just as it's said that there's honesty among thieves, so too would there be candor between conspirators.

He made his first stab at it in his office, five days after he'd walked Samara out of the courthouse. She was half sitting, half reclining on his sofa, an old thrift-shop thing that a lot of Naugas must have surrendered their hides to cover. He sat half a room away, by design safely en sconced behind the barrier of his desk. It wasn't Samara he

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