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第49部分

erlestanleygardner.the.caseofthesulkygirl-第49部分

小说: erlestanleygardner.the.caseofthesulkygirl 字数: 每页4000字

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      〃Counselor;〃 he said; 〃you will make your argument to the jury at the proper time。 The question of the court was whether there was any additional redirect examination。 Your answer was in the negative; and the witness will stand aside。〃
      〃Recall Judge Purley for further cross…examination;〃 said Perry Mason。
      Judge Purley came to the witness stand。 Gone was the judicial assurance which had clothed his manner earlier in the trial。 His face was drawn and strained; and there was a haunting doubt in his eyes。
      〃You also have been sworn in this case; so there is no necessity for you to be sworn again;〃 said Perry Mason。 〃Take your place on the witness stand。〃
      Judge Purley heaved his big bulk into the witness chair。
      〃When this test was being made over the week end;〃 said Perry Mason; in the tone of voice of one who is pronouncing a final and solemn judgment; 〃you sat in your automobile under the window of Edward Norton's study; in exactly the same place and position as that you occupied on the night of the murder; did you not?〃
      〃I did; sir; yes; sir。〃
      〃And from that position; by craning your neck; you could see the study windows in Edward Norton's house?〃
      〃Yes; sir。〃
      〃But because the top of the automobile was so low as to interfere with your vision; you could only see those windows by craning your neck; is that right?〃
      〃Yes; sir。〃
      〃And isn't it a fact; Judge Purley; that while you were seated there in that automobile; in exactly the same position that it occupied on the night of the murder; Don Graves came to the window of the study and called down to you; or to Claude Drumm; who was with you in the car?〃
      〃Yes; sir;〃 said Judge Purley; taking a deep breath。
      〃And isn't it a fact;〃 thundered Perry Mason; extending his rigid forefinger; so that it pointed directly at Judge Purley; 〃that now the matter has been called to your attention; and your recollection has had an opportunity to check over the circumstances of what happened upon that fateful night of the murder; that you now realize that the voice which called down to you from that second story window on the night of the test; was the same voice which had called down from that window on the night of the murder?〃
      Tense; dramatic silence gripped the courtroom。
      Judge Purley's hands tugged at the arm of the witness chair; and his face writhed in agony。
      〃My God!〃 he said。 〃I don't know! I have been asking myself that question for the last ten minutes; and I cannot answer it satisfactorily to my conscience。 All I know is that it may have been!〃
      Perry Mason turned half around and faced the jury。 His steady; unwavering eyes surveyed the faces of the nine men and the three women。
      〃That;〃 he said; in a tone of finality; 〃is all。〃
      For a long moment the courtroom remained silent; then there were rustlings; whispering; half…gasps。 Somewhere in the background a woman tittered hysterically。
      Judge Markham banged his gavel down on the desk。
      〃Order!〃 he said。
      Claude Drumm bit his lip in an agony of indecision。 Dare he go into the matter on redirect examination; or dare he wait until he could talk privately with the Municipal Judge?
      And; in that moment of indecision; in that moment when the attention of every human being in the courtroom was fastened upon him; Claude Drumm hesitated for one second too long。
      The attention of the crowd shifted。
      Perry Mason; leaning back in his chair; his eyes placidly surveying the sea of faces; saw it shift。 Judge Markham; sitting on the bench; wise in the ways of the courtroom; veteran of a hundred murder trials; saw it shift。
      As with one motion; as though actuated by some subtle; psychic mand; the eyes of the jurors; the eyes of the spectators; turned away from Claude Drumm; and fastened themselves upon the agonized face of Arthur Crinston。
      It was the silent verdict of the courtroom; and that verdict exonerated the two defendants; and fixed the guilt of Edward Norton's murder squarely upon Arthur Crinston and his acplice。
 
 
      CHAPTER TWENTY…SIX
 
      PERRY MASON sat in his office。 The light from the window streaming in upon his rugged; virile features made him seem somehow older; brought out the strong lines of his face。
      Frances Celane sat in the big black leather chair; her forefinger poking and twisting as she slid it along the smooth arm of the chair。 Her eyes were dark and filled with emotion。
      Robert Gleason stood leaning against the book case; his heavy; dark face twisted into that agony of silence which es to those inarticulate men who have much to say; yet cannot find a means of expression。
      Through the open windows; from the street below; came the cries of the newsboys; shouting their extra edition of the STAR。
      Perry Mason tapped the newspaper on his desk; a paper which was still damp from the presses。
      〃That;〃 he said; 〃is clever journalism。 Nevers had that paper on the street before you had gone from the courthouse to my office。 He had the thing all figured out and blocked out。 All he needed to do was to add a brief summary of the testimony of Judge Purley; and the headlines。〃
      He slid his forefinger along the headlines which streamed blackly across the top of the newspaper: 〃MURDER CASE DISMISSED。〃
      Frances Celane said softly: 〃It wasn't the journalism in this case that was so remarkable; Mr。 Mason; it was your wonderful analysis of what must have happened; and the steps you took to reconstruct the scene so that Judge Purley would be convinced。 I watched him when he was on the witness stand the first time; and I could see the problem that you had with him。〃
      Perry Mason smiled。
      〃Judge Purley;〃 he said; 〃is rather opinionated; and he would very much have disliked having to confess himself in error。 In fact; if I had asked him that question the first time he was on the witness stand; he would have indignantly denied that such could have been the case; and the denial would have so impressed itself upon his own mind; that no amount of subsequent testimony could ever have caused him even to entertain the faintest notion that he might have been mistaken。
      〃But the fact that I managed to duplicate the conditions in such a manner that his mind was totally unprepared for what was taking place; gave me the opportunity to approach him on a blind side; so to speak。
      〃Of course;〃 went on Perry Mason; 〃I had all of the facts in hand at the moment that Arthur Crinston; in telling me about the murder; discussed the telephone call to the police as though he had no knowledge of it; except what he had learned through the police。
      〃That was the slip that Crinston made; and the fatal slip; that; and failing to report that telephone conversation in his testimony to the jury。
      〃You see; he was so obsessed with the idea that he must keep the authorities from knowing what had transpired in that room when Norton was murdered; that he made up a story out of whole cloth; and stuck to it。
      〃That is not skillful lying。 It is not the proper way to mit perjury。 The skillful perjurer is he who sticks to so much of the truth as is possible; and only departs from it when it bees absolutely necessary。 These men who make up stories out of whole cloth usually leave a few loose threads somewhere。
      〃Yet it is a strange thing about the human mind: It has many facts constantly thrust upon it; and it doesn't properly correlate those facts。 I had the facts at my mand for some time before I knew what must have happened。
      〃You see; Crinston had borrowed heavily on the partnership credit。 The partnership was; of course; solvent; but Crinston's credit as an individual was all shot to pieces。 He had made Graves an acplice; and; together; they were deceiving your uncle; but when the bank sent the notice to your uncle; then Edward Norton learned for the first time what had happened。
      〃We can imagine what happened next。 He gave Mr。 Crinston a definite deadline; at which time Crinston was to have returned the money; or else be reported to the police。 When Crinsto

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