“Obviously not very well,” she says humorously, her eyes on the runners passing in front of us.
“I’ve been waiting for years for the opportunity to straighten you out, but you’ve never called me.”
I cut my eyes at her to see if she is serious. Amy is the kind of woman who is so likable and friendly she seems as if she is flirting with every man within ten yards of her.
Reluctant to invest too much in this conversation, I banter “I’ve always been afraid I’d have a heart attack and you wouldn’t try to revive me.”
Her blue eyes, round as two dimes, twinkle mischievously.
“It would depend on how you did. You’re not that old.”
I take another pull at the water. We are having quite a randy chat for friends.
“Aren’t you still a Holy Roller or whatever?” I ask rudely, but wanting to know. Over a year ago through an odd combination of circumstances I saw Amy at a service of the largest fundamentalist church in Blackwell County. I was in attendance as part of my preparation for defending a murder case; Amy was there apparently because she wanted to be. My girlfriend at the time had astounded me by joining the church, causing irreparable harm to our relationship.
“Nope,” she says, apparently not offended. She smiles.
“I’m still searching though.”
“Aren’t we all?” I respond tritely, but relieved. My own search is a little closer to home. For the most part I gave up on religion after Rosa died of breast cancer.
“So, your place or mine?” I kid, forcing her to be serious.
She giggles deliciously.
“Aren’t you still seeing Rainey McCorkle?”
Some women love to flirt if they think you’re safe.
“Rainey and I could never work things out,” I say truth fully.
“We haven’t gone out in months.” Occasionally, she phones to ask about Sarah. Sometimes, I hear a wistfulness in her voice, but basically, she has decided she needs to find a man with fewer warts. For my part, I want someone who needs fewer certainties.
Amy removes her leg from the rail and gives me a dazzling smile as she heads down the steps to the track.
“Well, give me a ring sometime.”
“I will,” I call after her, deciding to break my selfimposed vow not to go out with women as young as Amy. Since they haven’t exactly been lining up outside the house, it has been an easy pledge to keep. I decide to go home, though I’ve hardly worked out. If she compares me with some of the guys circling the track, she could easily change her mind.
After a shower I put on a pair of pants and a T-shirt and call a much younger classmate who graduated law school with me from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
Barton Sanders is the only lawyer I know in Fayetteville.
Most graduates migrate to the center of the state, but Bar ton moved to Fayetteville to take advantage of a real estate operation that was already thriving under his father-in-law. Rich and well connected. Barton is a dye ding-the-wool Hog fan and may be able to help me jump start this case if he is willing. Though we are not close, we were friends in law school and I have been by to see him a couple of times since Sarah has been in school at
Fayetteville. His wife calls him to the phone, and I tell him I am representing Dade Cunningham.
“No shit?” Barton exclaims, his voice high and reedy as usual.
“That’s incredible!”
I ask him to fill me in on what he has heard. Although he is excited to be in the loop, it turns out he doesn’t know much more than Roy Cunningham.
“It’s like there’s a news blackout at the university-while they stew about this thing. The girl’s father is a big Baptist,” he says, supplying me with one fact I didn’t have.
“Lots of money. The girl is a looker, too. Have you seen any games this year?”
“Only the one in Little Rock,” I answer, delighted there have been no announcements that Dade has been suspended. The fact is things have been so slow lately that I haven’t really been able to afford the trips this year to Fayetteville, but I don’t let Barton know it.
“Do you have any idea how well Coach Carter would react to a phone call from me? I want to slow this down before they make any decisions that would be hard to reverse.”
“Let me make some calls, and I’ll find out,” Barton volunteers.
“I know a couple of guys who know him pretty well. Carter’s the type of guy who might be willing to talk about this, but I bet he’s getting a lot of pressure from the higher-ups to drop him from the team. The old do-right rule. With all the crap in the past, this is a real PR problem for the school.”
“I know,” I concede, “but Cunningham’s the difference between the Sugar Bowl and another .500 season. All I want to do is talk to Carter. I’ve read that he sticks up for the players.” Years earlier Dale Carter had brought Houston a couple of almost undefeated seasons but had a problem with the bottle and got run off. He dried out and had been coaching quarterbacks with a number of teams when Jack Burke, the Razorbacks’ athletic director, tapped him in the spring to revive the team after a number of bad seasons.
“He does,” Barton agrees.
