The Wages of Sin
by Nancy Allen
on Tour April 26 - May 11, 2016
Book Details:
Genre: Legal Thriller, Crime Published by: Witness Impulse Publication Date: 04/26/2016 Number of Pages: 320 ISBN: 0062438751 (9780062438751) Series: An Ozarks Mystery, 3rd | Each is a Stand Alone Thriller Purchase Links:
Author Bio:
Nancy Allen practiced law for 15 years as Assistant Missouri Attorney General and Assistant Prosecutor in her native Ozarks. She has tried over 30 jury trials, including murder and sexual offenses, and is now a law instructor at Missouri State University. Her first novel,The Code of the Hills, was published by HarperCollins in 2014. The Wages of Sin, is the third book in her Ozarks mystery series.Catch Up with Nancy Allen:
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Excerpt;
Oh my God. Let this be over,
Elsie thought, doodling on the page of a legal pad. Assistant
Prosecuting Attorney Elsie Arnold had been tied up in Judge Carter’s
court for nearly two hours that morning, representing the State of
Missouri in a preliminary hearing. The criminal defendant was charged
with robbery in the first degree. Only Judge Carter, Elsie thought,
would be coldhearted enough to subject her to a robbery prelim on the
Tuesday after Labor Day weekend.
Public Defender Josh Nixon was grilling
the bank president, Donna Hudson, in cross-examination.
“So you were present at the time of
the alleged robbery?”
“Yes—I said so. In my office.”
“But isn’t
it true that, if you were shut up in your office, you did not have
occasion to hear whether the defendant threatened any harm?”
“The buzzer sounded. I heard it.”
The woman sat stiff, with righteous indignation in every
wrinkle of her face.
“The alarm, right? But you didn’t
hear any statements made by the defendant, did you? Because you
remained safely in the back of the bank.”
“I saw the bomb.”
A comical grin grew on the defense
attorney’s face; Elsie
closed her eyes so she wouldn’t
have to see it.
“The bomb?”
he repeated.
“The box. The box with the tape.”
The criminal complaint filed by the
prosecution did not allege that the defendant had threatened the bank
employee with a bomb. The criminal charge stated that the defendant
threatened the use of what appeared to be a bomb.
“Describe this box, please.”
“It was a box, about this size,”
she said, making a rectangle shape with her hands. “And
it was covered with duct tape.”
“Did the defendant detonate this
deadly bomb? This dangerous instrument you described?”
The banker eyed the defense attorney
with resentment. “You
know what happened.”
“Tell me. For the record.”
“The bank teller gave him the money.
Everything in her drawer. He ran out, left that box on the counter.”
“Then what happened?”
“The bomb squad came and took over.”
“What did they do? If you know.”
“They exploded it.”
The lines deepened around the woman’s
mouth. “They blew it
up. And the mess went everywhere.”
“Mess? What kind of mess?”
Elsie wanted to cover her ears to block
out the answer that was coming.
“The chocolate, the cherries.”
Josh Nixon leaned on the empty jury
box, nodding sagely. “So
the bomb was not a bomb at all? It was—what
did you say?”
“A box of candy. Chocolate-covered
cherries. Wrapped in duct tape.”
“And for the record, Ms. Hudson: was
the money recovered? The money from the bank teller’s
drawer?”
“Yes, it was. But—”
Before she could complete her sentence,
the defense attorney turned his back to her, cutting the witness off.
“No further questions,”
he said, and walked back to the counsel table. Nixon slid into his
seat, stretching his long legs out in front of him and tucking his
longish sun-streaked hair behind his ear. He hadn’t bothered to don
a tie.
Judge Carter, a slim man in his forties
with prematurely silver hair, peered at Elsie over his glasses.
“Redirect?”
Elsie stood at the counsel table,
looking at the bank president with an encouraging face. “But
did it appear to be a bomb? When the defendant threatened the teller
with it?”
“Objection,”
Nixon said, sitting up straight. “The
witness wasn’t present,
has no way of knowing other than hearsay!”
Elsie barked back. “You’re
the one who opened the door on this line of questioning. In your
cross-examination.”
The bank president rose from her chair,
the picture of aggrieved fury. “What
I want to know,” she
said, “is who is going
to pay? For that mess? The cleaning of the bank lobby?”
