Finally, Schlosser dove into relevant testimony. “The question on everyone’s mind, Mr. Grossman, is why you got out of your car in the first place, putting yourself in harm’s way?”
Grossman nodded respectfully, like a good little boy who always did what he was told. Uh huh. He made Sir Anthony Hopkins look like a ham actor in a Wayan’s Brothers comedy. Grossman said, “I thought the woman driving the VW, the one who had stopped in front of me, was having some sort of car trouble. The stoplight had been green for a long time, and her car hadn’t moved. So I got out of my car to check that she was okay.”
It took everything I had not to blurt laughter. Grossman had wanted to kill her, not help her.
Grossman continued, “It turned out, she had spilled her coffee all over her car. I asked her if she needed any help. She said no, she was fine. I suggested that she should pull over to the side of the road to let traffic go by.”
What? He was totally lying. He’d been shouting his ass off at Samantha and calling her names. The guy had been so worked up, I was surprised he hadn’t given himself a stroke. That’s why I’d walked up to Samantha’s car in the first place. Grossman had been trying to pry her window down so he could get to her. When that hadn’t worked, he’d started kicking her car door.
“Was this the point at which the defendant approached you?” Schlosser asked.
“Yes. He surprised me. I never saw him walk up. The next thing I know, he told me to ‘back the F-word off’ and leave. I had no idea what was going on. I had been trying to help the young woman in the VW. I turned to face him so I could explain myself. That’s when he hit me. I was so surprised, I never saw it coming.”
Was he serious? Or just fucking insane?
“Where did the defendant strike you?” Schlosser asked.
“In the stomach. I felt pain shoot out from my belly, and I think the wind was knocked out of me. I couldn’t breathe or even stand up, so I fell to my knees. Before I could recover, he grabbed the back of my shirt and lifted me up. My shirt cut into my throat and I couldn’t breathe. Then he dragged me to the side of the road. I was trying to stay on my feet, but he was pushing me so fast, I kept tripping. I think the only reason I didn’t fall on my face was that he had me by the shirt collar. When we got to the curb, he threw me to the ground.”
Schlosser continued asking Grossman a litany of questions: the severity of his injuries, how long he was off of work, how much pain he was in immediately after the attack and in the weeks following. It went on and on. Horst Grossman sounded like the most level headed, reasonable guy on the planet. George Schlosser was so smart with his questions, there was little Russell could object to.
I was on the edge of my seat when Schlosser finally turned things over to Russell.
Russell stepped confidently to the podium and went straight to work on Grossman. “Do you remember saying anything to Mr. Manos when he approached you?”
“Not that I recall,” Grossman answered promptly.
“You didn’t say anything to provoke him?”
“Not that I recall.”
“You didn’t make any threatening remarks?”
“Not that I recall.”
Fuck, Grossman had the most selective memory of all time. If he was going to lie his way through cross examination, I was fucked.
“How long would you estimate it was between the time you turned to face Mr. Manos and when you claim he attacked you?”
“I don’t know, maybe five seconds?” Grossman said thoughtfully.
Now he remembered. Too bad his recollection was a tad inaccurate.
“Did you make any moves that might have provoked Mr. Manos?”
“None that I recall.”
“You didn’t move toward him suddenly?”
“I don’t think so.”
Russell noticeably rolled his eyes. I couldn’t blame him. I wanted to roll mine, but I stared straight at Grossman as blandly as possible. I hoped the jury didn’t spot the daggers and bullets sneaking out of my eyes, because they were flying out at a thousand rounds a minute.
Russell asked Grossman, “You didn’t move an inch?”
“I don’t think so,” Grossman answered.
“Did you stand immobile, like a statue?” Russell asked in a tone that bordered on comical.
Grossman chuckled agreeably. “Of course not. But I didn’t make any sudden movements.”
“You’re sure?” Russell said doubtfully. “May I remind you, Mr. Grossman, that you are testifying under oath?”
Grossman’s brows furrowed. “I know that, sir, and I didn’t make any sudden moves.”
“That seems odd to me, Mr. Grossman. You’re saying that the defendant got off of his motorcycle, walked up to you, a complete stranger, and simply punched you in the stomach? Then he led you to the curb and asked you if you needed an ambulance?”
“It was the strangest thing…” Grossman mused thoughtfully.
“It was, wasn’t it?” Russell marveled, a grin of disbelief tugging at the corners of his mouth.
I was marveling too. Grossman was totally lying. But there was no way to prove it.
Russell asked more questions about the attack and the aftermath, including Grossman’s supposed injuries, but the man deflected all of Russell’s questions like the greatest goal tender in the history of sports. I couldn’t believe it. Grossman was a total pro on the stand.
Russell finally ran out of questions and sat down.
“Anything further, counselors?” the judge asked.
“No, your honor,” Schlosser said from the prosecutor’s table.
“Nothing further, your honor,” Russell said.
“The State rests, your honor,” Schlosser said.
Grossman stepped down from the witness stand.
“All right,” Judge Moody said, “we’ll take a short fifteen minute recess, then the defense will call its first witness.” She banged the gavel with finality.
