by K'wan
Lawless
K’wan
www.urbanbooks.net
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
PROLOGUE
PART I - Opening Statements
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
PART II - Discovery
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
PART III - Cross-Examination
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
EPILOGUE
Urban Books, LLC
300 Farmingdale Road, NY-Route 109
Farmingdale, NY 11735
Lawless Copyright © 2019 K’wan
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be repro-duced in any form or by any means without prior consent of the Publisher, except brief quotes used in reviews.
ISBN: 978-1-6016-2124-5
eISBN 13: 978-1-60162-125-2
eISBN 10: 1-60162-125-6
This is a work of fiction. Any references or similarities to actual events, real people, living or dead, or to real locales are intended to give the novel a sense of reality. Any similarity in other names, characters, places, and incidents is entirely coincidental.
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PROLOGUE
“Fire Bug make the trap go boom!” the youngest of the Savage boys sang while dancing in the passenger seat of the Yukon he was in. He watched with childlike amusement as the truck sitting on the corner a block away went up in flames. On his lap was the remote detonator for the explosives he had planted under the hood of the truck the day before. Fire Bug had been itching to hit the switch, but they had had to wait for the proper time.
“That’s a mighty fine piece of work you done there, Bug,” Big Money Savage said from behind the wheel. They called him Big Money, but he never seemed to have much of it. He was Bug’s first cousin, but he wasn’t a killer like the rest of them. Still, he was a Savage, and they wouldn’t leave him out in the cold. He was the odd jobs’ man of the family.
“Fucking right it was. I’m a damn perfectionist,” Bug told him.
“Well, this one didn’t go so perfect, seeing how you killed the wrong person,” Big Money told him and pointed a few feet to the left of the burning truck. The target, a man named King James, was still very much alive. Two of his henchmen were trying to restrain him as he attempted to run to the burning truck. There wasn’t much they could do for the boy inside, yet he still felt compelled to try.
“That lucky muthafucka!” Bug raged. He pulled his gun out from between the seats. “Big Money, pull up on this nigga so I can blow his brains out. The Savages ain’t never fucked up a hit, and we ain’t gonna start now.”
“Save it for another day, Bug. After an explosion like that, the police and everybody else are gonna be crawling over the block in a few ticks,” Big Money told him.
“I can take him, and we’ll be gone before anyone knows what happened,” Bug insisted.
“Bug, if you wanna go to prison, you can do that on your own time. Ain’t no way I’m gonna be the one to tell your mama that you got knocked over some dumb shit.” Big Money started the engine. They slowly pulled out into traffic.
The Yukon carrying the two arsonists rolled slowly past what was left of the burning truck. King James was on his knees a few feet away, sobbing uncontrollably, while his men stood around him. Seeing the self-proclaimed king of Harlem in such an emotional state gave Bug a cheap thrill. He may not have killed King, but he had sure as hell broken him. Bug continued to watch as two men helped King to his feet. Bug didn’t know who it was who had died in the explosion, but from King’s reaction, they must have been close. That at least made Fire Bug feel a little better about messing up the hit. As they passed the grieving soldiers, Bug and King James made eye contact. Not being able to resist the temptation of kicking a dog when he was down, Bug blew King a kiss before the Yukon peeled through the light and disappeared. Bug didn’t know it at the time, but the mocking gesture would set off a chain of events that would change his family forever.
PART I
Opening Statements
CHAPTER 1
Charles Johnson was what you would call a less than average Joe. He was an unassuming young man of twenty who lived in his mother’s basement. Three days per week, he rode his bike back and forth to his job at Home Depot. Outside of the people he talked to at work and the professors who taught some of the night classes he was taking at Atlanta Technical College, Charles had no social life to speak of. He was what you would call an unimportant man. So unimportant that if he up and dropped dead, it was doubtful that anyone but his mother would miss him. And that was only because he wouldn’t be around to kick in his monthly payment for the rent she charged him. Charles was an invisible man that no one ever saw.
That all had changed six weeks ago. In the blink of an eye, he’d gone from obscurity to being the meat in a newspaper byline about a man charged with armed robbery and attempted murder. According to the police, Charles was one of several men who had got it in their head to rob a liquor store in Bankhead. The owner, an older white man, had ended up taking a nonlethal gut shot and had been able to point the police in the right direction and identify several suspects. Charles hadn’t originally been one of them, but it hadn’t taken long for his codefendants to point their finger at him unanimously. Charles was the only black man in the group. It hadn’t helped matters when the store owner accused Charles in court of being the one who had shot him. Charles was being singled out and railroaded, and it appeared that only a miracle would be able to save him. Luckily for Charles, the law office he’d stumbled into happened to employ a miracle worker.
