The trial.
Edith Hudson spent a restless night,
and early in the morning, as early as she thought
she could reach him, she called the office of Jimmy’s
attorney. She told the lawyer that some new evidence
was to have been brought in to him and asked if he
had received it. Receiving a negative reply she
asked that she be called the moment it was brought
in.
All that day and the next she waited,
scarcely leaving her room for fear that the call might
come while she was away. The days ran into weeks
and still there was no word from the Lizard.
Jimmy was brought to trial, and she
saw him daily in the courtroom and as often as they
would let her she would visit him in jail. On
several occasions she met Harriet Holden, also visiting
him, and she saw that the other young woman was as
constant an attendant at court as she.
The State had established as unassailable
a case as might he built on circumstantial evidence.
Krovac had testified that Torrance had made threats
against Compton in his presence, and there was no way
in which Jimmy’s attorneys could refute the
perjured statement. Jimmy himself had come to
realize that his attorney was fighting now for his
life, that the verdict of the jury was already a foregone
conclusion and that the only thing left to fight for
now was the question of the penalty.
Daily he saw in the court-room the
faces of the three girls who had entered so strangely
into his life. He noticed, with not a little sorrow
and regret, that Elizabeth Compton and Harriet Holden
always sat apart and that they no longer spoke.
He saw the effect of the strain of the long trial
on Edith Hudson. She looked wan and worried, and
then finally she was not in court one day, and later,
through Harriet Holden, he learned that she was confined
to her room with a bad cold.
Jimmy’s sentiments toward the
three women whose interests brought them daily to
the court-room had undergone considerable change.
The girl that he had put upon a pedestal to worship
from afar, the girl to whom he had given an idealistic
love, he saw now in another light. His reverence
for her had died hard, but in the face of her arrogance,
her vindictiveness and her petty snobbery it had finally
succumbed, so that when he compared her with the girl
who had been of the street the latter suffered in
no way by the comparison.
Harriet Holden’s friendship
and loyalty were a never-ending source of wonderment
to him, but he accepted her own explanation, which,
indeed, was fair enough, that her innate sense of
justice had compelled her to give him her sympathy
and assistance.
Just how far that assistance had gone
Jimmy did not know, though of late he had come to
suspect that his attorney was being retained by Harriet
Holden’s father.
Bince appeared in the court-room only
when necessity compelled his presence on the witness
stand. The nature of the man’s testimony
was such that, like Krovac’s, it was difficult
of impeachment, although Jimmy was positive that Bince
perjured himself, especially in a statement that he
made of a conversation he had with Mr. Compton the
morning of the murder, in which he swore that Compton
stated that he intended to discharge Torrance that
day.
The effect of the trial seemed to
have made greater inroads upon Bince than upon Jimmy.
The latter gave no indication of nervous depression
or of worry, while Bince, on the other hand, was thin,
pale and haggard. His hands and face continually
moved and twitched as he sat in the courtroom or on
the witness chair. Never for an instant was he
at rest.
Elizabeth Compton had noticed this
fact, too, and commented upon it one evening when
Bince was at her home.
“What’s the matter with
you, Harold?” she asked. “You look
as though you are on the verge of nervous prostration.”
“I’ve had enough to make
any man nervous,” retorted Bince irritably.
“I can’t get over this terrible affair,
and in addition I have had all the weight and responsibility
of the business on my shoulders since, and the straightening
out of your father’s estate, which, by the way,
was in pretty bad shape.
“I wish, Elizabeth,” he
went on, “that we might be married immediately.
I have asked you so many times before, however, and
you have always refused, that I suppose it is useless
now. I believe that I would get over this nervous
condition if you and I were settled down here together.
I have no real home, as you know—the club
is just a stopping place. I might as well be
living at a hotel. If after the day’s work
I could come home to a regular home it would do me
a world of good, I know. We could be married
quietly. There is every reason why we should,
especially now that you are left all alone.”
“Just what do you mean by immediately?”
she asked.
“To-morrow,” he replied.
For a long time she demurred, but
finally she acceded to his wishes, for an early marriage,
though she would not listen to the ceremony being
performed the following day. They reached a compromise
on Friday morning, a delay of only a few days, and
Harold Bince breathed more freely thereafter than
he had for a long time before.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bince entered
the court-room late on Friday morning following the
brief ceremony that had made them man and wife.
