by Jodi Picoult
"Why would a child do these things, Doctor?" Jordan asked.
"In Ms. Duncan's case, it probably had to do with getting noticed. Her mother's death was an event that generated pity and attention for Gillian, and in her mind, the best way to continue that focus on herself was to keep creating fiascoes of some sort."
"In your opinion, Doctor, when a child is diagnosed as a pathological liar, what happens by the time he or she grows up?"
"Objection, Your Honor," Matt said. "This expert's projection on children in general has absolutely no bearing on what did happen with Gillian Duncan."
"Overruled," the judge murmured.
"The rule of thumb in psychiatry," Dr. Dubonnet replied, "is that boys who lie have conduct disorders and become sociopaths ... whereas girls who lie have personality disorders and become manipulative in interpersonal ways."
"Thank you," Jordan said. "Nothing further."
Matt stood immediately. "Doctor, you've never talked to Gillian Duncan, have you?"
"No."
"All you've done is read records that took place almost half her lifetime ago?"
"Yes."
"Your rule of thumb ... you can't really say that every boy or girl follows this path, can you? You're just making a broad assumption about what often happens?"
"That's correct."
"And you have no way of knowing if that's what happened to Gillian, do you?"
"No."
"Isn't it true that Gillian had just lost her mother at age nine?"
"So I understand."
"And that was the reason she began therapy, correct? Not because she had been lying compulsively."
"Yes."
"You said that the reason you believed Gillian was a pathological liar was because as a kid, she started some rumors about a younger woman and then denied them?"
"Among other things."
Matt smiled. "Forgive me, Doctor, but when I was a kid, we just called that being a girl."
"Objection!"
"Withdrawn," Matt said. "Isn't it true, though, that this is what girls do all the time? Boys punch each other; girls start rumors?"
"Objection," Jordan called again. "I want to know when Mr. Houlihan got his clinical psychology degree."
"Withdrawn. Doctor, you also mentioned a shoplifting incident that Ms. Duncan denied?"
"That's right."
Matt turned and stared directly into Jack's eyes. "Well, isn't it fairly common for a person who commits a crime to deny that he's done it?"
"Ah ... oftentimes ..."
"Isn't it fairly common for a person who commits a crime to deny that he's done it, even when there's physical evidence linking him to the crime?"
"I--I suppose so."
"So it isn't all that unusual, is it, Doctor, to lie to get out of trouble?"
"No."
"Does that make someone a pathological liar?"
Dr. Dubonnet sighed. "Not necessarily."
Matt glanced at the witness. "Nothing further."
He smelled like sweat and blood. His smile was sweet, too, and Meg would have bet he had no idea what he'd just gotten into. Dutifully, she pressed her lips to his cheek and almost immediately lost her balance. She fell into his lap, heard his grunt as her full body hit. "You okay?" he asked, only trying to help her up, his hands sliding awkwardly over her chest and wide bottom before he got the leverage to do it.
What you want and what you get are two very different countries; sometimes imagination builds a bridge before you have the chance to realize it won't hold weight. He hadn't been fondling her; he'd been breaking her fall. But oh, had Meg wished otherwise.
And in that moment she realized that she hadn't been the only one.
This time, Roy brought sandwiches. Roast beef piled high on a crusty roll, tuna salad on wheat, even veggie pitas for the meatless crowd. The judge and the jury and even Jack gratefully dug into this treat, but Matt sat with his back stiff, his untouched turkey sub resting on the corner of the prosecution's table.
"It's the chives," Roy confessed to the clerk, who'd asked a question about the ingredients in the chicken salad. "You don't expect them, which is why they come right back and bite you."
Head leaning against his hand, Matt drawled, "Your Honor, does this witness have anything to contribute to the defense's case besides a large dose of cholesterol?"
"Getting around to it," Roy muttered, taking his seat. He straightened his tie, cleared his throat, and scowled at Matt. "Skinny folk always have an attitude."
With his roast beef sub in one hand and his notes in the other, Jordan stood. "Can you state your name and address for the record?"
