THE MURDER TRIAL
Billy Byrne squared his
broad shoulders and filled his deep lungs with the
familiar medium which is known as air in Chicago.
He was standing upon the platform of a New York Central
train that was pulling into the La Salle Street Station,
and though the young man was far from happy something
in the nature of content pervaded his being, for he
was coming home.
After something more than a year of
world wandering and strange adventure Billy Byrne
was coming back to the great West Side and Grand Avenue.
Now there is not much upon either
side or down the center of long and tortuous Grand
Avenue to arouse enthusiasm, nor was Billy particularly
enthusiastic about that more or less squalid thoroughfare.
The thing that exalted Billy was the
idea that he was coming back to show them.
He had left under a cloud and with a reputation for
genuine toughness and rowdyism that has seen few parallels
even in the ungentle district of his birth and upbringing.
A girl had changed him. She
was as far removed from Billy’s sphere as the
stars themselves; but Billy had loved her and learned
from her, and in trying to become more as he knew
the men of her class were he had sloughed off much
of the uncouthness that had always been a part of
him, and all of the rowdyism. Billy Byrne was
no longer the mucker.
He had given her up because he imagined
the gulf between Grand Avenue and Riverside Drive
to be unbridgeable; but he still clung to the ideals
she had awakened in him. He still sought to
be all that she might wish him to be, even though
he realized that he never should see her again.
Grand Avenue would be the easiest
place to forget his sorrow—her he could
never forget. And then, his newly awakened pride
urged him back to the haunts of his former life that
he might, as he would put it himself, show them.
He wanted the gang to see that he, Billy Byrne, wasn’t
afraid to be decent. He wanted some of the neighbors
to realize that he could work steadily and earn an
honest living, and he looked forward with delight
to the pleasure and satisfaction of rubbing it in
to some of the saloon keepers and bartenders who had
helped keep him drunk some five days out of seven,
for Billy didn’t drink any more.
But most of all he wanted to vindicate
himself in the eyes of the once-hated law. He
wanted to clear his record of the unjust charge of
murder which had sent him scurrying out of Chicago
over a year before, that night that Patrolman Stanley
Lasky of the Lake Street Station had tipped him off
that Sheehan had implicated him in the murder of old
man Schneider.
Now Billy Byrne had not killed Schneider.
He had been nowhere near the old fellow’s saloon
at the time of the holdup; but Sheehan, who had been
arrested and charged with the crime, was an old enemy
of Billy’s, and Sheehan had seen a chance to
divert some of the suspicion from himself and square
accounts with Byrne at the same time.
The new Billy Byrne was ready to accept
at face value everything which seemed to belong in
any way to the environment of that exalted realm where
dwelt the girl he loved. Law, order, and justice
appeared to Billy in a new light since he had rubbed
elbows with the cultured and refined.
He no longer distrusted or feared
them. They would give him what he sought—a
square deal.
It seemed odd to Billy that he should
be seeking anything from the law or its minions.
For years he had waged a perpetual battle with both.
Now he was coming back voluntarily to give himself
up, with every conviction that he should be exonerated
quickly. Billy, knowing his own innocence, realizing
his own integrity, assumed that others must immediately
appreciate both.
“First,” thought Billy,
“I’ll go take a look at little old Grand
Ave., then I’ll give myself up. The trial
may take a long time, an’ if it does I want
to see some of the old bunch first.”
So Billy entered an “L”
coach and leaning on the sill of an open window watched
grimy Chicago rattle past until the guard’s
“Granavenoo” announced the end of his journey.
Maggie Shane was sitting on the upper
step of the long flight of stairs which lean precariously
against the scarred face of the frame residence upon
the second floor front of which the lares and penates
of the Shane family are crowded into three ill-smelling
rooms.
It was Saturday and Maggie was off.
She sat there rather disconsolate for there was a
dearth of beaux for Maggie, none having arisen to
fill the aching void left by the sudden departure
of “Coke” Sheehan since that worthy gentleman
had sought a more salubrious clime—to the
consternation of both Maggie Shane and Mr. Sheehan’s
bondsmen.
Maggie scowled down upon the frowsy
street filled with frowsy women and frowsy children.
She scowled upon the street cars rumbling by with
their frowsy loads. Occasionally she varied
the monotony by drawing out her chewing gum to wondrous
lengths, holding one end between a thumb and finger
and the other between her teeth.
Presently Maggie spied a rather pleasing
figure sauntering up the sidewalk upon her side of
the street. The man was too far away for her
to recognize his features, but his size and bearing
and general appearance appealed to the lonesome Maggie.
She hoped it was someone she knew, or with whom she
might easily become acquainted, for Maggie was bored
to death.
She patted the hair at the back of
her head and righted the mop which hung over one eye.
Then she rearranged her skirts and waited.
As the man approached she saw that he was better looking
than she had even dared to hope, and that there was
something extremely familiar about his appearance.
It was not, though, until he was almost in front
of the house that he looked up at the girl and she
recognized him.
