175923.fb2 Temporary Sanity - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 52

Temporary Sanity - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 52

Chapter 49

The stunned courtroom stands mute for a full ten seconds. And then Joey Kelsey begins to clap.

Beatrice bangs her gavel and Joey pauses, but now Harry and the Kydd are clapping too. Buck’s prison escorts join in, and Joey watches them before staring back at Beatrice and resuming his applause. Then the whole room explodes. A spontaneous, thunderous standing ovation.

The Kydd takes Patty Hammond by the hand and leads her through the crowd to our table. Buck and Patty stand at arm’s length for a beat, both seemingly unable to move in the enormity of the moment. They melt into each other, then, and the rest of the Hammonds rush forward and embrace them as one.

Luke and Maggie jump to their feet in the front row, whooping out loud and pounding their palms together over their heads. Maggie twists around toward the back door, lets out a shriek, and pushes her way into the center aisle. “Mom!” she shouts, fighting against the tide of humanity moving against her. “Let me through. Please. It’s my mom!”

The crowd actually parts down the middle to let Maggie pass, even the press. Sonia Baker stands just inside the back door, waiflike in street clothes undoubtedly borrowed from the Barnstable County House of Correction. Her eyes grow wide as she surveys the unruly mob in the courtroom, then fill as she spots Maggie hurtling toward her. She bends to embrace her daughter, but Maggie seems to have other plans.

Maggie allows her mother only the briefest of hugs, then pulls away and presents the small white box from Pedro’s Pawn Shop. Sonia hesitates, so Maggie opens it for her and stands on tiptoes to clasp the glittering necklace at the back of her mother’s neck.

It’s Patty who begins the applause this time. Patty, then Buck, then the rest of us. The TV camera lights and flashbulbs shift to the back of the room. Sonia looks confused, embarrassed. Maggie takes a bow.

Harry appears at my side and I reach up to brush my fingertips over his left temple. A light blue bruise is taking shape there, the result of pressure from Stanley’s Stallard Arms. All at once, I realize how close I came to losing Harry, and I’m overwhelmed by the thought of it. Words fail me, though; hot tears slide down my cheeks instead.

Harry leans over and cups my face in his hands, brushing my tears away with his thumbs. “Oh, no you don’t,” he says, pressing his forehead against mine. “You don’t get to fall apart yet.”

He’s right, of course. We’ll both fall apart later. When we can.

“Break it up, you two”-it’s Geraldine-“or I’ll have you taken into protective custody.” She pauses at our table on her way out of the courtroom and takes me aside. “Stanley confessed,” she says, “before going into surgery.”

“Confessed to what?”

“All of it: Howard Davis, Judge Long.” She tilts her head back toward Harry. “Him.”

I nod, but say nothing, and she leans closer. “He told me he didn’t have a choice. He’d been sworn to uphold and protect the system. And they were destroying it, one case at a time. He said he knew I’d understand.”

“Sounds like a vigilante, Geraldine. Better put his case on a fast track.”

She frowns and tosses her head at the Kydd. “Tell the Georgia Peach I’ll have Dominic Patterson out by noon.”

“He’ll be glad to hear it.”

She starts to leave, but apparently thinks better of it and turns back to me, her green eyes intense. “Next time you shoot someone, Martha, for Christ’s sake do it right.”

Once again, I’m speechless.

Geraldine heads for the side door and as I watch her exit, I realize the bench is empty. I catch Joey Kelsey’s eye. “Where’s the judge?”

“Gone,” he says, smiling.

“Did she call a recess?”

“Nope. She just got up and left.” Joey’s smile expands, as if the judge’s departure is exactly what he wanted for Christmas.

So Beatrice Nolan just got up and left. She didn’t bother to tell us we’re adjourned, didn’t bother to tell Buck Hammond he’s free to go. She didn’t thank the jurors for their dedicated service. She didn’t even wish them a happy holiday.

We will.

If by moral insanity it be understood only a disordered or perverted state of the affections or moral powers of the mind, it cannot be too soon discarded as affording any shield from punishment for crime; if it can be truly said that one who indulges in violent emotions, such as remorse, anger, shame, grief, and the like, is afflicted with homicidal insanity, it will be difficult, yes, impossible, to say where sanity ends, and insanity begins…

We say to you, as the result of our reflections on this branch of the subject, that if the prisoner was actuated by an irresistible inclination to kill, and was utterly unable to control his will or subjugate his intellect…he is entitled to an acquittal.

Mr. Justice Paxson

88 PA 291

January 20, 1879