The Greatest Works of Arthur Cheney Train (Illustrated Edition). Arthur Cheney Train. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Arthur Cheney Train
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 9788027226214
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her upon the court-room wall towered in its flowing draperies the majestic figure of the Goddess of the Law, blindfolded and holding aloft the scales of justice. Beside her sat in the silken robes of his sacred office a judge who cleverly administered that law to advance his own interests and those of his political associates. In front of her, treacherously smiling, stood the cynical, bullet-headed O'Brien. At a great distance Mr. Tutt leaned on his elbows at a table beside Shane O'Connell. To them she directed her gaze and faintly smiled.

      "Miss Beekman," began O'Brien as courteously as he knew how, "you reside, do you not, at Number 1000 Fifth Avenue, in this city and county?"

      "I do," she answered with resolution.

      "Your family have always lived in New York, have they not?"

      "Since 1630," she replied deprecatingly and with more confidence.

      "You are prominent in various philanthropic, religious and civic activities?"

      "Not prominent; interested," she corrected him.

      "And you make a practise of visiting prisoners in the Tombs?"

      She hesitated. What could this be leading to?

      "Occasionally," she admitted.

      "Do you know this defendant, Shane O'Connell?"

      "Yes."

      "Did you see him on the twenty-third day of last month?"

      "I think so—if that was the day."

      "What day do you refer to?"

      "The day I had the talk with him."

      "Oh, you had a talk with him?"

      "Yes."

      "Where did you have that talk with him?"

      "In the counsel room of the Tombs."

      O'Brien paused. Even his miserable soul revolted at what he was about to do.

      "What did he say?" he asked, nervously looking away.

      Something in his hangdog look warned Miss Beekman that she was being betrayed, but before she could answer Mr. Tutt was on his feet.

      "One moment!" he cried. "May I ask a preliminary question?"

      The court signified acquiescence.

      "Was that conversation which you had with the defendant a confidential one?"

      "I object to the question!" snapped O'Brien. "The law recognizes no confidential communications as privileged except those made to a priest, a physician or an attorney. The witness is none of these. The question is immaterial and irrelevant."

      "That is the law," announced the judge, "but under all the circumstances I will permit the witness to answer."

      Miss Beekman paused.

      "Why," she began, "of course it was confidential, Mr. Tutt. O'Connell wouldn't have told me anything if he had supposed for one moment I was going to repeat what he said. Besides, I suggested that I might be able to help him. Yes, certainly our talk was confidential."

      "I am sorry," gloated O'Brien, "but I shall have to ask you what it was."

      "That is not a question," said Mr. Tutt calmly.

      "What did the defendant say to you in the counsel room of the Tombs on the twenty-third of last month?" cautiously revised O'Brien.

      "I object!" thundered Mr. Tutt, his form towering until seemingly it matched that of the blind goddess in height. "I object to the answer as requiring a breach of confidence which the law could not tolerate."

      Judge Babson turned politely to Miss Beekman.

      "I regret very much that I shall be obliged to ask you to state what the defendant said to you. You will recall that you yourself volunteered the information that you had had the talk in question. Otherwise"—he coughed and put up his hand—"we might possibly never have learned of it. A defendant cannot deprive the people of the right to prove what he may have divulged respecting his offense merely by claiming that it was in confidence. Public policy could never allow that. It may be unpleasant for you to answer the question but I must ask you to do so."

      "But," she protested, "you certainly cannot expect me to betray a confidence! I asked O'Connell to tell me what he had done so that I could help him—and he trusted me!"

      "But you are not responsible for the law! He took his chance!" admonished the judge.

      Slowly Miss Althea's indignation rose as she perceived the dastardly trick which O'Brien had played upon her. Already she suspected that the judge was only masquerading in the clothing of a gentleman. With a white face she turned to Mr. Tutt.

      "Does the law require me to answer, Mr. Tutt?" she inquired.

      "Do not ask questions—answer them," ordered Babson brusquely, feeling the change in her manner. "You are a witness for the people—not the defendant."

      "I am not a witness against O'Connell!" she declared. "This man"—indicating O'Brien scornfully—"has in some way found out that I—Oh, surely the law doesn't demand anything so base as that!"

      There was silence. The wheels of justice hung on a dead center.

      "Answer the question," remarked His Honor tartly.

      All Miss Beekman's long line of ancestors turned in their graves. In her Beekman blood the chief justice, the ambassador, the great editor, the signer of the Declaration of Independence, stirred, awoke, rubbed their eyes and sternly reared themselves. And that blood—blue though it was instead of scarlet like the O'Connells'—boiled in her veins and burned through the delicate tissue of her cheeks.

      "My conscience will not permit me to betray a confidence!" she cried angrily.

      "I direct you to answer!" ordered the judge.

      "I object to the court's threatening the witness!" interjected Mr. Tutt. "I wish it to appear upon the record that the manner of the court is most unjudicial and damaging to the defendant."

      "Take your seat, sir!" barked Babson, his features swelling with anger. "Your language is contemptuous!"

      The jury were leaning forward intently. Trained militiamen of the gibbet, they nevertheless admired this little woman's fearlessness and the old lawyer's pugnacity. On the rear wall the yellow face of the old self-regulating clock, that had gayly ticked so many men into the electric chair, leered shamelessly across at the blind goddess.

      "Answer the question, madam! If, as you claim, you are a patriotic citizen of this commonwealth, having due respect for its institutions and for the statutes, you will not set up your own ideas of what the law ought to be in defiance of the law as it stands. I order you to answer! If you do not I shall be obliged to take steps to compel you to do so."

      In the dead silence that followed, the stones in the edifice of Miss Beekman's inherited complacency, with each beat of the clock, fell one by one to the ground until it was entirely demolished. Vainly she struggled to test her conscience by her loyalty to her country's laws. But the task was beyond her.

      Tightly compressing her lips she sat silent in the chair, while the delighted reporters scribbled furious messages to their city editors that Miss Althea Beekman, one of the Four Hundred, was defying Judge Babson, and to rush up a camera man right off in a taxi, and to look her up in the morgue for a front-page story. O'Brien glanced uneasily at Babson. Possible defiance on the part of this usually unassuming lady had not entered into his calculations. The judge took a new tack.

      "You probably do not fully understand the situation in which you are placed," he explained. "You are not responsible for the law. Neither are you responsible in any way for the consequences to this defendant, whatever they may be. The matter is entirely out of your hands. You are compelled to do as the court orders. As a law-abiding citizen you have no choice in the matter."

      Miss Althea's modest intellect reeled, but she stood her ground, the ghost of the Signer at her elbow.

      "I