A Good Mother Lara Bazelon (free e books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Lara Bazelon
Book online «A Good Mother Lara Bazelon (free e books to read .txt) đ». Author Lara Bazelon
Will feels his face reddening again both in embarrassment and anger. God, this woman was so obtuse. âOf course Luz doesnât call it rape. She canât even admit it to herself because what he did to her was so degrading...â He trails off as both Dr. Cartwright and Abby fix him with hard stares. A silence falls.
âIt may be,â Dr. Cartwright says finally, âthat your views about sexual relationships between married couples hew to a more traditional view. But let me assure you, there are many, many people who engage in this kind of sexual activity because they find it genuinely pleasurable.â
Will opens his mouth and shuts it again.
Abby says, âIt seems like they were at a low point when he went back to the US for his fatherâs funeral and had the affair with Jackie.â
Dr. Cartwright nods. âThat was in early October of 2005. There was serious contemplation of divorce on both sides during that time.â
âWhich changed in the beginning of December when Luz told Travis she was pregnant with Cristina, right?â
Dr. Cartwright nods approvingly at Abby, and Will has to suppress the urge to roll his eyes. âThatâs right. And in the meantime, and we are talking about a period of weeks here, the level of violence when they fought remained virtually the same. Mrs. Rivera Hollis was always clear with me that she believed the situation could be brought quickly under control. She wasnât afraid to confront her husband when he did something to make her angry, like criticize one of her outfits as too suggestive or when he didnât pick up after himself. She didnât hesitate to express anger toward him. Again, this is atypical. Battered women walk on eggshells, blaming themselves for the tiniest mistake, so inhibited they no longer are aware they have feelings to express, other than shame and fear.â
âWas he abusive during the pregnancy?â Will asks.
âShe says no. It was not an easy pregnancy, extreme morning sickness in the first trimester. At first, she says, he was excited, very supportive, and their relationship improved, but after a couple of weeks he was often distracted, would drift off in the middle of a conversation. Around Christmas, he started having nightmares and yelling in his sleep. It got bad enough that she asked him to sleep on the living room couch.â
âWhen he got the news that Jackie was also pregnant,â Abby says.
Dr. Cartwright nods, goes back to her notes. âWhich Ms. Stedman told her by email the night of the murder.â
âWhich the prosecution is going to argue is her motive for killing him. Not fear, revenge.â Abby rubs her temples. âThereâs a four-hour window between Jackieâs email and Travis coming home drunk from the party. Four hours of Luz stewing in the news that her husband not only had an affair with his ex-girlfriend, but fathered a child with her, and at least for a while, was even giving her the idea that he wouldââ
âLeave Luz for a new family,â Will interrupts, thinking aloud. âJust like her dad.â
âAs you might expect,â Dr. Cartwright says, âI asked Mrs. Rivera Hollis a number of questions about how she felt when she found out. And about the way she found out, which must have been rather shocking and humiliating. And, yes, infuriating. She said, âI was angry at myself more than anything. I made a bad choice. I thought he was a strong person, but he was a weak person.ââ
âDid she think Travis was going to leave her for Jackie?â Will asks.
âInterestingly, no. She did not seem worried about that possibility at all. I think she might actually have been alright if Travis had come clean and taken responsibility even if that meant making child support payments. What angered Mrs. Rivera Hollis was the continuing contact, her husbandâs inability to end the affair. She told me, âIt showed me that me and Cristina werenât enough for him. And that, you know, that was really disappointing.ââ
But Abby is still fixed on the point that Will had stopped her from making. âFour hours is an eternity. Two hundred and forty minutes to go from boiling to ice-cold. To think. To plan.â She looks pointedly at Dr. Cartwright. âThat email plus four hours is why sheâs getting convicted of first-degree murder unless we can offer up a more compelling story.â
Dr. Cartwrightâs expressionâreally a study in non-expressionâremains unchanged. They are all quiet for a moment, Dr. Cartwright continuing to look at Will and Abby with her sharp, unblinking owlâs eyes. She is waiting, accustomed, no doubt, to long silences. Will fidgets, picking lint off the sleeve of his suit jacket.
Beside him, Abby takes a deep breath. âSheâs not a battered woman. Thatâs what youâve been saying ever since we sat down. We canât make that argument.â
Will looks at Abby, annoyed. âHold onââ
But Dr. Cartwright interrupts him, âBased on my clinical observations, sheâs not. And there is no data to support a diagnosis of battered womanâs syndrome. Her levels were not elevated on the MMPI-2, or the MCMI-III, and her Rorschach is outside even the margins. She scores at the bottom range on the Spousal Assault Violent Acts Scale. If called to testify, I would say that her state of mind at the time of the offense was not impacted by that kind of trauma.â
Dr. Cartwright pauses. âAnd thereâs something else. The tests I administered have controls in place to assess malingeringâthat is, making up, masking, or exaggerating symptoms.â
âMasking.â Will jumps on the word like a life raft. âRight. She could be in complete denial.â He is beyond caring what Abby or Dr. Cartwright thinks, about his outdated ideas about sex, about his white male privilege. He drives on. âIâm sure thatâs common.â
âShe is in denial,â Dr. Cartwright agrees. âBut not about the abuse. The tests show malingering in only one respectâthe
Comments (0)