Th e trial took place at the Cumberland County Court in Bridgeton
during the last two weeks of March, just as spring started to break
through. I knew I wouldn’t be able to touch or talk to Mama but I
was excited because I hadn’t seen her since the day she was arrested,
over six months earlier. Gran had stubbornly refused to allow me
to visit, even though Mr. Hargraft had intervened and pleaded with
her to change her position. Mama did manage to write me letters,
which Mr. Hargraft would go out of his way to deliver to me, and I
treasured those letters. Th ey were fi lled with love and consideration
for Lexie and me, and Mama never complained about her own
situation. I would shut myself up in my room, away from Gran’s
prying eyes, and write letters back but I couldn’t let Mama know
how miserable I was without her. I mostly told her about how we
were getting along at school and the friends we had made and I
hardly ever mentioned Gran or Grandpa.
I was not allowed to be in the courtroom except for the time
when I gave testimony. Th at happened on the second day of the
trial and I was really nervous when Mr. Hargraft came to get me. I
remember him taking both of my hands in his and saying, “Cassie,
all you have to do is tell the truth. Remember what I told you, the
prosecutor might try to trip you up, so don’t let him confuse you.
Now do you think you can handle this?”
I nodded, and he handed me over to a man in uniform, I had
never seen before, who led me into the courtroom and into the witness
box. Th en, another man stood in front of me, blocking my view, and
made me put my hand on the bible and swear to tell the truth.
When I was asked to state my name, I couldn’t speak for a
moment because my eyes were fi xed on Mama. She was sitting next
to Mr. Hargraft behind a large table, just a few short yards away.
Even though her hair was pulled back in a pony tail and she was
wearing a faded blue blouse, she was still my beautiful Mama, and
as she looked back at me, she gave a hint of a smile and mouthed,
“I love you.”
I continued to stare until I was asked again to state my name,
“Cassandra Mae Taylor,” I said in a quavering voice. Th at’s when the
judge, who looked like a kindly Santa, leaned over and whispered,
“Try to speak up, dear.”
I faced forward and lifted my head proudly, then once again
stated my name, but this time in a loud strong voice, “Cassandra
Mae Taylor.”
Th e judge leaned over again and smiled, “Well done,” he said.
After that, Mr. Hargraft made me repeat everything I had told
him about my life at home with my family. I tried not to look
at the jury because I could feel all of their beady eyes on me as I
told my story and I heard an audible gasp when I came to the part
about Papa trying to drown Mama in the bathtub. When I looked
across at Mama, knowing that only half of my testimony was true,
while the rest was a fi gment of my imagination, she gave an almost
imperceptible shake of her head. I stared back at her, willing her
to let me continue, and not to expose me. She seemed to get my
message, because she lowered her head and sat that way until I had
fi nished. Mr. Hargraft then asked me what I had seen, or heard, on
the day of Papa’s death and, in a clear voice, I answered, “Absolutely
nothing, Lexie and I were fast asleep.”
I didn’t feel quite as confi dent when the prosecutor crossexamined
me. When he rose from the table, adjacent to where
Mama sat, he seemed to dominate the courtroom. He was a tall,
somewhat portly man, with thick white hair and heavy eyebrows
that seemed to meet in the middle of his forehead. He had the most
piercing brown eyes that seemed to stare right through me as he
walked towards the witness box. I couldn’t help noticing his clothes
too. Unlike Mr. Hargraft, who wore a plain navy suit, white shirt
and light blue tie, the prosecutor wore a black pin striped suit with
a black shirt, and white tie. It seems odd now that I would notice
the way he dressed but he reminded me of someone I had seen in
a movie. He stood in front of me for a moment not speaking until
the judge said, “We haven’t got all day Mr. Phillips. Please proceed
with your cross-examination.”
Despite my nervousness and his booming voice asking me the
same questions over and over, but in a diff erent manner, just to try
and trick me, the formidable Mr. Phillips never got me to change
my story. Mr. Hargraft, repeatedly rose to interject and sighed as he
said, “Asked and answered, your honor.” I was so relieved when the
prosecutor decided to fi nish with me and Mr. Hargraft declined the
opportunity to re-cross, but at the same time I knew I would soon
be taken out of the courtroom and away from Mama. As the bailiff
escorted me down the center aisle towards the exit, I know I had
tears running down my cheeks as I looked over at her and whispered,
“I love you Mama.”
Th e trial went on for days but the only way I got to hear about it was
by watching the local news or reading the paper. Many people came
forward as character witnesses for Papa, including Gran and Grandpa,
who proclaimed him to be a kind and gentle man who wouldn’t harm
a fl y. Others came forward to testify that they had never seen any
evidence of physical abuse and Mama had never confi ded in them
that she was a victim of any beatings. I felt like running out into the
street and screaming, for the entire world to hear, that Papa was too
clever to let anyone know what he was doing. He avoided hitting her
where any bruises would be seen and usually punched her in the chest
or stomach. Often she would double over in agony and drag herself
into the bathroom, to vomit in the toilet.
If I couldn’t tell the world, at least I could tell Gran and I didn’t
hesitate, but that got me in a whole heap of trouble. As usual, she
called me a liar and sent me to my room without supper and imposed
a weeklong curfew. Poor little Lexie had no idea what was going on,
and I aimed to keep it that way.
On the second to last day of the trial, in the afternoon, Mr.
Hargraft put Mama on the stand. I guess he felt it was the only way
she might get her story across to the jury.
I was horrifi ed that same night, to discover that Mama had lost
a baby, a year before I was born. Th e miscarriage was a result of a
beating, but at the hospital, Mama was too scared to tell any of the
hospital staff what really happened, and claimed to have fallen down
a short fl ight of stairs. When she was sure, just three weeks before
Papa died, that she was pregnant again, she knew she had to make
every eff ort to protect herself, just as she had with Lexie and me. She
claimed that Papa’s reaction to her that day, by throwing her across
the room, threw her into a panic and she was terrifi ed that she would
lose another child. Th en, when he made the remark about Lexie
being ripe for the picking, she completely lost control and that’s
when she picked up the poker. Th e remark had triggered Mama’s
memory when, on two occasions, she had seen Papa fondling two
of the neighbor’s young daughters. He had been behind the house
and she confronted him about it, but he had threatened to kill her
if she mentioned it to anyone. Th is time, the idea of him molesting
Lexie, was more than she could bear.
Th e next morning, Mr. Phillips cross-examined Mama and soon
had her in tears. He questioned the truth of all of my testimony,
and after being reminded that she was under oath, she admitted
that I had made up the story about the near drowning and the haircutting
incident. It was only natural, that he would then proceed to
badger her into admitting that everything she had testifi ed to had
been a pack of lies and that there was no evidence to support her
story. To make matters worse, Mama had to admit that she wasn’t
pregnant after all, even though she was sure that she was at the time
she killed Papa.