1970
The language of the court was, of course, not as poetic as the language of the marsh. Yet Kya saw similarities in their
natures. The judge, obviously the alpha male, was secure in his position, so his posture was imposing, but relaxed and unthreatened as the territorial boar. Tom Milton, too, exuded confidence and rank with easy movements and stance. A powerful buck, acknowledged as such. The prosecutor, on the other hand, relied on wide, bright ties and broad-shouldered suit jackets to enhance his status. He threw his weight by flinging his arms or raising his voice. A lesser male needs to shout to be noticed. The bailiff represented the lowest-ranking male and depended on his belt hung with glistening pistol, clanging wad of keys, and clunky radio to bolster his position.ย Dominance hierarchies enhance stability in natural populations, and some less natural,ย Kya thought.
The prosecutor, wearing a scarlet tie, stepped boldly to the front
and called his next witness, Hal Miller, a rake-thin twenty-eight-year-old with moppy brown hair.
โMr. Miller, please tell us where you were and what you saw the night of October 29 to 30, 1969, at about 1:45ย A.M.โ
โMe and Allen Hunt were crewing for Tim OโNeal on his shrimp boat, and we were headed back to Barkley Cove Harbor late, and we seen her, Miz Clark, in her boat, about a mile out, east of the bay, headed north-northwest.โ
โAnd where would that course take her?โ โRight smack to that cove near the fire tower.โ
Judge Sims banged his gavel at the outburst, which rumbled for a full minute.
โCould she not have been going somewhere else?โ
โWell, I reckon, but thereโs nothing up that way but miles of swamped-out woods. No other destination I know of โcept the fire tower.โ
Ladiesโ funeral fans pumped against the warming, unsettled room. Sunday Justice, sleeping on the windowsill, flowed to the floor and walked to Kya. For the first time in the courtroom, he rubbed against her leg, then jumped onto her lap and settled. Eric stopped talking and looked at the judge, perhaps considering an objection for such an open display of partiality, but there seemed no legal precedent.
โHow can you be sure it was Miss Clark?โ
โOh, we all know her boat. Sheโs been boatinโ around on her own fer years.โ
โWere there lights on her boat?โ
โNo, no lights. Mightโve run her over if we hadnโt seen her.โ โBut isnโt it illegal to operate a boat after dark without lights?โ โYeah, she was sโposed to have lights. But she didnโt.โ
โSo on the night that Chase Andrews died at the fire tower, Miss Clark was boating in exactly that direction, just minutes before the time of his death. Is that correct?โ
โYeah, thatโs what we seen.โ Eric sat down.
Tom walked toward the witness. โGood morning, Mr. Miller.โ โGood morninโ.โ
โMr. Miller, how long have you been serving as a crew member on Tim OโNealโs shrimp boat?โ
โGoing on three years now.โ
โAnd tell me, please, what time did the moon rise the night of October 29 to the 30?โ
โIt was waning, and didnโt rise till after we docked in Barkley.
Sometime after twoย A.M.ย I reckon.โ
โI see. So when you saw the small boat motoring near Barkley Cove that night, there was no moon. It must have been very dark.โ โYeah. It was dark. There was some starlight but, yeah, pretty
dark.โ
โWould you please tell the court what Miss Clark was wearing as she motored past you in her boat that night.โ
โWell, we werenโt near close enough to see what she was wearing.โ
โOh? You werenโt near enough to see her clothes.โ Tom looked at the jury as he said this. โWell, how far away were you?โ
โI reckon we was a good sixty yards away at least.โ
โSixty yards.โ Tom looked at the jury again. โThatโs quite a distance to identify a small boat in the dark. Tell me, Mr. Miller, what characteristics, what features of this person in this boat made you so sure it was Miss Clark?โ
โWell, like I said, โbout everybody in this town knows her boat, how it looks from close and far. We know the shape of the boat and the figure she cuts sittinโ in the stern, tall, thin like that. A very particular shape.โ
โA particular shape. So anybody with this same shape, any person who was tall and thin in this type of boat would have looked like Miss Clark. Correct?โ
โI guess somebody else coulda looked like her, but we get to know boats and their owners real good, you know, being out there all the time.โ
โBut, Mr. Miller, may I remind you, this is a murder trial. It cannot get more serious than this, and in these cases we have to be certain. We canโt go by shapes or forms that are seen from sixty yards away in the dark. So, please can you tell the court you are certain the person you saw on the night of October 29 to October 30, 1969, was Miss Clark?โ
โWell, no, I canโt be completely sure. Never said I could be completely sure it was her. But Iโm prettyโโ
โThat will be all, Mr. Miller. Thank you.โ Judge Sims asked, โRedirect, Eric?โ
From his seat, Eric asked, โHal, you testified that youโve been seeing and recognizing Miss Clark in her boat for at least three years. Tell me, have you ever thought you saw Miss Clark in her boat from a distance and then once you got closer, you discovered that it wasnโt Miss Clark after all? Has that ever happened?โ
โNo, not once.โ
โNot once in three years?โ
โNot once in three years.โ โYour Honor, the State rests.โ