Then Maggie Shane gasped and clutched
the handrail at her side. An instant later the
man was past and continuing his way along the sidewalk.
Maggie Shane glared after him for
a minute, then she ran quickly down the stairs and
into a grocery store a few doors west, where she asked
if she might use the telephone.
“Gimme West 2063,” she
demanded of the operator, and a moment later:
“Is this Lake Street?”
“Well say, Billy Byrne’s back. I
just see him.”
“Yes an’ never mind who
I am; but if youse guys want him he’s walkin’
west on Grand Avenoo right now. I just this
minute seen him near Lincoln,” and she smashed
the receiver back into its hook.
Billy Byrne thought that he would
look in on his mother, not that he expected to be
welcomed even though she might happen to be sober,
or not that he cared to see her; but Billy’s
whole manner of thought had altered within the year,
and something now seemed to tell him that it was his
duty to do the thing he contemplated. Maybe
he might even be of help to her.
But when he reached the gloomy neighborhood
in which his childhood had been spent it was to learn
that his mother was dead and that another family occupied
the tumble-down cottage that had been his home.
If Billy Byrne felt any sorrow because
of his mother’s death he did not reveal it outwardly.
He owed her nothing but for kicks and cuffs received,
and for the surroundings and influences that had started
him upon a life of crime at an age when most boys
are just entering grammar school.
Really the man was relieved that he
had not had to see her, and it was with a lighter
step that he turned back to retrace his way along
Grand Avenue. No one of the few he had met who
recognized him had seemed particularly delighted at
his return. The whole affair had been something
of a disappointment. Therefore Billy determined
to go at once to the Lake Street Station and learn
the status of the Schneider murder case. Possibly
they had discovered the real murderer, and if that
was the case Billy would be permitted to go his way;
but if not then he could give himself up and ask for
a trial, that he might be exonerated.
As he neared Wood Street two men who
had been watching his approach stepped into the doorway
of a saloon, and as he passed they stepped out again
behind him. One upon either side they seized
him.
Billy turned to remonstrate.
“Come easy now, Byrne,”
admonished one of the men, “an’ don’t
make no fuss.”
“Oh,” said Billy, “it’s
you, is it? Well, I was just goin’ over
to the station to give myself up.”
Both men laughed, skeptically.
“We’ll just save you the trouble,”
said one of them. “We’ll take you
over. You might lose your way if you tried to
go alone.”
Billy went along in silence the rest
of the way to where the patrol waited at another corner.
He saw there was nothing to be gained by talking
to these detectives; but he found the lieutenant equally
inclined to doubt his intentions. He, too, only
laughed when Billy assured him that he was on his way
to the station at the very instant of arrest.
As the weeks dragged along, and Billy
Byrne found no friendly interest in himself or his
desire to live on the square, and no belief in his
protestations that he had had naught to do with the
killing of Schneider he began to have his doubts as
to the wisdom of his act.
He also commenced to entertain some
of his former opinions of the police, and of the law
of which they are supposed to be the guardians.
A cell-mate told him that the papers had scored the
department heavily for their failure to apprehend
the murderer of the inoffensive old Schneider, and
that public opinion had been so aroused that a general
police shakeup had followed.
The result was that the police were
keen to fasten the guilt upon someone—they
did not care whom, so long as it was someone who was
in their custody.
“You may not o’ done it,”
ventured the cell-mate; “but they’ll send
you up for it, if they can’t hang you.
They’re goin’ to try to get the death
sentence. They hain’t got no love for
you, Byrne. You caused ’em a lot o’
throuble in your day an’ they haven’t
forgot it. I’d hate to be in your boots.”
Billy Byrne shrugged. Where
were his dreams of justice? They seemed to have
faded back into the old distrust and hatred.
He shook himself and conjured in his mind the vision
of a beautiful girl who had believed in him and trusted
him— who had inculcated within him a love
for all that was finest and best in true manhood,
for the very things that he had most hated all the
years of his life before she had come into his existence
to alter it and him.
And then Billy would believe again—believe
that in the end justice would triumph and that it
would all come out right, just the way he had pictured
it.
With the coming of the last day of
the trial Billy found it more and more difficult to
adhere to his regard for law, order, and justice.
The prosecution had shown conclusively that Billy
was a hard customer. The police had brought witnesses
who did not hesitate to perjure themselves in their
testimony— testimony which it seemed to
Billy the densest of jurymen could plainly see had
been framed up and learned by rote until it was letter-perfect.
These witnesses could recall with
startling accuracy every detail that had occurred
between seventeen minutes after eight and twenty-one
minutes past nine on the night of September 23 over
a year before; but where they had been and what they
had done ten minutes earlier or ten minutes later,
or where they were at nine o’clock in the evening
last Friday they couldn’t for the lives of them
remember.
And Billy was practically without witnesses.
The result was a foregone conclusion.
Even Billy had to admit it, and when the prosecuting
attorney demanded the death penalty the prisoner had
an uncanny sensation as of the tightening of a hempen
rope about his neck.