Fuck. The score was now: the State: 3, Me: 0
The only way I was going to score any points with the jury was when Russell called me to the stand, giving me the opportunity to finally tell my version of events. If I was lucky, this would win me a point with the jury, bringing the score up to 3 to 1. Too bad Schlosser would get to follow up with questions about my criminal past during cross examination. He could very well undermine any advantage I’d gained from telling my side of the story. If things went poorly, after I was finished testifying, the score could be back to 3 to 0, or worse, the jury might view me as a criminal. Because everyone knew: once a criminal, always a criminal. That would score a point for the prosecution. The way I saw it, that would put things at 4 to 0.
Sadly, it didn’t matter. Whether it was 3-0, 3-1, or 4-0, I was the loser in every scenario.
I needed an NFL wide receiver to run right onto this soccer field and catch a Hail Mary touchdown pass, or I was fucked.
Too bad there were no wide receivers in soccer.
===
SAMANTHA
The traffic jam finally cleared enough for the emergency crews to let cars start going through. It took forever for everyone to merge into the one lane that was open and squeeze around the wreck.
The Ralph’s semi and the other cars involved in the accident were all twisted, crunched, and blackened. The firemen were still milling about and hosing things down, but nothing appeared to be burning anymore. The people who’d been air lifted out by the helicopter were long gone. I took a moment to remind myself that their days were going way worse than mine.
I stuck to 65 mph on the way downtown, paranoid I might get pulled over by the CHP if I tried to speed. I didn’t need any more delays. I kept a four second following distance from the cars in front of me. I didn’t want to somehow get in a wreck of my own. That bitch Lady Luck had been working against me all morning, so I wasn’t giving her any opportunities to further fuck me over.
I exited the freeway at Front Street and headed toward the courthouse. There were a
bunch of one way streets and I got turned around several times before I found the courthouse on Broadway.
Did the courthouse have priority parking for panicky girlfriends? No. Did they have any parking whatsoever? None that I could see.
I was tempted to ditch my car on the steps of the courthouse and run inside. Crap. That wasn’t an option. I drove around the block and stopped at the first parking garage I could find. They wanted twenty five bucks! I didn’t care. I threw some bills at the parking attendant and parked on the third floor.
I took my heels off and carried them while I ran from my car to the courthouse. Lucky for me the San Diego sidewalks were relatively clean. The courthouse was a huge building with a bunch of Roman columns out front and the words ‘Hall of Justice’ in big letters above the entrance. Did Superman and Wonder Woman work here? Why hadn’t Wonder Woman flown her invisible jet to pick me up from the traffic jam? Or Superman could’ve just hopped out his window and swooped me out of my car. Those guys were getting lazy.
I put my shoes on and walked through the doors. Then I got in line for the security check and promptly took my shoes back off. And my belt. Why? I wasn’t flying anywhere. Couldn’t they see I wasn’t a terrorist? So what if my blouse was soaked with sweat? I know I was close to losing my cool because one more delay was going to broil my brain and send me into seizures, but it wasn’t like I had a bomb in my purse.
After I finished with security, I stopped in my tracks. Where the hell was Christos’ courtroom? There must’ve been a hundred rooms in this place! I grabbed several people walking by and asked if they knew where the Manos trial was, hoping that was what it was called. Every person I grabbed looked at me like I was insane. I wanted to tell them I didn’t have a bomb in my purse, nor was I a terrorist, but I deduced that would not help matters any.
So I started opening courtroom doors at random. Every time I did, whatever was going on inside ground to a halt. Everyone turned to stare at me and the lawyers glared at me like I was ruining their lawyer mojo. What the heck was the problem? I was being quiet. It might have been because all of the courtrooms were so small. Where were the huge ones you saw in all the movies?
More importantly, were the heck was Christos?
I was never going to find him.
This building had at least ten stories. Did I have to go from floor to floor opening every single door? That could take hours. But nobody I’d asked had a clue where Christos’ trial was.
What if I’d driven to the wrong court house?
Fuck!
Chapter 9
CHRISTOS
We all filed into the courtroom after the recess. The judge sat down at her bench and called in the jury.
“Mr. Merriweather,” Judge Moody said to Russell, “you may call your first witness.”
Russell leaned over and whispered in my ear, “You ready to do this?”
I took a huge breath. “Yeah.”
Time to roll the dice.
Time for me to step up and testify.
I felt my balls crawl up inside my pelvis. I think the hair on my head was trying to crawl back into my scalp and my fingernails were retracting. Every part of my body was attempting to avoid disaster or injury. This was it. Up on the high wire without a net. Did I fall to my death in the middle of my performance or finish with a flourish to the sound of applause?
“Psst!”
I whipped around to see who was hissing in my ear.
It was Samantha.
I nearly jumped out of my seat.
“Samoula?” my grandfather whispered, looking confused.
Brianna looked up from her laptop and stared at Samantha like she had just stepped off the Crazy Train from Crazy Town.
Russell’s head swiveled slowly around like a gun turret. He leveled a bludgeoning gaze at Samantha. He had no idea who she was. “Excuse me, young lady,” he whispered sternly, “may I help you?”
“I have a video!” Samantha hissed.
