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And again there was deathly silence.
"Have you not engaged anyone to defend you?" said Judge Brans...o...b.., turning to Paul.
"No one," replied Paul. "I wish to defend myself."
The judge uttered an exclamation of surprise. It might seem as though he knew nothing of the previous trial. He was a lawyer of the very strictest cla.s.s. What had been was nothing to him. He was there to begin the trial at the beginning, and he would act as though nothing had taken place and as though he were utterly ignorant of what had been discussed throughout the whole land.
"I strongly advise you to accept the service of someone to undertake your defence," he said; and he mentioned one or two names of those whom he felt sure would be willing to act for him. To Paul this seemed like a repet.i.tion of a formula. It was all artificial, unreal.
"No, my lord," he replied. "I intend to defend myself."
"Then you will know," said the judge, "that you have the right to cross-examine the witnesses."
"Thank you, my lord."
Again Mr. Bakewell rose for the prosecution. His speech was very nearly a repet.i.tion of the one he had delivered on the previous occasion, but for some reason or another it did not have the same effect as during its first deliverance. The jury were acquainted with the facts that had been discussed a hundred times in a hundred different ways during the last few days. Still, there could be no doubt about it, the case looked very black for Paul when it concluded.
The long feud which was known to exist between Paul and the murdered man; the many threats which had been uttered; the quarrel which had taken place on the night when Paul was elected member for Brunford; the open insults which the murdered man had hurled at the prisoner; the scene which had taken place on the night before the murder, and the threat he had made to avenge the injury. Mr. Bakewell also dwelt upon the excited state in which Paul was when he returned to the house, as would be proved by the evidence of the servants; of his going upstairs to the landing outside the servants' quarters at midnight; of his going out into the night alone; of his return early in the morning, pale and haggard; then, as the crowning evidence of all, the knife, which was known to be Paul's, which had been lying in his office--an office which was always locked when the owner of it was not present--the sharp, murderous weapon was found in the body of the murdered man, struck from behind.
All these things Mr. Bakewell described, and spoke with telling emphasis on the main features of the case. Possibly he knew the character of the judge to whom he addressed himself, and he had so arranged his speech that the chain of evidence was apparently complete.
When he sat down a great pent-up sigh arose, not only from the jurymen, but from the excited spectators. Although during the early part of what he had said the emotion was not so great as during the first trial, yet, as he summed up the case for the prosecution, fastened one link to another of the chain of events, and declared in solemn tones that the witnesses he had to call would prove everything he had said to the minutest detail, it seemed as though they expected the judge to put on the black cap and to utter the terrible words which have to be uttered on every condemned prisoner.
Paul, however, was not greatly moved by Mr. Bakewell's speech. He listened keenly, attentively, to all he had to say, made a note, and that was all.
It is not my purpose to follow the trial step by step. Those who care to do so can turn up the files of the Manchester papers, where they can find it in every detail; but in this history I do not purpose dwelling at length upon the many examinations that were made and on the voluminous evidence given. As far as Paul was concerned, he did not endeavour to cross-examine many of the witnesses. As far as he could see, their evidence was in the main true. They had given a statement of facts, and he felt that it would be utter waste of time to deal with details which might show discrepancies, but which were, as far as he could judge, of but little importance. He wanted to fasten upon the main features of the case, and then, without in the slightest degree hinting at anything which would connect his mother with the murder of Ned Wilson, to prove how utterly improbable, if not impossible, it was, that he should be guilty of the deed of which he was accused.
Still, he did cross-examine some of the witnesses, and it was evident by the look in the judge's eyes that he appreciated the cleverness of the cross-examination. Indeed, so successful was Paul that on more than one occasion he made this keen-minded lawyer--more lawyer, indeed, than man--realise that circ.u.mstantial evidence might be false, and that a jury would a.s.sume tremendous responsibility in pa.s.sing judgment of death upon anyone upon such evidence. Especially was this true in the case of the examination of the murdered man's father. He, as on the opening day of the first trial, was the most important witness, and after Mr. Bakewell had elicited from him practically the same admissions as had been given on the previous occasion, Paul rose to cross-examine him.
"Mr. Wilson," he said, "you have stated more than once that beside myself your son had no other enemy. Do you still adhere to this?"
"Certainly."
"Do you mean to say that during his life he has never gained the ill-will or the enmity of anyone besides me?"
"Not that I know of."
"You insist on this?"
"Yes. That is, no enmity of importance."
"What do you mean by importance?"
"I mean any enmity that would lead anyone to murder him."
"I want to ask you further questions about this. One of the witnesses who gave evidence concerning the quarrel between your son and myself on the night prior to his death is called Scott, is he not?"
"Yes."
"John Scott?"
"Yes."
"John had a son called Nick; is that not so?"
"Yes."
"Some three years ago he had a quarrel with your son?"
"Yes."
"It ended in Nick Scott being sent to prison. Is that true?"
"It is true that Nick Scott was sent to prison, but it had nothing whatever to do with his quarrel with my son. That was about a very trivial affair."
"But did not Nick Scott say that he'd pay your son out if he had to swing for it?"
"There was some such rumour, I believe. I paid no attention to it."
"I am taking this line, my lord," continued Paul, "because of the witness's evidence. He says that his son had no enemy in Brunford. I am going to prove to you that he had."
The judge nodded, while Paul again turned to the witness.
"You still adhere to the fact, then, do you, that your son had no enemy beside myself?"
"I did not think of Scott, because he was not in the country; besides, it was of no importance. Men often utter threats like that."
"It pains me to bring up another case," said Paul. "But please remember I am here accused of murder. Do you know a woman named Mary Bradshaw? She lives in Clough Street."
"I have heard of such a woman; yes."
"Your son was once very friendly with her. Had that woman no reason to hate him?"
"That was years ago."
Paul asked many questions concerning this woman which I will not set down here, because they were necessarily of a sordid nature, but which went to prove that although in neither case could these people have had anything to do with the murder, Ned Wilson was not universally beloved, as his father had stated, but bitterly hated.
"You have admitted to me," went on Paul at length, "that he was believed to have wronged two people, and that both of them had reason to bear him enmity. Might there not have been others of whom you never heard?"
"Of course my son was thirty years of age, and he lived his own life.
At the same time it is universally admitted that he was respected in the town and beloved by practically everyone."
"With the exception of these people, who, as you have admitted, uttered dark threats against him?"
At this the witness was silent.
"We will now go on to the question of the knife," said Paul, "concerning which you have made so much." And he dealt with this question in a similar way to that with which he had dealt with it on the previous occasion. The tendency of his questions was to show how unlikely it was that he, whom the witness still called a clever, scheming, cold-blooded villain, should use a knife known to be his, a knife that had been seen on his office desk, and leave it in the murdered man's body, knowing that all the time it could be traced to himself.
"There is still something more important," said Paul. "From the evidence given it is known that I parted from your son at twilight on the night before the murder."
"Yes."