A Time to Kill (48 page)

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Authors: John Grisham

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BOOK: A Time to Kill
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“What is your name, sir?”

“Sergeant Drumwright.”

“Where are you from?”

“Booneville.”

“Where’s that?”

“ ’Bout a hundred miles from here.”

“Why are you here?”

“Governor called us.”

“Why did he call you?”

“Keep things under control.”

“Are you expecting trouble?”

“No.”

“How long will you be here?”

“Don’t know.”

“Will you be here until the trial’s over?”

“Don’t know.”

“Who knows?”

“The governor, I reckon.”

And so on.

Word of the invasion spread quickly through the quiet Sunday morning, and after church the townfolk streamed to the square to verify for themselves that the army had indeed captured the courthouse. The sentries removed the barricades and allowed the curious to drive around their square and gawk at the real live soldiers with their rifles and jeeps. Jake sat on the balcony, drinking coffee and memorizing the note-cards of his jurors.

He called Carla and explained that the National Guard had been deployed, but he was still safe. In fact, he had never felt so safe. As he talked to her, he explained, there were hundreds of heavily armed army militiamen across Washington Street just waiting to protect him. Yes, he still had his bodyguard. Yes, the house was still standing. He doubted if the death of Bud Twitty had been reported yet, so he did not tell her. Maybe she would not hear of it. They were going
fishing on her father’s boat, and Hanna wanted her daddy to go. He said goodbye, and missed the two women in his life more than ever.

________

Ellen Roark unlocked the rear door of the office and placed a small grocery sack on the table in the kitchen. She pulled a file out of her briefcase and began looking for her boss. He was on the balcony, staring at note-cards and watching the courthouse. “Evenin’, Row Ark.”

“Good evening, boss.” She handed him a brief an inch thick. “It’s the research you requested on the admissibility of the rape. It’s a tough issue, and it got involved. I apologize for the size of it.”

It was as neat as her other briefs, complete with a table of contents, bibliography, and numbered pages. He flipped through it. “Damn, Row Ark, I didn’t ask for a textbook.”

“I know you’re intimidated by scholarly work, so I made a conscious effort to use words with fewer than three syllables.”

“My, aren’t we frisky today. Could you summarize this in a dissertation of, say, thirty pages or so?”

“Look, it’s a thorough study of the law by a gifted law student with a remarkable ability to think and write clearly. It’s a work of genius, and it’s yours, and it’s absolutely free. So quit bitching.”

“Yes, ma’am. Does your head hurt?”

“Yes. It’s been aching since I woke up this morning. I’ve typed on that brief for ten hours, and I need a drink. Do you have a blender?”

“A what?”

“Blender. It’s a new invention we have up North. They’re kitchen appliances.”

“There’s one in the shelves next to the microwave.”

She disappeared. It was almost dark, and the traffic had thinned around the square as the Sunday drivers had grown bored with the sight of soldiers guarding their courthouse. After twelve hours of suffocating heat and foglike humidity in downtown Clanton, the troops were weary and homesick. They sat under trees and on folding canvas chairs, and cursed the governor. As it grew darker, they strung wires from inside the courthouse and hung floodlights around the pavilions. By the post office a carload of blacks arrived with lawn chairs and candles to start the nightly vigil. They began pacing the sidewalk along Jackson Street under the suddenly aroused stares of two hundred heavily armed guardsmen. The lead walker was Miss Rosia Alfie Gate wood, a two-hundred-pound widow who had raised eleven children and sent nine to college. She was the first black known to have sipped cold water from the public fountain on the square and live to tell about it. She glared at the soldiers. They did not speak.

Ellen returned with two Boston College beer mugs filled with a pale green liquid. She sat them on the table and pulled up a chair.

“What’s that?”

“Drink it. It’ll help you relax.”

“I’ll drink it. But I’d like to know what it is.”

“Margaritas.”

Jake studied the top of his mug. “Where’s the salt?”

“I don’t like salt on mine.”

“Well, I don’t either then. Why margaritas?”

“Why not?”

Jake closed his eyes and took a long drink. And then another. “Row Ark, you are a talented woman.”

“Gofer.”

He took another long drink. “I haven’t had a margarita in eight years.”

