The Wing-and-Wing Part 31
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Ithuel stood too much in habitual awe of the captain of his old s.h.i.+p to venture on an answer; but if looks could have done harm, that important functionary would not have escaped altogether uninjured. As he said nothing, the examination proceeded.
"You know him to be Raoul Yvard, the commander of the French privateer lugger, le Feu-Follet?" continued the Judge Advocate, deeming it prurient to fortify his record of the prisoner's confession of ident.i.ty with a little collateral evidence.
"Why--I _some_ think"--answered Ithuel, with a peculiar provincialism, that had a good deal of granite in it--"that is, I kind o'
conclude"--catching an a.s.sent from Raoul's eye--"oh! yes--of _that_ there isn't the smallest mite of doubt in the world. He's the captain of the lugger, and a right down good one he is!"
"You were with him in disguise when he came, into the Bay of Naples yesterday?"
"I in disguise, 'squire!--What have I got to disguise? I am an American of different callings, all of which I practyse as convenience demands; being a neutral, I've no need of disguises to go anywhere. I am never disguised except when my jib is a little bowsed out; and that, you know, is a come-over that befals most seafaring men at times."
"You need answer nothing concerning yourself that will tend to criminate you. Do you know with what inducement, or on what business, Raoul Yvard came into the Bay of Naples yesterday?"
"To own to you the candid truth, 'squire, I do not," answered Ithuel, simply; for the nature of the tie which bound the young Frenchman so closely to Ghita was a profound mystery, in all that related to its more sacred feelings, to a being generally so obtuse on matters of pure sentiment.
"Captain Rule is a good deal given to prying about on the coast; and what particular eend he had in view in this expedition I cannot tell you. His a'r'n'ds in sh.o.r.e, I must own, be sometimes onaccountable!--Witness the island of Elby, gentlemen."
Ithuel indulged in a small laugh as he made this allusion; for, in his own way, he had a humor in which he occasionally indulged, after a manner that belonged to the cla.s.s of which he was a conspicuous member.
"Never mind what occurred at Elba. Prisoner, do you wish to question the witness?"
"Etuelle," asked Raoul, "do you not know that I love Ghita Caraccioli?"
"Why, Captain Rule, I know you think so and say so--but I set down all these matters as somewhat various and onaccountable."
"Have I not often landed on the enemy's coast solely to see her and to be near her?"
By this time Ithuel, who was a little puzzled at first to understand what it all meant, had got his cue, and no witness could have acquitted himself better than he did from that moment.
"That you have," he answered; "a hundred times at least; and right in the teeth of my advice."
"Was not my sole object, in coming into the Bay yesterday, to find Ghita, and Ghita only?"
"Just so. Of that, gentlemen, there can be no more question than there is about Vesuvius standing up at the head of the Bay, smoking like a brick-kiln. That _was_ Captain Rule's sole a'r'n'd."
"I just understood ye to say, witness," put in Lyon, "and that only a bit since, that ye did not know the prisoner's motive in coming into the Bay of Naples. Ye called his behavior unaccountable."
"Very true, sir, and so it is to _me_. I know'd all along that _love_ was at the bottom of it; but _I_ don't call love a _motive_, while I do call it _unaccountable_. Love's a feelin' and not a nature. That's the explanation on't. Yes, I know'd it was _love_ for Miss Gyty, but then that's not a motive in law."
"Answer to the facts. The court will judge of the motive for itself. How do you know that love for the young woman you mention was Raoul Yvard's only object in coming into the Bay?"
"One finds out such things by keeping company with a man. Captain Rule went first to look for the young woman up on the mountain yonder, where her aunt lives, and I went with him to talk English if it got to be necessary; and not finding Gyty at home, we got a boat and followed her over to Naples. Thus, you see, sir, that I have reason to know what craft he was in chase of the whole time."
As all this was strictly true, Ithuel related it naturally and in a way to gain some credit.
"You say you accompanied Raoul Yvard, witness, in a visit to the aunt of the young woman called Ghita Caraccioli," observed Cuffe, in a careless way that was intended to entrap Ithuel into an unwary answer--"where did you go from when you set out on your journey?"
"That would depend on the place one kept his reckoning from and the time of starting. Now, _I_ might say I started from Ameriky, which part of the world I left some years since; or I might say from Nantes, the port in which we fitted for sea. As for Captain Rule, he would probably say Nantes."
"In what manner did you come from Nantes?" continued Cuffe, without betraying resentment at an answer that might be deemed impertinent; or surprise, as if he found it difficult to comprehend. "You did not make the journey on horseback, I should think?"
