Every Street, Chapter 5
-see previous chapters for notes-
--Previously: Doug took the stand--
-------------------------
Inside the court, DeVann sat at his desk, murmuring some more
and filling more pages with what seemed to be random assortments
of letters, arranged in patterns on the paper. His ballpoint was
running out, and he stopped intermittently to shake it violently,
hoping to encourage more ink into the cartridge, as if by magic.
Doug stood by the heavy doorframe and watched the series of
actions. Write for thirty seconds. Stop to shake pen. Wipe mouth
with back of hand. Say something incomprehensible. Start writing
again. The cycle kept repeating. He hated the shambolic figure,
who couldn't even get a pen to work. But he had made the
selection and now he had to pay for it. Knowing little about law,
he tried to estimate how long he would be sent own for. Homicide
charges almost always got the defendant life, or so he picked up
from gossip around the admit desk. Reckless homicide, well that
hardly made it sound any better, so he'd probably lose parole for
that. His license was going too, so he could never even wimp out
and try to work in the prison medical unit. Standing there,
contemplating his grim future, his mind turned to what he might
have done to the future of others. He knew Carol would be the
first witness in his defence. How could DeVann possibly afford to
ignore her as a get-out clause now? And he had no power to stop
it. He stood in that position by the door for the rest of the
remaining time he had, until a bell sounded and the judge
returned. Doug made his way back to his seat, with the classic
'Let's Face The Music And Dance' ironically playing over and over
in his mind, taunting him.
"Prosecution. Have you any further witnesses?"
"No, Your Honour."
Judge Lomak grunted and marked something down on a piece of paper
in front of him. Still looking at the paper, he said,
"Defence? Call your first witness."
DeVann stood in a strange, half-couched type way, hovering over
his chair. "Defence calls Miss Carol Hathaway."
"HATHAWAY!" The court marshal boomed out of the doors.
Seconds later, Carol crossed the courtroom, brushing strands of
hair behind one ear as she stepped up and took the vows. Settling
in her seat, she refused to look at anyone other than the lawyer
in front of her, and if not that then the judge's podium next to
her.
"State your name and position for the record, please."
"Carol Hathaway, R.N., Nurse Manager at County General
ER."
"You have been working with Dr. Ross for some time now,
correct?"
"Yes. About ten years."
"In the same department?"
"Yes."
"You'd say Dr. Ross was a good doctor, wouldn't you?"
"Yes."
"And are you a good nurse, Miss Hathaway?"
"I try my best."
"You established a walk-in clinic at the County Emergency
Room, right?"
"Yes."
"Tell us a bit about it."
"It's a clinic that runs once a week, where people who want
flu shots, check-ups or advice can come without taking up time
that could be used to treat more critical patients."
"Good...good," DeVann nodded, as if he had been testing
her and she'd just given a right answer. "The clinic was
funded by...?"
"The hospital and generous gifts from the Carter
Foundation."
"I see...so was it the gifts or the hospital that provided a
PCA machine?"
"The hospital provided it."
Changing tack, DeVann asked, "On February 15th, when you
took a call from Joi Abbott, did you tell her that you would go
and see her and Ricky at home?"
"Yes."
"Did you tell her that Dr. Ross would come and see them at
home?"
"Yes I did."
"Why exactly was Mrs. Abbott calling you?"
"She called the ER because Ricky was in a lot of pain and
she couldn't understand how to work the PCA. She needed someone
to show her."
"So you asked Dr. Ross to go with you to the Abbott
home."
"Yes."
"You knew how to work the PCA, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"So why did you need Dr. Ross to come?"
"I...he was Ricky's doctor and he had explained to Joi how
to use it previously. I didn't feel that, as a nurse, it was my
place to use the machine."
"But surely, if that is the case, why did the hospital
provide you with one for the clinic you ran, without the aid of
doctors? So let me ask you again. Why did you need Dr. Ross to
come with you to the Abbott's house that night, particularly when
he had already stated that he didn't want to go?"
