Rather than letting it get me down, I decided I'd just go with it for this week's prompt.
Prompt: Jury Duty
Go ahead. Get your John Grisham on.
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My response:
I took advantage of the pause and stretched my fingers, then placed them lightly back down on the keyboard. The middle aged man on the witness stand sighed and nodded.
"We require a spoken answer, Mr. Banks," the judge reminded him for the third time.
My fingers flew with barely a thought. Fifteen years as a court reporter, and I joked with my friends that I could type out my dreams word for word, if only I could get comfortable with my laptop in my bed.
"Yes, sir. Yes. He did leave at ten thirty that night." He shook his head remorsefully and dropped his shoulders forward, avoiding the glare of the defendant.
"In your initial testimony, you stated that Mr. George Fry stayed the whole night at your house, drinking two six-packs and passing out on your couch. Why did you lie?" Mr. Fairlie, the DA, stood facing the jury, as if he were speaking to them instead of to Mr. Banks, on the stand. He always did that when he was trying to make a point. I was just lucky his voice carried, since that meant he usually had his back to me.
"He's my brother, man!" Mr. Banks spat out, a sob escaping his barrel-shaped chest, his rental suit straining at the seams. "I know he and Carlie were having some rough times, but he never would have done what they said. I know he didn't kill her." He dropped his head into his hands, openly sobbing now. "I know it, man!"
First, if he really knew it, he would have told the cops when his brother left and trusted them to figure it out. Second, the way he was breaking down, he was trying to convince himself as much as anyone else.
My eyes slipped over to the defendant. That one was guilty if I've ever seen one, and believe me, I have. Leaning back in his chair in his orange jumpsuit, slouching and glaring like a teenage punk in the back of history class, he was the picture of guilt. I'd bet he was mean even without two six-packs.
"No more questions, your honor."
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The case has not settled, so I'm going in. Wish me luck!