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Authors: Phillip Margolin

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Gault started to laugh, then winced with pain. The laugh turned into a cough. Jenny stood up and started to walk across the room toward the phone.

“Where are you going?” David asked.

“To call the police,” she said.

“I don’t think we should call them just yet,” David said softly. He was sitting on the edge of the couch, his eyes on Gault.

“But…” Jenny started.

“He’s right,” David said. “Gault will hire the best lawyers and a raft of psychiatrists, and the jury will find him not guilty by reason of insanity. He’ll spend a few years in a
mental hospital, then have a remarkable recovery. Won’t you, Tom?”

Gault just smiled.

“And Larry will still be in prison, won’t he?”

Gault’s smile broadened. David picked up the gun he had laid on the couch.

“David, don’t,” Jenny said, suddenly realizing what David intended to do.

“Don’t worry, sweets,” Gault said. “Dave doesn’t have the guts. He couldn’t shoot me before and he won’t do it now.”

David raised the gun.

“Please, David,” Jenny begged. “He’s playing with you. Making you follow his rules. Making you fit into his idea of what people are.”

David looked at Jenny. His hand was trembling and he looked desperate.

“That’s why I have to kill him, Jenny. I know what I’ll be if I do, but I lose either way. Gault’s different from other people. I could never win against him, but I can stop him from destroying other people, the way he’s destroyed me.”

“Well, well,” Gault said in a mocking tone. “You can feel it, Dave, can’t you?”

“Feel what?” David answered, less sure of himself.

“The power. Like God’s. You can see I was right, can’t you?”

“I’m not like you,” David said, his voice wavering.

“But you will be, as soon as you pull the trigger.”

“He’s right, David,” Jenny pleaded. “Please don’t kill him.”

“Do you want me to pray to you first, old buddy? You might find that satisfying.”

“Don’t you see what he’s like, Jenny?” David said, his voice filled with loathing for the thing on the floor.

“David is my shepherd,” Gault chanted, “I shall not want.”

“Shut up.”

“Even though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death…”

“Shut up,” David screamed, pointing the gun.

“…I shall fear no evil…”

David looked over toward Jenny. She was wide-eyed, staring at Gault with complete revulsion, as if she were really seeing him for the first time.

“…for David is with me.”

The gun exploded. There was no sign of remorse or fear on Gault’s face when David pulled the trigger. Only contempt. That was when David knew he had done the right thing.

D
avid stacked the last of his framed diplomas in the cardboard carton at his feet and sealed the top with masking tape. He stood up and looked around the office. The walls were bare. The desk drawers had been cleaned out. It had ceased to be David Nash’s office.

“Got everything packed away?” Gregory Banks asked from the doorway. David hadn’t heard him come in. He had been thinking about the office.

“Yeah. It’s all taken care of. There wasn’t much, anyway. These diplomas,” he said, indicating the box, “some personal stuff from the desk.”

David shrugged.

“Yeah, well,” Gregory said. They stood in the room without speaking for a moment.

“Damn, I’m gonna miss you, Dave,” Gregory said finally, his voice catching. David was embarrassed by Gregory’s unusual emotional display.

“Hey,” he said, “I’m just going on a vacation. I’ll be back. Maybe not as a lawyer, but I’m not leaving town forever.”

Larry Stafford was out of prison, and Jenny had reinstituted the divorce proceedings. David and Jenny were going to disappear for a while. David wanted to catch up on all the things he had missed while building his career. There was Abu Simbel to see and the Great Wall of China. They would travel together for a year. Maybe longer. When they returned, Jenny’s divorce would be final. Then they would decide about their future together. Maybe it would work out. Maybe it wouldn’t. They would see.

“What will you do if you don’t practice law?” Gregory asked.

“That’s something I don’t want to think about now. Don’t be so maudlin. Hell, you’re making me feel worse than I feel already.”

Gregory blushed. “You’re right. Shit, I never used to get so sloppy. It must be old age.”

David smiled, and so did Greg.

“That’s the boy,” David said.

He looked away from Gregory and looked at the room once more. The desk was big and old. He’d had it since he’d started practicing. He tried to remember how much he’d paid for it secondhand, but the price escaped him.

