THE DAY OF JUDGMENT
On the morning of the second day of
the trial Paul Stepaside woke from a troubled sleep.
Throughout the night he had been living again in his
dreams the scenes of the trial. They had been
confused and bewildered; but one fact dominated everything
else: the man who was his judge was his father!
When he woke, that was the first thought that appeared
clear in his mental horizon. Before he had gone
to sleep he realised that he hated his father with
a more intense hatred than when his mother had told
her story on the Altarnun Moors. No thought of
tenderness came into his mind. No feeling of
affection entered his heart. It seemed to him
as though all the darkness of his life, all the pain
he had ever suffered, all the wrongs he had ever endured,
were because of the man who, his mother declared,
was his father. And he hated him! It was
through him he lay in prison. It was through
him the shadow of the gallows rested upon him.
He realised, too, even although his heart refused
to assent to the finding of his brain, that he must
no longer love the woman who was dearer to him than
his own life. His sister? His heart made
mockery of the thought! No man loved a sister
as he loved Mary Bolitho. Only a half-sister,
it is true, but they were both children of the same
father. Oh, the bitter mockery, the terrible
irony of it! And this man, who stood for justice,
who represented the majesty of the law, who had risen
to one of the highest places in the realm of the law,
had been in reality a criminal ever since he came
to manhood. And this man had made it, as it
seemed to him, a sin for him to love the woman who
was all the world to him. His sister!
His sister! He had some idea that the English
law did not forbid a man marrying his own stepsister,
but something in his heart revolted against that.
And yet, and yet But what did
it all matter? He lay there in Strangeways Gaol
charged with murder. The first day of the trial
had gone black against him, and, although he knew
no more as to who murdered Ned Wilson than the veriest
stranger, he realised that he stood in the most imminent
danger. And the man who was really responsible
for everything, the man who was at the heart of it
all, was the judge! What should he do?
If he did what was in his heart, he could make him
a byword and a hissing through the whole country;
but that, again, meant disgrace for Mary, and he had
sworn that she must suffer nothing. The warder
brought him his morning meal, which he ate silently.
He was thinking what the day would bring forth.
He wondered how long the trial would last, and what
the jury would say. He could not see his way
through the tangle of his life. But as he thought
of everything a grim resolve mastered him. He
would not die; he simply would not! He would
fight to the very last. He would tear the evidence
which had been adduced in fragments. He would
proclaim his innocence, and not only proclaim it,
but prove it. He was sadly handicapped, for
whatever else he must do he must see to it that no
suspicion would attach to his mother. But without
allowing anyone to think of her in such a relation,
he would make it impossible for the jury to condemn
him.
When breakfast was over, he tramped
his little cell, thinking, thinking, considering a
score of plans, and discarding them, yet all the time
fighting his way towards his course of action.
He laughed as he reflected on the
irony of the situation. The judge would not
know what he knew, but sitting there in all his stately
dignity, arrayed in his robes of office, he would not
realise that the man charged with murder was his son.
He wondered how he could let him know it, wondered
how he could bring his own villainy home to him.
He had not one tender thought for his father, not
one only scorn, contempt, hatred was in
his heart when he thought of him. And yet he
was his own father father, too, of the woman
he loved, the woman whom he had held in his arms and
who had expressed her infinite faith in him.
Not long before the hour of the trial
the chaplain again paid him a visit. But Paul
was in no humour to receive him.
“I am afraid you only waste
your time coming to me,” he said. “I
appreciate the fact that you are a kind-hearted man,
but see, I haven’t an atom of faith, not an
atom. I do not believe in the value of your
religion. I am an atheist.”
“You believe nothing?” said the chaplain.
“Nothing as far as your profession is concerned,”
said Paul, “nothing.”
“Would nothing convince you?” said the
chaplain.
“Nothing,” replied Paul
grimly. And then he laughed. “I am
wrong, though,” he added. “Yes,
I think one thing would convince me. You remember
the story I told you yesterday or shall
we call it an incident, and not a story?”
“I remember. I suppose it had something
to do with your own life?”
