stilted and artificial things are in his courtroom right now. Ginder isnât a racist, not by a long shot. But whether or not Joseph Ginder is a racist isnât whatâs going to play in the newspaper tomorrow unless the next words out of his mouth are the right ones. All thatâs going to come across is that he lets white people out for the same crimes he keeps black people in for, and that is going to play like shit.
Ginder is very angry now, but not yet so angry he canât think. He locks onto Towns, eye-to-eye, knowing itâs too late now to throw her out; heâs entered the zone where appearance is everything. The standoff doesnât move for several seconds, until a barely perceptible smile creeps into his face. I recognize the âIâm brilliantâ look; Iâve seen it a hundred times. He relaxes a little, leaning back in his chair. âOctober 27, that last date you mentioned,â he says. âYou say that was the same crime as Mr. Bol?â
Towns doesnât need to look at her notes. âThe crime was aggravated assault with intent to do bodily harm, and first-degree murder, Your Honor.â
âWhat bail did I set on that occasion, Ms. Towns?â
âYou set bail at seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars.â
Ginder nods sagely. âHow about the date before. What was that one?â
âApril 23, 1998. The crime in that instance was rape with special circumstances.â
âWhat was the bail in that instance, Ms. Towns?â
âFour hundred thousand dollars.â
âAll right, Ms. Towns. Iâll tell you what Iâll do. Iâll set bail for Mr. Bol for one million, two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Mr. Bol is facing both counts, and unless my math is rusty, thatâs the combination of the two.â
âIt is, Your Honor.â
I look over at Stillman and smile; Bol couldnât raise fifteen hundred dollarsâ bail, much less nearly a thousand times as much. A million dollars to Moses Bol might as well be a billion. Ginder is smiling when he grants the bail and states court is adjourned. Iâm impressed; itâs a deft move that is scrupulously fair and deflates the racism charge without actually confronting it. Ginder standsâshit-eating grin on his faceâand the gallery rises with him.
At which point, Fiona Towns asks, âWhere do I pay?â
CHAPTER
4
â THAT DIDN â T GO WELL .â
âNo,â I say, âit didnât.â I stare at Stillman, who, along with David Rayburn, has gathered with me around the district attorneyâs conference table. Itâs two hours after Stillman and I left the courthouse. The last few moments there are a blur, but at least I managed to recommend to Ginder that he arrange for security to escort the Africans out of the building. The judge, still shell-shocked by the pastorâs ploy, managed to pull himself together enough to get four officers to walk out the Sudanese in a long, protected line. The Nationites, angered that the man they considered Tamra Hartlettâs killer would soon be walking the streets, hissed at them as they passed. The officers gave the Africans a fifteen-minute head start, but eventually, they had to let the lions loose. Bol was remanded to Townsâs care, and his monitored house arrest will be at the church, not at Bolâs apartment in Tennessee Village, which is right next door to the Nation.
âI did a Nexis search on Towns,â I say. âI got six hits. Itâs definitely interesting reading.â
âWho is she?â Rayburn asks.
âShe took over the Downtown Presbyterian Church about eight months ago. The place has been on the verge of closing for years. Towns showed up, and itâs become a hangout for the hard-core peace and justice types. Sheâs got the eco-crowd, antiglobalization, the whole thing. Itâs more like a political party than a church. Apparently, she
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