"State your name."
"Norris MacReady."
"Occupation?"
"I retired from the icehouse the same year as Nat."
There followed a series of questions regarding the establishment of the Whitney Civilian Town Guard and its function before Collins got down to the meatier inquiries.
"On the night of
"I did."
"Would you tell us about it, please."
Norris's eyes widened and he glanced from the attorney to the judge. "Do you think I ought to repeat it just like Lula said it?"
The judge answered, "Exactly as you heard it, yes."
"Well, all right, judge ... but the ladies in the courtroom ain't gonna like it."
"You're under oath, Mr. MacReady."
"Very well..." As a gentleman of the old order, Norris hesitated. Then he asked another question, "You think it'd be okay if I read it instead?"
Slocum leaped to his feet, spouting objections.
"Allow me, your honor, to establish the allowability of the reading material," Collins interjected quickly.
"Objection overruled, but establish it with a single question, is that understood, Mr. Collins?"
"It is." Collins turned to Norris. "From what would you like to read?"
"Why, from our log. Nat and me, we keep a log faithfully, don't we, Nat?"
"We sure do," answered Nat from the gallery.
Nobody raised an objection this time. The place was as still as outer space.
"You keep a log while you're on patrol?" Collins prompted.
"Oh, we got to. The government says. Got to record every plane sighting and every person who breaks curfew. This war is different than the Great War. In that one we never had to worry about spies in our own backyard like we have to this time, that's why we got to keep such close records."
"You may read your entry for August seventeenth, Mr. MacReady."
From an inside pocket of his uniform Norris withdrew a green-covered book with worn edges. He settled a pair of wire-rimmed spectacles over his nose, taking long moments to hook the springy bows behind his ears. Then he tipped back his head, licked a finger and turned pages so slowly that titters began in the room before he finally found the correct spot.
"'
—coming up along
Norris blushed. Nat blushed. Will blushed. Elly blushed. Collins politely took the MacReady's logbook and entered it as exhibit C before turning his witness over for cross-examination.
This time Slocum used his head and excused Norris without further questions. Throughout the courtroom a restlessness had begun. Murmurs sounded continuously from the gallery and spectators edged forward on their seats as Collins called his next witness.
"Defense calls Dr. Justin Kendall."
Kendall
strode down the center aisle, an imposing man of well over six feet, wearing a sharply tailored suit of brown serge, his receding hairline framing a polished forehead that looked as if he'd just scrubbed it with a surgical brush, and his frameless glasses giving him the appearance of a scholar. His fingers were long and clean as they pointed toward heaven while he repeated the oath. Collins was already firing questions as
Kendall
tugged at his trouser creases and took the witness chair.
"State your name and occupation, please."
"Justin Ferris Kendall, medical doctor."
"You practice medicine here in Calhoun, is that correct?"
"It is."
"And did you recently examine the deceased,
"Yessir, on October twentieth last year."
"And did you at the time confirm that she was approximately two months pregnant?"
"I did."
"Two months after Will Parker was heard telling her that if she was in heat she should go yowl beneath somebody else's window, you diagnosed her as two months pregnant?"
"Yessir."
"And do you employ a registered nurse named Miriam Gaultier who also acts as your receptionist?"
"I do,"
"Thank you. Your witness."
Slocum obviously couldn't divine a reason for this line of questioning and glanced around, confused by the abrupt turnover of the defense's witness.
He half-rose from his chair and replied, "No questions, your honor."
"Defense calls Miriam Gaultier to the stand."
Heads turned as a thin gray wisp of a woman passed through the spindled gate, smiling hello to Dr. Kendall, who held it open for her.
"State your name and occupation, please."
"Miriam Gaultier. I'm a nurse and receptionist for Dr. Justin Kendall."
"You've just heard Dr. Kendall testify that he was visited by the deceased,
"Yes, I was."
"And did you talk with
"Yes, I did."
