Read CUTTING ROOM -THE- Online

Authors: HOFFMAN JILLIANE

CUTTING ROOM -THE- (5 page)

BOOK: CUTTING ROOM -THE-
8.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Dickerson snorted and shook the paper again. ‘Don't you have some murder to solve,
Manuelo
?'

‘Heading to court right now,' Manny replied, pulling a sports jacket on.

‘Where'd you dig up that thing?'

‘What?'

‘The coat.'

‘The prosecutor asked me to get all fancy. You don't like?'

‘Are those patches on the sleeves?'

‘Very funny. Ain't no patches, Pops. This is a genuine …' Manny peered at the label on the inside of his jacket, ‘… Haggar. I bought it at the Aventura Mall.' Manny shrugged. ‘I can't find my good suit. It must still be in the cleaners' from my last trial.'

‘Nice tie.'

Manny wagged the tip of his teal tie that was speckled with tiny Miami Dolphins football helmets in the old detective's direction. ‘Thanks.'

Dickerson rolled his eyes again. ‘You in trial?'

‘I got an Arthur.' Arthur was short for Arthur Hearing — another way of saying bond hearing.

Dickerson smiled coyly. ‘I'm willing to bet your prosecutor has a nice set of gams and the initials ‘Ms' in front of her name.'

‘Who the hell says “gams”?'

‘You wouldn't wear a jacket to your own momma's funeral.'

‘Not if it was in Miami in June, I sure as fuck wouldn't. That's why Cubans invented guayabera shirts, Pops. Dressy when you need to be, yet still cool and comfortable. You're right — she is a she. And she does have fine legs. Not that I noticed.'

‘I knew it,' Dickerson replied with the same lecherous cackle.

‘Fuck you, old man. You don't know shit.'

‘What case you going on? Is that the dumpster girl?'

‘Yup. Holly Skole's her name.'

‘Saw the pictures on your desk.'

‘Sorry.'

‘Didn't realize you had a suspect. Is he good?'

‘I'm not counting chickens; I always get burned when I do. You saw the pictures — the guy's an animal. He needs to pay for what he's done.'

‘For once, young Jedi, we agree.'

Manny laughed. ‘For once.' Then he picked up his file and headed out the homicide squad-room doors and into the controlled chaos of the rest of the City of Miami Police Department.

‘Call me if you get lonely, Sonny Boy,' Dickerson called after him, as he returned to his paper. ‘I've only got one hundred and eighty-three days left. You still got time to learn from the master …'

The old man's voice faded away as the hallway crowd got louder. Manny had learned early on to never boast about the strength of a case or predict a conviction. No case was airtight, and especially not this one. He would have to make his case as if he was building a house destined to be hit by a hurricane — slowly, carefully, with a strong foundation.

He slipped on his Oakley's and stepped into the scorching sunshine. It was barely June and the humidity was already 95 per cent. He could feel his armpits start to drain as he headed across the steamy asphalt parking lot.

Bienvenido a Miami.

5

By 1:30 on a Tuesday afternoon, the criminal courthouse in downtown Miami was relatively quiet. The frenzied morning calendars had finally been cleared and the defendants, victims, witnesses, family members, defense attorneys, prosecutors and cops were long gone — their cases arraigned, continued, pled-out or set-over for motions or trials on another day. The hallways that had been clogged a few hours earlier were now deserted. Most of the building's courtrooms were empty and locked, their judges either still at lunch or in recess till the following morning. The courtrooms that were open were either in trial or hearing motions.

Assistant State Attorney Daria DeBianchi pushed open the heavy doors of 4-10 and made her way into the one courtroom in the building that was still a beehive of activity. On the other side of the railing that partitioned the lawyers from the general audience, an invisible line separated prosecutors from defense attorneys, like a boy/girl middle school dance. Correction officers manned the exits and flanked the jury box, which was also filled with bodies, except they weren't jurors, they were defendants — all dressed in bright orange jumpsuits, chained together at the wrists and shackled at the ankles. Filling the pews on the ‘state's side' of the gallery were detectives and cops. For the defense, it was friends and family. The judge hadn't yet taken the bench and the courtroom sounded like a playground at recess. Seated at a desk in front of the bench was the judge's judicial assistant, checking in a line of attorneys while simultaneously digging for gold inside her ear with a curved, glossy black fingernail. Daria took one look at the printed court calendar on top of the podium and sighed heavily. It was over two inches thick. She was gonna be here till friggin' Christmas …

