Copyright 2016
Amy closed her eyes and rubbed her hand across her forehead trying to clear the headache. She didn't regret her decision to take the job in the Public Defenders' Office. It felt good helping people who couldn't afford a lawyer by themselves, but she hadn't really been prepared for the workload. Looking around her small office, choked with legal texts and case files, she smiled ruefully to herself. At least she had a job, some of the friends she'd graduated with still hadn't found one. Finally the young woman let her eyes rest on her legal degrees, hanging framed on the only free space she had been able to find on the wall. She'd worked hard for them, she'd wanted to be a lawyer for as long as she could remember, but what she had now wasn't quite what she'd imagined, watching legal dramas as a teenager. Amy didn't expect something paid for by the government to compete with the large, plush, offices of private law firms. But it would have been nice to have a little more space. She sometimes half-imagined the bookshelves would all topple over on to her someday. Even though she had made maintenance fix them firmly to the walls.
Amy's office was just one of many. Over two dozen people worked there, lawyers, clerks, receptionists, and Amy felt like she didn't really know any of them. It was six months since she'd started, but her co-workers were still a mystery to her. And so, she supposed, she was to them. Oh they were nice enough, but they were all so rushed with the torrent of work that there really wasn't much time for office socialising. They tried to have a drink every couple of weeks, but even then not everyone could make it. Last Friday Tony had begged off to prepare for an urgent bail hearing and Sonya had stayed at the office as she had too many files to read for her first case on Monday. And the talk was always mostly work anyway. Not that she was any better, Amy grudgingly admitted. She still enjoyed being a lawyer too much to want to talk about anything else. But she was sure that she must have dealt with a hundred cases since she began here.
"Stop daydreaming," Amy told herself, concentrating again on the witness statements in front of her. Bag snatching. The witness' accounts didn't add up to much, as was typical their descriptions hardly matched.
"If you hold them upside and read them backwards maybe they fit Ben," the young lawyer mused.
Ben Atwold, 14 years and from the estates, was the accused. But conflicting witness statements wouldn't help here. Ben had been caught with the bag. And he had form. The best Amy could hope for was to get him into a reform program rather than Juvenile Detention. Or Juvenile Crime Academy as they called it around the office.
Putting the statements aside Amy started to look up the phone numbers for the prevention programs, to see if she could start arranging a spot for Ben before the next hearing. Judges were always more inclined to see it her way if the place was guaranteed.
Just as she found the number she wanted the phone rang. The number on the display showed it was Natalie, the younger of their two office administrators. Amy liked Natalie. If she knew anyone here it was the cute brunette. But even then their relationship was pretty much co-workers and nothing more. She didn't even know what Natalie liked to do outside the office. What books she liked or movies or anything. It was hard to consider her a friend when Amy didn't know whether they had anything in common or not.
"Amy?" sure enough, Amy recognised Natalie's voice.
"Yes."
Uh oh,
I bet this isn't asking if I'm short of stationery
.
"We need someone down at one of the nicks," said Natalie.
"Oh come on Natalie," Amy tried to sound put upon but not too begging. "I'm up to my ears here."
"And everyone else is over theirs. A couple of your cases finished this week, so you're next off the block," said Natalie firmly.
"What about Simon? He had more finish up than me," Amy parried back.
"And I already loaded him up again this morning". Natalie sighed, letting go her formal manner for a moment "Look, I know it's an extra load, but I think this one will be pretty straightforward."
"Okay," Amy surrendered. She trusted Natalie, and if she said that Amy had to take the next case, then that was that, no matter how much else she had on. "What is it and which station?"
"Soliciting, come out here and I've got all the details. Caught in the act, so just get her bail and you should be right back here".
Yeah right
, thought Amy, looking at the clock. 4pm already.
By the time I'm finished at the police station there'll be no point coming back here
.
And tomorrow is Saturday.
Better take some files to read over the weekend.
After getting Natalie to agree to try the prevention programs for a place for Ben Amy headed off for the police station.
The arresting officer, Constable Daniel McPherson, was every bit as confident as Natalie had implied.
"Yes Miss Jennings", Amy noticed the hesitation at Miss, as if Police Constable (or PC as it was usually abbreviated) McPherson was wondering if he should have used Ms. Amy didn't care either way, so made no sign. "My colleague, PC Manning," McPherson indicated the uniformed woman sitting next to him with a bored look on her face, "and I saw the suspect just before 3pm this afternoon in the High Street talking to a man in a car that had just pulled in the side of the road. It was pretty clear what was going on."
"Well, I'm sure it will all be in your statements," Amy said. It all sounded more than a little circumstantial to her. The High Street wasn't exactly a known venue for prostitution and if the police hadn't actually heard the conversation or seen money changing hands then the public prosecutor could find it difficult to prove the accusation. McPherson had monopolised the conversation. While his colleague had confirmed the basics of his account Amy could tell PC Manning wasn't as convinced.
Now that she looked at McPherson again Amy could tell he wasn't that old.
Probably as fresh on the beat as I am at the bar
, she thought. Amy was willing to wager that the young PC was trying to impress his superiors by enforcing the latest clean-up drive. Manning looked only a couple of years older, but had that edge about her that said she knew more about what was and wasn't possible. The young lawyer noted that Manning hadn't contradicted her colleague, but neither had she backed up his suspicions.
"But if I could see my client now I would appreciate it," Amy said firmly.
The constables were happy to provide Amy with an interview room in which she could talk to her client. But the woman waiting for her, Sophie Griffiths, wasn't exactly what Amy had expected. She wasn't as nervous as most of the people Amy talked to in police stations. Her clients tended to be afraid, or in denial, or eager to cut some sort of deal. Some of them were even angry. Sure, Sophie looked angry. But the sort of angry clients that needed public defenders tended to be open about it. Shouts, threats to the police. Amy had even dealt with clients who directed their anger at her. But Sophie's anger seemed more a slow burn.
Amy stopped for a moment in the doorway, trying to see Sophie as the police had. She was certainly attractive, even features accentuated by striking cheekbones and dark-brown hair that was almost black cut short and curling forward under the ears. Sophie looked about Amy's age, 24. But she wasn't exactly dressed for streetside soliciting, in what looked like comfortable jeans, worn joggers and a somewhat beaten-up looking jacket. She looked more like Amy and her friends when they were in university than the source of society's moral corruption.
"Who are you?" Sophie's question broke Amy out of her contemplation.
"Amy Jennings. I'm the lawyer assigned to your case," Amy said levelly as she took a seat opposite Sophie.
The brunette's anger seemed to drift away like smoke as she gave Amy a look up and down. "I thought I'd need a barrister and a solicitor, which are you?" Sophie asked.
She sounds like she knows something about legal proceedings
, thought Amy,
I wonder if she's been through this before
?
"In a lot of lower court matters these days, no", answered Amy, starting to wonder who was questioning whom, "It saves a lot of time if you only have to deal with one lawyer."
"And money," added Sophie pointedly. Amy looked up from the papers she was getting out. She thought she might have just caught a half smile on Sophie's face, but she wasn't sure.