At bay.
Only two people in court doubted for
one moment what the verdict would be. And those
two were the pair who stood there on their trial.
Sir Gilbert couldn’t believe the jury would convict
an innocent man of the crime he himself had half unwittingly
committed. Guy Waring couldn’t believe
the jury would convict an innocent man of the crime
he had never been guilty of. So those two doubted.
To all the rest the verdict was a foregone conclusion.
Nevertheless, dead silence reigned
everywhere in the court as the clerk of arraigns put
the solemn question, “Gentlemen, do you find
the prisoner at the bar guilty or not guilty?”
And the foreman, clearing his throat
huskily, answered in a very tremulous tone, “We
find him guilty of wilful murder.”
There was a long, deep pause.
Every one looked at the prisoner. Guy Waring
stood like one stunned by the immensity of the blow.
It was an awful moment. He knew he was innocent;
but he knew now the English law would hang him.
One pair of eyes in the court, however,
was not fixed on Guy. Elma Clifford, at that
final and supreme moment, gazed hard with all her
soul at Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve. Her glance went
through him. She sat like an embodied conscience
before him. The judge rose slowly, his eyes riveted
on hers. He was trembling with remorse, and deadlier
pale than ever. An awful lividness stole over
his face. His lips were contorted. His eyebrows
quivered horribly. Still gazing straight at Elma,
he essayed to speak. Twice he opened his parched
lips. Then his voice failed him.
“I cannot accept that finding,”
he said at last, in a very solemn tone, battling hard
for speech against some internal enemy. “I
cannot accept it. Clerk, you will enter a verdict
of not guilty.”
A deep hum of surprise ran round the
expectant court. Every mouth opened wide, and
drew a long hushed breath. Senior counsel for
the Crown jumped to his feet astonished. “But
why, my lord?” he asked tartly, thus baulked
of his success. “On what ground does your
lordship decide to override the plain verdict of the
jury?”
The pause that followed was inexpressibly
terrible. Guy Waring waited for the answer in
an agony of suspense. He knew what it meant
now. With a rush it all occurred to him.
He knew who was the murderer. But he hoped for
nothing. Sir Gilbert faltered: Elma Clifford’s
eyes were upon him still, compelling him. “Because,”
he said at last, with a still more evident and physical
effort, pumping the words out slowly, “I am
here to administer justice, and justice I will administer….
This man is innocent. It was I myself who killed
Montague Nevitt that day at Mambury.”
At those awful words, uttered in a
tone so solemn that no one could doubt either their
truth or their sincerity, a cold thrill ran responsive
through the packed crowd of auditors. The silence
was profound. In its midst, a boy’s voice
burst forth all at once, directed, as it seemed, to
the counsel for the Crown, “I said it was him,”
the voice cried, in a triumphant tone. “I
knowed ’um! I knowed ’um! Thik
there’s the man that axed me the way down the
dell the marnin’ o’ the murder.”
The judge turned towards the boy with
a ghastly smile of enforced recognition. “You
say the truth, my lad,” he answered, without
any attempt at concealment. “It was I who
asked you. It was I who killed him. I went
round by the far gate after hearing he was there,
and, cutting across the wood, I met Montague Nevitt
in the path by The Tangle. I went there to meet
him; I went there to confront him; but not of malice
prepense to murder him. I wanted to question
him about a family matter. Why I needed to question
him no one henceforth shall ever know. That
secret, thank Heaven, rests now in Montague Nevitt’s
grave. But when I did question him, he answered
me back with so foul an aspersion upon a lady who was
very near and dear to me”—the judge
paused a moment; he was fighting hard for breath;
something within was evidently choking him. Then
he went on more excitedly—“an aspersion
upon a lady whom I love more than life—an
insult that no man could stand—an unspeakable
foulness; and I sprang at him, the cur, in the white
heat of my anger, not meaning or dreaming to hurt
him seriously. I caught him by the throat.”
The judge held up his hands before the whole court
appealingly. “Look at those hands, gentlemen,”
he cried, turning them about. “How could
I ever know how hard and how strong they were?
I only seemed to touch him. I just pushed him
from my path. He fell at once at my feet—dead,
dead unexpectedly. Remember how it all came
about. The medical evidence showed his heart was
weak, and he died in the scuffle. How was I to
know all that? I only knew this—he
fell dead before me.”