For the first time on the stand, Carol glanced at Doug. He met
her eyes and read beyond the anger and despair to a part in her
soul that was calling for help, and only he could ever save her.
In an instant he hated himself for bringing her so much pain,
from when they started dating all those years ago, when he dumped
her to pursue other women, when he turned up at her engagement
party, when he made fun of her old boyfriend, when he became
angry with her for kissing another man when he had been running
around with multiple women only a year before. And now this.
"Miss Hathaway, please answer the question."
"I thought that, as Ricky's doctor, he should be there too.
And...I...am in a long-term relationship with Dr. Ross. I wanted
his moral support."
"So you forced him to go with you?"
"No, I didn't. I told him that Joi was having trouble with
the PCA and he said he didn't want to go, so I said I was going
to go anyway and that I'd see him tomorrow."
"So you didn't force him to go with you...but perhaps there
was a slight guilt trip going on?"
"Objection!" boomed the prosecution, before Carol had a
chance to even contemplate answering.
"Members of the jury, please ignore that last question.
Counsellor..."
DeVann nodded and started again.
"Because of your relationship with Dr. Ross, would you say
that you placed any...personal emphasis on him joining you that
night?"
"No..."
"But you said to him that you wouldn't see him that night -
am I correct in saying you live together?"
"We were, yes."
"So by saying that you would be away that night, you implied
that you wouldn't come home."
"Yes. Because I was going to be at the Abbott's house."
"And how do you think that would make Dr. Ross feel, if he
knew you were going to be caring for one of his patients all
night while he sat home alone, doing nothing?"
"Objection, speculation on the defendant's feelings, Your
Honor."
"Sustained. Rephrase the question, Counsellor."
"How would you have felt if you had been in Dr. Ross's
position, Miss Hathaway?"
"I would have felt guilty, and lonely."
"Thank you. Prosecution's witness."
The lawyer strode back to his seat next to Doug, who was
concentrating hard on the table in front of him, rubbing his chin
with one hand.
"You've known and worked with Dr. Ross for ten years, Miss
Hathaway?"
"Yes."
"Has he ever done anything like this before?"
"No...nothing this serious."
"But you can confirm the evidence of the other witnesses
that his behaviour at time has been somewhat reckless?"
"Yes."
"Nurse Hathaway, were you aware that Dr. Ross had given Mrs.
Abbott the override code to the PCA machine?"
"No, not until Ricky was brought into the ER in full
arrest."
"So you weren't there when the lethal dosage was
administered?"
"No."
DeVann suddenly had a scrawling attack and looked just about
ready to burst. Excitedly, he leant over and whispered in Doug's
ear.
"No-one else was there but you and Joi, right? If we can get
her to avoid the admission that you gave her the code, then we
have no evidence to say you did it!"
Doug gazed at the man sitting beside him in amazement and wonder.
It was like this guy was on some sort of roller coaster, where at
the top was a brilliant idea, and at the dip was a huge, gaping
black hole of stupidity.
"I already said I did it, Clifton. And how exactly would you
get Joi to lie on the stand?"
"Oh." That idea crushed, he returned to listening to
the testimony. But he was too late, and had missed the tail end
of it.
"Thank you, Miss Hathaway, you may step down now."
"Thank you." She almost whispered it back to the judge,
and descended from the raised platform on which the witness box
sat. Walking forcefully, with her head held high, she left the
room, refusing to meet anyone's looks. Outside, Doug was pretty
sure Mark was waiting for her and that they would return shortly.
Maybe they were holding a 'Losing Your Medical License' party,
and he hadn't been invited.
As his lawyer called for Joi Abbott to give her evidence, Doug
scanned the list of witnesses speaking, supposedly, in favour of
him. Unable to decipher the handwriting initially, he was
disappointed to see that Clifton had only managed three. Three
whole people. And he was already on the second. Who was the
third? The mess of cursive letters that all ran into each other
like some sort of alphabetic pile up on the legal pad betrayed no
clue as to who it was going to be, until he saw another piece of
paper entitled 'Dr. Donald Anspaugh', and a list of questions
written below it. Anspaugh? He was testifying for him? What was
that about??