"Oh, I begin to understand you, Captain Cuffe. Why, if the truth must be said, we came in the lugger the Few-Folly."
"I supposed as much. And when you went to visit this aunt where did you leave the lugger?"
"We didn't leave her at all, sir; being under her canvas, our feet were no sooner in the boat and the line cast off than she left us as if we had been stuck up like a tree on dry ground."
"Where did this happen?"
"Afloat, of course, Captain Cuffe; such a thing would hardly come to pa.s.s ash.o.r.e."
"All that I understand; but you say the prisoner left his vessel in order to visit an aunt of the young woman's; thence he went into the Bay for the sole purpose of finding the young woman herself. Now, this is an important fact, as it concerns the prisoner's motives and may affect his life. The court must act with all the facts before it; as a commencement, tell us where Raoul Yvard left his lugger to go on yonder headland."
"I do not think, Captain Cuffe, you've got the story exactly right.
Captain Rule didn't go on the mountain, a'ter all, so much to see the aunt as to see the niece at the aunt's dwelling; if one would eend right in a story, he must begin right."
"I left le Feu-Follet, Monsieur le Capitaine," Raoul calmly observed, "not two cables' length from the very spot where your own s.h.i.+p is now lying; but it was at an hour of the night when the good people of Capri were asleep, and they knew nothing of our visit. You see the lugger is no longer here."
"And do you confirm this story under the solemnity of your oath?"
demanded Cuffe of Ithuel, little imagining how easy it was to the witness to confirm anything he saw fit in the way he mentioned.
"Sartain; every word is true, gentlemen," answered Ithuel. "It was not more than a cable's length from this very spot, according to my judgment."
"And where is the lugger now?" asked Cuffe, betraying the drift of all his questions in his eagerness to learn more.
Ithuel was not to be led on so hurriedly or so blindly. Affecting a girlish sort of coyness, he answered, simpering:
"Why, Captain Cuffe, I cannot think of answering a question like that under the solemnity of an oath, as you call it. No one can know where the little Folly is but them that's in her."
Cuffe was a little disconcerted at the answer, while Lyon smiled ironically; the latter then took upon himself the office of cross-examining, with an opinion of his own penetration and shrewdness that at least ought to have made him quite equal to encountering one of Ithuel's readiness in subterfuges.
"We do not expect you to tell us of your own knowledge, witness," he said, "precisely the position by lat.i.tude and longitude, or by the points of the compa.s.s, at this identical instant, of the craft called by some the le Few-Folly, by others the Few-Follay, and, as it would now seem, by yourself, the Little Folly; for that, as ye've well obsairved, can be known only to those who are actually on board her; but ye'll be remembering, perhaps, the place it was agreed on between you, where ye were to find the lugger at your return from this hazardous expedition that ye've been making amang ye, into the Bay of Naples?"
"I object to that question as contrary to law," put in Ithuel, with a spirit and prompt.i.tude that caused the Judge Advocate to start, and the members of the court to look at each other in surprise.
"Nay, if ye object to the question on the ground that a true ainswer will be criminating yoursel', ye'll be justified in so doing, by reason and propriety; but then ye'll consider well the consequences it may have on your own case, when that comes to be investigated."
"I object on gin'ral principles," said Ithuel. "Whatever Captain Rule may have said on the subject, admitting that he said anything, just to bear out the argument (by the way Ithuel called this word arg_oo_ment, a p.r.o.nunciation against which we enter our solemn protest); admitting, _I,_ say, that _he_ said anything on the subject, it cannot be testimony, as _hear_say evidence is ag'in law all the world over."
The members of the court looked at the Judge Advocate, who returned the glance with an air of suitable gravity; then, on a motion of Sir Frederick's, the court was cleared to discuss the point in private.
"How's this, Mr. Judge Advocate?" demanded Cuffe, as soon as the coast was clear; "it is of the last importance to find where that lugger is--do you hold that the question is contrary to law?"
"Its importance makes it pertinent, I think, sir, as for the legality, I do not see how it can be affected by the circ.u.mstance that the fact came up in discourse."
"D'ye think so?" observed Sir Frederick, looking much more profound than was his wont. "Legality is the boast of English law, and I should dislike excessively to fail in that great essential. What is _said_ must be _heard_, to be _repeated_; and this seems very like _hearsay_ testimony. I believe it's admitted all round we must reject _that_."
"What is your opinion, Captain Lyon?" demanded the president.
The Wing-and-Wing Part 31
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The Wing-and-Wing Part 31 summary
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