David reached out absentmindedly and ran his hand over the corner of the desk. He thought about the framed clippings he had just packed away. Some of the most exciting moments in his life had started in this room.

David had loved the law and he had been a good lawyer. Maybe one of the best. But that part of his life was over forever, once he’d pulled the trigger and ended Thomas Gault’s life. No matter what the justification for the act, it had made it impossible for David to continue to practice his profession. The killing of Thomas Gault had made him an outlaw, even if no one other than Jenny knew.

“You’ll come to dinner tomorrow night?” Greg asked.

“Of course.”

The plans had already been made. He was leaving the country in two days. Jenny would meet him in London in two weeks. No one knew about their affair and they felt it best to keep it that way. The Gault case was closed and they saw no reason to stir up any suspicions.

No one had questioned the story he and Jenny had agreed on. David had told the police about Gault’s confessions and his meeting with Monica and Ortiz. He had recounted the incident at the house truthfully, except for one detail. David had said that Ortiz had fired, wounding Gault, who had fired simultaneously, killing Ortiz. The shot that killed Gault had been squeezed off by Ortiz just before the policeman died.

David apologized for handling Ortiz’s weapon and for moving the bodies. He should have known better, but he was pretty shaken up. No one had been critical. After all, he and Jenny had gone through an ordeal. And no one really cared that an insane cop killer had been shot to death.

“I’ve got to get going, Greg,” David said, hefting the carton and heading for the door.

“Sure,” Gregory said.

They both paused in the doorway for one last look at the bare room.

“You’ll be back,” Gregory said firmly.

“Maybe,” David said.

But he really didn’t think so.

With special thanks to Don Nash for his support, Bill
Phillips, Laura Evans, and Mike Mattil for their help,
and Jed Mattes for finding this book a home
.

And additional thanks to Irwyn Applebaum, Elisa
Petrini, and everyone at Bantam for everything you
have done for me
.

And finally I want to express my gratitude to Jim
Tower for taking the time to share his knowledge of
Mercedes-Benz cars with me, and to Dan Bronson for
his excellent screenplay and his advice on a knotty
plotting problem
.

About the Author

PHILLIP MARGOLIN
is the author of
Gone, But Not Forgotten; Sleeping Beauty; Wild Justice;
and many other
New York Times
bestsellers. He is a longtime criminal defense attorney and lives in Portland, Oregon.

www.phillipmargolin.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Praise
Raves for
New York Times
bestselling author

PHILLIP MARGOLIN and The Last Innocent Man

“It takes a really crafty storyteller to
put people on the edge of their seats
and keep them there. Phillip Margolin does just that.”

Chicago Tribune

“[A] jampacked plot…
[Margolin] shows us…the difficulties of lawyers as people practicing in a system of justice which is the same for the guilty and the innocent…and exposes the costs paid by a conscientious lawyer in the coin of human feeling.”

Washington Post

“A real spellbinder…
An intricate tale that weighs guilt, justice, and the law, this book also has plenty of action and drama.”

Library Journal

“The rapidly moving yarn
is enough to keep any reader from dozing between pages, and plenty of diversionary tactics disturb one’s second thoughts about who did what to whom.”

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

“Beautifully constructed…
tightly written, a pleasant mixture of brutality and humanity, with a humdinger of a solution.”

Contra Costa Times

Books by Phillip Margolin

P
ROOF
P
OSITIVE

L
OST
L
AKE

S
LEEPING
B
EAUTY

T
IES
T
HAT
B
IND

T
HE
A
SSOCIATE

W
ILD
J
USTICE

T
HE
U
NDERTAKER’S
W
IDOW

T
HE
B
URNING
M
AN

A
FTER
D
ARK

G
ONE
, B
UT
N
OT
F
ORGOTTEN

T
HE
L
AST
I
NNOCENT
M
AN

H
EARTSTONE

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

THE LAST INNOCENT MAN
. Copyright © 1981, 1995 by Phillip Margolin. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub © Edition JUNE 2007 ISBN: 9780061983580

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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