THE LAST WITNESS.
When Mr. O’Malley had finished
his address to the jury, it was past seven o’clock,
and the judge suggested that as it would be evidently
impracticable to finish the case that night, so as
to release the jury, they might as well at this point
adjourn it till the morrow. To this Mr. Allewinde
readily assented; but Mr. O’Malley declared that
though he was most unwilling to detain his lordship
and the court at that late hour, he must request permission
to be allowed to examine one of his witnesses, as
otherwise his caution in having had him ordered out
of court, would have been in vain. It was most
essential, he said, that his examination of Mr. Keegan
should take place before that man could have an opportunity
of conversing with his servant, Brady; whereupon the
judge consented to hearing Keegan’s evidence
that evening, and forthwith the name of Hyacinth Keegan
was called out in a loud voice by the crier, and was
repeated by every policeman in court, till a stranger
to the proceedings would have thought that Hyacinth
Keegan’s society was the one thing desirable
in Carrick-on-Shannon.
It would be drawing this trial out
to a weary length to give the whole of his evidence;
but Mr. O’Malley’s questions were such
as the attorney found it almost impossible to answer.
He was asked in the first place whether he at present
received the rents from Ballycloran, and then whether
he received them on his own behalf; the latter he
denied, but when told that if he denied the fact Mr.
Flannelly would be brought forward to prove it, he
at last owned that Mr. Flannelly had promised to make
over that property to him; he then denied that any
conversation had passed between him and Brady as to
the nature of the evidence the latter was to give at
the trial, or that he had expressed any anxiety on
any occasion that a verdict might be given against
the prisoner; he confessed that he might, in conversation,
have attributed the loss of his foot to the influence
of the prisoner; but he could not remember that he
had ever said that Macdermot should pay for it with
his life. In answering the different questions
put to him, he hesitated and blundered so much stammered
so often, and spoke so low, that every one in court
was convinced that he was perjuring himself; but still
he persisted in denying everything. The only
good effect Mr. O’Malley could get from his
evidence was, that the master frequently contradicted
what had been said by the servant. But then Brady
had shown so much confidence and self-assurance in
his replies, and Keegan so much hesitation and confusion,
that it was much more probable that the jury would
believe the former, than the latter; and if so, Keegan’s
contradicting the statements made by Brady, would
not serve to invalidate the material evidence given
by that man.
When Mr. Keegan came down from the
chair, the court broke up for the night, and the jury
were informed that the sheriff would afford them all
the accommodation in his power; and with
long faces they were marched away to durance vile.
The court, which, during the trial,
had been so densely crowded, again became desolate
and silent. Baron Hamilton, with his brother
Kilpatrick, retired to their dinner, which they had
well earned; and the coffee-rooms at the hotels again
became crammed with hungry guests, clamorous for food;
and the evening was passed in speculations as to what
would be the verdict in the case to which they had
all been listening.
In the barristers’ mess-room
all the feuds of the day were forgotten, and a most
jovial party was assembled. As each bottle of
claret succeeded the other, fresh anecdotes were told,
and innumerable puns were made. Mr. Allewinde
was quite great; his forensic dignity was all laid
aside, and he chatted to the juniors with most condescending
familiarity.
Mr. O’Laugher became the originator
of incessant peals of laughter; all that had taken
place during the day he turned into food for merriment;
not for one moment did he hold his tongue, nor once
did he say a foolish thing. He was the pet of
the barroom. The Connaught bar was famous for
Mr. O’Laugher; and they knew it, and were proud
of him.
Of all of them assembled there but
one seemed to have any memory of the sadness of the
scene that they had that day witnessed. How should
they? Or rather how miserable would be a barrister’s
life, were he to be affected by the misery which he
is so constantly obliged to witness in a criminal
court. On this occasion, however, the anxiety
which Mr. O’Malley had expressed when addressing
the jury had not been feigned, and the doubt which
he felt as to the fate of his client lay heavy on
him. He was aware that he had failed in shaking
Brady’s testimony, and he feared that in spite
of all he had done to prove the depravity of that
man’s character, the jury would be too much
inclined to believe him.
It had been decided that Feemy was
not to be brought into Carrick from Drumsna till such
time as Mr. O’Malley sent out word that she
would be required; and when he found how late it was
before he began his speech, he had told Father John
in court that she would not be wanted on that day.
She had, therefore, been left tranquilly at Mrs. McKeon’s,
who had fetched her to her own house from Ballycloran
on the morning of the trial.
