by Randy Singer
PRAISE FOR DIRECTED VERDICT AND OTHER NOVELS BY RANDY SINGER
“There is plenty of room in evangelical Christian fiction for fresh voices, and debut novelist Singer is a promising one.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
on Directed Verdict
“A riveting courtroom drama . . .”
CBA MARKETPLACE
on Directed Verdict
“Realistic and riveting, Directed Verdict is a compelling story about the persecuted church and those who fight for global religious freedom.”
JAY SEKULOW
Chief counsel, American Center for Law and Justice
“Randy Singer’s novel of international intrigue, courtroom drama, and gripping suspense will challenge readers to examine anew issues of faith and ethics.”
JERRY W. KILGORE
Former attorney general of Virginia, on Directed Verdict
“After a string of suspense-filled nights and bleary-eyed mornings, I can personally testify that Randy Singer writes a better legal thriller than even John Grisham. Directed Verdict grabs you on page one and never lets up.”
SHAUNTI FELDHAHN
Best-selling author, speaker, and nationally syndicated columnist
“Randy Singer never disappoints. The plot builds, the pages turn, and the message is always right.”
HUGH HEWITT
Author, columnist, and radio host of the nationally syndicated Hugh Hewitt Show
“Singer hits pay dirt again with this taut, intelligent thriller. . . . [He] is clearly an up-and-coming novelist to watch.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
on Dying Declaration
“[Irreparable Harm is] an accomplished novel. Randy Singer combines edge-of-your-seat action with a powerful message. Highly recommended.”
T. DAVIS BUNN
Author of My Soul to Keep
“In this gripping, obsessively readable legal thriller, Singer proves himself to be the Christian John Grisham.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
on False Witness
“At the center of the heart-pounding action are the moral dilemmas that have become Singer’s stock-in-trade. . . . An exciting thriller.”
BOOKLIST
on By Reason of Insanity
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Directed Verdict
Copyright © 2002 by Randy D. Singer. All rights reserved.
First printing by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., in 2009.
Previously published as Directed Verdict by WaterBrook Press under ISBN-10: 1-57856-633-9.
Cover photograph of walking man copyright © alvarez/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of businesspeople copyright © IS_ImageSource/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.
Designed by Dean H. Renninger
Published in association with the literary agency of Alive Communications, Inc., 7680 Goddard Street, Suite 200, Colorado Springs, CO 80920, www.alivecommunications.com.
Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Singer, Randy (Randy D.)
Directed verdict / Randy Singer.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-4143-3154-6 (sc)
1. Persecution—Saudi Arabia—Fiction. 2. Missionaries’ spouses—Fiction. 3. Actions and defenses—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3619.I5725D47 2009
813′.6—dc22 2008053387
Build: 2014-02-28 12:43:45
For Rhonda, Roz, and Josh.
You’re the best. Ever.
Contents
Part I: Persecution Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Part II: The Law 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
Part III: Discovery Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Part IV: The Trial 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
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Epilogue
1
“SARAH, THE MUTTAWA FOUND US! They’re coming. Maybe tonight.” The caller paused, his voice trembling. “Arrests. Interrogations. Executions. They’ll stop at nothing,” he whispered rapidly in Arabic.
Sarah tried to answer, but the words stuck in her throat. She clenched the receiver so tight her knuckles turned white. She was suddenly out of breath, yet she knew she could not allow the man on the other end of the line to sense her fear.
“Sarah, are you there?”
“Is this Rasheed?” she asked in her own low murmur. She too spoke in Arabic.
“You must cancel the services tonight. And, Sarah?”
“Yes?”
“Get the kids out of the apartment.”
The kids. Twelve-year-old Meredith. Ten-year-old Steven. Of course she would find a place for the kids. But what about her . . . and Charles? They couldn’t just run and hide at the first hint of an investigation. But if this were not a false alarm . . .
“Sarah? Remember, we are not given a spirit of fear but of power and love and a sound mind.”
“Um, okay . . . we’ll be all right.” As she spoke her voice grew steadier, but she still whispered. “Pray for us.”
“I will,” he promised, and the line went dead.
Sarah kept the phone against her ear, not yet ready to hang up and face Charles and the kids. A million questions screamed for answers. It was Rasheed’s voice, but how could he possibly know about the Muttawa? And if they were coming tonight, what did they know? Who told them? And why? She tried to gather her thoughts, calm her fears, stop the spinning sensation in her head. She lowered the phone and stared down at it.
