Clyde's testimony1 proceeded to the point where the family had removed from Quincy, Illinois (a place resorted toon account of some Salvation2 Army work offered his father and mother), to Kansas City, where from his twelfthto his fifteenth year he had browsed3 about trying to find something to do while still resenting the combination ofschool and religious work expected of him.
"Were you up with your classes in the public schools?""No, sir. We had moved too much.""In what grade were you when you were twelve years old?""Well, I should have been in the seventh but I was only in the sixth. That's why I didn't like it.""And how about the religious work of your parents?""Well, it was all right--only I never did like going out nights on the street corners."And so on, through five-and-ten cent store, soda4 and newspaper carrier jobs, until at last he was a bell-hop at theGreen- Davidson, the finest hotel in Kansas City, as he informed them.
"But now, Clyde," proceeded Jephson who, fearful lest Mason on the cross-examination and in connection withClyde's credibility as a witness should delve5 into the matter of the wrecked6 car and the slain7 child in Kansas Cityand so mar8 the effect of the story he was now about to tell, was determined9 to be beforehand in this. Decidedly,by questioning him properly he could explain and soften11 all that, whereas if left to Mason it could be torturedinto something exceedingly dark indeed. And so now he continued:
"And how long did you work there?""A little over a year.""And why did you leave?""Well, it was on account of an accident.""What kind of an accident?"And here Clyde, previously12 prepared and drilled as to all this plunged13 into the details which led up to andincluded the death of the little girl and his flight--which Mason, true enough, had been intending to bring up. But,now, as he listened to all this, he merely shook his head and grunted15 ironically, "He'd better go into all that," hecommented. And Jephson, sensing the import of what he was doing--how most likely he was, as he would havephrased it, "spiking17" one of Mr. Mason's best guns, continued with:
"How old were you then, Clyde, did you say?""Between seventeen and eighteen.""And do you mean to tell me," he continued, after he had finished with all of the questions he could think of inconnection with all this, "that you didn't know that you might have gone back there, since you were not the onewho took the car, and after explaining it all, been paroled in the custody18 of your parents?""Object!" shouted Mason. "There's no evidence here to show that he could have returned to Kansas City andbeen paroled in the custody of his parents.""Objection sustained!" boomed the judge from his high throne. "The defense19 will please confine itself a littlemore closely to the letter of the testimony.""Exception," noted20 Belknap, from his seat.
"No, sir. I didn't know that," replied Clyde, just the same.
"Anyhow was that the reason after you got away that you changed your name to Tenet as you told me?"continued Jephson.
"Yes, sir.""By the way, just where did you get that name of Tenet, Clyde?""It was the name of a boy I used to play with in Quincy.""Was he a good boy?""Object!" called Mason, from his chair. "Incompetent21, immaterial, irrelevant22.""Oh, he might have associated with a good boy in spite of what you would like to have the jury believe, and inthat sense it is very relevant," sneered23 Jephson.
"Objection sustained!" boomed Justice Oberwaltzer.
"But didn't it occur to you at the time that he might object or that you might be doing him an injustice24 in using his name to cover the identity of a fellow who was running away?""No, sir--I thought there were lots of Tenets."An indulgent smile might have been expected at this point, but so antagonistic26 and bitter was the general publictoward Clyde that such levity27 was out of the question in this courtroom.
"Now listen, Clyde," continued Jephson, having, as he had just seen, failed to soften the mood of the throng,"you cared for your mother, did you?--or didn't you?"Objection and argument finally ending in the question being allowed.
"Yes, sir, certainly I cared for her," replied Clyde--but after a slight hesitancy which was noticeable--a tighteningof the throat and a swelling28 and sinking of the chest as he exhaled29 and inhaled30.
"Much?""Yes, sir--much." He didn't venture to look at any one now.
"Hadn't she always done as much as she could for you, in her way?""Yes, sir.""Well, then, Clyde, how was it, after all that, and even though that dreadful accident had occurred, you could runaway31 and stay away so long without so much as one word to tell her that you were by no means as guilty as youseemed and that she shouldn't worry because you were working and trying to be a good boy again?""But I did write her--only I didn't sign my name.""I see. Anything else?""Yes, sir. I sent her a little money. Ten dollars once.""But you didn't think of going back at all?""No, sir. I was afraid that if I went back they might arrest me.""In other words," and here Jephson emphasized this with great clearness, "you were a moral and mental coward,as Mr. Belknap, my colleague, said.""I object to this interpretation32 of this defendant33's testimony for the benefit of the jury!" interrupted Mason.
"This defendant's testimony really needs no interpretation. It is very plain and honest, as any one can see,"quickly interjected Jephson.
"Objection sustained!" called the judge. "Proceed. Proceed.""And it was because you were a moral and mental coward as I see it, Clyde--not that I am condemning34 you foranything that you cannot help. (After all, you didn't make yourself, did you?)"But this was too much, and the judge here cautioned him to use more discretion35 in framing his future questions.
"Then you went about in Alton, Peoria, Bloomington, Milwaukee, and Chicago--hiding away in small rooms inback streets and working as a dishwasher or soda fountain man, or a driver, and changing your name to Tenetwhen you really might have gone back to Kansas City and resumed your old place?" continued Jephson.
"I object! I object!" yelled Mason. "There is no evidence here to show that he could have gone there and resumedhis old place.""Objection sustained," ruled Oberwaltzer, although at the time in Jephson's pocket was a letter from Francis X.
Squires, formerly36 captain of the bell-hops of the Green-Davidson at the time Clyde was there, in which heexplained that apart from the one incident in connection with the purloined37 automobile38, he knew nothingderogatory to Clyde; and that always previously, he had found him prompt, honest, willing, alert and well-mannered. Also that at the time the accident occurred, he himself had been satisfied that Clyde could have beenlittle else than one of those led and that if he had returned and properly explained matters he would have beenreinstated. It was irrelevant.
Thereafter followed Clyde's story of how, having fled from the difficulties threatening him in Kansas City andhaving wandered here and there for two years, he had finally obtained a place in Chicago as a driver and later asa bell-boy at the union League, and also how while still employed at the first of these places he had written hismother and later at her request was about to write his uncle, when, accidentally meeting him at the unionLeague, he was invited by him to come to Lycurgus. And thereupon, in their natural order, followed all of thedetails, of how he had gone to work, been promoted and instructed by his cousin and the foreman as to thevarious rules, and then later how he had met Roberta and still later Miss X. But in between came all the details asto how and why he had courted Roberta Alden, and how and why, having once secured her love he felt andthought himself content--but how the arrival of Miss X, and her overpowering fascination39 for him, had servedcompletely to change all his notions in regard to Roberta, and although he still admired her, caused him to feelthat never again as before could he desire to marry her.
But Jephson, anxious to divert the attention of the jury from the fact that Clyde was so very fickle40--a fact tootrying to be so speedily introduced into the case--at once interposed with:
"Clyde! You really loved Roberta Alden at first, didn't you?""Yes, sir.""Well, then, you must have known, or at least you gathered from her actions, from the first, didn't you, that shewas a perfectly41 good and innocent and religious girl.""Yes, sir, that's how I felt about her," replied Clyde, repeating what he had been told to say.