When Larry Macdermot saw the car at
the door, in which Feemy was to go away, he was dreadfully
wrath. He first of all declared that his daughter
should not be taken away to Mr. Keegan’s that
his own son had deserted him and tried to sell the
estate, and that now they meant to rob him of his
daughter! And he wept like a child, when he was
told that unless she went of her own accord, the house
would be broken open, and she would be taken away
by force. It was in vain that Mary McGovery endeavoured
to make him understand that Feemy’s presence
was necessary in Carrick, and that she had to appear
as a witness at her brother’s trial.
Whenever Thady’s trial was spoken
of; and Mary, by continually recurring
to the subject, had made the old man at last comprehend
that his son was to be tried; but whenever
it was spoken of now, he merely expressed his approbation,
and a wish that Thady might be punished, for making
friends with such a reptile as Keegan for
deserting his father, and planning to cheat him out
of his house and his property. Mary took great
pains to set him right, and bellowed into his ear
as if he were deaf instead of stupid, twenty times
a day, that Thady was to be tried for Ussher’s
death; but Larry couldn’t be got to remember
that Ussher was dead, and would continually ask his
daughter when her lover was coming back to live with
them, and defend them and the property against the
machinations of Keegan and her brother.
All the Thursday Feemy remained at
Drumsna, every moment expecting that she would be
immediately called in to go to Carrick. She sat
the whole day in the drawing-room, close by the fire,
with her friend’s cloak around her, without
speaking to any one. The girls had come and spoken
kindly to her when she first arrived; but their mother
had told them that they had better not attempt to
converse with her. Mrs. McKeon herself sat with
her the whole day, and spoke to her a gentle word
now and again; but she purposely abstained from troubling
her, and she made no allusion whatever to the subject
on which she had thought so much, and on which her
own suspicions had been corroborated by Mary’s
information. Necessary as it was that the poor
girl should tell some one, this was not the time to
press her.
There sat Feemy. Ah! how different
from the girl described in the opening of this tale.
Her cheek was pale and wan, and the flesh had gone,
and the yellow skin fell in from her cheekbone to her
mouth, giving her almost a ghastly appearance; her
eyes appeared larger than ever, but they were quenched
with weeping, and dull with grief; her hair was drawn
back carelessly behind her ears, and her lips were
thin and bloodless. Two or three times during
the day Mrs. McKeon had given her half a glass of
wine, which she had drank on being told to do so,
and she had once tried to eat a bit of bread.
But she had soon put it down again, for it seemed
to choke her.
About five o’clock Mrs. McKeon
learnt that Feemy would not be called for that day,
and the poor girl was then induced to go to bed; but
nothing could persuade her to allow any one to assist
her. It was wonderful how she could have undressed
herself, and dressed herself the next morning, she
seemed so weak and powerless!
Tony and Father John got home to dinner
about eight. They were both in good spirits,
for Mr. O’Malley’s speech had been so convincing
to them, that they conceived it could not but be equally
so to the jury. They forgot that they had previously
assured themselves of Thady’s evidence, and
that therefore they were prepared to believe every
word said on his behalf; but that this would by no
means be the case with the jury. They were very
sanguine, and Tony insisted that Counsellor O’Malley’s
health should be drunk with all the honours.
On the morning they went early into
town; they had obtained from the clerk of the peace
permission to make use of a small room within the
court, and here Feemy and Mrs. McKeon were to remain
undisturbed till the former was called for; then that
lady was to bring her into court, and even undertook
to go upon the table with her, and repeat to the jury,
if she would be allowed to do so, the evidence, which
they were all sure Feemy herself would not be able
to give in a voice loud enough to be heard by any
one. When the car stopped at the court-house
in Carrick-on-Shannon, it was found absolutely necessary
to carry her into the room, for she had apparently
lost all power of action. She neither cried nor
sobbed now; but gazed listlessly before her, with
her eyes fixed upon vacancy, as the two strong men
lifted her from the car, and supported her between
them by her arms up the steps into the court-house.
“This will never do,”
said Tony to his friend after leaving her in the room;
“this will never do; she’ll never be able
to say a word on the table; it’s only cruelty,
Father John, bringing her here.”
“But O’Malley says she
must come,” said Father John; “he says,
if she can take the oath, and speak but three or four
words to Mrs. McKeon, that will do.”
“She’ll never do it; she’ll
never be able to take the oath; she’ll have
to be carried on the table, and when there, she’ll
faint. Poor Thady! if he’s acquitted, the
first thing he’ll have to learn will be her
disgrace. You must tell him of that, Father John;
no one else can.”