“In his interviews, he always says he knows what it’s like to be down. I’ll see if I can get his number. It’s probably unlisted.”
“Thanks, Barton,” I say.
“I appreciate it.”
“I’m always glad to help a real lawyer,” Barton says slavishly.
“Barton, you make more in a day than I make in a month,” I remind him. Barton (who was advised by our trial advocacy professor not even to try crossexamining a dead dog because he got so flustered in class), has the kind of mind that can trace a chain of title practically without pencil and paper. I could have five computers working night and day and never get a parcel of land back further than three owners without becoming hopelessly confused. The last time I saw him he had on a Rolex and a gold ring that ought to be locked up in Fort Knox. The metal on my body couldn’t even buy me lunch.
“Don’t kid me, Gideon,” he says.
“I read about you in the papers. You’re the real thing.”
Why discourage him? If he wants to believe what he sees on the tube, that’s his problem.
“Whatever you can find out,” I say, “I’ll be in your debt.”
“No problem,” he says, his voice rushing on to another topic.
“Here’s something that might help. Did you notice this case was actually filed by the assistant prosecuting attorney, a kid by the name of Mike Cash? Our prosecutor is on vacation for three weeks in the wilds of Canada.
There’s a feeling that Mike should have waited until Binkie Cross got back in town to bring this kind of charge. There’s a rumor going around he has a sister who was raped and he’s got an itchy trigger finger when he comes to that kind of crime.”
This is welcome news. There is nothing to say that a charge can’t be dismissed. I thank him and hang up so he can get on the phone. While I’m waiting, I call Sarah to let her know I’ll be coming up tomorrow. She answers on the fifth ring and sounds sleepy. It is only seven-thirty.
She shouldn’t be tired this early on a Tuesday.
“What’s wrong, babe?” I ask.
“You sound exhausted.” I try to imagine her room. Unless she has improved her house keeping, there are more clothes on the floor than in her closet. At least she is living in a dorm. Apartments are nothing but trouble. The year I lived in one at Fayetteville my grades dropped a full letter.
“I’m fine. Daddy,” she says, yawning audibly.
“I had a math test yesterday and stayed up late. I was just taking a nap so I won’t be sleepy later on.”
Damn, what is going to happen that she has to take a nap for? I know I shouldn’t ask. If she doesn’t want me to know, I couldn’t dynamite it out of her.
“You have a party to go to in the middle of the week?” I yelp, knowing I sound stupid and old.
There is silence on the other end.
“It’s not a big deal,” she says finally.
“I was just leaving.”
So make it quick. Dad. I look down at Woogie, who is curled up on the cool linoleum. He isn’t giving me the bum’s rush.
“How was your test?”
“It was hard,” she admits.
College algebra. I made a “D” in it almost thirty years ago at Fayetteville. An excellent student otherwise, Sarah has unfortunately inherited my math brains.
“Hang in there,” I advise.
“And don’t get behind.” The pearls of wisdom are really dropping tonight. I get to the point of why I called.
“I’m coming to Fayetteville tomorrow to interview a client. Do you know Dade Cunningham?”
“Dad!” Sarah shrieks into the phone.
“You’re representing him?”
“His uncle is James Cunningham, who lives down the street,” I explain.
“I just talked to Dade’s father about an hour ago. Do you know Dade?”
“This is so weird!” Sarah wails.
“You’re really going to be his lawyer?”
“Is it going to cause you any problems?” I ask. My daughter has never reconciled herself to the way I pay her bills. She concedes that in the abstract criminal defense work is a necessary evil, but like most people, she believes that once someone is actually charged with a crime, the only worthwhile thing left to do in the case is to figure out the length of the prison term. I should have realized Sarah wouldn’t be too thrilled about my taking this case. A kid goes off to school to get away from her parents, and here I am popping up again.
“I guess not,” she says, her voice sounding even more tired than when we began the conversation.
“I’ve seen him at pep rallies and stuff like that. He was in my west em civ class last year. I know him well enough to say “Hi,” but that’s all.”
Not bosom buddies then. When I took WE, they might as well have taught it in Razorback Stadium.
“People won’t even know,” I tell her, “that we’re related.”
“Of course they will,” Sarah contradicts me.
“This is like the stock market dropping three hundred points in one day up here. All anybody talks about is the Razorbacks.”
An exaggeration, but I know what she means. Bill Clinton is the number one fan.
“Have you heard anything about the incident?” I can’t help but ask, though I know she is anxious to leave.