"Roy J. Peabody. I live above the Do-Or-Diner, in Salem Falls."
"Where were you the afternoon of April thirtieth, Mr. Peabody?"
"Working," Roy said.
"Do you know who Gillian Duncan is?"
"Ayuh."
"Did you see her that day?"
"Ayuh."
Jordan took another bite of his sandwich. "Where?" he asked, then swallowed.
"She came into the diner 'bout three-thirty."
"Was Jack working at that time?"
"Sure was."
"Did you ever see the two of them together?" Jordan asked.
"Ayuh."
"Can you tell me about that?"
Roy shrugged. "She came in and ordered a milk shake. Then she changed her mind, said she wasn't hungry, and walked out. I saw her go 'round back, to where Jack was putting the trash into the Dumpster."
"You saw this?"
"My cash register sits next to a window," Roy said. "What exactly did you see?"
"She must have said something to him, because he looked up after a minute and they started talking."
For taciturn Roy, that pretty much said it all, too. Jordan hid a smile. "How long did they talk?"
"Had to have been ten minutes, because I changed the cash drawer then. Takes some time to count up all those bills and coins."
"Thank you, Roy." Jordan lifted the sandwich. "For everything."
As soon as Matt stood up for his cross-examination, Roy turned to the judge. "Can I ask him a question?"
She seemed surprised, but nodded. "All right, Mr. Peabody."
"What the heck was wrong with my muffin?" Roy barked.
"Excuse me?"
"You didn't eat it, did you? Just like you didn't eat my sandwich today."
"It wasn't a personal affront, Mr. Peabody. I was making a statement," Matt said.
"'Bout what? That my food isn't good enough for you?"
"If you take muffins from a witness, you're more likely to believe him."
Roy blinked, confounded.
"Let's just say I'm on a gluten-free diet," Matt said with a sigh. "Do you mind if I ask you a few things now?"
"Go on ahead. I took the whole afternoon off for you."
Matt rolled his eyes. "Mr. Peabody, were you inside when you saw Gillian leave?"
"That's what I said."
"And Gillian went around the back of the diner?"
"Yes."
"Was your window open?"
"No, Addie says it's a waste of the air-conditioning."
"So you didn't hear who called whom over, then?"
"No. But I sure noticed she was pissed off when she left."
Matt looked at the judge. "I'd like to move to strike that statement."
"I wouldn't," Judge Justice said. "Mr. Peabody, what led you to believe she was angry?"
"Her nose was so high in the air I thought she'd trip on the sidewalk. She was walking a mile a minute. Huffing, like she was fit to tie Jack."
Jordan grinned from ear to ear. If he won this trial, he'd eat lunch at the Do-Or-Diner every day of his life from now on. And he'd tip Roy, as well as his waitress.
"Do you know, Mr. Peabody, why she was angry?"
"Can't say."
"Well, for example, what if he'd made an improper advance toward her? Wouldn't that have upset her?"
<
br /> Roy slanted a look at Jack. "I suppose."
"Or if he touched her inappropriately? Might that account for a rapid retreat?"
The old man hesitated, then said, "Maybe."
Matt walked back to the county attorney's table and picked up his sandwich. He took a huge bite, chewed and swallowed. "Thank you, Mr. Peabody," he said, smiling. "It's not every day a defense witness caters to the prosecution, too."
Meg knew better than to cast a spell that tried to control another person. If a spell was going to work, it meant that energy and power poured through you into someone else--so a connection had been made between the two of you. Which meant if you sent harm out, eventually you'd be the recipient of it, too.
Hexing, though, wasn't the same as using magick to destroy. After all, when they'd cast a spell for old Stuart Hollings, they were trying to get rid of his tumor. A growing cancer had to be dissipated. And a person who repeatedly threatened the safety of others had to be stopped. That was why Meg had to do a binding spell.
It was the first time she'd ever cast a circle by herself. Meg knelt between the shrubs in her backyard, praying her mother wouldn't come home early from work. A black candle burned in front of her, and an ashtray she'd dug up from the attic held a stick of incense.
