Rage of Angels by Sidney Sheldon

There was an odd feeling of reliving the past as she got off at the sixth floor and walked toward the familiar door marked District Attorney, County of New York. Inside, the same secretary was seated at the same desk.

“I’m Jennifer Parker. I have an appointment with—”

“Go right in,” the secretary said. “The District Attorney is expecting you.”

Robert Di Silva was standing behind his desk, chewing on a wet cigar, giving orders to two assistants. He stopped as Jennifer entered.

“I was betting you wouldn’t show up.”

“I’m here.”

“I thought you would have turned tail and run out of town by now. What do you want?”

There were two chairs opposite Robert Di Silva’s desk, but he did not invite Jennifer to sit.

“I came here to talk about my client, Abraham Wilson.”

Robert Di Silva sat down, leaned back in his chair and pretended to think. “Abraham Wilson…oh, yes. That’s the nigger murderer who beat a man to death in prison. You shouldn’t have any trouble defending him.” He glanced at his two assistants and they left the room.

“Well, counselor?”

“I’d like to talk about a plea.”

Robert Di Silva looked at her with exaggerated surprise. “You mean you came in to make a deal? You amaze me. I would have thought that someone with your great legal talent would be able to get him off scot-free.”

“Mr. Di Silva, I know this looks like an open-and-shut case,” Jennifer began, “but there are extenuating circumstances. Abraham Wilson was—”

District Attorney Di Silva interrupted. “Let me put it in legal language you can understand, counselor. You can take your extenuating circumstances and shove them up your ass!” He got to his feet and when he spoke his voice was trembling with rage. “Make a deal with you, lady? You fucked up my life! There’s a dead body and your boy’s going to burn for it. Do you hear me? I’m making it my personal business to see that he’s sent to the chair.”

“I came up here to withdraw from the case. You could reduce this to a manslaughter charge. Wilson’s already in for life. You could—”

“No way! He’s guilty of murder plain and simple!”

Jennifer tried to control her anger. “I thought the jury was supposed to decide that.”

Robert Di Silva smiled at her without mirth. “You don’t know how heartwarming it is to have an expert like you walk into my office and explain the law to me.”

“Can’t we forget our personal problems? I—”

“Not as long as I live. Say hello to your pal Michael Moretti for me.”

 

 

Half an hour later, Jennifer was having coffee with Ken Bailey.

“I don’t know what to do,” Jennifer confessed. “I thought if I got off the case Abraham Wilson would stand a better chance. But Di Silva won’t make a deal. He’s not after Wilson—he’s after me.”

Ken Bailey looked at her thoughtfully. “Maybe he’s trying to psych you out. He wants you running scared.”

“I am running scared.” She took a sip of her coffee. It tasted bitter. “It’s a bad case. You should see Abraham Wilson. All the jury will have to do is look at him and they’ll vote to convict.”

“When does the trial come up?”

“In four weeks.”

“Anything I can do to help?”

“Uh-huh. Put out a contract on Di Silva.”

“Do you think there’s any chance you can get Wilson an acquittal?”

“Looking at it from the pessimist’s point of view, I’m trying my first case against the smartest District Attorney in the country, who has a vendetta against me, and my client is a convicted Black killer who killed again in front of a hundred and twenty witnesses.”

“Terrific. What’s the optimist’s point of view?”

“I could get hit by a truck this afternoon.”

 

 

The trial date was only three weeks away now. Jennifer arranged for Abraham Wilson to be transferred to the prison at Riker’s Island. He was put in the House of Detention for Men, the largest and oldest jail on the island. Ninety-five percent of his prison mates were there awaiting trial for felonies: murder, arson, rape, armed robbery and sodomy.

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