"And what was the gist of that conversation?"
"I asked
"Did she give it to you?"
"No, sir, she didn't."
"Why not?"
"Because she advised me to send the bill to Harley Overmire, of
Whitney
,
Georgia
."
Nobody heard Collins turn the witness over to Solicitor General Slocum, but they could hear the sweat ooze from Harley Overmire's pores as the prosecution cross-examined Miriam Gaultier in the silent room.
"Was
"Yes, it was."
"Can you, beyond a shadow of a doubt, state that it was not paid by
"Well..."
"Beyond a shadow of a doubt, Mrs. Gaultier," Slocum reiterated, skewering her with his dark eyes.
"It was paid in cash."
"In person?"
"No, it was mailed in."
"Thank you, you may step down."
"But it was sent in an envelope from—"
"You may step down, Mrs. Gaultier!"
"—the electric company, as if whoever sent it—"
Clakk! Clakk!
Murdoch rapped his gavel. "That will be all, Mrs. Gaultier!" Things were going even better than Collins had hoped for. He hurriedly called his next witness while the tide was rolling in the right direction.
"Defense recalls Leslie McCooms."
The medical examiner was reminded that she was still under oath and Collins made his point without histrionics.
"When you examined the body of
"Yes."
Tell me, Miss McCooms, how many fingerprints were found on
"Nine."
"And which fingerprint was missing?"
"The one from the index finger of the right hand."
"Thank you—your witness."
Will felt hope swell his chest, climb his arms and infuse his head. With one hand balled around the other, he pressed his thumb knuckles to his lips and warned himself, it's not through yet. But he couldn't resist turning to glimpse Elly over his shoulder. Her face was pink with excitement. She made a fist and thumped it against her heart, causing his own to bang with intensified hope.
Slocum took his turn, overtly agitated.
"Is it true, Miss McCooms, that it's possible for a victim to be strangled by someone with ten good fingers, leaving less than ten fingerprints?"
"Yes, it is."
"Thank you. You're excused."
Will's brief hope extinguished but he had little time to grow despondent. The surprising Collins kept a brisk pace, recognizing the value of concentrated shock.
"Defense calls Harley Overmire."
Overmire, looking like a scared, hairy ape, puffed up the center aisle, stuffed into a light blue suit with sleeves six inches too long for his stubby arms, sleeves that nearly concealed his hands.
The bailiff held out his Bible and ordered, "Raise your right hand, please."
Harley's face was pale as a full moon. Beads of sweat stood out on his upper lip and two discs of dampness darkened the armpits of his suit.
"Raise your right hand, please," the bailiff repeated.
Harley had no choice but to do as ordered. Haltingly he lifted his arm, and as he did so his sleeve slipped down. Every eye in the room fixed upon that meaty hand, silhouetted against the white plastered wall of the courtroom, with its index finger missing.
"Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?"
Harley's voice sounded like the squeak of a mouse when the trap trips.
"I do."
The bailiff droned his questions while' Collins scanned the eyes of the jurors, finding every one fixed upon Overmire's trembling, four-fingered hand.
"State your name and occupation, please."
"Harley Overmire, superintendent at the Whitney Sawmill."
"You may be seated."
Collins pretended to read over his notes for a full thirty seconds while Harley quickly sat and hid his right hand at his side. The air felt electric, charged with opinion. Collins let the voltage build while glancing pointedly over the tops of his half-glasses at Harley's hidden hand, the infamous hand that had already gained him a countywide reputation as a military shirker. Collins removed his glasses, stretched to his feet as if his rheumatism was acting up and approached the witness stand. Putting a finger to his chin, he paused thoughtfully, then turned back toward his table as if he'd forgotten something. Halfway there, he did an about-face and stood silently studying Overmire. The courtroom was so silent a spider could have been heard spinning its web. Collins scanned every face in the jury before resting his gaze on its chairman. In a voice rich with innuendo, he said, "No questions."