"Well, then, just roughly now, without going into detail, do you suppose you could explain to yourself and thisjury how and why and where and when those changes came about which led to that relationship which we all ofus" (and here he looked boldly and wisely and coldly out over the audience and then afterwards upon the jurors)"deplore. How was it, if you thought so highly of her at first that you could so soon afterwards descend42 to thisevil relationship? Didn't you know that all men, and all women also, view it as wrong, and outside of marriageunforgivable--a statutory crime?"The boldness and ironic16 sting of this was sufficient to cause at first a hush43, later a slight nervous tremor44 on thepart of the audience which, Mason as well as Justice Oberwaltzer noting, caused both to frown apprehensively45.
Why, this brazen46 young cynic! How dared he, via innuendo47 and in the guise48 of serious questioning, intrude49 sucha thought as this, which by implication at least picked at the very foundations of society--religious and moral! Atthe same time there he was, standing50 boldly and leoninely, the while Clyde replied:
"Yes, sir, I suppose I did--certainly--but I didn't try to seduce51 her at first or at any time, really. I was in love withher.""You were in love with her?""Yes, sir.""Very much?""Very much.""And was she as much in love with you at that time?""Yes, sir, she was.""From the very first?""From the very first.""She told you so?""Yes, sir.""At the time she left the Newtons--you have heard all the testimony here in regard to that--did you induce or seekto induce her in any way, by any trick or agreement, to leave there?""No, sir, I didn't. She wanted to leave there of her own accord. She wanted me to help her find a place.""She wanted you to help her find a place?""Yes, sir.""And just why?""Because she didn't know the city very well and she thought maybe I could tell her where there was a nice roomshe could get--one that she could afford.""And did you tell her about the room she took at the Gilpins'?""No, sir, I didn't. I never told her about any room. She found it herself." (This was the exact answer he hadmemorized.)"But why didn't you help her?""Because I was busy, days and most evenings. And besides I thought she knew better what she wanted than Idid--the kind of people and all.""Did you personally ever see the Gilpin place before she went there?""No, sir.""Ever have any discussion with her before she moved there as to the kind of a room she was to take--its positionas regards to entrance, exit, privacy, or anything of that sort?""No, sir, I never did.""Never insisted, for instance, that she take a certain type of room which you could slip in and out of at night orby day without being seen?""I never did. Besides, no one could very well slip in or out of that house without being seen.""And why not?""Because the door to her room was right next to the door to the general front entrance where everybody went inand out and anybody that was around could see." That was another answer he had memorized.
"But you slipped in and out, didn't you?""Well, yes, sir--that is, we both decided10 from the first that the less we were seen together anywhere, the better.""On account of that factory rule?""Yes, sir--on account of that factory rule."And then the story of his various difficulties with Roberta, due to Miss X coming into his life.
"Now, Clyde, we will have to go into the matter of this Miss X a little. Because of an agreement between thedefense and the prosecution52 which you gentlemen of the jury fully53 understand, we can only touch on thisincidentally, since it all concerns an entirely54 innocent person whose real name can be of no service here anyhow.
But some of the facts must be touched upon, although we will deal with them as light as possible, as much forthe sake of the innocent living as the worthy55 dead. And I am sure Miss Alden would have it so if she were alive.
But now in regard to Miss X," he continued, turning to Clyde, "it is already agreed by both sides that you met herin Lycurgus some time in November or December of last year. That is correct, is it not?""Yes, sir, that is correct," replied Clyde, sadly.
"And that at once you fell very much in love with her?""Yes, sir. That's true.""She was rich?""Yes, sir.""Beautiful?
"I believe it is admitted by all that she is," he said to the court in general without requiring or anticipating a replyfrom Clyde, yet the latter, so thoroughly56 drilled had he been, now replied: "Yes, sir.""Had you two--yourself and Miss Alden, I mean--at that time when you first met Miss X already established thatillicit relationship referred to?""Yes, sir.""Well, now, in view of all that--but no, one moment, there is something else I want to ask you first--now, let mesee--at the time that you first met this Miss X you were still in love with Roberta Alden, were you--or were younot?""I was still in love with her--yes, sir.""You had not, up to that time at least, in any way become weary of her? Or had you?""No, sir. I had not.""Her love and her companionship were just as precious and delightful57 to you as ever?""Yes, sir, they were."And as Clyde said that, he was thinking back and it seemed to him that what he had just said was really true. Itwas true that just before meeting Sondra he was actually at the zenith of content and delight with Roberta.
"And what, if any, were your plans for your future with Miss Alden--before you met this Miss X? You musthave thought at times of that, didn't you?""Well, not exactly," (and as he said this he licked his lips in sheer nervousness). "You see, I never had any realplan to do anything--that is, to do anything that wasn't quite right with her. And neither did she, of course. Wejust drifted kinda, from the first. It was being alone there so much, maybe. She hadn't taken up with anybody yetand I hadn't either. And then there was that rule that kept me from taking her about anywhere, and once we weretogether, of course we just went on without thinking very much about it, I suppose--either of us.""You just drifted because nothing had happened as yet and you didn't suppose anything would. Is that the way?""No, sir. I mean, yes, sir. That's the way it was." Clyde was very eager to get those much-rehearsed and veryimportant answers, just right.
"But you must have thought of something--one or both of you. You were twenty-one and she was twenty-three.""Yes, sir. I suppose we did--I suppose I did think of something now and then.""And what was it that you thought? Can you recollect58?""Well, yes, sir. I suppose I can. That is, I know that I did think at times that if things went all right and I made alittle more money and she got a place somewhere else, that I would begin taking her out openly, and thenafterwards maybe, if she and I kept on caring for each other as we did then, marry her, maybe.""You actually thought of marrying her then, did you?""Yes, sir. I know I did in the way that I've said, of course.""But that was before you met this Miss X?""Yes, sir, that was before that."("Beautifully done!" observed Mason, sarcastically59, under his breath to State Senator Redmond. "Excellent stageplay," replied Redmond in a stage whisper.)"But did you ever tell her in so many words?" continued Jephson.
"Well, no, sir. I don't recall that I did--not just in so many words.""You either told her or you didn't tell her. Now, which was it?""Well, neither, quite. I used to tell her that I loved her and that I never wanted her to leave me and that I hopedshe never would.""But not that you wanted to marry her?""No, sir. Not that I wanted to marry her.""Well, well, all right!--and she--what did she say?""That she never would leave me," replied Clyde, heavily and fearsomely, thinking, as he did so, of Roberta's lastcries and her eyes bent60 on him. And he took from his pocket a handkerchief and began to wipe his moist, coldface and hands.
("Well staged!" murmured Mason, softly and cynically61. "Pretty shrewd--pretty shrewd!" commented Redmond,lightly.)"But, tell me," went on Jephson, softly and coldly, "feeling as you did about Miss Alden, how was it that uponmeeting this Miss X, you could change so quickly? Are you so fickle that you don't know your own mind fromday to day?""Well, I didn't think so up to that time--no, sir!""Had you ever had a strong and binding62 love affair at any time in your life before you met Miss Alden?""No, sir.""But did you consider this one with Miss Alden strong and binding--a true love affair--up to the time you metthis Miss X?""Yes, sir, I did.""And afterwards--then what?""Well--afterwards--it wasn't quite like that any more.""You mean to say that on sight of Miss X, after encountering her once or twice, you ceased to care for MissAlden entirely?""Well, no, sir. It wasn't quite like that," volunteered Clyde, swiftly and earnestly. "I did continue to care for hersome--quite a lot, really. But before I knew it I had completely lost my head over--over Miss--Miss--""Yes, this Miss X. We know. You fell madly and unreasonably63 in love with her. Was that the way of it?""Yes, sir.""And then?""Well--and then--I just couldn't care for Miss Alden so much any more." A thin film of moisture covered Clyde'sforehead and cheeks as he spoke64.
