by The Hearing
She faced him and said, “If making it public would correct some of the problems she wrote about, she’d want you to show it.”
The corners of his mouth lifted slightly. “I keep waiting for you to come up with a wrong answer.”
“Raney does, too.” Her tired eyes sparked for an instant. “You’ll have to get in line. So meanwhile, what do we do?”
Glitsky knew the answer to that. “Diz has got to get it in front of the judge. If she was sleeping with half her clients, if she was leaving the country the next day . . .”
“Then it need not have been random.”
“No,” he said heavily. “It never was.”
Abe stared at the floor between his shoes. A shiver went through him and he lifted his face, inches now from hers. “You know my problem?”
“What’s your problem?”
“A lot of times, like with Elaine, I don’t say things when I should.”
She reached out and cupped his hands in hers. Met his eyes. Waited.
“But I’ve got to ask you . . .”
She brought her mouth to his, her hands to his face. When she pulled away ten seconds later, she whispered to him, “That would be a yes.”
35
In the minutes before Department 20 convened, the Cadaver’s chambers vibrated with anger and accusations. Torrey was on his feet, pacing in front of Hill’s desk, the day’s issue of the Examiner in his hand as a prop. “Never in my time as a prosecutor have I ever seen this kind of irresponsible slander. I thought I’d seen defense attorneys pull every outrageous stunt in the books, but this . . .”
“With friends like Dash Logan, I bet you have,” Hardy interjected mildly. He was standing by the door. Both David Freeman and Sharron Pratt claimed pride of place and sat in the armchairs arranged on the rug in front of Hill. The court reporter—since every word uttered in a capital case is on the record—sat with her machine to the judge’s right, tapping away.
Torrey turned on his heel, lashing out. “I’m not talking about Dash Logan! I’m talking about this libelous—”
“So sue me.” Hardy moved forward, toward the judge. “Your honor, excuse me, but so what? A reporter wrote a factual story that doesn’t bear on this case—”
“A factual story, my ass! There’s nothing but—”
“Mr. Torrey!” Hill boomed. As with Hardy in chambers the day before, the judge projected a much more powerful persona here in his room than he showed on the bench. Again, he was not yet in his robes, and the business suit added to the aura of power. “I’m goddamned tired of listening to profanity day in and day out, so we won’t have any more of it here, all right.”
“I’m sorry, your honor, but . . .”
Hill held up a finger, spoke sternly with the volume still up. “No buts. I’m tired of it. That’s the end of it.”
Torrey, no place to go, threw a malevolent glance at Hardy, pulled himself to his full height and stiffly walked over to the one window. Sharron Pratt watched him with sympathy, then shifted in her chair and came back to the judge. Her voice all smooth reason. “What Gabe’s saying has merit, though, your honor. Mr. Hardy is named as a source in this column. Surely he could have exercised a little restraint in his dealings with the press while this hearing was going on.”
“How many times do I have to say it?” Hardy leaned against the bookshelves, arms crossed and casual, although it was far from how he felt. “The article doesn’t have anything to do with this case, your honor. I had no idea exactly when Mr. Elliot was going to run it. And there isn’t a word in it that isn’t factual.”
Torrey pounced again. “That’s a lie. I never offered you a deal.”
Hardy was mild. “The article doesn’t say you did.”
“Well, it damn well implies it.” Realizing what he’d done, Torrey faced the judge. “Sorry, your honor.” Hill waved it off.
“That’s how you read it, of course,” Hardy replied. “If the shoe fits . . .” A shrug.
“All right, gentlemen, that’s enough.” Hill arranged some pens on his blotter. “Ms. Pratt, I’ve given both you and Mr. Torrey more than a reasonable opportunity to vent your displeasure at Mr. Hardy. But he’s right. This article has nothing to do with the case at hand. And we are here in chambers at his request, not yours. Do you mind if we proceed?” He turned to Hardy. “And what you have does—presumably—bear here. Is that correct?”
