Tampa, Florida
Monday 5:30 p.m.
January 25, 1999
I set it up carefully. I’d be spending half an hour alone with a nasty tempered man who was an accessory to murder.
I don’t know whether it’s easier to kill when you’ve got nothing more to lose, but I wasn’t interested in testing the hypothesis.
Unlike Dr. Morgan, I’ve never had the patience for science.
My clerk scheduled our meeting for 5:30, after the trial day. My bailiff would be close by. Security in Federal Buildings is tight since the Oklahoma City bombing. I was sure he wouldn’t be able to bring in a gun or a knife, and I also thought I could probably take him if I didn’t let him sneak up behind me again. Long enough for the bailiff to arrive, anyway.
Belt and suspenders: I scheduled Ben Hathaway for 5:45. Clever, eh? That’s why they pay me the big bucks.
O’Connell arrived ten minutes early. I made him wait five minutes past his appointment time before I allowed my secretary show him in. Business as usual.
When he walked in, he looked around the room as if he was expecting someone else to be there.
I said, “O’Connell, please, sit down.”
Waved toward one of the green leather chairs. I didn’t need the elevated platform under my desk to enable me to tower over the normally nervous chair inhabitants. But I occupied the office my predecessor had decorated it. He was only about five feet tall, and I’m sure you’ve got your own ideas about little men with a little power.
In this instance, though, I confess that I felt more confident being a foot taller than I otherwise am.
O’Connell looked up at me from his chair. It put him a little more off balance, unsure.
“Judge Carson.” He nodded.
Was he that cool, or reverting to forty years of training?
He said, “Good of you to see me. What can I do for you?”
Smooth.
But I had no intention of allowing him to take over this time.
Put two people in a room who are used to having complete control over their lives sometime and watch what happens. It’s a little like two male lions in the same cage. Right now we were circling. He watched for clues.
He hadn’t dared to ignore my “invitation” with a case currently in trial in my courtroom. But he wanted to know why I’d summoned him here and he wouldn’t ask twice.
I let him simmer a while longer. “Excuse me one minute while I review this order, O’Connell. I’ll be right with you.”
One of my former partners used to sit in a room with one other occupant in complete silence. Nature abhors a vacuum, he would say. Pretty soon, most people will talk to fill up the silence. O’Connell Worthington was too old and too crafty a player to chatter without purpose. But the silence worked its magic. He began to perspire; a little damp above his upper lip, but it was definitely there.
“Too warm in here for you, O’Connell?” I asked him, letting him know I’d noticed.
“I’m fine, Judge. Thank you.”
He clearly wasn’t fine.
I was winning round one, and we both knew it.
“O’Connell, I asked you here because I need a little advice.” I said, after ten more minutes of silence, putting the order I’d been revising to one side.
YOU ARE READING
Due Justice
Mystery / ThrillerWhen a famous plastic surgeon's decomposed body surfaces in Tampa Bay with a bullet in its head, Federal Judge Willa Carson's "little sister" is caught in a high-stakes game of greedy lawyers, blackmail and deceit. Fiercely independent Carly is the...