There were a few deputy DAs working in their cubicles when Delilah let Ashley into the district attorney’s office, but most of the office was dark and deserted. Delilah put Ashley into an empty room with a large table and returned fifteen minutes later pushing a dolly loaded down with banker boxes. Ashley helped stack the boxes on the table, and the two women unpacked them. One box contained Delilah’s files, including an indexed set of the police reports. Two large boxes held copies of the transcripts of Maxfield’s trial, which was under review in the Oregon Supreme Court. Several boxes contained exhibits that had been introduced at trial. Another box held evidence that Delilah had not entered as exhibits. While Ashley was unpacking the last box, Delilah disappeared. She reappeared moments later with a mug and a thermos of coffee.
“Figured you could use this. You’re in for a long day. And don’t worry, girl. This ain’t the horrid office brew. It’s Delilah’s caffeine special, a secret blend I perfected during years of late nights and early mornings.”
Delilah left and Ashley got down to business. She grabbed the transcript first. Since she knew what she was looking for she didn’t have to read all of it. She skimmed the opening statements and closing arguments of both attorneys, her testimony, and the testimony of Larry Birch and Tony Marx. When she was done with the transcript, Ashley read through the police reports, concentrating on the interviews that Larry Birch had conducted with her but also reading any report that summarized the case. Two hours later, she had not found what she was looking for, and that scared her to death.
Even if she was right about this one thing, there were other unanswered questions. She pulled the draft of Maxfield’s unfinished novel out of the court exhibits, hoping it would hold the answer to one of them. Delilah had not offered the whole manuscript into evidence. Only those pages that had scenes that corresponded to the evidence that had been withheld from the public had been marked as exhibits. Joshua Maxfield was printed on the top left corner of each page. She skimmed the one hundred and seventy-odd pages, but none of them contained an answer to her questions.
Ashley had read the police report that detailed the search of Maxfield’s cabin. She knew that an earlier draft of the novel had been found on a table in the room where Maxfield did his writing. After a few minutes of searching she found it. The earlier draft did not have Maxfield’s name on it and it was significantly different from the other draft. By the time Ashley was through reading it, she was certain she knew what had happened, but there was one more thing she had to do to be certain that she was right. She walked down the hall and knocked on the doorjamb of the prosecutor’s office.
“Delilah,” she said when the deputy DA looked up, “I have to talk to Joshua Maxfield.”
The Oregon State Penitentiary is located near the I-5 freeway in Salem, Oregon ’s capital. At ten o’clock on Monday morning, Ashley parked in the visitor’s lot. A tree-shaded sidewalk ran past a row of small white houses that served as offices for the prison staff. At the end of the walk, across a stretch of asphalt, was the prison with its egg yolk-yellow walls topped by razor wire and guarded by gun towers.
Ashley checked in at the visitors’ desk, then took a seat in the reception area. While she was waiting for the guard to call her name, Ashley almost changed her mind about meeting Joshua Maxfield. She was that frightened of him. Delilah had arranged for the interview and had volunteered to go along. Jerry had also volunteered, after his attempts to talk her out of the meeting had failed. She’d turned them both down, because she believed that she had a better chance of getting the death-row inmate to talk if she was alone.
The guard summoned Ashley to the metal detector. After she walked through without setting off an alarm, he escorted her down a short ramp to an enclosed area sealed off by two sets of movable bars. Inside the enclosure, behind bulletproof glass, were several members of the prison staff. One of them hit a button. There was a loud buzz and the bars in front of Ashley slid back. She entered the holding area and pushed her driver’s license through a slit in the glass while the bars slid back in place. As soon as her identity was verified, the guard pressed another button and a second set of bars slid back, admitting her to a narrow hallway that led to the interior of the prison. The walls of the hallway seemed to close in on her, and the clanging sound that the bars made when they slammed shut reminded Ashley that she was now locked in prison.
After a short walk her escort stopped in front of a thick metal door with a small window in its upper half. Ashley stood aside while he unlocked the door and admitted her to the visiting area. To the right was a large open room filled with prison-made couches and low wooden tables. A few vending machines stood against the far wall. At the end closest to Ashley a guard sat on a raised platform that gave him a view of the room. Her escort identified Ashley before returning to the reception area.
Ashley looked around the visiting room nervously while the guard phoned death row and asked to have Joshua Maxfield brought down. She had never been in a prison before. She half expected to see tattooed bodybuilders and greasy Hell’s Angels eyeing her coldly with rape on their minds. Instead she found the room filled with unspectacular-looking men dressed in jail-issue jeans and blue workshirts, who were talking quietly to family members and friends. One middle-aged man with a potbelly and a shaggy mustache was sitting on the floor playing with a little girl Ashley judged to be four. A shy young man in his late twenties was holding hands with a tired-looking young woman who was in the last stages of pregnancy. At the far end of the room, a short, skinny black man was laughing at something an elderly black woman had said.
After a fifteen-minute wait, a new guard entered the visiting room and spoke to the officer on the platform. A few moments later, he took Ashley across the hallway to another visiting section, where the only furniture was the hard metal bridge chairs that stood opposite windows of thick glass. Behind these windows, in narrow concrete rooms sat prisoners deemed too dangerous or too much of an escape risk to be allowed into the main visiting area. The guard led Ashley to two doors at the far end of the room. He opened one of them and Ashley found herself in a tiny cubicle. The only furniture was a bridge chair that faced a glass window. A small metal shelf protruded from the bottom of the window. There was a narrow slot at the bottom of the glass through which sheets of paper could be passed. Above the slit was an equally narrow metal grate that permitted people on either side of the glass to speak to each other.
“They’re bringing Maxfield down, now. He’ll sit in there,” the guard said, pointing at an identical cubicle on the other side of the glass. “This is the only place where visitors are permitted to talk to the inmates on death row. When you’re ready to leave, go back to the desk and we’ll have someone come down from reception and get you.”
The guard left Ashley alone in the room. The air was close and she started to feel claustrophobic. Delilah had told her that it would be impossible for Maxfield to get at her, but she had been afraid of him for so long that she had to convince herself that he did not have supernatural powers that would enable him to break through the thick glass and concrete that separated them.
The door to the other cubicle snapped open with a metallic click, and a guard prodded Joshua Maxfield into the narrow space. His hair had turned partially gray and his skin was pasty from lack of exposure to the sun. Ashley remembered how fit he’d looked on the day they’d met outside the gym. Now his skin looked slack. The only thing that had not changed was his eyes, which never left her while the guard unlocked his hand and leg irons.
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