Part 46 (1/2)
”But you had not seen Ajax Stone's face; how then could you recognize him?”
”No, I had not seen his face, but I had the back of his head and how he was dressed, and I knew I had fastened him in there, and that he didn't get out till the sheriff took him out; and then I heard his voice and knew it was Ajax's voice.”
The cross-questioning went on. It was what Lulu had dreaded, but it did not seem to embarra.s.s or disturb her; nor could she be made to contradict herself.
Her father's eyes shone; he looked a proud and happy man as he led her back to her seat, holding her hand in a tender, loving clasp.
She was surprised and pleased to find Grandma Elsie and Violet sitting with the other relatives and friends. They had come in while she was on the witness stand.
”Dear child,” Violet said, making room for her by her side, ”you went through your ordeal very successfully, and I am very glad for your sake, that it is over.”
”Yes, my dear, we are all proud of you,” added Grandma Elsie, smiling kindly upon the little girl.
But there was not time for anything more.
”Max Raymond,” some one called.
”Here, sir,” replied the lad, rising.
”Take the witness stand.”
”Go, my son, and let us see how well you can acquit yourself,” the captain said in an encouraging tone, and Max obeyed.
He conducted himself quite to his father's satisfaction, behaving in a very manly way, and giving his testimony in the same clear, distinct tones and straightforward manner that had been admired in his sister.
But having much less to tell, he was not kept nearly so long upon the stand.
There were other witnesses for the prosecution, one of whom was Capt.
Raymond himself.
He testified that the burglars had evidently entered the house through a window, by prying open a shutter, removing a pane of gla.s.s, then reaching in and turning the catch over the lower sash.
When the evidence on that side had all been heard, the counsel for the accused opened the case for the defense.
He was an able and eloquent lawyer, but his clients had already established an unenviable reputation for themselves, and the weight of the evidence against them was too strong for reb.u.t.tal. Their conviction was a foregone conclusion in his mind, and that of almost every one present, even before he began his speech.