saw her tell him to fuck off. In those words. But smiling
sweetly.
He was watching the rear door when Smilow escorted
Alex in. Their gazes locked and held, gobbling
up each other. They had spoken on their cell phones
while en route, but that wasn't as satisfactory as seeing
for himself that she was, finally, safe. From prosecution.
From Steffi. From Bobby.
Smilow motioned her toward an empty chair next
to one in which Frank Perkins was seated. The lawyer
stood and hugged her warmly. Smilow relinquished
her to Perkins, then moved down the outer aisle toward
the dais. He motioned Hammond over. Nonplussed,
Hammond excused himself and stepped
down from the temporary platform.
"Good work," Smilow told him.
Knowing the pride that the compliment must have cost the detective, Hammond said, "I just showed up
and did what you advised me to do. If you hadn't coordinated
it, it wouldn't have worked." He paused a
moment. "I still can't believe she came after me. I
would have expected a surrender and confession
first."
"Then you don't know her very well."
"I came to realize that. Almost too late. Thanks for
all you did."
"You're welcome." Smilow glanced toward Davee
and caught her looking at him. Unless Hammond's
eyes were deceiving him, the detective actually
blushed. Quickly he returned his attention back to Hammond. "This is for you." He extended a manila
envelope toward Hammond.
"What is it?"
"A lab report. Steffi gave it to me this morning. It
matches your blood to that found on Dr. Ladd's
sheets." Hammond's lips parted, but Smilow shook
his head sternly. "Don't say anything. Just take it and
destroy it. Without this, any allegations Steffi makes
about you sleeping with a suspect will be unsubstantiated.
Of course, since Dr. Ladd turned out not to be
the culprit, it's really only a technicality."
Hammond looked at the deceptively innocuous
envelope. If he accepted it, he would be as guilty as
Smilow had been in the State v. Vincent Anthony Barlow case. Barlow was guilty as sin of murdering his
seventeen-year-old girlfriend and the fetus she was
carrying, but Smilow had fudged some exculpatory
evidence which Hammond was obligated by law to
disclose.
It wasn't until after he had won a conviction that
he learned of Smilow's alleged mishandling of the
case. He could never prove that Smilow had deliberately
excluded the mitigating evidence in his discovery,
so an investigation into malfeasance was never
conducted. Barlow, now serving a life sentence, had
filed an appeal. It had been granted. The young man
would get another trial, to which he was entitled no
matter how guilty he was.
But Hammond had never forgiven Smilow for
making him an unwitting participant in this miscarriage
of justice.
"Don't be a Boy Scout," the detective said now in
an undertone. "Haven't you earned all the badges you
need?"
"It's wrong."
Smilow lowered his voice even more. "We don't
like each other, and we both know why. We operate
differently, but we're working the same side. I need a
tough prosecutor and trial attorney like you over
there in the solicitor's office, not a glad-handing
politician like Mason. You'll do far more good by
serving this county as the top law officer than you
would by making a confession of sexual misconduct,
which nobody gives a damn about anyway. Think about it, Hammond."
"Hammond?"
He was being summoned back up onto the dais so
they could begin. Without turning, he said, "Coming."
"Sometimes we have to bend the rules to do a better
job," Smilow said, staring hard at him.
It was a persuasive argument. Hammond took the
envelope.
* * *
Mason was drawing his speech to a close. The reporters'
eyes were beginning to glaze. Some of the
cameramen had lowered their cameras from their
shoulders. The account of Steffi's attempt on Hammond's
life and subsequent arrest had held them
spellbound, but this portion of Mason's address had
caused their interest to wane.
"While it pains me that someone in our office is
presently in police custody, soon to be charged with a
serious crime, I'm equally proud that Special Assistant
County Solicitor Hammond Cross was instrumental
in her capture. He demonstrated extraordinary
bravery today. That's only one of the reasons why
I'm endorsing him as my successor."
That received a thunderous round of applause.
Hammond stared at Mason's profile while his mentor
extolled his talent, dedication, and integrity. The envelope
with the incriminating lab report was resting
on his knees. He imagined it to be radiating an angry
red aura that belied Mason's accolades.
"I won't bore you any longer," Mason boomed in
the good-natured, straightforward manner that had
endeared him to the media. "Allow me to introduce
the hero of the hour." He turned and motioned for
Hammond to join him.
The cameramen repositioned their video recorders
on their shoulders. The newspaper reporters perked
up and almost in unison clicked their ballpoints.
Hammond laid the envelope on the slanted tray of
the lectern. He cleared his throat. After thanking
Mason for his remarks, as well as for the confidence
he had placed in him, he said, "This has been a remarkable
week. In many ways it seems like much
more time than that has passed since I learned that
Lute Pettijohn had been murdered.
"Actually, I don't consider myself a hero, or derive
any pleasure from knowing that my colleague, Steffi
Mundell, is to be charged with that murder. I believe
the evidence against her is compelling. As one familiar
with the case--"
Loretta Boothe rushed into the room.
Hammond's heart lurched; his speech faltered and
died.
Only those standing near the door noticed her at
first. But when Hammond stopped speaking, all
heads turned to see who had caused the interruption.
Impervious to the stir she had created, Loretta was
frantically motioning him toward her.
