.V ^>. . V ■'^ X^ v^^ "^^^ «2^^ ^""^ic^' •C'^^-^'^^-^ ' ^ ^ r-^ .C .cO A^ ^^, S *^ g 1 \ ,0' ^t^ ^/ '^""^^J^^.* , .0 A . V 1 8 . -^^ V " ^ * <* ^ > ^^r^v" -^■^■^ .SJ> ^^"^. . ' '^^ <* ;/: x°°- .0^ ^A%, ■^ ^J- C ^\ '\' '/>l ;.# -t .^^- ■'■■^.. •V^^M^- \- ' 7 /^' 1^3^/ '^%V o 0^ <^- *onO^ \^^ '^^ .^^^^ •^^^^ -v>' »^- : -'-^,^^'" * ,-0 ^^^'^ .. • 0^ Oo. A>' /-v A.* y -^ ,0o .^^ ''^>. .^:^ -n^. V^ : ^S^ V ,x^ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/robberyunderlawOOchal U. S. BOARD OF TAX APPEALS DIV,.:^^: DOCKIJ^^PJ^-Z ADIITTED IN EVIDENOC iyiAY3l 1932 REBPONDEHT'S ^?r^ See Note to Frontispiece, page 185. ^^'>r Robbery Under Law OR The Battle of the Millionaires A PIvAY In Three Acts and Three Scenes TIME, 1887 TREATING OF THE ADVENTURES OF THE AUTHOR OF " WHO'S LOONEY NOAV?*' By John Armstrong Chaloner AUTHOR OF SCORPIO SUNDAY'S COMPLIMENTS TO SOCIETY WOMEN. "We're always hearing al>out poor girls who go wrong, and sell them- selves to the Bevil, and te^npt men into sin. If you believe what some folks say, you'd think it was only the six-dollar-a-week factory girl that filled the joints, and wrecked the homes, and lured av)ay 7n others' darlings. As a matter of fact, some of the most dangerous women, some of the most un- principled sirens, are to be found among the daughters of the rich; women who will lie for money, steal for money, wear the scarlet letter for money — murder for money." — William Sunday. PALMETTO PRESS Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen. FIFTY CENTS \^^ COFYBIGHT PAiadETTo Press 1915. 'CI. A 4 (1 173 5 JUL 10 1315 9V PROLOQUE Since finishing the phi 3^ : "Robbery Under Law," last FalL the undersigned has written another play found herewith, entitled: "The Hazard Of The Die," a three act play in blank verse treating of the conspiracy of Catiline during the last days of the Roman Republic. A word of explanation is germane to the matter in hand. Upon finishing "Robbery Under Law," this last Fall, the writer sent it to a friend — a lady — upon a large New York daily paper. She in turn sent it to another lady — a friend of hers — with the request that she bring the play to the at- tention of her friend's — a large Xew York theatrical man- ager's — play-reader. The letter below is an exact transcript of the letter of the undersigned to lady number two. In closing this introduction to an introduction — so to speak— it might be observed that the length of the first pky — a thing which can be remedied by a blue pencil and judicious and experienced cutting, without in the least interfering with the action of the drama — the length has been retained — even added to — since the letter below was written — in order to serve OS a sort of propaganda tovards the cause of Lunacy Law re- form^ to which the icriter has sacrificed the past eighteen years of his life — com.€ March 13, 1915. All the characters — with the exception of the heroine's — which is entirely an im- aginary^ one — ha^^ng been photographed actually — so to speak — from life; and all the actions of all the characters — bar the heroine's — having been practically copies from court records as is indicated in the subjoined letter. To that end the writer has left his comments unpruned, upon the abominable laws, and the even more abominable administration of said laws, by the New York Courts, both State and Federal, set forth in "Robbery Under Law."t fThe object being to put before the papers the deadly disease eating the fibre of our body-politic in vicious iL/unacy Legislation obtaining in 40 per cent, of the States of the United States; as "Damaged Goods" put before the papers and public the deadly disease eating the flesh of alas! but too many of the peoples of the earth. P Pw L G Charles Eeade's brilliant and powerful novel: **Very Hard Cash." of some fifty or more years ago. revolutionized the treatment of prisoners behind the bars of English Insane Asylimis. It is far too much to expect the same result from "Eobbery Under Law." but — for what it is worth as a photo- graphic exposition of cold. hard, every-day facts, in our al- legedly hiunane. and civilized, and upright community of the United States — it is hereby launched upon the perilous seas of literature. JOHX ARMSTEOXG CHALOXER, "The Merry Mills." Cobham. Albemarle County. Virginia. December '21. 1914. Cobham. Va.. and of the *Xew York Eichmond. Virginia. October 24. 