Carter Watson, a current
magazine under his arm, strolled slowly along, gazing
about him curiously. Twenty years had elapsed
since he had been on this particular street, and the
changes were great and stupefying. This Western
city of three hundred thousand souls had contained
but thirty thousand, when, as a boy, he had been wont
to ramble along its streets. In those days the
street he was now on had been a quiet residence street
in the respectable workingclass quarter. On this
late afternoon he found that it had been submerged
by a vast and vicious tenderloin. Chinese and
Japanese shops and dens abounded, all confusedly intermingled
with low white resorts and boozing dens. This
quiet street of his youth had become the toughest
quarter of the city.
He looked at his watch. It was
half-past five. It was the slack time of the
day in such a region, as he well knew, yet he was curious
to see. In all his score of years of wandering
and studying social conditions over the world, he
had carried with him the memory of his old town as
a sweet and wholesome place. The metamorphosis
he now beheld was startling. He certainly must
continue his stroll and glimpse the infamy to which
his town had descended.
Another thing: Carter Watson
had a keen social and civic consciousness. Independently
wealthy, he had been loath to dissipate his energies
in the pink teas and freak dinners of society, while
actresses, race-horses, and kindred diversions had
left him cold. He had the ethical bee in his
bonnet and was a reformer of no mean pretension, though
his work had been mainly in the line of contributions
to the heavier reviews and quarterlies and to the
publication over his name of brightly, cleverly written
books on the working classes and the slum-dwellers.
Among the twenty-seven to his credit occurred titles
such as, “If Christ Came to New Orleans,”
“The Worked-out Worker,” “Tenement
Reform in Berlin,” “The Rural Slums of
England,” “The people of the East Side,”
“Reform Versus Revolution,” “The
University Settlement as a Hot Bed of Radicalism”
and “The Cave Man of Civilization.”
But Carter Watson was neither morbid
nor fanatic. He did not lose his head over the
horrors he encountered, studied, and exposed.
No hair brained enthusiasm branded him. His humor
saved him, as did his wide experience and his conservative
philosophic temperament. Nor did he have any
patience with lightning change reform theories.
As he saw it, society would grow better only through
the painfully slow and arduously painful processes
of evolution. There were no short cuts, no sudden
régénérations. The betterment of mankind
must be worked out in agony and misery just as all
past social betterments had been worked out.
But on this late summer afternoon,
Carter Watson was curious. As he moved along
he paused before a gaudy drinking place. The sign
above read, “The Vendome.” There
were two entrances. One evidently led to the
bar. This he did not explore. The other was
a narrow hallway. Passing through this he found
himself in a huge room, filled with chair-encircled
tables and quite deserted. In the dim light he
made out a piano in the distance. Making a mental
note that he would come back some time and study the
class of persons that must sit and drink at those
multitudinous tables, he proceeded to circumnavigate
the room.
Now, at the rear, a short hallway
led off to a small kitchen, and here, at a table,
alone, sat Patsy Horan, proprietor of the Vendome,
consuming a hasty supper ere the evening rush of business.
Also, Patsy Horan was angry with the world. He
had got out of the wrong side of bed that morning,
and nothing had gone right all day. Had his barkeepers
been asked, they would have described his mental condition
as a grouch. But Carter Watson did not know this.
As he passed the little hallway, Patsy Horan’s
sullen eyes lighted on the magazine he carried under
his arm. Patsy did not know Carter Watson, nor
did he know that what he carried under his arm was
a magazine. Patsy, out of the depths of his grouch,
decided that this stranger was one of those pests who
marred and scarred the walls of his back rooms by
tacking up or pasting up advertisements. The
color on the front cover of the magazine convinced
him that it was such an advertisement. Thus the
trouble began. Knife and fork in hand, Patsy
leaped for Carter Watson.
“Out wid yeh!” Patsy bellowed. “I
know yer game!”
Carter Watson was startled. The
man had come upon him like the eruption of a jack-in-the-box.
“A defacin’ me walls,”
cried Patsy, at the same time emitting a string of
vivid and vile, rather than virile, epithets of opprobrium.