She was supposed to have a poppet, a wax or cloth doll made to represent the person she wanted to stop from doing harm. But Meg had never been crafty and so had no idea how to go about making a representation of someone. In the end, she'd rummaged through her closet, into the bin of old Barbie and Ken dolls she'd had as a kid. Naked, the doll was obscene, the hair matted. Meg sprinkled it with salt water and whispered the words she'd copied from a grimoire at the Wiccan Read. "Blessed be, you creature made ... uh, in China ... and changed by life. You are not plastic, but flesh and blood. You are between the worlds, in all the worlds, so mote it be."
She held the doll in her hands and imagined a silver net falling out of the sky. Then she took a length of red ribbon from the pocket of her shorts and wrapped it tight around the doll's hands, mouth, and groin. Finally, Meg took all the energy that trembled through her nerves, feeding her fear, and she directed it into the doll, until the thin figure jumped out of her palms and fell onto the ground before her. "By Air and Earth, by Water and Fire, so be you bound, as I desire."
Meg would not be hurt again. She would not let anyone else be hurt again, either. Lies were only as strong as the suckers who believed them; and figuring that out late, Meg knew, was better than never figuring it out at all. Opening the circle, she took a spade from her mother's gardening set and buried the doll beneath the roots of a hydrangea bush. On top of this, she set the heaviest rock she had been able to drag over. And when the poppet meant to represent Gillian Duncan was safely underground, Meg patted the mound with satisfaction.
In the middle of Matt's cross of Roy Peabody, the bailiff walked up to Jordan and handed him a note. "You've got to be kidding," he muttered, balling it up in his hand. He waited until the prosecutor had finished and then asked to approach the bench.
"Your Honor, could we take a ten-minute recess?" he asked.
"You've had plenty of time to confer with your client," Matt began.
"I'm not going to talk to my client. If it makes you happy, you sit here and baby-sit him." Jordan turned to the judge. "This is a personal matter, ma'am."
She nodded and granted Jordan the time. He hurried back to the defense table, motioned to Selena, and strode out of the courtroom.
Thomas was waiting for him there. "This'd better be good," Jordan said.
"I think it is." He held out his hand, presenting a notebook. "This came in the mail for you."
Jordan stared daggers at his son. "And you felt the profound need to bring it to me in the middle of a trial?"
"Book of Shadows," Selena read, taking it from Thomas. "I saw these at the Wiccan Read, when I was there."
"If Starshine felt the need to send a gift, I could have used a goodluck charm."
"I don't think Starshine sent it, Jordan," Selena said quietly, pulling the silver ribbon that Thomas had used as a bookmark out in a long spool.
Jordan fingered the ribbon. Then he took the book from Thomas's hand and flipped through it, skimming. The last page with writing on it held his attention for a long time.
It was little-known fact, but witnesses were allowed to use anything--anything at all--to refresh their recollection.
Engrossed, Jordan did not take his eyes from the final entry. He touched the page with reverence. "Where did it come from?"
Thomas thought for a moment before he answered. "A good witch," he said.
Sitting on the witness stand, Jack looked warily at the enemy.
His lawyer.
At first, Jordan had not wanted Jack to testify, believing that he usually did a better job of speaking for his clients. But his defense so far consisted of a witch, a pair of toxicologists, a shrink, and Roy--it sounded more like the punch line to a joke than a legal rebuttal. Jack was well spoken, clean-cut, educated--even if he had nothing to counter Gillian Duncan's story, he would look good sitting on the stand.
It was no small measure of irony that the last person in the world Jack would ever trust was the only one who could help him now. As he sat on the stand and watched Jordan's antics--his hand motions, his calculated frowns at the jury--Jack thought, They are all alike. Liars, the lot of them. And just as he'd been screwed once before by a lawyer, Jack believed he'd be screwed again.
Don't act defensive or angry or they'll think you capable of violence, Jordan had said moments ago. Just follow my lead. This is what I do for a living. But that was impossible for Jack to do. It was as if Jordan stood at the bottom of a cliff urging Jack to jump, trusting the promise he'd catch him ... yet Jack was still beaten and bruised from his last fall.