1914. Miss . Xew York. X. Y. My dear Miss . My letter from "The Meny Mills.* yours with the play — to !Miss . * (naming that lady's newspaper), which she for- warded with the play to Virginia, crossed. My letter in- formed you that I had decided upon publishing the play in book form, before producing same. Yours informed me — through Miss . of its rejection by your play-reader. "For this relief much thanks" — as Hamlet observes. Xothing could be more timely, a pj'opos. or pleasant to me than said rejection. The reason being, that the reasons for same given by the reader are so amusing — when viewed in connection with the stubborn facts in the premises — that the rejection becomes a literaiw asset of the first water to me: and shall be printed — sinking — of course, out of courtesy to Miss and yourself — the name of the managers in- volved. You see it's this way. Practically all the characters, and all the scenes, in the play, are from life. PROLOGUE iii This being so, the words of your reader: "far-fetched and sensational in plot"' become highly interesting. The first Act is taken hodily — characters and action from life. This is the Act in which the shooting and death of one of the characters occurs. The proof of my statement is that said Act is merely the gist of my deposition on the witness stand in the case of Chaloner against the New York '''•Evening Post^^- for $100,000 damages for libel in printing that I killed John Gillard, the English wife-beater — after the coroner's jury had found that he met his death by a pistol in the hands of Gillard and Chaloner, while Chaloner was, in good faith, trying to pre- vent Gillard from shooting his — Gillard's — wife. So much for the "far fetched and sensational plot*' of Act I. Act II is a thinly disguised statement of cold, hard facts — bar only the love-motive, which is entirely imaginary. Scene I, of Act III, is almost verhatinn and actually from life! Scene II, Act III, is fractically so. Scene III, Act III, is largely so. The only main differences being that the fight with the "Bloomingdale" keeper took place in my cell at "Bloomingdale," instead of in the wood at "Bloomingdale": and, also, that I escaped from "Blooming- dale" by flight unaided by support from outside that insti- tution — outside the Insane Asylum — as in the play. Lord Byron wrote: "Truth is stranger than fiction." Messrs. 's play-reader surely endorses that re- mark of his experienced and brilliant lordship. The play-reader continues: "This so-called play is lengthy and diffuse." On the edge of the manuscript I was at pains to write at the middle of Act II: "This should be cut about two- thirds from here on." And in the same place in Act III, I wrote: "This should be cut about three- quarters from here on." So you see your play-reader and I are in accord about it's being "diffuse in dialogue." I did not cut for the solitary reason that I am not experienced in catering to public taste — as is a manager — and therefore he would be in a far stronger position than would T. I merely exposed my Psychological wares for him to se- iv PROLOGUE lect from — the public at last beginning to take a keen in- terest in that mysterious department of science. The amounts I named could have been cut from the play without the least injury to the action, though not to the Ps^^chological value of it as a study in the very latest and farthest advanced realms of Mediumship. Since that is what I am — a Medium — in the language of the late Professor William James, of Harvard — of whom you have doubtless heard. In my sensational trial at Charlottesville, Virginia, No- vember 6, 1901, his opinion declaring me sane and also a Medium, largely helped to win me the recovery of my good name from the stigma cast upon it by the perjured arrest and incarceration of myself in ''Bloomingdale" as a maniac, by my avaricious and unnatural brothers and sisters, who lusted after my million and a half of real estate on Manhat- tan Island — though each was a millionaire in his or her own right. Professor James' words were: ''Mr. Chaloner is of a strongly 'mediumistic' or 'psychic* temperament."