<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
<h3>THE STRANGER’S ARRIVAL</h3></div>
<p>On taking his seat at the opening of court the next morning,
the judge at once announced his decision.</p>
<p>“I have given such thought as I have been able to the
question raised by counsel last evening, and have examined
authorities cited by him, and others, bearing upon the
question, and have reached the conclusion that his motion
must be overruled. It is true that a conviction for murder
cannot rest alone upon the extra-judicial admission of the
accused. And in the present case I must remind the court
and the jury that thus far the identity of the prisoner has
not yet been established, as it is not determined whether
or not he is the man whom the witness, Nels Nelson, heard
make the admission. It is true there must be distinct proof,
sufficient to satisfy the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt,
that homicide has been committed by some one, before the
admission of the accused that he did the act can be considered.
But I think that fact can be established by circumstantial
evidence, as well as any other fact in the case,
and I shall so charge the jury. I will give you an exception.
Mr Nathan Goodbody, you may go on with your
defense after the hearing of the next witness, which is now in
order.”<SPAN name='FNanchor_0002' id='FNanchor_0002'></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_0002' class='fnanchor'>[1]</SPAN></p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_464' name='page_464'></SPAN>464</span></div>
<p>The decision of the court was both a great surprise and
a disappointment to the defendant’s young counsel. Considering
the fact that the body of the man supposed to have
been murdered had never been found, and that his death
had been assumed from his sudden disappearance, and the
finding of his personal articles scattered on the river bluff,
together with the broken edge of the bluff and the traces
of some object having been thrown down the precipice at
that point, and the fact that the State was relying upon the
testimony of the eavesdropping Swede to prove confession
by the prisoner, he still had not been prepared for the testimony
of this witness that he had heard the accused say that
he had killed his cousin, and that it had been his intention
to kill him. He was dismayed, but he had not entirely
lost confidence in his legal defense, even now that the judge
had ruled against him. There was still the Supreme Court.</p>
<p>He quickly determined that he would shift his attack
from the court, where he had been for the time repulsed,
and endeavor to convince the jury that the fact that Peter
Junior was really dead had not “been proven beyond a
reasonable doubt.”</p>
<p>Applying to the court for a short recess to give him time
to consult with his client, he used the time so given in
going over with the prisoner the situation in which the
failure of his legal defense had left them. He had hoped
to arrest the trial on the point he had made so as to eliminate
entirely the hearing of further testimony,––that of Betty
Ballard,––and also to avoid the necessity of having his
client sworn, which last was inevitable if Betty’s testimony
was taken.</p>
<p>He had never been able to rid himself of the impression
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_465' name='page_465'></SPAN>465</span>
left upon his mind when first he heard the story from his
client’s lips, that there was in it an element of coincidence––too
like dramatic fiction, or that if taken ideally, it was
above the average juryman’s head.</p>
<p>He admonished the prisoner that when he should be called
upon for his testimony, he must make as little as possible of
the fact of their each being scarred on the hip, and scarred
on the head, the two cousins dramatically marked alike,
and that he must in no way allude to his having seen Betty
Ballard in the prison alone.</p>
<p>“That was a horrible mistake. You must cut it out of
your testimony unless they force it. Avoid it. And you
must make the jury see that your return was a matter of––of––well,
conscience––and so forth.”</p>
<p>“I must tell the truth. That is all that I can do,” said
the prisoner, wearily. “The judge is looking this way,––shall
we––”</p>
<p>Nathan Goodbody rose quickly. “If the court please,
we are ready to proceed.”</p>
<p>Then at last Betty Ballard was called to the witness
stand. The hour had come for which all the village had
waited, and the fame of the trial had spread beyond the
village, and all who had known the boys in their childhood
and in their young manhood, and those who had been their
companions in arms––men from their own regiment––were
there. The matter had been discussed among them more
or less heatedly and now the court room could not hold the
crowds that thronged its doors.</p>
<p>At this time, unknown to any of the actors in the drama,
three strangers, having made their way through the crowd
outside the door, were allowed to enter, and stood together
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_466' name='page_466'></SPAN>466</span>
in the far corner of the court room unnoticed by the throng,
intently watching and listening. They had arrived from the
opposite sides of the earth, and had met at the village hotel.
