A Special Relationship (48 page)

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Authors: Douglas Kennedy

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Literary

BOOK: A Special Relationship
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‘We’ve largely gone over to the French inquisitorial model when it comes to family law,’ Maeve explained to me when we met in her chambers, ‘which means that, unlike the States, neither side can interrupt the other’s examination of a witness unless it is absolutely crucial.’ After the applicant’s case had been presented, we would give our evidence. Then after our case was presented, there would be closing arguments. We’d go first, with Tony’s barrister to follow. Then Maeve would be allowed to make a response, after which Tony’s barrister would have the final word.

‘And I know what you’re going to say: that is completely unfair if you happen to be the respondent. Which is, I’m afraid, absolutely right. But that’s how the system works – and there’s precious little any of us can do about it. Except to make absolutely certain that they won’t be able to pick apart anything we’ve presented to the court – which is my job.’

Whereas my job was to sit there and wonder if I’d ever live with my son again.

Maeve Doherty positioned herself in the front row of the courtroom. I sat with Nigel Clapp directly behind her. Tony’s side had exactly the same seating arrangements. I glanced at my watch. 10.31 am. The judge had yet to arrive. I knew already from Maeve that the hearing would be closed to members of the public, so the visitors’ pews at the back of the court would remain empty. But then, suddenly, the main door opened and I heard a very familiar voice say my name.

The voice was that of my sister, Sandy. I turned around. There she was, looking tired and disorientated, and dragging a roll-on suitcase behind her. I stood up, stunned. I said, ‘What are you doing here?’

My tone wasn’t wildly enthusiastic – and she picked up on this immediately.

‘I just thought I should be here.’

Tony craned his neck, and appeared stunned to see her in court.

‘What are you looking at?’ she snapped at him, and he instantly turned away. Then she turned to me and whispered, ‘Aren’t you pleased I’m here?’

I gave her a quick hug and whispered, ‘Of course, of course. It’s just a shock, that’s all. Did you just arrive?’

‘Yep. Just took the subway in from Heathrow. I suppose you can find a bed for me for a couple of nights.’

I managed a small smile. ‘I think that can be arranged. Who’s looking after the kids?’

‘You know my neighbours, the Fultons? Their two are away at summer camp, so it was no sweat for them to …’

But we were interrupted by the court clerk announcing: ‘Please stand.’ I motioned Sandy to find a pew, and I went racing back to my spot next to Nigel Clapp. He was already standing.

‘My sister,’ I whispered to him.

‘Oh … uhm … right,’ he said.

The rear door opened, and Mr Justice Charles Traynor walked in. He was in his early sixties. Large. Imposing. Well-upholstered. With a full head of steel hair and an imperial bearing that immediately let it be known he thought a great deal of himself. His three-piece black suit was immaculate. So too was his white shirt and a school tie which I guessed to be Eton (and which Maeve later confirmed to be correct). He took his place on the bench. He bowed to us, we bowed to him. He nodded for us to sit down. He removed a pair of half-moon spectacles from the breast pocket of his suit and placed them on his nose. He cleared his throat. The clerk called the court to order. Traynor peered out at us. I could see him catch sight of the lone visitor in the back row.

‘And whom might you be?’

Nigel quickly whispered an explanation to Maeve Doherty, who rose and said, ‘My Lord, that is the sister of the respondent, who has just arrived from the States to be with Ms Goodchild for the hearing. We ask the court’s permission to allow her to stay.’

Traynor looked towards Lucinda Fforde.

‘Does the applicant’s counsel wish to raise any objections to this visitor?’

‘One moment, please, My Lord,’ she said, then leaned back and had a quick
sotto voce
conversation with Tony and his solicitor. After a moment, she stood and said, ‘We have no objections, My Lord.’

‘Very well then – the visitor may stay.’

I avoided turning around and looking at Sandy right then – for fear she’d do something mildly triumphalist and well-meaning, like giving me the thumbs up.