“What?” Russell asked bluntly.
“You should sit down, agápi mou,” I said softly.
“You really need to see this video!” Samantha whispered. “It’s on my phone.” She held it over the low railing between the observer’s benches and the floor of the courtroom proper. She gave a little wave to my grandfather and smiled at him.
“Young lady, court is in session,” Russell warned. “You keep talking, and the judge is liable to cite you for contempt of court. I suggest you return to your seat and behave yourself or I will have you escorted out of here myself.”
“This is important!” Samantha pleaded. “Tell him, Christos!”
“Do you know this miscreant?” Russell asked me sharply, narrowing his eyes.
“Yeah,” I sighed. “I sort of do.”
Samantha slapped my shoulder and frowned at me. “Sort of?”
I repressed a chuckle. “Russell, meet Samantha Smith. She’s my girlfriend.”
Russell raised his eyebrows. “Pleased to meet you, Samantha,” he said politely. “I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but we’re in the middle of a trial. I’m trying to keep your boyfriend out of the slammer. Unless you have a very good reason for interrupting, I suggest you sit down immediately and keep quiet.”
“But I have video of what happened!” Samantha pleaded.
“What are you talking about?” Russell asked, perplexed.
“Mr. Merriweather,” Judge Moody interrupted, “do we have a problem?”
Russell smiled at the judge. “No, your honor, not at all. May we have a moment?”
“Make it quick, Mr. Merriweather,” Judge Moody ordered.
“I have video of him!” Samantha hissed.
“Of who?” I asked.
“I found a video online of you punching that guy sitting right over there!” She pointed at Horst Grossman who sat on the far side of the witness gallery, behind the prosecutor’s table.
Both of Russell’s eyebrows climbed up his forehead. “Come again?”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I said, “Samantha, are you serious?”
She nodded. “Yes!”
Judge Geraldine fired a stern look at the three of us. “Any time, Mr. Merriweather.”
“One moment, your honor,” Russell said. “I may have just received information that bears on this case.”
“May have or have?” the judged asked impatiently.
“If you would kindly give me a moment, your honor, I will let you know.”
“Do I need to call another recess five minutes after the last one?”
“No, your honor. This will only take a moment.”
“You have two minutes, counselor.”
Russell turned to Samantha. “Do you have the video on your phone?”
“Yes.”
“Is it ready to play?”
“Yes.”
“May I see it?”
Samantha handed the phone to Russell.
I leaned over his shoulder and he pressed play.
The video was amazingly clear. You could see Horst Grossman’s face clearly as he shouted and screamed at Samantha in her VW. You could even see Samantha’s face inside her car, and me when I walked up in my helmet, before and after Grossman lunged and I punched. Whoever shot it must have been planning on studying cinematography at USC film school. The audio was a bit choppy, but you could hear most of what Horst Grossman said.
Russell glanced between Samantha and the phone. “Is that you?” he asked, pointing at the tiny image of Samantha in her VW.
She nodded.
In a low voice, Russell said, “Christos, you’re lucky we’re in court. Otherwise I’d smack you upside the head. Then I’d turn you around and smack you up the other side. Why didn’t you tell me your girlfriend was the girl in the car? Are you crazy? No, don’t answer that. Because I know you’re crazy.” He turned to Samantha. “Where did you find this video?”
“On somebody’s blog. It’s not even a Youtube video. It was on Vimeo.”
“We checked the road rage videos,” Russell said, confused, “and we checked Vimeo. And Youtube. And everywhere else. Several times. We couldn’t find anything.”
“I think whoever uploaded just posted it. See, the upload date is two days ago and it only has a few hundred hits. It took me all night to find it because of how it was labelled.”
“You’re quite the private investigator,” Russell said. “What was your name again?”
“Samantha Smith.”
“Thank you, Ms. Smith. I think you just saved your boyfriend’s ass.” Russell smiled. “Would you have any objection to going up on the witness stand to testify in Christos’ defense?”
“Me?” she gasped.
“Yes, you. If the judge will allow it, we can keep Christos off the stand.”
“Of course! I’ll totally do it!” she said.
“Do me a favor,” Russell said, “email the URL of that website to my assistant.” He nodded toward Brianna and said, “Ms. Smith, this is Brianna Johnson.”
Brianna and Samantha shook hands then Samantha fired off the email to her.
“Got it,” Brianna said a few seconds later. I watched her pull the video up on her laptop. It turned out the courthouse had great wi-fi service.
Russell stood up, faced the judge, and in his most charming, winning voice, said, “Your honor, may counsel approach the bench?”
“This better be good, Mr. Merriweather.”
George Schlosser and his team were staring at us openly. They had no idea what was about to hit them.
“I think you’re going to be amused, your honor,” Russell said thoughtfully. “I certainly am.”
“You may approach, counselors,” the judge said.
Russell, Brianna, George Schlosser, and his two assistants walked up to Geraldine Moody’s bench.
In a soft voice I could barely hear, Russell explained everything to the judge. He pointed at Samantha several times. When he did, Schlosser and his team gave Samantha dirty looks.
Painless (The Story of Samantha Smith #3) Page 15