Final Appeal

Final Appeal by Lisa Scottoline Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Final Appeal by Lisa Scottoline Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lisa Scottoline
want to check security.”
    “Come clean, Rossi.”
    I consider this. Ray is one of the few marshals who liked Armen; he’s also one of the few African Americans, which I suspect is no coincidence. “Tell you what. Get me in. If it pays off, I’ll tell you why.”
    “What am I supposed to tell the marshals?”
    “What marshals? You’re the marshal.”
    “I’m a CSO, technically. A court security officer. I mean the marshals watching the monitors.”
    “Tell ’em I’m checking security, that I’m the administrative law clerk to the chief judge.”
    “Grace.” His somber expression reminds me of something I’d rather not dwell on. Armen is gone.
    “Forget it, I’ll tell them something. I’ll handle it. Just get me in, I’ll owe you. Big-time.”
    Suddenly he snaps his fingers. “I know what you can do for me.”
    “Anything.”
    “You can introduce me to your fine friend, the lovely Eletha Staples.”
    “Eletha? Don’t you know her?”
    “I’ve been workin’ here as long as she has, but she won’t give me the time of day. She seein’ anybody?”
    I think of Leon, Eletha’s boyfriend, who gives her nothing but grief. “No.”
    “Hot dog!” He rubs his hands together; it makes a dry sound. “Lunch. I’ll start with lunch, take it nice and easy. Can you set it up?”
    “Deal.” I set the tuna hoagie and Snapple on the counter in front of Maryellen. At the last minute, Ray tosses in two packs of chocolate Tastykakes.
    “What are you having today, Grace?” Maryellen says. Her cloudy eyes veer wildly around the room.
    “Thanksgiving dinner,” I say to her and she laughs.
    After we leave the snack bar, Ray leads me through a labyrinth of hallways to the core of a secured part of the courthouse. It would have been impossible to find this myself, and when I reach the barred entrance I understand why.
    It’s a prison.
    Sixteen floors from where I work, in the same building. It gives me the creeps. The sign on the barred door says: ONLY COUNSEL MAY VISIT PRISONERS .
    We head down another hall, past a room with a number of empty desks in it, and open a door onto a small room, brightly lit by a ceiling of fluorescents. A wall of TV screens dominates the room, giving it a futuristic feel. There must be twenty-five black-and-white TV screens here, trained everywhere throughout the courthouse.
    The monitors in the left bank flash on the stairwells at each floor of the building, and the large screens in the middle offer an ever-changing peek into the courtrooms. In 12-A there’s a young woman crying on the witness stand. In 13-A an older man is being sentenced. In 14-A a little boy is testifying.
    “It’s like a soap opera, huh, Worrell?” Ray says amiably to the stony-faced marshal watching the screens. He’s a stocky middle-aged man in a black T-shirt that says UNITED STATES MARSHAL SERVICE . It looks more like a get-up for Hell’s Angels, but I do not remark this aloud.
    “Ugh,” the man says, his attention focused on the TV pictures of prison cells on the far right. Each cell is numbered and occupied by a man in street clothes, probably awaiting trial. They sit slumped or asleep in their cells; one is a black teenager in an oversized sweatshirt, just a kid. I think of Hightower.
    “This is Grace Rossi, Worrell. She’s a lawyer, works for the appeals court. She wants to see—”
    “I want to see the monitors,” I say with faux authority. “It’s a security check for the new chief judge.”
    Worrell begins to laugh at one of the prisoners, a Muslim crouched over in prayer. “Say it loud, brother. You’re gonna need it.” Ray looks sideways at the monitor.
    “Where’s the screen for the eighteenth floor?” I ask.
    “That one.” He points to one of the screens. The bottom of the screen reads 16-B. In the high-resolution picture, a young secretary pauses to tug up her slip. Worrell chuckles. “They forget Big Brother’s watching.”
    Of course they forget; I did. So did whoever

Similar Books

Not Quite a Mermaid

Linda Chapman

Sprout Mask Replica

Robert Rankin

Darkness Before Dawn

Sharon M. Draper

Watch Them Die

Kevin O'Brien

Shadow Pavilion

Liz Williams

Taliesin Ascendant (The Children and the Blood)

Skye Malone, Megan Joel Peterson

Hostage Nation

Victoria Bruce

Saturn Run

John Sandford, Ctein