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The witness hesitated.
"Ten shillings."
"Do you swear it was not more than ten shillings?"
"It might have been a pound."
"Do you swear it was not more than a pound?"
"It might have been thirty shillings. I don't exactly remember."
"I see. For the first time your memory begins to fail you. Then did you communicate with the police?"
"I did not."
"What did you do?"
"The next day I called on the prisoner at his office at Austin Friars."
"Yes. And then?"
"I charged him with the murder."
"You charged him with the murder. Of course, then, you did communicate with the police?"
The witness seemed to find the reiteration trying. He looked around him, as if seeking shelter.
"Unfortunately, I did not."
"Unfortunately? I see. Unfortunately, what did you do?"
"At that time I was very pressed for money. I yielded to the pressure of my necessities."
"By which you mean?"
"That I accepted a small loan."
"You accepted a small loan. Did you not levy blackmail? Did you not extort blood-money, sir? Did you not demand a sum of money in exchange for your silence?"
Mr. Bates raised his voice very considerably. The witness quivered.
"I believe I did suggest that a small loan should be made to me."
"And you got it?"
"I did."
"What was the amount of this small loan?"
"A hundred pounds."
"A hundred pounds?" This from the judge.
The witness, "Yes, my lord."
"You call that a small loan? Well, go on."
Mr. Bates went on.
"Then what did you do?"
"I called again at the prisoner's office. When I found he was not there on this Friday I called at his private house."
"On which occasion you found him ill in bed?"
"I found him in bed."
"In the presence of Mrs. Tennant you suggested that another small loan should be made you?"
"I might have done."
"You did not get it?"
"I did not."
"You were shown to the door instead?"
"I left the house, resolving to tamper no more with my conscience."
"Having been refused another small loan?"
"I went at once to the police, and told them everything."
"Including the incident of the small loan?"
"I don't know that I told them about that."
"I think it probable that you did not. Mr. Taunton, what is your profession?"
The witness gripped the rail in front of him.
"I have none."
"May I ask, then, how you earn your living?"
"As best I can."
Mr. Bates turned to the judge.