It was obvious that Robbie was relishing the moment. His performance was being broadcast live. His audience was captive, spellbound, and hungry for every detail. He could not be interrupted or challenged on any point. It was his press conference, and he was finally getting the last word. The moment was a lawyer’s dream.
———
There would be several points during the morning when Robbie belabored a topic, beginning with his heartfelt ramblings about Donté Drumm. The audience, though, refused to be bored. He eventually got around to the crime, and this prompted a photo of Nicole, a very pretty, wholesome high school girl.
Reeva was watching. Phone calls had roused her. They had been up all night dealing with the fire at the feed store, a fire that was contained quickly and could’ve been much worse. It was certainly arson, a criminal act obviously carried out by black thugs seeking revenge against the family of Nicole Yarber. Wallis was still there, and Reeva was alone.
She cried when she saw her daughter’s face, displayed by a man she loathed. She cried and she seethed and she ached. Reeva was confused, tormented, thoroughly bewildered. The phone call last night from Judge Henry had spiked her blood pressure and sent her to the emergency room. Add the fire, and Reeva was practically delirious.
She had asked Judge Henry many questions—Nicole’s grave? Skeletal remains? Her clothing and driver’s license, belt and credit card, and all the way up in Missouri? She had not been dumped in the Red River near Rush Point? And worst of all—Drumm was not the killer?
“It’s true, Mrs. Pike,” the judge said patiently. “It’s all true. I’m sorry. I know that it is a shock.”
A shock? Reeva couldn’t believe it and for hours refused to believe it. She’d slept little, ate nothing, and was still grasping for answers when she turned on the television and there was Flak, the peacock, live on CNN talking about her daughter.
There were reporters outside, in the driveway, but the house was locked, the curtains drawn, the blinds down, and one of Wallis’s cousins was on the front porch with a 12-gauge shotgun. Reeva was fed up with the media. She had no comment. Sean Fordyce was holed up in a motel south of town fuming because she would not chat with him on camera. He had made a fool of her already. He reminded her of their agreement, of the signed contract, to which she responded, “Just sue me, Fordyce.”
Watching Robbie Flak, Reeva, for the first time, allowed herself to think the unthinkable. Was Drumm innocent? Had she spent the last nine years hating the wrong person? Had she watched the wrong man die?
And what about the funeral? Now that her baby had been found, she would need to be properly buried. But the church was gone. Where would they have the funeral? Reeva wiped her face with a wet cloth and mumbled to herself.
———
Eventually, Robbie moved on to the confession. Here he picked up steam and was consumed by a controlled rage. It was very effective. The courtroom was silent. Carlos projected a photo of Detective Drew Kerber, and Robbie announced with great drama, “And here is the principal architect of the wrongful conviction.”
Drew Kerber was watching, at the office. He had spent a horrible night at home. After leaving Judge Henry’s, he had gone for a long drive and tried to imagine a happier ending to this nightmare. None appeared. Around midnight, he sat down with his wife at the kitchen table and bared his souclass="underline" the grave, the bones, the ID, the unmentionable idea that “evidently” they had nailed the wrong guy; Flak and his lawsuits and his threats of vigilante-style suing that would follow Kerber to his grave and the high probability of future unemployment, legal bills, and judgments. Kerber unloaded a mountain of grief upon his poor wife, but he did not tell the whole truth. Detective Kerber had never admitted, and he never would, that he had bullied Donté into confessing.
As a chief detective with sixteen years of experience, he earned $56,000 a year. He had three teenagers and a nine-year-old, a mortgage, two car payments, an IRA with around ten grand, and a savings account with $800. If fired, or retired, he might be entitled to a small pension, but he could not survive financially. And his days as a police officer would be over.
“Drew Kerber is a rogue cop with a history of obtaining fake confessions,” Robbie said loudly, and Kerber flinched. He was at his desk, in a small locked office, all alone. He had instructed his wife to keep the TVs off in the house, as if they could somehow hide this story from his kids. He cursed Flak, then watched with horror as the slimeball explained to the world exactly how he, Kerber, had obtained the confession.
Kerber’s life was over. He might handle the ending by himself.
———
Robbie moved on to the trial. He introduced more characters—Paul Koffee and Judge Vivian Grale. Photos, please. On the large screen, Carlos projected them side by side, as if still attached, and Robbie assailed them for their relationship. He mocked the “brilliant decision to move the trial all the way to Paris, Texas, forty-nine miles from here.” He drove home the point that he tried valiantly to keep the confession away from the jury, while Koffee fought just as hard to keep it in evidence. Judge Grale sided with the prosecution and “her lover, the Honorable Paul Koffee.”
Paul Koffee was watching, and seething. He was at the cabin by the lake, very much alone, watching the local station’s “exclusive live coverage” of the Robbie Flak show, when he saw his face next to Vivian’s. Flak was railing against the jury, as white as a Klan rally because Paul Koffee had systematically used his jury strikes to eliminate blacks, and, of course, his girlfriend up on the bench went along with it. “Texas-style justice,” Robbie lamented, over and over.
He eventually moved away from the more tawdry aspects of the judge-prosecutor relationship and found his rhythm railing against the lack of evidence. Grale’s face disappeared from the screen, and Koffee’s was enlarged. No physical evidence, no dead body, only a trumped-up confession, a jailhouse snitch, a bloodhound, and a lying witness named Joey Gamble. Meanwhile, Travis Boyette was free, certainly not worried about getting caught, not by these clowns.
Koffee had tried all night to conjure up a revised theory that would somehow link Donté Drumm and Travis Boyette, but fiction failed him. He felt lousy. His head ached from too much vodka, and his heart pounded as he tried to breathe under the crushing weight of a ruined career. He was finished, and that troubled him much more than the notion that he had helped kill an innocent young man.
———
When he finished with the jailhouse snitch and the bloodhound, Robbie attacked Joey Gamble and his fraudulent testimony. With perfect timing, Carlos flashed up Gamble’s affidavit, the one signed in Houston on Thursday, an hour before the execution. Highlighted were Joey’s statements admitting he lied at trial and admitting he was the first to suggest that Donté Drumm was the killer.
Joey Gamble was watching. He was at his mother’s house in Slone. His father was away; his mother needed him. He had told her the truth, and the truth had not been well received. Now he was shocked to see and hear his transgressions broadcast in such a startling way. He had assumed that when he came clean, he would be subjected to some level of embarrassment, but nothing like this.