Legal briefs don’t have to be written at a breakneck pace in order to captivate the audience — trial judges and appellate justices.Instead of getting bogged down in legalese, 1st District Appellate Justice and legal thriller writer David W. Ellis said attorneys should concentrate on telling their client’s story, said .“If you’re reading good fiction, the reader becomes lost in it,” Ellis said in an interview with the Daily Law Bulletin. “It’s really not that different from …