Still, it was difficult, when there was a wind, and the train was going at a high speed, to hear what was taking place in the next coach but one; for instance, if there were two persons quarrelling. At the same time, if any one had screamed at all loudly he could scarcely have failed to hear that. His hearing was very good. The compartment looked to him as if somebody had been having a fight in it.
Again no questions from Mr. Bates. So far, Tommy could have managed equally well without his help.
Though it is true that that is saying little.
CHAPTER x.x.x.
MR. TAUNTON"S EVIDENCE.
"Call Alexander Taunton!"
He came not, though they called.
Instead there was an interval for refreshment. A buzz of talking rose in the court. With one hand the judge pressed his spectacles more firmly in their place. He took a bird"s-eye view of the proceedings.
"I think," he observed, "that before taking the evidence of the next witness, it might be convenient if we were to adjourn for luncheon."
So we adjourned. At least, some of us did. The prisoner was taken away.
I heard them removing him behind me. Most of the counsel removed themselves, and some of the people. The greater part of us who stayed set to eating. Sandwiches were produced and other things. Mysterious refreshments were brought in from without. I had my own little store.
Everybody chattered. It was quite a festive scene.
"Call Alexander Taunton!"
Proceedings recommenced by a repet.i.tion of the words. But again he did not come.
"Alexander Taunton!"
One heard the name shouted by different voices, apparently in different pa.s.sages and at different doors. Still none answered. The delay ruffled the judge"s feelings.
"What does this witness mean by keeping the court waiting? Where is he?"
Sir Haselton Jardine"s colleague rose with the apparent intention of personally a.s.sisting in the search.
"Here he is," said some one.
And there he was. I almost dropped from my seat.
Who should get into the box but Reginald Townsend"s Corsican brother, Jack Haines"s private detective, who had told me that his name was Stewart Trevannion.
I could scarcely believe my own eyes at first. But it was the man--if one had seen him once, there was no mistaking him. To me he seemed to be peculiarly ill at ease--an uneasiness which was not by any means concealed by an attempt to carry things off with a flourish. He bowed to the judge, he bowed to the jury; I believe he was going to bow to the lawyers too, only at the last moment he changed his mind. He placed his silk hat on the rail at his side. He took off one of his brand-new gloves. Unb.u.t.toning his overcoat, he opened it so as to display his chest. There was something about him which destroyed the effect he evidently intended to produce--it made the people smile.
The judge was serious enough.
"What do you mean by keeping the court waiting?"
Alexander Taunton--or whatever his name was--pressed the finger-tips of his left hand against his chest.
"I beg your lordship"s pardon. I had just that moment stepped outside."
I could have wagered he had stepped outside to drink just another drop to help him to keep his courage up. The more I looked at him the plainer I saw that there was quite a hunted look about his eyes.
The story he told in response to Sir Haselton Jardine"s questions filled me with something more than amazement. Of course he was the Taunton whose evidence at the examination before the magistrates one had read in the papers, but I had never for an instant suspected--who would have done?--that the two men were, or could be, one and the same.
By the time he had finished he had hammered every nail in Tommy"s coffin. And the strangest part about it was that--as none knew better than I--certainly the larger portion of what he said was true.
He had travelled from Brighton in the next compartment to Tommy and I.
Think of it! On that fateful Sunday night I had journeyed with one brother half the way and with the other brother the rest of the way to town.
He had heard us having our little discussion. He had heard some of the things we had said to each other--especially some of the very strongest. He had heard the banging of the door as I fell. According to him, the sound had so agitated him that he had not known what to do. He suspected that something had happened, but he had not known what. He owned now that he ought to have given the alarm and stopped the train, but at the moment he lost his presence of mind. On reaching Victoria he found Tommy sitting in the next compartment alone. Blood was flowing from a wound in his cheek. Prisoner"s own handkerchief being soaked with blood, witness lent him one of his own--a silk one. On which prisoner threw his bloodstained handkerchief out of the window.
At this point, altogether unexpectedly, Sir Haselton Jardine sat down.
Mr. Bates got up. As he did so, the witness looked over his shoulder as if he would have liked to have turned tail and run.
I saw that Mr. Bates was going to do something to earn his money at last.
The witness saw it too.
"My learned brother, Mr. Taunton, has brought your story to a point at which it reminds one of those sensational tales which are to be continued in our next. With your permission we will continue it together. You have told us of your charitable loan of a handkerchief--a silk handkerchief. May I take it that you then communicated with the police?"
"No."
"Then what did you do?"
"I had no actual knowledge that a crime had been committed."
"I ask you, Mr. Taunton, when you had lent the silk handkerchief, what you did."
"I saw the prisoner to a cab."
"Then did you communicate with the police?"
"I did not."
"Then what did you do?"
"I accompanied him a short distance in the cab."
"Did he give you anything when you parted?"
"He gave me his address."
"Did he give you anything else?"
"He gave me a deposit on my silk handkerchief."
"He gave you a deposit on your silk handkerchief. I see. What was the amount of the deposit?"