“If I have given any offense I did not mean
to ”
But that was as far as the visitor got. Patsy
interrupted.
“Get out wid yeh; yeh talk too
much wid yer mouth,” quoted Patsy, emphasizing
his remarks with flourishes of the knife and fork.
Carter Watson caught a quick vision
of that eating-fork inserted uncomfortably between
his ribs, knew that it would be rash to talk further
with his mouth, and promptly turned to go. The
sight of his meekly retreating back must have further
enraged Patsy Horan, for that worthy, dropping the
table implements, sprang upon him.
Patsy weighed one hundred and eighty
pounds. So did Watson. In this they were
equal. But Patsy was a rushing, rough-and-tumble
saloon-fighter, while Watson was a boxer. In
this the latter had the advantage, for Patsy came
in wide open, swinging his right in a perilous sweep.
All Watson had to do was to straight-left him and
escape. But Watson had another advantage.
His boxing, and his experience in the slums and ghettos
of the world, had taught him restraint.
He pivoted on his feet, and, instead
of striking, ducked the other’s swinging blow
and went into a clinch. But Patsy, charging like
a bull, had the momentum of his rush, while Watson,
whirling to meet him, had no momentum. As a result,
the pair of them went down, with all their three hundred
and sixty pounds of weight, in a long crashing fall,
Watson underneath. He lay with his head touching
the rear wall of the large room. The street was
a hundred and fifty feet away, and he did some quick
thinking. His first thought was to avoid trouble.
He had no wish to get into the papers of this, his
childhood town, where many of his relatives and family
friends still lived.
So it was that he locked his arms
around the man on top of him, held him close, and
waited for the help to come that must come in response
to the crash of the fall. The help came that
is, six men ran in from the bar and formed about in
a semi-circle.
“Take him off, fellows,”
Watson said. “I haven’t struck him,
and I don’t want any fight.”
But the semi-circle remained silent.
Watson held on and waited. Patsy, after various
vain efforts to inflict damage, made an overture.
“Leggo o’ me an’ I’ll
get off o’ yeh,” said he.
Watson let go, but when Patsy scrambled
to his feet he stood over his recumbent foe, ready
to strike.
“Get up,” Patsy commanded.
His voice was stern and implacable,
like the voice of God calling to judgment, and Watson
knew there was no mercy there.
“Stand back and I’ll get up,” he
countered.
“If yer a gentleman, get up,”
quoth Patsy, his pale blue eyes aflame with wrath,
his fist ready for a crushing blow.
At the same moment he drew his foot
back to kick the other in the face. Watson blocked
the kick with his crossed arms and sprang to his feet
so quickly that he was in a clinch with his antagonist
before the latter could strike. Holding him,
Watson spoke to the onlookers:
“Take him away from me, fellows.
You see I am not striking him. I don’t
want to fight. I want to get out of here.”
The circle did not move nor speak.
Its silence was ominous and sent a chill to Watson’s
heart.
Patsy made an effort to throw him,
which culminated in his putting Patsy on his back.
Tearing loose from him, Watson sprang to his feet and
made for the door. But the circle of men was
interposed a wall. He noticed the white, pasty
faces, the kind that never see the sun, and knew that
the men who barred his way were the nightprowlers and
preying beasts of the city jungle. By them he
was thrust back upon the pursuing, bull-rushing Patsy.
Again it was a clinch, in which, in
momentary safety, Watson appealed to the gang.
And again his words fell on deaf ears. Then it
was that he knew of many similar knew fear. For
he had known of many similar situations, in low dens
like this, when solitary men were man-handled, their
ribs and features caved in, themselves beaten and kicked
to death. And he knew, further, that if he were
to escape he must neither strike his assailant nor
any of the men who opposed him.
Yet in him was righteous indignation.
Under no circumstances could seven to one be fair.
Also, he was angry, and there stirred in him the fighting
beast that is in all men. But he remembered his
wife and children, his unfinished book, the ten thousand
rolling acres of the up-country ranch he loved so
well. He even saw in flashing visions the blue
of the sky, the golden sun pouring down on his flower-spangled
meadows, the lazy cattle knee-deep in the brooks, and
the flash of trout in the riffles. Life was good-too
good for him to risk it for a moment’s sway
of the beast. In short, Carter Watson was cool
and scared.