"I see! I see!" went on Jephson, oratorically and loudly, having the jury and audience in mind. "A case of theArabian Nights, of the enscorcelled and the enscorcellor.""I don't think I know what you mean," said Clyde.
"A case of being betwitched, my poor boy--by beauty, love, wealth, by things that we sometimes think we wantvery, very much, and cannot ever have--that is what I mean, and that is what much of the love in the worldamounts to.""Yes, sir," replied Clyde, quite innocently, concluding rightly that this was mere14 show of rhetoric65 on Jephson'spart.
"But what I want to know is--how was it that loving Miss Alden as much as you say you did--and having reachedthat relationship which should have been sanctified by marriage--how was it that you could have felt so littlebound or obligated to her as to entertain the idea of casting her over for this Miss X? Now just how was that? Iwould like to know, and so would this jury, I am sure. Where was your sense of gratitude66? Your sense of moralobligation? Do you mean to say that you have none? We want to know."This was really cross-examination--an attack on his own witness. Yet Jephson was within his rights and Masondid not interfere67.
"Well . . ." and here Clyde hesitated and stumbled, quite as if he had not been instructed as to all this beforehand,and seemed to and did truly finger about in his own mind or reason for some thought that would help him toexplain all this. For although it was true that he had memorized the answer, now that he was confronted by theactual question here in court, as well as the old problem that had so confused and troubled him in Lycurgus, hecould scarcely think clearly of all he had been told to say, but instead twisted and turned, and finally came outwith:
"The fact is, I didn't think about those things at all very much. I couldn't after I saw her. I tried to at times, but Icouldn't. I only wanted her and I didn't want Miss Alden any more. I knew I wasn't doing right--exactly--and Ifelt sorry for Roberta--but just the same I didn't seem able to do anything much about it. I could only think ofMiss X and I couldn't think of Roberta as I had before no matter how hard I tried.""Do you mean to say that you didn't suffer in your own conscience on account of this?""Yes, sir, I suffered," replied Clyde. "I knew I wasn't doing right, and it made me worry a lot about her and myself, but just the same I didn't seem to be able to do any better." (He was repeating words that Jephson hadwritten out for him, although at the time he first read them he felt them to be fairly true. He had suffered some.)"And then?""Well, then she began to complain because I didn't go round to see her as much as before.""In other words, you began to neglect her.""Yes, sir, some--but not entirely--no, sir.""Well, when you found you were so infatuated with this Miss X, what did you do? Did you go and tell MissAlden that you were no longer in love with her but in love with some one else?""No, I didn't. Not then.""Why not then? Did you think it fair and honorable to be telling two girls at once that you cared for them?""No, sir, but it wasn't quite like that either. You see at that time I was just getting acquainted with Miss X, and Iwasn't telling her anything. She wouldn't let me. But I knew then, just the same, that I couldn't care for MissAlden any more.""But what about the claim Miss Alden had on you? Didn't you feel that that was enough or should be, to preventyou from running after another girl?""Yes, sir.""Well, why did you then?""I couldn't resist her.""Miss X, you mean?""Yes, sir.""And so you continued to run after her until you had made her care for you?""No, sir, that wasn't the way at all.""Well then, what was the way?""I just met her here and there and got crazy about her.""I see. But still you didn't go and tell Miss Alden that you couldn't care for her any longer?""No, sir. Not then.""And why not?""Because I thought it would hurt her, and I didn't want to do that.""Oh, I see. You didn't have the moral or mental courage to do it then?""I don't know about the moral or mental courage," replied Clyde, a little hurt and irritated by this description ofhimself, "but I felt sorry for her just the same. She used to cry and I didn't have the heart to tell her anything.""I see. Well, let it stand that way, if you want to. But now answer me one other thing. That relationship betweenyou two--what about that--after you knew that you didn't care for her any more. Did that continue?""Well, no, sir, not so very long, anyhow," replied Clyde, most nervously68 and shamefacedly. He was thinking ofall the people before him now--of his mother--Sondra--of all the people throughout the entire United States--whowould read and so know. And on first being shown these questions weeks and weeks before he had wanted toknow of Jephson what the use of all that was. And Jephson had replied: "Educational effect. The quicker andharder we can shock 'em with some of the real facts of life around here, the easier it is going to be for you to geta little more sane69 consideration of what your problem was. But don't worry your head over that now. When thetime comes, just answer 'em and leave the rest to us. We know what we're doing." And so now Clyde added:
"You see, after meeting Miss X I couldn't care for her so much that way any more, and so I tried not to go aroundher so much any more. But anyhow, it wasn't so very long after that before she got in trouble and then--well--""I see. And when was that--about?""Along in the latter part of January last year.""And once that happened, then what? Did you or did you not feel that it was your duty under the circumstancesto marry her?""Well, no--not the way things were then--that is, if I could get her out of it, I mean.""And why not? What do you mean by 'as things were then'?""Well, you see, it was just as I told you. I wasn't caring for her any more, and since I hadn't promised to marryher, and she knew it, I thought it would be fair enough if I helped her out of it and then told her that I didn't carefor her as I once did.""But couldn't you help her out of it?""No, sir. But I tried.""You went to that druggist who testified here?""Yes, sir.""To anybody else?""Yes, sir--to seven others before I could get anything at all.""But what you got didn't help?""No, sir.""Did you go to that young haberdasher who testified here as he said?""Yes, sir.""And did he give you the name of any particular doctor?""Well--yes--but I wouldn't care to say which one.""All right, you needn't. But did you send Miss Alden to any doctor?""Yes, sir.""Did she go alone or did you go with her?""I went with her--that is, to the door.""Why only to the door?""Well, we talked it over, and she thought just as I did, that it might be better that way. I didn't have any too muchmoney at the time. I thought he might be willing to help her for less if she went by herself than if we both wenttogether."("I'll be damned if he isn't stealing most of my thunder," thought Mason to himself at this point. "He'sforestalling most of the things I intended to riddle70 him with." And he sat up worried. Burleigh and Redmond andEarl Newcomb--all now saw clearly what Jephson was attempting to do.)"I see. And it wasn't by any chance because you were afraid that your uncle or Miss X might hear of it?""Oh, yes, I . . . that is, we both thought of that and talked of it. She understood how things were with me downthere.""But not about Miss X?""No, not about Miss X.""And why not?""Well, because I didn't think I could very well tell her just then. It would have made her feel too bad. I wanted towait until she was all right again.""And then tell her and leave her. Is that what you mean?""Well, yes, if I still couldn't care for her any more--yes, sir.""But not if she was in trouble?""Well, no, sir, not if she was in trouble. But you see, at that time I was expecting to be able to get her out of that.""I see. But didn't her condition affect your attitude toward her--cause you to want to straighten the whole thingout by giving up this Miss X and marrying Miss Alden?""Well, no, sir--not then exactly--that is, not at that time.""How do you mean--'not at that time'?""Well, I did come to feel that way later, as I told you--but not then--that was afterwards--after we started on ourtrip to the Adirondacks--""And why not then?""I've said why. I was too crazy about Miss X to think of anything but her.""You couldn't change even then?""No, sir. I felt sorry, but I couldn't.""I see. But never mind that now. I will come to that later. Just now I want to have you explain to the jury, if youcan, just what it was about this Miss X, as contrasted with Miss Alden, that made her seem so very much moredesirable in your eyes. Just what characteristics of manner or face or mind or position--or whatever it was that soenticed you? Or do you know?"This was a question which both Belknap and Jephson in various ways and for various reasons--psychic, legal,personal--had asked Clyde before, and with varying results. At first he could not and would not discuss her at all,fearing that whatever he said would be seized upon and used in his trial and the newspapers along with her name.
