ALSO BY ROBERT DUGONI
Damage Control
The Tracy Crosswhite Series
My Sister’s Grave
Her Final Breath
In the Clearing
The Academy (a short story)
Third Watch (a short story)
The David Sloane Series
The Jury Master
Wrongful Death
Bodily Harm
Murder One
The Conviction
Nonfiction with Joseph Hilldorfer
The Cyanide Canary
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Text copyright © 2016 by Robert Dugoni
All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.
Published by Thomas & Mercer, Seattle
www.apub.com
Amazon, the Amazon logo, and Thomas & Mercer are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.
ISBN-13: 9781503939424
ISBN-10: 1503939421
Cover design by Rex Bonomelli
To Sam Goldman. People always said you were a character, and I’d hoped to make you one before you passed, but I know you’re up there in Heaven still calling everyone hero, chief, and friend. You were one of a kind—a teacher, a mentor, a friend. I’ll miss you.
And no dedication to you, Sam, would be complete without mentioning your bride, Adele. She was always there with you for all those many adventures of the Wildest Journalism Teacher in the West!
Keep smiling, hero.
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
EPILOGUE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chapter 1
December 21, 1987
Peter Donley had run out of time. Behind the elevated bench at the front of the courtroom, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Franklin Jefferson Barnes peered at Donley over the top of his reading glasses.
“If counsel is prepared to submit this matter, I am prepared to issue my ruling,” Barnes said, adjusting his considerable girth hidden beneath the pleated black robe.
Opposing counsel Rebecca Rattigan shot from her chair, its legs screeching on the worn tiles, though the sound was still not nearly as grating as her voice. “Submitted, Your Honor.”
And why wouldn’t she? Possession being nine-tenths of the law, and her client being the possessor, Rattigan figured she’d won, and rightfully so.
Judge Barnes shifted his gaze to Donley. “Mr. Donley, is the plaintiff prepared to submit?”
Donley looked down at his seventy-eight-year-old client. Victor Russo sat slumped beside him at counsel table, as forlorn as a man who had just lost his best friend. In some respects, Russo had. Since the death of his wife, Russo had shared an apartment above Victor’s, Russo’s North Beach restaurant, with Albert, an African gray parrot. That is, until Russo’s cleaning lady opened Albert’s cage without closing the apartment window. Russo spent two weeks calling animal shelters and pet shops. A store on Divisadero said they’d sold an African gray that matched Albert’s description, but when Russo offered the twenty-four-year-old, tattooed, punk-rock drummer twice what he’d paid the pet store, the man had refused. Russo called Donley’s Uncle Lou for help.
Donley gently scooted back his chair and slowly stood, prepared to submit the matter, but when he opened his mouth to speak, he just couldn’t bring himself to do so. Instead, he heard one of his Uncle Lou’s favorite adages.
You only go around once in life, kid. You might as well have some fun.
At twenty-eight, just three years out of law school, Donley already felt like he’d gone around in life more than once. He looked at his client. The tears that had pooled in Russo’s eyes throughout the afternoon began to slide down the man’s cheeks.
“Mr. Donley?” Judge Barnes asked, now sounding impatient.
What the hell, Donley thought. He straightened and faced Barnes. “Your Honor, the plaintiff wishes to call one more witness.”
Rattigan’s smug expression turned to exasperation. Throughout the trial, her inexperience had been on display like a bad actress overacting her scenes. “Your Honor, the defense objects. Mr. Donley has called every witness disclosed on his witness list.”
Donley tried to sound conciliatory. “I apologize to Ms. Rattigan and to the court, but this witness’s possible testimony just recently came to my attention, and it is germane to the issue of ownership.”
Rattigan shook the witness list Donley had submitted to the court. “If this surprise witness is not on the list, he cannot testify. Code of Civil Procedure, Section—”
Judge Barnes held up a hand as thick as a catcher’s mitt. “Ms. Rattigan, why don’t you concentrate on making the objections and allow me to worry about ruling on them,” he said, a hint of his Louisiana dialect slipping into his baritone voice.
“I apologize,” Rattigan replied, “but this is highly prejudicial—”
Barnes again raised his hand, this time with the index finger extended. “Unless you’re going to tell me that your client has transformed himself into Rosa Parks and been asked to sit in the back of an Alabama bus, I don’t think it’s possible for him to have suffered any further prejudice than you’ve already opined during this three-hour trial.”
Rattigan’s face flushed, but for once she had the good sense to remain silent.
“Now,” Barnes said, slowly turning his attention to Donley, “who is this surprise witness, Mr. Donley?”
Donley steeled himself. “The plaintiff wishes to call Albert to the stand.”
The reading glasses that had been perched on the bridge of Judge Barnes’s nose fell, dangling by a chain. “Say what?” Barnes asked.
“I know this request is unusual—”
“Unusual?” Barnes drew out the word like a worked-up Southern Baptist preacher. “Unusual? Mr. Donley, you just asked me to call a bird to the witness stand.”
“Actually, Judge, Alfred is an African gray parrot.”