His opponent, locked by his masterly
clinch, was striving to throw him. Again Watson
put him on the floor, broke away, and was thrust back
by the pasty-faced circle to duck Patsy’s swinging
right and effect another clinch. This happened
many times. And Watson grew even cooler, while
the baffled Patsy, unable to inflict punishment, raged
wildly and more wildly. He took to batting with
his head in the clinches. The first time, he
landed his forehead flush on Watson’s nose.
After that, the latter, in the clinches, buried his
face in Patsy’s breast. But the enraged
Patsy batted on, striking his own eye and nose and
cheek on the top of the other’s head. The
more he was thus injured, the more and the harder
did Patsy bat.
This one-sided contest continued for
twelve or fifteen minutes. Watson never struck
a blow, and strove only to escape. Sometimes,
in the free moments, circling about among the tables
as he tried to win the door, the pasty-faced men gripped
his coat-tails and flung him back at the swinging
right of the on-rushing Patsy. Time upon time,
and times without end, he clinched and put Patsy on
his back, each time first whirling him around and
putting him down in the direction of the door and
gaining toward that goal by the length of the fall.
In the end, hatless, disheveled, with
streaming nose and one eye closed, Watson won to the
sidewalk and into the arms of a policeman.
“Arrest that man,” Watson panted.
“Hello, Patsy,” said the policeman.
“What’s the mix-up?”
“Hello, Charley,” was the answer.
“This guy comes in ”
“Arrest that man, officer,” Watson repeated.
“G’wan! Beat it!” said Patsy.
“Beat it!” added the policeman. “If
you don’t, I’ll pull you in.”
“Not unless you arrest that
man. He has committed a violent and unprovoked
assault on me.”
“Is it so, Patsy?” was the officer’s
query.
“Nah. Lemme tell you,
Charley, an’ I got the witnesses to prove it,
so help me God. I was settin’ in me kitchen
eatin’ a bowl of soup, when this guy comes in
an’ gets gay wid me. I never seen him in
me born days before. He was drunk ”
“Look at me, officer,”
protested the indignant sociologist. “Am
I drunk?”
The officer looked at him with sullen,
menacing eyes and nodded to Patsy to continue.
“This guy gets gay wid me.
‘I’m Tim McGrath,’ says he, ‘an’
I can do the like to you,’ says he. ‘Put
up yer hands.’ I smiles, an’ wid that,
biff biff, he lands me twice an’ spills me soup.
Look at me eye. I’m fair murdered.”
“What are you going to do, officer?” Watson
demanded.
“Go on, beat it,” was the answer, “or
I’ll pull you sure.”
The civic righteousness of Carter Watson flamed up.
“Mr. Officer, I protest ”
But at that moment the policeman grabbed
his arm with a savage jerk that nearly overthrew him.
“Come on, you’re pulled.”
“Arrest him, too,” Watson demanded.
“Nix on that play,” was the reply.
“What did you assault him for, him a peacefully
eatin’ his soup?”
II-
Carter Watson was genuinely angry.
Not only had he been wantonly assaulted, badly battered,
and arrested, but the morning papers without exception
came out with lurid accounts of his drunken brawl with
the proprietor of the notorious Vendome. Not
one accurate or truthful line was published.
Patsy Horan and his satellites described the battle
in detail. The one incontestable thing was that
Carter Watson had been drunk. Thrice he had been
thrown out of the place and into the gutter, and thrice
he had come back, breathing blood and fire and announcing
that he was going to clean out the place. “Eminent
sociologist jagged and jugged,”
was the first head-line he read, on the front page,
accompanied by a large portrait of himself. Other
headlines were: “Carter Watson
aspired to championship honors”;
“Carter Watson gets his”;
“Noted sociologist attempts to
clean out A tenderloin cafe”;
and “Carter Watson knocked out
by Patsy Horan in three rounds.”