* I am no spiritualist. Far from it. I denounce spiritualism as a fake; and charge all my interesting Psychological phenomena — such as trances and trance-like states — to Psychology and nothing else. Hence the '"'so-called flaif^ deals icith the most ad- vanced outposts of the great suhject of Psychology. This being the fact, the statement of your reader : "there is nothing in the story that is worth considering,'' becomes highly interesting. Which interest is accentuated by the following closing and crowning climax of criticism upon the part of your reader : ''Hhe behaviour of all the characters being highly unconvincing under all circumstances.'''' Might I be permitted to add — "m particular that of the late John Gil- lard^ deceased:'' So much the roof and crown of things is this last gem of your reader, that I cannot and will not resist the temp- tation to appropriate this "Eajah's Ruby" of critical insight, culture, and artistic and dramatic penetration and experience, as follows: I have — some two or three days ago — completed a very brief Prologue: and had sent it — with the duplicate manuscript I had of the play — to the publishers who are bringing out: "Robber}^ Under Law" in book form. I had PROLOGUE feared that the Prologue was too brief. Therefore it is with pleasure that I add to it the admirably succinct, and yet com- prehensive, synopsis of "R. U. L.", rendered by your reader at the top of the report thereon, together with his verbatim entire hostile critique thereof, followed by my reply thereto, in the shape of this letter to you, with, of course, your name sunk; by way of comment and explanation to the critics who will have "Robbery Under Law" before them in book form before long. In this icay I shall find out if Truth is so much stranger than Fiction that it cannot and shall not compete with Fiction m things theatrical. Thanking you for your courtesy in the premises, believe me. Very sincerely yours, JOHN ARMSTRONG CHALONER. P. S. — You will pardon the length of this letter when you consider that it is my new Prologue — and unless I write it to you I can't truthfully say that I did — as I shall — in the Prologue. J. A. C. Author's address Read September 30th, 1914. (C. E. W.) "Robbery Under Law"; or "The Battle of The Millionaires." Play in Three Acts. By This requires three scenes and sixteen characters. Hugh Stutfield, of Virginia and New York, a millionaire Art Patron and Writer on Law, has an enemy in James Lawless, also a millionaire, who conspires with his relatives to get him out of the way. Hugh and Lawless are rivals for the hand of Viola Cariston, and fearing that he has little chance of winning her from the Virginian, Lawless determines to resort to any m^eans rather than lose her. Constantia and Winston Blettermole, cousins of Hugh's, are bit- terly jealous of him, and as they are the next heirs to his millions if he does not marry, they listen readily to the criminal suggestions of Lawless and his lawyer, Spink. Although Hugh has a certain clair- voyant sense which warns him of trouble, they manage to have him shut up in an Asylum as a dangerous lunatic. From this place he eventally makes his escape and by wit and courage gets the better of his persecutors. This so-called play is a lengthy and far-fetched narrative, very sensational in plot and diffuse in dialogue. The speeches are almost all pages in length and the authors are apparently quite ignorant of the form in which plays are written. There is nothing in the story which is worth considering — the behavior of all the characters being highly unconvincing under all circumstances. PROLOGUE It is but fair to state that lady number two's play-reader had not the remotest idea as to the identity of the author of ''Robbery Under Law.'* For he says in his critique, "the authors are." Finally he is presumably unfamiliar with the stirring cycle of events which — for the past eighteen years — has been whirling around the head of "Who's Looney Now?" A Play in Three Acts and Three Scenes. INSET To "EOBBERY UNDER LAW" DEATHLESS ROMANCE. Chorus loquitur. In MemoHam "THE WIZARD OF THE NORTH." Thou think'st perchance Romance is dead and gone That Science cold hath laid her fiery ghost But glance within and thou 'It be told not one But deeds of derring-do a serried host. The Poetr}^ of Business herein gleams — The sparkling projects of her darkling womb — And Death doth shed her shimmering moonbeam gleams Athwart the ghostly portal of the Tomb. Love lifts her radiant head and waves her hand; Whereat fell Rivalry doth draw his knife — Psychology then in the game takes hand^ And san^'es the hero in his hour of strife! In short we show that Mysteiy to-day Is as mysterious as she's been for aye. ROBBERY UNDER LAW OR The Battle of the Millionaires A Play in Three Acts and Three Scenes. Dramatis Personam. Hugh Stutfield of "Rokeby,'' Albemarle County, Virginia, and New York. Millionaire Art Patron and Law Writer. 