"Free," Rennell repeated softly. "Free."
"Yes."
His smile combined incredulity with fear. "What I do then?" he asked. "Been here so long I don't know free no more. Don't know how that be without my brother."
"I know. But you've got me now."
Rennell averted his eyes, and for a fleeting moment, Terri envisioned him as a bashful child—or, perhaps, a fearful one. "Maybe I could live with you . . ."
Sometimes lawyers did this, Terri knew, to bridge a client's transition. But she was Elena's mother. "We'll figure it out," she temporized. "We thought you could help us at our office. Keep things neat, like you do in your cell."
"Mean I'd sleep there, too?"
Terri hesitated. "There are lots of places." She stopped herself: even a halfway house for the retarded might shy away from a man once convicted, however wrongly, of a sex crime with a child. "Not to live, I mean. Just to help you figure out the world again. There are churches, too. People care about what happens to you. I know a minister in San Francisco who may want you to live there."
The words she could not say, that Elena could never live with him, shadowed her response. Taking his hand, Terri promised, "I'll always be there, Rennell. I'll make sure you're fine."
On the Monday after Terri's outing with Elena, the State of California petitioned the United States Supreme Court to review the case of Rennell Price.
PART FOUR
THE HIGH COURT
ONE
LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON, CHRIS, TERRI, AND CARLO MET around the conference table. "No surprises here," Chris said, then began reading aloud from the Attorney General's petition to the Supreme Court. "This decision resonates far beyond the particulars of the case against Rennell Price. It is a comprehensive usurpation by two Ninth Circuit judges of the role of Congress, of the Supreme Court of California, and by extension, of the United States District Court. It conflicts with the decisions of other circuit courts. And it arrogates to these two judges the proper role of this Court to determine the rights available to habeas corpus petitioners far beyond Mr. Price."
"Yeah," Carlo remarked to Terri, "it also undermines the war on terror, promotes the teaching of evolution, and opens the floodgates to gay marriage."
Terri did not smile. "Pell is doing what he has to do—make the decision bigger than Rennell. The Supreme Court will take only cases which affect the law as a whole, and he has to persuade four justices that this is one of them."
Carlo considered this. "What's been so weird is watching Rennell become an afterthought. This isn't about him anymore."
"No," Terri concurred softly. "It's about all the sand we're throwing into the machinery of death." To Chris, she said, "What's Pell's argument on freestanding innocence?"
Frowning, Chris flipped the bound pages. "This captures the essence," he told her. "Based on the last-minute confession of a death row inmate—an all-too-common event—Judges Montgomery and Sanders have abrogated Congress's carefully crafted effort to ensure that, after thorough consideration of a prisoner's constitutional rights, a sentence of death is carried out. The result is a legal mutation: an invitation to serial habeas corpus petitions, wherein piecemeal 'new' evidence of innocence is conjured by desperate prisoners and inventive lawyers, and courts are forced to entertain them one by one. If this opinion stands, the fifteen years so far consumed by Rennell Price is only the beginning, and this decision the beginning of the end of capital punishment as we know it." Chris looked up. "That would be a shame."
Terri slowly shook her head. "I can never say you didn't warn me."
"Let it go," Chris answered quietly. "Rennell was forty-eight hours from execution. We had to argue everything we could."
Carlo looked from his father to Terri. "And we've kept Rennell alive. All we need to do now is persuade the Supreme Court not to take the case. I mean, they only grant about one percent of these petitions, right?"
"That doesn't mean much here," Terri told him. "Pell has packaged this as Armageddon, creating an absolute necessity for the Supreme Court to save AEDPA, slap down the Ninth Circuit, and pillory Blair Montgomery." Turning to Chris, she asked, "How many times does Pell mention Montgomery's name?"
Chris smiled faintly. "I lost count."
Carlo stood, stretching his arms over his head. "Can't we crosspetition on the issues we lost? Maybe the Court will look at the whole mess and decide they don't want to consider whether the entire capital punishment system is all screwed up."
"Bad idea," Terri said flatly. "We want to make this case sound ordinary, and Pell sound like he's hyperventilating. Having to defend the ruling on freestanding innocence will be hard enough."
"Terri's right," Chris concurred. "As I read the Supreme Court, Pell has got three likely votes already—Justices Fini, Kelly, and Ware. Rothbard, Huddleston, and the Chief Justice are probably inclined toward us. We have to pitch this case to the cautious middle: Raymond, Millar, and, especially, Justice Glynn—"
"All Pell needs is one more vote," Terri interjected, "and the Supreme Court will take the case. Two votes, and the Court can summarily reverse the Ninth Circuit—without even giving us a hearing. Our best hope is to persuade Glynn, Raymond, and Millar that this case is just about one prisoner, Rennell Price, and nothing to get excited over."
"In other words," Chris said dryly, "that the machinery of death will grind on as before. Just without Rennell."
* * *
Hearing the identity of his caller, Charles Monk chuckled softly.
"Congratulations, counselor. Been reading where you saved that poor innocent we persecuted. Must be on top of the world."
"High on life," Terri said pleasantly. "As it were. Are you really feeling all that aggrieved?"
"Oh, I'll live, too. I'm more sorry for that girl's family. No end to this for them."
"And killing Rennell would be an end?"
"For some families it is, of a kind. You never know before they execute the guy. Or in this case, the last guy." Monk's voice softened. "But you didn't call me to gloat, or argue capital punishment. You want something."
"Other than Eddie Fleet?" Terri answered in a pointed tone. "Betty Sims. I was wondering if you'd found her yet."
Monk laughed again. "Guess you think you haven't got the degree of innocence some judges may be looking for. Pell told me he's taking this all the way to the U.S. Supremes."
"Yeah," Terri said sardonically. "It's an outrage, what those two judges did. Pell still thinks there's at least a chance Rennell might actually be guilty, which is more than enough for him. What about you?"
"Me? I'm sitting here looking at some crime scene pictures—double murder of a mom and kid in the Mission District, domestic probably. Killed with a knife. A whole lot nastier than lethal injection, though at least it came as a surprise to the folks in these photographs." Monk paused a moment. "About Betty Sims, she's nowhere in the Bayview. I don't have much time these days, and my guess is she's long gone from San Francisco. But I'll poke around a little more."
"Thanks," Terri said, her voice revealing more relief than she wished. "Guess you're more curious than Larry."
"Maybe about Fleet," Monk answered. "You know how cops are. Never a good reason to hide behind the Fifth Amendment."
With this remark—perhaps, Terri thought, a tacit jibe at Larry Pell—Monk got off.
* * *
"Betty Sims?" Johnny Moore asked Terri. "Still can't find her. In fact, I've still got nothing concrete that says Eddie Fleet likes little girls."
"Well, he does," Terri snapped. "Take it from this girl."