by Robin James
Hand of Justice
A Mara Brent Legal Thriller
Robin James
All Rights Reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the author or publisher, except where permitted by law or for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Up Next for Mara Brent…
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About the Author
Also by Robin James
1
If a tornado hit the Blue Pony at 5:27 p.m. that particular Friday night, the Waynetown justice system would cease to exist. It wasn’t my scene. Not really. I was more of a wine-in-the-bubble-bath kind of drinker. But my boss, Kenya, had made my attendance at the Pony after work mandatory. “Just try to act surprised,” she said. “Oh, and if you try to worm your way out of it, I’ll make you cover traffic court for the whole summer.”
I laughed until I saw her steely-eyed stare. Kenya Spaulding, Chief Prosecutor of Maumee County, told jokes, but she didn’t kid around.
As I walked in, the bar itself was almost empty. A game room with pool tables, vintage eighties arcade games, and pinball machines came in from the right. I bypassed it, heading for the tables. The muscle-bound bartender with the slicked-back hair lifted his chin when he saw me.
“Another lawyer?” he said cheerfully, taking in my crisp dark suit and three-inch Sergio Rossi pumps. “Your group’s in the back.”
Smiling, I walked around the bar and headed down the dark hallway into the restaurant. They’d taken up four long tables. In the corner sat Kenya, Howard Jordan (who everyone called Hojo unless they were from out of town), Caro, our office manager, and the entire appellate court team.
The judiciary took up the second table. Judges Saul and Ivey from Common Pleas, along with Judge DeCamp from Muni court. Their spouses. A few of my favorite defense attorneys had a table well in the back, away from the final grouping in the other corner. Detectives Gus Ritter, Sam Cruz, the sex squad, and a few from upper command rounded out the law enforcement group. As I stepped into the dim light of the room, a cheer went up and everyone raised their glasses.
I felt a hot blush creep up my cheeks. Sweat formed beneath my collar. Then Kenya was there.
“First round’s on me,” she said, handing me a shot glass.
Tequila. I could smell it. The crowd waited. There was no getting out of it.
“Bottoms up!” Hojo called from the end of the table. He had his own shot glass poised for my signal.
“I gotta get home somehow,” I said under my breath.
Kenya laughed and pushed the glass closer. I did the shot. She handed me a lemon wedge. I got a round of applause.
“Congratulations,” Kenya said, putting her arm around me. She led me to the prosecutors’ table. It was then I noticed the banner taped to the wall. Well, not so much a banner as 8 1/2 x 11 copy paper printed with red lettering.
“Congrats, Mara!”
The tequila warmed my belly and loosened my nerves.
“It’s okay,” Kenya whispered as Hojo held a chair out for me. “Today you get to be happy about it.”
She was right. The cause for this little celebration was still folded up in the bottom of my briefcase, the ink barely dry on it. Its timestamp read May 18th, 4:51 p.m. Judgement of the Court. Dissolution of Marriage. Judge Saul had actually been the one to sign it. She must have lit out for the Blue Pony right before me.
I was divorced. Single again. Free. Out of habit, my thumb went to the base of the ring finger on my left hand. I hadn’t worn my wedding ring in nearly a year. It sat in a teacup along with my engagement ring on my kitchen ledge next to a succulent my son brought home from school. He’d made the pot in ceramics class.
“I am happy,” I admitted. “It’s just …”
“Weird,” Kenya answered for me. “I know. I remember.” Kenya had what she called a starter marriage years before we met.
“Gets easier,” Hojo chimed in. He would know. He’d been married and divorced three times. Kenya just the once, though I’d only recently learned that. The little charge I’d gotten out of the tequila faded a bit. The three of us made up the litigation team for the prosecutors’ office. Not one of us could keep our marriage intact. Though, in my case, I wouldn’t take all the blame for it. I could have forgiven a lot of things. Jason’s cheating wasn’t one of them.
“What’ll you have?” A waitress appeared. She set a beer down in front of Hojo and a rocks glass in front of Kenya.
“Uh ... I’ll do a margarita,” I said. “And did anyone order any food?”
“Pizzas are coming,” the waitress answered. I thanked her. Settling into my seat, this whole thing felt like a reverse wedding shower. And it kind of was. But Kenya was right. Dang it, if she wasn’t always.
It would take time to adjust to my new status. Time to figure out exactly how I’d navigate life as a single mom of a ten-year-old boy with special needs. But today felt good to celebrate.
It got a little crazy after that. I made my way from table to table, thanking everyone for coming. Lord, it felt like a reverse wedding reception. I made it to the “cop table” last. By then, only Gus and Sam remained. The others had bellied up to the bar to catch a basketball game. The Cavs were playing.
