Fatal Judgment. Andrew Welsh-Huggins
I heard an engine roaring to life. I looked and saw a van leaving the curb a block down a little too quickly and heading in the same direction as the judge’s Lexus. It too rolled through the stop sign and was gone. I stared a moment longer before walking inside.
I stomped to the rear, opened the door, and let Hopalong out into my postage stamp of a backyard. I refilled his water bowl, pulled a Black Label from the fridge, opened it, drained it in less time than it takes a jury to file in with its verdict, and grabbed another beer. I sat down at my kitchen table, started up my laptop, stood up and let the dog in, sat back down, and Googled Franklin County judge Laura Porter.
For the next few minutes I studied the results, trying but failing to see anything that might explain what just happened. So far as I could tell, the Web hits were divided evenly between media accounts of cases she oversaw and references to her Supreme Court campaign against William O’Malley, an appeals court judge from Youngstown. The former links were the usual grab bag of activity that passes through any big city judge’s courtroom. A murder here, a burglary there: an environmental land dispute, an attempted murder, a medical malpractice claim. But as I scrolled down, one of the criminal cases caught my attention.
WOMAN ARRESTED AFTER THREATENING JUDGE AT SENTENCING
Six weeks ago, Laura sent a nineteen-year-old man to prison for sixty-three years for wounding a child in a drive-by shooting that left the boy permanently paralyzed. The defendant was black, as was the child, who was just seven years old. Immediately afterward, the man’s mother stood up and called Porter a bitch who hates black people. At her instruction, deputies dragged the woman out of the courtroom. She was charged with inducing panic and contempt of court. I wrote the woman’s name down. Could this be the problem?
I’m in trouble . . . My God—are you all right?
Whose call was it that ended our impassioned fumbling and flipped her switch so completely? Whose photo was on the caller ID I glimpsed? A family member? A lover? Someone from the courthouse? What was the subsequent text that scared Laura so? And was it my imagination, or had the van that pulled out moments after she left seemed in a bit of a hurry for a lazy late summer evening?
I turned to the campaign web links. Unlike most political races, judicial competitions are normally about as exciting as watching Sherwin-Williams samples dry. Codes of conduct prevent a lot of the normal mudslinging. Third-party groups can get involved, pouring in unrestricted funds from the left and the right, but so far this had been a relatively uneventful face-off. Laura, a moderate Republican, had a small lead in the one and only poll taken so far. O’Malley, a Democrat, seemed a decent enough guy, and you couldn’t entirely write off his chances, if only because of his name. In Ohio as elsewhere, judges with Irish surnames earned an instant advantage in campaigns. His only blemish was a decade-old incident in which he admitted cheating on the number of hours he recorded for his continuing education classes. He blamed the mistake on procrastination brought on by stress. A professional conduct board cleared him of wrongdoing. Small potatoes in the world of political scandals, and it was unclear if voters cared—or even knew there was a campaign on and who the candidates were. At this point, it was probably Laura’s race to lose.
I threw in the towel after an hour. Whatever trouble Laura was in, it wasn’t in the public record or related to the race, so far as I could see. I opened the front door and glanced up and down the street. No sign of her Lexus, or a van in a hurry. I took a third Black Label into the living room, picked up my copy of Glass House, and started reading, checking the time every few minutes or so.
Everything OK? I texted when two hours had passed. No response. Half an hour later I tried calling, but got only voice mail. The greeting unchanged after all this time: “Hi, it’s Laura. You know the drill.” I didn’t bother leaving a message. Unease growing, I went back to my book, reading until my eyes started to droop, which was right around the time Hopalong was scratching the back door for one last trip outside. I sent a final text before heading to bed:
Come by no matter what time.
My phone stayed silent.
I’VE PASSED MORE RESTFUL nights in jail cells ahead of arraignments. When I awoke shortly after six o’clock, feeling as exhausted as when my head hit the pillow, the first thing I did was pick up my phone. My heart skipped a beat. There was a missed call from Laura shortly before midnight which somehow I’d slept through. A call, but no message. Sitting up, still half asleep, I pressed redial but once again got only voice mail.
This time I left a message, hung up, and tried again immediately. Same result. I debated what to do, though I knew within seconds there was only one choice, as dramatic as it seemed. Because something was wrong. The trouble she said she was in. The strange call: My God—are you all right? The van pulling away from the curb, fast. Her promise to return, followed by radio silence, followed by a call but no voice mail.
Fifteen minutes later, shaved and clutching a travel mug of coffee, I was in my Honda Odyssey headed north to her condo in an upscale faux–English cottage development off Dublin Road on the northwest side. The place she bought after the divorce occasioned by her husband’s declaration at breakfast one morning that he was leaving her for an associate at his blue-chip downtown law firm. The other woman only a bit older than half Laura’s age. A declaration—from the little I knew of the event—as unexpected as a blow to the head with a two-by-four. How had Laura put it, referring to the day I dumped her? You blindsided me, that’s for sure. Bringing back such lovely memories of Paul.
Twenty minutes later I parked, checked my surroundings, walked to the door, and rang the bell. I studied my phone while I waited, one of the most surefire and also most misleading ways to convince people you don’t pose a threat. I rang a second time, and then after thirty seconds rapped the metal knocker. Nothing. I tried the door handle. Locked. Looking around, I reached into my pocket, pulled out a key, and inserted it in the lock.
Call it a hazard of my trade. Call it deviousness. Call it a safeguard against my penchant for misplacing things. Go with a combo meal, if you like. For whatever reason, I guarded the key Laura had given me back in the day carefully. So carefully that I disobeyed her instructions and made a copy anyway. Which, for reasons I couldn’t explain fully, I kept in a drawer after our breakup. The fact I hadn’t looked at it in five years until this morning didn’t spare me a residual twinge of guilt over my—what? Breach of contract? Ethical oversight? Wishful thinking?
I recalled once more the strange call, her fear, and the suspicious van, pushed the thoughts away and turned the key. A moment later I was inside.
3
“LAURA?”
No response. The house dark except for a single lamp on an end table in the living room. I shut the door behind me, took a few steps farther in, and looked around. She’d replaced the couch with something a little higher end, and it looked as if the walls had a new coat of off-beige paint. Otherwise the house appeared the same as the one I used to visit each Sunday morning. Neat—neater than my place, anyway—but lived in. Nothing immediately suspicious. Throw pillows slightly off-kilter on the couch; TV remote resting atop a day-old New York Times on the coffee table; an empty wine glass beside it, bottom ringed with red. No signs of a break-in or a ransacking or anything out of the ordinary.
I stepped into the kitchen, calling her name again. Here too, things appeared normal. A coffee cup and a small plate sat in the left chamber of the double metal sink, but the counter area was clear and the surface free of finger smudges. I stepped over and examined the door of her refrigerator and the magnets she’d adorned it with. “Let’s go somewhere and judge people,” read one, picturing two women in brightly colored fifties-style dresses. “I’m not here to judge. I’m just here to point out your mistakes,” said another, superimposed over a photo of Laura—a birthday gag gift, perhaps? And one I remembered well: “Book lovers never go to bed alone.” In the middle of the magnets, the pad of narrow stationery with a wildflower design she kept affixed there for her weekly shopping list. Several items penciled in, starting with Eggs, bananas, 1 percent milk, the 1 percent underlined. So Laura, so precise. Why describe the type of milk when she was the