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to make his case look good in the hope of getting me to give Jackson a

plea.  Or maybe he hoped Prescott was inexperienced enough to make the

call herself.

"Call your first witness, Mr.  Szlipkowsky."

"There's one complication, your honor.  One of my witnesses is moving

to quash the subpoena I served on him yesterday.  If I may make a

suggestion, perhaps I could call just one witness now, and we could

take up the motion to quash after a lunch recess."

"That would be fine.  Please proceed."  That simple plan would have

taken Prescott fifteen minutes to conjure on her own.

"The defense calls Nelly Giacoma."

Unlike Ray, Nelly hadn't toned down the fashion statements for the

courtroom.  I watched Judge Prescott eye her from head to toe, pausing

extra long for the ankle tattoo.  I couldn't wait until Prescott

learned that this funky chick with a nose ring and hot-pink pixie cut

was a law school graduate.  And I couldn't wait to hear what Nelly

could possibly offer to the case.

Slip's initial questions established Nelly's working relationship with

Clarissa and her job responsibilities.  Bo-ring.

Then he pulled out a document, a move that never fails to get my

attention.

"Do you recognize this document, Ms.  Giacoma?"

"Yes.  It's a letter to Judge Easterbrook that I received at the office

on Wednesday."

Slip gave me a copy and had the original marked as evidence.  I

recognized the scrawl from the other letters he'd written.  This one

was comparatively brief:

Dear Judge,

What does it take to get your at tension  I am making good money and

have proof to show you.  I will do ALL I can do to save my family.

PLEASE understand that.

"The letter is signed Melvin Jackson, is that correct?"  Slip asked.

"Yes."

"And it relates to a pending case about his eviction from public

housing."

"It's a threat relating to his pending case, yes."

Nelly was growing on me.  I have an affinity for women who talk back.

The letter was indeed a threat, very much like the ones Jackson had

been sending for weeks.

"And is this the envelope that the letter arrived in?"  Slip asked.

I restrained myself from objecting to the dangling preposition and

waited while Slip marked the envelope as evidence.

"Yes."

"Could you please identify the date on the envelope's postmark?"

Nelly did.  The date was the previous Monday, the morning after

Clarissa died.

The panic was momentary.  After a few seconds, Slip's cheap trick was

apparent.  I used my cross to make sure the judge saw it too.

"Hi, Nelly.  Samantha Kincaid.  We met earlier this week."

"I remember."

"You've used the mail before, right?"

"Of course."

"And in your experience, are post offices open on Saturday nights and

Sundays?"

"No, they're not."

"So a letter mailed on Saturday evening would be postmarked "

"On Monday."

A lunch hour from a court hearing isn't much of a break.  In an office

where we're each entirely on our own, each precious minute of recess

must be spent on the research and follow-up that supporting attorneys

would do in a large law firm.  Every time I go to trial, I lose a few

pounds from the combination of adrenaline and starvation.

I stopped at the mini-mart on my way into the courthouse and grabbed a

Diet Coke, yogurt, and banana.  I wolfed down the food in the elevator

and sneaked the Diet Coke into the law library.  I spent half an hour

in the stacks, confirming the research I had done on Caffrey's motion

to quash.  This would be a fight between Caffrey and Slip.  If Prescott

asked for my opinion, I'd cite the cases I found, making it clear that

it was entirely in her discretion.

Before I left again for the Justice Center, I ran up to my office to

check messages.

The first was from Susan Kerr.  "Hi, Samantha.  Susan Kern I'm sorry to

bother you again.  I know you're busy, but I didn't know who else to

talk to.  Can you call me if you have a chance?  Thanks."  I hit the

nine button to save the message, then went to the next one.  It was

from Jenna Markson, the child-support paralegal I had called last

night.

"Hi, Samantha.  It's Jenna.  I had a chance to run that property you

asked about when I was doing some other record searches.  The owner's a

corporation called Gunderson Development, Incorporated.  I checked with

the corporate registry division of the Secretary of State, and the

registered officer is a guy named Larry Gunderson."

I scribbled his name and the name of his company on a Post-it note

while I listened to the rest of Jenna's message.

"I went ahead and ran his financials.  It looks like he was a bit of a

wheeler-dealer until he went Chapter Eleven about ten years ago.  My

guess is that Gunderson Development is little more than Mr.  Gunderson

himself.  Let me know if you need anything else.  Oh, and Samantha,

don't tell anyone else I ran the financials.  We only have access to

that database for child-support investigations."

Now I understood why the attorneys all rave about Jenna.  She'd

probably been running defendants for everyone in the office, telling

each of them it was an exception.

I looked at my watch.  I only had three minutes to get my butt out of

the courthouse, across the street, and into the Justice Center, but

Grace's comments about the Glenville property last night were still

bothering me.

I hit six to respond to Jenna's message.  At the beep, I said, "Hey,

Jenna.  Samantha Kincaid in Major Crimes.  Thanks for the information

on Gunderson.  Could you do me one more favor?  Can you see who owns

the adjacent parcels?  Sorry for the extra work, but I forgot to bring

it up earlier."

I hit the pound key twice to send the message, hung up, and grabbed

what I needed for court, making a vow to myself as I ran out the door.

If Gunderson didn't own the rural property beyond the urban growth

boundary, I'd let it drop.

Ten.

Word must have spread about T. J. Caffrey, because the TV crews were

back.  Asked to comment on the anticipated motion to quash, I said I

was not going to address matters that had not yet been brought to

court.  It sounded more civilized than, "You mean that coward s motion

to squirm out of testifying?  No comment."

Back in the courtroom, I noticed that Roger had returned without his

client.  Under the circumstances, I couldn't blame Townsend for wanting