“Poor fellow; it will be worse
to him than all. But she brought him to this,
and she must save him if she can.”
“I tell you,” said Tony,
“she’ll never speak a word upon that table;
we’d better tell O’Malley at once; ’t
would be only cruelty to put her there.”
They both accordingly went to O’Malley,
who was now in court, and told him that they thought
Feemy Macdermot could not be safely brought there.
He, however, still declared that it was imperative
for her brother’s safety that she should appear,
even if it were utterly impossible to get her to speak;
and that as she had been the person in fault, and
has he had had all the suffering, the cruelty would
be to him, if she were not brought forward.
Father John returned to the private
room, and tried to make her speak. He kneeled
down before her, and again began explaining to her
the purpose for which she was there, and implored her
to exert herself to save her brother. She once
or twice opened her mouth, as if speaking, but uttered
no sound. She understood, however, what the priest
said to her, for she gently pressed his hand when he
took hold of hers, and nodded her head to him, when
he begged her to exert herself.
In the meantime Mr. O’Malley
was continuing the examination of his witnesses.
The first who appeared on this the second morning of
the trial was Corney Dolan, who unfortunately came
prepared to swear anything which he thought might
benefit the prisoner. He said he remembered the
evening of the wedding, he remembered the conversation
at which the prisoner had been present, that he was
quite sure Ussher’s name wasn’t mentioned or
at any rate that if mentioned, it was not accompanied
by any threat that, the only plan of violence
alluded to during the evening was that one or two of
the boys said that they would duck Keegan in a bog
hole if he came to receive rents at Ballycloran.
This was all very well, as long as
the questions were put to him by Mr. O’Malley;
but he was forced to tell a somewhat different tale
when examined by Mr. Allewinde, by whom he was made
to own that there had been projects abroad for murdering
Ussher, though he still maintained that none of them
had been alluded to by the party at Mrs. Mehan’s.
He was also made to give himself so bad a character
that it was more than probable that the jury would
not believe a word he had said.
Father John was the next; he was only
called on to prove that Thady had been intoxicated
when he left the party at Mrs. Mehan’s, and to
speak as to character. With tears in his eyes
he corroborated all that the barrister had said in
his speech in praise of his poor young friend; he
described him as honest, industrious, and manly patient
under his own wrongs, but unable to endure quietly
those inflicted on his family.
Tony McKeon was the next, and with
the exception of Feemy, the last; and he too had only
to speak as to character.
Just as Father John had been getting
into the chair, a policeman had come into court and
whispered to Doctor Blake, who was sitting in one
of the lower benches; and the Doctor immediately got
up from his seat and went away with the man.
Father John had not observed the occurrence;
but when he was leaving the table, and as Tony was
getting up, the latter whispered to him, “Blake
has been called out. Just look to Feemy.”
And at the same moment Mr. O’Malley said out
aloud:
“Mr. Magrath, if I might trouble
you so far, would you have the kindness to bring Miss
Macdermot into court? I do not anticipate that
we shall have much delay with Mr. McKeon’s evidence.”
Father John immediately hurried into
the room, where Mrs. McKeon had been left with her
charge; and his heart trembled within him as he remembered
the death-like look the poor girl had when he left
her but an hour since, and reflected that it was too
probably to her aid that Doctor Blake had been called.
And so it was. When he entered
the room, round the door of which a lot of frieze
coats had crowded, but which was kept shut, he found
Feemy on the ground, with her head supported on Mrs.
McKeon’s lap, and Blake kneeling beside her,
endeavouring to pour something into her mouth.
There was another woman standing in the room, and an
apothecary, whom the doctor had sent for; but Father
John was soon made to understand that medical skill
could avail but little, and that all the aid which
Feemy could now receive from her fellow-creatures
was to come from him.
To describe the scene which immediately
followed would be to treat so sacred a subject much
too lightly. The priest, however, found that
neither life nor reason was extinct; she acknowledged
the symbol of salvation in which she trusted, and
received that absolution from her sins which her church
considers necessary. Who can say how deeply she
had repented of her misdeeds during the many hours
of silent agony which she had endured!
Her arm was stretched out from her
body, and her hand was clasped tightly in that of
Mrs. McKeon’s. The moment before she drew
her final breath, she felt and tried to return the
pressure; she made one great struggle to speak.
“Myles” was the single word which her lips
had strength to form; and with that last effort poor
Feemy died.