“Yes, your honor, it does.” He leaned over and undid the clasp of his briefcase, then extracted several sheets of paper and held them tantalizingly. “Last night, Lieutenant Glitsky was reviewing some property of Elaine Wager’s that had been brought to my office . . .”
“My Lord! Your honor!” Torrey exploded again, marching forward. “What does Mr. Hardy think he’s doing now? By what right does he gain possession of Ms. Wager’s property? Lieutenant Glitsky has already been placed on disciplinary leave for interfering in this case and cannot serve any kind of search warrant on her or anybody else. This is completely improper, totally beyond the pale.”
Hardy calmly addressed the judge. “If Mr. Torrey could keep his well-pressed shirt on, your honor. There was no search warrant. We asked Ms. Wager’s fiancé if we could take a look through her condominium. He said yes. Simple as that.”
Torrey grunted with displeasure. “I don’t think so.”
Freeman jumped in. “Why not, Gabe? Why wouldn’t he want to help us find some clue as to who might have killed her?”
“We know who killed her,” Torrey snapped.
“No. I don’t think we do,” Freeman replied.
Pratt ignored that exchange and leaned forward. “I have a question for Mr. Hardy. You’re the one who brought up Lieutenant Glitsky. Is he working for you on this matter?”
Hardy shrugged. “As you say, he’s on leave. He can do what he wants and it appears he wants to know who killed Elaine Wager. Naturally, anything he finds will be made available to you.”
“We already have a police file on that, Mr. Hardy. From Lieutenant Glitsky’s own department.”
Hardy shrugged. “Lieutenant Glitsky thinks the police may have made a mistake and that you’ve painted yourself into a political corner.” He borrowed one of Freeman’s smiles.
“So you contend that Lieutenant Glitsky’s involvement here is what? Somehow to protect the police department from its own ineptitudes?”
“I’m sure there’s a little of that, yes. But mostly something else.”
“Oh, what’s that?”
Next to Pratt, Freeman clucked. She’d just asked another question to which she didn’t know the answer, and it was always—always—a bad idea.
Hardy looked at Pratt, at Torrey, finally at the judge. “Your honor, Lieutenant Glitsky is—was—Elaine Wager’s father.”
After several seconds of absolutely dead air, Torrey found his voice. “My God,” he said, incredulous, “is there no end to it? It appears that Messrs. Hardy and Freeman will go to any lengths of fabrication to muddy the waters here. This has got to be the most ridiculous . . .” Words failing him, he made some dismissive noise, then turned to the judge for commiseration. “Your honor, please?”
By now, though, Hill was fully engaged. Whatever else was going on here, this was as unusual a set of facts as he’d ever dealt with. If they were facts. He turned to Hardy, ready to strike at the first sign of nonsense. “I’m very much hoping you have proof of this, counsel.”
“Of course, your honor.” He approached the desk with his papers. “As I began to say so long ago now, last night Lieutenant Glitsky was looking over some of Elaine’s property that had been brought down to my office. Among the items was a key that he recognized as belonging to a public locker.” He kept talking, loath to give anyone a chance to interrupt him again. “As it turned out, this locker was located in the bus station, and Lieutenant Glitsky opened it”—he held up a hand, stopping Torrey before he could start—“he is her next of kin, your honor, and not acting as a police officer. There was no quest
ion of his needing a warrant. He was perfectly within his rights. In any event, the locker contained many of Elaine’s personal items, but also a handwritten letter addressed to Lieutenant Glitsky—”
Torrey could restrain himself no longer. “Oh, please . . .”
But Hardy could see that Hill was still with him, and continued. “—a copy of which I have with me. The original is in a safe place and can be made available to the court at short notice. Several references in this letter bear strongly upon this case, your honor, and I wanted to bring them to the court’s attention at the earliest possible moment.”
“To what end, Mr. Hardy? If this is evidence, present it at the hearing in your case in chief. If it’s not, I don’t want to hear about it, here or anywhere else.”
