In Self Defense

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In Self Defense Page 17

by Susan R. Sloan


  The air conditioning was going full force. Even so, those packed into the spectator seats were perspiring freely, and using whatever they had at hand to fan themselves. Their discomfort wasn’t by necessity, however, but by choice. They had stood in line for hours -- some had even camped out overnight -- for the opportunity to get a seat at the big event -- bored housewives, out-of-work dot.com nerds, gossipmongers, and social climbers squeezing in among supporters and reporters.

  The media coverage had been relentless throughout the winter, spring, and summer, and speculation was running rampant. Did she or didn’t she? Newspapers and tabloids alike asked the question, and were quickly snatched off the shelves by those who seemed to have an insatiable interest in other people’s business, and seemed to take a perverse pleasure in other people’s problems.

  “It’s human nature,” Doreen observed. “Their lives are so miserable, it makes them feel better to wallow in someone else’s misery.”

  The holidays had been bleak and seemed to drag on forever, with Clare and the children just going through the motions, no one really wanting to celebrate, no one really wanting to look the other in the eye. Everybody was glad when they were finally over.

  In January, Clare went back to work at Thornburgh House, but by the end of February, it was clear that she was too much of a distraction. She turned her authors over to Nina and resigned.

  “It’s for the best now,” Glenn Thornburgh said. “But perhaps, someday, when this is all behind you . . .” He let the thought dangle.

  “Perhaps,” Clare murmured, knowing that, whatever the outcome of all this, that day would never come.

  The paparazzi pursued her relentlessly. As the case moved along, and the legal maneuverings began, and the trial loomed, her face was everywhere, in the newspapers, the tabloids, the magazines, and on every local television and cable news channel. There was no escaping it. Everywhere she went, people either stared at her or whispered behind her back. Everyone she had ever known was being pursued for comments. Richard’s parents were no longer speaking to her. Members of charitable organizations, with whom she had worked tirelessly for years, either stopped calling or avoided returning her calls. With the loss of its innovative leader, and the subsequent arrest of its major stockholder, Nicolaidis Industries dropped almost a third of its value.

  “Do we need more capital?” Clare asked Henry Hartstone.

  “No, we’re all right,” he advised. “Just give it some time.”

  It was March, when word of the new X-ray machine leaked out, before things began to turn up again.

  One afternoon in April, Julie came home with a badly scraped knee.

  “What happened?” Clare asked, taking her into the bathroom and reaching for the peroxide.

  “There was a man at school,” the girl replied. “He wanted to take my picture. He asked me all sorts of questions about you. I didn’t answer, and I tried to run away from him. But I tripped.”

  Clare called David. David called the school. The school promised to do what it could to protect the children.

  Then, on a day in May, Peter climbed into the Voyager with a black eye.

  “Where did that come from?” Doreen asked.

  “Billy Tucker called mom a murderer,” the boy explained.

  “Your mother’s not a murderer,” Doreen told him firmly. “What happened was an accident. She just made a mistake.”

  “I know,” Peter said. “Billy Tucker has a black eye, too.”

  The house Clare had never felt comfortable in became her whole world. She retreated into its depths like a wounded animal, and declined to emerge, even at the insistence of good friends.

  “Come on over for dinner,” Marcia Bennett, the neighbor to the north, would invite.

  “Thanks, but I’m not feeling very well,” Clare would respond. “Perhaps another time.”

  “As long as you’re not working right now, why don’t we spend a day in town?” Jenny Corcoran, the neighbor to the south, would propose. “There are two shops that just opened in Pacific Place that are supposed to be spectacular.”

  “Sounds like fun, but I’m afraid my mind’s not on shopping right now,” Clare would reply.

  “Why don’t you and the kids come stay with us for a few days,” Elaine Haskell would suggest. “It’ll give Doreen some time off. It’ll give you a change of air to breathe.”

  “Doreen won’t take time off,” Clare would say. “And much as I hate this house, now more than ever, I think it would be better for us to stay put for the time being.”