30 years old. In love with Viola. James Lawless, of New York. Millionaire man- about- town. 30 years old. Rival of Stutfield, and his enemy. Rejected suitor of Viola. Winston Blettermole, of New York, millionaire. Cousin and heir-at-law of Stutfield, and his bitter enemy. 30 years old. Bei.isarius p. Spink, of the New York County Bar. Family lawyer of both Lawless and Blettermole. Learned but unscrupulous practitioner. Hatches the plot to have Stutfield basely declared insane to rid Lawless of a rival in love, and enable Blettermole to obtain control of his five million dollar estate. Known to his intimates as "B. P.," since he frowns upon the juxtaposition of such names as "Belisarius'- and "Spink." 50 years old, but wonderfully preserved. Captain Cariston, "F. F. V." and ex-Confederate Cavalry Officer under Stuart in the army of Northern Vir- ginia. Since the war exiled himself to the coal fields ROBBERY UNDER LAW of West Virginia for twenty years, and as a result is now worth half a million. Father of Viola, his only child. About 50 3^ears old. Albert Wedge. Inventor. In employ of Stutfield, about 30 years old. JoHx BuLLARD. English machinist, 32 years old. / Xew York alienists. Employed by Lawless -p^ -p> I and Blettermole to visit Stutfield in Xew York j^ ' ^^ ^^ / under false pretenses, garble his statements / and falsely testify as to his insanity. Fifty- ' five and fifty-eight, respectively. "Bosco."' Stutfield's negro body-servant. "Wash." Negro butler at "Elsinore." the three thousand acre plantation of Captain Cariston in Albemarle Comity. Pat Sligo. Keeper at "Fairdale" Insane Asylum. In charge of Stutfield. 25 years old. Viola Caristox. Daughter of Captain Cariston. of "Elsi- nore." In love with Stutfield. 25 years old. Constaxtia Blettermole. Wife of Winston Blettermole. Viola's best friend. 28 years old. Mrs. Bullard. Wife of John Bullard. 30 years old. MoNA Bullard. Eight year old daughter of Mrs. Bullard. Time, 1887. tAlfas Rumdumbagore, a falsely alleged Parsee fire-worshipper from Bombay. ROBBERY UNDER LAW ACT I. The Hand of Destiny. The Dining Koom at "Kokeby," Albemarle County, Vir- ginia, Stutfield's 400 acre estate. Three P. M., March 15th. 1887. ACT II. Weaving tpte Plot. The Drawing Room at "Elsinore," Captain Cariston's 3,000 acre plantation. Five miles from "Eokeby." Four P. M., March 18th, 1887. ACT III. Counterplot. SCENE I. In The Shadow Or The Labyrinth. Stutfield's bedroom in his suite at the Hotel Kensington, 15th Street and 5th Avenue. Six-thirty P. M., April 12th, 1887. SCENE II. The Labyrinth. Stutfield's cell in "Fairdale" Insane Asylum. Time: Afternoon, three months later. SCENE III. The Rescue. The wood at "Fairdale" Insane Asylum. Time: After- noon. Three weeks later. ROBBERY UNDER LAW THE HAXD OF DESTIXY. Act I. Dining Room at ••Eokebv," Albemarle County, Vir- ginia. (Stutfield. alone, dressed in riding costume — cut-away- coat, breeches and gaiters — sitting at table in centre of stage. Stutfleld is a man five feet ten and tki'ee-quarter inches high, of athletic build and weighs a hundred and fiity-four. His fea- tures are strong and regular. Eyes dark grey, hair thick and curly and such dark brown as to appear black. He is clean shaved. He smiles as readily as he frowns. Luncheon over. except fruit. "Bosco." a powerful negro servant, enters and hands Stutfield a letter, on a silver salver). "Bcsco*": "From [Miss Cariston. Sir. The groom brought it and left." (Servant retires. Stutfield opens letter, and reads.) Stutfield. { Reading ^) •"Elsinore."' March thirteenth. 1887. "Dearest Hugh: This is the twelfth letter I have ever, ever written you. my dear, and yet I am in the same state of imcertainty as re- gards accepting you as I was when I sat down to write the first. Why is this? Why can't I make up my mind? You satisfy my mental concept of a man. you satisfy my moral concept, and my physical. You are blue-blooded. You are rich. You are in the prime of life. You are a cosmopoli- tan — a Londoner, a Parisian, and a Xew Yorker, as much as you are a Virginian bom. if not raised in the dear old State. Why cannot I say. 'Come to me. and take me.