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"You guys find anything?"  I asked, groping for the lamp.

"You could say that.  This thing's ready to go."

I asked him to walk me through it from the start.

"Lesh agreed to sign the warrant as a no-knock," he explained, meaning

they could enter the house without knocking first.  "So we call out the

emergency response team just in case the entry goes bad.  Never know

with the kids and all.

"We kicked the door.  Jackson's asleep on the couch.  His three kids

are sacked out in the bedrooms.  We took them out into the hallway to

secure the apartment and get the scene under control."

"Handcuffs?"  I asked.

"Just for Jackson.  He was one unhappy camper about us waking the kids,

and we didn't want him going mental on us."  Under the circumstances, a

court would go with that.

"Then what?"

"Once we secured the apartment, our first priority was placing the

kids.  We had SCF on-site with a foster placement ready, but Jackson

wigged when he saw them coming.  He was a complete wreck, pretty much

offered to confess if we'd call his mom."

"He admitted it?"

"Hold on.  I wrote it down verbatim."  I heard him flip some pages.

"Here it is.  "You're here for me.  This don't involve my kids.  I'll

show you what you came for; now just let them stay with their nana.

These kids been through enough.""

"Holy shit."

"It gets better.  SCF calls the mom did it right there in front of

Jackson so he'd know we weren't jamming him.  We tell him she's on the

way and even let the kids lay down in the apartment next door while

they're waiting.  So then Raymond goes, "All right, Melvin.  We're all

stand-up here.  Now what were you saying about showing us what we came

for?"  Melvin says, "It's in the van.  Keys are on the table."

"We leave backup watching Melvin and the apartment while we head out to

the parking lot with the keys.  We slide open the door, step in, and

find six gallons of mocha cream paint."

"Anything else?"  I asked.

"Not in the van.  So we go back up to the apartment and say to Jackson,

"I guess you've been watching the news, Melvin."  He must've lost his

desperation by then, knowing that his mom's on the way for the kids. He

tries to play it cool and is all, "The news?  Man, I don't know what

you're talking about, the news."  And I said, "You must've known we

were looking for the paint, Melvin.  You just told us where to find

it."  And so then he admits that he knew we'd been looking for the

paint."

"Anything in the apartment?"

"Oh, yeah.  Melvin keeps a great big fat file on his eviction case,

including copies of all the letters he sent the vie.  We also found

some drafts of letters he must not have sent, and those were even

worse.  We bagged 'em up already, but I wrote down here that one of

them said, Maybe someone should show you what it's like to lose

everything, bitch.  Guess he decided that wasn't likely to get him

anywhere."

Neither would her death, but murder is rarely rational.

"Then Melvin's mom shows up.  And let me tell you, Mama Jackson is a

major piece of work.  Came damn close to waking up the entire floor.

Kept screaming at us to get her boy out of those handcuffs.  We were

trying to calm her down.  Then

Raymond walks out of the back of the apartment with a hammer looped

over his pen."

"What hammer?"

"I'm getting there.  I thought I was supposed to give you the facts in

the order they happened."

Cops love to fuck with lawyers, even when they're prosecutors, and, as

much as Walker loves me, I am still a prosecutor.

"Ray found a hammer stashed on the top shelf of the bedroom closet.

Looked like it had been wiped down, but you could still see a little

blood.  The crime lab's checking for sure.  We should have an answer by

morning."

"So what happened when Jackson saw that you found the hammer?"

"That's what was fucked up.  It wasn't so much what Jackson did; it was

what the mother did.  She went absolutely nuts.  Hands on the hips,

doing the sassy head thing: "I knew this wasn't no routine search. This

here's about that white judge.  I been trying to tell this fool the

police gonna be knockin' on his do', but, no, Melvin, you got yo'self

too busy to listen."  Then she starts homing in on Johnson, going off

about how he planted the weapon and how could he turn his back on his

own people, that kind of shit."

"Can't be the first time you guys had to deal with a pissed-off

mother."

"Sure, you get used to it, but she took our attention away from

Jackson.  No one got a chance to see his reaction when he realized

Johnson found the hammer.  There's something about that first look,

that expression on their face when they realize you've got 'em.  It's

too bad you can't get that look into evidence, right there for the

jury.  Because the minute you see it, you know.  You know it in your

gut, This is the guy.  And we missed it."

"Oh, come on, you know it's your guy anyway.  You got the weapon, the

paint, the letters.  You said yourself that Jackson practically

confessed."

"I didn't say he was getting off.  Shit, the guy's toast.  But it's the

look, Kincaid, and the mom kept us from seeing it.  You've got no clue

what I'm talking about, do you?"

I did, actually.  There's a thrill no, it's nothing short of a high

when you've got the defendant on the stand, you're building a rhythm

with him on cross, and then you ask the karate chop question, the one

you've been headed for from the very start.  But you sneak up to it

through the back roads, taking every possible detour, so no one knows

it's coming, least of all the defendant.  And when he realizes there's

no good way to answer it, he gets that look.  He flashes back to his

attorney warning him to stay off the stand.  Then to him telling the

attorney, "That bitch ain't got nothing on me."  And then he pictures

what you both know is coming, the jury reading that verdict.  It's a

look of panic and utter hatred.

An arrest without the look was like hitting it out of the park without

the crack of the bat.  Or a perfect drive off the tee without feeling

the ping of the ball against the sweet spot of your club.  For Walker,

this case clearance was purely utilitarian.

"Maybe it's not too late for you to get the look," I told him.  "Is

Jackson talking?"

"Doesn't look like it.  He's the type who would have, but once the mom

was done giving Johnson the black-pride trip, she started in on Melvin

about a lawyer."  Walker slipped back into his Mama Jackson routine.

'"Don't you be talkin' to that Uncle Tom and his cracker-ass police

buddies.  You get yo'self a public defender."  Before you know it,