  She didn’t want the paparazzi following her and setting up camp in front of Elaine’s home in Ravenna. It was bad enough they had done it in Laurelhurst.

  “You know, if you keep hiding yourself away like this, people are going to think maybe it’s because you really did do something wrong,” Nina warned her.

  “I don’t care,” Clare said, and much to her surprise, she realized that she meant it.

  “Well, maybe you don’t, but your attorney might,” her friend said. “After all, he’s the one who’s going to have to pick a jury of twelve impartial people.”

  “You mean I should be parading myself around town as the grieving widow?”

  “Why not? That’s what you are, aren’t you?”

  Clare opened her mouth to say something, and then abruptly closed it again. “What I am is really none of anybody else’s business,” she said instead.

  In total agreement with his client, David Johansen refused to try his case in the media. Let the public speculate, he told his associates. In the long run, it would make no difference.

  The one thing of note in the months leading up to the trial was that the stalker had stopped calling.

  “There hasn’t been any activity reported since the end of December,” Erin observed.

  “Not long after Clare Durant was charged,” Dusty mused. “Why do you think?”

  “Hard to tell,” Erin said. “It may be because Clare’s not as accessible as she used to be. She doesn’t answer her telephone anymore. So if he’s calling, the housekeeper is answering, and he just hangs up. Or it may be that she’s caught right in the glare of the media spotlight, and almost every move she makes is documented one way or another. Not to mention that that house is locked up like a fortress. He may have figured she’d be too hard to get to.”

  “Do you think he’s moved on?” Dusty wondered.

  Erin shrugged. “I’ve been thinking about that,” she said. “It would be the first time he’s abandoned a target . . . well, the first time that we would know about, anyway. But under the circumstances, it would be the smart thing for him to do.”

  The stalker was the very last thing on Clare’s mind. As far as she was concerned, the media had replaced him, in spades, hounding her at all hours of the day and night, following her children around, spying on her housekeeper. Long before the trial was even scheduled to begin, David had to arrange for private bodyguards to protect the Laurelhurst house around the clock, and to accompany the occupants wherever they went.

  Then it was October, a year after the death of Richard Durant, and Seattle was about to find out for itself whether the trial was going to live up to all the hype.

  ***

  At precisely nine thirty in the morning on the first Tuesday in October, Mark Sundstrom stood up, smoothed his hair, adjusted his glasses, buttoned his suit jacket, and turned to face the jury. It had taken the better part of two weeks to select the seven women and five men, plus four alternates, who were now seated in front of him, culled from over two hundred residents of King County, who had all claimed to be impartial in the matter of the People v. Clare Durant.

  It was hard to know, really, how impartial they were, but Sundstrom and his staff, as well as David Johansen and his staff, had done the best they could, studying each of them carefully, reading between the lines of their responses to both general and specific questions. And now it was time for both sides to put their choices to the ultimate test.


  “Ladies and gentlemen, my name is Mark Sundstrom, and I represent the people of the State of Washington,” he began. “It will be my job, through the presentation of testimony and evidence and argument, to prove to you, beyond any reasonable doubt, that shortly after midnight on October 20th of last year, the defendant in this case, Clare Durant, did knowingly shoot her husband to death.”

  It was clear that Mark Sundstrom was an upstanding man, a dedicated public servant, doing his job as well as he could, understated and attractive, without being too attractive, who spoke forcefully, but not stridently. The jurors liked him.

  “In this proceeding, Mrs. Durant will be offering an affirmative defense. What that means is, her attorney will claim that his client was acting in self-defense when she shot her husband, because she believed she was shooting an intruder, a serial stalker. However, the evidence and the testimony you will see and hear will not back that up. Now, we’re not saying that someone wasn’t stalking Mrs. Durant. Someone well may have been. What we’re saying is that she had ample opportunity to know, before she pulled the trigger, that the man she was shooting was not an intruder, but was in fact her husband. To prove it, we will show you some pretty gruesome crime scene photos, and I apologize to you in advance for this. We will also be introducing crime scene evidence and show you reenactments performed by the police investigating this crime. And you will hear testimony from witnesses who will speak to issues present in the Durant marriage.”