Traynor cleared his throat. Then, without any fancy preamble or explanatory comments, he asked the applicant’s barrister to begin presenting her client’s case.

Lucinda Fforde stood up with a little bow of the head towards the bench, and began to speak.

‘My Lord, having been in receipt of my statement, you are in no doubt aware that this is, without question, a desperately sad and tragic case …’

With that, off she went, painting a picture of an intensely successful professional man – Anthony Hobbs, ‘one of the outstanding journalists of his generation’ – who had found himself involved with a woman about whom he knew very little, and who became pregnant only a few short weeks into their liaison. Of course, Mr Hobbs could have played the cad and turned his back on this woman. Instead, upon learning of his transfer back to London, he asked if she would like to accompany him – and, in fact, regularize their situation through marriage. Now though there’s no doubt that Ms Goodchild had a most difficult pregnancy, and also had to cope with a most severe postnatal depression, her behaviour became exceptionally erratic, to the point where …

And then – as in her opening at the Interim Hearing – she listed and embellished everything they had against me. My initial anguished statement in hospital that I didn’t care if Jack lived or died. My increasingly erratic behaviour while at the Mattingly. My threat to kill him. The sleeping pill poisoning incident. My incarceration in the psycho ward. The wondrous steadfastness of my husband through all of this …

At which point, in the back of the court, there was a loud angry exhalation of breath. Sandy. Lucinda Fforde stopped in mid-speech, and craned her neck to see who caused this interruption. So did Maeve and Nigel Clapp, where Mr Justice Traynor simply peered over his bi-focals and asked, ‘Did somebody say something?’

Sandy hung her head, avoiding all those accusatory eyes.

‘See that it doesn’t happen again,’ the Judge said crisply, in a tone that indicated the next time he would not be polite about it. Then he asked Lucinda Fforde to continue.

She picked up from where she left off, outlining Tony’s decency, and how he stood by me even after I spoke of murdering our son, and how he turned, in despair, to his old friend, Diane Dexter, who offered shelter from the maniacal …

And so forth. And so on. I had to hand it to her: she was brisk. She was concise. She was tough. She left the listener in no doubt that I had turned infanticidal – and that, as horrible as it was to separate a mother from its child, there was no choice in this instance. To allow the child back with its mother now, she argued, would only put him back in renewed jeopardy – something, she was certain, the court didn’t want to facilitate. Especially as the child was so happily settled with his father and Ms Dexter.

Now I had heard most of these arguments before. But it still didn’t lessen the impact of hearing them again. Like all good barristers, Lucinda Fforde was a brilliant persuader – and one who, in clear, precise, rational language, turned me into a terrifying wretch who so didn’t know what she was doing that she seriously considered killing her son.

It was now Maeve’s turn to outline our case, and she did so with impressive lucidity and compactness – brevity (she told me) being one of the virtues that Traynor preferred. She began by quickly reminding the judge of my journalistic background, my long-standing work as a foreign correspondent with the
Boston Post,
my ability to cope admirably as a journalist and a woman in the Middle East. She then detailed, in about three sentences, my whirlwind romance with Mr Hobbs, falling pregnant at the age of thirty-seven, reaching that ‘now or never’ juncture that a woman approaching forty reaches on the question of motherhood, deciding to come with him to London, and then being hit with a nightmare pregnancy.

She took him through my decline and fall – her language economic, rigorous, and devoid of melodramatic pity for what had befallen me. She was a first-rate storyteller – and she had Traynor’s full attention as she pressed forward to the end of her opening statement.

‘Though Ms Goodchild has never denied that – while in the throes of a clinical depression – she once expressed lack of concern about the child’s survival, and once uttered a threat against her son, she never carried out this threat, nor committed any violent action against him. She also openly admits that, while suffering from sleep deprivation and her ongoing postnatal depression, she did accidentally breastfeed her son while taking sedatives – an incident for which she still feels ongoing remorse.

