Page 70
Chapter 70 of "A Family for Reno" starts revealing surprises: Graceâs mouth opened very slightly, but she didnât say anything.âThing was, I had mountains of... Read on!
Graceâs mouth opened very slightly, but she didnât say anything.
âThing was, I had mountains of evidence. And one of my special talents was explaining complicated financial information to juries clearly enough for them to understand it. The jury was out for an hour and forty-five minutes. They came back with a verdict of guilty on all counts.â
He paused. Now for the hard part of this conversation.
âThen we went to sentencing. Perry tried to charm the jury again, but by then, they were onto him and he only irritated them more. When he realized he wasnât going to weasel out of paying up, he blew his stack. Called the jury a bunch of illiterate day laborers and scum scraped off the sidewalk. Accused them of only being on a jury because they had nothing better to do with their lives. When the judge told him to sit down and be quiet, he made the other grave mistake in sentencing hearings of copping an attitude with the judge.â
âThey threw the book at him, didnât they?â Grace asked quietly.
âOh yeah. The judge went along with the juryâs recommendation to make him pay back every penny heâd stolen, plus the maximum fine of $250,000 and forfeiture of everything he bought with the stolen money. Heâd been embezzling for over a decade, and basically everything he owned was forfeited. His real estate holdings, personal house and vacation home, cars, furniture, art, his wifeâs jewelry, and of course, all his stock and other investments. They wiped him out.â He hesitated, and then added, âThe cherry on top of the sundae of suck was the judge sentenced him to 25 years in jail.â
âWhoa.â
âHis wife was there every single day of the trial, sitting in the front row behind her husband. I had watched her learn in real time what a scumbag and liar her husband really was. I tore down everything sheâd believed about him bit by bit over the course of that three-week trial. I saw the betrayal in her eyes, saw her anger, and eventually her despair. She sat in the front row when the sentence was read, and she didnât move. Didnât make a sound. She had three kids pressed up against her, and the baby on her lap. She didnât cry, and she didnât look at me. She just sat there and died inside while her entire world was ripped away from her. Iâve carried around that picture of her in my head every day for three years, and I see her in my nightmares every night.â
He saw exactly the empathy and sorrow in Grace for Susanah PerryâCarterâthat heâd expected. And he hated to be the one whoâd put that look in her eyes.
He only had a little more to tell, but it was the most damning bit of the whole, awful tale. His voice sounded wooden to his ears as he spoke, but he couldnât help it. This was the only way he was going to get through saying aloud what happened next.
âAfter the sentence was read, Perryâs lawyers asked the court to give him 24 hours before he reported to prison to say goodbye to his children because they were very young, I believe the daughter was six. The twin boys were about four, and the baby would have been maybe six months old. The judge agreed to the delay. Perry went home, spent the day with his family, went over to his elderly, diabetic motherâs house in the evening to say goodbye to her, stole most of her insulin, drove himself to the shipping companyâs headquarters, and injected himself with all the insulin in the parking lot.â
Graceâs hand went over her mouth.
He stopped to breathe. The cat in Graceâs lap stretched and resettled.
After a few steadying breaths, he said, âI quit my job the day after Winston Perryâs funeral. I sold everything I owned and hit the road. After about six months of sitting in motel rooms drinking, and then sitting in motel room not drinking, which was worse, Hank and Dillon asked me to join the rodeo. It had a job mucking stalls and a bullfighterâs slot open.â
He paused, debating whether or not to share the rest of it with Grace, but he owed her nothing less than complete honesty. âThe judge let Susannah Perry keep an educational trust fund for her kids, and the cash she had in a separate bank account of her own. It was enough for her to find housing and feed the kids for a few months. Iâve been sending her money anonymously every month since her husband died and the court seized everything. She doesnât know the checks are from me. I set it up that way because I wanted her to take it without owing anything to the man who killed her husband.â
He looked at his hands.
He continued hoarsely, âI donât know if Iâd be here today if not for Hank and Dillon dragging me out of my spiral of guilt and self-hatred. They grabbed me by the collar, said I needed a change of scene and a job, or at least a reason to get out of bed every day, and that I needed my family. So I learned to dance with bulls. Turns out the only thing that erases the picture of Susannah and her kids for a little while is a two-thousand-pound death machine trying to flatten me.â
âWill you go back to bullfighting when your knee is better?â she asked quietly.
âHank says my knee is done, and heâs as good a sports doctor as there is. My knee surgeon agrees with him. I was panicked when they told me I wouldnât make it back into the arena with bulls. How was I going to live with the image of Susannah around the clock with no relief? And then I met you. You and Lily. My nightmares arenât gone, but Iâm not having them every night anymore, and I see the image less often during the day. Being around you and helping figure out whoâs been bothering you has given me a sense of purpose I havenât had for a long time.â He fell silent.
Grace was very still, her gaze turned inward to her thoughts. She stroked Marshmallow absently, and the cat purred loudly. Outside, the frogs filled all the space he was no longer filling with words.
âSo thatâs who I am,â he said. âIâm a man who drove another man to suicide. Iâm a man who orphaned four little kids and widowed their mother. Iâve been running from myself and hiding from Susannah Perry for three years. Iâm a murderer and a coward.â
Grace replied, âYouâre also a man whoâs been supporting a family youâre not responsible for. And youâre a man who agreed to help your brother keep his daughter, even though I canât imagine how hard itâs going to be for you to step back into a courtroom.â
He opened his mouth to disagree, but she talked over him, cutting him off. âYou didnât kill Winston Perry. He did that to himself. He took millions of dollars, not you. He chose to put his familyâs future in jeopardy by doing so. I donât know much about shipping, but I expect he had a pretty big salary if he was a top guy at a big shipping firm.â
Reno nodded in affirmation.
âHe couldâve chosen to live on the money he earned legitimately, like the rest of us do. Maybe he couldnât have bought a vacation home or had as fancy a car, or given his wife fancy jewelry, but he couldâve lived within his means. He chose to lie to his wife. He chose to ignore his lawyerâs advice. He chose to be condescending to the jury and nasty to the judge. And most of all, Reno . . .â She waited to finish until he looked up reluctantly at her, and then she stared him dead in the eye as she finished, âMost of all, he chose to end his own life. Which, if you ask me, is a hundred times more cowardly than sending money anonymously to a widow and her kids.â
His gaze fell away from her direct stare as she silently willed him to believe her. He heard her words. Acknowledged that her logic was not flowed. But deep down in his gut, in the place that still bled from the wound of Susannah Perry looking at him in utter despair when her entire world was destroyed, that part of him couldnât accept Graceâs words as true. It was his fault. All of it.
âWould Perry have gotten away with stealing all that money if you hadnât taken the case and done the investigation?â Grace asked.
âDoubtful. The CEO was convinced Perry was embezzling from the company and the CEO wouldâve hired some other lawyer to investigate it. Or he mightâve reported Perry to the FBI.â
âWould the FBI or some other lawyer have found enough evidence to convict Perry?â
âIf whoever was assigned to the case was halfway competent, yes. Perry got sloppier, the longer he got away with it. And the longer he got away with it, the more he stole. People were starting to notice that something was off about the amount of money coming in and the profits being reported.â