William Bernhardt - Blind Justice

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Out of corporate life and on his own, lawyer Ben Kincaid sees the seamy side of the law every day. There's no glamour and little reward when it comes to defending the lowlifes who beat down his door. But when a friend is set up for murder, Ben has no choice but to enter the world of hardball litigation and face a judge who despises him in a trial he is guaranteed to lose. Apple-style-span BLIND JUSTICE

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“That’s ridiculous.”

“I knew you’d be outraged,” Langdell said. “I saw your pet chickens in the lobby.”

“Those aren’t—oh, never mind.” Ben pulled a legal pad out of his desk and started making notes. “Who runs these cockfights?”

“Professionals, mostly. Each season, October through June, breeders bring their birds to game clubs and set up fights. We’re talking about birds that for centuries have been selectively bred for aggression. Plus the owners equip their birds with ice-pick gaffs or razor-sharp knives, just to make the birds tougher and the fight bloodier.”

“That’s grotesque,” Ben said quietly.

“Precisely. And a lawyer like you should be able to turn some heads down at the capitol. I saw you on television the other day. I figure if you can push around reporters like that, you can arrange to be heard by the state legislators, too.”

“I’d be happy to work on this,” Ben said. “As you know, I’m neck-deep in a murder case at present, but as soon as that’s concluded…”

“I understand. Fit us in as soon as you can. Cockfighting is just the tip of the iceberg. After that, we’ll go after the puppy mills.”

Ben felt a hollow in his heart. “Puppy mills?”

“Puppies confined to filthy mesh cages, forced to stand on chicken wire, day in, day out. Bred like rabbits, without regard to congenital defects or disease, then shipped off to pet stores and sold at exorbitant prices. Again, Oklahoma has many of the prime offenders.”

“Clayton, I don’t want to seem rude, but this conversation is depressing the hell out of me.”

“Believe me, I know. I live with it every day.”

“Why don’t I give you a ring as soon as I get free of the McCall case? We can develop a systematic plan of action.”

“Sounds dandy to me.” Langdell rose and shook Ben’s hand. “So, does this mean you’re my lawyer now?”

“Well, it means I’m the Society’s lawyer. Why do you ask?”

Langdell laughed, a bit too heartily. “I just like to know who is and isn’t on my side.” He winked and left the office.

Leaving Ben to wonder exactly what that meant.

29

“COME ON, GISELLE. EAT!”

It was a fair compromise. He’d filled her bowl with one-fourth Feline’s Fancy and three-fourths regular Cat Chow. He figured it would smell enough like what she preferred to get her started, till she developed a taste for the other. Eventually, he would wean her off the expensive brand altogether. He thought.

Apparently, Giselle didn’t see it that way. She circled the food bowl a few times. Her face crinkled; her whiskers shook. She stared at Ben with what he could have sworn were eyes of betrayal. Then she curled up in his easy chair, now covered with black cat hair, and acted as if he didn’t exist.

“Look, Giselle. I just can’t afford to feed you that ridiculously overpriced gourmet cat food every single day!”

She licked her paws idly, entirely oblivious to him.

“I repeat—”

He was interrupted by a knock at the door. He opened it to find Mrs. Marmelstein standing in the hallway.

“Is something wrong?” Ben asked.

“I didn’t want you to take this case in the first place,” she said emphatically. “I knew what would happen. Policemen waving their guns around, chasing crazed drug pushers, tramping, through my garden.…”

Ben’s eyebrows rose. “There was a police officer here?”

“Yes.” She gave him an accusatory look. “Looking for you, of course.”

“Did you get a name?”

“No. But he left a note.”

Ben took the note from Mrs. Marmelstein and unfolded it. It said: Third base8:00. He checked his watch. It was already 8:30.

“Gotta go,” Ben murmured. “I may be late tonight.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised. Socializing with police hooligans. You’ll probably go to the pool halls. Visit some ladies of loose morals.”

Ben smiled. “I’ll leave before the loose morals get out of control. Did he really tramp through your garden?”

Mrs. Marmelstein sniffed. “Well, no. But only because I stopped him.”

Ben hadn’t been to a Tulsa Drillers game in years.

Not that he was a jock, but he did enjoy watching the Drillers play when he could. Actually, his favorite part was the hot dogs. They were awful, but that was part of the charm. He’d bought two at the stand downstairs and was carrying them, the foil wrappings sweating in his hands.

The game was already into the top of the sixth inning when he arrived. The Shreveport Captains were four runs ahead of the Drillers. A Shreveport victory seemed inevitable, and the crowd was thinning. It didn’t take Ben long to find Mike up in the cheap seats on the third baseline.

“I was beginning to think you weren’t coming,” Mike said.

“I didn’t get home till late.” Ben took the empty seat beside Mike and handed him a hot dog. “Got your note and came straight out here.”

Mike nodded. “I didn’t want to leave a message on your machine. I wanted to meet somewhere we could talk. Freely. Privately.”

“So you set up a meeting at a baseball stadium?”

“Sure. Buried in a crowd. Didn’t you ever read The Purloined Letter ? The best hiding place is out in the open.” He paused to watch the shortstop trigger a magnificent double play. “Besides, I wanted to see the ball game.”

“What if Abshire sees you out here with me?”

“No chance. He’s back at FBI headquarters burning the midnight oil. He works on this case night and day.”

That was reassuring. “What did you want?”

Mike’s eyes didn’t waver from the ball game, “Ben, I don’t like what’s happening any more than you do. There’s nothing I can do about it, but I am…sorry.”

“Got any specifics?”

“Well, I find it tough to believe Christina stuffed a cache of drugs in a Betty Boop doll.”

“Then who did?”

“That’s the problem. I know both of the investigating officers who accompanied me to her apartment, and I’d swear they’re clean. No way they’d plant false evidence.”

“Someone did.”

Mike shrugged.

“What about the other evidence? What’s Abshire holding back?”

“As far as exculpatory evidence goes, nothing. I would’ve raised holy hell if he hadn’t shown you that paraffin report, though.”

Ben hoped that was right. But as he recalled, Mike was pretty tranquil at the time.

“Virtually all the evidence they’ve found goes against Christina. I gotta tell you, Ben, they’re building an airtight case. If this were in my jurisdiction, I’d ask the D. A. to press charges, too.”

“Even though you know Christina wouldn’t shoot anyone? Much less four times in the head?”

Mike didn’t say anything.

“Is there anything you can do to loosen up Abshire? Make him more reasonable?”

Mike laughed. “He doesn’t listen to me. He doesn’t listen to anyone, except maybe Stanford. Officially, he can’t go to the bathroom without Stanford’s okay. But a mere local cop like me he can blow off with impunity. Hell, I tried to get him to have the goddamn drug test done on Christina the day they brought her in. But he didn’t. He didn’t have to, so he didn’t.”

There was a sudden burst of shouting and applause. The Drillers batter had knocked the ball high and far. It flew into the outfield, soared and… yes ! Over the fence for a grand slam. The crowd leaped to its feet, yelling, tooting horns, ringing cowbells. The batter nonchalantly floated around the bases. In the space of seconds, a hopeless defeat became a tie game. Things weren’t always what they seemed.

“You’re not exactly a fount of information tonight, Mike.”

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