At the police court, next morning,
under bail, appeared Carter Watson to answer the complaint
of the People Versus Carter Watson, for the latter’s
assault and battery on one Patsy Horan. But first,
the Prosecuting Attorney, who was paid to prosecute
all offenders against the People, drew him aside and
talked with him privately.
“Why not let it drop!”
said the Prosecuting Attorney. “I tell you
what you do, Mr. Watson: Shake hands with Mr.
Horan and make it up, and we’ll drop the case
right here. A word to the Judge, and the case
against you will be dismissed.”
“But I don’t want it dismissed,”
was the answer. “Your office being what
it is, you should be prosecuting me instead of asking
me to make up with this this fellow.”
“Oh, I’ll prosecute you
all right,” retorted the Prosecuting Attorney.
“Also you will have to prosecute
this Patsy Horan,” Watson advised; “for
I shall now have him arrested for assault and battery.”
“You’d better shake and
make up,” the Prosecuting Attorney repeated,
and this time there was almost a threat in his voice.
The trials of both men were set for
a week later, on the same morning, in Police Judge
Witberg’s court.
“You have no chance,”
Watson was told by an old friend of his boyhood, the
retired manager of the biggest paper in the city.
“Everybody knows you were beaten up by this
man. His reputation is most unsavory. But
it won’t help you in the least. Both cases
will be dismissed. This will be because you are
you. Any ordinary man would be convicted.”
“But I do not understand,”
objected the perplexed sociologist. “Without
warning I was attacked by this man; and badly beaten.
I did not strike a blow. I ”
“That has nothing to do with it,” the
other cut him off.
“Then what is there that has anything to do
with it?”
“I’ll tell you. You
are now up against the local police and political
machine. Who are you? You are not even a
legal resident in this town. You live up in the
country. You haven’t a vote of your own
here. Much less do you swing any votes.
This dive proprietor swings a string of votes in his
precincts a mighty long string.”
“Do you mean to tell me that
this Judge Witberg will violate the sacredness of
his office and oath by letting this brute off?”
Watson demanded.
“Watch him,” was the grim
reply. “Oh, he’ll do it nicely enough.
He will give an extra-legal, extra-judicial decision,
abounding in every word in the dictionary that stands
for fairness and right.”
“But there are the newspapers,” Watson
cried.
“They are not fighting the administration
at present. They’ll give it to you hard.
You see what they have already done to you.”
“Then these snips of boys on
the police detail won’t write the truth?”
“They will write something so
near like the truth that the public will believe it.
They write their stories under instruction, you know.
They have their orders to twist and color, and there
won’t be much left of you when they get done.
Better drop the whole thing right now. You are
in bad.”
“But the trials are set.”
“Give the word and they’ll
drop them now. A man can’t fight a machine
unless he has a machine behind him.”
III-
But Carter Watson was stubborn.
He was convinced that the machine would beat him,
but all his days he had sought social experience, and
this was certainly something new.
The morning of the trial the Prosecuting
Attorney made another attempt to patch up the affair.
“If you feel that way, I should
like to get a lawyer to prosecute the case,”
said Watson.
“No, you don’t,”
said the Prosecuting Attorney. “I am paid
by the People to prosecute, and prosecute I will.
But let me tell you. You have no chance.
We shall lump both cases into one, and you watch out.”
Judge Witberg looked good to Watson.
A fairly young man, short, comfortably stout, smooth-shaven
and with an intelligent face, he seemed a very nice
man indeed. This good impression was added to
by the smiling lips and the wrinkles of laughter in
the corners of his black eyes. Looking at him
and studying him, Watson felt almost sure that his
old friend’s prognostication was wrong.
But Watson was soon to learn.