With all the other events unfolding so rapidly
today, he hadn't had time to call and tell her that Alex
was no longer a suspect, therefore her whereabouts
last Saturday evening were irrelevant.
But Loretta was here, with one of the brawny
marines from the fair in tow, and there was no way he
could avoid her. "Excuse me a moment."
Despite the murmur of puzzlement that rippled
through the crowd, he stepped off the dais and made
his way to the back of the room. As he went, he
thought of all the people the next few moments
would inevitably embarrass. Monroe Mason.
Smilow. Frank Perkins. Himself. Alex. When he
passed her, his glance silently apologized for what
was about to happen.
"You wanted to speak to me, Loretta?"
She didn't even try to mask her irritation. "For almost
twenty-four hours."
"I've been busy."
"Well, so have I." She stepped back through the
door and spoke to someone who had been left standing
out in the hallway. "Come on in here."
Hammond waited expectantly, wondering how he
was going to explain himself when the marine gaped
at him and declared, "He's the one! He's the one that
was dancing with Alex Ladd."
But it wasn't a fresh recruit who came through the
door. Instead, looking self-conscious and miserable, a
slight black man with wire-rimmed spectacles
stepped into the room.
Hammond released a short laugh of pure
astonishment. "Smitty?" he exclaimed, realizing that
he didn't even know the man's last name.
"How're you doing, Mr. Cross? I told her we
shouldn't interrupt, but she wouldn't pay me any
mind."
Hammond looked from the shoeshine man to
Loretta. "I thought you went to the fair," he heard
himself say stupidly. "That's what your messages
said."
"I did. I bumped into Smitty there. He was sitting
in the pavilion all by himself, listening to the music.
We started chatting and the subject of the Pettijohn
case came up. He's moved his business to the Charles
Towne Plaza."
"I saw him there today."
"I'm sorry I didn't talk to you, Mr. Cross. I guess
I was feeling sort of ashamed."
"For what?"
"For not telling you about Steffi Mundell's
switcheroo last Saturday," Loretta cut in. "First he
sees her in jogging getup, then in one of the hotel
robes, then in jogging clothes again. All very
strange."
"I didn't make much of it, Mr. Cross, until I saw
her on the TV yesterday, and it reminded me."
"He was reluctant to get anyone into trouble, so he
didn't say anything to anyone except Smilow."
"Smilow?"
The detective, who had moved up beside Hammond,
addressed Smitty. "When you referred to the
lawyer you saw on TV, I thought you were talking
about Mr. Cross."
"No sir, the lady lawyer," the older man explained.
"I'm sorry if I caused y'all any trouble."
Hammond laid his hand on Smitty's shoulder.
"Thank you for coming forward now. We'll get your
statement later." To Loretta he said, "Thank you."
She frowned, grumbling. "You got her without my
help, but you still owe me a foot rub and a drink. A
double."
Hammond turned back into the room. The cameras
were whirring now. Lights nearly blinded him as
he made his way back to the dais. He could have
skipped like a kid. The bands of tension around his
chest had been snipped loose. He was breathing normally.
Nobody knew about him and Alex. There wasn't
going to be any surprise witness who had seen Alex
and him together last Saturday. Nobody knew except
her. Frank Perkins. Rory Smilow. Davee.
Well... and him.
He knew.
Suddenly he didn't feel like skipping anymore.
He resumed his place behind the lectern. As he
did so, Monroe Mason gave him a wink and a
thumbs-up. He glanced at his father. Preston, for
once, was nodding his wholehearted approval.
He would agree with Smilow. Let it drop. Accept
the job. Do good work and the misbehavior
would be justified.
He was a shoo-in. He would win the election in a
landslide. He probably wouldn't even have an opponent.
But was the job, any job, worth sacrificing his
self-respect?
Wouldn't he rather tell the truth and have it cost
him the election than keep a secret? The longer the
secret was kept, the dirtier it would become. He
didn't want the memory of his first night with Alex to
be sullied by secrecy.
His gaze fastened on hers, and he knew in an instant,
by the soft expression in her eyes, that she
knew exactly what he was thinking. She was the only
one who knew what he was thinking. She was the
only one who would understand why he was thinking
it. She gave him an intensely private, extremely intimate
smile of encouragement.
In that moment, he loved her more than he had 11 ever thought it possible to love.
"Before I proceed ... I want to address an individual
whose life has been unforgivably upended
this week. Dr. Alex Ladd cooperated with the
Charleston Police Department and my office at the
sacrifice of her practice, her time, and most importantly
her dignity. She has endured immeasurable
embarrassment. I apologize to her on behalf of this
county.
"I also owe her a personal apology. Because...
because I knew from the start that she had not murdered
Lute Pettijohn. She admits to seeing him that
afternoon, but well before the time of his death. Certain
material elements indicated that she might have
had motive. But I knew, even while she was being
subjected to humiliating interrogations, that she
couldn't have killed Lute Pettijohn. Because she had
an alibi."
Nobody knows. Really only a technicality. Why be
a Boy Scout? You 'II do far more good. .. Nobody
gives a damn anyway.
Hammond paused and took a deep breath, not of
anxiety, but relief.
"I was her alibi."