<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.<br/> GEOFFREY WINS HIS CASE</h2>
<p>Before ten o’clock on the following morning, having already spent two
hours over his brief, that he had now thoroughly mastered, Geoffrey was at his
chambers, which he had some difficulty in reaching owing to the thick fog that
still hung over London, and indeed all England.</p>
<p>To his surprise nothing had been heard either of the Attorney-General or of Mr.
Candleton. The solicitors were in despair; but he consoled them by saying that
one or the other was sure to turn up in time, and that a few words would
suffice to explain the additional light which had been thrown on the case. He
occupied his half hour, however, in making a few rough notes to guide him in
the altogether improbable event of his being called on to open, and then went
into court. The case was first on the list, and there were a good many counsel
engaged on the other side. Just as the judge took his seat, the solicitor, with
an expression of dismay, handed Geoffrey a telegram which had that moment
arrived from Mr. Candleton. It was dated from Calais on the previous night, and
ran, “Am unable to cross on account of thick fog. You had better get
somebody else in Parsons and Douse.”</p>
<p>“And we haven’t got another brief prepared,” said the
agonised solicitor. “What is more, I can hear nothing of the
Attorney-General, and his clerk does not seem to know where he is. You must ask
for an adjournment, Mr. Bingham; you can’t manage the case alone.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” said Geoffrey, and on the case being called he rose
and stated the circumstances to the court. But the Court was crusty. It had got
the fog down its throat, and altogether It didn’t seem to see it.
Moreover the other side, marking its advantage, objected strongly. The
witnesses, brought at great expense, were there; his Lordship was there, the
jury was there; if this case was not taken there was no other with which they
could go on, &c., &c.</p>
<p>The court took the same view, and lectured Geoffrey severely. Every counsel in
a case, the Court remembered, when It was at the Bar, used to be able to open
that case at a moment’s notice, and though things had, It implied, no
doubt deteriorated to a considerable extent since those palmy days, every
counsel ought still to be prepared to do so on emergency.</p>
<p>Of course, however, if he, Geoffrey, told the court that he was absolutely
unprepared to go on with the case, It would have no option but to grant an
adjournment.</p>
<p>“I am perfectly prepared to go on with it, my lord,” Geoffrey
interposed calmly.</p>
<p>“Very well,” said the Court in a mollified tone, “then go on!
I have no doubt that the learned Attorney-General will arrive presently.”</p>
<p>Then, as is not unusual in a probate suit, followed an argument as to who
should open it, the plaintiff or the defendant. Geoffrey claimed that this
right clearly lay with him, and the opposing counsel raised no great objection,
thinking that they would do well to leave the opening in the hands of a rather
inexperienced man, who would very likely work his side more harm than good. So,
somewhat to the horror of the solicitors, who thought with longing of the
eloquence of the Attorney-General, and the unrivalled experience and finesse of
Mr. Candleton, Geoffrey was called upon to open the case for the defendants,
propounding the first will.</p>
<p>He rose without fear or hesitation, and with but one prayer in his heart, that
no untimely Attorney-General would put in an appearance. He had got his chance,
the chance for which many able men have to wait long years, and he knew it, and
meant to make the most of it. Naturally a brilliant speaker, Geoffrey was not,
as so many good speakers are, subject to fits of nervousness, and he was,
moreover, thoroughly master of his case. In five minutes judge, jury and
counsel were all listening to him with attention; in ten they were absorbed in
the lucid and succinct statement of the facts which he was unfolding to them.
His ghost theory was at first received with a smile, but presently counsel on
the other side ceased to smile, and began to look uneasy. If he could prove
what he said, there was an end of their case. When he had been speaking for
about forty minutes one of the opposing counsel interrupted him with some
remark, and at that moment he noticed that the Attorney-General’s clerk
was talking to the solicitor beneath him.</p>
<p>“Bother it, he is coming,” thought Geoffrey.</p>
<p>But no, the solicitor bending forward informed him that the Attorney-General
had been unavoidably detained by some important Government matter, and had
returned his brief.</p>
<p>“Well, we must get on as we can,” Geoffrey said.</p>
<p>“If you continue like that we shall get on very well,” whispered
the solicitors, and then Geoffrey knew that he was doing well.</p>
<p>“Yes, Mr. Bingham!” said his Lordship.</p>
<p>Then Geoffrey went on with his statement.</p>
<p>At lunch time it was a question whether another leader should be briefed.