“I know what he is, Mr. Donley. And if I recall from my simple southern education, I do believe a parrot is a bird.”
“What I mean,” Donley continued, “is that, well, being a parrot, Albert is . . . for lack of a better word, he is able to ‘parrot’ back certain phrases he’s been taught or has learned on his own.”
Though Barnes’s brow remained furrowed, his expression of disgust softened, and his eyebrows rose. Was it curiosity? At least he hadn’t rejected the idea outright, or directed the bailiff to put Donley in handcuffs for contempt. “And you intend to put him . . . it . . . you intend to put the bird on my witness stand and have it mimic a phrase it has been taught?”
“Every day when Mr. Russo left his apartment, he turned on the television to keep Albert company.” Russo nodded like a bobblehead doll. “And it seems that Albert picked up an ability to mimi
c something he heard.”
Rattigan furiously flipped the pages of her Code of Civil Procedure book. “Your Honor, we object. This is a bird. Only people can testify.”
“You found that in the code, did you?” Barnes asked.
Rattigan lifted her head. “Well . . . no. But I mean, it has to be in here . . . somewhere. I mean, this . . . this is a bird!”
“Actually there is precedent for introducing animals as evidence.” Donley snapped open his black binder and pulled out a short brief he’d typed up late the previous evening but had hoped to never use. He handed one copy to Rattigan and a second to Judge Barnes’s clerk, who provided it to the judge. “The court will take particular note of the Connecticut case Adams v. Martin, in which Barney, the dancing terrier, was allowed to demonstrate a unique ability to juggle red rubber balls.”
“Your Honor, that is not the same thing,” Rattigan whined. “We’re talking about letting a bird testify, not demonstrate a trick.”
Donley lowered the brief. “I mean no disrespect to this court, but the most important thing here, the equitable thing, is to determine Albert’s rightful owner. Allowing Albert to take the witness stand will conclusively prove either he is, or is not, the same bird that has lived with Victor Russo for more than five years.”
Barnes sighed. “What exactly is the phrase you contend this bird will mimic, Mr. Donley?”
“It’s not exactly a phrase, Judge.”
“Then, what is it?”
“It’s . . . well, it’s a show tune.”
Barnes leaned forward, now considering Donley out of one squinted eye. “A show tune?”
“Apparently, Albert is particularly fond of The Andy Griffith Show, and—”
“Andy Griffith?”
“Yes, Your Honor. You know . . . Mayberry RFD. Andy and Barney, Opie, Aunt Bea—”
“I know the show, Mr. Donley; I raised three kids of my own and have seven grandchildren.”
“Right. Well, apparently Albert picked up the ability to whistle the show’s opening tune.” And with that, Donley put aside what little dignity he retained and whistled the tune to The Andy Griffith Show.
Barnes sat back, lips pursed, running a hand over his bald head for what seemed an eternity but was just a few seconds. Then, without uttering a word, he looked to his bailiff and swept his hand toward the large birdcage on the table between the two counsel tables. When she hesitated, Barnes repeated the gesture and widened his eyes to encourage her. The bailiff lifted the cage by the ring and placed Albert on the witness chair.
Now it was the clerk’s turn to look perplexed. “Should I . . . swear in the witness?”
Barnes closed his eyes and gently shook his head. Opening his eyes, he gestured for Donley to proceed.
“Your Honor, if it is acceptable to the court, Mr. Russo would like to handle this witness himself.”
Barnes clasped his hands. “Of course he would. Why not?”
Donley whispered in Russo’s ear. “OK, Victor. He’s all yours.”
Russo pushed back his chair and walked to the open space between the judge’s bench and the witness stand. He bowed with great deference to Barnes and turned to the cage.
“Albert? Over here, Albert. That’s a good boy. Albert, do you want to watch Andy Griffith? Andy Griffith?”
The bird began to prance along the bar and bob its head.
“Andy Griffin, Albert. You know.” Russo whistled.
“Objection!” Rattigan shouted so loud, Russo flinched as if she’d snuck up and goosed him.
Barnes looked dumbfounded. “Excuse me, Ms. Rattigan?”
“He’s leading the witness, Your Honor.”
Barnes bit his lower lip and closed his eyes. “Overruled.”
“But, Your Honor—”
The catcher’s mitt hand reached out again. “Sit . . . down, Ms. Rattigan.”
“But—”
Barnes moved his hand as if placing it on Rattigan’s head and forcibly lowering her into her chair. “Sit . . . down.” He looked to Russo. “Continue, Mr. Russo.”
“I think he’s distracted, Your Honor,” Russo said.
“Just do your best, Mr. Russo,” Barnes said.
Russo bowed again and resumed. “Andy Griffith, Albert. Andy Griffith.” His voice became desperate. He whistled, but Albert remained silent.
Russo coaxed the bird a third time, also without success. Tears had again pooled in his eyes, and he dropped his head in resignation.
Barnes sat forward, speaking gently. “Thank you, Mr. Russo. I think that will be all.”
Donley stepped out from counsel table and touched Victor Russo’s elbow, leading him back to his seat.
