pretty fucking convenient.'
'All I'm saying is that it's worth exploring.'
'And how are we supposed to do that?'
Hutch spread his hands. 'You're the reporter. Are you telling me you've never done a background check?'
'It usually helps to have a name.'
'So we get it somehow.'
'How? Walk up and ask him?' Matt snorted again. 'Hey, buddy, we think you might be the guy who should really be on trial here. You want to give us your name so we can pass it on to the cops?'
'I'm serious,' Hutch said.
'Oh, I know you are. But as much as I'd like to think you're right about this guy, we can't be checking up on everyone in that courtroom who gives us a bad vibe.'
'Bad
Matt held up his hands. 'Okay, you've made your point. I doubt if it'll come to anything, but it doesn't hurt to check him out. And now that I think about it, there might be a fairly painless way to get his name-assuming we have a little help.'
'From who?'
'That old guy you were talking to during the breaks yesterday. One of the other trial junkies.'
'Gus?'
'That's the one. Didn't you say he used to be a bailiff there?'
Hutch nodded. 'Thirty years. In that very same courtroom.'
'So it stands to reason he's pretty friendly with the security staff. The gatekeepers in the lobby.'
'He's pretty friendly all around. What do you have in mind?'
'Nothing too devious,' Matt said. 'But if Gus and his buddies go along, I think it just might work.'
It took Hutch a moment to figure out what Matt was getting at, but once he did, he couldn't help but smile.
Nice, he thought.
Very nice.
— 30 -
'Empty your pockets, please. Keys, wallets, cell phones in the tray. Backpacks, briefcases, purses on the belt.'
It was a daily ritual-
The guards manning the scanners were very thorough, and courteously mistrustful of everyone who entered: staff, attorneys, spectators and defendants alike.
But they always had a broad smile and a friendly word for Gus, former bailiff and resident trial junkie.
He was one of the boys.
First thing that morning, the second day of testimony, Hutch had approached Gus in the upstairs hallway, just outside the courtroom, asking him a question related to the trial. He couldn't remember now what that question was, but Gus had known immediately that there was something else on his mind.
'I sure hope you're a better actor when the camera's pointing at you.'
There weren't many people on the planet who had a genuine twinkle in the eye, but Gus was one of them.
'I'm afraid this is about as good as it gets,' Hutch told him.
'Well, at least it pays. I saw the news about you posting bond for the defendant.'
'You and a few thousand other people.'
'Saw the reporters, too. Coming after you when your cab pulled up outside. Looked like a pack of cheetahs chasing after a gazelle.'
'Cheetahs don't usually travel in packs,' Hutch said, wondering how he even knew that.
Gus grinned. 'I stand corrected, professor.'
'So does it bother you?'
'What-the reporters, or you reminding me how little education I've had?'
Hutch shook his head. 'Me posting bond.'
'Now why would it bother me? It's your money. And it's no secret that you and that little gal are friends. Maybe
When he saw the
'Much ado about nothing,' he said with a shrug. 'Just a thank you kiss.'
'I had a young lady thank me like that, once. We went on to raise three kids together-may she rest in peace. But let's not get too far off point. You've got something you want to ask me, and I figure you might as well come out with it.'
Hutch hesitated. When you're about to try to get someone to do something a little sketchy, it isn't easy to just come out with it. And when you're trying to get him to get someone
'So what do you think about her?' he asked. 'Veronica. You think she's guilty?'
'Well now,' Gus said. 'I suppose it would be politically prudent of me to tell you it's a bit premature to be asking me
'…But?'
Gus gestured to the closed courtroom doors, which wouldn't be unlocked until five minutes before trial started. There was already a crowd forming, people anxious to get the seats that hadn't been reserved for friends and family.
'I ran that courtroom for nearly three decades and I saw a lot of defendants come and go. You see that many faces, you tend to learn to read them pretty fast.'
'Makes sense,' Hutch said.
'Damn right. Now I don't have any statistics or science to back me up, but I figure a good eighty percent of the people who sit at that defense table did exactly what the cops and the prosecution say they did. Maybe more. And nine times out of ten, I can predict who's guilty just by looking them in the eye.'
'And Ronnie?'
'She ain't no killer, son. I knew that the moment she walked into the courtroom.' He checked his watch, then gestured to the doors again. 'But if you don't tell me what's on your mind pretty soon, it's gonna have to wait until morning recess. I need to queue up.'
Hutch had waited with the crowd many times himself, but now that he was siding with the defense, Waverly was making sure he and the rest of Ronnie's supporters had seats. The courtroom was easily the largest one in the building, but if yesterday's proceedings were any indication, it would be filled to capacity.
Considering Gus's connection to the place, it was a bit surprising he didn't have a reserved seat himself, but maybe he played by the rules-and that could be a bad thing.
'You can sit with us,' Hutch said. 'Even if you say no to what I'm about to ask you.'