'Yeah, good question. Don't know. Must have been some international thing. Other countries involved, diplomacy, something. And they
Will was considering the implications. 'You're not saying
'I really doubt it.'
'I mean the news said he was investigating all kinds of cases. Drug cases, bad stuff…'
'He was. I don't know who did it. Maybe somebody else knew he was getting close to something.'
'Like Hackett,' Rachel said.
Bradley nearly choked. 'You're not saying he'd do that, are you?'
'No. I'm not.'
Rachel continued to let her imagination go. 'Maybe the first lady called the State Department. I mean, who knows?'
'I don't trust anyone. And I mean no one. You've all got to be incredibly careful. Don't let anyone get close to you that you don't know. Check you car for bombs-'
'Are you serious? How are we supposed to do that?'
'I don't really know. I shouldn't have said that. I'm not really checking… just use caution.'
'That's why we're meeting here?' Bradley said, looking around the den.
'Yes, and somebody's reading my mail. My e-mail.'
'What?' he said, leaning back on the leather couch. 'Seriously?'
'Somebody has set up a tunnel through my server so all my e-mails are forwarded. Very sophisticated.'
'I've never heard of such a thing.'
'Me neither. So whatever you get from me at work, phone, e-mail, whatever, won't mean shit. Only when we're here, or on my new cell.'
Will breathed deeply without saying anything. He started looking around the room. 'If they're smart enough to tap your e-mail, what makes you think they haven't bugged your house?'
'I had it scanned.'
'What about your office?'
'I don't want to tip anyone off. Maybe when we get close to trial. When I figure out how to use it all to my advantage.'
Will said quietly, 'Shit, Mike. Somebody really doesn't want you to win this case.'
'They may not care about the case. But they may really care if they get exposed. And they see the two as linked, because they are. Problem is they know what happened and we don't.'
'So what did you want to talk about?'
I was glad to get to the facts. I could deal with that. Build a case, gather evidence, and get ready for trial. 'I want you two to go back out to the site with me. I've been thinking about my last time out there. I've got an idea.'
'What is it?'
'I'll tell you later.'
'Why later?'
'After your deposition. I want Hackett to hear your opinions and think they're unremarkable.'
Bradley said, 'That shouldn't be too hard right now.'
'If what I'm thinking about has any merit to it, I don't want them to know about it until it's too late.'
'Is that kosher?'
'Right now it's just a thought in my head.'
'All right. We'll just criticize the report and not give them much of a theory of our defense.'
'Exactly. Did you get your animation done, Karl?'
'It's on my computer if you want to see it.'
'Absolutely.'
Karl had a large Apple laptop. He opened it up and put it on the coffee table in front of Bradley. He called up the file. He said, 'I took the animation from WorldCopter based on the flight data recorder and CVR and filled in the blanks. I had a surveyor get us the heights of all the significant trees and got the terrain-contour information from the USGS charts of the area.' He started the animation. 'If you watch here, I've gotten the bugs out of some of the data.' He pointed. 'See, right there, the helicopter starts down. We can't tell why from any of the data. So I just had it tumble to the ground and had the blade come off as it broke through the trees-'
'Stop it,' I said as the helicopter plunged down through the trees in a frighteningly lifelike animation. 'Why there? If the NTSB's theory is right, the blade came off much earlier and just landed there coincidentally.'
'I'm not convinced of that,' Will said. 'If the tip weights failed, or came off, that doesn't mean the blade's going to come completely off. It will just throw the helicopter out of balance and it will come apart. But that doesn't mean necessarily that the blade comes off.'
'Well, then why did it?'
'Not sure yet. I think from impact, but we need to go back to the scene, like you said.'
I sat on the couch and looked at the stopped animation. 'What's your theory, Karl?' I asked. 'Why did it go down where it did?'
Will hesitated, then said, 'Could be tip weights. I can't rule that out. It fits. But with the pilot's attitude toward the president, and the FDR circuit breaker pulled, could be intentional on the pilot's part too. There's one other possibility.'
'What?'
'Maybe the president came up into the cockpit to watch out the front during the storm. Maybe they hit a big pocket or had a bad updraft and the president pitched forward into Collins's lap. He might have pushed the cyclic and the helicopter would have nosed down. Could account for why they were upside down too.'
'We don't hear the president on the CVR again though before the crash.'
'True, but it might have happened before he even had a chance to say hello. Gets there, they hit big turbulence, and over they go. I don't know.'
I nodded and considered. It was possible. 'Hard to prove, Karl.'
'It's all I've got right now.'
'We'll see what happens when we go back out there.'
Rachel said to me quietly, 'Can I talk to you alone?'
I looked at her face, then said to the others, 'Excuse us for a second, will you?'
We walked into my living room and I closed the den door behind me. 'What is it?'
'We can't do any real work at the office? How are we supposed to prepare?'
'We do the best we can.'
'Mike, we hired our contract attorneys because we need them. We need their help. Braden is the smartest guy I've ever worked with. He does the best work in the office. And Elizabeth is tireless. Are you saying we can't use them? Don't you trust them?'
'We just can't take the chance.'
'But that puts us back to where it's just you and me doing all the real work. That's the very thing we were trying to avoid. Maybe whoever did this did it just so we'd all turn on each other. Not trust each other. We should tell them about it and get their help to prepare for trial.'
'We can't chance it, Rachel.'
'We're not going to get it all done, Mike.'
'We'll do the best we can. Trust me on this, Rachel.'
25
I FELT EXPOSED and Hackett felt invulnerable. I was trying desperately to develop a nonexistent case while looking over my shoulder, yet I had to produce my experts for depositions.
At the conclusion of Bradley's deposition, Hackett tried not to gloat. The court reporter and the rest of the attorneys left the conference room; Hackett and I were standing there with Bradley, who was putting his papers back into his lopsided briefcase. Hackett put the cap back on his expensive fountain pen and put the pen in his shirt pocket. He looked at me. 'Mike, help me here. You have refused to settle this case, and I had assumed it was because you had something to say in the defense of WorldCopter. But now we're done with the experts.' He looked confused. 'You don't have
I tried to answer a little more quickly then I would otherwise have so as to look defensive. 'They're going to show that the NTSB's conclusions-and your experts-are wrong. They're just speculating.'
Hackett shook his head. 'Mike. You know if you don't tell the jury a story better than mine, you're going to lose. Mine not only is right, but everybody has heard about it in the newspaper since the NTSB announced it. How in the hell do you expect to win?'
I looked at him somewhat smugly. 'Maybe something will break between now and trial. Maybe some witness will come out of the woodwork.'
Hackett bit. 'A surprise witness? Surely you mean somebody on the witness list then? And we've deposed virtually all of those who have anything to say about anything. Plus, if it was an actual surprise, I don't know how you could anticipate it now.' He adjusted his coat. 'You're not planning on pulling something, are you, Mike? Because that would be unethical.'
'I'm not saying anything. I'm just going to go back to my office.'
He said to my back, 'I've got your witness list, Mike. I'm going to hold you to it.'