What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)

Though she had to admit, the offer was attractive.

Lance nodded. “I love you, and I want you to be happy more than anything else. Just promise me you’ll think about the job before turning Garcia down.”

“It won’t change my decision.” Morgan rose onto her toes and kissed him on the mouth. So why did the offer still feel tempting?

He kissed her back, then his hands went to her arms, rubbing them. “It’s cold. You shouldn’t be out here without a coat. I’ll see you in the morning.” He nodded toward the house. “Get some rest. Big day tomorrow.”

“Goodnight.” Morgan kissed him again, then walked inside. She went to the kitchen and took an ice pack from the freezer. She wanted to prevent as much swelling as possible. The hearing would be difficult enough without her looking wounded.

She went to bed with her computer and notes and spent the next few hours researching case precedent, reviewing her arguments for Haley’s bail, and praying she could convince the judge. Come morning, Haley’s fate was entirely in the hands of Hard-Ass Judge Marlow.





Chapter Eleven

Morgan set her tote on the defense counsel table and removed her legal pad. Her private case notes were written in her personal shorthand on the second page, covered by the blank top sheet.

Not that she was paranoid or anything.

She didn’t bother to sit. The hearing would be over in minutes. The courtroom hummed with low voices as she waited for her client. Judge Marlow set a pair of black-rimmed reading glasses on his nose and lifted a sheet of paper. He was reading the charges, no doubt.

The rattle of metal signaled Haley’s arrival. A bailiff led her into the room. Her stunned gaze flitted around the courtroom, as if looking for a safe place to land. Haley seemed to decide the floor was her only option and dropped her head. She shuffled as she walked. The shackles around her ankles seemed to weigh her down, and her orange jail uniform hung loose on her tiny frame. She could have been a child dressed as an inmate for Halloween.

Her hair fell in a disheveled curtain around her face, and Morgan wanted to smooth it. The young woman looked wild. This was not the steady, stable impression Morgan had wanted to make on the judge. But then, the jail intake process was humiliating and dehumanizing. For Haley, it must have been even more traumatic.

The bailiff steered her to the table. Haley lifted her gaze to Morgan’s. The girl’s face was pale and freckled. She looked unbearably young and vulnerable.

Victimized.

Morgan’s heart clenched, and she hoped that’s what the judge would see.

She glanced at Esposito, standing at the prosecutor’s table across the aisle. So arrogant. So sure of his role. Of Haley’s guilt.

Morgan thought of all the defendants she’d prosecuted. Had she ever taken the time to really look at them? Had any of them been innocent?

Behind Morgan, the courtroom door opened. Bryce Walters slipped in and joined his ADA. Only the highest-profile cases warranted the DA’s personal attention.

The judge coughed, drawing Morgan’s attention back to him. He scrutinized Morgan’s face; sympathy softened his expression for a brief moment before he got back to business. Morgan mentally cursed McFarland. Her diligent use of ice overnight had kept the swelling to a minimum, but her black eye was visible through two layers of concealer.

She supposed she should be grateful McFarland hadn’t punched her in the mouth. At least her voice was clear.

Judge Marlow officially called the case and identified the parties present for prosecution and defense. “Does the defense waive the formal reading of the charges?”

“Yes, Your Honor.” She saw no benefit in dragging out the process, especially with Judge Marlow. He liked cases in his courtroom to move along at a brisk clip.

“Mr. Walters.” The judge shifted his gaze to the prosecutor’s table. “You may proceed.”

“The state strongly feels that Ms. Powell should remain in custody.” Bryce’s voice rang out, clear and confident. “The crime is particularly heinous in nature, and the evidence is solid. The defendant is clearly a danger to the public.”

“Ms. Dane.” The judge looked to Morgan.

“Your Honor, Ms. Powell has never been in trouble with the law,” Morgan argued. “She has lived in the area for seven years and was also born here. Her father was a Scarlet Falls police officer who lost his life in the line of duty. She has worked for the same employer since graduating from the local university three years ago. Her mother lives in Grey’s Hollow, and Haley lives with her. There is nothing in her background that suggests she is a flight risk or dangerous.”

Judge Marlow lowered his black-framed reading glasses to the very edge of his nose and squinted at the prosecutor, waiting for his rebuttal.

Bryce’s face hardened with disapproval. “Ms. Powell stabbed Noah Carter in the abdomen three times. She then went to sleep, covered in his blood, leaving him to bleed to death. Her fingerprints were found on the knife, and the expedited DNA report shows that Mr. Carter’s blood was literally on her hands.”

In the back of the courtroom, a woman sobbed. Morgan knew without looking that the woman was Noah Carter’s mother.

Ignoring the empathy in her heart, Morgan argued, “Ms. Powell has strong ties to the community. Her record is as clean as it can be. She’s never even received a parking ticket. In addition, she has a serious health condition.” Morgan defined Addison’s disease for the judge. “She became seriously ill over the weekend in the sheriff’s custody and required treatment in the hospital. Jail could be deadly for her.”

Judge Marlow set his glasses down and scrubbed both hands across his face. Dropping his hands, he stared at Haley for a few seconds. She trembled, her shoulders caved inward and her small body curled protectively around itself.

Morgan prayed the judge interpreted her unfocused eyes as desperation, illness, and fear, not insanity.

The judge rubbed his jaw, his expression thoughtful. “Ms. Powell, the district attorney has indicated he will be charging you with first-degree murder, a very serious charge with significant penalties. While I will not insist you remain in custody, I agree that a high bond is warranted in this matter. I am going set a one-million-dollar cash bond in this case, with an additional condition of electronic monitoring, at the defendant’s expense.”

Cash?

Instead of putting up 10 percent of the total bond and using a professional bail bond service for the remainder, Eliza would have to secure Haley’s release with $1 million in cash.

Judge Marlow set his jaw and leveled his gaze at Morgan. He was not going to yield, but she had to try. “Your Honor, we feel a million-dollar cash bond is excessive and ask for a professional bond option.”

“Denied. Bail is set at one million dollars cash.” Marlow’s tone and gavel announced that his word was final.

At the prosecutor’s table, Bryce looked irritated, but Esposito’s glare could have sliced Morgan in two. What was wrong with him? Why did he act as if every small win for her was a personal affront? Besides, with the judge requiring the entire bond to be produced in cash, there was a chance that Haley would have to remain in custody anyway.

Morgan turned away from his glower. She had no time for his ego issues. Sinking into her chair, she slid her legal pad into her tote. Next to her, Haley sat, pale and silent and shaking.

“A million dollars in cash?” she asked in a small voice.

“We’ll figure this out.” Morgan hoped. With a business the size of Wild, Eliza must have assets. Right? She must have something she could liquidate or borrow against. If not, they could appeal. The judge was supposed to set two forms of bail.

The bailiff led Haley away.