"Mrs. Abbott, when you called the County General Emergency
Room on February 15th, what exactly was the purpose of your
call?"
Joi looked decidedly nervous. She had seemed more peaceful after
Ricky had died but now she was on edge, as if tentatively hanging
on the brink of something.
"Ricky was in a lot of pain, and I couldn't get the machine
to work. I wanted someone to show me how to work it again."
"Who did you have in mind for this task?"
"Well, Dr. Ross. He had been treating Ricky, and he'd given
us the PCA machine, so I thought maybe he could help."
"But you didn't mind when Nurse Hathaway came without Dr.
Ross?"
"No. She'd treated Ricky, and me, before too. I was just
happy that someone could help me make Ricky feel better."
"So when Dr. Ross did turn up, what did you think?"
"I...I don't really recall. I was sitting with Ricky. I
think I was glad, because, well, no offence to Nurse Hathaway,
but he was a doctor and I thought maybe he could help Ricky some
more..."
"When you say, 'help Ricky some more', what exactly are you
referring to, Mrs. Abbott?"
"In the morning," Joi looked at Doug, and her eyes were
wet, "in the morning I asked Dr. Ross if he could help Ricky
to stop feeling anymore pain."
There was a ripple of conversation around the courtroom.
"So, you asked Dr. Ross, a fine ER pediatrician, to practice
euthanasia on your little boy." DeVann boomed; he'd
obviously seen one too many courtroom drama films.
Joi let a tear slide down her cheek as she gazed at Doug,
answering the question, "Yes."
"Can you tell us what happened after you asked him?"
"I...he didn't say anything, and he went downstairs. I
thought he had refused my request, and I started crying when I
heard the front door close, but then he came back up to us. He
wrote down four numbers on a piece of paper and told me that it
was the over-ride code for the machine so I could give Ricky as
much painkiller as he needed. He asked me if I was sure I wanted
to do this and I told him I was, I didn't want to watch my son in
pain anymore." More tears rolled down her face, leaving
tracks and trails, showing the pattern of her grief for her son
and for the career of the doctor who had listened to her and
cared.
"Dr. Ross gave you these numbers, and then what did you
do?"
"He went to work and I put the code in the machine and gave
Ricky as much medicine as I could...I told him," she paused
to wipe her nose with a Kleenex, "that he wouldn't hurt
anymore, and that I loved him. Then he stopped breathing and I
panicked so I called 911..."
"And that's when Ricky's father arrived and you went to the
County Emergency Room, right?"
"Yes."
"So, just recapping on what you have said..."
"Objection!! Summarisation should be kept until
closing!"
"Sustained."
Flustered, DeVann shuffled his paper pile, dropping one but
failing to notice.
"No further questions."
He returned to his seat, leaving his page of notes on the floor.
The assistant district attorney took advantage of this and picked
it up, handing it back to his incompetent opposition. Several
members of the audience laughed behind their hands, and Clifton
even had the dignity to blush. But after handing back the paper,
the lawyer returned to his seat and settled down comfortably.
"The prosecution has no questions, Your Honor."
"What?!" whispered Clifton, half to himself and half to
Doug. "Oh man, oh man. I haven't prepared for the next
witness...oh boy..."
"Would the defence call their next witness sometime today
please?"
"Uh, Your Honor, the defence would like to request a ten
minute recess."
The big judge considered this, eventually looking at his watch
and saying, "I could do with a snack. Court will reconvene
in ten minutes."
For the duration of the recess, Doug sat next to his lawyer and
watched him scribble hastily thought up questions under
Anspaugh's name. This was ridiculous he knew, but he had gone
past the point of no return a long time ago. Turning around, he
noticed that Carol and Mark weren't anywhere to be seen - had
they ever returned after Carol's testimony, or were they just
taking advantage of the break? Turning back to face front again,
he watched Judge Lomak ascend the steps to his platform and
position high above everyone. He watched Dr. Donald Anspaugh walk
to his place on the witness stand. He watched DeVann rise from
his seat and take his place in front of his witness, but all he
heard was the sound of Carol's breathing behind him. Did she want
him to go to jail? Surely that's what she should want, for
betraying her more than anything else. Or did she want him to
stay free, so the future charges against her would be lessened?
