as he was sworn in. Alex knew that her father’s vigorous appearance could undermine his case. And, of course, the pretrial publicity had been savagely negative. Rick Diehl’s PR team had worked hard to portray her dad as an ungrateful, greedy, unscrupulous man. A man who interfered with medical research. A man who wouldn’t keep his word, who just wanted money.
None of that was true—in reality, it was the opposite of the truth. But not a single reporter had called her father to ask his side of the story. Not one. Behind Rick Diehl stood Jack Watson, the famous philanthropist. The media assumed that Watson was the good guy, and therefore her father was the bad guy. Once that version of the morality play appeared in the New York Times (written by the local entertainment reporter), everybody else fell into line. There was a huge “me, too” piece in the L.A. Times, trying to outdo the New York version in vilifying her father. And the local news shows kept up a daily drumbeat about the man who wanted to halt medical progress, the man who dared criticize UCLA, that renowned center of learning, the great hometown university. A half-dozen cameras followed her and her father whenever they walked up the courthouse steps.
Their own efforts to get the story out had been singularly unsuccessful. Her father’s hired media advisor was competent enough, but no match for Jack Watson’s well-oiled, well-financed machine.
Of course, members of the jury would have seen some of the coverage. And the impact of the coverage was to put added pressure on her father not merely to tell his story, but also to redeem himself, to contradict the damage already done to him by the press, before he ever got to the witness stand.
Her father’s attorney stood and began his questions. “Mr. Burnet, let me take you back to the month of June, some eight years ago. What were you doing at that time?”
“I was working construction,” her father said, in a firm voice. “Supervising all the welding on the Calgary natural gas pipeline.”
“And when did you first suspect you were ill?”
“I started waking up in the night. Soaking wet, drenched.”
“You had a fever?”
“I thought so.”
“You consulted a doctor?”
“Not for a while,” he said. “I thought I had the flu or something. But the sweats never stopped. After a month, I started to feel very weak. Then I went to the doctor.”
“And what did the doctor tell you?”
“He said I had a growth in my abdomen. And he referred me to the most eminent specialist on the West Coast. A professor at UCLA Medical Center, in Los Angeles.”
“Who was that specialist?”
“Dr. Michael Gross. Over there.” Her father pointed to the defendant, sitting at the next table. Alex did not look over. She kept her gaze on her father.
“And were you subsequently examined by Dr. Gross?”
“Yes, I was.”
“He conducted a physical exam?”
“Yes.”
“Did he do any tests at that time?”
“Yes. He took blood and he did X-rays and a CAT scan of my entire body. And he took a biopsy of my bone marrow.”
“How was that done, Mr. Burnet?”
“He stuck a needle in my hipbone, right here. The needle punches through the bone and into the marrow. They suck out the marrow and analyze it.”
“And after these tests were concluded, did he tell you his diagnosis?”
“Yes. He said I had acute T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia.”
“What did you understand that disease to be?”
“Cancer of the bone marrow.”
“Did he propose treatment?”
“Yes. Surgery and then chemotherapy.”
“And did he tell you your prognosis? What the outcome of this disease was likely to be?”
“He said that it wasn’t good.”
“Was he more specific?”
“He said, probably less than a year.”
“Did you subsequently get a second opinion from another doctor?”
“Yes, I did.”
“With what result?”
“My diagnosis was…he, uh…he confirmed the diagnosis.” Her father paused, bit his lip, fighting emotion. Alex was surprised. He was usually tough and unemotional. She felt a twinge of concern for him, even though she knew this moment would help his case. “I was scared, really scared,” her father said. “They all told me…I didn’t have long to live.” He lowered his head.
The courtroom was silent.
“Mr. Burnet, would you like some water?”
“No. I’m fine.” He raised his head, passed his hand across his forehead.
“Please continue when you’re ready.”
“I got a third opinion, too. And everybody said to me that Dr. Gross was the best doctor for this disease.”
“So you initiated your therapy with Dr. Gross.”
“Yes. I did.”
Her father seemed to have recovered. Alex sat back in her chair, took a breath. The testimony unrolled smoothly now, a story her father had told dozens of times before. How he, a scared and frightened man, fearing for his life, had put his faith in Dr. Gross; how he had undergone surgery and chemotherapy under the direction of Dr. Gross; how the symptoms of the disease had slowly faded over the course of the following year; how Dr. Gross had seemed at first to believe that her father was well, his treatment successfully completed.
“You had follow-up examinations with Dr. Gross?”
“Yes. Every three months.”
“With what result?”
“Everything was normal. I gained weight, my strength came back, my hair grew back. I felt good.”
“And then what happened?”
“About a year later, after one of my checkups, Dr. Gross called to say he needed to do more tests.”
“Did he say why?”
“He said some of my blood work didn’t look right.”
“Did he say which tests, specifically?”
“No.”
“Did he say you still had cancer?”
“No, but that’s what I was afraid of. He had never repeated any tests before.” Her father shifted in his chair. “I asked him if the cancer had come back, and he said, ‘Not at this point, but we need to monitor you very closely.’ He insisted I needed constant testing.”
“How did you react?”
“I was terrified. In a way, it was worse the second time. When I was sick the first time, I made my will, made all the preparations. Then I got well and I got a new lease on life—a chance to start over. Then his phone call came, and I was terrified again.”
“You believed you were sick.”
“Of course. Why else would he be repeating tests?”
“You were frightened?”
“Terrified.”
Watching the questioning, Alex thought, It’s too bad we don’t have pictures. Her father appeared vigorous and hearty. She remembered when he had been frail, gray, and weak. His clothes had hung on his frame; he looked like a dying man. Now he looked strong, like the construction worker