Open and Shut - By David Rosenfelt Page 0,47

trial.

Wallace will have none of this. “Your Honor, the Kelly-Frye, as the defense knows, is designed to challenge the technology itself, independent of the specific case. The results will not be in until almost the date of trial, and if the defense waits until then to decide whether to seek the hearing, the trial date you've set will almost certainly be delayed.”

I chime in. “In the interests of justice, the defense is willing to allow a delay, though we would prefer that our client not have to sit in a jail cell while the prosecution gets its act together.”

Wallace is getting annoyed, which is what I want, but Hatchet refuses to let the back-and-forth continue.

“Mr. Carpenter, your request to delay your decision is denied. Are you requesting a Kelly-Frye or not?”

“No, Your Honor.” Wallace whirls around in surprise. “But the defense reserves its right to challenge the evidence when presented.”

“No objection, Your Honor,” Wallace agrees.

“Very good. What's next?”

“There is the matter of bail, Your Honor,” I say.

“In a capital case?”

“The prosecution has not officially announced its intention in that regard.”

“That's just a formality,” Wallace says. “The paperwork is being prepared now.”

“My client has already served seven years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Every single additional day is an intolerable imposition.”

“Motion for bail denied. Anything else?”

Before Wallace or I have a chance to reply, Hatchet slams down his gavel. “See you at jury selection.”

Kevin and I say our goodbyes to Willie and make plans to meet with him and discuss some specifics of the case. After he leaves, Kevin says, “The judge wasn't as tough as you led me to believe.”

“Just wait,” I say. “Just wait.”

NEW JERSEYHAS ALWAYS BEEN A STATE WITH AN identity crisis. It is essentially divided into three areas: the part near New York, the part near Philadelphia, and everything in between. That middle part includes both fashionable suburban areas and lower- to middle-class towns and farmland. It is in the economically depressed farmland where Denise McGregor was raised, so it is where I am going today.

The trip down the Garden State Parkway is bumper-to-bumper because of beach traffic, compounded by the fact that it seems like there are tollbooths every twenty feet. I switch off to the New Jersey Turnpike and the drive goes much more smoothly. It gives me time to think.

I've learned that Denise's father still lives down here, but I've decided not to call ahead and prepare him for my arrival. It is likely that he will be disinclined to speak to me, since he no doubt believes that I represent his daughter's killer, and I think I have a better chance if I take him by surprise. I really have no preconceived notions of what I might find out from him, but if my theory is correct that Denise's murder was not random and served a purpose, then the more I can find out about her the better.

I soon find myself on a small, mostly dirt road in a very depressed area. I pass a series of small shacks, all with animals and trucks out front. I finally pull up to a ramshackle trailer, which bears the address I have for Denise's father. I'm glad that it's not part of a trailer park, since that seems to be where tornadoes always pick to strike. I don't have time to ponder the meteorological significance of this, because I see an elderly man rocking gently on a rocking chair in front of the trailer.

Sitting next to the man is a large German shepherd, quiet but eyeing me as if lunch just arrived. I pull my car up fairly close and get out, leaving the door open so that if the dog chases me I might have an escape route.

I approach the man, who shows no signs of even being aware that I am there.

“Hello, I'm looking for Wally McGregor.”

“He's the blind guy in the rocking chair.”

I look around to see if the person he is talking about is there, and then I realize with an embarrassed flash that he's talking about himself, and that he's already made an idiot out of me.

“You're Wally McGregor?”

He laughs. “I can't fool you, can I?”

I return the laugh. “No, I'm much too sharp for that. My name is Andy Carpenter.”

“What can I do for you?”

“I want to talk to you about Denise.”

I can see him tense up when he hears Denise's name; there is no statute of limitations on emotions when a parent loses a

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