As he waited for the jury to return
its verdict Billy sat in his cell trying to read a
newspaper which a kindly guard had given him.
But his eyes persisted in boring through the white
paper and the black type to scenes that were not in
any paper. He saw a turbulent river tumbling
through a savage world, and in the swirl of the water
lay a little island. And he saw a man there
upon the island, and a girl. The girl was teaching
the man to speak the language of the cultured, and
to view life as people of refinement view it.
She taught him what honor meant among
her class, and that it was better to lose any other
possession rather than lose honor. Billy realized
that it had been these lessons that had spurred him
on to the mad scheme that was to end now with the
verdict of “Guilty”—he had wished
to vindicate his honor. A hard laugh broke
from his lips; but instantly he sobered and his face
softened.
It had been for her sake after all,
and what mattered it if they did send him to the gallows?
He had not sacrificed his honor—he had
done his best to assert it. He was innocent.
They could kill him but they couldn’t make
him guilty. A thousand juries pronouncing him
so could not make it true that he had killed Schneider.
But it would be hard, after all his
hopes, after all the plans he had made to live square,
to show them. His eyes still boring
through the paper suddenly found themselves attracted
by something in the text before them—a name,
Harding.
Billy Byrne shook himself and commenced to read:
The marriage of Barbara, daughter
of Anthony Harding, the multimillionaire, to William
Mallory will take place on the twenty-fifth of June.
The article was dated New York.
There was more, but Billy did not read it.
He had read enough. It is true that he had urged
her to marry Mallory; but now, in his lonesomeness
and friendlessness, he felt almost as though she had
been untrue to him.
“Come along, Byrne,” a
bailiff interrupted his thoughts, “the jury’s
reached a verdict.”
The judge was emerging from his chambers
as Billy was led into the courtroom. Presently
the jury filed in and took their seats. The
foreman handed the clerk a bit of paper. Even
before it was read Billy knew that he had been found
guilty. He did not care any longer, so he told
himself. He hoped that the judge would send
him to the gallows. There was nothing more in
life for him now anyway. He wanted to die.
But instead he was sentenced to life imprisonment
in the penitentiary at Joliet.
This was infinitely worse than death.
Billy Byrne was appalled at the thought of remaining
for life within the grim stone walls of a prison.
Once more there swept over him all the old, unreasoning
hatred of the law and all that pertained to it.
He would like to close his steel fingers about the
fat neck of the red-faced judge. The smug jurymen
roused within him the lust to kill. Justice!
Billy Byrne laughed aloud.
A bailiff rapped for order.
One of the jurymen leaned close to a neighbor and
whispered. “A hardened criminal,”
he said. “Society will be safer when
he is behind the bars.”
The next day they took Billy aboard
a train bound for Joliet. He was handcuffed
to a deputy sheriff. Billy was calm outwardly;
but inwardly he was a raging volcano of hate.
In a certain very beautiful home on
Riverside Drive, New York City, a young lady, comfortably
backed by downy pillows, sat in her bed and alternated
her attention between coffee and rolls, and a morning
paper.
On the inside of the main sheet a
heading claimed her languid attention: Chicago
murderer given life sentence.
Of late Chicago had aroused in Barbara Harding a
greater proportion of interest than ever it had in
the past, and so it was that she now permitted her
eyes to wander casually down the printed column.
Murderer of harmless old saloon keeper
is finally brought to justice. The notorious
West Side rowdy, “Billy” Byrne, apprehended
after more than a year as fugitive from justice, is
sent to Joliet for life.
Barbara Harding sat stony-eyed and
cold for what seemed many minutes. Then with
a stifled sob she turned and buried her face in the
pillows.
The train bearing Billy Byrne and
the deputy sheriff toward Joliet had covered perhaps
half the distance between Chicago and Billy’s
permanent destination when it occurred to the deputy
sheriff that he should like to go into the smoker and
enjoy a cigar.
Now, from the moment that he had been
sentenced Billy Byrne’s mind had been centered
upon one thought—escape. He knew
that there probably would be not the slightest chance
for escape; but nevertheless the idea was always uppermost
in his thoughts.
His whole being revolted, not alone
against the injustice which had sent him into life
imprisonment, but at the thought of the long years
of awful monotony which lay ahead of him.
He could not endure them. He
would not! The deputy sheriff rose, and motioning
his prisoner ahead of him, started for the smoker.
It was two cars ahead. The train was vestibuled.
The first platform they crossed was tightly enclosed;
but at the second Billy saw that a careless porter
had left one of the doors open. The train was
slowing down for some reason—it was going,
perhaps, twenty miles an hour.
Billy was the first upon the platform.
He was the first to see the open door. It meant
one of two things—a chance to escape, or,
death. Even the latter was to be preferred to
life imprisonment.
Billy did not hesitate an instant.
Even before the deputy sheriff realized that the
door was open, his prisoner had leaped from the moving
train dragging his guard after him.