“Madame Bailiff, you may take Albert from the witness stand,” Barnes said.
As the bailiff carried Albert back to the table, Barnes said, “I assume you are prepared to submit this matter, Mr. Donley?”
Resigned, Donley nodded. “Yes.”
“Very well, then. Mr. Russo, I’m deeply sorry, but the burden in this case was upon you, as the plaintiff, to convince me the parrot belonged to you, and I’m afraid I can’t conclude that is the case. Therefore, it is the decision of this court—”
“Andy Griffith. Andy Griffith.”
The court reporter, taking down every word spoken in the courtroom, lifted his head, uncertain who had interrupted the judge. Everyone else, however, had turned to the table behind Donley, where Albert, head bobbing, pranced along the bar.
“Andy Griffith,” he squawked.
“I’ll be damned,” Barnes said.
And with that, Albert began to whistle.
At nearly six in the evening, Donley had expected Ruth-Bell to have left the office and gone home, but when he stepped into the cramped reception area, she remained at her desk, the telephone pressed to her ear. Lou’s voice spilled from his office, a one-sided conversation indicating he, too, was on the telephone.
Ruth-Bell handed Donley a stack of pink message slips without any further acknowledgment, and he stepped past the file cabinets and small table with the stained coffeepot into his office.
He draped his jacket over the back of a chair and set his briefcase beside his desk. Outside, he heard two of San Francisco’s homeless arguing. The Law Offices of Lou Giantelli were located on the first floor of a historic building in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District. The building’s proximity to the courthouse had prompted Lou to buy it three decades earlier, when the neighborhood had been a relatively safe area. The intervening years had not been kind to the Tenderloin. What remained were run-down apartment houses and commercial buildings, and corner liquor stores and peep shows that attracted drug dealers and addicts, prostitutes and their pimps and johns, and the homeless and mentally unstable. Sometimes getting to work meant stepping across bodies—not all still alive.
Donley’s desk phone rang, and he was surprised to see from the console that it was Ruth-Bell. Usually, she just shouted from reception that Donley or Lou had a call.
“You have a call,” Ruth-Bell said.
When Ruth-Bell didn’t elaborate, Donley said, “Did they give you a name?”
“Someone named Polly.”
“Polly? Polly who?” he said, and immediately regretted it.
“Polly want a cracker,” Ruth-Bell cackled, and with that Lou, who had obviously been waiting just outside the door, stepped into Donley’s office flapping his elbows and squawking. “Andy Griffith. Andy Griffith.”
Ruth-Bell hurried in behind him. “I heard you almost got yourself in trouble because your star witness was a little fowl mouthed,” she said.
“Very funny,” Donley said, letting them have their moment. “You two should go on the road together.” He checked his watch. “How about now?”
Lou paused, laughing so hard he was having trouble catching his breath. When he did, he said, “I would have given anything to have seen it.”
“Can’t believe it worked,” Donley said. “And it cost me only my dignity
and my career.”
Lou’s voice rose. “Are you kidding? You’re the talk of the courthouse. My phone has been ringing off the hook. Three judges called to ask if it was true; apparently, they’re having their Christmas party, and Barnes is telling everyone and anyone who will listen.”
“And that’s a good thing?” Donley asked.
“The papers seem to think so.” Ruth-Bell handed him a pink message slip. “Bill Main called from the Chronicle.”
“And I just got off the phone with Victor,” Lou said. “Three television trucks are parked outside his restaurant. He and Albert are going to be on the six o’clock news. It’s the best publicity his restaurant has had in twenty years.” Lou turned for the door. “Come on. Let’s watch it on the television in my office.”
“I’d rather not,” Donley said. “I had to live it.”
Ruth-Bell started for the door. “And much as I’d like to, I’m already late, and if I don’t get home and make husband number three something to eat, I’ll be looking for husband number four. That man can’t boil water.”
After Ruth-Bell had left, Lou leaned on the edge of the round table in the corner of Donley’s office, nearly toppling the stack of case files.
“Come on, give me the details.”
Donley explained how he knew he had not proved the bird belonged to Russo and how he’d come up with the idea the night before and performed research to support the argument. “I just couldn’t bear the thought of Victor watching that guy carry Albert out of that courtroom. To be honest, I was surprised Barnes let me do it.”
“Please,” Lou said. “Franklin Jefferson Barnes lives for stuff like this. He’s got an ego as big as his gut, and you made him the star attraction at the party. Trust me, no matter what he looked or sounded like in court, the only thing Barnes likes better than telling a good story is when he’s in it. And he’ll be telling this one long into his retirement. He won’t forget it. Neither will you.”
Lou straightened and started for the door, but he paused at the threshold and turned back. His shirtsleeves were rolled up, revealing meaty forearms. Though nearing seventy, Lou had maintained much of the stocky build that made him an All-City high school football player back in the day when running backs were still called wing backs. The notable exception was an expanded waistline from a healthy love of Italian food. “I know this hasn’t been exactly the practice you had in mind—”
The 7th Canon Page 1