In the meantime McKeon had given his
evidence in the court and had left the table Mr.
Allewinde having declined to cross-examine either
him or Father John. There was then a pause of
some little duration in court, during which Mr. O’Malley,
addressing the judge, said that Miss Macdermot, the
witness now about to be brought forward, was unfortunately
in a very weak state of health, so much so, that had
her evidence not been essential to her brother, he
should be most unwilling to have troubled her; he
then apologised for the delay, and asked for and obtained
permission for Mrs. McKeon to be on the table and
repeat the answers of the witness to the jury:
the judge merely premising that it would be necessary
that that lady should be sworn to repeat the true
answers.
There was still some further delay
after Mr. O’Malley had sat down. Mr. McKeon
got up to go and help to bring her into court, but
just in the doorway he met a man who whispered to
him; he did not return however, but hurried on to
the room where he had left his wife, and reached it
just as the breath left the poor girl’s body.
In spite of their distress it was apparent to all
that the truth must be immediately made known in the
court, and Mr. McKeon was leaving for the purpose
of telling Mr. O’Malley, when Father John laid
his hand upon his friend’s shoulder, and said
“Poor Thady, it will break his
heart to hear it. It must be kept from him.
But heaven only knows what’s best; he must hear
it at last. Go, McKeon, and tell O’Malley;
he’ll know what’s best to do.”
McKeon returned into court, and making
his way with difficulty close up to the barrister,
whispered in his ear that his witness was no more.
Mr. O’Malley, who had been standing,
instantly sat down, as if appalled by the suddenness
of the event. Every one in the court who had
seen McKeon’s face as he entered, felt aware
that something had happened to Feemy.
The judge leaned forward over his
desk, addressing himself particularly to Mr. O’Malley,
and said,
“Is Miss Macdermot too unwell,
Mr. O’Malley, to be brought into court?”
“My lord,” said he again,
rising from his seat, “she has already gone
before another judgment-seat. Macdermot,”
and he turned round to the prisoner in the dock, “you
have borne your sorrows hitherto like a man; you must
try and bear this also your sister is dead.
She has fallen the first victim God forbid
that another should be sacrificed. My lord, my
cause is now done; there is now no living witness,
but the prisoner, of that scene which I described to
you. The case must go to the jury as it is.”
During the time of the whole trial,
Thady had stood upright at the bar, with his elbow
leaning on the wooden rail, and his face resting on
his arm. He had almost constantly kept his eye
upon the speakers, occasionally turning his gaze to
the place where Father John had sat during the trial,
to see that he had not deserted him. During the
speech which Mr. O’Malley had made on his behalf,
he had brightened up, and looked more cheerful than
he had done for many months. When that was finished
he had felt more sanguine as to his acquittal than
he had done at any time since he had first given himself
up as a prisoner. During the short pause which
occurred in court immediately after McKeon left the
table, he had once or twice looked round to learn
if Feemy were coming, though the high woodwork of the
dock would effectually prevent him from seeing her
till she was at the table.
It will be remembered that Feemy’s
extreme illness had never been made known to her brother, much
less her lamentable situation. Father John had
told him that she was unwell, but he had not thought
it necessary to frighten him at the present time by
letting him know how very ill she was. The doctor’s
departure from court he did not notice at all.
Father John was sent for to his sister in a manner
which caused him no apprehension, and even
when McKeon went out to see whether she was coming,
it never occurred to Thady that the delay in his sister’s
appearance was occasioned by ill health. It was
only when he saw O’Malley sit down, after hearing
some whispered tidings from McKeon, that he felt alarmed.
When the barrister told the judge that his witness
had gone before another judgment-seat, it was still
evident from his face that he did not perfectly comprehend
what had happened; but there was no misunderstanding
the language in which the tidings were immediately
afterwards communicated to himself. He seemed
to make one attempt as if to say something; but the
feeling of his situation, and the paraphernalia of
the court awed him into silence, and he sank down
within the dock to hide his sorrow from the crowd
that were gazing at him.
There was some considerable delay
in the court after this, as though all the parties
concerned felt unwilling to commence business after
the shock which Feemy’s death had occasioned.
The judge sat back in his chair, silent and abstracted,
as if, valuable as he must know his own and the public
time to be, he felt unable to call on any one to proceed
with the case immediately after so sad an event.