Larry had spied the younger man first, and, scarcely knowing
what he was doing, or why, he walked up to him, and
spoke, involuntarily holding out his hand to him.</p>
<p>“Tell me who you are,” he said, ere Richard could surmise
what was happening.</p>
<p>“My name is Kildene,” said Richard, frankly. “Have
you any reason for wishing to know me?”</p>
<p>For the moment he thought his interlocutor might be a
detective, or one who wished to verify a suspicion. Having
but that moment arrived, and knowing nothing of the trial
which was going on, he could think only of his reason for his
return to Leauvite, and was glad to make an end of incognito
and sorrowful durance, and wearisome suspense, and he did
not hesitate, nor try any art of concealment. He looked
directly into Larry’s eyes, almost defiantly for an instant,
then seeing in that rugged face a kindly glint of the eye and
a quiver about the mouth, his heart lightened and he
grasped eagerly the hand held out to him.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you will tell me whom you are? I suppose I
ought to know, but I’ve been away from here a long time.”</p>
<p>Then the older man’s hand fell a-trembling in his, and
did not release him, but rather clung to him as if he had had
a shock.</p>
<p>“Come over here and sit beside me a moment, young
man––I––I’ve––I’m not feeling as strong as I look. I––I’ve
a thing to tell you. Sit down––sit down. We are
alone? Yes. Every one’s gone to the trial. I’m on here
from the West myself to attend it.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_467' name='page_467'></SPAN>467</span></div>
<p>“The trial! What trial?”</p>
<p>“You’ve heard nothing of it? I was thinking maybe
you were also––were drawn here––you’ve but just come?”</p>
<p>“I’ve been here long enough to engage a room––which
I shan’t want long. No, I’ve come for no trial exactly––maybe
it might come to that––? What have you to tell me?”</p>
<p>But Larry Kildene sat silent for a time before replying.
An eager joy had seized him, and a strange reticence held
his tongue tied, a fear of making himself known to this son
whom he had never seen since he had held him in his arms,
a weak, wailing infant, thinking only of his own loss. This
dignified, stalwart young man, so pleasant to look upon––no
wonder the joy of his heart was a terrible joy, a hungering,
longing joy akin to pain! How should he make
himself known? In what words? A thousand thoughts
crowded upon him. From Betty’s letter he knew something
of the contention now going on in the court room, and from
the landlord last evening he had heard more, and he was
impatient to get to the trial.</p>
<p>Now this encounter with his own son,––the only one
who could set all right,––and who yet did not know of
the happenings which so imperatively required his presence
in the court room, set Larry Kildene’s thoughts stammering
and tripping over each other in such a confusion of
haste, and with it all the shyness before the great fact of
his unconfessed fatherhood, so overwhelmed him, that for
once his facile Irish nature did not help him. He was at
a loss for words, strangely abashed before this gentle-voiced,
frank-faced, altogether likable son of his. So he temporized
and beat about the bush, and did not touch first on that
which was nearest his heart.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_468' name='page_468'></SPAN>468</span></div>
<p>“Yes, yes. I’ve a thing to tell you. You came here to
be at a––a––trial––did you say, or intimate it might
be? If––if––you’ll tell me a bit more, I maybe can help
you––for I’ve seen a good bit of the world. It’s a strange
trial going on here now––I’ve come to hear.”</p>
<p>“Tell me something about it,” said Richard, humoring
the older man’s deliberation in arriving at his point.</p>
<p>“It’s little I know yet. I’ve come to learn, for I’m interested
in the young man they’re trying to convict. He’s a
sort of a relative of mine. I wish to see fair play. Why are
you here? Have you done anything––what have you
done?”</p>
<p>The young man moved restlessly. He was confused by
the suddenness of the question, which Larry’s manner deprived
of any suggestion of rudeness.</p>
<p>“Did I intimate I had done anything?” He laughed.
“I’m come to make a statement to the proper ones––when
I find them. I’ll go over now and hear a bit of this trial,
since you mention it.”</p>
<p>He spoke sadly and wearily, but he felt no resentment
at the older man’s inquisitiveness. Larry’s face expressed
too much kindliness to make resentment possible, but
Richard was ill at ease to be talking thus intimately with a
stranger who had but just chanced upon him. He rose to
leave.</p>
<p>“Don’t go. Don’t go yet. Wait a bit––God, man!