  Having set the scene, the prosecutor then got down to the specifics of the state’s case, naming the witnesses in the order they would appear, and describing what each would be testifying to, and how it would all tie together to prove the charge of murder. Finally, he looked at each juror.

  “Do I pretend to know what motivated Mrs. Durant to kill her husband?” he asked. “No, I don’t. But you will hear testimony that confirms her husband was seeking a divorce. You will hear testimony that he was making plans to marry another woman. You will hear testimony that, when she found out about it, Mrs. Durant was so furious that she threatened to have him removed from his position as CEO of Nicolaidis Industries. And you will hear testimony that, apparently, even this threat of dismissal did not deter Richard Durant.”

  Sundstrom paused for a moment to let his words sink in. “Was it simply a matter of her husband’s infidelity that made the defendant pull the trigger that fateful night?” he concluded. “Was it the personal humiliation of knowing she was about to be discarded for another woman, a younger woman, a socially prominent woman? Or was it the inevitable public embarrassment that was bound to come when others would discover that, despite all her years of good works, her marriage had gone bad? Ladies and gentlemen, in a relatively short amount of time, you’re going to know everything we know, and then I’m going to be perfectly willing to let you make that decision.”

  With a little nod, the prosecutor sat down. His opening statement had lasted two hours and twenty-five minutes, and immediately thereafter, court was recessed for lunch.

  ***

  “He makes me sound like such a monster,” Clare said as she sat and stared at nothing out the window of a small anteroom next to the courtroom that she and her attorney would have at their disposal for the duration of the trial.

  “Don’t worry,” David told her. “He doesn’t know what we know.”

  ***

  At ten minutes past two o’clock that afternoon, David stood up and smiled a bit shyly at the jury. “Ladies and gentlemen, my name is David Johansen,” he said in a soft, pleasant voice, “and I represent Clare Durant, the defendant in this case. Which means that, until she gets up on the witness stand and speaks to you herself, I’ll be speaking for her. I’ll do that by listening, as carefully as you will, to each and every one of the prosecution witnesses, and asking them the same questions I think you would want to ask, if you had the opportunity. I will also be speaking for my client when I challenge every aspect of the evidence that will be presented here at trial. Because, there’s never just one side to a story, you know, and when you’re dealing with a person’s life and liberty, as I am, and as you will be, nothing is more important than holding the prosecution to the highest possible standard of accuracy.”

  If the jurors expected slick, sharp, expensive, they were disappointed. David Johansen was not as tall as Mark Sundstrom, not as trim or as easy in his suit and tie, not even as attractive, perhaps. But there was something nice about him, something comfortable, something that remind them of a brother, or a childhood friend, or the boy next door. The jurors couldn’t help themselves -- they liked him, too.

  “As I think you already realize, you have an awesome responsibility ahead of you,” he continued. “You must hear all the evidence that is going to be presented to you, you must weigh it, and finally, you must to come to a unanimous decision. And all Clare Durant and I ask is that you keep an open mind until you’ve heard the whole story.”

  With that, he nodded to the jurors, to the judge, and sat down.

  Judge Lazarus, a sixteen-year veteran of the bench, turned to the prosecutor.

  “Are you prepared to call your first witness?” she inquired.

  “We are, Your Honor,” Mark Sundstrom replied.

  And so began the trial of Clare Durant.

  Ten

  The King County medical examiner took the witness stand just after two o’clock that afternoon. Roger Figg was a slight man in his late fifties, with wispy brown hair, prominent cheekbones, and a twenty-five-year, unblemished record.

  “Dr. Figg,” Mark Sundstrom began, once the witness’s credentials had been established, “you performed the autopsy on the body of Richard Durant, did you not?”