At last Mr. Allewinde rose and said
that no one could regret more than himself the dreadfully
tragical manner in which the prisoner had lost the
benefit of the evidence, which it was expected his
sister would have been able to give on his behalf;
that he conceived that it would be anything but mercy
to the prisoner to delay the proceedings in their
present stage on account of what had happened; moreover,
he considered that doing so would be illegal.
He would suggest to the judge, to his learned friend
on the other side, and to the jury, whether any legal
and available use could be made of the evidence which
had been given by the prisoner’s sister before
the coroner.
This, however, Mr. O’Malley
declined, alleging that the questions put to Miss
Macdermot by the coroner, were merely intended to elicit
evidence that Captain Ussher had been killed by her
brother, and that the answers she then gave were of
course not such as would be favourable to the prisoner;
nor were such as could prove those facts which Mr.
O’Malley had intended to prove. Mr. O’Malley
finished by stating that as far as he was concerned
the case was ready to be submitted by his lordship
to the jury.
Mr. Allewinde, however, still had
the right of reply, and he was not the man to allow
any chance circumstance to prevent him making use
of it. He accordingly again got up to address
the jury. He told them that what he had to say
would not keep them long, and considering that he
was a lawyer and a barrister, he kept his word with
tolerable fidelity. He remarked that the evidence
of Brady had in no degree been shaken. That the
subjects in which Keegan had been examined had had
no reference to the case; and that it was quite plain
that Dolan had come forward to swear to anything which
he thought might tend to the prisoner’s acquittal.
He made no allusion whatever to Father John and Tony
McKeon, and then ended by saying, that “the unexpected
and melancholy death of Miss Macdermot was an occurrence
which could not but fill the breast of every one present
with most profound sympathy for the prisoner, that
he should abstain from saying a word which might be
unnecessarily disagreeable or painful to the feelings
of any one but that the jury must feel
that the prisoner would lose nothing from the loss
of her evidence. Of course,” he continued,
“in a point of law you are bound to look on
the case as if Miss Macdermot had died at the same
moment with her betrothed husband, for you are aware
that you cannot allow anything which my learned friend
has told you to be taken into consideration by you
in finding your verdict. But it will lessen the
pain which more or less you must suffer in this sad
case, to reflect what strong grounds you have for supposing
that the sister, had she lived, could have proved
nothing favourable to the brother; for had she been
able to do so, she would have done it when examined
before the coroner. I shall now trouble you no
further. His lordship in submitting the case
to you will give you doubtless the necessary caution
against allowing excited feelings to have any influence
over the verdict to which you shall come.”
Mr. Allewinde then sat down, and after
the lapse of one or two minutes the judge turned to
the jury, and spoke his charge to them upon the question.
He went deliberately through the whole evidence dwelt
upon various minor points in the prisoner’s
favour told them that the prisoner could
not be considered as guilty of murder, if there was
ground to believe that he had committed the act whilst
the deceased was forcibly carrying off his sister;
and that if they believed that the prisoner had never
before premeditated the death of the man he killed,
he could not be considered to have been guilty of
the crime for which he was now tried. He then
went at length into all the points; he showed the
jury that no evidence whatever had been brought up
to prove that the girl was in a senseless state when
Ussher was attacked; and that for anything they had
heard proved, she might have been walking quietly with
him. He then went into the evidence given by
Brady, and he stated it as his own opinion, that the
man was in the main to be believed; he argued that
his whole evidence, both on direct and cross-examination
had been given in a manner which seemed to him to
show an unwillingness to give more information than
he could possibly help on either side but
still with a determination not to forswear himself.
But at the same time he told them that this was a
question on which each juror should form his own opinion;
in fact that it was to judge of the value and credibility
of evidence that they were summoned. It was,
also, he said, for them to decide whether the death
of the revenue officer was premeditated by the party
at Mrs. Mehan’s when they talked of ridding
the country of him. He passed very slightly over
the remaining evidence, merely saying that this was
a case in which character could not weigh with them,
as, if the prisoner were guilty, his former apparent
good character only aggravated his sin. He then
concluded by telling the jurors that they were bound
by solemn oaths to allow nothing to interfere with
the truth of their verdict that they must
all deplore the untimely death of the young woman
who was to have appeared before them, and sympathise
with the brother for the loss of his sister but
that his misfortune in this respect, could not lighten
his guilt if he were guilty, or diminish the sacredness
of the duty which each juror owed to his country.
When the judge had finished, the jury
retired to consider their verdict; and the other business
of the assizes was proceeded with, as if nothing peculiar
had happened to check the regular routine duties of
the court.