“Yeah, but why?” Tracy said. “For what reason? What good does all that accomplish?”
“It screws the facts of the case up to the extent that the evidence all comes out cockeyed. It lets me make the arguments I’ve made against Lieutenant Sanders and this ballistics expert. It lets me imply the cops are the ones who screwed the evidence up. If the cops screwed the evidence up, there’s no way Vaulding gets a conviction, and my client goes free.”
Tracy frowned. “Yeah, but …”
“But what?”
“That still doesn’t make sense.”
“Why not?”
“Because in that case the cops got the wrong gun.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, no, they don’t. They’ve got the murder weapon. It was in Timberlaine’s holster. And it’s there because you put it there. After scratching it up with the rattailed file. But that would mean that gun was the gun originally found next to the body. Before you switched it. Right?”
“This is getting very messy,” Steve said. “We really should have a map with push pins, you know?”
“Stick with me a moment. This one’s simple. If you swapped the gun next to the body for Timberlaine’s gun, and that’s how the gun in Timberlaine’s holster turned out to be the murder weapon, that would mean the gun we originally found next to the body was the duplicate, and the gun in Timberlaine’s holster that you swapped it for, the gun he was walking around with all day, would be the original Pistol Pete Robbins gun.”
“Yeah. So?”
“It doesn’t add up at all. How do you explain that Timberlaine’s ‘got the real thing, baby,’ instead of the can of Coke?”
“Commercials? You’re throwing commercials at me?”
“You know what I mean. If the real gun was stolen, how did Timberlaine get it back?”
“We’ve only got his word for that. If he made it up, then he’s got both guns, and he can plant them wherever he pleases.”
“In which case he’d be guilty of the murder.”
“Exactly.”
Tracy gave him a look.
Steve cocked his head. “Sweetheart, in those books you read the client is always innocent. Otherwise there’d be no book. It doesn’t always work out that way. Believe it or not, occasionally a person is accused of a crime because he actually did it.”
“You think Timberlaine’s guilty?”
“No, I don’t. But when you start trying to explain facts away and negate theories, if you want to dismiss guilty motives as possible explanations, you’re really narrowing your sights.”
Tracy frowned. “Yeah, I know.”
“And,” Steve said. “You have to take into account the fact that, since Timberlaine came to call on us and laid this story in front of us with all due candor, we have found out he neglected to tell us that he had purchased an identical gun.”
“Right.”
“So, naive as Timberlaine may seem to be, we still have to consider what if that’s at least partly an act. For instance, what if Timberlaine wanted to kill Potter for some other reason, something that hasn’t come out yet? What does Timberlaine do? He sets up a reason for him to kill Potter that won’t hold water. That is on its face absurd. See what I’m saying? He employs the moron factor. He goes through the elaborate routine of having Crumbly bid against Burdett on a gun, knowing that Burdett will realize Crumbly is bidding for him and outbid him. And then pretend he’s angry at Jack Potter for letting the information out. It’s a ridiculous motive that won’t stand much scrutiny. You heard Burdett say it wasn’t the type of gun Crumbly would bid on, and he’d never bid that high anyway. Timberlaine had to know that. So the deception had to fail. And even with circumstantial evidence against him, how can you convict him of murder with a motive as shaky as that?”
“Good lord,” Tracy said. “Do you really think that’s true?”
“Of course not. He’s my client, and I think he’s innocent.”
“Fine,” Tracy said without enthusiasm. “That’s convincing as all hell. Look, can we go back to the gun switching a moment?”
“Which gun switching?”
“Yeah, right. Vaulding’s theory. You and I find the murder weapon, Martin goes for the cops, you grab the gun and run upstairs.”
“What about it?”
“You said Timberlaine gives you the file to rough up the gun.”
“Right. So?”
“Where did he get the file?”
“It was there in his room.”
“Why?”
“Because there wasn’t time for him to get it from anywhere else.”
“I know that,” Tracy said. “That’s just the point. There wasn’t time, and there’s no reason why he’d have that file in his room, so it couldn’t have happened.”
“But the file was in his room. It may not make any sense, but it was. Timberlaine even admits it was. He claims he found it.”
“Yeah, but you’re not going to let him say so on the witness stand. And this is Vaulding’s theory, so how’s he gonna prove it?”
“He doesn’t have to prove it. He just has to plant the insinuation in the mind of the jury.”
“Yeah, but it still has to make sense. The theory is Timberlaine had the file and gave it to you to rough up the gun?”
“Sure.”
“And why did you do that?”
“So they couldn’t match up the fatal bullet.”
“Yeah, well then you made a bad job of it. Because they still matched up the fatal bullet.”
“I was in a hurry. I had to work fast.”
“Yeah, but still-”
Mark Taylor burst into the room.
“Got it, Steve!”
“Got what?”
“My operative’s back. I got the name of the collector.”
“Thank God for that. Who is he?”
“You’re a sexist pig again.”
“What?”
Taylor grinned. “The collector’s a woman.”
“For Christ’s sake, Mark.”
“Sorry. I couldn’t resist.”
“Maybe not, but-Oh, shit.”
“What?”
“Don’t tell me the collector’s Felicia Ebersol?”
“Who?”
“Didn’t you question her? You know. That friend of Timberlaine’s.”
“I’m afraid you’re a sexist pig again.”
“What the hell?”
“Thinking there’s only one woman collector. Well, it’s not her. This collector’s name is Veronica Dreisson.”
“Can I talk to her?”
“Would you want to?”
“Actually, yes. My instinct is to bury her, but as an attorney, I want to make sure her rights are protected.”
“That’s what I wanted to ask you about.”
“What?”
“She’s in California.”
“Oh?”
“Yeah. And she’s comin’ back tomorrow. I was wondering if some business or other might induce her to stay over?”
Steve gave him a look.
Taylor shrugged. “Just a thought.”
“No, Mark, let her come back. I want to talk to her when she gets here.”
Taylor looked concerned. “You gonna put her on the stand and drop a bombshell by bringing in the other gun?”
“I wouldn’t do that unless I absolutely had to.”
“That does not cheer me.”
“Right now that looks like a sucker play.”
“That does.” Taylor took a breath. “I certainly don’t want you to tell me anything you don’t want to tell me.”
“What does that mean, Mark?”
“This morning you produced a gun in court.”
“Naturally. I’m not going to defy a subpoena.”
“Now I know you don’t want to tell me anything or you already would have, but I was just thinking.”
“What was that, Mark?”
“I was thinking-hypothetically speaking, of course-but wouldn’t it be nice if that gun you produced was the gun that Timberlaine originally gave you? The one I tested the bullets from. The one you substituted for the one I bought. The one that’s been sitting in your safe ever since. Because in that event, the bullets you gave them would conveniently match the gun you gave them. And the gun you got from Timberlaine’s safe-deposit box-my gun-would now be sitting in your safe where no one would ever think of looking for it. And no one would ever find it, unless you yourself, for some perverse reason, brought it into the case. But barring that, no one would ever ask anything about that gun, because no one would ever know that it even existed. And to all intents and purposes, it never would have existed, because the evidence would all be back in order, and the guns and bullets would all match up. And yours truly would be off the proverbial hook.