Wait! I’ve a thing to tell you.” Larry leaned forward,
and his face worked and tears glistened in his eyes as he
looked keenly up into his son’s face. “You’re a beautiful
lad––a man––I’m––You’re strong and fine––I’m
ashamed to tell it you––ashamed I’ve never looked on
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_469' name='page_469'></SPAN>469</span>
you since then––until now. I should have given all up
and found you. Forgive me. Boy!––I’m your father––your
father!” He rose and stood looking levelly in his
son’s eyes, holding out both shaking hands. Richard took
them in his and held them––but could not speak.</p>
<p>The constraint of witnesses was not upon them, for they
were quite alone on the piazza, but the emotion of each of
them was beyond words. Richard swallowed, and waited,
and then with no word they both sat down and drew their
chairs closer together. The simple act helped them.</p>
<p>“I’ve been nigh on to a lifetime longing for you, lad.”</p>
<p>“And I for you, father.”</p>
<p>“That’s the name I’ve been hungering to hear––”</p>
<p>“And I to speak––” Still they looked in each other’s
eyes. “And we have a great deal to tell each other! I’m
almost sorry––that––that––that I’ve found you at
last––for to do my duty will be harder now. I had no one
to care––particularly before––unless––”</p>
<p>“Unless a lass, maybe?”</p>
<p>“One I’ve been loving and true to––but long ago given
up––we won’t speak of her. We’ll have to talk a great
deal, and there’s so little time! I must––must give myself
up, father, to the law.”</p>
<p>“Couldn’t you put it off a bit, lad?”</p>
<p>Larry could not have told why he kept silent so long in
regard to the truth of the trial. It might have been a vague
liking to watch the workings of his son’s real self and a
desire to test him to the full. From a hint dropped in
Betty’s letter he guessed shrewdly at the truth of the situation.
He knew now that Richard and his young friend of
the mountain top were actuated by the same motives, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_470' name='page_470'></SPAN>470</span>
he understood at last why Harry King would never accept
his offer of help, nor would ever call him father. Because
he could not take the place of the son, of whom, as he
thought, he had robbed the man who so freely offered him
friendship––and more than friendship. At last Larry
understood why Peter Junior had never yielded to his
advances. It was honor, and the test had been severe.</p>
<p>“Put it off a little? I might––I’m tempted––just to
get acquainted with my father––but I might be arrested,
and I would prefer not to be. I know I’ve been wanted for
three years and over––it has taken me that long to learn
that only the truth can make a man free,––and now I
would rather give myself up, than to be taken––”</p>
<p>“I’m knowing maybe more of the matter than you think––so
we’ll drop it. We must have a long talk later––but
tell me now in a few words what you can.”</p>
<p>Then, drawn by the older man’s gentle, magnetic sympathy,
Richard unlocked his heart and told all of his life
that could be crowded in those few short minutes,––of
his boyhood’s longings for a father of his own––of his
young manhood’s love, of his flight, and a little of his later
life. “We’d be great chums, now, father,––if––if it
weren’t for this––that hangs over me.”</p>
<p>Then Larry could stand it no longer. He sprang up and
clapped Richard on the shoulder. “Come, lad, come!
We’ll go to this trial together. Do you know who’s being
tried? No. They’ll have to get this off before they can
take another on. I’m thinking you’ll find your case none
so bad as it seems to you now. First there’s a thing I
must do. My brother-in-law’s in trouble––but it is his
own fault––still I’m a mind to help him out. He’s a fine
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_471' name='page_471'></SPAN>471</span>
hater, that brother-in-law of mine, but he’s tried to do a
father’s part in the past by you––and done it well, while
I’ve been soured. In the gladness of my heart I’ll help
him out––I’d made up my mind to do it before I left my
mountain. Your father’s a rich man, boy––with money
in store for you––I say it in modesty, but he who reared
you has been my enemy. Now I’m going to his bank, and
there I’ll make a deposit that will save it from ruin.”</p>
<p>He stood a moment chuckling, with both hands thrust
deep in his pockets. “We’ll go to that trial––it’s over an
affair of his, and he’s fair in the wrong. We’ll go and
watch his discomfiture––and we’ll see him writhe. We’ll
see him carry things his own way––the only way he can
ever see––and then we’ll watch him––man, we’ll watch
him––Oh, my boy, my boy! I doubt it’s wrong for me to
exult over his chagrin, but that’s what I’m going for now.
