Day One of Deliberation.
The jury went out at 4:17 PM on a Wednesday.
By 5:30 they'd asked to break for the evening. Normal — no jury decided a $25 million case before dinner. I went ho, ate the food Donna had made without tasting much of it, and went to bed at ten.
I lay awake until one.
Day Two.
Maria ndez was already in the hallway when I arrived at 8 AM. She had a cup of coffee from the street cart outside and a blue wool coat that looked like it had traveled a long way. She stood when she saw .
"How long?" she asked.
"Hard to say. A few more days, possibly." I sat in the bench opposite hers. "The longer they deliberate, the more seriously they're taking it. That's not bad."
She considered this. She had the careful stillness of soone accustod to waiting for things that might not co.
"My husband used to say," she said, "that waiting is the price God charges for good things." She looked at the closed courtroom doors. "I hope he was right."
We sat in compatible silence for a while. A deputy walked the corridor. A clerk from the clerk's office pushed a cart of files past. The courthouse had its own ecosystem — a city inside a city, operating on its own rhythms regardless of what decisions were being made inside the rooms.
[ Win Rate Calculator: Deliberation duration analysis. 70%. Jury's request to break rather than work late suggests structured deliberation, not divided deliberation. Favorable pattern. ]
I kept that to myself.
Around eleven, Zane arrived with two coffees and the Wall Street Journal, which he read without speaking to , which was exactly what I needed. At noon, we went downstairs and ate bad sandwiches from the café on the ground floor. Zane complained about the mustard. I told him he should have gotten it without mustard. He said he always forgot.
Day Three.
Donna took a half day.
She arrived at 10 AM with a novel and sat next to on the hallway bench and opened it to wherever she'd stopped reading. She didn't ask how I was doing or offer encouragent or speculate about the deliberations. She just sat there with her shoulder against mine and read.
I'd been staring at the sa paragraph of a case brief for forty minutes. I gave up and put it away.
"You don't have to be here," I said.
"I know." She turned a page.
I looked down the hallway — other attorneys waiting on other things, a family cluster outside another courtroom, a court officer eating a granola bar by the water fountain. All the ordinary machinery of a building where people ca to resolve the unresolvable.
"Donna."
"Mm."
"Thank you for finding the mo."
She turned another page. "I know."
Maria ndez — Day Three, Afternoon
She went back to her hotel at lunch and ate a small al she barely tasted and thought about what she would tell her daughters.
The older one was thirteen. She had her father's jaw and Carlos's habit of going quiet when she was upset, holding everything inside until it ca out sideways. The younger one was nine and still sotis set a plate at dinner that no one ate.
Maria didn't want to tell them about the verdict. She wanted to tell them about the trial. About the attorney who had co to work on a Tuesday morning with circles under his eyes and four hours of sleep and had stood in front of twelve strangers and said her husband's na until they rembered it.
Carlos ndez had two daughters.
She had heard that. She had heard her husband described not as a statistic or a plaintiff or a worker but as a person with daughters and a lunch pail and a ride to work that had beco, without warning, the last one.
She didn't know if the jury would find for them. She had learned, in the past two years, not to hold certainties about justice. But she knew this: whatever happened, the truth had been said in that room. People had heard it. That was already sothing.
She went back to the courthouse at 1 PM and sat in the hallway and waited.
Day Four. 7:04 AM.
Zane called.
"Jury sent a note. They want to review the HR mo."
My hand tightened on the phone. "When?"
"Court officer just told . They want to see it again."
I sat up in bed. Donna was already awake beside — she'd heard it in my voice when I answered.
"That's our mo," I said. "That's the downstream causation docunt."
"Yes."
"They're checking it."
"Yes."
A jury asking to review specific evidence during deliberations was almost never random. They were looking at it because soone in that room was arguing about it. Either one of my jurors needed to confirm the chain of causation to convince a holdout, or a defense-friendly juror was trying to find a reason to dismiss it.
[ Win Rate Calculator: HR mo review request. Pattern analysis — majority validation behavior vs. minority challenge behavior. 68% majority validation likely. ]
"I'll be there in forty minutes," I said.
2:47 PM.
The buzzer.
The thing about a jury buzzer — everyone in the courthouse who's waiting hears it differently. For the families, it ant the unknown resolved itself into sothing they could hold. For attorneys, it ant the long guessing was over and now you found out how wrong you'd been.