Patsy Horan and two of his satellites testified to
a most colossal aggregation of perjuries. Watson
could not have believed it possible without having
experienced it. They denied the existence of
the other four men. And of the two that testified,
one claimed to have been in the kitchen, a witness
to Watson’s unprovoked assault on Patsy, while
the other, remaining in the bar, had witnessed Watson’s
second and third rushes into the place as he attempted
to annihilate the unoffending Patsy. The vile
language ascribed to Watson was so voluminously and
unspeakably vile, that he felt they were injuring
their own case. It was so impossible that he should
utter such things. But when they described the
brutal blows he had rained on poor Patsy’s face,
and the chair he demolished when he vainly attempted
to kick Patsy, Watson waxed secretly hilarious and
at the same time sad. The trial was a farce,
but such lowness of life was depressing to contemplate
when he considered the long upward climb humanity must
make.
Watson could not recognize himself,
nor could his worst enemy have recognized him, in
the swashbuckling, rough-housing picture that was
painted of him. But, as in all cases of complicated
perjury, rifts and contradictions in the various
stories appeared. The Judge somehow failed to
notice them, while the Prosecuting Attorney and Patsy’s
attorney shied off from them gracefully. Watson
had not bothered to get a lawyer for himself, and
he was now glad that he had not.
Still, he retained a semblance of
faith in Judge Witberg when he went himself on the
stand and started to tell his story.
“I was strolling casually along
the street, your Honor,” Watson began, but was
interrupted by the Judge.
“We are not here to consider
your previous actions,” bellowed Judge Witberg.
“Who struck the first blow?”
“Your Honor,” Watson pleaded,
“I have no witnesses of the actual fray, and
the truth of my story can only be brought out by telling
the story fully ”
Again he was interrupted.
“We do not care to publish any
magazines here,” Judge Witberg roared, looking
at him so fiercely and malevolently that Watson could
scarcely bring himself to believe that this was same
man he had studied a few minutes previously.
“Who struck the first blow?” Patsy’s
attorney asked.
The Prosecuting Attorney interposed,
demanding to know which of the two cases lumped together
was, and by what right Patsy’s lawyer, at that
stage of the proceedings, should take the witness.
Patsy’s attorney fought back. Judge Witberg
interfered, professing no knowledge of any two cases
being lumped together. All this had to be explained.
Battle royal raged, terminating in both attorneys
apologizing to the Court and to each other. And
so it went, and to Watson it had the seeming of a
group of pickpockets ruffling and bustling an
honest man as they took his purse. The machine
was working, that was all.
“Why did you enter this place
of unsavory reputations?” was asked him.
“It has been my custom for many
years, as a student of economics and sociology, to
acquaint myself ”
But this was as far as Watson got.
“We want none of your ologies
here,” snarled Judge Witberg. “It
is a plain question. Answer it plainly.
Is it true or not true that you were drunk? That
is the gist of the question.”
When Watson attempted to tell how
Patsy had injured his face in his attempts to bat
with his head, Watson was openly scouted and flouted,
and Judge Witberg again took him in hand.
“Are you aware of the solemnity
of the oath you took to testify to nothing but the
truth on this witness stand?” the Judge demanded.
“This is a fairy story you are telling.
It is not reasonable that a man would so injure himself,
and continue to injure himself, by striking the soft
and sensitive parts of his face against your head.
You are a sensible man. It is unreasonable, is
it not?”
“Men are unreasonable when they
are angry,” Watson answered meekly.
Then it was that Judge Witberg was
deeply outraged and righteously wrathful.
“What right have you to say
that?” he cried. “It is gratuitous.
It has no bearing on the case. You are here as
a witness, sir, of events that have transpired.
The Court does not wish to hear any expressions of
opinion from you at all.”
“I but answered your question,
your Honor,” Watson protested humbly.
“You did nothing of the sort,”
was the next blast. “And let me warn you,
sir, let me warn you, that you are laying yourself
liable to contempt by such insolence. And I will
have you know that we know how to observe the law
and the rules of courtesy down here in this little
courtroom. I am ashamed of you.”
And, while the next punctilious legal
wrangle between the attorneys interrupted his tale
of what happened in the Vendome, Carter Watson, without
bitterness, amused and at the same time sad, saw rise
before him the machine, large and small, that dominated
his country, the unpunished and shameless grafts of
a thousand cities perpetrated by the spidery and vermin-like
creatures of the machines. Here it was before
him, a courtroom and a judge, bowed down in subservience
by the machine to a dive-keeper who swung a string
of votes. Petty and sordid as it was, it was
one face of the many-faced machine that loomed colossally,
in every city and state, in a thousand guises overshadowing
the land.