It was the other way before I met you, but the finding of
you has given me a light heart, and I’ll watch that brother-in-law’s
set-down with right good will.”</p>
<p>He told Richard about Amalia, and asked him to wait
until he fetched her, as he wished her to accompany them,
but still he said nothing to him about his cousin Peter. He
found Amalia descending the long flight of stairs, dressed
to go out, and knew she had been awaiting him for the last
half hour. Now he led her into the little parlor, while
Richard paced up and down the piazza, and there, where
she could see him as he passed the window to and fro,
Larry told her what had come to him, and even found time
to moralize over it, in his gladness.</p>
<p>“That’s it. A man makes up his mind to do what’s right
regardless of all consequences or his prejudices, or what
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_472' name='page_472'></SPAN>472</span>
not,––and from that moment all begins to grow clear, and
he sees right––and things come right. Now look at the
man! He’s a fine lad, no? They’re both fine lads––but
this one’s mine. Look at him I say. Things are to
come right for him, and all through his making up his mind
to come back here and stand to his guns. The same way
with Harry King. I’ve told you the contention––and at
last you know who he is––but mind you, no word yet to
my son. I’ll tell him as we walk along. I’m to stop at
the bank first, and if we tell him too soon, he’ll be for going
to the courthouse straight. The landlord tells me there’s
danger of a run on the bank to-morrow and the only reason
it hasn’t come to-day is that the bank’s been closed all the
morning for the trial. I’m thinking that was policy, for
whoever heard of a bank’s being closed in the morning for
a trial––or anything short of a death or a holiday?”</p>
<p>“But if it is now closed, why do we wait to go there? It
is to do nothing we make delay,” said Amalia, anxiously.</p>
<p>“I told Decker to send word to the cashier to be there,
as a deposit is to be made. If he can’t be there for that,
then it’s his own fault if to-morrow finds him unprepared.”
Larry stepped out to meet Richard and introduced Amalia.
He had already told Richard a little of her history, and now
he gave her her own name, Manovska.</p>
<p>After a few moments’ conversation she asked Larry: “I
may keep now my own name, it is quite safe, is not? They
are gone now––those for whom I feared.”</p>
<p>“Wait a little,” said Richard. “Wait until you have
been down in the world long enough to be sure. It is a
hard thing to live under suspicion, and until you have means
of knowing, the other will be safer.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_473' name='page_473'></SPAN>473</span></div>
<p>“You think so? Then is better. Yes? Ah, Sir
Kildene, how it is beautiful to see your son does so very
much resemble our friend.”</p>
<p>They arrived at the bank, and Larry entered while
Richard and Amalia strolled on together. “We had a
friend, Harry King,”––she paused and would have corrected
herself, but then continued––“he was very much
like to you––but he is here in trouble, and it is for that for
which we have come here. Sir Kildene is so long in that
bank! I would go in haste to that place where is our
friend. Shall we turn and walk again a little toward the
bank? So will we the sooner encounter him on the way.”</p>
<p>They returned and met Larry coming out, stepping
briskly. He too was eager to be at the courthouse. He
took his son’s arm and rapidly and earnestly told him the
situation as he had just heard it from the cashier. He told
him that which he had been keeping back, and impressed
on him the truth that unless he had returned when he did,
the talk in the town was that the trial was likely to go
against the prisoner. Richard would have broken into a
run, in his excitement, but Larry held him back.</p>
<p>“Hold back a little, boy. Let us keep pace with you.
There’s really no hurry, only that impulse that sent you
home––it was as if you were called, from all I can
learn.”</p>
<p>“It is my reprieve. I am free. He has suffered, too.
Does he know yet that I too live? Does he know?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not––yet, but listen to me. Don’t be too
hasty in showing yourself. If they did not know him, they
won’t know you––for you are enough different for them
never to suspect you, now that they have, or think they
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_474' name='page_474'></SPAN>474</span>
have, the man for whom they have been searching. See
here, man, hold back for my sake. That man––that
brother-in-law of mine––has walked for years over my
heart, and I’ve done nothing. He has despised me, and
without reason––because I presumed to love your mother,
lad, against his arrogant will. He––he––would––I will
see him down in the dust of repentance. I will see him
willfully convict his own son––he who has been hungering
to see you––my son––sent to a prison for life––or
hanged.”</p>
<p>Richard listened, lingering as Larry wished, appalled
at this revelation, until they arrived at the edge of the
crowd around the door, eagerly trying to wedge themselves
in wherever the chance offered.</p>
<p>“Oh! Sir Kildene––we are here––now what to do!
How can we go in there?” said Amalia.</p>
<p>Larry moved them aside slowly, pushing Amalia between
Richard and himself, and intimating to those nearest him
that they were required within, until a passage was gradually
made for the three, and thus they reached the door
and so gained admittance. And that was how they came
to be there, crowded in a corner, all during the testimony
of Betty Ballard, unheeded by those around them––mere
units in the throng trying to hear the evidence and see the
principals in the drama being enacted before them.</p>
<div class='footnote'><SPAN name='Footnote_0002' id='Footnote_0002'></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_0002'><span class='label'>[1]</span></SPAN>
<p>The ruling of the court upon this point was afterwards justified
by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in the case of Buel <i>v.</i> State, 104
Wis. 132, decided in 1899.</p>
</div>
<hr class='toprule' />
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