CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
I SPENT A sleepless night at the Motel 6.
Nights before closing arguments are always like that for me. My mind is filled with thoughts about what I’m going to say, what I shouldn’t say, what happened during the trial that I may have overlooked, and whether I’m up to the task of speaking on behalf of a human being facing years in prison.
I was never one of those lawyers who could hold a courtroom spellbound by the pure power of his golden tongue. Mine was more of the aluminum variety. But I was adequate when I had the facts and the law on my side. This night I wasn’t sure about either. I tried to rehearse a little but gave up around eleven and tried to go to sleep.
At midnight I decided to go out for a drink.
Frisbee’s was unusually crowded, I thought. Maybe this was the social center of Hinton. This was what the people had to look forward to. Up here there was no Hollywood Bowl or Dodger Stadium, just the multiplex, 7-Eleven, and Frisbee’s.
I took what was becoming my usual table, near the back, where a big screen TV tuned into the Classic Sports Network was playing a tape of the first game of the 1988 World Series. The Oakland A’s were supposed to win that one, with a one run lead in the ninth over the Dodgers and Dennis Eckersley on the mound. But with two out and a man on, Kirk Gibson came limping up to the plate to pinch hit. He had two bum legs and hadn’t played the entire game, but now he was going to give it a go.
As I drank a beer, I watched that moment of high drama again. Eckersley, the best reliever in baseball, got two strikes on Gibson right away. Gibson worked him, getting the count to 3 and 2.
You couldn’t have designed a better scenario: Bottom of the ninth, full count, two down, man on, one run lead, great pitcher, gutsy hitter. Eckersley delivered the pitch. Gibson swung, and as the ball took off toward the right field bleachers, Vin Scully, calling the game for NBC, said, “. . . she is
gone!”
A round of cheers erupted from the Frisbee’s crowd, as if the home run had just happened. I had seen it on TV when it
did
happen and felt the same elation as I had then. It remains, for me, the most exciting sports moment I’ve ever witnessed.
As I watched Kirk Gibson limp around the diamond again, pumping his fist in elation, getting mobbed at home plate by his teammates and the elfin Dodger manager, Tommy Lasorda, I had an amazing insight.
I was Kirk Gibson.
Tomorrow I would be limping into a courtroom for one last at bat. Could I come through? Hit it out of the ballpark? Set Howie free?
It was both exhilarating and frightening.
On the TV Bob Costas was interviewing Gibson. Gibson was talking about how he’d wanted one more at bat and then said something about “the good Lord” coming through for him.
I snorted and looked into my beer. “All right, Lord,” I said to the foam, “let’s see what you can do for me.” And then I drank my prayer.
A couple of minutes later, after ordering another beer, and as I was mentally rehearsing my closing argument, I felt something in my chest. It was a vibration but not a steady one. Pulsating. A thumping.
It grew stronger.
I then realized it was the sub-woof of a car stereo. It continued for another second or two, then shut off. I watched the front door and somehow knew it would be him.
Darcy Hazelton swaggered in. He was greeted by some buddies with whoops and hollers and joined them at the bar.
Suddenly, through that mysterious mental alchemy that sometimes happens, diffuse thoughts and images began to coalesce into an odd semblance of order. Connections were made in my mind . . .
Darcy Hazelton . . .
Warren Hazelton . . .
Tolletson . . .
Daphne Barth . . .
Thumping noises . . .
Murder . . .
Did any of this make sense? Daphne Barth had reported a thumping noise, thinking it was someone trying to break into her house. Could it have been a car stereo?
This
car stereo? What was it she had said? She looked out her window and saw a car. No, she said, more like a truck than a car.
Could it have been Darcy Hazelton’s? And could he have possibly been the one Howie saw in the room?
I had no evidence of that. This was all a patch of thin reeds. But having nothing else to weave a story from, I stood up, drained my beer, and walked over to the bar where Hazelton was sitting.
He was bracketed by two guys who looked like they spent a lot of time in the gym. The one on his right had a tank top on, exposing a snake tattoo just below the neck. The other one didn’t have any distinguishing marks, but he did have biceps that looked like croquet balls. The two guys were laughing hysterically. Darcy Hazelton, who wore a cream-colored silk shirt, appeared to be shaking with laughter too.
When the guy on the right saw me standing there, he stopped laughing. He nudged Hazelton on the shoulder, then nodded my way. Hazelton twirled on his barstool and faced me.
“Darcy Hazelton?” I said.
He had an angular face, one that narrowed from a prominent forehead down to a sharp chin. His skin was pale, blending almost seamlessly into the colorlessness of his shirt, and his eyes were narrow in a weak sort of way. His hair, what was left of it, was black and combed straight back.
