UNEXPECTED evidence.
When Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve left
Spa, he left with a ruddy glow of recovered health
on his bronzed red cheek; for in spite of anxiety
and repentance and doubt, the man’s iron frame
would somehow still assert itself. When he took
his seat on the bench in court that morning, he looked
so haggard and ill with fatigue and remorse that even
Elma Clifford herself pitied him. A hushed whisper
ran round among the spectators below that the judge
wasn’t fit to try the case before him.
And indeed he wasn’t. For it was his own
trial, not Guy Waring’s, he was really presiding
over.
He sat down in his place, a ghastly
picture of pallid despair. The red colour had
faded altogether from his wan, white cheeks. His
eyes were dreamy and bloodshot with long vigil.
His big hands trembled like a woman’s as he
opened his note-book. His mouth twitched nervously.
So utter a collapse, in such a man as he was, seemed
nothing short of pitiable to every spectator.
Counsel for the Crown stared him steadily
in the face. Counsel for the Crown—Forbes-Ewing,
Q.C.—was an old forensic enemy, who had
fought many a hard battle against Gildersleeve, with
scant interchange of courtesy, when both were members
of the junior Bar together; but now Sir Gilbert’s
look moved even him to pity. “I think,
my lord,” the Q.C. suggested with a sympathetic
simper, “your lordship’s too ill to open
the court to-day. Perhaps the proceedings had
better be adjourned for the present.”
“No, no,” the judge answered,
almost testily, shaking his sleeve with impatience.
“I’ll have no putting off for trifles in
the court where I sit. There’s a capital
case to come on this morning. When a man’s
neck’s at stake—when a matter of life
and death’s at issue—I don’t
like to keep any one longer in suspense than I absolutely
need. Delay would be cruel.”
As he spoke he lifted his eyes—and
caught Elma Clifford’s. The judge let his
own drop again in speechless agony. Elma’s
never flinched. Neither gave a sign; but Elma
knew, as, well as Sir Gilbert knew himself, it was
his own life and death the judge was thinking of,
and not Guy Waring’s.
“As you will, my lord,”
counsel for the Crown responded demurely. “It
was your lordship’s convenience we all had at
heart, rather than the prisoner’s.”
“Eh! What’s that?”
the judge said sharply, with a suspicious frown.
Then he recovered himself with a start. For a
moment he had half fancied that fellow, Forbes-Ewing,
meant something by what he said—meant
to poke innuendoes at him. But, after all, it
was a mere polite form. How frightened we all
are, to be sure, when we know we’re on our trial!
The opening formalities were soon
got over, and then, amid a deep hush of breathless
lips, Guy Waring, of Staple Inn, Holborn, gentleman,
was put upon his trial for the wilful murder of Montague
Nevitt, eighteen months before, at Mambury in Devon.
Guy, standing in the dock, looked
puzzled and distracted rather than alarmed or terrified.
His cheek was pale, to be sure, and his eyes were
weary; but as Elma glanced from him hastily to the
judge on the bench she had no hesitation in settling
in her own mind which of the two looked most at that
moment like a detected murderer before the faces of
his accusers. Guy was calm and self-contained.
Sir Gilbert’s mute agony was terrible to behold.
Yet, strange to say, no one else in court save Elma
seemed to note it as she did. People saw the
judge was ill, but that was all. Perhaps his
wig and robes helped to hide the effect of conscious
guilt—nobody suspects a judge of murder;
perhaps all eyes were more intent on the prisoner.
Be that as it might, counsel for the
Crown opened with a statement of what they meant to
prove, set forth in the familiar forensic fashion.
They didn’t pretend the evidence against the
accused was absolutely conclusive or overwhelming
in character. It was inferential only, but not
circumstantial—inferential in such a cumulative
and convincing way as could leave no moral doubt on
any intelligent mind as to the guilt of the prisoner.
