As inveterate readers of
crime fiction, we know cops, because we’ve read a thousand police procedurals.
And we know attorneys,
both defense and prosecution, because we’ve read an equal number of legal
thrillers. To a slightly lesser degree, we also know medical examiners, fugitive
apprehension experts, and so on, and so on. Virtually every job in the criminal
justice system gets a thorough vetting in our genre.
Except, of course, for the
one that perhaps matters most:
The judge.
In crime fiction—as in
real life—the judge seems to issue rulings from on high, tossing them down like
godly lightning strikes before fading back into the mists. We never hear much
about the human heart beating beneath the robe (or, in the case of you charming
Brits, under the wig).
I mention all this
because, one, Ayo Onatade is the one who invited me here to ShotsMag, and I
happen to know she looks after the Justices at the Supreme Court; and, two, a
judge is the protagonist of my U.K. debut, Say
Nothing.
In truth, I didn’t set out
to till unplowed fields with this novel. I first came up with the premise—that
a U.S. federal judge would have his children kidnapped by someone looking to
control the outcome of a case he was hearing—and only later recognized that by
happy accident I had stumbled upon fresh ground.
Once I did, my internal
monologue went something like this: Huh, a judge. That’s kind of interesting.
And then it went: Oh,
bollocks. I’m writing this in first person, but I don’t know a blessed thing
about what it’s like to be a judge.
Remedying that was no easy
task. Federal judges are notoriously taciturn, seldom granting interviews or
writing tell-all memoirs. The first few judges I approached with a request for
an interview told me (politely) to get lost.
Once I finally found one
who was willing to let me in—on condition that I wouldn’t reveal his or her
identity—I was fascinated by what I found.
For starters, I had no
idea how busy federal judges are. You’d think when they hear a case that’s over
by 11:30 they’d be tucking into their first gin and tonic by 2. But, no, my
judge routinely put in ten-hour workdays, even when there was nothing scheduled
in the courtroom. As I have the protagonist muse early in the novel:
From a workload
standpoint, federal judges tend to be like ducks: There’s more going on under
the surface than anyone quite realizes.
I was also fascinated by how
solitary my judge felt. The demands of maintaining proper judicial detachment
wore on my judge and the whole staff. At one point, I have the judge’s
clerk—who has a pair of fish named Thurgood and Marshall, after his favorite
U.S. Supreme Court Justice—say to his boss:
“Sometimes I feel like these guys”—he pointed to Thurgood and
Marshall, swimming aimless circles behind him — “like we’re in a fishbowl all the time. It’s just us in this little
office suite, isolated from the rest of the world, and we render our decisions
and who knows what everyone thinks? It’s not like there’s a comments box in the
back of the courtroom.”
But more than anything, what
struck me about this character I was creating was how this ordeal I was putting
him through—having his children kidnapped and not being in control of what
happened to them—was so at odds with his regular existence.
As my protagonist says at
the end of Chapter 4 of Say Nothing:
With little more than my
own gut to guide me, I routinely make pronouncements that will shape the remainder
of peoples’ lives. The wealthiest lawyers in the land kowtow to me. Huge
bureaucracies are forced to follow my orders. The most formidable people in our
society are but one bad decision away from winding up in my courtroom, begging
for my mercy, sometimes literally trembling before me.
I realize it’s the
position, not the person, that inspires this sycophancy. I certainly do nothing
to encourage it. I am something of a reluctant Caesar. The constant fawning
embarrasses me.
It comes with the job all
the same.
Whether I like it or not,
I represent power.
Whether I want it or not,
I have power.
Or at least I used to.
I’m grateful to the judge
who talked to me for the time spent and hospitality extended. I certainly
couldn’t have written the novel without help from the judge and the judge’s
staff. Did I get everything right? I don’t know.
But I guess Ayo can be the
judge of that.
Say
Nothing
by Brad Parks is published by Faber & Faber (£12.99)
Brad Parks is the only
author to have won the Shamus, Nero and Lefty Awards, three of American crime
fiction’s most prestigious prizes. Say
Nothing is his U.K. debut.
More information about Brad Parks and his books
can be found on his website. You can also follow him on Twitter @Brad_Parks and on Facebook
Wow, such a fascinating post! I admit that as a huge fan of crime, and more particularly legal thrillers, I had never really paid that much attention to the judge. This book needs to be high on my TBR pile, because of all the research and the fact this has sparkled my curiosity to an extent I was not expecting! Thanks for putting the light on a different edge of my favorite genre!
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