With a face of speechless awe, he
paused and wiped his brow. Not a soul in court
moved or breathed above a whisper. It was evident
the judge was in a paroxysm of contrition. His
face was drawn up. His whole frame quivered visibly.
Even Elma pitied him.
“And then I did a grievous wrong,”
the judge continued once more, his voice now very
thick and growing rapidly thicker. “I did
a grievous wrong, for which here to-day, before all
this court, I humbly ask Guy Waring’s pardon.
I had killed Montague Nevitt, unintentionally, unwittingly,
accidentally almost, in a moment of anger, never knowing
I was killing him. And if he had been a stronger
or a healthier man, what little I did to him would
never have killed him. I didn’t mean to
murder him. For that my remorse is far less poignant.
But what I did after was far worse than the murder.
I behaved like a sneak—I behaved like a
coward. I saw suspicion was aroused against the
prisoner, Guy Waring. And what did I do then?
Instead of coming forward like a man, as I ought,
and saying ‘I did it,’ and standing my
trial on the charge of manslaughter, I did my best
to throw further suspicion on an innocent person.
I made the case look blacker and worse for Guy Waring.
I don’t condone my own crime. I did it
for my wife’s sake and my daughter’s,
I admit—but I regret it now bitterly—and
am I not atoning for it? With a great humiliation,
am I not amply atoning for it? I wrote an unsigned
letter warning Waring at once to fly the country, as
a warrant was out against him. Waring foolishly
took my advice, and fled forthwith. From that
day to this”—he gazed round him appealingly—“oh,
friends, I have never known one happy moment.”
Guy gazed at him from the dock, where
he still stood guarded by two strong policemen, and
felt a fresh light break suddenly in upon him.
Their positions now were almost reversed. It was
he who was the accuser, and Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve,
the judge in that court, who stood charged to-day
on his own confession with causing the death of Montague
Nevitt.
“Then it was you”
Guy said slowly, breaking the pause at last, “who
sent me that anonymous letter at Plymouth?”
“It was I,” the judge
answered, in an almost inaudible, gurgling tone.
“It was I who so wronged you. Can you ever
forgive me for it?”
Guy gazed at him fixedly. He
himself had suffered much. Cyril and Elma had
suffered still more. But the judge, he felt sure,
had suffered most of all of them. In this moment
of relief, this moment of vindication, this moment
of triumph, he could afford to be generous. “Sir
Gilbert Gildersleeve, I forgive you,” he answered
slowly.
The judge gazed around him with a
vacant stare. “I feel cold,” he
said, shivering; “very cold, very faint, too.
But I’ve made all right here,” and
he held out a document. “I wrote this paper
in my room last night—in case of accident—confessing
everything. I brought it down here, signed and
witnessed, unread, intending to read it out if the
verdict went against me—I mean, against
Waring…. But I feel too weak now to read anything
further…. I’m so cold, so cold.
Take the paper, Forbes-Ewing. It’s all in
your line. You’ll know what to do with
it.” He could hardly utter a word, breath
failed him so fast. “This thing has killed
me,” he went on, mumbling. “I deserved
it. I deserved it.”
“How about the prisoner?”
the authority from the gaol asked, as the judge collapsed
rather than sat down on the bench again.
Those words roused Sir Gilbert to
full consciousness once more. The judge rose
again, solemnly, in all the majesty of his ermine.
“The prisoner is discharged,” he said,
in a loud, clear voice. “I am here to do
justice—justice against myself. I enter
a verdict of not guilty.” Then he turned
to the polices “I am your prisoner,” he
went on, in a broken, rambling way. “I
give myself in charge for the manslaughter of Montague
Nevitt. Manslaughter, not murder. Though
I don’t even admit myself, indeed, it was anything.
more than justifiable homicide.”
He sank back again once more, and
murmured three times in his seat, as if to himself,
“Justifiable homicide! Justifiable homicide!
Just—ifiable homicide!”
Somebody rose in court as he sank,
and moved quickly towards him. The judge recognised
him at once.
“Granville Kelmscott,”
he said; in a weary voice, “help me out of this.
I am very, very ill. You’re a friend.
I’m dying. Give me your arm! Assist
me!”