“Who are you?” he said. His voice was about as friendly as a syringe.
“My name’s Denney. I’m here on business.”
Hazelton’s eyes thinned a scintilla more. “Denney?”
“That’s right.”
“The lawyer?”
“People seem to know me, don’t they?”
“What are you doing here?”
“I was having a drink.”
“Then drink.” He clipped the words dismissively.
“Can I have a word with you?” I asked.
Hazelton looked at his buddy on the right, the one with the snake. “Can you believe this guy?” he said. Mr. Snake half-smiled and shook his head.
Returning to me, Hazelton said, “You got to be kidding.”
“I’m not.”
“I got no reason to talk to you.”
“If I could just have a sec—”
He started to spin back around.
“It’s important.”
Hazelton stopped midway and half-turned his head toward me. “Don’t you know you’re a cockroach?” He spun back so he could look at me directly. “You’re a cockroach. You know that?”
His two friends cracked smiles, and I noticed a few others at the bar looking at me, no doubt wondering if I’d scurry away like the unsanitary bug I’d just been compared to.
“Sure I know that,” I said. “It’s like the old joke.”
“Huh?” Hazelton looked genuinely confused.
“What’s the difference between a cockroach and a lawyer?”
Darcy Hazelton turned to Mr. Snake, who shrugged.
I said, “One is a dirty, ugly, crumb-sucking pest. The other one’s an insect.”
The guy with the biceps snorted a laugh. Hazelton shot him an angry look, and he clammed up.
“Why don’t you get lost?” Hazelton said to me.
I half considered it. In a macho bar like this, I was a perfect target and outnumbered to boot. But Hazelton’s hostility told me I was on to something. I didn’t move.
“What kind of car do you drive, Darcy?” I loaded my voice with mock conviviality, giving the question a sarcastic spin.
“You better get out of here now,” Hazelton said. I half expected the two muscle boys to stand simultaneously, like thugs in a 40’s
film noir,
and escort me out.
I stood my ground like Victor Mature. “You’ve got a nice sound system.”
Blinking, Hazelton seemed momentarily baffled. I congratulated myself on a small victory. “I told you, I got nothing to say,” he finally offered.
“That’s what he said,” Mr. Snake added, looking at me with macho eyes of menace. He was reveling in this.
“How would you like to be called as a witness, Darcy?” I said.
“What?”
“Yeah. How would you like me to drag your sorry butt into court tomorrow? I have a feeling you could tell the jury some things.”
His narrow slits widened enough so I could see his eyes. Just as quickly, they closed down. Mr. Snake said, “Let’s do him.”
Darcy Hazelton put his hand up to stop the thought, much to my relief. “Outside,” he said.
He got up from his stool and walked toward the door, leaving his two companions to give me the testosterone glare. I smiled, nodded, and followed Hazelton outside.
The midnight air was crisp. The moon was nearly full, giving the parking lot a faint, silvery wash. Young Hazelton stood near the first row of cars, his back to me, looking down the road that led here to the social center of Hinton.
I saw a Range Rover a couple of cars down and walked toward it. “Yours?” I said.
Hazelton gave me a half-turn look. “You know who my father is?” he asked.
“Sure.”
“Then why are you being stupid?”
“I don’t follow you.”
When Hazelton turned to face me, the moon gave his pale face a moonlike quality of its own, dull light reflecting off it—a ghostly luminescence. It was hard to make out, but I thought I saw a touch of fear.
“Look,” he said, “you don’t mess with my father.”
“I don’t care about your father. I care about you.”
“Why?”
“What do you know about the murder of Rae Patino?”
For a long moment he stood and stared at me, a fleshy statue in this eerie automotive garden. “I just know what everybody else knows,” he said finally.
“That’s all?”
“That’s all.”
“You ever go out with her?”
“You’re crazy.”
“You ever go over to her house? Spend time with her?”
Darcy Hazelton took a step toward me. The look of fear had given way to anger, but not just any anger. It was . . . twisted. Like he’d lost control. Now he seemed truly dangerous.
“I don’t know what you think you’re doing,” Hazelton said, “but if you come near me again, I’ll get you messed up. I’ll get you messed up, and then I’ll kill you.”
Quickly he turned and charged back into the bar, leaving me to wonder what I’d just witnessed. Was it consciousness of some sort of guilt? That was possible, but only if Darcy Hazelton was playing with a full deck, something I was doubting seriously. It could have just been the reaction of a spoiled and somewhat off-kilter, rich kid who was not used to threats or insinuations.
All I knew for sure was that what had started as a simple inquiry had turned into an oddball scene with a manifestly dangerous man. The sooner I got out of Hinton, the better, I decided.I returned to the motel and didn’t fall asleep until sometime after 3 A.M.