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"Because you weigh exactly the right amount."
Sydney carefully stepped onto the carpet and sat down cross-legged. "So what was it this time?"
"What was what?"
"Your back always gets pretzeled when you're stressed out about a case."
Matt rolled over. "Married you for your ESP, too." He drew his knees up, stretching muscles along his spine. "Gillian's friends were taking drugs the night of the rape."
"And Gillian?"
"Said she wasn't."
Sydney shrugged. "So?"
"Well, no matter what, it's exculpatory. I have to turn it over to the defense."
"It doesn't change the fact that she was raped, does it?"
"No," Matt said slowly.
Sydney raised her brows. "You think she's lying to you."
"Ah, h.e.l.l." Matt got to his feet and started pacing. "I don't know. She said it was her thermos but that Charlie's daughter brought the stuff. And that she didn't drink anything that night because she wasn't thirsty. I can probably get Meg to admit to procuring the drugs when I put her on the stand. But still ... there were five cups there with residue in them-one for each of the girls and one for St. Bride. McAfee is going to be all over this."
"Maybe it was poured for her but she didn't drink it."
"Maybe."
Sydney was quiet for a moment. "Do you think she was lying about the rape, too?"
He shook his head. "I've got too much evidence. The blood on her s.h.i.+rt, the scratches on his face, the s.e.m.e.n."
She wrapped her arms around Matt's waist. "You never liked sharing your toys."
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"You're growling because you have to turn over something that hurts your case."
"But it doesn't," Matt argued. "Sure, it doesn't make Gillian look like an angel ... but I can still get St. Bride convicted."
Sydney leaned up and kissed his chin. "Don't you feel better now?"
To his surprise, Matt realized he did. His back wasn't aching, and for the first time all day, he was itching to just get this case to trial already. "That's the third reason I married you," he said, and stamped a kiss on her mouth.
"Five cups don't mean squat, Jordan," Selena argued.
"Reasonable doubt. All I have to do is plant the seed."
"I don't care if you plant a whole frigging tree. You can't say that just because a cup was there that a kid drank out of it. Your car's in the garage. Does that mean I drive it?"
Thomas looked up from the kitchen table, where he was struggling through a trigonometry proof. "Could you two take this somewhere else?"
But neither Jordan nor Selena paid him any attention. "If I say that Gillian lied about taking drugs, it suggests that she lied about a number of things. Including this rape."
"Jordan, listen to yourself! Matt Houlihan could drive a freight train through the holes in that argument."
"You got anything better?" Jordan snapped. "Because I I don't. I have a client who says the victim came onto him, but he can't offer us any more details. I have proof that the victim is into some pretty strange s.h.i.+t, but discrediting her isn't going to acquit Jack. Which means, for G.o.d's sake, that if all I have to throw at Goliath is a f.u.c.king pebble, I'm going to wind up my arm as best I can." don't. I have a client who says the victim came onto him, but he can't offer us any more details. I have proof that the victim is into some pretty strange s.h.i.+t, but discrediting her isn't going to acquit Jack. Which means, for G.o.d's sake, that if all I have to throw at Goliath is a f.u.c.king pebble, I'm going to wind up my arm as best I can."
"For Christ's sake," Thomas muttered. He started gathering his books and papers together, intent on moving to a quieter area. Like maybe a blasting zone.
Suddenly, all the fire went out of Jordan. He sank into a chair across from Thomas and rested his head in his hands. "I'm sorry. I'm being an idiot."
"No argument here," Selena said.
"It's just that I only have four days, Selena, and then we're standing up in front of the judge. And everything you've turned up in the past week-well, G.o.d, it's fantastic. But I went into this a.s.suming that I was trying a simple case-girl says guy raped her, guy has a previous conviction. Indictment, arraignment, trial. And suddenly, every time I turn around, there's something new-this witch stuff, and the drugs, and evidence that doesn't match up. This isn't the case I thought I had." He pressed his thumb and forefinger deep into the sockets of his eyes. "I want a year to prepare. Then the next second, I don't, because at the rate we're going we'll probably find out that Gillian's got connections to the Sicilian mob."
"Nah. Although I did turn up something about her being a presidential intern."
"Not funny," Jordan muttered. "I have no idea what to say happened that night."