“Is everything all right, hon?” Charles asked. He crossed the kitchen and began massaging her shoulders. She closed her eyes and felt his fingers penetrate the knotted muscles. They did not relax. “Hey,” he said gently. “What’s got you so tight?”
Sarah turned and let Charles embrace her. She trembled in his arms, then stood on her toes and whispered in his ear. “The Muttawa have found us. They may be coming tonight.”
Tilting her head to look at him, she searched his eyes for the comfort and strength she had found on so many occasions during their twenty-three years of marriage.
Instead, she saw n
othing but terror.
* * *
There were few empty seats in the cavernous courtroom, and the marshals were on full alert. The middle aisle divided the spectators into two camps. They had nothing in common.
The left side, behind the prosecutor’s table, was jammed with the local defenders of a woman’s right to choose. Employees of the Norfolk Medical Clinic were there, as were leading pro-choice advocates from across Virginia. Joining them, so as not to be associated with the fanatics on the other side, were court personnel who had taken time off to see the defendant get what he deserved.
The other side of the courtroom—the right side—was populated with members of Chesapeake Community Church. Many kept their heads bowed in silent prayer as their pastor, the Reverend Jacob Bailey, came to a critical point in his testimony. The church members were joined by some hard-core veterans of the pro-life movement, men and women who had served time for chaining themselves to each other or to abortion clinics. They had seen some irate judges and pit-bull prosecutors in their day. But, as they eagerly told any reporter who would listen, they had never seen a judge as biased as this one—the Honorable Cynthia Baker-Kline. And in this case, with no jury, she had the sole power to convict or acquit.
Two sketch artists, drawing fast and furiously, sat with the reporters on the left side of the courtroom. The woman wearing the robe was easy, a sketch artist’s dream. Behind her back, the lawyers called her Ichabod Crane. She had angular features—a long pointed nose, wire-rimmed glasses, accusatory bony fingers, a perpetual scowl, and a jutting jaw—the quintessential schoolmistress. She had not smiled the entire case.
The Reverend Jacob Bailey would prove more difficult for the artists. Try as they might, neither had succeeded in making the defendant look like a criminal. His face was thin and pale. Twenty days of a fluids-only fast had rendered him gaunt. Static electricity charged his wispy and unmindful blond hair, and he slumped forward as he testified, his bony frame engulfed by the witness chair. He talked so softly that Ichabod had to keep reminding him to speak into the mike.
The man presently questioning Bailey was defense attorney Brad Carson. He fared better with the artists. He was thin, possessing a runner’s build, a chiseled jaw, deep-set and expressive steel blue eyes, and jet-black hair. He had the comfortable bearing of a man without pretense and a quick and easy smile that charmed both witnesses and spectators.
The artists put down their pencils as Carson got to the crux of the matter.
“What were you doing outside the abortion clinic on September 13, Reverend?” Brad addressed the witness from behind the podium. Yesterday his efforts to pace the courtroom had generated a stern lecture from Ichabod on proper decorum.
“Praying,” the reverend said, softly and simply.
“Were you talking to God or talking to men?”
“I pray to God,” the reverend answered, “in the name of His Son, Jesus Christ.”
Brad had not put that last part in the script, and he shot Bailey a reproving look. “Did you have your eyes closed as you knelt to pray?” Brad emphasized that the reverend was on his knees; it would make his conduct seem less threatening.
“Yes, of course.”
“Did you even know whether anybody else was around?”
“Not really,” the reverend said. “When I pray, I try to focus on God and block out everything else.”
Another bonus answer. Brad got the impression that the pastor was juicing it up a little for the congregation.
“Were you within one hundred feet of the clinic?” Ichabod asked sharply, leaning forward so she hovered over the witness.
Her question, though an easy one, seemed to startle the witness. He looked up meekly at the judge. “Yes, ma’am,” he said.
Brad watched Ichabod make a check on the legal pad in front of her. The criminal statute applied to any speech or activities within one hundred feet of a medical facility.
He moved quickly to regain the initiative. “May I approach the witness, Your Honor?” Brad started walking toward the witness box.
Ichabod glared at Brad and waited a few painful seconds. He stopped. “Yes,” she said, when she had his full attention. Brad sighed and moved forward. Out of the corner of his eye he watched Ichabod return to doodling on her legal pad, doing her best to look bored.
“I’m handing you a copy of the criminal statute in question,” Brad said as he extended a single sheet of paper to the reverend. The paper trembled as Bailey held it. Brad knew this would happen. It was part of his plan to generate sympathy.
“Look down at the second paragraph,” Brad continued, moving back to his own counsel table and pulling a pair of reading glasses from his suit coat pocket, “and follow with me as I briefly read the things this statute prohibits. Did you try to obstruct, detain, or hinder anyone from entering the facility?”