Geoffrey said that so far as he was concerned he could get on alone. He knew
every point of the case, and he had got a friend to “take a note”
for him while he was speaking.</p>
<p>After some hesitation the solicitors decided not to brief fresh counsel at this
stage of the case, but to leave it entirely in his hands.</p>
<p>It would be useless to follow the details of this remarkable will suit, which
lasted two days, and attracted much attention. Geoffrey won it and won it
triumphantly. His address to the jury on the whole case was long remembered in
the courts, rising as it did to a very high level of forensic eloquence. Few
who saw it ever forgot the sight of his handsome face and commanding presence
as he crushed the case of his opponents like an eggshell, and then with calm
and overwhelming force denounced the woman who with her lover had concocted the
cruel plot that robbed her uncle of life and her cousins of their property,
till at the last, pointing towards her with outstretched hand, he branded her
to the jury as a murderess.</p>
<p>Few in that crowded court have forgotten the tragic scene that followed, when
the trembling woman, worn out by the long anxiety of the trial, and utterly
unnerved by her accuser’s brilliant invective, rose from her seat and
cried:</p>
<p>“We did it—it is true that we did it to get the money, but we did
not mean to frighten him to death,” and then fell fainting to the
ground—or Geoffrey Bingham’s quiet words as he sat down:</p>
<p>“My lord and gentlemen of the jury, I do not think it necessary to carry
my case any further.”</p>
<p>There was no applause, the occasion was too dramatically solemn, but the
impression made both upon the court and the outside public, to whom such a
scene is peculiarly fitted to appeal, was deep and lasting.</p>
<p>Geoffrey himself was under little delusion about the matter. He had no conceit
in his composition, but neither had he any false modesty. He merely accepted
the situation as really powerful men do accept such events—with
thankfulness, but without surprise. He had got his chance at last, and like any
other able man, whatever his walk of life, he had risen to it. That was all.
Most men get such chances in some shape or form, and are unable to avail
themselves of them. Geoffrey was one of the exceptions; as Beatrice had said,
he was born to succeed. As he sat down, he knew that he was a made man.</p>
<p>And yet while he walked home that night, his ears still full of the
congratulations which had rained in on him from every quarter, he was conscious
of a certain pride. He will have felt as Geoffrey felt that night, whose lot it
has been to fight long and strenuously against circumstances so adverse as to
be almost overwhelming, knowing in his heart that he was born to lead and not
to follow; and who at last, by one mental effort, with no friendly hand to
help, and no friendly voice to guide, has succeeded in bursting a road through
the difficulties which hemmed him in, and has suddenly found himself, not above
competition indeed, but still able to meet it. He will not have been too proud
of that endeavour; it will have seemed but a little thing to him—a thing
full of faults and imperfections, and falling far short of his ideal. He will
not even have attached a great importance to his success, because, if he is a
person of this calibre, he must remember how small it is, when all is said and
done; that even in his day there are those who can beat him on his own ground;
and also that all worldly success, like the most perfect flower, yet bears in
it the elements of decay. But he will have reflected with humble satisfaction
on those long years of patient striving which have at length lifted him to an
eminence whence he can climb on and on, scarcely encumbered by the jostling
crowd; till at length, worn out, the time comes for him to fall.</p>
<p>So Geoffrey thought and felt. The thing was to be done, and he had done it.
Honoria should have money now; she should no longer be able to twit him with
their poverty. Yes, and a better thought still, Beatrice would be glad to hear
of his little triumph.</p>
<p>He reached home rather late. Honoria was going out to dinner with a
distinguished cousin, and was already dressing. Geoffrey had declined the
invitation, which was a short one, because he had not expected to be back from
chambers. In his enthusiasm, however, he went to his wife’s room to tell
her of the event.</p>
<p>“Well,” she said, “what have you been doing? I think that you
might have arranged to come out with me. My going out so much by myself does
not look well. Oh, I forgot; of course you are in that case.”</p>
<p>“Yes—that is, I was. I have won the case. Here is a very fair
report of it in the <i>St. James’s Gazette</i> if you care to read
it.”</p>
<p>“Good heavens, Geoffrey! How can you expect me to read all that stuff
when I am dressing?”</p>
<p>“I don’t expect you to, Honoria; only, as I say, I have won the
case, and I shall get plenty of work now.”</p>
<p>“Will you? I am glad to hear it; perhaps we shall be able to escape from
this horrid flat if you do. There, Anne! Je vous l’ai toujours dit, cette
robe ne me va pas bien.”</p>
<p>“Mais, milady, la robe va parfaitement——”</p>
<p>“That is your opinion,” grumbled Lady Honoria. “Well, it
isn’t mine. But it will have to do. Good-night, Geoffrey; I daresay that
you will have gone to bed when I get back,” and she was gone.</p>
<p>Geoffrey picked up his <i>St. James’s Gazette</i> with a sigh. He felt
hurt, and knew that he was a fool for his pains. Lady Honoria was not a
sympathetic person; it was not fair to expect it from her. Still he felt hurt.
He went upstairs and heard Effie her prayers.</p>
<p>“Where has you beed, daddy?—to the Smoky Town?” The Temple
was euphemistically known to Effie as the Smoky Town.</p>
<p>“Yes, dear.”</p>
<p>“You go to the Smoky Town to make bread and butter, don’t you,
daddy?”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear, to make bread and butter.”</p>
<p>“And did you make any, daddy?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Effie, a good deal to-day.”</p>
<p>“Then where is it? In your pocket?”</p>
<p>“No, love, not exactly. I won a big lawsuit to-day, and I shall get a
great many pennies for it.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” answered Effie meditatively, “I am glad that you did
win. You do like to win, doesn’t you, daddy, dear.”</p>
<p>“Yes, love.”</p>
<p>“Then I will give you a kiss, daddy, because you did win,” and she
suited the action to the word.</p>
<p>Geoffrey went from the little room with a softened heart. He dressed and ate
some dinner.</p>
<p>Then he sat down and wrote a long letter to Beatrice, telling her all about the
trial, and not sparing her his reasons for adopting each particular tactic and
line of argument which conduced to the great result.</p>
<p>And though his letter was four sheets in length, he knew that Beatrice would
not be bored at having to read it.</p>
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