But later, when because of the silence of the newspapers everywhere in regard to her true name, it became plain that she was not to be featured, he permitted himself to talk more freely about her. But now here on the stand, hegrew once more nervous and reticent72.
"Well, you see, it's hard to say. She was very beautiful to me. Much more so than Roberta--but not only that, shewas different from any one I had ever known--more independent--and everybody paid so much attention to whatshe did and what she said. She seemed to know more than any one else I ever knew. Then she dressed awfullywell, and was very rich and in society and her name and pictures were always in the paper. I used to read abouther every day when I didn't see her, and that seemed to keep her before me a lot. She was daring, too---not sosimple or trusting as Miss Alden was--and at first it was hard for me to believe that she was becoming sointerested in me. It got so that I couldn't think of any one or anything else, and I didn't want Roberta any more. Ijust couldn't, with Miss X always before me.""Well, it looks to me as if you might have been in love, or hypnotized at that," insinuated73 Jephson at theconclusion of this statement, the tail of his right eye upon the jury. "If that isn't a picture of pretty much all gone,I guess I don't know one when I see it." But with the audience and the jury as stony-faced as before, as he couldsee.
But immediately thereafter the swift and troubled waters of the alleged74 plot which was the stern trail to which allthis was leading.
"Well, now, Clyde, from there on, just what happened? Tell us now, as near as you can recall. Don't shade it ortry to make yourself look any better or any worse. She is dead, and you may be, eventually, if these twelvegentlemen here finally so decide." (And at this an icy chill seemed to permeate75 the entire courtroom as well asClyde.) "But the truth for the peace of your own soul is the best,"--and here Jephson thought of Mason--let himcounteract that if he can.
"Yes, sir," said Clyde, simply.
"Well, then, after she got in trouble and you couldn't help her, then what? What was it you did? How did youact? . . . By the way, one moment--what was your salary at that time?""Twenty-five dollars a week," confessed Clyde.
"No other source of income?""I didn't quite hear.""Was there any other source from which you were obtaining any money at that time in any way?""No, sir.""And how much was your room?""Seven dollars a week.""And your board?""Oh, from five to six.""Any other expenses?""Yes, sir--my clothes and laundry.""You had to stand your share of whatever social doings were on foot, didn't you?""Objected to as leading!" called Mason.
"Objection sustained," replied Justice Oberwaltzer.
"Any other expenses that you can think of?""Well, there were carfares and trainfares. And then I had to share in whatever social expenses there were.""Exactly!" cried Mason, with great irritation77. "I wish you would quit leading this parrot here.""I wish the honorable district attorney would mind his own business!" snorted Jephson--as much for Clyde'sbenefit as for his own. He wished to break down his fear of Mason. "I'm examining this defendant, and as forparrots we've seen quite a number of them around here in the last few weeks, and coached to the throat likeschool-boys.""That's a malicious78 lie!" shouted Mason. "I object and demand an apology.""The apology is to me and to this defendant, if your Honor pleases, and will be exacted quickly if your Honorwill only adjourn79 this court for a few minutes," and then stepping directly in front of Mason, he added: "And Iwill be able to obtain it without any judicial80 aid." Whereupon Mason, thinking he was about to be attacked,squared off, the while assistants and deputy sheriffs, and stenographers and writers, and the clerk of the courthimself, gathered round and seized the two lawyers while Justice Oberwaltzer pounded violently on his deskwith his gavel:
"Gentlemen! Gentlemen! You are both in contempt of court, both of you! You will apologize to the court and toeach other, or I'll declare a mistrial and commit you both for ten days and fine you five hundred dollars each."With this he leaned down and frowned on both. And at once Jephson replied, most suavely81 and ingratiatingly:
"Under the circumstances, your Honor, I apologize to you and to the attorney for the People and to this jury. Theattack on this defendant, by the district attorney, seemed too unfair and uncalled for--that was all.""Never mind that," continued Oberwaltzer.
"Under the circumstances, your Honor, I apologize to you and to the counsel for the defense. I was a little hasty, perhaps. And to this defendant also," sneered Mason, after first looking into Justice Oberwaltzer's angry anduncompromising eyes and then into Clyde's, who instantly recoiled82 and turned away.
"Proceed," growled83 Oberwaltzer, sullenly84.
"Now, Clyde," resumed Jephson anew, as calm as though he had just lit and thrown away a match. "You sayyour salary was twenty-five dollars and you had these various expenses. Had you, up to this time, been able toput aside any money for a rainy day?""No, sir--not much--not any, really.""Well, then, supposing some doctor to whom Miss Alden had applied85 had been willing to assist her and wanted-say a hundred dollars or so--were you ready to furnish that?""No, sir--not right off, that is.""Did she have any money of her own that you know of?""None that I know of--no, sir.""Well, how did you intend to help her then?""Well, I thought if either she or I found any one and he would wait and let me pay for it on time, that I could saveand pay it that way, maybe.""I see. You were perfectly willing to do that, were you?""Yes, sir, I was.""You told her so, did you?""Yes, sir. She knew that.""Well, when neither you nor she could find any one to help her, then what? What did you do next?""Well, then she wanted me to marry her.""Right away?""Yes, sir. Right away.""And what did you say to that?""I told her I just couldn't then. I didn't have any money to get married on. And besides if I did and didn't go away somewhere, at least until the baby was born, everybody would find out and I couldn't have stayed there anyhow.
And she couldn't either.""And why not?""Well, there were my relatives. They wouldn't have wanted to keep me any more, or her either, I guess.""I see. They wouldn't have considered you fit for the work you were doing, or her either. Is that it?""I thought so, anyhow," replied Clyde.