“No.”
“Did you knowingly come within eight feet of any patients for the purpose of passing out a leaflet or handbill?”
“No.”
“Did you knowingly come within eight feet of any patients for the purpose of engaging in oral protests or persuading the patients not to proceed with an abortion?”
“No,” the Reverend Bailey said, his voice picking up some confidence even as his hand continued to tremble. Brad was pleased with the witness; it had not been easy to convince the pastor to answer so succinctly.
But Ichabod was not through.
“When you pray,” she asked, looking thoughtfully out toward the audience, “does your religion require that you pray at a certain spot?”
“No, Your Honor,” Bailey admitted, looking befuddled.
“So you can pray anywhere in the country, and God will still hear?”
“Yes, of course. He’s omnipresent.”
“And can your God hear you whether you pray out loud or to yourself?” the judge asked, still staring off into the distance.
“Sure,” Bailey said. He had leaned too close to the mike, and it squealed. He jumped back as if it had bitten him.
“On the date in question, were you praying out loud or to yourself?” Ichabod queried.
“Out loud.”
“Loud enough for others to hear?”
“Yes.”
Ichabod made a few more check marks on her pad. Then she turned and gave the witness an icy stare. He shifted uncomfortably.
Brad felt like he was watching a train wreck develop in slow motion and was powerless to stop it. He took off his glasses and began gnawing on them.
“Then do you expect this court to believe that you just happened to pick this spot to pray and just happened to pray out loud, but really had no intention of persuading the women who might just happen to walk by?” Ichabod raised her inflection and eyebrows in a show of disbelief.
“Your Honor,” Brad said quickly, drawing attention away from the witness box. “I find myself in the unusual position of objecting to the court’s own questions.” He flashed a disarming grin that the judge did not return.
“While I’ve got a suspicion that my objection will be overruled,” he continued, “it does seem improper for you to be asking argumentative questions of this witness. Particularly when the question implies that this statute prevents someone from praying out loud on a public sidewalk. My reading of the statute does not suggest that interpretation.”
“Is that your objection?” Ichabod turned her icy stare to Brad.
“For now,” he added quickly.
“Overruled. The court is entitled to develop a full record. Now, Mr. Bailey, answer the question.”
Reverend Bailey hesitated and exhaled deeply. “Honestly, Your Honor,” he said in a soft-spoken plea, “I felt burdened to pray about this.” He paused and looked down at his folded hands, his voice softening even further. “This sin that is plaguing our nation . . . this killing of unborn children. And I felt led by God to do so in front of the clinic, regardless of the consequences.”
Attaboy, Brad thought. Show a li
ttle spine. Brad jumped on the chance to regain control.
“Why did you feel so burdened?” he asked, leaning forward, feigning interest.
The question elicited a quick response from the prosecuting attorney, a severe-looking woman in her midforties named Angela Bennett, who rose immediately to object. She could have saved her energy, because Ichabod, the self-appointed guardian of the Norfolk Clinic, was all over this one.
“Mr. Carson,” Ichabod hissed, staring at him over the glasses perched on the end of her nose, “that question’s improper, and you know it. I’ve told you before, we are not going to get into the reverend’s personal views on abortion—”
“But, Judge, motivation is key. The statute requires that Reverend Bailey intentionally come within eight feet of abortion patients for the purpose of persuading them not to—” The judge held up her hand and Brad stopped in midsentence.
“Mr. Carson!” she snapped. “I am not finished!”
“Sorry, Your Honor,” Brad said, without the least hint of remorse.
“You will not inject the issue of motivation into this case. This is basically a trespass case. He either violated the law, or he didn’t. His purpose for being there—and whether it was to persuade women not to have an abortion—can be determined from his actions. His motivation for being there does not concern me. Is that clear?” She gave Brad her most intense federal judge stare.
He wanted to tell her she was splitting legal hairs, that she was a disgrace to the bench. He wanted to tell her off the way he had in his dreams, the way he had while driving to work, the way he had a thousand times this morning in his own mind. He felt the heat rising in his neck, and he knew how good it would feel to unload. But he also knew it would be pointless.
His plan called for a far different approach. And his client’s future hinged on Brad’s ability to keep his cool and execute the plan.
So he just glared back, his eyes flashing with equal intensity.
“Mr. Carson, I’m speaking to you,” Ichabod said, her voice nearly cracking.
“Sorry, Judge,” he replied at last. “I just wanted to make sure you were finished this time.”