<h2><SPAN name="chap52"></SPAN>Chapter LII</h2>
<p>When Cowperwood reached the jail, Jaspers was there, glad to see him but
principally relieved to feel that nothing had happened to mar his own
reputation as a sheriff. Because of the urgency of court matters generally, it
was decided to depart for the courtroom at nine o’clock. Eddie Zanders
was once more delegated to see that Cowperwood was brought safely before Judge
Payderson and afterward taken to the penitentiary. All of the papers in the
case were put in his care to be delivered to the warden.</p>
<p>“I suppose you know,” confided Sheriff Jaspers to Steger,
“that Stener is here. He ain’t got no money now, but I gave him a
private room just the same. I didn’t want to put a man like him in no
cell.” Sheriff Jaspers sympathized with Stener.</p>
<p>“That’s right. I’m glad to hear that,” replied Steger,
smiling to himself.</p>
<p>“I didn’t suppose from what I’ve heard that Mr. Cowperwood
would want to meet Stener here, so I’ve kept ’em apart. George just
left a minute ago with another deputy.”</p>
<p>“That’s good. That’s the way it ought to be,” replied
Steger. He was glad for Cowperwood’s sake that the sheriff had so much
tact. Evidently George and the sheriff were getting along in a very friendly
way, for all the former’s bitter troubles and lack of means.</p>
<p>The Cowperwood party walked, the distance not being great, and as they did so
they talked of rather simple things to avoid the more serious.</p>
<p>“Things aren’t going to be so bad,” Edward said to his
father. “Steger says the Governor is sure to pardon Stener in a year or
less, and if he does he’s bound to let Frank out too.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood, the elder, had heard this over and over, but he was never tired of
hearing it. It was like some simple croon with which babies are hushed to
sleep. The snow on the ground, which was enduring remarkably well for this time
of year, the fineness of the day, which had started out to be clear and bright,
the hope that the courtroom might not be full, all held the attention of the
father and his two sons. Cowperwood, senior, even commented on some sparrows
fighting over a piece of bread, marveling how well they did in winter, solely
to ease his mind. Cowperwood, walking on ahead with Steger and Zanders, talked
of approaching court proceedings in connection with his business and what ought
to be done.</p>
<p>When they reached the court the same little pen in which Cowperwood had awaited
the verdict of his jury several months before was waiting to receive him.</p>
<p>Cowperwood, senior, and his other sons sought places in the courtroom proper.
Eddie Zanders remained with his charge. Stener and a deputy by the name of
Wilkerson were in the room; but he and Cowperwood pretended now not to see each
other. Frank had no objection to talking to his former associate, but he could
see that Stener was diffident and ashamed. So he let the situation pass without
look or word of any kind. After some three-quarters of an hour of dreary
waiting the door leading into the courtroom proper opened and a bailiff stepped
in.</p>
<p>“All prisoners up for sentence,” he called.</p>
<p>There were six, all told, including Cowperwood and Stener. Two of them were
confederate housebreakers who had been caught red-handed at their midnight
task.</p>
<p>Another prisoner was no more and no less than a plain horse-thief, a young man
of twenty-six, who had been convicted by a jury of stealing a grocer’s
horse and selling it. The last man was a negro, a tall, shambling, illiterate,
nebulous-minded black, who had walked off with an apparently discarded section
of lead pipe which he had found in a lumber-yard. His idea was to sell or trade
it for a drink. He really did not belong in this court at all; but, having been
caught by an undersized American watchman charged with the care of the
property, and having at first refused to plead guilty, not quite understanding
what was to be done with him, he had been perforce bound over to this court for
trial. Afterward he had changed his mind and admitted his guilt, so he now had
to come before Judge Payderson for sentence or dismissal. The lower court
before which he had originally been brought had lost jurisdiction by binding
him over to to higher court for trial. Eddie Zanders, in his self-appointed
position as guide and mentor to Cowperwood, had confided nearly all of this
data to him as he stood waiting.</p>
<p>The courtroom was crowded. It was very humiliating to Cowperwood to have to
file in this way along the side aisle with these others, followed by Stener,
well dressed but sickly looking and disconsolate.</p>
<p>The negro, Charles Ackerman, was the first on the list.</p>
<p>“How is it this man comes before me?” asked Payderson, peevishly,
when he noted the value of the property Ackerman was supposed to have stolen.</p>
<p>“Your honor,” the assistant district attorney explained, promptly,
“this man was before a lower court and refused, because he was drunk, or
something, to plead guilty. The lower court, because the complainant would not
forego the charge, was compelled to bind him over to this court for trial.