"And then what?""Well, even if I had wanted to go away with her and marry her, I didn't have enough money to do that and shedidn't either. I would have had to give up my place and gone and found another somewhere before I could let hercome. Besides that, I didn't know any place where I could go and earn as much as I did there.""How about hotel work? Couldn't you have gone back to that?""Well, maybe--if I had an introduction of some kind. But I didn't want to go back to that.""And why not?""Well, I didn't like it so much any more--not that kind of life.""But you didn't mean that you didn't want to do anything at all, did you? That wasn't your attitude, was it?""Oh, no, sir. That wasn't it. I told her right away if she would go away for a while--while she had her baby--andlet me stay on there in Lycurgus, that I would try to live on less and give her all I could save until she was allright again.""But not marry her?""No, sir, I didn't feel that I could do that then.""And what did she say to that?""She wouldn't do it. She said she couldn't and wouldn't go through with it unless I would marry her.""I see. Then and there?""Well, yes--pretty soon, anyhow. She was willing to wait a little while, but she wouldn't go away unless I wouldmarry her.""And did you tell her that you didn't care for her any more?""Well, nearly--yes, sir""What do you mean by 'nearly'?""Well, that I didn't want to. Besides, she knew I didn't care for her any more. She said so herself.""To you, at that time?""Yes, sir. Lots of times.""Well, yes, that's true--it was in all of those letters of hers that were read here. But when she refused so flatly,what did you do then?""Well, I didn't know what to do. But I thought maybe if I could get her to go up to her home for a while, while Itried and saved what I could--well . . . maybe . . . once she was up there and saw how much I didn't want tomarry her--" (Clyde paused and fumbled86 at his lips. This lying was hard.)"Yes, go on. And remember, the truth, however ashamed of it you may be, is better than any lie.""And maybe when she was a little more frightened and not so determined--""Weren't you frightened, too?""Yes, sir, I was.""Well, go on.""That then--well--maybe if I offered her all that I had been able to save up to then--you see I thought maybe Imight be able to borrow some from some one too--that she might be willing to go away and not make me marryher--just live somewhere and let me help her.""I see. But she wouldn't agree to that?""Well, no--not to my not marrying her, no--but to going up there for a month, yes. I couldn't get her to say thatshe would let me off.""But did you at that or any other time before or subsequent to that say that you would come up there and marryher?""No, sir. I never did.""Just what did you say then?""I said that . . . as soon as I could get the money," stuttered Clyde at this point, so nervous and shamed was he, "Iwould come for her in about a month and we could go away somewhere until--until--well, until she was out ofthat.""But you did not tell her that you would marry her?""No, sir. I did not.""But she wanted you to, of course.""Yes, sir.""Had you any notion that she could force you so to do at that time-- marry her against your will, I mean?""No, sir, I didn't. Not if I could help it. My plan was to wait as long as I could and save all the money I could andthen when the time came just refuse and give her all the money that I had and help her all I could from then on.""But you know," proceeded Jephson, most suavely and diplomatically at this point, "there are various referencesin these letters here which Miss Alden wrote you"--and he reached over and from the district attorney's tablepicked up the original letters of Roberta and weighed them solemnly in his hand--"to a PLAN which you two hadin connection with this trip--or at least that she seemed to think you had. Now, exactly what was that plan? Shedistinctly refers to it, if I recall aright, as 'our plan.'""I know that," replied Clyde--since for two months now he, along with Belknap and Jephson, had discussed thisparticular question. "But the only plan I know of"--and here he did his best to look frank and beconvincing--"was the one I offered over and over.""And what was that?""Why, that she go away and take a room somewhere and let me help her and come over and see her once in awhile.""Well, no, you're wrong there," returned Jephson, slyly. "That isn't and couldn't be the plan she had in mind. Shesays in one of these letters that she knows it will be hard on you to have to go away and stay so long, or until sheis out of this thing, but that it can't be helped.""Yes, I know," replied Clyde, quickly and exactly as he had been told to do, "but that was her plan, not mine. Shekept saying to me most of the time that that was what she wanted me to do, and that I would have to do it. Shetold me that over the telephone several times, and I may have said all right, all right, not meaning that I agreedwith her entirely but that I wanted to talk with her about it some more later.""I see. And so that's what you think--that she meant one thing and you meant another.""Well, I know I never agreed to her plan--exactly. That is, I never did any more than just to ask her to wait andnot do anything until I could get money enough together to come up there and talk to her some more and get herto go away--the way I suggested.""But if she wouldn't accede87 to your plan, then what?""Well, then I was going to tell her about Miss X, and beg her to let me go.""And if she still wouldn't?""Well, then I thought I might run away, but I didn't like to think about that very much.""You know, Clyde, of course, that some here are of the opinion that there was a plot on your part whichoriginated in your mind about this time to conceal88 your identity and hers and lure89 her up there to one of thoselone lakes in the Adirondacks and slay90 her or drown her in cold blood, in order that you might be free to marrythis Miss X. Any truth in that? Tell this jury--yes or no--which is it?""No! No! I never did plot to kill her, or any one," protested Clyde, quite dramatically, and clutching at the armsof his chair and seeking to be as emphatic91 as possible, since he had been instructed so to do. At the same time hearose in his seat and sought to look stern and convincing, although in his heart and mind was the cryingknowledge that he had so plotted, and this it was that most weakened him at this moment--most painfully andhorribly weakened him. The eyes of all these people. The eyes of the judge and jury and Mason and all the menand women of the press. And once more his brow was wet and cold and he licked his thin lips nervously andswallowed with difficulty because his throat was dry.
And then it was that piecemeal92, and beginning with the series of letters written by Roberta to Clyde after shereached her home and ending with the one demanding that he come for her or she would return to Lycurgus andexpose him, Jephson took up the various phases of the "alleged" plot and crime, and now did his best tominimize and finally dispel93 all that had been testified to so far.
Clyde's suspicious actions in not writing Roberta. Well, he was afraid of complications in connection with hisrelatives, his work, everything. And the same with his arranging to meet her in Fonda. He had no plan as to anytrip with her anywhere in particular at the time. He only thought vaguely94 of meeting her somewhere-anywhere--and possibly persuading her to leave him. But July arriving and his plan still so indefinite, the firstthing that occurred to him was that they might go off to some inexpensive resort somewhere. It was Roberta whoin Utica had suggested some of the lakes north of there. It was there in the hotel, not at the railway station, thathe had secured some maps and folders96--a fatal contention97 in one sense, for Mason had one folder95 with aLycurgus House stamp on the cover, which Clyde had not noticed at the time. And as he was so testifying,Mason was thinking of this. In regard to leaving Lycurgus by a back street--well, there had been a desire toconceal his departure with Roberta, of course, but only to protect her name and his from notoriety. And so withthe riding in separate cars, registering as Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Golden, and so on indefinitely throughout theentire list of shifty concealments and evasions98. In regard to the two hats, well, the one hat was soiled and seeingone that he liked he bought it. Then when he lost the hat in the accident he naturally put on the other. To be sure,he had owned and carried a camera, and it was true that he had it at the Cranstons' on his first visit there on the eighteenth of June. The only reason he denied having it at first was because he was afraid of being identifiedwith this purely99 accidental death of Roberta in a way that would be difficult to explain. He had been falselycharged with her murder immediately upon his arrest in the woods, and he was fearful of his entire connectionwith this ill-fated trip, and not having any lawyer or any one to say a word for him, he thought it best to saynothing and so for the time being had denied everything, although at once on being provided counsel he hadconfided to his attorneys the true facts of the case.