They would show that a clbse intimacy had long existed
between the prisoner Waring and the deceased gentleman,
Mr. Montague Nevitt. Witnesses would be called
who would prove to the court that just before the murder
this intimacy, owing to circumstances which could not
fully be cleared up, had passed suddenly into intense
enmity and open hatred. The landlord of the inn
at Mambury, and other persons to be called, would
speak to the fact that prisoner had followed his victim
in hot blood into Devonshire, and had tracked him
to the retreat where he was passing his holiday alone
and incognito—had tracked him with every
expression of indignant anger, and had uttered plain
threats of personal violence towards him.
Nor was that all. It would be
shown that on the afternoon of Waring’s visit
to Mambury, Mr. Nevitt, who possessed an intense love
of nature in her wildest and most romantic moods—it’s
always counsel’s cue, for the prosecution, to
set the victim’s character in the most amiable
light, and so win the sympathy of the jury as against
the accused—Mr. Nevitt, that close student
of natural beauty, had strolled by himself down a
certain woodland path, known as The Tangle, which
led through the loneliest and leafiest quarter of
Mambury Chase, along the tumbling stream described
as the Mam-water. Ten minutes after he had passed
the gate, a material witness would show them, the
prisoner Waring presented himself, and pointedly asked
whether his victim had already gone down the path
before him. He was told that that was so.
Thereupon the prisoner opened the gate, and followed
excitedly. What happened next no living eye
but the prisoner’s ever saw. Montague Nevitt
was not destined to issue from that wood alive.
Two days later his breathless body was found, all
stiff and stark, hidden among the brown bracken at
the bottom of the dell, where the murderer no doubt
had thrust it away out of his sight on that fatal
afternoon in fear and trembling.
Half-way through the opening speech
Sir Gilbert’s heart beat fast and hard.
He had never heard Forbes-Ewing open a case so well.
The man would be hanged! He felt sure of it!
He could see it! For a while the judge almost
gloated over that prospect of release. What was
Guy’s life to him now, by the side of his wife’s
and Gwendoline’s happiness? But as counsel
uttered the words, “What happened next no living
eye but the prisoner’s ever saw,” he looked
hard at Guy. Not a quiver of remorse or of guilty
knowledge passed over the young man’s face.
But Elma Clifford, for her part, looked at the judge
on the bench. Their eyes met once more. Again
Sir Gilbert’s fell. Oh, heavens! how terrible!
Even for Gwendoline’s sake he could never stand
this appalling suspense. But perhaps after all
the prosecution might fail. There was still a
chance left that the jury might acquit him.
So, torn by conflicting emotions,
he sat there still, stiff and motionless in his seat
as an Egyptian statue.
Then counsel went on to deal in greater
detail with the question of motive. There were
two motives the prosecution proposed to allege:
first, the known enmity of recent date between the
two parties, believed to have reference to some business
dispute; and, secondly—here counsel dropped
his voice to a very low key—he was sorry
to suggest it; but the evidence bore it out—mere
vulgar love of gain—the commonplace thirst
after filthy lucre. They would bring witnesses
to show that when Mr. Montague Nevitt was last seen
alive, he was in possession of a pocket-book containing
a very large large sum in Bank of England notes of
high value; from the moment of his death that pocket-book
had disappeared, and nobody knew what had since become
of it. It was not upon the body when the body
was found. And all their efforts to trace the
missing notes, whose numbers were not known, had been
unhappily unsuccessful.
Guy listened to all this impeachment
in a dazed, dreamy way. He hardly knew what it
meant. It appalled and chilled him. The web
of circumstances was too thick for him to break.
He couldn’t understand it himself. And
what was far worse, he could give no active assistance
to his own lawyers on the question of the notes—which
might be very important evidence against him—without
further prejudicing his case by confessing the forgery.
At all hazards, he was determined to keep that quiet
now. Cyril had never spoken to a soul of that
episode, and to speak of it, as things stood, would
have been certain death to him. I would be to
supply the one missing link of motive which the prosecution
needed to complete their chain of cumulative evidence.
It was some comfort to him to think,
however, that the secret was safe in Cyril’s
keeping. Cyril had all the remaining notes, still
unchanged, in his possession; and the prosecution,
knowing nothing of the forgery, or its sequel, had
no clue at all as to where they came from.