* You who are a metaphysician and a philosopher will probably say because I do not know my own mind. But my dear, dear friend, the tabulating of — I shan't say all and simdry. but certainly — several of your attractive qualities in this letter, gainsays that hypothesis, does it not. Hugh? I do wish I could screw myself up to the sticking-place and say. 'Come.' But I can- not. I feel. Hugh, darling, that I am doing you a great wrong in keeping you hanging in the offing like this — that I ROBBERY UNDER LAW am keeping some nobler woman than myself away from you. away from your charm, aw^ay from your manliness, away from your high ideality and true Christian manhood. You see, dear, I do know you pretty well for having known you for so short a while — barely three months — after all, do I not, darling? But try as I may, I simply cannot bring my- self to say 'Yes.' When I first saw you at that ball in New York last January — the 'Patriarchs' — I had a feeling that you were my mate. That may sound strangely but you know I am a strange creature. That may sound unmaidenly — ^but, my darling, j^ou know, at all events, I am not that. Yes, Hugh, I felt that you were my mate, my man, my defender, and champion against 'the thorns and crosses of the world' as our Shakspeare says. You don't know how my heart went out to you — how it beat under my corsage — you see, dear, I am frank — I do not conceal your attraction for me — and yet — and yet — . But there — I know my vacillation irritates you, dear, so I shall stop, with a prayer for guidance to that God Whom we both so firmly believe in, and trust. Your friend, Viola Cariston." (Upon reading letter Stutfield says:) "What wouldn't I give to be able to win that girl!" (Leans head on hand, elbow on table and gazes into fire at right. After a moment) : "I'd give anything — anything — anything an honorable man could — to win her." (Pause) "A girl like that needs the imagination touched — needs something that appeals to the imagination — to turn the trick. And what in G — d's name can appeal to a young girl's imagination in these drab- colored, hum-drum piping days of peace! Nothing!" (A pause. Sighs.) "Well, there's nothing to do for it but wait- waiting in a case like the present doesn't spoil anything, doesn't endanger anything — 'Patience and shuffle the cards — patience and shuffle the cards' — (The negro, Bosco,. enters and says:) "Miss Cariston, Sir, and a strange lady is outside — in Miss Cariston's runabout — and Miss Cariston want to know^ if yo' can see her and the lady for a few minutes." ROBBERY UNDER LAW Stutfield: ^'Jliss Carist07i/" Bosco: "Yes, Suh." Stutfield: '•Certainly, 111 go out at once." (Enter Viola and Mrs. Bullard, and an eight-year-old daughter. Viola Cariston is five feet eight inches in height, of full but graceful figure. Has dazzling ^hite skin with two patches of colour in her cheeks. Her eyes are a red- brown, so dark as to appear almost black. Her hair which is very abundant and naturally wa^-y is a dark copper colour — almost black. She has a face of wining sweetness, shadowed by a seriousness — a gravity — which makes her smile a rare one. Mrs. Bullard is an attractive, well mannered, lower-mid- dle class woman, modestly, but tastefully dressed. Mona is a child of unusual attractiveness and refinement: dressed with extreme care by her mother.) Viola : "I came in uninvited, Hugh — as you see — but the matter is marked 'Urgent' and ceremony must go to the wall. Permit me to make you known to Mrs. John Bullard, late of England. I come in the role of a damsel-errant, succour- ing distressed womanhood — nothing else, you may well im- agine, could have induced me to invade the bachelor quarters of Mr. Hugh Stutfield, of 'Eokeby' and New York." (Stutfield, who has risen and crossed the stage to door at left by which they entered — only door in the room — bows politely but coldly to Mrs. Bullard, who returns the salute quietly). Stutfield: "One moment. Miss Cariston — permit me. Bosco. clear the table. Then tell Miss Cariston's groom to take the horse to the stable — but not unharness — on account of the cold." (Bosco bows, and with great alacrity, skill and noiselessness places the plate and fruit-dish upon a tray — no cloth on the table, which is mahogany — with fruit knife and glass, and the table is cleared. He then disappears). Stutfield: "Won't you ladies and the little girl please seat yourselves before the fire and