Part 25 (1/2)
”Answer the question without equivocation, witness.”
”Y-es, sir.”
There was a slight stir in the body of the court due to the fact that Miss Fewbanks and Mrs. Holymead had risen and were making their way to the door. The fas.h.i.+onably-dressed women in the court stared with much interest at the daughter of the murdered man, whom most of them knew, in order to see how she was taking the disclosures about her dead father's private life.
”And sometimes there were quarrels between your late master and these visitors, were there not?” continued Holymead.
”Quarrels, sir?”
”Surely you know that under the influence of wine some people become quarrelsome?”
”Yes, sir.”
”Well, did your late master's nocturnal visitors ever become quarrelsome?”
”Sometimes, sir.”
”In the exercise of your confidential duties did you sometimes see quarrelsome ladies off the premises?”
”Sometimes, sir.”
”And it was no uncommon thing for them to say things to you about your master, eh?”
”Sometimes they didn't care what they said.”
”Quite so,” commented Counsel drily. ”They indulged in threats?”
”Not all of them,” replied Hill, who at length saw where the cross-examination was tending.
”I do not suggest that all of them did--only that the more violent of them did so.”
”Quite so, sir.”
”So we may take it that the quarrel between your late master and Miss Fanning was not the only quarrel of the kind which came under your notice?”
”There were not many others,” said Hill.
”It was not the only one?” persisted Counsel.
”No, sir.”
”In your evidence-in-chief you said nothing about Miss Fanning using threats against your master when you were showing her out?”
”No, sir.”
”She did not use any?”
”Not in my hearing, sir.”
There was a pause at this stage while Mr. Holymead consulted the notes he had made of Mr. Walters's cross-examination of the witness.