Judge Carter slammed the gavel. The
bank president jumped, startled, and hopped back onto her seat on the
witness stand.
“Ms. Arnold—further questions?”
“No.”
“Any further witnesses on behalf of
the defense?”
“No,”
said Nixon.
The judge turned to his clerk. “The
court finds probable cause. Defendant is bound over to Circuit Court
on the charge of robbery in the first degree. Arraignment to be held
Friday at 9:00 A.M.”
When the judge left the bench, Josh
Nixon turned to whisper with his client, a long-haired young man with
a bushy mustache. The president of Bank of the Hilltop, Donna Hudson,
stormed off the witness stand and bore down on Elsie.
“How could I be treated this way in a
court of law?”
“No one meant to mistreat you,”
Elsie said in a soothing voice. “It
was just cross-examination—the defense attorney gets to ask
questions. I explained that to you before.”
“But I am the victim. My family owns
the bank.”
“That’s
right, Donna. But the defense has the right to confront the witnesses
against him.”
“Who gave that criminal the right to
confront me? I am a taxpaying citizen.”
Elsie backed up a step, angling to make
a getaway. “The US
Constitution. Sixth Amendment.”
The banker’s
eyes narrowed; Elsie sensed that the woman didn’t
appreciate the finer points of the Bill of Rights.
“When will the court make him pay for
the cleanup? The cleanup of the bank lobby?”
Edging closer to the door, Elsie shook
her head. “Hard to say.
You think this guy has any money?”
Mrs. Hudson’s
unhappy expression showed that the conversation wasn’t
over. But as she was about to speak again, Elsie’s
friend and coworker, Breeon Johnson, hurried into the courtroom and
grabbed Elsie’s arm.
“Downstairs,”
Breeon said.
“Now? Right now?”
Elsie asked.
“Just one darned minute,”
Donna Hudson said. She opened a Louis Vuitton handbag and
pulled out a Kleenex, rubbing furiously at her nose. Elsie eyed the
bag with curiosity. It was probably the real article. Though as an
employee of a rural county in the Ozarks, Elsie didn’t
have sufficient acquaintance with designer goods to distinguish the
genuine product from a knockoff.
Elsie gave Breeon an inquiring look.
“Can you wait a sec?”
Breeon tugged at her arm. “Can’t
wait. It’s an
emergency.”
Elsie could see from Breeon’s
face that she was deadly serious. “Okay,”
she said. Looking back at the banker, Elsie spoke hastily.
“The system is working,
Mrs. Hudson. Your bank robber has been bound over; he’ll
be arraigned in Circuit Court, and his case will be set for jury
trial. I appreciate your cooperation, and your testimony. But I have
to get downstairs.” She
looked over to the door; Breeon had just vanished through it.
“Something major is
going on.”
“But will he pay?”
The woman’s
voice rang in Elsie’s
ears, and she was tired of hearing it. Turning away, she said, “Yeah.
Yes, Mrs. Hudson. He’ll
pay.”
“How?”
“The old-fashioned way, I expect.
With his liberty.”
The banker protested, her voice shrill,
but Elsie departed at a fast pace, and scrambled down the worn marble
staircase of the McCown County Courthouse, catching up to Breeon at
the back entrance to the Prosecutor’s
Office.
“What?”
Elsie demanded, as Breeon punched the security buttons to
access the private entrance. “What
is it?”
Breeon shook her head in disgust.
“Another murder. They
found the body in a trailer home, right outside the city limits. Can
you believe it?”
“Again?”
Murder cases were rare in rural McCown County, a small
community nestled deep in the Ozark hills of southwest Missouri.
Elsie had handled a murder case over the summer, prosecuting a
juvenile for the death of a bus driver. A second homicide, occurring
within such a short period of time, would shake the entire community.
“Yeah, another woman,”
Breeon said, pushing the door open. “But
a young one this time.”
“Aw, shit,”
Elsie said.
Breeon gave her a look, righteous anger
evident in her face. “She
was eight months pregnant.”
The news stopped Elsie in her tracks.
“A
double murder,” she
whispered.
Thank you for showcasing this book...it sounds like something I will enjoy!
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