Standing four-foot-eleven and three-quarters, and weighing 94 pounds, with wavy auburn hair, blue eyes and skin so fair she broke out in freckles when she was next to an oven, everyone liked to tell Daria that: #1 — she didn't look Italian, and #2 — she definitely didn't look like a prosecutor. The Italian thing was understandable, she supposed. Every one of her relatives, including her
nonna
, was tan, dark-eyed, and blanketed in coarse, black hair all over their stocky, thick bodies. Daria got called ‘mick' more often than she did ‘guinea'. As for the comments on her non-prosecutorial appearance, she wasn't sure if those were intended as compliments or condolences, but since she was still getting them five years into her career, she figured the job had neither aged nor hardened her. To compensate for the fact that she wasn't an Amazon who could arm wrestle an AK47 out of a defendant's hands before carrying him up the river, she made sure she always wore heels — the higher, the better. And red lipstick — the redder, the better. She'd read in
Vogue
once that red lipstick made people think you were in control. For the most part it worked. Most defendants weren't sure whether they should flirt with her or send over a death threat.

The majestically intimidating, wood-paneled courtroom was standing-room only. In the afternoons 4-10 was reserved solely for Arthur Hearings — bond hearings for badass defendants charged with non-bondable, badass offenses like kidnapping, drug trafficking, and murder. On a good day with a good judge, they were no big deal — a ten or twenty-minute defense fishing expedition that usually ended like it started, with a dangerous defendant denied bond and remanded to the county jail pending trial. But on Tuesdays Arthurs were presided over by Judge Werner Steyn, a former public defender who leaned so far to the left he had trouble standing up straight. That made him the natural favorite of defense attorneys everywhere, who all pushed to have their Arthurs set before him. With Monday's Memorial Day holiday shortening the work-week, and Steyn dependably late taking the bench, Christmas might actually come and go before she returned to the mess that waited on her desk across the street at the State Attorney's Office.

She found her case buried on page 22 of the calendar. With two defendants per page, it wasn't hard to do the math. Unless she got moved up, there'd be no
Toddlers &
Tiaras
tonight.

‘Hi, Harmony,' she said sweetly when she'd finally made her way on the attorney line up to the clerk's desk. ‘How are you? How's your hubby feeling? I heard half of Probation is down with the flu. And it's almost
June
. What's with that?'

Harmony, the clerk with the name befitting either a stripper or a Life Coach, stared blankly at Daria as if she were a total stranger, not a Division Chief who'd appeared in her courtroom dozens of times before. And with whom she'd had dozens of — obviously meaningless — conversations. Her bulging eyes, which were lined like a dead body at a TV crime scene with black liner, blinked twice. Finally it clicked — at least that she had a husband. ‘Good, he's good, thank God! Wow! No, no flu. What page you on, hon?'

So much for charm and chit-chat. ‘Twenty-two. Lunders. Talbot Lunders. Has the defense checked in yet?'

Harmony leafed through her master calendar. ‘Oh yeah. A while ago. But I got a lot ahead of you now, State; I can't let you be cutting the line. So you're gonna be number thirteen, hon.' She frowned and wagged a black talon to stop the words she knew were coming. ‘And yes, that is the best I can do, even though, I know, I know, it's an unlucky number, but somebody's gotta be it.' Harmony finished with a dismissive sigh, before turning her head to address the lawyer behind Daria. ‘What page you on, hon?'

Next!
It was like getting served slop on a school lunch line. Daria begrudgingly waded into the pack of prosecutors. Thirteen was better than forty-four, but it still meant a long afternoon, although, she thought, as she surveyed the courtroom, her detective didn't appear to be on time anyway. This was her first case with City of Miami Detective Manny Alvarez. Last week he'd been forty-five minutes late for his pre-file without offering up so much as a lame excuse why. Although he had brought her a
café con leche
and some weird pastry that oozed pink goo, along with a stack of reports that he'd already actually written — something most cops didn't get around to doing before the third discovery demand, and only after you screamed at them — she was still ticked off. And she was going to be
really
mad if he pulled the same stunt today, even if he did wind up beating the judge to the bench.

