The courtroom was half-empty. Sal sat in the back row, arms crossed, wearing a clean flannel shirt he’d clearly ironed for the occasion.
So he became a public defender. Sal didn’t understand. “You defend thieves,” he’d grumble, scraping gravel from his boots on Owen’s welcome mat. “Brandanos build things. We don’t clean up after the people who tear them down.” owen brandano
“The fire escape collapsed last spring. The windows on the north side are all broken. There’s no heat, no light, no water.” Owen turned to the judge. “Your Honor, Mr. Cress didn’t secure this property. He weaponized its neglect. My client didn’t break in. He walked into a ruin that the city should have condemned years ago. The only person here who has broken the public trust is the man using blight as a business model.” The courtroom was half-empty