A familiar phrase rang in his ears:
“It is to laugh.” At the height of
the wrangle, he giggled, once, aloud, and earned a
sullen frown from Judge Witberg. Worse, a myriad
times, he decided, were these bullying lawyers and
this bullying judge then the bucko mates in first quality
hell-ships, who not only did their own bullying but
protected themselves as well. These petty rapscallions,
on the other hand, sought protection behind the majesty
of the law. They struck, but no one was permitted
to strike back, for behind them were the prison cells
and the clubs of the stupid policemen paid
and professional fighters and beaters-up of men.
Yet he was not bitter. The grossness and the sliminess
of it was forgotten in the simple grotesqueness of
it, and he had the saving sense of humor.
Nevertheless, hectored and heckled
though he was, he managed in the end to give a simple,
straightforward version of the affair, and, despite
a belligerent cross-examination, his story was not
shaken in any particular. Quite different it
was from the perjuries that had shouted aloud from
the perjuries of Patsy and his two witnesses.
Both Patsy’s attorney and the
Prosecuting Attorney rested their cases, letting everything
go before the Court without argument. Watson
protested against this, but was silenced when the Prosecuting
Attorney told him that Public Prosecutor and knew
his business.
“Patrick Horan has testified
that he was in danger of his life and that he was
compelled to defend himself,” Judge Witberg’s
verdict began. “Mr. Watson has testified
to the same thing. Each has sworn that the other
struck the first blow; each has sworn that the other
made an unprovoked assault on him. It is an axiom
of the law that the defendant should be given the
benefit of the doubt. A very reasonable doubt
exists. Therefore, in the case of the People
Versus Carter Watson the benefit of the doubt is given
to said Carter Watson and he is herewith ordered discharged
from custody. The same reasoning applies to the
case of the People Versus Patrick Horan. He is
given the benefit of the doubt and discharged from
custody. My recommendation is that both defendants
shake hands and make up.”
In the afternoon papers the first
headline that caught Watson’s eye was:
“Carter Watson acquitted.”
In the second paper it was: “Carter
Watson escapes A fine.”
But what capped everything was the one beginning:
“Carter Watson A good fellow.”
In the text he read how Judge Witberg had advised
both fighters to shake hands, which they promptly did.
Further, he read:
“‘Let’s have a nip on it,’
said Patsy Horan.
“‘Sure,’ said Carter Watson.
“And, arm in arm, they ambled for the nearest
saloon.”
IV-
Now, from the whole adventure, Watson
carried away no bitterness. It was a social experience
of a new order, and it led to the writing of another
book, which he entitled, “Police court
procedure: A Tentative Analysis.”
One summer morning a year later, on
his ranch, he left his horse and himself clambered
on through a miniature canyon to inspect some rock
ferns he had planted the previous winter. Emerging
from the upper end of the canyon, he came out on one
of his flower-spangled meadows, a delightful isolated
spot, screened from the world by low hills and clumps
of trees. And here he found a man, evidently on
a stroll from the summer hotel down at the little
town a mile away. They met face to face and the
recognition was mutual. It was Judge Witberg.
Also, it was a clear case of trespass, for Watson
had trespass signs upon his boundaries, though he
never enforced them.
Judge Witberg held out his hand, which Watson refused
to see.
“Politics is a dirty trade,
isn’t it, Judge?” he remarked. “Oh,
yes, I see your hand, but I don’t care to take
it. The papers said I shook hands with Patsy
Horan after the trial. You know I did not, but
let me tell you that I’d a thousand times rather
shake hands with him and his vile following of curs,
than with you.”
Judge Witberg was painfully flustered,
and as he hemmed and hawed and essayed to speak, Watson,
looking at him, was struck by a sudden whim, and he
determined on a grim and facetious antic.
“I should scarcely expect any
animus from a man of your acquirements and knowledge
of the world,” the Judge was saying.
“Animus?” Watson replied.