‘But those three incidents I’ve just outlined are the entire sum total of the “crimes and misdemeanours” that my client has been accused of committing by the applicant. And out of these three incidents, the applicant manipulated the facts to initially obtain an emergency
ex parte
order against Ms Goodchild – a hearing that conveniently took place while she was out of the country at a family funeral. The applicant has since further exploited these incidents to win the Interim order, granting him residence of the child, essentially condemning Ms Goodchild as an unfit mother, and, with the exception of one pitiful hour a week, separating my client from her infant son for the past six months. I say that the applicant has acted in a ruthless, opportunistic fashion against his wife – and all for his own gain.’

She sat down. There was a moment’s pause. Then Lucinda Fforde stood up and called her first witness: Mr Thomas Hughes.

In he marched, dressed in an excellent suit, his demeanour every bit the arrogant Harley Street specialist. He stepped into the witness box, took the oath, and then nodded with a certain old boy politeness to Mr Justice Traynor. It was at that moment that I noticed they were wearing the same school tie.

‘Mr Hughes, you are considered, are you not, one of the leading obstetrics specialists in the country,’ Ms Fforde began, and then reminded the court that his witness statement had been submitted earlier. But just to verify the details of this statement, was it his opinion that Ms Goodchild’s behaviour was abnormally extreme while under his care at the Mattingly Hospital?

He launched into this subject with reasoned relish, explaining how, in all his years as a consultant, I was one of the most aggressive and extreme patients he had encountered. He then went on to explain how, shortly after the birth of my son, the nurses on the ward had reported to him about my dangerously ‘capricious and volatile behaviour’.

‘Desperate stretches of crying,’ he said, ‘followed by immoderate bouts of anger, and an absolute lack of interest in the welfare of her child – who, at that moment, was resident in the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit.’

‘Now, in your witness statement,’ Lucinda Fforde said, ‘you emphasize this latter point, noting how one of the nurses reported to you that Ms Goodchild said – and this is a direct quote: “He
is
dying – and I don’t care. You get that? I
don’t
care.’”

‘I’m afraid that is correct. After her son was recovering from jaundice, she became extremely unsettled in front of the entire maternity ward, to the point where I had to verbally calm her down and inform her that her behaviour was most unacceptable.’

‘Now it has been clinically argued that Ms Goodchild was in the throes of a postnatal depression during this time. Surely, you have dealt before with other patients suffering from this sort of condition?’

‘Of course. It is certainly not an atypical condition. However, I have yet to deal with a patient who reacted in such a profoundly aggressive and dangerous manner – to the point where, when I heard that her husband had sought a court order to remove the child from her, I was not at all surprised.’

‘Thank you very much, Mr Hughes. No further questions at this juncture.’

Maeve Doherty now stood. Her voice was cool, level.

‘Mr Hughes ... I’d like to ask you when you had Ms Goodchild bound to her hospital bed.’

He looked startled. ‘I never ordered that at all,’ he said, his tone indignant.

‘And when did you have her heavily tranquillized?’

‘She was never heavily tranquillized. She was on a modest anti-depressant to deal with the post-operative shock she suffered from her emergency Caesarean …’

‘And when you had her committed to the psychiatric wing of the Mattingly …’

‘She was never committed, she was never heavily tranquillized, she was never bound to her bed.’

Maeve Doherty looked at him and smiled.

‘Well sir, having stated that, how can you then say that she was a dangerous patient? Surely if she had been a dangerous patient, you would have ordered her to be bound …’

‘It is true that she did not commit acts of physical violence, but her verbal behaviour …’

‘But, as you just said, she was suffering from post-operative shock, not to mention trying to cope with the fact that her son was in Intensive Care. And there was an initial worry about whether the child had suffered brain damage during the delivery. Now, surely, under such circumstances, one might expect the patient to be rather agitated.’

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