“Dad, please don’t try to get me involved,” she says impatiently.
“I know how you’ve used Rainey.”
Sarah is always accusing me of using people in my life to get information in my big cases. My off-and-on girlfriend Rainey, a social worker at the state hospital, seemed like a member of my staff she was so helpful.
Sarah would become incensed when I asked Rainey to hide a client or witness for a night or two at her house as I had to do a couple of times. Rainey never complained.
Other things about me upset her. But not my work. Invariably, she would get sucked in once a case got going.
“Have you heard anything about what Robin is like?” I ask.
“Dad!” Sarah pleads.
I back off.
“Be careful tonight,” I advise, unable not to have the last word. I let her go after telling her I will call her for dinner tomorrow evening. I assume I will be spending the night. It is too long a trip
to make often. My fees will be eaten up in transportation and lodging costs.
Yet, if I end up negotiating Dade’s pro contract, it will be the best time I ever spent.
“I love you, Sarah,” I say, finally.
“I love you, too,” she says, her voice full of exasperation, before she hangs up.
After taking a Lean Cuisine out of the freezer and pop ping it in the microwave, I open a Miller Lite and sit at the kitchen table and wait for Barton’s call. I try to read (he part of the paper I missed this morning but give up because I’m thinking about the case and Sarah’s comments about the Razorbacks. Why are they so damn important? Not just to me, but to hundreds of thousands in the state. Including the President of the United States.
And it is winning that is crucial. Not merely competing, not good sportsmanship, not the sheer athleticism of our players, imported or not. Winning, in our brains, equates with respect. And this is what we crave. Why wouldn’t we feel as good about ourselves if we were to achieve the lowest infant-mortality rate in the country? Frankly, we’d rather beat Alabama in football or Kentucky in basket ball.
At ten Barton calls back and gives me Coach Carter’s home and office number.
“He still may be in his office,” he says.
“The coaches stay up there late during the sea son. The two men I talked to said to call him immediately. It can’t hurt. Of course they are the type who would want Dade to play even if he had murdered the chancellor
I laugh. Razorback football and basketball. The meaning of life. I thank Barton and tell him I will come by his office in the next couple of days. Then I dial Carter’s home number.
“Coach Carter,” he says, answering on the first ring as if he were expecting my call. His voice, familiar through radio and TV, is raspy and tough like a drill sergeant’s.
Carter has none of the slickness of the younger breed of coaches, who look and sound as if they were in constant rehearsal for later careers as sport announcers.
I explain quickly who I am and why I’m calling.
“From what I’ve heard, I think there’s a real strong likelihood that Dade didn’t rape this girl. Coach Carter. I’d very much like for you to talk to him yourself before you take any disciplinary action. I should have him bonded out of jail tomorrow afternoon and can have him in your office anytime you say.”
“How do you know he didn’t rape her?” he demands, his voice hard as graphite.
“His father’s talked to him,” I say.
“Dade swears it was consensual. For whatever reason, it sounds to me like she was trying to set him up.” I tell him also that the rape charge may have been filed prematurely and why. He clears his throat a couple of times but hears me out.
“This isn’t a cut-and-dried kind of case where you have a girl who’s been beaten up and raped. She waited until the next day to say anything and didn’t have a scratch on her.
Everything I hear about Dade is that he’s a good kid. In my opinion, he deserves at least a conversation with you before anything else happens to him.”
Carter clears his throat again and grunts, “Where can I reach you tomorrow afternoon about five?”
My mind goes blank. I can’t even think of a single motel in Fayetteville.
“I’ll call and leave a message for you.”
I think I have my foot in the door, but I have no real idea. If Carter doesn’t want to talk to Dade, I sure as hell can’t make him. I thank him and hang up. As I begin to pack, I worry that I may be jeopardizing Dade’s criminal case by having him talk to Carter. He may say something to implicate himself. By trying to save his football career, I may end up helping to convict my own client. Human greed. I can feel it working in me like a virus. After I talk to Dade, I can always change my mind. I’ll cross that bridge when I get to it.
It is hard to get to sleep. When I try to quit thinking about Dade’s case, my mind automatically defaults to Amy. Damn, she looked good. I’ll call her when I get back or maybe sooner. Woogie, at my feet, moans in his sleep. Do dogs dream? I will. My life hasn’t had so many possibilities in quite some time. Better not seem too eager or I’ll scare her off.