  “I did,” Figg confirmed. “On Friday, October 20th of last year, at one-thirty in the afternoon.”

  “And what were your findings?”

  “I found that Richard Durant’s death was as a result of multiple gunshot wounds.”

  At that point, Tom Colby, Sundstrom’s second chair, almost a carbon copy of the prosecutor himself, stood up and positioned a large monitor within view of the jury. Sundstrom then invited the medical examiner to step down from the witness box and stand next to the monitor. From a computer back at the prosecutor’s table, Colby pressed several keys and a series of photographs began to appear on the screen, showing Richard Durant’s body, laid out on a metal table. Meticulously, Dr. Figg took the jury through the various injuries that had led to the victim’s death.

  “I removed two bullets from the neck,” he said, using a laser pointer, “three from the chest, two from the abdomen, one from the pelvis, and one from the right thigh.” The red beam of light highlighted each entry wound.

  “Do you know which bullet it was that actually killed him?” Sundstrom inquired.

  “It could have been any one of three,” Figg replied. “The one that bisected the aorta, the one that severed the spine, or the one that penetrated the heart.”

  Clare sat at the defense table, with her hands folded quietly in her lap, and watched the jury watching the show. It was gruesome stuff, but all twelve jurors, as well as the alternates, were sitting forward, at the edge of their seats, with their eyes fixed on Dr. Figg and his exhibits.

  The medical examiner’s direct testimony lasted the rest of Tuesday and enough of Wednesday so that it wasn’t until almost the end of the day that Mark Sundstrom was satisfied he had gotten all the information and enough of the gore before the jury to turn the witness over to the defense.

  David Johansen stood up. “Nine bullets,” he said. “Isn’t that a lot of bullets to kill someone standing less than fifteen feet away?”

  “It doesn’t usually take that many, no,” Figg agreed.

  “In your history as a medical examiner, Doctor, how many gunshot victims have you autopsied?”

  “Perhaps five hundred.”

  “And how many of those five hundred had as many bullet wounds as Richard Durant?”

  “In my twenty-fiv
e years, I’ve seen perhaps half a dozen,” Figg replied.

  “What was the nature of these shootings?”

  “Most were gang-related.”

  “You mean, as in several people shooting one victim at the same time?”

  “Yes.”

  “And the rest?”

  “One was a father who shot the man who had raped and murdered his daughter. He fired seven bullets into his victim. One was a teenager high on drugs who put six bullets into a postman because he thought he was the devil.” The medical examiner sighed. “And the last was a woman who killed her husband after years of abuse. We recovered twelve bullets from his body.”

  “And you can still remember every one of those shootings?”

  “They’re some of the ones that are hardest to forget,” Figg said.

  “Was there any way to tell, from the autopsies, why these people were shot?”

  “No, of course not.”

  “So this information you’ve just provided the jury came from other sources?”

  “Yes. From the associated trials.”

  “I see. So, based on your autopsy alone, there would really be no way for you to tell why Richard Durant was killed, would there? I mean, you can’t say with any medical certainty that he was shot out of fear or panic, or anger -- or even that he was shot in cold blood, can you?”

  “No,” Figg admitted, “I can’t.”

  “Thank you, Doctor,” David said.

  ***

  “What would you like for dinner?” Doreen asked.

  “To tell you the truth,” Clare said, “I’m not very hungry.” Two days of watching gut-wrenching autopsy photographs flashing across a giant screen had left Clare with little appetite, and no interest in worrying about it.

  “All the more reason you have to eat,” the housekeeper, who wasn’t privy to the courtroom show, insisted. “The children are going to have macaroni and cheese. I’ll throw in a little sausage for you.”

  Clare shrugged. It didn’t matter. Lately, picking at Doreen’s food had become something of a game, something done to placate the woman. It wasn’t that Doreen wasn’t an excellent cook. She was. It was just that, whatever the outcome of the trial, Clare knew her days of being a hearty eater were over, and one thing had begun to taste more or less the same as another.

 

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