“You good?” Gus asked. He too knew his way around divorce court.
“How many for you?” I asked.
Gus held two fingers up. “The first former Mrs. Ritter barely counts, though. That was before I entered the police academy.”
“Lucky for you,” Sam chimed in. “She’d be throwing pension check parties with the second former Mrs. Detective Ritter.”
Gus smiled even wider. “Bought her out. Gave her the house. Had that sucker paid off. Plus, I caught her cheating on me with the neighbor. Got lucky I drew old Judge Mattis. Turns out the first former Mrs. Judge Mattis pulled a similar number on him.”
This got a laugh at first from Sam. Then the two of them went silent.
“Uh, sorry, Mara,” Sam offered. “Not trying to make light of …”
“No,” I said, putting a hand up. “It’s okay. Really. Might
as well laugh about all of this sometimes. It’s better than the alternative.”
“How’s Will holding up?” Sam asked. “You know what? Forget I asked. This is a party. And it’s none of my business.”
I reached across the table and touched his arm. “We’re friends,” I said. “And I know you’re not asking me for gossip’s sake, Sam. The answer is, good ... ish.”
“Ready for another margarita?” The waitress practically sang it.
I put a hand over the top of my glass. “I’m good.” It was then I noticed Sam wasn’t drinking at all. He had a glass of ice water in front of him. Gus finished his third beer and waved the girl off from any more.
“He taking you home?” I asked Gus. This garnered a sheepish grin from him and outright laughter from Sam.
“She is,” Sam explained. I turned my head to follow his gaze.
“Well, I’ll be,” I said, whistling. Paula Dudley, the bar’s owner, weaved her way through the tables, checking on every patron. She was a pretty woman with striking white hair and black, circular-framed glasses. She’d gotten the bar after her divorce from the first former Mr. Dudley whose family opened it in 1962.
“Well done, Gus,” I said.
Sam poked him in the arm, still laughing.
“Just make sure you take your heart medication.”
“Zip it,” Gus said, his voice like sandpaper over gravel. “Both of ya.”
At that point, Paula Dudley caught Gus’s eye. She was blushing all right. So was Gus. He cleared his throat and scooted out of his chair, leaving Sam and me alone.
“Oh my,” I said. “I didn’t know Gus had it in him.”
“I don’t think Paula did either,” Sam said.
“I mean ... he’s smiling!” I said. “And uh, is that what it sounds like when Gus Ritter laughs?”
Paula sidled up to Gus and threaded her arm through his. She planted a kiss on his cheek and I swear his eyes actually twinkled.
“How long’s that been going on?” I asked.
“About a month,” Sam answered. “She’s got a cousin who works in the property room. I don’t know how she did it, but she fixed them up.”
“Well, good,” I said. “Gus deserves some fun in his life.”
Sam’s eyes went a little dark telegraphing his thoughts. I knew what he wanted to say. I deserved some fun too.
“Thanks for being here,” I said. “I had no idea Kenya was putting this all together.”
A strange expression came into his eyes.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “This was your idea?”
Sam cleared his throat. “Not just me. Gus said something to Paula and …” The rest of his sentence trailed off. There was a dart game going on, and it looked like Kenya had just wiped the floor with Judge Ivey. There was an equal amount of cheers as grumbles as those who’d bet on the game squared up.
“Well thank Gus and Paula for me,” I said. “And you. A night out was a great idea.”
Sam reached for the pitcher of water. He was about to fill his glass when his cell phone went off. It lit up and vibrated on the table in front of him.
His expression fell when he saw the caller ID. I didn’t even ask him about it before I saw Kenya’s smile fade to a frown as she pulled out her own ringing phone.
Sam stuck one finger in one ear and held his phone to the other. His eyes caught Kenya’s as she listened to whatever bad news her caller delivered.
“How many?” Sam asked. “Are you sure? That can’t ... Holy ... Yeah. Okay. You better get B.C.I. down. I’m at the Pony. I can be there in fifteen.”
Kenya had hung up with her caller. The partygoers yelled after her as she waved off a rematch.
Sam hung up. He pressed his hand to his forehead. Then he slammed his fist to the table.
“Sam?” Kenya asked.
“It’s mine,” he answered her. “I’m heading out to the farm now. Can you try to keep this from spreading through the bar, at least for tonight?”
“Of course,” she said.
Sam rose to his feet. Gus had his back to him. Sam gave me a pained look, then hustled toward the front door.
Kenya put a hand on my arm. “We need to go,” she said. “You sober?”
“Sober enough,” I said. “What’s going on?”
Kenya pulled us down a dark hallway by the service entrance. We waited as a server hustled past us.
