Day Two. 10:14 AM.
David Chen took the stand like a man expecting to be hit.
He was sixty-one, forr VP of Operations at Hessington Oil, resigned eight months after the explosion and hadn't spoken publicly about it until now. He wore a blue tie that was slightly too short and sat with his hands gripped together in his lap. When the bailiff swore him in, his voice was quiet but it didn't shake.
I approached slowly.
"Mr. Chen, during your tenure as VP of Operations, did you have concerns about safety conditions at the Ecuador platform?"
"Yes."
"Did you communicate those concerns to Hessington Oil's executive board?"
"Yes. Three tis in writing."
I introduced Exhibit 14-A — the first mo, dated August 2011 — and walked him through it line by line. The language was careful, corporate, the kind of writing that tried very hard not to sound alarming while describing sothing alarming. Recomnded priority assessnt of pressure relief infrastructure. Chen had learned to speak in a dialect designed not to trigger defensive responses. The jury read along on the monitors.
"And the second mo, November 2011?"
"Sa concern, escalated language. I used the word 'urgent.'"
"And the third? February 2012?"
Chen unfolded his hands. "I wrote that failure to replace the pressure relief system would result in — my words — catastrophic failure within six to twelve months."
[ Win Rate Calculator: Jury response — 4 mbers taking notes. Probability 58% → 63%. ]
"One month later," I said quietly, "the explosion occurred."
"Yes."
Jessica rose for cross. She moved to the podium with a single sheet of notes, which ant she'd prepared this cold.
"Mr. Chen, isn't it true that your departnt's budget request had been denied the previous fiscal year?"
"Yes."
"And these mos — they doubled as justification for that budget request, correct?"
A beat. "Safety concerns and budget concerns aren't mutually exclusive—"
"Please answer the question. The mos supported a case for increased departntal funding?"
"Among other things."
"So you had a financial incentive to describe conditions as urgent."
Chen's jaw tightened. His hands gripped together again. I watched the jury watch him — this mattered, how he handled it.
"Ms. Pearson," he said, steadier than I expected, "I didn't write those mos for a budget line. I wrote them because I knew n would die."
The jury didn't look away from him.
[ Win Rate Calculator: 63% holding. ]
Day Three brought Dr. Patricia Wong and sixty-four slides.
She was fifty-three, petroleum engineering chair at MIT, with the particular authority of soone who spent decades being the only woman in every eting. She presented her causation analysis with almost aggressive calm — pressure data, maintenance logs, tallurgical reports on the recovered valve fragnts, all synthesized into a chain of causation that had no gaps.
"The explosion resulted from a corroded pressure relief valve. This valve should have been replaced — by Hessington Oil's own maintenance schedule — eighteen months prior to the accident."
She advanced to the final slide. A single probability figure in large type.
"With 92% confidence, this explosion would not have occurred if the pressure relief system had been maintained according to the manufacturer's recomnded schedule. A schedule Hessington Oil's own internal docunts show they were fully aware of, and chose to defer."
Jessica's cross was technically rigorous and went nowhere. She challenged the tallurgical thodology, the pressure modeling paraters, the causation threshold. Dr. Wong answered every question the sa way — precise, specific, untroubled.
[ Win Rate Calculator: 63% → 66%. ]
Sixty-six percent. Comfortable enough that I was starting to worry.
The coffee stand outside the third-floor restrooms had been there since the building was renovated in 1998.
I knew this because I'd read the courthouse renovation report at so point during discovery — looking for sothing unrelated — and the detail had lodged in my brain the way useless things sotis did. The stand had a laminated nu and a machine that produced espresso the color of motor oil.
Mike Ross was sitting on the bench beside it, staring at his phone.
I almost walked past. His body language stopped — not stress, exactly. Stress I'd have recognized and ignored. This was the particular stillness of a person trying very hard not to move, the way people freeze when they're calculating whether they've been seen.
Rachel ca around the corner and touched his shoulder. He flinched before catching himself, composing his expression into sothing manageable.
"...Cahill's office requested records from—" She stopped when she saw .
Mike stood. The professional smile he produced was fast and smooth — he was good at it.
"Scott. Congratulations on the montum in there. Chen's testimony was—"
"Thank you."
"—really sothing. How's Zane holding up? He looks like he's enjoying every minute of it."
"He is." I pulled a coffee from the stand and dropped coins in the slot. "How's your caseload?"
Sothing moved through Mike's face. Micro-expression, half a second, the kind the System cataloged automatically. Containnt response.
[ Blackmail Archive: Mike Ross — behavioral pattern consistent with active exposure managent. Subject is controlling information disclosure, monitoring external threat level. Threat: Sean Cahill. Status: System Restriction Active. Cannot act. ]
"Busy," he said. "The usual."
He never ntioned his own credentials. Not his cases, not his standing at the firm, not his own positioning during a trial that had the legal community paying attention. A guy like Mike — Harvard-trained, Harvey's protégé, ambitious — would normally have made at least one comnt about his own career in a conversation like this.
He was managing exposure. He was keeping his footprint small.
I took my coffee and went back to my table.
Jessica Pearson — Late that evening, her office.
The associate had left the deposition summary on her desk and gone ho. Jessica read it with one hand and signed two unrelated docunts with the other.
She set down the summary.
Sixty-six percent plaintiff probability. She'd seen the Win Rate Calculator data on her own firm's modeling — their numbers were less optimistic. Scott Roden had built a tight case: clean causation, credible witnesses, sympathetic plaintiffs, no obvious soft spots.
Gregory Holt was the soft spot.
She picked up her phone and called him.
"Mr. Holt."
"Ms. Pearson." His voice was careful. "Is tomorrow still the plan?"
"Day Four, afternoon session." She looked at the window. "Are you ready?"
A pause. "I'm ready. I just want to make sure — what I saw, what I logged — that's the truth. That's what this is about."
"That's exactly what this is about," Jessica said.
She believed him. That was the thing about Holt — he wasn't paid, wasn't pressured, wasn't a corporate plant. He was an engineer who kept ticulous field notebooks because he was trained to, and who had watched news coverage of the trial for two days before calling her office. The truth was simply not what Scott Roden's narrative said it was.
She set down the phone and looked at the causation chain on her evidence board. Three nodes: maintenance failure, managent decision, explosion.
Tomorrow she was going to add a fourth node.
And Scott Roden's entire structure was going to co apart.
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