Keith Davis was an up-and-coming defense attorney who worked for the firm of Hunt, Lehman, and Gold. It was one of the top law firms not only in the city of Atlanta but also in the state of Georgia. The firm was built on the résumés of the partners, but their stellar reputation came from the stable of young lawyers they kept in rotation. It was a collective of some of the sharpest legal minds in the state, but Keith was by far the sharpest knife in the drawer.
Being the color of milk chocolate, standing six feet two inches tall, with rich black hair that rolled over the top of his head in waves and with engaging brown eyes, Keith was someone who would look more comfortable in a catalog than he did in a courtroom. Writing him off as a pretty boy with a degree was why prosecutors often found themselves caught off guard when he walked into a courtroom and almost effortlessly punched holes in their cases against his clients. Keith had an intimate understanding of the law, which made him an authority on manipulating it to win a case.
Keith sat listening to the prosecutor babble, but he was only half paying attention. He kept casting anxious glares at the courtroom doors to see if his paralegal, Susan, had arrived yet, but there was still no sign of her. If she didn’t show soon, Keith would have to improvise. It wouldn’t be the first time he had to work on the fly, but he preferred to go into battle with hi
s guns fully loaded.
The prosecutor, Allen Glen, was a legend in the halls of courtrooms across the state of Georgia. They called him the Black Death, because he had a reputation for burying minorities in the deepest and darkest holes, never to be seen again. On the stand sat Glen’s star witness and the lead detective on the case, Roy Graves. He was both a smug bastard with a splotchy record and a card-carrying member of the good old boy network . . . a true son of the South. Graves and Glen had been playing Batman and Robin throughout the whole fiasco, going above and beyond to punch holes in Keith’s case, and for the most part, they had been successful.
When Charles was fifteen, he had been arrested for assault when he took part in a fight that had broken out at a high school basketball game. Charles had only been defending himself against members of the opposing team when they attacked him, but at the urging of his legal aid attorney, he’d pleaded guilty to the charges in exchange for probation and a felony conviction. Charles had been a minor at the time, and legally, Glen couldn’t use these old charges in the case, but during cross-examination, he had conveniently let it slip out that Charles had an arrest record. Planting that seed made it easy for Glen to demonize Charles in the eyes of the jury and feed the notion that he was some common thug who was capable of committing the new crime he was being accused of.
Keith glanced over at his client, Charles, who was so terrified that he could barely keep his knees from knocking together. He was nervous, and rightfully so. The deck was stacked so high against him that it was almost a sure thing that prison awaited him in the future unless something short of a miracle happened. Luckily for Charles, miracles were what Keith specialized in.
When Glen finally got tired of hearing himself talk, he rested his case and opened the floor for Keith Davis. “Game over, hotshot,” Glen said slyly while passing Keith on the way back to his side of the courtroom.
Keith took a second to pat Charles’s hand reassuringly before standing up from the table. He spared a last glance over his shoulder, but still no Susan. He was on his own. Taking a deep breath, Keith stepped from behind the table and prepared to address the court. His manicured fingernails glistened in the pale light of the courtroom as he buttoned the blazer to his tailored dark gray suit. The pink shirt beneath was freshly pressed, and his charcoal tie was knotted perfectly. Though Keith appeared to be the perfect picture of calm, his mind was racing at a million miles per minute. He could feel the eyes of his boss, Theodore Hunt, boring into him from a few seats back. He didn’t have to see him to know that he was watching. Theodore always seemed to be watching him. No doubt he was probably wondering if the seemingly hopeless case would finally be the one to smudge Keith’s pristine track record.
Theodore had been the most animate about Keith not taking the case to begin with. “You’re setting yourself up for failure, kid,” Theodore had told him that morning in his office. He’d been more concerned about how Keith losing the case would reflect on the firm than about the young man whose life hung in the balance. This had only made Keith more determined to take the case, just to prove his overbearing boss wrong. Now, drawing closer to the moment of truth, he began to think his ego had painted him into a corner he wouldn’t be able to get out of.
With the last card he had to play seeming to be missing from the deck, Keith now took a deep breath and prepared to mount as best a defense as he could. He had gone all in and now had to finish playing the hand. Just as he was about to open his mouth to start his cross-examination, the courtroom doors swung open and in stumbled his ace.
Susan Delany came stumbling into the courtroom, carrying a stack of folders, which threatened to spill from her grasp. She was a frumpy woman, twentysomething, with curly blond hair and clear blue eyes behind wire-framed glasses. Susan Delany was one of the paralegals who worked for the firm and was Keith’s go-to person. Her uncanny knack for fact-finding and her attention to detail had pulled Keith’s ass out of the fire on more than one occasion.
Susan hustled down the aisle, offering mumbled apologies to those whose feet she stepped on and those she accidentally slapped with her trench coat, which flapped behind her like a superhero’s cape. Her theatrics, though not intentional, caused quite a commotion, to the displeasure of the judge.
“What in blazes is going on?” the judge snapped.
“A moment please, Your Honor?” Keith asked, trying to hide his excitement.