And so, too, with the missing suit, which because it was wet and muddy he had done up in a bundle in the woodsand after reaching the Cranstons' had deposited it behind some stones there, intending to return and secure it andhave it dry-cleaned. But on being introduced to Mr. Belknap and Mr. Jephson he had at once told both and theyhad secured it and had it cleaned for him.
"But now, Clyde, in regard to your plans and your being out on that lake in the first place--let's hear about thatnow."And then--quite as Jephson had outlined it to Belknap, came the story of how he and Roberta had reached Uticaand afterwards Grass Lake. And yet no plan. He intended, if worst came to worst, to tell her of his great love forMiss X and appeal to her sympathy and understanding to set him free at the same time that he offered to doanything that he could for her. If she refused he intended to defy her and leave Lycurgus, if necessary, and giveup everything.
"But when I saw her at Fonda, and later in Utica, looking as tired and worried as she was," and here Clyde wasendeavoring to give the ring of sincerity100 to words carefully supplied him, "and sort of helpless, I began to feelsorry for her again.""Yes, and then what?""Well, I wasn't quite so sure whether in case she refused to let me off I could go through with leaving her.""Well, what did you decide then?""Not anything just then. I listened to what she had to say and I tried to tell her how hard it was going to be for meto do anything much, even if I did go away with her. I only had fifty dollars.""Yes?""And then she began to cry, and I decided I couldn't talk to her any more about it there. She was too run-downand nervous. So I asked her if there wasn't any place she would like to go to for a day or two to brace101 herself up alittle," went on Clyde, only here on account of the blackness of the lie he was telling he twisted and swallowed inthe weak, stigmatic way that was his whenever he was attempting something which was beyond him--anyuntruth or a feat71 of skill--and then added: "And she said yes, maybe to one of those lakes up in the Adirondacks-itdidn't make much difference which one--if we could afford it. And when I told her, mostly because of the wayshe was feeling, that I thought we could--""Then you really only went up there on her account?""Yes, sir, only on account of her.""I see. Go on.""Well, then she said if I would go downstairs or somewhere and get some folders we might be able to find aplace up there somewhere where it wasn't so expensive.""And did you?""Yes, sir.""Well, and then what?""Well, we looked them over and we finally hit on Grass Lake.""Who did? The two of you--or she?""Well, she took one folder and I took another, and in hers she found an ad about an inn up there where twopeople could stay for twenty-one dollars a week, or five dollars a day for the two. And I thought we couldn't domuch better than that for one day.""Was one day all you intended to stay?""No, sir. Not if she wanted to stay longer. My idea at first was that we might stay one or two days or three. Icouldn't tell--whatever time it took me to talk things out with her and make her understand and see where Istood.""I see. And then . . .?""Well, then we went up to Grass Lake the next morning.""In separate cars still?""Yes, sir--in separate cars.""And when you got there?""Why, we registered.""How?""Clifford Graham and wife.""Still afraid some one would know who you were?""Yes, sir.""Did you try to disguise your handwriting in any way?""Yes, sir--a little.""But just why did you always use your own initials--C. G.?""Well, I thought that the initials on my bag should be the same as the initials on the register, and still not be myname either.""I see. Clever in one sense, not so clever in another--just half clever, which is the worst of all." At this Masonhalf rose in his seat as though to object, but evidently changing his mind, sank slowly back again. And once moreJephson's right eye swiftly and inquiringly swept the jury to his right. "Well, did you finally explain to her thatyou wanted to be done with it all as you had planned--or did you not?""I wanted to talk to her about it just after we got there if I could--the next morning, anyhow--but just as soon aswe got off up there and got settled she kept saying to me that if I would only marry her then--that she would notwant to stay married long--that she was so sick and worried and felt so bad--that all she wanted to do was to getthrough and give the baby a name, and after that she would go away and let me go my way, too.""And then?""Well, and then--then we went out on the lake--""Which lake, Clyde?""Why, Grass Lake. We went out for a row after we got there.""Right away? In the afternoon?""Yes, sir. She wanted to go. And then while we were out there rowing around--" (He paused.)"She got to crying again, and she seemed so much up against it and looked so sick and so worried that I decidedthat after all she was right and I was wrong--that it wouldn't be right, on account of the baby and all, not to marryher, and so I thought I had better do it.""I see. A change of heart. And did you tell her that then and there?""No, sir.""And why not? Weren't you satisfied with the trouble you had caused her so far?""Yes, sir. But you see just as I was going to talk to her at that time I got to thinking of all the things I had beenthinking before I came up.""What, for instance?""Why, Miss X and my life in Lycurgus, and what we'd be up against in case we did go away this way.""Yes.""And . . . well . . . and then I couldn't just tell her then--not that day, anyhow.""Well, when did you tell her then?""Well, I told her not to cry any more--that I thought maybe it would be all right if she gave me twenty-four hoursmore to think things all out--that maybe we'd be able to settle on something.""And then?""Well, then she said after a while that she didn't care for Grass Lake. She wished we would go away from there.""SHE did?""Yes. And then we got out the maps again and I asked a fellow at the hotel there if he knew about the lakes upthere. And he said of all the lakes around there Big Bittern was the most beautiful. I had seen it once, and I toldRoberta about it and what the man said, and then she asked why didn't we go there.""And is that why you went there?""Yes, sir""No other reason?""No, sir--none--except that it was back, or south, and we were going that way anyhow.""I see. And that was Thursday, July eighth?""Yes, sir.""Well, now, Clyde, as you have seen, it has been charged here that you took Miss Alden to and out on that lakewith the sole and premeditated intent of killing102 her--murdering her--finding some unobserved and quiet spot andthen first striking her with your camera, or an oar76, or club, or stone maybe, and then drowning her. Now, what have you to say to that? Is that true, or isn't it?""No, sir! It's not true!" returned Clyde, clearly and emphatically. "I never went there of my own accord in thefirst place, and I only went there because she didn't like Grass Lake." And here, because he had been sinkingdown in his chair, he pulled himself up and looked at the jury and the audience with what measure of strengthand conviction he could summon--as previously he had been told to do. At the same time he added: "And Iwanted to please her in any way that I could so that she might be a little more cheerful.""Were you still as sorry for her on this Thursday as you had been the day before?""Yes, sir--more, I think.""And had you definitely made up your mind by then as to what you wanted to do?""Yes, sir.""Well, and just what was that?""Well, I had decided to play as fair as I could. I had been thinking about it all night, and I realized how badly shewould feel and I too if I didn't do the right thing by her--because she had said three or four times that if I didn'tshe would kill herself. And I had made up my mind that morning that whatever else happened that day, I wasgoing to straighten the whole thing out.""This was at Grass Lake. You were still in the hotel on Thursday morning?""Yes, sir.""And you were going to tell her just what?""Well, that I knew that I hadn't treated her quite right and that I was sorry--besides, that her offer was fairenough, and that if after what I was going to tell her she still wanted me, I would go away with her and marryher. But that I had to tell her first the real reason for my changing as I had--that I had been and still was in lovewith another girl and that I couldn't help it--that probably whether I married her or not--""Miss Alden you mean?""Yes, sir--that I would always go on loving this other girl, because I just couldn't get her out of my mind. But justthe same, if that didn't make any difference to her, that I would marry her even if I couldn't love her any more asI once did. That was all.""But what about Miss X?""Well, I had thought about her too, but I thought she was better off and could stand it easier. Besides, I thoughtperhaps Roberta would let me go and we could just go on being friends and I would help her all I could.""Had you decided just where you would marry her?""No, sir. But I knew there were plenty of towns below Big Bittern and Grass Lake.""But were you going to do that without one single word to Miss X beforehand?""Well, no, sir--not exactly. I figured that if Roberta wouldn't let me off but didn't mind my leaving her for a fewdays, I would go down to where Miss X lived and tell her, and then come back. But if she objected to that, whythen I was going to write Miss X a letter and explain how it was and then go on and get married to Roberta.""I see. But, Clyde, among other bits of testimony here, there was that letter found in Miss Alden's coat pocket-theone written on Grass Lake Inn stationery103 and addressed to her mother, in which she told her that she wasabout to be married. Had you already told her up there at Grass Lake that morning that you were going to marryher for sure?""No, sir. Not exactly, but I did say on getting up that day that it was the deciding day for us and that she wasgoing to be able to decide for herself whether she wanted me to marry her or not.""Oh, I see. So that's it," smiled Jephson, as though greatly relieved. (And Mason and Newcomb and Burleigh andState Senator Redmond all listening with the profoundest attention, now exclaimed, sotto voce and almost inunison: "Of all the bunk104!")"Well, now we come to the trip itself. You have heard the testimony here and the dark motive105 and plotting thathas been attributed to every move in connection with it. Now I want you to tell it in your own way. It has beentestified here that you took both bags--yours and hers--up there with you but that you left hers at Gun Lodgewhen you got there and took your own out on the lake in that boat with you. Now just why did you do that?