He loved her with all his heart, like he had never loved anyone
before, but he couldn't foresee a future for their relationship
after what he had done. They were already living apart - what
hope did they ever have of remaining a couple if he was locked
away? Desperately clawing at the edges of the depression pit, he
shifted his attention to try and concentrate on what Anspaugh was
saying, with the thought ever present in his mind - would these
be his last few hours of freedom?
"I am not condoning Dr. Ross' behaviour, but I believe that
he has always had his patients' best interests at heart."
"So is his supposed crime forgivable?"
"Objection! That is for the jury to decide, surely?!"
"Hypothetically I'm talking, Your Honour."
"Objection over-ruled."
"In my eyes I've forgiven Dr. Ross for a lot of things, and
if it was up to me I would forgive him for this as well. But he
would have to be watched more carefully in future, his patients
would have to be monitored."
"Ummm..." DeVann stumbled over his next question. He'd
lost a sheet of paper. Doug saw it, on the floor by the chair
next to him. And although he wanted to help, something in him
gave up and he didn't mention it as he watched his attorney
flounder by the platform.
"Uh. The defence rests, Your Honor."
As soon as he had said it, he turned around and saw the paper on
the floor. Turning back to the judge to ask if he could continue,
he was beaten by the heavy man to it.
"No, Counsellor, you know the rules. You've closed your
case, now sit back down. I'm not sure I've seen such a shambolic
attempt at practicing law ever before. Does the prosecution have
any further questions?"
"No, Your Honor, we believe that Dr. Anspaugh has no further
evidence useful to ourselves."
"Okay. Witness dismissed. We'll break for lunch and
reconvene at 2pm." He banged his gavel and lurched off once
again.
Grateful for the break, Doug left the courthouse altogether. He
wasn't meant to, and he knew it. But he needed the air and a
change of scenery albeit brief. He stood on the street outside
the building, trying to ignore the cold breeze that blew around
him, little sharp daggers of icy air poking and prodding and
demanding an answer. Standing there, he knew his future was not
in Chicago, not in the cold, windy city. He studied his feet, and
looked up as a truck roared past. Starting a slow walk to the
nearest food vendor, he heard steps behind him and felt Mark fall
into step beside him.
"Hey."
"Hey."
After some moments of silence, their slow footsteps speaking for
them, Mark said to the air in front of him, "I just wanted
to say good luck for the verdict."
"Huh. Yeah, right." Doug stopped at the burger bar and
took some notes out of his pocket.
"No, Doug. You don't understand, none of us want you to go.
We didn't want this to happen."
"It's not your problem, Mark. I'm going, whatever the
verdict is, you know that."
"Leaving town?"
"Yes."
He ordered a plain burger, handed over his change and started the
walk back to the courthouse. Mark followed him, almost running in
a half-gait position, trying to get him to stop and listen.
"Are you sure you really want to leave Chicago, Doug?"
"What would I do here, Mark? Sit around, get fat and crazy,
live of my unemployment cheques? Wind up in the ER in thirty
years time with bedsores because I'm too big to get out of the
bed, heart failure because I can't afford proper food,
lacerations where I've been cutting myself so that I can die and
never have to deal with another day? I don't think so. Prison in
Florida or Carolina, somewhere where the sun shines and I can get
a good view from my cell window."
Unable to say anything in response, Mark studied Doug's face. The
anger and pain he recognised were all present but there was a
hint of something else. A desperation, a fear maybe, in his eyes.
Fury that wasn't impenetrable, so solid was its core, lined his
face and the lines around his eyes that used to come from
laughing were there as a mark of anguish. His friend was sinking,
and he didn't want to swim.
©Triggersaurus 2001