“Mr. Davis, you had better have a damn good reason for disrupting my courtroom!” the judge spat.
“If God has seen fit to smile on me today, I will,” Keith said, moving to meet his paralegal. “Did you get it, Susan?” he asked her when he reached her side.
“Yes. It took some doing, but a friend of a friend was able to help me out, if I promised to go on a date with him,” Susan said, balancing her folders with one hand and digging in her satchel with the other. From it, she produced a green folder, which she handed to Keith.
Keith took a few seconds to flip through the folder to make sure it had what he needed inside. When he laid eyes on the documents, his lips parted into a wide grin, showing off two rows of perfect white teeth. “Susan, I owe you one for this.” He kissed her on the forehead.
“You owe me more than one,” she whispered. “You should see the guy I had to agree to date in order to get you this stuff. He’s got a unibrow, for Christ’s sake!”
“Mr. Davis, do you plan to cross-examine this witness, or would you like to waste more of this court’s time?” the judge barked at Keith.
“My apologies, Your Honor. I do intend to cross-examine Detective Graves, but I plan to make it short and sweet,” Keith said with an easy smile, which made Prosecutor Glen nervous. “Detective Graves,” he began, “I’m going to begin with asking you a very simple question. Can you say without a shadow of a doubt that the right man was arrested for this crime?”
“That’s what my report says,” Detective Graves replied in a smug tone.
“Right, your report. The same report that has my client being positively identified by the store owner as well as one of his codefendants, correct?”
“Yup,” Graves answered.
“Is there any scientific evidence to support this? Camera footage, ballistic evidence maybe?”
“No, the cameras in the store relay only live feed, and as far as ballistic evidence, by the time we tracked Mr. Johnson down, several days had passed, so any trace evidence we could’ve used was long gone.”
Keith raised his eyebrow. “So, your testimony is based on hearsay?”
“My testimony is based on an old man sitting in the hospital with a gut shot, a man who fingered that colored fella as the shooter.” He jabbed an accusatory finger in Charles’s direction. “Hell, even his friend said he done it.”
A confused expression crossed Keith’s face. “So, what you’re saying is that this whole case against my client is based on the word of a traumatized old man and an informant who you’ve promised only God knows what to place the blame on Mr. Johnson?” Keith shook his head pitifully. “Shame on you and the Atlanta Police Department for wasting this court’s time, Detective Graves.”
Detective Graves’s eyes narrowed to slits. For a brief second, he couldn’t hide the contempt he felt for the well-dressed African American attorney. “Look, boy, I don’t know what you’re fishing for, but—”
“I haven’t been a boy in quite a few years,” Keith said, cutting him off. “And I’m not fishing for anything. I’m digging a hole and this”—he raised the folder Susan had given him for all to see—“is my shovel.” Keith approached the bench, then handed both the judge and Detective Graves copies of one of the documents in the folder.
“Mr. Davis, what is this?” the judge asked, looking at the document strangely.
“I was hoping to let Detective Graves have the honor of explaining, but since he seems to be at a loss for words, I’ll help him out.” Keith turned his attention to the detective, who had suddenly turned as red as a tomato. Det
ective Graves opened his mouth to say something, but no sound came out. There was blood in the water, so Keith turned to the jurors and went for the kill. “Detective Graves, what you have in front of you is a photocopy of a desk appearance ticket for a drunk and disorderly that was issued on the same night of the robbery, only in the city of Savannah. Could you please read the name of the person this ticket was issued to out loud for the court?”
Before Detective Graves could answer, Prosecutor Glen was on his feet. “Objection, Your Honor! It’s a little late to introduce new evidence, especially if we weren’t made aware of it during discovery.”
“If I’d had it in my possession at the time, I’d have observed protocol, but this information was just made available to me a few seconds ago by my legal clerk.” Keith motioned toward Susan, whom he allowed the honor of presenting Prosecutor Glen with his copy of the document. “I assure you, Your Honor, I would not have disrupted these proceedings at the eleventh hour if the new information had been anything less than a game changer in this case.”
The judge stared Keith down for a few seconds. He didn’t particularly care for the young defense attorney, but he respected his tenacity. “It had damn well better be, Mr. Davis.” He motioned for him to continue.
“The name, please, Detective Graves,” Keith said, pressing his witness.
Detective Graves mumbled something that was inaudible.
“Could you repeat that so that the entire courtroom can hear you?” Keith cupped his hand to his ear.
“Charles Johnson!” Detective Graves repeated in a nasty tone.
The whole courtroom, including Charles, gasped, in shock.
“Bingo!” Keith snapped his fingers. “At the time of the robbery, my client was sitting in a holding cell nearly three hours away from the scene of the crime. Unless Mr. Johnson has figured out how to defy the laws of physics, it’s impossible for him to have been in two places at once. So, I’ll ask you again for the record, Detective. Are you sure the right man was arrested for this crime?”