“You have heard the miserable stories, then?”
said Paul.
“I have heard a great many things about you,”
replied the chaplain.
“Well, then,” said Paul.
“Let me say this to you: I think this would
convince me that there might be something in religion
if my father confessed his wrong, publicly confessed
it, mind you, and sought to do right; if he proclaimed
his ill-deeds before the world, and did all in his
power to rectify the wrong he had done. Then
I might believe.”
“And nothing else would convince you?”
said the chaplain.
“Nothing else,” said Paul.
“But who is your father? Where is he?”
“Ah,” said Paul.
“But it’s no use thinking of it any more.
The whole thing is hopeless, and life is just a great
mockery.”
The chaplain left him with a sad heart.
He was a kind man, and sought to do his duty, and
Paul had interested him strangely.
The court that day was, if possible,
more crowded than ever. The morning papers had
been filled with reports of the previous day’s
trial. The wildest of rumours had been afloat.
Descriptive articles had been written about the young
Member of Parliament who was accused of such a terrible
crime. His every word had been commented on.
His appearance had been discussed. The evidence
given had been the subject of thousands of gossiping
tongues. And so the court that day was simply
thronged with an intense, eager crowd. Moreover,
the inwardness of the trial had seized upon the imaginations
of the people. It was more real, more vivid
to them than it had been the day before. And
when Paul entered the dock, accompanied by two policemen,
a great silence fell upon the court, while every eye
was fixed upon him.
“He looks as hard and proud as ever!”
“Yes, there’s not much sign of repentance!”
“I wonder if the trial will close to-day?”
“There’s no knowing.
I’ve heard as ’ow several witnesses will
be brought into court which was never thought of at
the beginning. Will Ashley says as ’ow
he saw Paul about half-past five on the morning of
the murder not far from Howden Clough. Will says
as ’ow there was a look in his eyes like the
eyes of a madman.”
“But Will never appeared before the coroner’s
inquest?”
“No; I suppose he wanted to
be kept out of it. But he ’appened to tell
his missis, and his missis told it to somebody else,
who told it to one of the policemen, and that’s
’ow it came about.”
In another part of the court, not
far from the barristers’ seats, two ladies discussed
Paul. They, too, had been brought there by morbid
curiosity aroused by this trial.
“Did you know that Judge Bolitho’s
daughter was here yesterday?”
“No. Was she?”
“Yes. I watched her face
during the trial. It was as pale as death.
I wonder how she dared to come.”
“Why, what do you mean?”
“Oh, you know she was engaged to young Wilson.”
“I’ve heard that was denied.”
“Well, anyhow, there’s
something about it in one of the Brunford papers,
and there’s no doubt Wilson was in love with
her.”
“Then no wonder she was pale.”
“Mrs. Jackson told me she saw her smile on the
prisoner.”
“She must have been mistaken. It’s
terribly interesting, isn’t it?”
“I wonder when they will commence. It’s
five minutes past time.”
This was true. Five minutes
had passed away since Paul had been led to the dock,
and still the trial had not commenced. The reason
for this was evident the judge had not
yet appeared. The jurymen were in their places,
conversing in low whispers one with another.
More than one was anxious and pale. A number
of barristers were also present, eager for the commencement
of the day’s trial. They were wondering
what new factor would be at work that day. To
most of them it was a case that was deeply interesting,
one which they wished to study and which might help
them in days to come. Newspaper reporters sat
busily writing. Each was trying to vie with the
other to produce a sensational description.
Presently, as if by magic, a great silence fell upon
the court. It was now ten minutes past the time
when the trial should commence, and still the judge
had not appeared. Each seemed to be wondering
what was the matter. The air was tense with excitement.
Could anything have happened? What did the judge
mean by being late? And still they waited and
watched, until at last the silence became almost painful.
Presently a deep sigh rose from the
crowded seats. It seemed as if the spectators
wanted to give vent to their feelings. A curtain
at the back of the hall was drawn aside, and Judge
Bolitho, with bowed head and staggering footsteps,
found his way to his accustomed seat.