“I’m very sorry.” Her twenty-ounce mug was half empty.

“What kind of rum?”

“I would call you a dumbass if you weren’t my boss.”

“Thank you.”

“It’s not rum. It’s tequila, with lime juice and Cointreau. I thought every law student knew that.”

“How can you ever forgive me? I’m sure I knew it when I was a law student.”

She gazed around the square.

“This is incredible! It looks like a war zone.”

Jake drained his glass and licked his lips. Under the pavilions they played cards and laughed. Others sought refuge from the mosquitoes in the courthouse. The candles turned the corner and made a pass down Washington Street.

“Yes,” Jake said with a smile. “It’s beautiful, isn’t it? Think of our fair and impartial jurors as they arrive in the morning and are confronted with that. I’ll renew my motion for a change of venue. It’ll be denied. I’ll ask for a mistrial, and Noose will say no. And then I’ll make sure the court reporter records the fact that this trial is being conducted in the middle of a three-ring circus.”

“Why are they here?”

“The sheriff and the mayor called the governor, and convinced him the National Guard was needed to preserve peace in Ford County. They told him our hospital is not large enough for this trial.”

“Where are they from?”

“Booneville and Columbus. I counted two hundred and twenty around lunch.”

“They’ve been here all day?”

“They woke me at five this morning. I’ve followed their movements all day. They were pinned down a couple of times, but reinforcements arrived. A few minutes ago they met the enemy when Miss Gatewood and her friends arrived with their candles. She stared them down, so now they’re playing cards.”

Ellen finished her drink and left for more. Jake picked up the stack of notecards for the hundredth time and flashed them on the table. Name, age, occupation, family, race, education—he had read and repeated the information since early morning. Round Two arrived with haste, and she took the cards.

“Correen Hagan,” she said, sipping.

He thought a second. “Age, about fifty-five. Secretary for an insurance agent. Divorced, two grown children. Education, probably high school, no more. Native of Florida, for what that’s worth.”

“Rating?”

“I think I gave her a six.”

“Very good. Millard Sills.”

“Owns a pecan orchard near Mays. About seventy years old. His nephew was shot in the head by two blacks during a robbery in Little Rock several years ago. Hates blacks. He will not be on the jury.”

“Rating?”

“Zero, I believe.”

“Clay Bailey.”

“Age, about thirty. Six kids. Devout Pentecostal. Works at the furniture plant west of town.”

“You’ve given him a ten.”

“Yeah. I’m sure he’s read that part in the Bible about an eye for an eye, etc. Plus, out of six kids, I’d think at least two would be daughters.”

“Do you have all of them memorized?”

He nodded and took a drink. “I feel like I’ve known them for years.”

“How many will you recognize?”

“Very few. But I’ll know more about them than Buckley.”

“I’m impressed.”

“What! What did you say! I have impressed you with my intellect!”

“Among other things.”

“I feel so honored. I’ve impressed a genius in criminal law. The daughter of Sheldon Roark, whoever he is. A real live
summa cum laude
. Wait’ll I tell Harry Rex.”

“Where is that elephant? I miss him. I think he’s cute.”

“Go call him. Ask him to join us for a patio party as we watch the troops prepare for the Third Battle of Bull Run.”

She headed for the phone on Jake’s desk. “What about Lucien?”

“No! I’m tired of Lucien.”

________

Harry Rex brought a fifth of tequila he found somewhere deep in his liquor cabinet. He and the law clerk argued violently over the proper ingredients of a good margarita. Jake voted with his clerk.

They sat on the balcony, calling names from index cards, drinking the tangy concoction, yelling at the soldiers, and singing Jimmy Buffett songs. At midnight, Nesbit loaded Ellen in his patrol car and took her to Lucien’s. Harry Rex walked home. Jake slept on the couch.

33

__________

M
onday, July 22. Not long after the last margarita Jake bolted from the couch and stared at the clock on his desk. He had slept for three hours. A swarm of wild butterflies fought violently in his stomach. A nervous pain shot through his groin. He had no time for a hangover.