Jordan leaned close, so that only Jack could see his anger. "Pay attention, dammit," he hissed. "I can't do this without you." Then a pleasant expression whitewashed his features, and he said, "What happened next?"
He was back there for a moment, their laughter sparkling over his head like stars, close enough to catch. "I was on the edge of a clearing in the woods," Jack said slowly, "and when I looked up, there were a group of girls standing there. Naked."
That single word stilled the court. "Wait a second." Jordan shook his head. "You're telling us you stumbled upon a bunch of naked girls?"
"I know. That's exactly what I thought, too. That I'd had so much to drink I was hallucinating."
"I can imagine. What else do you remember?"
Jack shook his head. "It looked ... well, like nothing I'd ever seen. There were candles. And ribbons, hanging from the trees."
Jordan crossed to the evidence table and lifted one. "Ribbons like these?"
"Yes. But longer."
"Can you recall anything else?"
Jack closed his eyes, struggling. "Only bits and pieces. Like I'll close my eyes and see the bonfire. Or I'll wake up in the morning and there's a sweetness on my tongue, a taste I can place from that night." He shook his head, frustrated. "But there's so much of it that's just empty space, and the things that do come to me make no sense."
Jordan began to walk toward his client. "Do you remember any particular items laying around that night?"
"Objection," Matt called lazily. "If the witness is drawing a blank, Mr. McAfee isn't allowed to fill in the picture with his own crayon."
"Sustained."
Undeterred, Jordan caught Jack's eye. "Is it annoying to be unable to remember what happened that night?"
"You have no idea." Jack reached deep for the words. "I know I didn't do what they say. I just know it. But I can't see it clearly."
"What do you think it would take to jog your memory?"
"I don't know," Jack admitted. "God knows I've tried everything."
"Me, I have to hold some souvenir in my hands, and boom, I'm back there." Jordan grinned. "I have a foul ball I caught during game seven of the 198
6 American League championships, the one when Henderson hit a three-run blast off Donnie Moore of the California Angels. Every time I pick it up, I think of the Sox pulling ahead from behind and making it into the World Series."
"Once again, Your Honor, objection. As much as I love getting Mr. McAfee's life history, it's beside the point."
"But Judge, it's not. I'd like to enter into evidence this notebook and let the witness use it to refresh his recollection." Reaching behind the defense table, Jordan took the black-and-white composition book from Selena, then brought it toward the evidence table.
"Approach!" Matt yelled, coming to his feet. "All right, Mr. McAfee, what's up your sleeve now?" Judge Justice asked.
"Your Honor, the rules of evidence say I can refresh my witness's memory with any document at my disposal. This is a book of shadows--a witches' log, if you will, that documents the Pagan ritual that took place the night of the alleged crime."
Judge Justice turned it over in her hands, flipping through it, then handed it to Matt to examine. "This is inappropriate, Your Honor," Matt insisted. "The witness didn't write a single page of this book ... he has no original knowledge of what's in it. His memory isn't going to be refreshed by reading it--it's going to be created new." He narrowed his eyes at Jordan. "Mr. McAfee is finding a way to put words into his client's mouth."
"Even if the witness was not a party to its creation, Mr. Houlihan, the defense is welcome to use this item to spark a memory." The judge turned to Jordan. "I myself saved a souvenir cup from the 1975 World Series, game six, when Carlton Fisk's fly stayed inside the foul line by inches, and as long as I have that godawful plastic mug, I'll never forget the magic of that moment. Objection overruled."
As soon as Jordan handed the composition notebook to his client, Jack's hand began to shake. "That night," he murmured. "She was writing in this, under the dogwood tree."
"And then?"
"She stood up," Jack said slowly. "She stood up, and she said my name."
A more sober man would have turned and walked away, but Jack could not hold that thought in his mind. It was too full with other things--ribbons hanging where they did not belong; a knife set perpendicular to a white candle; the scent of cinnamon; the simple fact that she was asking for him. "You're just in time," Gillian said. "We've been waiting for you."