Since then he has changed his mind and has admitted his guilt to the district
attorney. He would not be brought before you except we have no alternative. He
has to be brought here now in order to clear the calendar.”</p>
<p>Judge Payderson stared quizzically at the negro, who, obviously not very much
disturbed by this examination, was leaning comfortably on the gate or bar
before which the average criminal stood erect and terrified. He had been before
police-court magistrates before on one charge and another—drunkenness,
disorderly conduct, and the like—but his whole attitude was one of
shambling, lackadaisical, amusing innocence.</p>
<p>“Well, Ackerman,” inquired his honor, severely, “did you or
did you not steal this piece of lead pipe as charged here—four dollars
and eighty cents’ worth?”</p>
<p>“Yassah, I did,” he began. “I tell you how it was, jedge. I
was a-comin’ along past dat lumber-yard one Saturday afternoon, and I
hadn’t been wuckin’, an’ I saw dat piece o’ pipe thoo
de fence, lyin’ inside, and I jes’ reached thoo with a piece
o’ boad I found dey and pulled it over to me an’ tuck it. An’
aftahwahd dis Mistah Watchman man”—he waved his hand oratorically
toward the witness-chair, where, in case the judge might wish to ask him some
questions, the complainant had taken his stand—“come around tuh
where I live an’ accused me of done takin’ it.”</p>
<p>“But you did take it, didn’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yassah, I done tuck it.”</p>
<p>“What did you do with it?”</p>
<p>“I traded it foh twenty-five cents.”</p>
<p>“You mean you sold it,” corrected his honor.</p>
<p>“Yassah, I done sold it.”</p>
<p>“Well, don’t you know it’s wrong to do anything like that?
Didn’t you know when you reached through that fence and pulled that pipe
over to you that you were stealing? Didn’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yassah, I knowed it was wrong,” replied Ackerman, sheepishly.
“I didn’ think ’twuz stealin’ like zackly, but I done
knowed it was wrong. I done knowed I oughtn’ take it, I guess.”</p>
<p>“Of course you did. Of course you did. That’s just it. You knew you
were stealing, and still you took it. Has the man to whom this negro sold the
lead pipe been apprehended yet?” the judge inquired sharply of the
district attorney. “He should be, for he’s more guilty than this
negro, a receiver of stolen goods.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” replied the assistant. “His case is before Judge
Yawger.”</p>
<p>“Quite right. It should be,” replied Payderson, severely.
“This matter of receiving stolen property is one of the worst offenses,
in my judgment.”</p>
<p>He then turned his attention to Ackerman again. “Now, look here,
Ackerman,” he exclaimed, irritated at having to bother with such a pretty
case, “I want to say something to you, and I want you to pay strict
attention to me. Straighten up, there! Don’t lean on that gate! You are
in the presence of the law now.” Ackerman had sprawled himself
comfortably down on his elbows as he would have if he had been leaning over a
back-fence gate talking to some one, but he immediately drew himself straight,
still grinning foolishly and apologetically, when he heard this. “You are
not so dull but that you can understand what I am going to say to you. The
offense you have committed—stealing a piece of lead pipe—is a
crime. Do you hear me? A criminal offense—one that I could punish you
very severely for. I could send you to the penitentiary for one year if I
chose—the law says I may—one year at hard labor for stealing a
piece of lead pipe. Now, if you have any sense you will pay strict attention to
what I am going to tell you. I am not going to send you to the penitentiary
right now. I’m going to wait a little while. I am going to sentence you
to one year in the penitentiary—one year. Do you understand?”
