"Do you know I think I have been watched to-day. There was a fellow concealed in Mrs. Clemmens' house, who saw me leave it, and who, I have no doubt, took express note of the time I started. And there was another chap hanging round the station at the quarries, whom I am almost sure had no business there unless it was to see at what moment I arrived. He came back to Sibley when I did, but he telegraphed first, and it is my opinion that Orcutt – "
Here he was greatly startled by hearing his name spoken in a loud and commanding tone of voice. Stopping short, he glanced up, encountered the eye of Mr. Orcutt fixed upon him from the other side of the court-room, and realized he was being summoned to the witness stand.
"The deuce!" he murmured, with a look at Byrd to which none but an artist could do justice.
XXXII.
HICKORY
Hickory, dickory, dock!
The mouse ran up the clock!
The clock struck one,
And down he run!
Hickory, dickory, dock!
– Mother Goose Melodies.
HICKORY'S face was no new one to the court. He had occupied a considerable portion of one day in giving testimony for the prosecution, and his rough manner and hardy face, twinkling, however, at times with an irrepressible humor that redeemed it and him from all charge of ugliness, were well known not only to the jury but to all the habitués of the trial. Yet, when he stepped upon the stand at the summons of Mr. Orcutt, every eye turned toward him with curiosity, so great was the surprise with which his name had been hailed, and so vivid the interest aroused in what a detective devoted to the cause of the prosecution might have to say in the way of supporting the defence.
The first question uttered by Mr. Orcutt served to put them upon the right track.
"Will you tell the court where you have been to-day, Mr. Hickory?"
"Well," replied the witness in a slow and ruminating tone of voice, as he cast a look at Mr. Ferris, half apologetic and half reassuring, "I have been in a good many places – "
"You know what I mean," interrupted Mr. Orcutt. "Tell the court where you were between the hours of eleven and a quarter to one," he added, with a quick glance at the paper he held in his hand.
"Oh, then," cried Hickory, suddenly relaxing into his drollest self. "Well, then, I was all along the route from Sibley to Monteith Quarry Station. I don't think I was stationary at any one minute of the time, sir."
"In other words – " suggested Mr. Orcutt, severely.
"I was trying to show myself smarter than my betters;" bowing with a great show of respect to the two experts who sat near. "Or, in other words still, I was trying to make the distance between Mrs. Clemmens' house and the station I have mentioned, in time sufficient to upset the defence, sir."
And the look he cast at Mr. Ferris was wholly apologetic now.
"Ah, I understand, and at whose suggestion did you undertake to do this, Mr. Hickory?"
"At the suggestion of a friend of mine, who is also somewhat of a detective."
"And when was this suggestion given?"
"After your speech, sir, yesterday afternoon."
"And where?"
"At the hotel, sir, where I and my friend put up."
"Did not the counsel for the prosecution order you to make this attempt?"
"No, sir."
"Did he not know you were going to make it?"
"No, sir."
"Who did know it?"
"My friend."
"No one else?"
"Well, sir, judging from my present position, I should say there seems to have been some one else," the witness slyly retorted.
The calmness with which Mr. Orcutt carried on this examination suffered a momentary disturbance.
"You know what I mean," he returned. "Did you tell any one but your friend that you were going to undertake this run?"
"No, sir."
"Mr. Hickory," the lawyer now pursued, "will you tell us why you considered yourself qualified to succeed in an attempt where you had already been told regular experts had failed?"
"Well, sir, I don't know unless you find the solution in the slightly presumptive character of my disposition."
"Had you ever run before or engaged in athletic sports of any kind?"
"Oh, yes, I have run before."
"And engaged in athletic sports?"
"Yes, sir."
"Mr. Hickory, have you ever run in a race with men of well-known reputation for speed?"
"Well, yes, I have."
"Did you ever win in running such a race?"
"Once."
"No more?"
"Well, then, twice."
The dejection with which this last assent came forth roused the mirth of some light-hearted, feather-headed people, but the officers of the court soon put a stop to that.
"Mr. Hickory, will you tell us whether on account of having twice beaten in a race requiring the qualifications of a professional runner, you considered yourself qualified to judge of the feasibility of any other man's making the distance from Mrs. Clemmens' house to Monteith Quarry Station in ninety minutes by your own ability or non-ability to do so?"
"Yes, sir, I did; but a man's judgment of his own qualifications don't go very far, I've been told."