“Certainly not. I haven’t such a thing
in my nature. And to prove it, let me show you
something curious, something you have never seen before.”
Casting about him, Watson picked up a rough stone
the size of his fist. “See this. Watch
me.”
So saying, Carter Watson tapped himself
a sharp blow on the cheek. The stone laid the
flesh open to the bone and the blood spurted forth.
“The stone was too sharp,”
he announced to the astounded police judge, who thought
he had gone mad.
“I must bruise it a trifle.
There is nothing like being realistic in such matters.”
Whereupon Carter Watson found a smooth
stone and with it pounded his cheek nicely several
times.
“Ah,” he cooed. “That
will turn beautifully green and black in a few hours.
It will be most convincing.”
“You are insane,” Judge Witberg quavered.
“Don’t use such vile language
to me,” said Watson. “You see my bruised
and bleeding face? You did that, with that right
hand of yours. You hit me twice biff,
biff. It is a brutal and unprovoked assault.
I am in danger of my life. I must protect myself.”
Judge Witberg backed away in alarm
before the menacing fists of the other.
“If you strike me I’ll
have you arrested,” Judge Witberg threatened.
“That is what I told Patsy,”
was the answer. “And do you know what he
did when I told him that?”
“No.”
“That!”
And at the same moment Watson’s
right fist landed flush on Judge Witberg’s nose,
putting that legal gentleman over on his back on the
grass.
“Get up!” commanded Watson.
“If you are a gentleman, get up that’s
what Patsy told me, you know.”
Judge Witberg declined to rise, and
was dragged to his feet by the coat-collar, only to
have one eye blacked and be put on his back again.
After that it was a red Indian massacre. Judge
Witberg was humanely and scientifically beaten up.
His checks were boxed, his cars cuffed, and his face
was rubbed in the turf. And all the time Watson
exposited the way Patsy Horan had done it. Occasionally,
and very carefully, the facetious sociologist administered
a real bruising blow. Once, dragging the poor
Judge to his feet, he deliberately bumped his own nose
on the gentleman’s head. The nose promptly
bled.
“See that!” cried Watson,
stepping back and deftly shedding his blood all down
his own shirt front. “You did it. With
your fist you did it. It is awful. I am
fair murdered. I must again defend myself.”
And once more Judge Witberg impacted
his features on a fist and was sent to grass.
“I will have you arrested,” he sobbed
as he lay.
“That’s what Patsy said.”
“A brutal –sniff, sniff, and
unprovoked sniff, sniff assault.”
“That’s what Patsy said.”
“I will surely have you arrested.”
“Speaking slangily, not if I can beat you to
it.”
And with that, Carter Watson departed
down the canyon, mounted his horse, and rode to town.
An hour later, as Judge Witberg limped
up the grounds to his hotel, he was arrested by a
village constable on a charge of assault and battery
preferred by Carter Watson.
V-
“Your Honor,” Watson said
next day to the village Justice, a well to do farmer
and graduate, thirty years before, from a cow college,
“since this Sol Witberg has seen fit to charge
me with battery, following upon my charge of battery
against him, I would suggest that both cases be lumped
together. The testimony and the facts are the
same in both cases.”
To this the Justice agreed, and the
double case proceeded. Watson, as prosecuting
witness, first took the stand and told his story.
“I was picking flowers,”
he testified. “Picking flowers on my own
land, never dreaming of danger. Suddenly this
man rushed upon me from behind the trees. ‘I
am the Dodo,’ he says, ’and I can do you
to a frazzle. Put up your hands.’
I smiled, but with that, biff, biff, he struck me,
knocking me down and spilling my flowers. The
language he used was frightful. It was an unprovoked
and brutal assault. Look at my cheek. Look
at my nose I could not understand it.
He must have been drunk. Before I recovered from
my surprise he had administered this beating.
I was in danger of my life and was compelled to defend
himself. That is all, Your Honor, though I must
say, in conclusion, that I cannot get over my perplexity.
Why did he say he was the Dodo? Why did he so
wantonly attack me?”
