Dawn Patrol - Don Winslow [96]
The gallery holds only about twenty people, but that’s ample space for this morning. An insurance bad-faith case isn’t sexy and rarely attracts much of a crowd. A few of the courthouse regulars, trial junkies, mostly retired people who have nothing more exciting to do, are sitting in the gallery, looking bored and vaguely disappointed. An insurance company representative, conspicuous in his gray suit, sits in the front row taking notes.
Johnny and Harrington are there.
Semi–pissed off, because they couldn’t find a judge who’d let them take Tammy in before she testified in the civil case. Semi, because they really want to talk to her about the Angela Hart case, but on the other hand, if she’s here to fuck Danny Silver, that can’t be a bad thing. Let her get deeper into the shit with Silver, so she has no place else to go except to them.
Petra sits at the defense table.
You couldn’t tell from her looks, Boone thinks as he slips in and sits down in the back row, that she’s been up for more than twenty-four hours, almost shot, and nearly frozen. She looks fresh and focused in a pinstriped charcoal gray suit, her hair pinned up, subtle makeup on her eyes.
Very professional.
Maximum cool.
She turns and favors him with a smile as subtle as her makeup before she turns around to watch Alan Burke, who is just starting his examination of Tammy Roddick.
She looks good. Just enough like a stripper to believe that she was with Silver Dan the night his warehouse burned down, not enough like a stripper to lose credibility. She’s wearing a lot less eye makeup, but those green cat eyes still jump out at you. And she’s calm.
Ice.
Alan Burke always looks good. Hair combed straight back like a blond Pat Riley, his skin tanned from surfing but glowing from the SPF lotion he uses religiously. Alan may be the last guy left in the Western world who still looks good in a double-breasted suit, and this morning he has on a navy blue Armani, a white shirt, and a canary yellow tie.
He’s smiling.
Alan is always smiling, even when things are going bad, but especially when he’s shredding an opposing witness. But he has a friendly witness now, one who’s about to kill his opponent for him.
Dan Silver sits beside his lawyer at the plaintiff’s table, giving Tammy the stink eye. Dan is one of those guys who never look good no matter what you dress them in. If it’s true that the clothes make the man, then nothing can make Dan Silver. He’s forsaken the cowboy rig this morning for an ill-fitting suit, tight across the shoulders but baggy against his trunk. The suit is a greenish gray, which does nothing to help Dan’s sallow skin, bad complexion, and heavy jowls. His hair is in an old-fashioned pompadour with a little ducktail, a statement that things were better in the 1950s. Now he sits at the plaintiff’s table and glares at Tammy.
Silver’s lawyer is the infamous Todd “the Rod” Eckhardt, a plaintiffs’ lawyer known around the greater San Diego Bar community for his shameless willingness to sue anybody for anything. Todd has sued for all those reasons that make the general public loathe and despise lawyers—the hot coffee spilled on the lap of a driver doing seventy in a thirty-five-mph zone; the “food product” that came out of a microwave hot; and, Boone’s personal favorite, a lady of the evening who sued a blessed-by-nature john for neck injuries that would prevent her from ever effectively again carrying out her trade and earning a living.
So Todd the Rod is a millionaire many times over and doesn’t try to disguise the fact. He comes into depositions and hearings with a valet—yes, a valet—who looks like he came out of some 1940s British black-and-white film about exploring the Irrawaddy or something, carries Todd’s briefcases and Red Files, and helps him off with