"Jack was beaten up badly hours before. You could say he was in too sorry a physical state to commit the crime."
"But not so sorry a physical state that he couldn't manage to get to a bar and drink himself sick." Jordan shook his head. "I can defuse what the girl says, but I can't refute it. The only pieces of that night Jack can recall are laughable. Ribbons and bonfires and naked teenagers-"
"Naked?" Thomas squeaked. "Chelsea was naked?"
"How am I supposed to get a jury to buy that? And then to vote for an acquittal?"
"That's why you need proof, Jordan," Selena said gently. "Reasonable doubt works most of the time ... but like you said, the alternative you're proposing is so strange that it's still going to be hard to swallow. You need to hand the jury your own evidence, so that they know Gillian was playing witch in the forest that night. And a cup doesn't cut it."
Thomas stacked his books and headed down the hall. "See you," he muttered. "I'm sure you'll really miss me being in here."
"I know," Jordan sighed. "But if she took the atropine, it was nearly two months ago. The half-life of the drug is about six hours. It's not like we can get a sample of her blood tonight and still find it swimming around in there."
"We should have had her blood screened by a private lab right after Jack's arrest. What were we thinking?"
Jordan met her gaze. "That she was telling the truth."
Thomas's voice floated down the hall. "You did have her screened," he called out. "In the ER."
"Routine drug tests don't show atropine."
"So ... why couldn't you try it again with some fancy test? What did they do with the blood when they were done?"
"It went off to the state lab with the rest of the rape kit," Jordan explained, and suddenly his jaw dropped. "Holy s.h.i.+t, the rape kit. The known samples they used to type DNA came from blood that was taken that night."
"And they save that stuff." Selena was already out of her seat. "How fast can you get the judge to sign off on a motion for independent testing?"
Jordan reached for the briefcase that held his laptop. "Watch me," he said.
Roman Chu had started Twin States Forensic Testing in a clean room part.i.tioned off in his parents' garage. Having cultivated a reputation for getting things done in a fraction of the time it took the state lab to do them, he generated enough work to pay for his own building, and to hire ten employees who worked miracles for attorneys at the eleventh hour.
"I appreciate this," Jordan said for the twentieth time.
After the judge had granted the motion, Selena had secured Gillian's blood sample from the state lab. The prep work had been done during DNA a.n.a.lysis: The blood had been spun down and separated from the cells, the serum frozen. All Roman had to do was run the ma.s.s spectrometry. Now, they both stared at the computer, waiting for the results. "I want Cuban cigars," Roman muttered. "Not that c.r.a.p from Florida you got me last year."
"You got it."
"And I'm still charging you for overtime."
The screen blinked green, and suddenly a stream of numbers came up. Roman grabbed a reference text and compared it to what was on the computer, then whistled softly.
"Translate," Jordan demanded.
Roman pointed a finger at the percentiles. "The blood's got atropine in it."
"You're certain?"
"Oh, yeah. The drug concentration's so high I'm surprised it didn't put her into a coma."
Jordan crossed his arms. "So what do do you think the physical effect was?" you think the physical effect was?"
Roman laughed. "Buddy," he said, "she was tripping."
For the first time in nearly a decade, Addie took a lunch break during lunch hours. With Delilah and her father sharing the kitchen and Darla waiting tables, Addie had found herself wandering around useless. She would have gone to see Jack, but visiting hours were not until tomorrow-the night before the trial started. So instead, she went to see Chloe.
"This," Addie said, "was your favorite kind of day." She set a small nosegay of Queen Anne's lace in front of Chloe's gravestone. "Do you remember when we used to pretend it was summer, in the middle of January? With a beach blanket picnic, and the heat turned up, and you and me in our bathing suits in the bathtub." She touched the granite slab. It was warm from the sun, nearly as warm as a child's skin. "Is it summer all the time up there, Chlo?" she whispered.
What she wished, more than anything, was that she had a store of memories like those. Losing Chloe had been like reading a wonderful book only to realize that all the pages past a certain point were blank. Addie had been cheated out of watching her daughter get her first training bra, helping her choose a prom dress, seeing her eyes darken the first time she spoke of a boy she loved. She missed driving her to the high school, and getting ice cream cones and swapping halfway through to try the other flavor. She missed talking, and hearing an answer back.
