Alex Cross's Trial
their white friends set about to deny my clients any access at all to the suspected man. How they, in fact, attacked my clients, and sought to visit great bodily harm upon themeven though my clients had a written legal warrant deputizing them and empowering them to question the accused, they were set upon by a pack of armed men.
My clients fired their own weapons, gentlemen, in self-defense. The case is simple. Its what is known in our game as open and shut. My clients are facing these terrible charges, they have been jailed and denied their most basic rights as Americans, as Mississippians.
You could see the jurors straightening with pride as he said this. And all because of a story! A fable! A fiction, my friends. Mr. Jonah Curtis is a very eloquent lawyer, gentlemen, anyone can see that, but what hes telling you is nothing more than a bedtime story!
Several jurors laughed out loud.
That is right, gentlemen of the jury. A bedtime story. We have two versions being told here. Mr. Curtis has told you a fairy story, and I have told you the truth. As God above knows it to be!
Chapter 105
GODDAMN THEM, BEN. Goddamn them all to hell!
L.J. slammed his fist on the dining room table, rattling the crystal goblets. Goddamn their lying, cheating asses!
L.J. was doing all the shouting. Jonah and I were standing back, watching him scream in a way only rich men can. We didnt try to stop him or calm him down.
The biggest lie of all, L.J. said, is when he says these White Raiders had some kind of official warrant to come into that house after Ricky.
Jonah looked at me. All right, Ben, how is Lewis going to demonstrate that in a credible fashion?
Easy, I said. Hell put Phineas Eversman on the stand.
The policeman?
Chief of police, and the only full-time officer on the force, I reminded him. Hell put Phineas on and Phineas will lie through his teeth.
Jonah looked quizzical. I thought Eversman was on our side. Or at least neutral.
He was on our side for exactly one night, I explained. He only arrested those men because L.J. pushed him into it. Hes been looking for a way out ever since.
I speared a slice of Virginia ham before passing the platter to L.J.
It didnt look like it would rain tonight, did it? said Jonah.
Not to me, L.J. replied. Why?
That sure does sound like thunder outside, Jonah said.
I walked over to the window and pulled back the drapes. First I was surprised; then I was frightened.
What is it, Ben?
About thirty, forty fellows with guns, I said, and a few with pitchforks. They appear to be just standing there, watching the house.
Thats a mighty big crowd for Eudora, L.J. said.
No, I said. Its a mighty big mob .
Chapter 106
THE MOB CAUSED US no trouble that night. For about an hour they watched us watching them through the windows, then they turned and went away. Every few minutes I peeked out the window, but the streets of Eudora stayed quiet and dark that night.
The next morning the trial began in earnest. I spent a long minute studying the face of Henry Wadsworth North, trying to match the man with what I remembered of the boy on the day Mama took sick. Too many years had intervened. This sallow, blotchy-faced fat man bore only a vague resemblance to the surly kid I remembered from Jenkins Mercantile.
Jonah called his first witness: Abraham Cross.
Abraham was wearing his best church suit, of speckled brown wool, and a matching fedora. He rolled in in a rickety wheelchair Moody had borrowed from a crippled neighbor of L.J.s, a nice woman who sympathized with us.
Now, Mr. Cross, Jonah said, why dont you take us back to the night of August twenty-fifth. Tell us what you remember.
Abraham nodded. Well, sir, I was in the parlor, a-layin in my bed, and Moody was tendin after me
Excuse me, sir, Jonah said. Who is Moody?
Moody Cross. My granddaughter. She looks after me.
Thank you, sir. Please go on.
Like I say, I was a-layin in my bed. Not quite sure if Id been sleeping or not. But then sure enough I come awake. Sound like the cavalry done showed up outside the house. A bunch of horses, I dont know how many. And men shootin off guns, and yellin. Like to scared me half to deathand I dont need to be any closer to dead than I already am.
Laughter rolled through the
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