She peered at the degenerates that filled the jury box to see if her defendant had been brought out yet. He hadn't. Based on the mug shot clipped to the top of her file, she could expect the ladies in the courtroom to collectively start panting when Corrections ushered him through the door. She wondered if he'd be as striking in person, having fermented in a jail cell for the past couple of weeks.

Standing up against the wall on the prosecutorial side of the courtroom was her friend Lizette, a Domestics prosecutor, who was waving her over as if she were hailing a cab in rush hour. ‘So what happened to you yesterday,
mami
?' Lizette demanded when Daria squeezed in next to her.

‘Don't start,' Daria replied. Most of the young, single prosecutors in the office had spent Monday's unofficial start to summer sipping mojitos and sangria by the pool at the Clevelander on South Beach. Judging by the comments she'd fielded all morning, she was the only one who'd missed it. ‘I was at my brother's all weekend. Dang, you're tan. Did you fall asleep on a tanning bed or something, Liz? You look like Snooki.'

Lizette waved a hand in front of her face. ‘I'm Columbian. I got this on the walk across the parking lot,' she shot back with a Spanish accent that became more pronounced whenever she got flustered or was in front of a Hispanic judge. ‘You missed a good time, girl.'

‘Don't envy me. I spent the past three days babysitting triplets.'

Lizette curled her lip like she'd smelled two-day-old fish. ‘Triplets?'

‘
Three-year-old
triplets. My brother and his wife went on a cruise to the Bahamas. So while you were working on that tan you deny intentionally working on, I was cutting up hot dogs and watching Disney flicks. Oh, and potty training.'

The curl grew into a grimace.

‘Of course they're boys, so that means none of 'em can aim for shit. We're talking the ceiling, the walls, the door — anywhere but the bowl. They're cute and I love them to pieces, but, man, do I feel
old
. I was stressed the whole time. Couldn't sleep. Always afraid one of 'em might slip out in the middle of the night, ride out of town like Paul Revere, naked on top of the Great Dane, waving a Pull-Up in his hand.'

‘Great Dane?'

‘Her name's Petunia. She's shy.'

‘I won't even watch my sister's fish.'

‘Oh, and an albino ferret that the kids like to lock in the dryer.'

‘I've heard enough.'

‘I think my whacked mother's plan backfired. Instead of rushing out to find myself a husband and jump-start a family, I might go celibate.' Daria sniffed at her arm. ‘Do I smell like grape jelly to you? I don't know what they put in that shit, but it stays in your system. I'm sweating it out of my pores. That and peanut butter. And my shoes are sticking to everything.'

Lizette nodded. ‘You're right. I would never advocate celibacy, but you're not the mommy type. Good thing you don't need a man to have fun.'

‘That's not a real concern right now for me, anyway; it's easy to give up what you're not getting.' Daria frowned before adding, ‘Thanks for the mommy comment. I can be warm and fuzzy, you know.'

Lizette shrugged. ‘Whatever. So who're you here on?'

‘On today's menu we have one Talbot Alastair Lunders.'

‘What kind of name is that?'

‘A family one, I suppose.'

‘Obviously not a Miami family. I'm guessing that someone with not one, but two, obnoxious Anglo names must come from money.'

‘You're right. Young Talbot is of the Palm Beach Lunders.'

‘Who are the Palm Beach Lunders?'

‘Daddy apparently owns some luxury soap company. Or so I've been warned.'

‘What company is that?'

‘Dial.'

Lizette's eyes went wide. ‘No shit. Really?'

Daria laughed. ‘No, not really. Some spa brand I never heard of.'

Lizette surveyed the jury box. ‘All of the boys today look like they come from the projects, not Palm Beach.'

‘Oh, Talbot's not out yet,' Daria replied, flashing Lizette the mug shot. The tan playboy with the highlighted, shaggy hairdo and mesmerizing hazel eyes looked more like a brooding Dolce & Gabbana model in his booking photo than a murderer. ‘You'll probably start drooling when Corrections brings him in. Maybe even consider a career on the Dark Side.'

BOOK: CUTTING ROOM -THE-
8.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Glimmer and other Stories by Nicola McDonagh
One Tree by Stephen R. Donaldson
It Takes Two to Strangle by Kaminski, Stephen
Raising Atlantis by Thomas Greanias
The Cougar's Trade by Holley Trent
Feral by Sheri Whitefeather
Bridge: a shade short story by Jeri Smith-Ready
The Fighter by Arnold Zable