Nesbit slept like an infant behind the wheel. Jake roused him and jumped in the back seat. He waved at the sentries, who watched curiously from across the street. Nesbit drove two blocks to Adams, released his passenger, and waited in the driveway as instructed. He showered and shaved quickly. He chose a charcoal worsted wool suit, a white pinpoint button-down, and a very neutral, noncontroversial, expressionless burgundy silk tie with a few narrow navy stripes for good measure. The pleated pants hung perfectly from his trim waist. He looked great, much more stylish than the enemy.

Nesbit was asleep again when Jake released the dog and jumped in the back seat.

“Everything okay in there?” Nesbit asked, wiping the saliva from his chin.

“I didn’t find any dynamite, if that’s what you mean.”

Nesbit laughed at this, with the same irritating, laughing response he made to almost everything. They circled the square and Jake got out in front of his office. Thirty minutes after he left, he turned on the front lights and made the coffee.

He took four aspirin and drank a quart of grapefruit juice. His eyes burned and his headached from abuse and fatigue, and the tiring part had not yet begun. On the conference table he spread out his file on Carl Lee Hailey. It had been organized and indexed by his law clerk, but he wanted to break it down and put it back together. If a document or case can’t be found in thirty seconds, it’s no good. He smiled at her talent for organization. She had files and sub-files on everything, all ten seconds away at a fingertip. In a one-inch, three-ring notebook she had a summary of Dr. Bass’s qualifications and the outline of his testimony. She had made notes on anticipated objections from Buckley, and provided case authority to fight his objections. Jake took great pride in his trial preparation, but it was humbling to learn from a third-year law student.

He repacked the file in his trial briefcase, the heavy black leather one with his initials in gold on the side. Nature called, and he sat on the toilet flipping through the index cards. He knew them all. He was ready.

A few minutes after five, Harry Rex knocked on the door. It was dark and he looked like a burglar.

“Whatta you doing up so early?” Jake asked.

“I couldn’t sleep. I’m kinda nervous.” He thrust
forward a loaded paper sack with grease spots. “Dell sent these over. They’re fresh and hot. Sausage biscuits, bacon and cheese biscuits, chicken and cheese biscuits, you name it. She’s worried about you.”

“Thanks, Harry Rex, but I’m not hungry. My system is in revolt.”

“Nervous?”

“As a whore in church.”

“You look pretty haggard.”

“Thanks.”

“Nice suit though.”

“Carla picked it out.”

Harry Rex reached into the sack and produced a handful of biscuits wrapped in foil. He piled them on the conference table and fixed his coffee. Jake sat across from him and flipped through Ellen’s brief on M’Naghten.

“She write that?” Harry Rex asked with both cheeks full and his jaws grinding rapidly.

“Yeah, it’s a seventy-five-page summary of the insanity defense in Mississippi. It took her three days.”

“She seems very bright.”

“She’s got the brains, and she writes fluidly. The intellect is there, but she has trouble applying what she knows to the real world.”

“Whatta you know about her?” Crumbs fell from his mouth and bounced on the table. He brushed them onto the floor with a sleeve.

“She’s solid. Number two in her class at Ole Miss. I called Nelson Battles, Assistant Dean of the Law School, and she checked out fine. She has a good chance of finishing number one.”

“I finished ninety-third outta ninety-eight. I would’ve finished ninety-second but they caught me cheating on an exam. I started to protest, but I figured
ninety-third was just as good. Hell, I figured, who cares in Clanton. These people were just glad I came back here to practice when I graduated instead of going to Wall Street or some place like that.”

Jake smiled at the story he had heard a hundred times.

Harry Rex unwrapped a chicken and cheese biscuit. “You look nervous, buddy.”

“I’m okay. The first day is always the hardest. The preparation has been done. I’m ready. It’s just a matter of waiting now.”

“What time does Row Ark make her entrance?”

“I don’t know.”

“Lord, I wonder what she’ll wear.”

“Or not wear. I just hope she’s decent. You know what a prude Noose is.”

“You’re not gonna let her sit at counsel table are you?”

“I don’t think so. She’ll stay in the background, sort of like you. She might offend some of the women jurors.”

“Yeah, keep her there, but outta sight.”

Harry Rex wiped his mouth with a huge paw. “You sleeping with her?”

“No! I’m not crazy, Harry Rex.”

“You’re crazy if you don’t. That woman could be had.”

“Then have her. I’ve got enough on my mind.”

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