by Lis Wiehl
“Some bruises, but that’s all.” Now that it was over, Mia was starting to shake in earnest. “Everyone piled on him so fast, I don’t think he had a chance to hurt me.”
“He had a razor blade,” Trevor said grimly, “but I knocked it out of his hand.”
Rolf said, “Thank God for that. He’d have cut your throat for sure, Mia.”
“Okay, I’m going to touch your neck.” The deputy gently cradled the back of Mia’s head in one hand while he stroked and pressed her throat with the other. “I think you’re right. Just bruises. Nothing broken. Your hyoid bone feels intact. You might want to go to the hospital to get checked out. It’s up to you. We could call an ambulance.”
Mia knew she most definitely did not want to spend the next two hours getting poked and prodded, surrounded by the stress of a busy emergency room. All she wanted to do was go back to her office, pick up her things, and go home to her kids. “I don’t think I want to do that.” She looked up at the judge, who had come down off the bench too late to join the fray. It was strange to realize the whole thing had lasted only a few seconds.
“You sure you don’t want to go to the hospital, Mia?” he asked.
“I’m sure.” Everyone was looking at her, including the man who had just tried to kill her. It was one thing to be the center of attention when you were asking the court to take away a man’s life, either literally or figuratively. It was another when the tables were turned. When you were the one at risk.
Judge Rivas turned to Rolf. “Obviously, sentencing will have to be delayed. And your client will probably face more charges.”
“Obviously.” Rolf straightened his tie. “And his family may need to hire a new lawyer. It’s one thing to make sure my client gets a fair trial. It’s another to have to stop him from killing the prosecutor.”
CHAPTER 3
Mia leaned against the elevator wall. Her legs didn’t feel strong enough to hold her up. As soon as the doors opened, she would go straight to her office, grab her coat and purse, and get out of here. Right now she couldn’t bear to talk about what had just happened. Couldn’t bear to have everyone gather around, concerned and solicitous.
Mia wasn’t a victim. She had file folders of real victims on her desk. Some with photos of people who hadn’t even had time to be surprised before they were dead. And some with photos of victims who had far too much time between the realization that something bad was happening and the end of it.
As Mia walked in, Frank D’Amato was just coming out of his office. He was both Mia’s boss and the King County prosecutor. At least he was as of today. The election was only eight days away.
“Mia, I’m glad I caught you. I’ve got a case I need you to take.”
“Can it wait, Frank? There’s something I need to—”
“I’m afraid it can’t, Mia.” He had already turned to go back to his office.
By the expression on the face of their secretary, Mia knew word had traveled faster than the elevator. Judy pulled down her mouthpiece. “Frank, Mia was just—”
“It’s all right, Judy.” Mia knew there would be lots of questions, lots of discussion, a thorough postmortem designed to prevent some future prosecutor from being slashed to death on a courtroom floor. Just not, if she could help it, today. She would put what had happened out of her mind, listen to Frank, and then she would leave. She would wait until she was safely at home behind her closed bedroom door before she would allow herself to break down. Until then, her memory of what had just occurred would go into a box.
Mia was getting pretty good at putting things in boxes.
She followed Frank in. He was already behind his desk, staring at his computer screen, his black eyebrows pulled together in a frown. Mia could remember when Frank was the kind of guy who wore Dockers, but now he favored Italian wool suits. His dark hair was artfully touched with silver at the temples. With his athletic body and cleft chin, he looked like an actor hired to play the part of a district attorney—or even president. And Frank was nothing if not ambitious.
“Come look at this,” he said, motioning her around his desk. Then he clicked on a file, and a poor-quality video from a security cam began to play. It was black and white, shot from about ten feet above a wide pedestrian bridge.
“Where is this?” Mia asked as a parade of people passed the camera: Moms herding toddlers. Old ladies clutching purses. Young women swinging shopping bags. Adolescent boys sauntering in baggy cargo shorts despite the weather.
“The walkway connects a parking garage to a mall,” Frank said.
Her phone buzzed again, and Mia realized she had forgotten to check it earlier. It was probably someone wanting to know more about what had happened in the courtroom.
“What exactly am I looking for?” Ignoring her phone, she mentally put on her prosecutor hat. There would be time to talk about what had happened—and what had almost happened—later.
“You’ll know it when you see it,” he said grimly.
Two teenage boys entered the frame, wheeling an empty shopping cart. A third trailed behind them. One of the boys wore a white hoodie. The second wore a football jersey with the number 12 on the back, as well as a name she thought started with a B. The third boy, dressed in a dark hoodie, walked in front of the cart and began waving his arms. Mia watched the dark spot of his mouth opening and closing. If she had to guess, she would have said he was yelling.
The whole thing was a guess. The picture was so blurry and pixilated, she couldn’t really say that all three were boys. Or even kids. The only real clue to their identities was the football jersey. She glanced at Frank, but he was focused on the screen. She just hoped the video wasn’t all the evidence they had.
Now the two boys lifted the front of the cart and balanced it precariously on the metal lip of the railing. The front half jutted out into space. Mia caught her breath as it wobbled back and forth. How far above the ground was the walkway? Two stories? More? And what was below? Because she was sure now, sickeningly sure, that the cart was going to plummet. But what was underneath? A child? A bicyclist? A car whose driver would crash?
But the two boys kept both their hands on it, even as the nose dipped and the handle rose. At one point the boy in the dark hoodie grabbed the side of the cart next to the boy in the football jersey, their bodies blurring as they moved. Mia watched in helpless horror as the cart tipped forward and then suddenly disappeared.
All three boys stood for a moment, empty-handed. Each of their smudgy faces held the round, dark O of an open mouth. And then they ran. The boy in the dark hoodie ran to the left. The boy in the white hoodie and the boy wearing the football jersey ran to the right.
“So what happened when the cart hit the ground?” Mia asked.
Instead of answering, Frank raised his hand to tell her to wait. The screen went black, then images from a second video appeared.
This camera was mounted along the side of a narrow road. For the moment there were no cars, just a half dozen people walking in all directions. On the far side of the road were a sidewalk and two sets of glass doors—the entrance to a store. Two people—one taller than the other—were moving toward the double doors and away from the camera. If anything, this video was even blurrier than the first, the figures nearly outside the camera’s range.
Although she knew what was going to happen, Mia still gasped when the cart suddenly crashed from above into the frame.
The story continues in A Deadly Business by Lis Wiehl.