Ackerman blanched a little and licked his lips nervously. “And then I am
going to suspend that sentence—hold it over your head, so that if you are
ever caught taking anything else you will be punished for this offense and the
next one also at one and the same time. Do you understand that? Do you know
what I mean? Tell me. Do you?”</p>
<p>“Yessah! I does, sir,” replied the negro. “You’se gwine
to let me go now—tha’s it.”</p>
<p>The audience grinned, and his honor made a wry face to prevent his own grim
grin.</p>
<p>“I’m going to let you go only so long as you don’t steal
anything else,” he thundered. “The moment you steal anything else,
back you come to this court, and then you go to the penitentiary for a year and
whatever more time you deserve. Do you understand that? Now, I want you to walk
straight out of this court and behave yourself. Don’t ever steal
anything. Get something to do! Don’t steal, do you hear? Don’t
touch anything that doesn’t belong to you! Don’t come back here! If
you do, I’ll send you to the penitentiary, sure.”</p>
<p>“Yassah! No, sah, I won’t,” replied Ackerman, nervously.
“I won’t take nothin’ more that don’t belong tuh
me.”</p>
<p>He shuffled away, after a moment, urged along by the guiding hand of a bailiff,
and was put safely outside the court, amid a mixture of smiles and laughter
over his simplicity and Payderson’s undue severity of manner. But the
next case was called and soon engrossed the interest of the audience.</p>
<p>It was that of the two housebreakers whom Cowperwood had been and was still
studying with much curiosity. In all his life before he had never witnessed a
sentencing scene of any kind. He had never been in police or criminal courts of
any kind—rarely in any of the civil ones. He was glad to see the negro
go, and gave Payderson credit for having some sense and sympathy—more
than he had expected.</p>
<p>He wondered now whether by any chance Aileen was here. He had objected to her
coming, but she might have done so. She was, as a matter of fact, in the
extreme rear, pocketed in a crowd near the door, heavily veiled, but present.
She had not been able to resist the desire to know quickly and surely her
beloved’s fate—to be near him in his hour of real suffering, as she
thought. She was greatly angered at seeing him brought in with a line of
ordinary criminals and made to wait in this, to her, shameful public manner,
but she could not help admiring all the more the dignity and superiority of his
presence even here. He was not even pale, as she saw, just the same firm, calm
soul she had always known him to be. If he could only see her now; if he would
only look so she could lift her veil and smile! He didn’t, though; he
wouldn’t. He didn’t want to see her here. But she would tell him
all about it when she saw him again just the same.</p>
<p>The two burglars were quickly disposed of by the judge, with a sentence of one
year each, and they were led away, uncertain, and apparently not knowing what
to think of their crime or their future.</p>
<p>When it came to Cowperwood’s turn to be called, his honor himself
stiffened and straightened up, for this was a different type of man and could
not be handled in the usual manner. He knew exactly what he was going to say.
When one of Mollenhauer’s agents, a close friend of Butler’s, had
suggested that five years for both Cowperwood and Stener would be about right,
he knew exactly what to do. “Frank Algernon Cowperwood,” called the
clerk.</p>
<p>Cowperwood stepped briskly forward, sorry for himself, ashamed of his position
in a way, but showing it neither in look nor manner. Payderson eyed him as he
had the others.</p>
<p>“Name?” asked the bailiff, for the benefit of the court
stenographer.</p>
<p>“Frank Algernon Cowperwood.”</p>
<p>“Residence?”</p>
<p>“1937 Girard Avenue.”</p>
<p>“Occupation?”</p>
<p>“Banker and broker.”</p>
<p>Steger stood close beside him, very dignified, very forceful, ready to make a
final statement for the benefit of the court and the public when the time
should come. Aileen, from her position in the crowd near the door, was for the
first time in her life biting her fingers nervously and there were great beads
of perspiration on her brow. Cowperwood’s father was tense with
excitement and his two brothers looked quickly away, doing their best to hide
their fear and sorrow.</p>
<p>“Ever convicted before?”</p>
<p>“Never,” replied Steger for Cowperwood, quietly.</p>
<p>“Frank Algernon Cowperwood,” called the clerk, in his nasal,
singsong way, coming forward, “have you anything to say why judgment
should not now be pronounced upon you? If so, speak.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood started to say no, but Steger put up his hand.</p>
<p>“If the court pleases, my client, Mr. Cowperwood, the prisoner at the
bar, is neither guilty in his own estimation, nor in that of two-fifths of the
Pennsylvania State Supreme Court—the court of last resort in this
State,” he exclaimed, loudly and clearly, so that all might hear.</p>
<p>One of the interested listeners and spectators at this point was Edward Malia