Please speak so that all of the jurymen can hear you.""Well, the reason for that was," and here once more his throat became so dry that he could scarcely speak, "wedidn't know whether we could get any lunch at Big Bittern, so we decided to take some things along with us fromGrass Lake. Her bag was packed full of things, but there was room in mine. Besides, it had my camera with thetripod outside. So I decided to leave hers and take mine.""YOU decided?""Well, I asked her what she thought and she said she thought that was best.""Where was it you asked her that?""On the train coming down.""And did you know then that you were coming back to Gun Lodge106 after going out on the lake?""Yes, sir, I did. We had to. There was no other road. They told us that at Grass Lake.""And in riding over to Big Bittern--do you recall the testimony of the driver who drove you over--that you were'very nervous' and that you asked him whether there were many people over that that day?""I recall it, yes, sir, but I wasn't nervous at all. I may have asked about the people, but I can't see anything wrongwith that. It seems to me that any one might ask that.""And so it seems to me," echoed Jephson. "Then what happened after you registered at Big Bittern Inn and gotinto that boat and went out on the lake with Miss Alden? Were you or she especially preoccupied107 or nervous orin any state different from that of any ordinary person who goes out on a lake to row? Were you particularlyhappy or particularly gloomy, or what?""Well, I don't think I was especially gloomy--no, sir. I was thinking of all I was going to tell her, of course, andof what was before me either way she decided. I wasn't exactly gay, I guess, but I thought it would be all rightwhichever way things went. I had decided that I was willing to marry her.""And how about her? Was she quite cheerful?""Well--yes, sir. She seemed to feel much happier for some reason.""And what did you talk about?""Oh, about the lake first--how beautiful it was and where we would have our lunch when we were ready for it.
And then we rowed along the west shore looking for water lilies. She was so happy that I hated to bring upanything just then, and so we just kept on rowing until about two, when we stopped for lunch.""Just where was that? Just get up and trace on the map with that pointer there just where you did go and howlong you stopped and for what."And so Clyde, pointer in hand and standing before the large map of the lake and region which particularlyconcerned this tragedy, now tracing in detail the long row along the shore, a group of trees, which, after havinglunch, they had rowed to see--a beautiful bed of water lilies which they had lingered over--each point at whichthey had stopped, until reaching Moon Cove25 at about five in the afternoon, they had been so entranced by itsbeauty that they had merely sat and gazed, as he said. Afterwards, in order that he might take some pictures, theyhad gone ashore108 in the woods nearby--he all the while preparing himself to tell Roberta of Miss X and ask herfor her final decision. And then having left the bag on shore for a few moments while they rowed out and tooksome snapshots in the boat, they had drifted in the calm of the water and the stillness and beauty until finally hehad gathered sufficient courage to tell her what was in his heart. And at first, as he now said, Roberta seemedgreatly startled and depressed109 and began crying a little, saying that perhaps it was best for her not to live anylonger--she felt so miserable110. But, afterwards, when he had impressed on her the fact that he was really sorry andperfectly willing to make amends111, she had suddenly changed and begun to grow more cheerful, and then of asudden, in a burst of tenderness and gratefulness--he could not say exactly--she had jumped up and tried to cometo him. Her arms were outstretched and she moved as if to throw herself at his feet or into his lap. But just then, her foot, or her dress, had caught and she had stumbled. And he--camera in hand--(a last minute decision or legalprecaution on the part of Jephson)--had risen instinctively112 to try to catch her and stop her fall. Perhaps--he wouldnot be able to say here--her face or hand had struck the camera. At any rate, the next moment, before he quiteunderstood how it all happened, and without time for thought or action on his part or hers, both were in the waterand the boat, which had overturned, seemed to have struck Roberta, for she seemed to be stunned113.
