He patted the other
side of his vest.
“I got another envelope with five in it right here, Counselor,” he said. “I was ready for you.”
“Damn, now I feel bad, leaving you with money in your pocket.”
I tore out his copy of the receipt and handed it out the window.
“I receipted it to Casey. He’s the client.”
“Fine with me.”
He took the receipt and dropped his arm off the window sill as he stood up straight. The car returned to a normal level. I
wanted to ask him where the money came from, which of the Saints’ criminal enterprises had earned it, whether a hundred girls
had danced a hundred hours for him to pay me, but that was a question I was better off not knowing the answer to. I watched
Vogel saunter back to his Harley and struggle to swing a trash can–thick leg over the seat. For the first time I noticed the
double shocks on the back wheel. I told Earl to get back on the freeway and get going to Van Nuys, where I now needed to make
a stop at the bank before hitting the courthouse to meet my new client.
As we drove I opened the envelope and counted out the money, twenties, fifties and hundred-dollar bills. It was all there.
The tank was refilled and I was good to go with Harold Casey. I would go to trial and teach his young prosecutor a lesson.
I would win, if not in trial, then certainly on appeal. Casey would return to the family and work of the Road Saints. His
guilt in the crime he was charged with was not something I even considered as I filled out a deposit slip for my client fees
account.
“Mr. Haller?” Earl said after a while.
“What, Earl?”
“That man you told him was coming in from New York to be the expert? Will I be picking him up at the airport?”
I shook my head.
“There is no expert coming in from New York, Earl. The best camera and photo experts in the world are right here in Hollywood.”
Now Earl nodded and his eyes held mine for a moment in the rearview mirror. Then he looked back at the road ahead.
“I see,” he said, nodding again.
And I nodded to myself. No hesitation in what I had done or said. That was my job. That was how it worked. After fifteen years
of practicing law I had come to think of it in very simple terms. The law was a large, rusting machine that sucked up people
and lives and money. I was just a mechanic. I had become expert at going into the machine and fixing things and extracting
what I needed from it in return.
There was nothing about the law that I cherished anymore. The law school notions about the virtue of the adversarial system,
of the system’s checks and balances, of the search for truth, had long since eroded like the faces of statues from other civilizations.
The law was not about truth. It was about negotiation, amelioration, manipulation. I didn’t deal in guilt and innocence, because
everybody was guilty. Of something. But it didn’t matter, because every case I took on was a house built on a foundation poured
by overworked and underpaid laborers. They cut corners. They made mistakes. And then they painted over the mistakes with lies.
My job was to peel away the paint and find the cracks. To work my fingers and tools into those cracks and widen them. To make
them so big that either the house fell down or, failing that, my client slipped through.
Much of society thought of me as the devil but they were wrong. I was a greasy angel. I was the true road saint. I was needed
and wanted. By both sides. I was the oil in the machine. I allowed the gears to crank and turn. I helped keep the engine of
the system running.
But all of that would change with the Roulet case. For me. For him. And certainly for Jesus Menendez.
Four
L ouis Ross Roulet was in a holding tank with seven other men who had made the half-block bus ride from the Van Nuys jail to
the Van Nuys courthouse. There were only two white men in the cell and they sat next to each other on a bench while the six
black men
Janwillem van de Wetering