AN IMPORTANT WITNESS
The effect of Roland Reed’s
sudden appearance in the court-room, close upon the
doubt expressed as to his existence, was electric.
Every head was turned, and every one present looked
with eager curiosity at the mysterious stranger.
They saw a dark-complexioned, slender, but wiry man,
above the middle height, with a pair of keen black
eyes scanning, not without sarcastic amusement, the
faces turned toward him.
Luke recognized him at once.
“Thank God!” he ejaculated,
with a feeling of intense relief. “Now
my innocence will be made known.”
Squire Duncan was quite taken aback.
His face betrayed his surprise and disappointment.
“I don’t know you,” he said, after
a pause.
“Perhaps not, Mr. Duncan,”
answered the stranger, in a significant tone, “but
I know you.”
“Were you the man who gave this
tin box to the defendant?”
“Wouldn’t it be well,
since this is a court, to swear me as a witness?”
asked Roland Reed, quietly.
“Of course, of course,”
said the squire, rather annoyed to be reminded of
his duty by this stranger.
This being done, Mr. Beane questioned
the witness in the interest of his client.
“Do you know anything about
the tin box found in the possession of Luke Larkin?”
he asked.
“Yes, sir.”
“Did you commit it to his charge for safe-keeping?”
“I did.”
“Were you previously acquainted with Luke?”
“I was not.”
“Was it not rather a singular
proceeding to commit what is presumably of considerable
value to an unknown boy?”
“It would generally be considered
so, but I do many strange things. I had seen
the boy by daylight, though he had never seen me, and
I was sure I could trust him.”
“Why, if you desired a place
of safe-keeping for your box, did you not select the
bank vaults?”
Roland Reed laughed, and glanced at
the presiding justice.
“It might have been stolen,” he said.
“Does the box contain documents of value?”
“The contents are valuable to me, at any rate.”
“Mr. Beane,” said Squire
Duncan, irritably, “I think you are treating
the witness too indulgently. I believe this box
to be the one taken from the bank.”
“You heard the remark of the
justice,” said the lawyer. “Is this
the box taken from the bank?”
“It is not,” answered
the witness, contemptuously, “and no one knows
this better than Mr. Duncan.”
The justice flushed angrily.
“You are impertinent, witness,”
he said. “It is all very well to claim
this box as yours, but I shall require you to prove
ownership.”
“I am ready to do so,”
said Roland Reed, quietly. “Is that the
box on the table?”
“It is.”
“Has it been opened?”
“No; the key has disappeared from the bank.”
“The key is in the hands of
the owner, where it properly belongs. With the
permission of the court, I will open the box.”
“I object,” said Squire Duncan, quickly.
“Permit me to say that your
refusal is extraordinary,” said Mr. Beane, pointedly.
“You ask the witness to prove property, and
then decline to allow him to do so.”
Squire Duncan, who saw that he had
been betrayed into a piece of folly, said sullenly:
“I don’t agree with you, Mr. Beane, but
I withdraw my objection. The witness may come
forward and open the box, if he can.”
Roland Reed bowed slightly, advanced
to the table, took a bunch of keys from his pocket,
and inserting one of the smallest in the lock easily
opened the box.
Those who were near enough, including
the justice, craned their necks forward to look into
the box.
The box contained papers, certificates
of stock, apparently, and a couple of bank-books.
“The box missing from the vault
contained government bonds, as I understand, Squire
Duncan?” said the lawyer.
“Yes,” answered the justice, reluctantly.
“Are there any government bonds in the box,
Mr. Reed.”
“You can see for yourself, sir.”
The manner of the witness toward the
lawyer was courteous, though in the tone in which
he addressed the court there had been a scarcely veiled
contempt.
“I submit, then, that my young
client has been guilty of no wrong. He accepted
the custody of the box from the rightful owner, and
this he had a clear right to do.”
“How do you know that the witness
is the rightful owner of the box?” demanded
the justice, in a cross tone. “He may have
stolen it from some other quarter.”
“There is not a shadow of evidence
of this,” said the lawyer, in a tone of rebuke.
“I am not sure but that he ought to be held.”
“You will hold me at your peril,
Mr. Duncan,” said the witness, in clear, resolute
tones. “I have a clear comprehension of
my rights, and I do not propose to have them infringed.”
Squire Duncan bit his lips. He
had only a smattering of law, but he knew that the
witness was right, and that he had been betrayed by
temper into making a discreditable exhibition of himself.
“I demand that you treat me
with proper respect,” he said angrily.
“I am ready to do that,”
answered the witness, in a tone whose meaning more
than one understood. It was not an apology calculated
to soothe the ruffled pride of the justice.
“I call for the discharge of
my young client, Squire Duncan,” said the lawyer.
“The case against him, as I hardly need say,
has utterly failed.”
“He is discharged,” said the justice,
unwillingly.
Instantly Luke’s friends surrounded
him and began to shower congratulations upon him.
Among them was Roland Reed.
“My young friend,” he
said, “I am sincerely sorry that by any act
of mine I have brought anxiety and trouble upon you.
But I can’t understand how the fact that you
had the box in your possession became known.”
This was explained to him.
“I have a proposal to make to
you and your mother,” said Roland Reed, “and
with your permission I will accompany you home.”
“We shall be glad to have you,
sir,” said Mrs. Larkin, cordially.
As they were making their way out
of the court-room, Melinda Sprague, the cause of Luke’s
trouble, hurried to meet them. She saw by this
time that she had made a great mistake, and that her
course was likely to make her generally unpopular.
She hoped to make it up with the Larkins.
“I am so glad you are acquitted,
Luke,” she began effusively. “I hope,
Mrs. Larkin, you won’t take offense at what I
did. I did what I thought to be my duty, though
with a bleeding heart. No one is more rejoiced
at dear Luke’s vindication.”
“Miss Sprague,” said she,
“if you think you did your duty, let the consciousness
of that sustain you. I do not care to receive
any visits from you hereafter.”
“How cruel and unfeeling you
are, Mrs. Larkin,” said the spinster, putting
her handkerchief to her eyes.
Mrs. Larkin did not reply.
Miss Sprague found herself so coldly
treated in the village that she shortly left Groveton
on a prolonged visit to some relatives in a neighboring
town. It is to be feared that the consciousness
of having done her duty did not wholly console her.
What she regretted most, however, was the loss of
the reward which she had hoped to receive from the
bank.