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"If this is what you told Ruth Murphey, no wonder she ran away," Bondelli said.
"I told Ruth I'd help any way I can."
"You have a strange way of showing it."
"Look," Thurlow said. "We've a community up in arms, fearful, excited. Murphey's the focus for their hidden guilt feelings. They want him dead. They want this psychological pressure taken off them. You can't psychoa.n.a.lyze a whole community."
Bondelli began tapping a finger impatiently on the desk. "Will you or will you not help me prove Joe's insane?"
"I'll do everything I can, but you know Joe's going to resist that form of defense, don't you?"
"Know it!" Bondelli leaned forward, arms on his desk. "The d.a.m.n' fool blows his top at the slightest hint I want him to plead insanity. He keeps harping on the unwritten law!"
"Those stupid accusations against Adele," Thurlow said. "Joe's going to make it very difficult to prove him insane."
"A sane man would fake insanity now if only to save his life," Bondelli said.
"Keep that very clearly in mind," Thurlow said. "Joe can't in any way entertain the idea that he's insane. To admit that -- even as a possibility -- or as a necessary pretense, he'd have to face the fact that his violent act could've been a useless, senseless thing. The enormity of such an admission would be far worse than insanity. Insanity's much preferable."
"Can you get that across to a jury?" Bondelli asked. He spoke in a hushed tone.
"That Murphey considers it safer to play sane?"
"Yes."
Thurlow shrugged. "Who knows what a jury will believe? Joe may be a hollow sh.e.l.l, but that's one h.e.l.luva strong sh.e.l.l. Nothing contradictory can be permitted to enter it. Every fiber of him is concentrated on the necessity to appear normal, to maintain the illusion of sanity -- for himself as well as for others. Death is far preferable to that other admission . . . Oscar Wilde concurring."
"'Each man kills the thing he loves,'" Bondelli whispered. Again, he turned, looked out the window. The smoky pattern was still there. He wondered idly if workmen were tarring a roof somewhere below him.
Thurlow looked down at Bondelli's tapping finger. "The trouble with you, Tony," he said, "is you're one of G. K. Chesterton's terrible children. You're innocent and love justice. Most of us are wicked and naturally prefer mercy."
As though he hadn't heard, Bondelli said: "We need something simple and elegant to show the jury. They have to be dumbfounded with the realization that . . ." He broke off, stared at Thurlow. "And your prediction of Joe's trouble fits the bill precisely."
"Too technical," Thurlow said. "A jury won't sit still for it, won't understand it. Juries don't hear what they don't understand. Their minds wander. They think about dress patterns, bugs in the rose garden, what's for lunch, where to spend a vacation."
"You did predict it, didn't you? Ruth did report your words correctly?"
"The psychotic break, yes, I predicted it." The words were almost a sigh. "Tony, haven't you focused on what I've been telling you? This was a s.e.x crime -- the sword, the violence . . ."
"Is he insane?"
"Of course he's insane!"
"In the legal sense?"
"In every sense."
"Well, then there's legal precedent for . . ."
"Psychological precedent's more important."
"What?"
"Tony, if there's one thing I've learned since becoming court psychologist here, it's that juries, spend far more energy trying to discover the judge's opinion than they do following what the opposing lawyers are presenting. Juries have a purely disgusting respect for the wisdom of judges. Any judge we get is going to be a member of this community. The community wants Joe put away permanently -- dead. We can prove him insane until we're blue in the face. None of these good people will face our proof consciously, even while they're accepting it unconsciously. In fact, as we prove Joe insane, we're condemning him."
"Are you trying to tell me you can't get up on that stand and say you predicted Joe's insanity but the authorities refused to act because the man was too important a member of the community?"
"Of course I can't."
"You think they won't believe you?"
"It doesn't make any difference whether they believe me!"
"But if they believe . . ."
"I'll tell you what they'll believe, Tony, and I'm surprised that you, an attorney, don't realize this. They'll believe that Paret has proof of Adele's unfaithfulness, but that some legal technicality, legal trickery on your part, prohibits introduction of the dirty details. They'll believe this because it's the easiest thing to believe. No grandstand play on my part will change that."
"You're saying we don't stand a chance?"
Thurlow shrugged. "Not if it goes to trial right away. If you can delay the trial or get a change of venue . . ."
Bondelli swiveled his chair, stared through the smoke pattern outside his window. "I find it very hard to believe that reasonable, logical human beings . . ."
"What's reasonable or logical about a jury?" Thurlow asked.
A flush of anger began at Bondelli's collar, spread upward across his cheeks, into his hair. He turned, glared at Thurlow. "Do you know what I think, Andy? I think the fact that Ruth ran out on you has colored your att.i.tude toward her father. You say you'll help, but every word you . . ."
"That'll be enough of that," Thurlow interrupted, his voice low, flat. He took two deep breaths. "Tell me something, Tony. Why're you taking this case? You're not a criminal lawyer."
Bondelli pa.s.sed a hand across his eyes. Slowly, the flush left his skin. He glanced at Thurlow. "Sorry, Andy."
"That's all right. Can you answer the question? Do you know why you're taking this case?"
Bondelli sighed, shrugged. "When the story broke that I was representing him, two of my most important clients called and said they'd take their business elsewhere if I didn't pull out."
"That's why you're defending Joe?"
"He has to have the best defense possible."
"You're the best?"
"I wanted to go up to San Francisco, get Belli or someone of that stature, but Joe refuses. He thinks it's going to be easy -- the G.o.dd.a.m.n' unwritten law."
"And that leaves you."
"In this city, yes." Bondelli extended his arms onto the desk, clasped his hands into fists. "You know, I don't see the problem the same way you do, not at all. I think our biggest job's to prove he isn't faking insanity."
Thurlow took off his gla.s.ses, rubbed his eyes. They were beginning to ache. He'd been reading too much today, he thought. He said: "Well, you have a point there, Tony. If a person with delusions learns to keep quiet about them, you can have one h.e.l.luva time getting him to act on those delusions where people will see him and understand. Exposing faked insanity is easy compared with the problems of detecting a concealed psychosis, but the public generally doesn't understand this."