"I called to her to try to get to the boat--it was moving away--to take hold of it, but she didn't seem to hear me orunderstand what I meant. I was afraid to go too near her at first because she was striking out in every direction-andbefore I could swim ten strokes forward her head had gone down once and come up and then gone downagain for a second time. By then the boat had floated all of thirty or forty feet away and I knew that I couldn't gether into that. And then I decided that if I wanted to save myself I had better swim ashore."And once there, as he now narrated114, it suddenly occurred to him how peculiar115 and suspicious were all thecircumstances surrounding his present position. He suddenly realized, as he now said, how had the whole thinglooked from the beginning. The false registering. The fact his bag was there--hers not. Besides, to return nowmeant that he would have to explain and it would become generally known--and everything connected with hislife would go--Miss X, his work, his social position--all--whereas, if he said nothing (and here it was, and for thefirst time, as he now swore, that this thought occurred to him), it might be assumed that he too had drowned. Inview of this fact and that any physical help he might now give her would not restore her to life, and thatacknowledgment would mean only trouble for him and shame for her, he decided to say nothing. And so, toremove all traces, he had taken off his clothes and wrung116 them out and wrapped them for packing as best hecould. Next, having left the tripod on shore with his bag, he decided to hide that, and did. His first straw hat, theone without the lining (but about which absent lining he now declared he knew nothing), had been lost with theovertu
1 testimony | |
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2 salvation | |
n.(尤指基督)救世,超度,拯救,解困 | |
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v.吃草( browse的过去式和过去分词 );随意翻阅;(在商店里)随便看看;(在计算机上)浏览信息 | |
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10 decided | |
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11 soften | |
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12 previously | |
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16 ironic | |
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17 spiking | |
n.尖峰形成v.加烈酒于( spike的现在分词 );偷偷地给某人的饮料加入(更多)酒精( 或药物);把尖状物钉入;打乱某人的计划 | |
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23 sneered | |
讥笑,冷笑( sneer的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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24 injustice | |
n.非正义,不公正,不公平,侵犯(别人的)权利 | |
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25 cove | |
n.小海湾,小峡谷 | |
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26 antagonistic | |
adj.敌对的 | |
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27 levity | |
n.轻率,轻浮,不稳定,多变 | |
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28 swelling | |
n.肿胀 | |
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29 exhaled | |
v.呼出,发散出( exhale的过去式和过去分词 );吐出(肺中的空气、烟等),呼气 | |
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30 inhaled | |
v.吸入( inhale的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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31 runaway | |
n.逃走的人,逃亡,亡命者;adj.逃亡的,逃走的 | |
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32 interpretation | |
n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理 | |
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33 defendant | |
n.被告;adj.处于被告地位的 | |
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34 condemning | |
v.(通常因道义上的原因而)谴责( condemn的现在分词 );宣判;宣布…不能使用;迫使…陷于不幸的境地 | |
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35 discretion | |
n.谨慎;随意处理 | |
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36 formerly | |
adv.从前,以前 | |
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37 purloined | |
v.偷窃( purloin的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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38 automobile | |
n.汽车,机动车 | |
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39 fascination | |
n.令人着迷的事物,魅力,迷恋 | |
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40 fickle | |
adj.(爱情或友谊上)易变的,不坚定的 | |
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41 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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42 descend | |
vt./vi.传下来,下来,下降 | |
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43 hush | |
int.嘘,别出声;n.沉默,静寂;v.使安静 | |
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44 tremor | |
n.震动,颤动,战栗,兴奋,地震 | |
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45 apprehensively | |
adv.担心地 | |
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46 brazen | |
adj.厚脸皮的,无耻的,坚硬的 | |
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47 innuendo | |
n.暗指,讽刺 | |
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48 guise | |
n.外表,伪装的姿态 | |
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49 intrude | |
vi.闯入;侵入;打扰,侵扰 | |
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50 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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51 seduce | |
vt.勾引,诱奸,诱惑,引诱 | |
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52 prosecution | |
n.起诉,告发,检举,执行,经营 | |
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53 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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54 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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55 worthy | |
adj.(of)值得的,配得上的;有价值的 | |
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56 thoroughly | |
adv.完全地,彻底地,十足地 | |
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57 delightful | |
adj.令人高兴的,使人快乐的 | |
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58 recollect | |
v.回忆,想起,记起,忆起,记得 | |
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59 sarcastically | |
adv.挖苦地,讽刺地 | |
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60 bent | |
n.爱好,癖好;adj.弯的;决心的,一心的 | |
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61 cynically | |
adv.爱嘲笑地,冷笑地 | |
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62 binding | |
有约束力的,有效的,应遵守的 | |
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63 unreasonably | |
adv. 不合理地 | |
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64 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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65 rhetoric | |
n.修辞学,浮夸之言语 | |
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66 gratitude | |
adj.感激,感谢 | |
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67 interfere | |
v.(in)干涉,干预;(with)妨碍,打扰 | |
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68 nervously | |
adv.神情激动地,不安地 | |
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69 sane | |
adj.心智健全的,神志清醒的,明智的,稳健的 | |
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70 riddle | |
n.谜,谜语,粗筛;vt.解谜,给…出谜,筛,检查,鉴定,非难,充满于;vi.出谜 | |
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71 feat | |
n.功绩;武艺,技艺;adj.灵巧的,漂亮的,合适的 | |
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72 reticent | |
adj.沉默寡言的;言不如意的 | |
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73 insinuated | |
v.暗示( insinuate的过去式和过去分词 );巧妙或迂回地潜入;(使)缓慢进入;慢慢伸入 | |
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74 alleged | |
a.被指控的,嫌疑的 | |
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75 permeate | |
v.弥漫,遍布,散布;渗入,渗透 | |
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76 oar | |
n.桨,橹,划手;v.划行 | |
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77 irritation | |
n.激怒,恼怒,生气 | |
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78 malicious | |
adj.有恶意的,心怀恶意的 | |
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79 adjourn | |
v.(使)休会,(使)休庭 | |
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80 judicial | |
adj.司法的,法庭的,审判的,明断的,公正的 | |
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81 suavely | |
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82 recoiled | |
v.畏缩( recoil的过去式和过去分词 );退缩;报应;返回 | |
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83 growled | |
v.(动物)发狺狺声, (雷)作隆隆声( growl的过去式和过去分词 );低声咆哮着说 | |
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84 sullenly | |
不高兴地,绷着脸,忧郁地 | |
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85 applied | |
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用 | |
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86 fumbled | |
(笨拙地)摸索或处理(某事物)( fumble的过去式和过去分词 ); 乱摸,笨拙地弄; 使落下 | |
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87 accede | |
v.应允,同意 | |
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88 conceal | |
v.隐藏,隐瞒,隐蔽 | |
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89 lure | |
n.吸引人的东西,诱惑物;vt.引诱,吸引 | |
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90 slay | |
v.杀死,宰杀,杀戮 | |
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91 emphatic | |
adj.强调的,着重的;无可置疑的,明显的 | |
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92 piecemeal | |
adj.零碎的;n.片,块;adv.逐渐地;v.弄成碎块 | |
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93 dispel | |
vt.驱走,驱散,消除 | |
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94 vaguely | |
adv.含糊地,暖昧地 | |
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95 folder | |
n.纸夹,文件夹 | |
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96 folders | |
n.文件夹( folder的名词复数 );纸夹;(某些计算机系统中的)文件夹;页面叠 | |
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97 contention | |
n.争论,争辩,论战;论点,主张 | |
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98 evasions | |
逃避( evasion的名词复数 ); 回避; 遁辞; 借口 | |
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99 purely | |
adv.纯粹地,完全地 | |
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100 sincerity | |
n.真诚,诚意;真实 | |
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101 brace | |
n. 支柱,曲柄,大括号; v. 绷紧,顶住,(为困难或坏事)做准备 | |
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102 killing | |
n.巨额利润;突然赚大钱,发大财 | |
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103 stationery | |
n.文具;(配套的)信笺信封 | |
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104 bunk | |
n.(车、船等倚壁而设的)铺位;废话 | |
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105 motive | |
n.动机,目的;adv.发动的,运动的 | |
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106 lodge | |
v.临时住宿,寄宿,寄存,容纳;n.传达室,小旅馆 | |
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107 preoccupied | |
adj.全神贯注的,入神的;被抢先占有的;心事重重的v.占据(某人)思想,使对…全神贯注,使专心于( preoccupy的过去式) | |
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108 ashore | |
adv.在(向)岸上,上岸 | |
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109 depressed | |
adj.沮丧的,抑郁的,不景气的,萧条的 | |
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110 miserable | |
adj.悲惨的,痛苦的;可怜的,糟糕的 | |
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111 amends | |
n. 赔偿 | |
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112 instinctively | |
adv.本能地 | |
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113 stunned | |
adj. 震惊的,惊讶的 动词stun的过去式和过去分词 | |
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114 narrated | |
v.故事( narrate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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115 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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116 wrung | |
绞( wring的过去式和过去分词 ); 握紧(尤指别人的手); 把(湿衣服)拧干; 绞掉(水) | |
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