"Miz Peabody?"
The sound of a girl's voice startled Addie so much she whirled around to find its source. Meg Saxton stood a few feet away, looking just as surprised as Addie.
"Meg ... I didn't know you were here."
There was a wall between them, invisible but thick. The last time Addie had spoken privately to Meg was at Chloe's funeral. Meg and Chloe had played together on the swing set in her yard. But here Meg was, all grown up, and Chloe was dead.
"How ... have you been?" Addie asked politely.
"Fine," Meg answered. Silence sprouted. "Did you come to visit her?"
They both turned toward the gravestone, as if expecting Chloe to appear. "I wish I'd known her," Meg confessed. "I mean, she was older than me, but I think ... I think if things had been different, we could have been friends."
"I think Chloe would have liked that," Addie said softly. Tears filled the young girl's eyes, and she turned away, trying to hide. "Meg? Are you all right?"
"No!" Meg cried, a sob hitching the word in half. "Oh, G.o.d." G.o.d."
Instinctively, Addie reached for her, and the contact was electric. Meg smelled of shampoo and cheap cosmetics and childhood, and Addie was overwhelmed by the shape and feel of a girl roughly the same age as Chloe. So this is what it would have been like, So this is what it would have been like, she thought, her eyes drifting closed. she thought, her eyes drifting closed.
Meg whispered so quietly that Addie didn't believe she had heard correctly. "She's so lucky."
"Who is?"
"Chloe."
Addie's hands stilled. "You don't mean that."
"I do." Meg wiped at her face with the bottom of her T-s.h.i.+rt. "I wish I were dead."
It hit Addie then, what Meg had been doing at the cemetery. She had come back to the spot where the alleged a.s.sault had occurred. Jack hadn't done it-she knew this as surely as she knew that Chloe was buried close by-but something had rattled Meg that night, all the same.
Addie squeezed Meg's shoulders. "I think we should go. This place has bad memories for both of us."
Meg reluctantly glanced in the direction of the clearing. "Ms. Peabody," she whispered, miserable. "I think ... I think he touched me, too."
"Touched ... you?" Addie said, the words round, with no sound behind them.
"Touched me," Meg repeated, mortified. "You me," Meg repeated, mortified. "You know." know." And G.o.d help her, Addie did. And G.o.d help her, Addie did.
In the end, it came down to this: Being a mother was something that stayed with you, dormant, ready to flare at a single match-stroke of circ.u.mstance. And apparently it didn't matter if the child was one of your body or just one with a place in your heart-instinct was instinct.
Addie loved Jack. She believed him when he said he hadn't attacked Gillian Duncan. But she was a mother, and she knew what had to be done. So she took Meg to Charlie's office at the police station and closed the door behind them. She kept her expression blank. Then, holding Meg's hand tight for moral support, she listened as this girl-this friend of her daughter's-told Charlie what she'd told Addie minutes before.
Charlie knew the floor was stable, but he could feel it rocking beneath his feet. He cleared his throat for the hundredth time and swallowed, then turned on the tape recorder that sat between himself and his daughter.
Meggie was s.h.i.+vering, although she wore the blue uniform jacket that usually hung on the back of his office door. Her hands fell at elbow-length in the jacket, and it made him think of how he and Barb would dress her up when she was just a baby, crazy angel wings made out of real feathers and soft headbands with antennae, things like that that were immortalized in dusty photo alb.u.ms.
Oh, Christ.
"Where, um, did he touch you?"
She couldn't look him in the eye, and that was fine, because Charlie couldn't look at her, either. "Here. And here."
"The victim," Charlie said thickly, "is indicating her left hip and breast."
Every muscle in his body was rigid with tension. How was he going to tell Barbara about this? How was he ever going to finish? You could not be a detective when you wanted so badly to be simply a father.
"Charlie." Houlihan's voice fell heavily. "You don't have to do this."
Charlie shook his head tightly. "Meg, did Jack St. Bride expose himself to you?"
"No," his daughter whispered.
"Did he touch you anywhere else? In any other way?"
"Did any part of his body come in contact with part of yours?" Matt asked quietly.