Rough Justice

Free Rough Justice by Lisa Scottoline

Book: Rough Justice by Lisa Scottoline Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lisa Scottoline
Philadelphia.
     
    News flash. Crime spreads to suburbs. Mary sighed and hit a key for the second article. Maybe this was a bonehead idea after all.
     
Ebenezer Yoachim, 68, died today at Sinai Gardens Convalescent Home. Mr. Yoachim owned the Yoyo Dry Cleaners on Cottman Avenue and until his illness was a baritone in the barbershop quartet called the Troubadours. Mr. Yoachim is survived by his wife, Rachel Newman Yoachim, and his son, Samuel.
     
    Mary felt let down. An obit. Couldn’t be Darnton. One story left. She hit the key without enthusiasm. It was from April 12, 1965, and appeared in the business section.
Ebenezer Darning, of Greene Street in Center City, was promoted to teller at the main branch of Girard Bank.
     
    Mary blinked, surprised at the similarity of the names. Darning/Darnton. She sat up straighter and scrolled down the page. Underneath the blurb was a thumbnail photo of a young man with a confident smile and a smooth chin. EBENEZER DARNING , said the caption. The man in the news photo was black, like Darnton. It was surprising. A black man promoted in that era? That was around the time of the Civil Rights Act. Racial discrimination was rampant then. Darning must have had brains and guts.
    Mary leaned closer to the computer screen to see the bank teller’s face. She couldn’t tell what he looked like from the tiny photo, so she moved the computer mouse and clicked the cyber-magnifying glass over the man’s face. The photo blossomed into pixelated squares but was still too small. The man’s eyes looked closed, as if the shutter had been snapped at just the wrong moment. Mary clicked the mouse button again.
    My God. She stared at the enlarged photo on the screen. The sight pressed her back into her desk chair. It was a photo of a young Eb Darning, but she could have been looking at an autopsy photo of Heb Darnton, his eyes sealed in death. Without the beard, there was a clear resemblance around the eyes, a protruding of the brow and a largish nose. It looked like the same man, over thirty years younger. Was Eb Darning the same man as Heb Darnton?
    To be sure Mary needed to compare the computer image to the photos of autopsy photos in the file. Had she discovered something significant? Was this related to the evidence the D.A. had uncovered? Could everybody in the world type better than she did? Mary leapt from her desk chair and ran down the hall to the glass conference room.

9
     
    T he blizzard intensified as night fell outside the jury room in the Criminal Justice Center, but Ralph Merry was pleased. The jurors were going the right way, which was finding Steere innocent. Ralph believed 100 percent in the Fourth Amendment and argued that Steere was justified in defending himself when he got carjacked. Plus it would made a more upbeat ending for Ralph’s book.
    The jurors weren’t allowed to sign any deals yet, but Ralph’s wife, Hilda, had gotten calls from two literary agents in New York, who said several publishing houses were interested in the inside story of the Steere case. That’s what publishing companies called themselves —
houses
— and Ralph thought they could call themselves whatever they wanted if they came through with six figures. Still, he wasn’t going to make any deals with any
houses
until he made sure they would put his picture on the cover like they did with General Schwarzkopf’s book. Ralph’s book deal was this close, except that Kenny Manning was putting up quite a fight to convict.
    “The man’s guilty!” Kenny was saying. He had lifted himself from his seat and leaned halfway over the table on his strong arms, almost in Christopher Graham’s startled face. “The brother walks up to the car, all the man had to do was drive away. That’s it. He didn’t have to
do
him!”
    “Damn right,” added Lucky Seven.
    Christopher regained his composure and squared his broad shoulders as he stood behind his chair. He hadn’t had much contact with black people, but he

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