“Your honor.” Freeman came slowly up from his chair. “With respect, I’ve seen the document and believe it raises issues that address whether or not the district attorney’s office should recuse itself, or you should recuse it, entirely from this case.”
Pratt, under her breath: “You’ve got to be joking.”
“Not at all, Sharron.” Freeman turned to her. “We believe the A.G. is much more objectively situated to prosecute this case, your honor. There is evidence of personal animus here that—”
“I’ve heard enough talking,” Hill interrupted. “We’ve got a hearing in the real world out there and I’d like to get back to it someday. Mr. Hardy, let’s see what you’ve got. You make a motion if you’ve got one, and I’ll make a ruling.”
“Of course I knew the judge wouldn’t force them to recuse. The fact that Torrey used to have a personal relationship with her sometime in the past isn’t enough, even if we could prove it without hearsay. As his honor astutely noted.” Freeman was in high spirits, trying to bring Cole up to date at the defense table while they waited for Judge Hill to enter the courtroom again after the long adjournment to chambers. “Besides, we need a written motion, notice to the A.G., and a whole lot more than we’ve got.” David displayed a slight edge of disappointment that Cole had felt he had to ask why they’d requested the D.A.’s dismissal from the case. But it wasn’t enough to dull his pleasure in the result. “And there was no way Pratt was taking herself out of this.”
“Okay? And yet you asked them both to do it anyway because . . . ?”
Saddened by the thickness of his slow student, Freeman went into teacher mode. “Because we needed the judge to see that letter, Cole. We needed him to know as a fact that Glitsky was Elaine’s father—that’s why him helping your defense, bucking his own police force, is so significant. We also needed him to know that our friend Mr. Torrey slept with her. But mostly it goes to his character, which we’ve been trying to get out for reasons that Mr. Hardy might be better able to explain. Because say what you will, Torrey outranked Elaine, and in our culture, that smells enough like sexual harassment to make Hill wonder. Also, just between you and me, it didn’t hurt for Pratt to hear about his little indiscretion, either.
“Basically” —Freeman’s smile was terrible to behold—“we’re just screwing with them, Cole. Screwing with them because they screwed with us. We’re showing them this case isn’t going to be a political victory lap ending with you on death row.”
And indeed, across the courtroom, the two prosecutors were studiously not talking, sitting as far apart as they could possibly get as they arranged their water glasses and other important items on their table.
“But the most important reason, by far, really wasn’t any of that. Since we really don’t have a shred of evidence that somebody else in fact killed Elaine, the next best thing is to prove that Elaine’s life was at least troubled and complicated. She had man trouble, work trouble, law trouble. Personal issues. She might have been killed by an unlucky random event like a mugger, that’s true, but now it’s definitely in his mind, and very strongly, that she wasn’t your average Jane Doe walking back to her office on a Sunday night. With so much going wrong in her life, so much obvious angst that she was actually leaving the country on the next day, what would you think?”
“I’d think it’s a pretty big coincidence that she got killed that night.”
“Right. It makes the odds a lot better that one of these people had a reason to kill her.” He shrugged. “To tell the truth, though, Cole, I don’t want to bring you down, but none of it proves anything really. Certainly, it doesn’t prove that you didn’t do it and that’s the whole point here. But it’s got to give the judge some pause at least, and that in turn will maybe give us a little more stage to dance on, and that, my friend, that’s the name of the game.”
Glitsky the cop had his own jobs this morning.
His vision had shifted since he’d read his daughter’s letter, and suddenly Hardy’s theory of the previous night played to all the unrelated variables. Elaine had discovered something. Someone she trusted had recently made her lose all faith in the law. She had once slept with Gabe Torrey. She was in the middle of an investigation involving Dash Logan, who hung with Visser, who’d been with Cullen Alsop.
This was no longer a universe of possibilities. They were no longer searching the city for an anonymous trigger man. Glitsky could concentrate his efforts on limited targets. Hardy’s theory might yet prove unfounded, but before he would abandon it now, Abe was going to test its limits.
