An
Excerpt from Amanda's Rib
If Amanda
Winslow had been an only child,
she'd be dead.
She traced a fingernail
along a vein in her wrist. Suicide
often tempted her, but Amanda
knew her death would destroy her
sister. Pushing those thoughts
aside, she sat on the edge of
the metal cot and covered her
face with her hands. Images and
voices of lawyers swirled in her
mind, blending together to become
one. “A lot depends on the
judge we get.” “We
can make motions to delay.”
“We can make motions to
speed things along.” “I'll
try to get you out of here, but
it's doubtful they'll release
you.” Didn't anyone have
something good to say? She raised
her head at the sound of keys.
“You've
got a visitor.” Janice,
the only guard who treated her
like a human, stood on the other
side of the bars.
“Who?”
“Graham
Burke, in the flesh. Not a flunky,
but the man himself.” Janice
swung the jail door open.
“Pardon
me for being obtuse, but who is
Graham Burke?”
“Only
the most famous lawyer in all
of Minnesota. You've got to get
out more.”
“So
they tell me.”
“Don't
keep the man waiting.”
Amanda stood, smoothed
her baggy orange jumpsuit, and
walked with Janice to a meeting
room. The outfit swam on her,
and she'd had to roll the fabric
at her ankles or risk tripping.
Maybe she'd be sentenced to life
in a cornfield. She'd make a good
scarecrow. Janice opened the door
and Amanda saw a man seated at
a gray table.
He stood and crossed
the room. “Ms. Winslow,
I'm Graham Burke.”
“I'm
at a disadvantage,” Amanda
said, shaking his hand. “You
know who I am, but I don't know
who you are.”
Motioning toward
the table and two chairs, he said,
“Why don't we get better
acquainted?”
“Knock
when you're done.” Janice
closed the door behind her.
Watching him closely,
Amanda moved to the table and
sat on one of the chairs. He wore
his snowy white shirt, gray suit
and red tie with an air of power.
His thick platinum hair gleamed.
The word ‘dapper' had been
invented for men like him. “Why
are you here, Mr. Burke?”
“Graham.
May I call you Amanda?”
He took the seat across from her.
“Sure,
why not? We're not big on formality
here.”
“Your
case interests me. Have you hired
an attorney yet?”
Amanda shook her
head and brushed her bangs out
of her eyes. “No. No one's
given me any reason to. Everyone
I've talked to seems to think
my best bet is to hope for a good
judge and have faith in the system.
I'd like a little more than that
on my side.”
With a nod, Graham
said, “It's your lucky day.
I'm here to offer representation.”
Amanda stared at
him. “Just like that. No
questions? No ‘Did you do
it?' or ‘Tell me about that
day'?”
“I
don't want to know if you did
it. I'll have to ask you a few
things, but too much knowledge
may limit my defense. I can't
argue something I know isn't true.
Trust me on this. Trust me on
a lot of things.”
“I've
got to tell you something, Graham.
I'm tapped out on trust.”
“Can't
say I blame you. Your case intrigues
me, Amanda. I have a few contacts
and I've learned more than what's
been reported. The prosecution
has no motive, no weapon, no evidence,
no case.”
“Then
why did they arrest me?”
“Process
of elimination. It had to be you.
That and public pressure. Upscale
wives don't kill their husbands.
If they do, they have to be punished.
I'm here to make sure that doesn't
happen to you.”
“I
see. I'm glad you're confident,
Graham, but what if I can't afford
you?”
“We'll
think of something. First thing
I need to do is get you out of
here.”
Amanda straightened.
“You can do that? The other
attorneys said it was very unlikely.”
“Unlikely,
yes. Impossible, no. I'll do my
best, and when I do my best I
usually get what I want.”
He stood and held out his hand
again. “Do we have a deal?”
After getting to
her feet, Amanda gave his hand
a firm shake. “Once I'm
on the sidewalk, we have a deal.
I hope you're as good as you claim.”
Graham moved to
the door and knocked, then turned
to Amanda. “You want modest,
look somewhere else. You want
freedom, I'm your man.”
“I
have the feeling you're exactly
who I'm looking for. You get me
out of here today, and I'll know
for sure.”
Janice opened the
door and raised her eyebrows at
Amanda. “Done?”
“Done,”
Graham answered and strode out
of the room.
Drumming her fingers
on the table, Amanda felt the
first glimmer of hope she'd known
in a year, since the day of Michael's
murder. “Janice, I might
have a chance.”
“If
you're breathing, you've got a
chance.”
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