“So, you thought of that,” Steve said.
Vaulding shrugged. “Hey, give me a break. Considering the case, my opening argument was sketchy at best. We’ve had half a hundred twists in the evidence since then. None of which benefit your client. You think I wouldn’t love to stand up and summarize that evidence under the guise of stating what I intend to prove? It’s just you and me talking here, Winslow, but you think I wouldn’t take that shot if I got it? The jury won’t hear me, but the press sure will. And just between you and me, there are a lot more voters read the paper than sit on that jury.”
“Gee, that never occurred to me,” Steve said.
“I’ll bet,” Vaulding said. “You wanna know my intention? My intention is to go straight back into court and call Miss Veronica Dreisson to the stand.”
“Now, there’s another thing,” Steve said, “that I promised my secretary I’d take up with you.”
Vaulding frowned. “What?”
“The word Miss. These days it’s Ms. But that can wait. Right now I’d like to stop you from making a big mistake.”
“Thanks for your concern.”
“Listen,” Steve said. “Remember when you first called me into your office? You told me about your talk with Dirkson. And you said you didn’t necessarily buy his line.”
“This is true, and I don’t. But the situation is a little different here. Your client’s guilty and that’s the bottom line. Your client’s guilty six ways from Sunday. He bought the murder gun, for Christ’s sakes.”
“That remains to be proven.”
Vaulding waved it away. “Oh, sure, sure. By the time you get him on the witness stand, I’m sure you’ll have thought up some great explanation. But it’s no go. You know and I know he bought it. You know and I know he’s guilty. Now I don’t care if there’s some technicality, some legal loophole, some circuitous route by which you think you could get around all that and get your client off. If you can, bully for you, but I’ll take my shot. He’s guilty and I’m not giving ground. I got enough to nail him, so that’s what I’m gonna do.”
“Can we get back to your phone call with Dirkson?”
“What’s that got to do with anything?”
“You say you don’t buy his line, but it’s different this time because my client’s guilty. Now, assuming there ever was a phone call from Dirkson-assuming that wasn’t just a ploy to keep me in your office while you served the search warrant and grabbed the file-”
Vaulding’s eyes flicked momentarily, but he maintained his superior smile.
“Assuming you actually spoke to Dirkson,” Steve said. “He may have told you I’m tricky, I’m fast, I pull unorthodox shit in court, you gotta watch out for me, I’m dramatic, I’ll grandstand, I’ll steal the press-that’s just for starters and I’m sure Dirkson could do a better job of it.
“But there’s one thing I’ll bet he didn’t say-that I ever sold him a bill of goods. Now, you can call him and ask him if you want, but here’s what he’ll have to say.”
Steve held up two fingers. “I talked to him two times during a case. Like I’m talking to you. One time he listened. As I advised, he dismissed the case, called in the press and took the credit. The other time he didn’t listen. That case blew up on him in court.” Steve shrugged. “Tough break. But in both cases, he’d have to admit I gave him the straight goods.”
“Yeah, but it’s different,” Vaulding said. “Those clients were innocent.”
Steve sighed. “We’re talking in circles here. Forget the innocent or guilty for a moment. I know that’s hard for you to do, but, hell, you’re an elected official. Think newspaper headlines. You’ve been getting ’em, all right, but they aren’t the kind that win elections. What you need here is a victory.”
Vaulding frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“We’re separating the men from the boys here, Vaulding. This case is gonna break, and it’s gonna break soon. When it does, there’s gonna be a huge amount of publicity. My question right now is where you fit into it. Would that be the front-page picture of the grinning D.A. expounding his theory of the case? Or is your name only going to be seen by the people who turn to the inside page and read the one-line blurb, ‘District Attorney Robert Vaulding could not be reached for comment’?”
Vaulding stared at him. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“I’m making you an offer. It is a limited offer. Today’s special. In fact, it is a one-time-only offer. When we walk out of here that offer will be withdrawn. Frankly, I don’t expect you to take it, but I make it anyway. So when this is all over and you’re licking your wounds and feeling all pissed off over what a slick son of a bitch I turned out to be, you’ll have to admit I gave you your chance.
“The best I can do is offer. What you do after that is entirely up to you. But here’s the situation. We’re at an impasse. You can either walk into court right now, put my expert on the stand and give her a thorough grilling. Or you can take a deep breath, put your prejudices aside and listen to what I have to say. And I have to tell you, right now I’m so fed up with this case, I don’t really care which.”
Steve shrugged.
“O.K. Your move. What’s it gonna be?”
47
Robert Vaulding’s face was grim. He looked around the courtroom at the spectators, the reporters, the jurors, the judge, and finally up at the elderly, white-haired woman he had just installed on the witness stand. She was smiling slightly and looked utterly serene and placid, giving the impression of being one of those elderly women who is totally sweet but also slightly dotty and scatterbrained. For a second it flashed on Vaulding, my god, am I doing the right thing? He took a deep breath, plunged ahead.
“Ms. Dreisson?” he began, remembering Steve Winslow’s admonition.
It was not his day.
Veronica held up her hand. “One moment, young man. Dreisson is my married name. Not my maiden name. My late husband, Arnold, was a Dreisson. I do not think that he would like to see his name become a Ms. I am Mrs. Dreisson, if you please.”
Vaulding took a breath, and seemed to roll his eyes heavenward for a split second before smiling and saying, “I stand corrected, Mrs. Dreisson.”
The newspaper reporters, frustrated at having called in instructions to hold the front page for a plea-bargain that had not materialized, scribbled gleefully. It was clear this little old lady would make a feisty witness.
“Tell me, Mrs. Dreisson,” Vaulding said, “what do you do?”
Veronica smiled. “I don’t do anything. I retired more than twenty years ago.”
“Yes, but you seem a quite active woman. Aside from any business or profession, is there any hobby or special interest that occupies your time?”
“Yes, of course.”
“And what would that be.”
“Guns.”
“I beg your pardon? Did you say guns?”
“Yes, I did, young man,” Veronica said. She added, “Do you have trouble hearing?”
That produced a laugh in the courtroom.
Vaulding never cracked a smile. “No, I do not,” he said. “But I wanted to be sure the jurors heard you. Your hobby is guns?”
“That’s right.”
“You collect guns?”
“Oh, yes.”
“You are still actively involved in doing this?”
“Yes, of course.”
“How many guns do you own?”
“Between two and three hundred.”
That produced a reaction in the courtroom. Judge Hendrick banged the gavel.
“Between two and three hundred? Of different makes and models?”
“Well, I should think so,” Veronica said. “It would certainly be silly to have two hundred of the same gun.”
“Then you are familiar with different types of firearms?”
“Yes, of course.”
“Do you consider yourself an expert?”
Veronica smiled. “I consider myself knowledgeable on the subject. In the past I’ve been employed as an expert.”
“In the past?”
“Yes.” Veronica squinted at him. “Let me see. Would that be before you were born?”