“Multiple homicide,” she said. “Out in farm country. Redmond Road. The Sutter family. Sam’s going to need us out there. We should go.”
The Sutters. They were a big family. Waynetown business owners. It seemed like almost everyone in town could claim some relation to them if you went far back enough.
“How many?” I asked.
Kenya slowly closed her eyes as she found her breath.
“Kenya. How many?” I whispered.
She opened her eyes. “All of them, Mara. All of them.”
2
Farm country. This stretch of Redmond Road stretched for miles with nothing but cornfields on either side. The newest structure out here was the new barn Matt Denton built in 1988.
Kenya drove. Her GPS would have taken us straight through a pond past the railroad tracks if we hadn’t been able to see B.C.I.’s massive temporary floodlights twinkling in the distance.
“Did you know them?” I asked her.
Kenya gripped the wheel. “I mean, sure. There have been Sutters in Waynetown before there was Waynetown in Waynetown. One of the cousins was in my graduating class. I think he was one of C.J.’s boys?”
She turned toward the lights. The first driveway led us to a two-story brick house with white shutters and well-trimmed hedges. Kenya cut her engine just as Sam walked up to us. He turned back and shouted instructions to a pair of uniformed cops standing on the other side of the driveway.
“They’re still here?” Kenya asked, her face dropping. I tracked her gaze. The coroner’s van was parked in the adjoining driveway. I realized with icy dread who she meant. The bodies. The victims were all still inside. Of course they were. It had been less than two hours since Sam took over the scene.
“What have you got so far?” I asked Sam.
“Seven victims,” he said. “This is Chris and Jenny Sutter’s house. Four of them are here.”
“Four of them,” Kenya repeated. Cameras flashed through the windows as B.C.I. did their meticulous work, photographing every room. Every drop of blood.
“Jenny Sutter, age fifty-six, was found in the kitchen. Shot once in the face. We found Chris, her husband, age sixty-one, in the mudroom off the garage. Garage door was open. My guess is he was coming in after hearing the shot fired into Jenny. He got it in the chest. His daughter, Skylar, is right behind him. She was twenty-two.”
Sam held a small tablet. He turned the screen so Kenya and I could see. Jenny Sutter had no face. Just long brown hair soaked in blood. She landed against the refrigerator, her arms and legs sprawled in an X. Chris Sutter had fallen forward, but a massive exit wound blew through the back of his yellow tee-shirt. Beside him, young Skylar Sutter lay slumped against the wall, her eyes still open. The shot took her in the forehead.
I hugged my arms around me.
“Fourth victim from this household is half in and half out the sliding glass door off the kitchen. If I had to guess, he walked in on what happened to Jenny too. It happened fast.”
I nodded. “The killer was in the kitchen too?” I asked.
“Kitchen’s in the back of the house,” he said. “There’s a living room in front. He was probably standing in the living room. Mudroom comes off the left.”
“Who’s this fourth victim?” I asked, looking at the body of a young man lying on his stomach, shot through the back. He had red hair, cropped short.
“Ben Watson, age twenty-three,” Sam said. “Not a member of the family. A friend. Not sure of the relationship yet, but our witness says he was staying here. He was a friend of Skylar’s.”
“Who’s your w
itness?” Kenya asked.
“Darcy Lydell,” Sam answered; his expression turned pained. “Chris and Jenny have another adult kid. Luke. He doesn’t live here, but Chris and Jenny watch his son, Charlie. Charlie’s just over a year old. We found him in a back bedroom.”
“Oh God.” Kenya said it for us.
“Alive,” Sam quickly said. “Though mad as hell and wearing a heavily soiled diaper. He was still in his playpen. Darcy is his maternal grandma. Luke and his wife Rachel are both nurses. They were working doubles, and Darcy came at five to pick Charlie up and relieve the Sutters. She could hear the baby crying and nobody came to the door when she knocked. So she came around the back and saw Ben’s body lying in the slider.”
“My God,” I said. Later, I knew I would have to listen to what would have to be Darcy Lydell’s horrified 911 call.
“What about the other victims?” Kenya asked.
“Kevin Sutter lives in the ranch house over there,” Sam answered. He pointed east of us. It was a small house with white vinyl siding and an American flag still up the flagpole in the front yard.
“Kevin Sutter, thirty-two,” Sam said. “Chris’s cousin. He lives alone. Found him in his kitchen as well. Shot in the chest.”
Sam swiped to another photo. Kevin Sutter looked more like a wax figure. Shock frozen on his face as he lay sprawled in the center of a small kitchen, a chair lying on its side next to him. What looked like his entire blood volume had spread beneath him, making grisly lines in the grout of his white tile floor.