Neither comfortable nor welcome at the Hall of Justice, he set himself up in the Solarium. Everyone on the team, with the addition of Jan Falk, had checked in by seven-thirty. He’d passed around the letter, told the story. By eight o’clock, Amy Wu was off with Gina Roake to interview the various witnesses who’d come forward in the Abby Oberlin will contest. If Gene Visser had threatened any of these people . . .
Curtis Rhodin had a good friend in the attorney general’s office. Hardy and Freeman thought that Curtis could talk to his pal and bring him up to speed with the confluence of all these events. Elaine had been looking at Logan’s files when she’d been killed. The A.G.’s office didn’t have even a remotely good relationship with the D.A. anyway. Based on Torrey’s relationship to the murder victim, it might be disposed to believe that Logan’s files held evidence of a D.A. cover-up of some kind that had somehow resulted in a murder. It was all nebulous and unfounded, but it was also provocative and tied to a capital murder, and these features tended to get a judge’s attention. They were hoping for a search warrant on Logan’s office—and this time a warrant directed not at a few folks who happened to be Logan’s clients, but at Logan’s whole practice. At Logan himself. This was a long shot since they had no active case—but at the very least, it might shake up the principals and force one of them to do something rash.
Jon Ingalls was going to find both Visser and Logan and serve subpoenas on them so that they would be in the courtroom if Hardy got to where he needed to call them. Then, accompanied by Treya and maybe Glitsky after he finished some phone calls, Ingalls was going to check with more restaurants and hotels. Glitsky was convinced that somebody must have seen Elaine that night. He didn’t believe she’d been walking alone through a deserted downtown at 1:00 A.M. She’d been walking with her killer.
But Glitsky, Hardy and Freeman were all in accord that their best shot, not only of finding any evidence but of introducing this entire line of inquiry at the hearing, lay in the Cullen Alsop/Ridley Banks/Gene Visser/Jan Falk connection, whatever that might be. Falk was going over to court with Hardy and Freeman, a critical link should they need him. He hated Torrey and the whole D.A. apparatus and was on their side, an invaluable police witness who was hostile to the prosecution.
But hating wasn’t going to be enough, and Glitsky was on the phone to Paul Thieu now, pitching his idea. Copies of the lab and crime scene reports on Cullen Alsop that Thieu had managed to get were in front of him. “Right,” he was saying. “I know that. But the lab wasn’t looking for any specific print, were they?”
“Abe.” Thieu kept his tone reasonable. He wanted to help because he liked and respected Glitsky, but
he had to keep an extremely low profile or his own position would be threatened. And going to the lab on a murder case to which he was not assigned and asking for a rush reanalysis of their data wasn’t low profile. It would get around the building. “What am I supposed to ask them? It was a room in a flophouse. I read the report, too. They didn’t clean the place too often. There were dozens of good prints. The maids, past tenants, you name it. They’re not going to run every print in the room.”
“But on the bag itself? Paul, I’m reading it right in front of me. There was another print that wasn’t Cullen’s. One.”
Thieu’s frustration came through the wires. “It wasn’t computer quality, Abe, and it didn’t match anybody who was around or lived nearby when the police arrived. No match.”
“I know. But if a print was clear enough, it could be run against the database.” This was the state computer file of people with criminal records, against which the lab compared crime scene fingerprints. It was a useful database that could produce matches quickly and cheaply. But you needed a nice, clean print. The print on the bag was partial and blurry. Enough for a skilled and trained human to compare, but not for the computer.
“You’re telling me you want to do a hand search with this? It’ll take a month and—”
“No. A single comparison. Visser. That’s all.”
This wasn’t that difficult a request. Visser was a private investigator and a former policeman. His fingerprints would be on file. Thieu was sure he could find a set of them somewhere, possibly even in the homicide detail itself, and run them to the lab for comparison within a half hour, although how long they’d take to get to it . . .
“Don’t ask,” Glitsky commanded. “Tell.”
In the courtroom, Hardy was taking all the time he could with the death of Cullen Alsop. On the stand was Saul Westbrook, the young public defender.