And thus was Sol Witberg given a liberal
education in the art of perjury. Often, from
his high seat, he had listened indulgently to police
court perjuries in cooked-up cases; but for the first
time perjury was directed against him, and he no longer
sat above the court, with the bailiffs, the Policemen’s
clubs, and the prison cells behind him.
“Your Honor,” he cried,
“never have I heard such a pack of lies told
by so bare-faced a liar !”
Watson here sprang to his feet.
“Your Honor, I protest.
It is for your Honor to decide truth or falsehood.
The witness is on the stand to testify to actual events
that have transpired. His personal opinion upon
things in general, and upon me, has no bearing on
the case whatever.”
The Justice scratched his head and
waxed phlegmatically indignant.
“The point is well taken,”
he decided. “I am surprised at you, Mr.
Witberg, claiming to be a judge and skilled in the
practice of the law, and yet being guilty of such
unlawyerlike conduct. Your manner, sir, and your
methods, remind me of a shyster. This is a simple
case of assault and battery. We are here to determine
who struck the first blow, and we are not interested
in your estimates of Mr. Watson’s personal character.
Proceed with your story.”
Sol Witberg would have bitten his
bruised and swollen lip in chagrin, had it not hurt
so much. But he contained himself and told a simple,
straightforward, truthful story.
“Your Honor,” Watson said,
“I would suggest that you ask him what he was
doing on my premises.”
“A very good question.
What were you doing, sir, on Mr. Watson’s premises?”
“I did not know they were his premises.”
“It was a trespass, your Honor,”
Watson cried. “The warnings are posted
conspicuously.”
“I saw no warnings,” said Sol Witberg.
“I have seen them myself,”
snapped the Justice. “They are very conspicuous.
And I would warn you, sir, that if you palter with
the truth in such little matters you may darken your
more important statements with suspicion. Why
did you strike Mr. Watson?”
“Your Honor, as I have testified,
I did not strike a blow.”
The Justice looked at Carter Watson’s
bruised and swollen visage, and turned to glare at
Sol Witberg.
“Look at that man’s cheek!”
he thundered. “If you did not strike a blow
how comes it that he is so disfigured and injured?”
“As I testified ”
“Be careful,” the Justice warned.
“I will be careful, sir.
I will say nothing but the truth. He struck himself
with a rock. He struck himself with two different
rocks.”
“Does it stand to reason that
a man, any man not a lunatic, would so injure himself,
and continue to injure himself, by striking the soft
and sensitive parts of his face with a stone?”
Carter Watson demanded
“It sounds like a fairy story,”
was the Justice’s comment.
“Mr. Witberg, had you been drinking?”
“No, sir.”
“Do you never drink?”
“On occasion.”
The Justice meditated on this answer with an air of
astute profundity.
Watson took advantage of the opportunity
to wink at Sol Witberg, but that much-abused gentleman
saw nothing humorous in the situation.
“A very peculiar case, a very
peculiar case,” the Justice announced, as he
began his verdict. “The evidence of the
two parties is flatly contradictory. There are
no witnesses outside the two principals. Each
claims the other committed the assault, and I have
no legal way of determining the truth. But I
have my private opinion, Mr. Witberg, and I would
recommend that henceforth you keep off of Mr. Watson’s
premises and keep away from this section of the country ”
“This is an outrage!” Sol Witberg blurted
out.
“Sit down, sir!” was the
Justice’s thundered command. “If you
interrupt the Court in this manner again, I shall
fine you for contempt. And I warn you I shall
fine you heavily you, a judge yourself,
who should be conversant with the courtesy and dignity
of courts. I shall now give my verdict:
“It is a rule of law that the
defendant shall be given the benefit of the doubt.
As I have said, and I repeat, there is no legal way
for me to determine who struck the first blow.
Therefore, and much to my regret,” here
he paused and glared at Sol Witberg “in
each of these cases I am compelled to give the defendant
the benefit of the doubt. Gentlemen, you are
both dismissed.”
“Let us have a nip on it,”
Watson said to Witberg, as they left the courtroom;
but that outraged person refused to lock arms and amble
to the nearest saloon.