Butler, who had just stepped in from another courtroom where he had been
talking to a judge. An obsequious court attendant had warned him that
Cowperwood was about to be sentenced. He had really come here this morning in
order not to miss this sentence, but he cloaked his motive under the guise of
another errand. He did not know that Aileen was there, nor did he see her.</p>
<p>“As he himself testified at the time of his trial,” went on Steger,
“and as the evidence clearly showed, he was never more than an agent for
the gentleman whose offense was subsequently adjudicated by this court; and as
an agent he still maintains, and two-fifths of the State Supreme Court agree
with him, that he was strictly within his rights and privileges in not having
deposited the sixty thousand dollars’ worth of city loan certificates at
the time, and in the manner which the people, acting through the district
attorney, complained that he should have. My client is a man of rare financial
ability. By the various letters which have been submitted to your honor in his
behalf, you will see that he commands the respect and the sympathy of a large
majority of the most forceful and eminent men in his particular world. He is a
man of distinguished social standing and of notable achievements. Only the most
unheralded and the unkindest thrust of fortune has brought him here before you
today—a fire and its consequent panic which involved a financial property
of the most thorough and stable character. In spite of the verdict of the jury
and the decision of three-fifths of the State Supreme Court, I maintain that my
client is not an embezzler, that he has not committed larceny, that he should
never have been convicted, and that he should not now be punished for something
of which he is not guilty.</p>
<p>“I trust that your honor will not misunderstand me or my motives when I
point out in this situation that what I have said is true. I do not wish to
cast any reflection on the integrity of the court, nor of any court, nor of any
of the processes of law. But I do condemn and deplore the untoward chain of
events which has built up a seeming situation, not easily understood by the lay
mind, and which has brought my distinguished client within the purview of the
law. I think it is but fair that this should be finally and publicly stated
here and now. I ask that your honor be lenient, and that if you cannot
conscientiously dismiss this charge you will at least see that the facts, as I
have indicated them, are given due weight in the measure of the punishment
inflicted.”</p>
<p>Steger stepped back and Judge Payderson nodded, as much as to say he had heard
all the distinguished lawyer had to say, and would give it such consideration
as it deserved—no more. Then he turned to Cowperwood, and, summoning all
his judicial dignity to his aid, he began:</p>
<p>“Frank Algernon Cowperwood, you have been convicted by a jury of your own
selection of the offense of larceny. The motion for a new trial, made in your
behalf by your learned counsel, has been carefully considered and overruled,
the majority of the court being entirely satisfied with the propriety of the
conviction, both upon the law and the evidence. Your offense was one of more
than usual gravity, the more so that the large amount of money which you
obtained belonged to the city. And it was aggravated by the fact that you had
in addition thereto unlawfully used and converted to your own use several
hundred thousand dollars of the loan and money of the city. For such an offense
the maximum punishment affixed by the law is singularly merciful. Nevertheless,
the facts in connection with your hitherto distinguished position, the
circumstances under which your failure was brought about, and the appeals of
your numerous friends and financial associates, will be given due consideration
by this court. It is not unmindful of any important fact in your career.”
Payderson paused as if in doubt, though he knew very well how he was about to
proceed. He knew what his superiors expected of him.</p>
<p>“If your case points no other moral,” he went on, after a moment,
toying with the briefs, “it will at least teach the lesson much needed at
the present time, that the treasury of the city is not to be invaded and
plundered with impunity under the thin disguise of a business transaction, and
that there is still a power in the law to vindicate itself and to protect the
public.</p>
<p>“The sentence of the court,” he added, solemnly, the while
Cowperwood gazed unmoved, “is, therefore, that you pay a fine of five
thousand dollars to the commonwealth for the use of the county, that you pay
the costs of prosecution, and that you undergo imprisonment in the State
Penitentiary for the Eastern District by separate or solitary confinement at
labor for a period of four years and three months, and that you stand committed
until this sentence is complied with.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood’s father, on hearing this, bowed his head to hide his tears.