But as for Sir Gilbert, he listened
still with ever-deepening horror. His mind swayed
to and fro between hope and remorse. They were
making the man guilty, and Gwendoline would be saved!
They were making the man guilty, and a gross wrong
would be perpetrated! Great drops of sweat stood
colder than ever on his burning brow. He couldn’t
have believed Forbes-Ewing could have done it so well.
He was weaving a close web round an innocent man with
consummate forensic skill and cunning.
The case went on to its second stage.
Witnesses were called, and Guy listened to them dreamily.
All of them bore out counsel’s opening statement.
Every man in court felt the evidence was going very
hard against the prisoner. They’d caught
the right man, that was clear—so the spectators
opined. They’d proved it to the hilt.
This fellow would swing for it.
At last the landlord of the Talbot
Arms at Mambury shuffled slowly into the witness-box.
He was a heavy, dull man, and he gave evidence as
to Nevitt’s stay under an assumed name—which
counsel explained suggestively by the deceased gentleman’s
profound love of retirement —and as to
Guy’s angry remarks and evident indignation.
But the most sensational part of all his evidence
was that which related to the pocket-book Montague
Nevitt was carrying at the time of his death, containing
notes, he should say, for several hundred-pounds,
“or it murt be thousands—and yet,
again, it mustn’t,” which had totally
disappeared since the day of the murder. Diligent
search had been made for the pocket-book everywhere
by the landlord and the police, but it had vanished
into space, “leaving not a wrack behind,”
as junior counsel for the prosecution poetically phrased
it.
At the words Cyril mechanically dived
his hand into his pocket, as he had done a hundred
times a day before, during these last eighteen months,
to assure himself that that most incriminating and
unwelcome object was still safely ensconced in its
usual resting-place. Yes, there it was sure enough,
as snug as ever! He sighed, and pulled his hand
out again nervously, with a little jerk. Something
came with it, that fell on the floor with a jingle
by his neighbour’s feet. Cyril turned crimson,
then deadly pale. He snatched at the object;
but his neighbour picked it up and examined it cursorily.
Its flap had burst open with the force of the fall,
and on the inside the finder read with astonishment,
in very plain letters, the very name of the murdered
man, “Montague Nevitt.”
Cyril held out his hand to recover
it impatiently. But the finder was too much
taken back at his strange discovery to part with it
so readily. It was full of money-Bank of England
notes; and through the transparent paper of the outermost
among them the finder could dimly read the words,
“One hundred.”
He rose in his place, and held the
pocket-book aloft in his hand with a triumphant gesture.
Cyril tried in vain to clutch at it. The witness
turned round sharply, disturbed by this incident.
“What’s that?” the judge exclaimed,
puckering his brows in disapprobation, and looking
angrily towards the disturber.
“If you please, my lord,”
the innkeeper answered, letting his jaw drop slowly
in almost speechless amazement, “that’s
the thing I was a-talking of: that’s Mr.
Nevitt’s pocket-book.”
“Hand it up,” the judge
said shortly, gazing hard with all his eyes at the
mute evidence so tendered.
The finder handed it up without note or comment.
Sir Gilbert turned the book over in
blank surprise. He was dumfoundered himself.
For a minute or two he examined it carefully, inside
and out. Yes; there was no mistake. It was
really what they called it. “Montague Nevitt”
was written in plain letters on the leather flap;
within lay half-a-dozen engraved visiting-cards, a
Foreign Office passport in Nevitt’s name, and
thirty Bank of England notes for one hundred pounds
apiece. This was, indeed, a mystery!
“Where did it come from?”
the judge asked, drawing a painfully deep breath,
and handing it across to the jury.
And the finder answered, “If
you please, my lord, the gentleman next to me pulled
it out of his pocket.”
“Who is he?” the judge
inquired, with a sinking heart, for he himself knew
perfectly well who was the unhappy possessor.
And a thrill of horror ran round the
crowded court as Forbes-Ewing answered, in a very
distinct voice, “Mr. Cyril Waring, my lord,
the brother of the prisoner.”