It had been generally supposed that to-day the case
would go to the jury as the evidence was all in, and
the final arguments of the attorneys, which had started
the preceding day, would be concluded during the morning
session. It had been conceded that the judge’s
charge would be brief and perfunctory, and there was
even hope that the jury might return a verdict before
the close of the afternoon session, but when Bince
and his bride entered the court-room they found Torrance’s
attorney making a motion for the admission of new
evidence on the strength of the recent discovery of
witnesses, the evidence of whom he claimed would materially
alter the aspect of the case.
An hour was consumed in argument before
the judge finally granted the motion. The first
of the new witnesses called was an employee of the
International Machine Company. After the usual
preliminary questions the attorney for the defense
asked him if he was employed in the plant on the afternoon
of March 24. The reply was in the affirmative.
“Will you tell the jury, please,
of any occurrence that you witnessed there that afternoon
out of the ordinary?”
“I was working at my machine,”
said the witness, “when Pete Krovac comes to
me and asks me to hide behind a big drill-press and
watch what the assistant general manager done when
he comes through the shop again. So I hides there
and I saw this man Bince come along and drop an envelope
beside Krovac’s machine, and after he left I
comes out as Krovac picks it up, and I seen him take
some money out of it.”
“How much money?” asked the attorney.
“There was fifty dollars there. He counted
it in front of me.”
“Did he say what it was for?”
“Yes, be said Bince gave it to him to croak
this fellow”—nodding toward Jimmy.
“What fellow?” asked the
attorney. “You mean Mr. Torrance, the
defendant?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And what else? What happened after that?”
“Krovac said he’d split it with me if
I’d go along and help him.”
“Did you?”
“Yes.”
“What happened?”
“The guy beat up Krovac and come near croaking
me, and got away.”
“That is all,” said the attorney.
The prosecuting attorney, whose repeated
objections to the testimony of the witness had been
overruled, waived cross-examination.
Turning to the clerk, “Please
call Stephen Murray,” said Jimmy’s attorney.
Murray, burly and swaggering, took
the witness chair. The attorney handed him a
letter. It was the letter that Murray had written
Bince enclosing the supposed I.W.W. threat.
“Did you ever see that before?” he asked.
Murray took the letter and read it
over several times. He was trying to see in
it anything which could possibly prove damaging to
him.
“Sure,” he said at last
in a blustering tone of voice. “I wrote
it. But what of it?” “And this enclosure?”
asked the attorney. He handed Murray the slip
of soiled wrapping paper with the threat lettered upon
it. “This was received with your letter.”
Murray hesitated before replying.
“Oh,” he said, “that ain’t
nothing. That was just a little joke.”
“You were seen in Feinheimer’s
with Mr. Bince on March—Do you recall the
object of this meeting?”
“Mr. Bince thought there was
going to be a strike at his plant and he wanted me
to fix it up for him,” replied Murray.
“You know the defendant, James Torrance?”
“Yes.”
“Didn’t he knock you down
once for insulting a girl?” Murray flushed,
but was compelled to admit the truth of the allegation.
“You haven’t got much use for him, have
you?” continued the attorney.
“No, I haven’t,” replied Murray.
“You called the defendant on
the telephone a half or three-quarters of an hour
before the police discovered Mr. Compton’s body,
did you not?”
Murray started to deny that he had
done so. Jimmy’s attorney stopped him.
“Just a moment, Mr. Murray,” he said, “if
you will stop a moment and give the matter careful
thought I am sure you will recall that you telephoned
Mr. Torrance at that time, and that you did it in the
presence of a witness,” and the attorney pointed
toward the back of the court-room. Murray looked
in the direction that the other indicated and again
he paled and his hand trembled where it rested on the
arm of his chair, for seated in the back of the courtroom
was the head-waiter from Feinheimer’s.
“Now do you recall?” asked the attorney.
Murray was silent for a moment.
Suddenly he half rose from his chair. “Yes
I remember it,” he said. “They are
all trying to double-cross me. I had nothing
to do with killing Compton. That wasn’t
in the deal at all. Ask that man there; he will
tell you that I had nothing to do with killing Compton.
He hired me and he knows,” and with shaking finger
Murray pointed at Mr Harold Bince where he sat with
his wife beside the prosecuting attorney.