Aileen bit her lower lip and clenched her hands to keep down her rage and
disappointment and tears. Four years and three months! That would make a
terrible gap in his life and hers. Still, she could wait. It was better than
eight or ten years, as she had feared it might be. Perhaps now, once this was
really over and he was in prison, the Governor would pardon him.</p>
<p>The judge now moved to pick up the papers in connection with Stener’s
case, satisfied that he had given the financiers no chance to say he had not
given due heed to their plea in Cowperwood’s behalf and yet certain that
the politicians would be pleased that he had so nearly given Cowperwood the
maximum while appearing to have heeded the pleas for mercy. Cowperwood saw
through the trick at once, but it did not disturb him. It struck him as rather
weak and contemptible. A bailiff came forward and started to hurry him away.</p>
<p>“Allow the prisoner to remain for a moment,” called the judge.</p>
<p>The name, of George W. Stener had been called by the clerk and Cowperwood did
not quite understand why he was being detained, but he soon learned. It was
that he might hear the opinion of the court in connection with his copartner in
crime. The latter’s record was taken. Roger O’Mara, the Irish
political lawyer who had been his counsel all through his troubles, stood near
him, but had nothing to say beyond asking the judge to consider Stener’s
previously honorable career.</p>
<p>“George W. Stener,” said his honor, while the audience, including
Cowperwood, listened attentively. “The motion for a new trial as well as
an arrest of judgment in your case having been overruled, it remains for the
court to impose such sentence as the nature of your offense requires. I do not
desire to add to the pain of your position by any extended remarks of my own;
but I cannot let the occasion pass without expressing my emphatic condemnation
of your offense. The misapplication of public money has become the great crime
of the age. If not promptly and firmly checked, it will ultimately destroy our
institutions. When a republic becomes honeycombed with corruption its vitality
is gone. It must crumble upon the first pressure.</p>
<p>“In my opinion, the public is much to blame for your offense and others
of a similar character. Heretofore, official fraud has been regarded with too
much indifference. What we need is a higher and purer political
morality—a state of public opinion which would make the improper use of
public money a thing to be execrated. It was the lack of this which made your
offense possible. Beyond that I see nothing of extenuation in your case.”
Judge Payderson paused for emphasis. He was coming to his finest flight, and he
wanted it to sink in.</p>
<p>“The people had confided to you the care of their money,” he went
on, solemnly. “It was a high, a sacred trust. You should have guarded the
door of the treasury even as the cherubim protected the Garden of Eden, and
should have turned the flaming sword of impeccable honesty against every one
who approached it improperly. Your position as the representative of a great
community warranted that.</p>
<p>“In view of all the facts in your case the court can do no less than
impose a major penalty. The seventy-fourth section of the Criminal Procedure
Act provides that no convict shall be sentenced by the court of this
commonwealth to either of the penitentiaries thereof, for any term which shall
expire between the fifteenth of November and the fifteenth day of February of
any year, and this provision requires me to abate three months from the maximum
of time which I would affix in your case—namely, five years. The sentence
of the court is, therefore, that you pay a fine of five thousand dollars to the
commonwealth for the use of the county”—Payderson knew well enough
that Stener could never pay that sum—“and that you undergo
imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for the Eastern District, by separate
and solitary confinement at labor, for the period of four years and nine
months, and that you stand committed until this sentence is complied
with.” He laid down the briefs and rubbed his chin reflectively while
both Cowperwood and Stener were hurried out. Butler was the first to leave
after the sentence—quite satisfied. Seeing that all was over so far as
she was concerned, Aileen stole quickly out; and after her, in a few moments,
Cowperwood’s father and brothers. They were to await him outside and go
with him to the penitentiary. The remaining members of the family were at home
eagerly awaiting intelligence of the morning’s work, and Joseph
Cowperwood was at once despatched to tell them.</p>
<p>The day had now become cloudy, lowery, and it looked as if there might be snow.
Eddie Zanders, who had been given all the papers in the case, announced that
there was no need to return to the county jail. In consequence the five of
them—Zanders, Steger, Cowperwood, his father, and Edward—got into a
street-car which ran to within a few blocks of the prison. Within half an hour
they were at the gates of the Eastern Penitentiary.</p>
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