I stood in the corridor outside 4B and felt the particular dry-mouthed quiet of the mont before.
Donna wasn't there — she'd gone back to the office after lunch. Zane was beside . Maria ndez and the families were already inside, having arrived twenty minutes ago when word spread through the courthouse network. Jessica was at the defense table when I ca in, her posture technically perfect, her face arranged into the professional composure of soone who had been through this many tis.
Ava Hessington sat beside her and looked at her hands.
Wells took the bench.
"Has the jury reached a verdict?"
The foreperson stood. A woman in her early forties, accountant by day job according to the jury questionnaire, who had sat in the second seat and taken the most notes of anyone in the box.
"We have, Your Honor."
"On the question of negligence in the wrongful deaths of Carlos ndez, Diego Fuentes, Arturo Vega, Rafael Santos, Esteban Cruz, and Marco Delgado — how do you find?"
The foreperson looked at her paper. Then at the gallery.
"We find for the plaintiffs. Hessington Oil is liable."
The room didn't erupt. The families released sound — not celebration, sothing more collapsed than that. Relief that had been held for two years finally finding sowhere to go. Maria ndez had both hands pressed to her mouth.
"On the question of compensatory damages?"
"We award eighteen point seven million dollars."
Zane's pen stopped moving.
"On the question of punitive damages, acknowledging willful disregard for worker safety?"
"We award six point five million dollars."
Twenty-five point two million. The jury had found willful disregard — that was the downstream causation argunt, confird. They hadn't just found negligence. They'd found that Hessington knew exactly what it was doing.
Wells thanked the jury. The gavel ca down.
I stood there for three seconds exactly, letting it register. Then Maria ndez was across the gallery rail — technically against protocol, and the deputy made a move and then stopped — and her arms were around , and she was crying with the particular soundless intensity of soone who had been holding it for a long ti.
"Thank you," she said. "Carlos would have liked you."
I didn't say anything. So monts don't need words filling them.
Outside the courthouse, the February air cut clean and cold.
Zane shook my hand with both of his — the handshake of a man who's run out of words but hasn't run out of feeling. He held it for a mont before letting go.
"You just delivered the largest plaintiff's verdict this firm has ever seen," he said. "Against Jessica Pearson. After being down to 42% on Day Four. I don't know what else to say."
"You don't need to say anything."
"I'm proud I hired you." He said it simply, no ceremony around it. "That's all."
Jessica found by the front steps, her team moving around her toward the parking structure. She stopped and extended her hand.
"You found the mo I missed." Her voice was straightforward — no warmth, but genuine. "That's good lawyering."
"You had at 42%," I said. "That's great lawyering."
Sothing moved at the corner of her mouth. Almost a smile. "We'll et on opposite sides again."
"Probably."
She walked away with the particular bearing of soone who doesn't need the last word because she's already thinking about the next thing.
[ Win Rate Calculator: Case closed. Final trics — opened 61%, crisis low 42%, closing 71%, verdict 25.2M. Case reference logged: Downstream Causation Pivot. ]
[ Argunt Crusher: New reference pattern stored — corporate system liability, foreseeable consequence chain. ]
Harvey's text ca through on Donna's phone.
She was waiting in the car on the street outside. I got in, and she handed the phone without saying anything.
Good verdict. Hard case. He earned it.
Seven words from Harvey Specter constituted an endorsent he'd never give directly. I handed the phone back.
"He was in the gallery during closing," I said.
Donna looked at . "I know. He texted to say he was leaving." She put the car in drive. "He didn't want you to see him."
I looked out the window at the courthouse receding behind us. Forty years of granite and legal history, and sowhere in there twelve people had decided that six workers mattered enough to cost a corporation twenty-five million dollars.
It wasn't Carlos ndez back. Nothing was that. But it was what justice looked like when the law worked the way it was supposed to — imperfect and slow and insufficient in every human sense, and still better than silence.
"Call Louis," Donna said, navigating onto 8th Avenue. "He'll want to hear it from you, not from the news alerts."
She was right. She had an unerring sense for which relationships needed maintenance and when.
I dialed. Louis picked up on the first ring, which ant he'd been watching his phone.
"Tell everything," he said.
And in the car moving through the early February dark, with Donna's hand on the wheel and the city going about its business around us, I did.
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