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"I did."
"What did you think she meant to do with it?"
"What she did do--stick George Pickerin'. I heerd her bawlin' that oot both afore an' efther."
The man was desperate. In his own parlance, he might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb, and he would spare no one.
"Oh, indeed! You knew she intended to commit murder?"
"I thowt so."
"Then why did you not follow her?"
"I was skeered."
"What! Afraid of a weak woman?"
"Well, I didn't give a d.a.m.n if she did stab him! There, ye hev it straight!"
Mr. Stockwell turned to Mr. Dane.
"If you are looking for accessories in this trumped-up case, you have one ready to hand," he exclaimed.
"You must be careful what you are saying, Marshall," observed the Coroner severely. "And moderate your language, too. This court is not a stable."
"He shouldn't badger me," cried the witness in sullen anger.
"I'll treat you with great tenderness," said Mr. Stockwell suavely, and a general smile relieved the tension.
"How did you obtain Miss Thwaites's address at Hereford?"
No answer.
"Come, now. Where are your wits? Will you accuse me of badgering you, if I suggest that you stole a letter from Kitty Thwaites's pocket?"
"I didn't steal it. It was in a frock of hers, hangin' in her bedroom."
"You are most obliging. And the sovereign you sent her? Did you, by any chance, borrow it from Mrs. Atkinson?"
"Frae Mrs. Atkinson? Whe said that?"
"Oh, I mean without her knowledge, of course. From Mrs. Atkinson's till, I should have said."
The chance shot went home. The miserable groom growled a denial, but no one believed him. Quite satisfied that he had destroyed the man's credibility, Mr. Stockwell sat down.
"Martin Court Bolland!" said the Coroner's officer, and a wave of renewed interest galvanized the court. Mr. Dane arranged his papers and looked around with the air of one who says:
"Now we shall hear the truth of this business."
Martin came forward. It chanced that the first pair of eyes he encountered were Angle's. The girl was gazing at him with a spiteful intensity he could not understand. He did not know then of the painful expos which took place at The Elms when Mrs. Saumarez learnt on the preceding day that her daughter was a leading figure among the children in the "Black Lion" yard on the night of the tragedy.
Angle blamed Martin for having betrayed her to the authorities. She did not know how resolutely he had declined to mention her name; he loomed large in her mind, to the exclusion of the others.
She regarded him now with a venomous malice all the more bitter because of the ultra-friendly relations she had forced on him.
He looked at her with genuine astonishment. She reminded him of the wildcat he choked to death in Thor ghyll. But he had to collect his wandering faculties, for the Coroner was speaking.
CHAPTER XV
THE UNWRITTEN LAW
Martin's evidence was concise. He happened to be in the "Black Lion"
yard with other children at a quarter past ten on Monday night. He heard a woman's scream, followed by a man's loud cry of pain, and both sounds seemed to come from the extreme end of the garden.
Kitty Thwaites ran toward the hotel shrieking, "Oh, Betsy, Betsy, you've killed him!" She screamed "Murder" and called for someone to come, "for G.o.d's sake!" She fell exactly opposite the place where he was standing. Then he saw Betsy Thwaites--he identified her now as Mrs. Pickering--running after her sister and brandis.h.i.+ng a knife. She appeared to be very excited, and cried out, "I'll swing for him. May the Lord deal wi' him as he dealt wi' me!" She called her sister a "strumpet," and said it would "serve her right to stick her with the same knife." He was quite sure those were the exact words. He was not alarmed in any way, only surprised by the sudden uproar, and he saw the two women and the knife as plainly as if it were broad daylight.
Mr. Dane concluded the examination-in-chief, which he punctuated with expressive glances at the jury, by touching on a point which he expected his acute rival to raise.
"What were you doing in the 'Black Lion' yard at that hour, Bolland?"
"I was having a dispute with Master Frank Beckett-Smythe."
"What sort of a dispute?"
"Well, we were fighting."
A grin ran through the court.
"He is an intelligent boy and older than you. Can you suggest any reason why he should have failed to see and hear all that you saw and heard?"
Martin paused. He disliked to pose as a vainglorious pugilist, but there was no help for it.
"I got the better of him," he said quietly. "One, at least, of his eyes were closed, and I had just given him an uppercut on the nose."
"But his brother was there, too?"
"Master Ernest was looking after him."
"How about the other children?"
"They ran away."
"All of them?"