warm?" (Bringing up two chairs. The little girl on the way to mount her mother's lap spys an old Xile green velvet. Rugby School. England, football cap of Stutfield's. on the table, and exclaims) : Mona: "My, what a pretty cap!" ROBBERY UNDER LAW Stutfield: "Yes, young lady, rather Oriental, is it not? That (holding it up) Miss Cariston, is a souvenir of my hard- fought battles on the football field at Rugby — Tom Brown's Rugby — where I was full back for my team. I wear it only about the house and only in winter — and only in going through the halls — because as you may have noticed — though hot Avater is laid on here I never use anything but the open wood fires, and therefore the hall- ways are cold. (Leav- ing the cap in the child's hands). Viola: "Mr. Stutfield, this lady met me as I was driv- ing home from a Ladies' Auxiliary meeting at Grace church. She was on foot, accompanied by her little girl. She stopped me and asked if I knew the way to Mr. Hugh Stutfield's. I replied that I did. She then asked me if I would mind driv- ing her there, as she had business of importance which would not brook delay. I willingly consented. As soon as she was seated she said that she would like to speak to me privately. I thereupon told Griffith — the boy — to get down and walk ahead of the horse — " Stutfield: "Pardon my interruption, but I shall give myself the pleasure of saying a general ever! You made Master' Griffith walk ahead of the horse. There's where your generalship which you will bear me out I've always insisted on, you inherited from your warlike sire — there's where your generalship came in, and made its rare presence felt^ — ninety women out of a hundred — and ninety men even — would have allowed Master Griffith to walk behind and overhear you, or anywhere he pleased, so long as he did walk." Viola : ^''Merci. But no more interruptions, if you please — particularly upon such exceedingly trifling provoca- tion — the matter in hand, Mr. Stutfield, is of the very gravest possible importance." (Stutfield, who has at first smiled and bowed, now looks grave and says) : Stutfield: "A thousand pardons — I shall not offend again." Viola: "Mrs. Bullard then told me one of the most heart-rending stories I have ever heard, of marital unhappi- ness. I should preface my remarks by saying that I have known of her and her husband and little girl ever since they .IZtKA zifrTiniiT strms ^: zasi w^iker — raied. Ifas. lUhid-Ob!! ^ rC lams wiiw^ mmd tar for 9o 1»F T is said to bp m lue ben able to ^ an t^ :-fli. and scaicebr safiriTi: Mr^ BdDaid aars ber ROBBERY UNDER LAW man — and he is known to be very industrious. At this point, Mrs. Bullard can best take up the tale." Mrs. BuUard: "Well, sir, my husband is a wife-beater of the very worst description. Last night he beat me over the shoulders and back with a poker — gave me about a dozen very severe blows with a small iron poker — he generally uses a poker because anything less strong than iron would break under the force of his blows. He is always very careful not to strike me about the head or face, where the marks could be seen. He always hits me where the marks will not be seen. He has been beating me off and on now for a year or more. I have left him twice and gone to my relatives who are well to do. Each time I forgave him and returned. I shall do so no more. He will kill me one of these days if I don't leave him. Last night he beat me dreadfully, and for no cause. It isn't as though I didn't make him a good and faithful wife, or didn't make him comfortable at home — didn't cook his meals properly, and have everything neat and tidy about the home. For I do all these things — " Viola: "Excuse me, Mrs. Bullard, but why on earth does he beat you?" Mrs. Bullard : "To vent his spite, Miss — to ease his feel- ings. He has awful ugly moods sometimes when he's sullen and won't speak a word. He's not a great talker anyway, but when he gets into one of those moods, he won't say a word — it's just a look and a blow — just a look and a blow — and once he's begun he seems to get more and more fond of it, and so gives me a dozen or more blows. It's the same with little Mona here." (Pointing to the child on her lap). "He'll strike her as quick as me in one of those moods — but he never takes anything to her as he does to me — never uses a poker or a pair of tongs as he does with me — he seems to realize that it might kill her. He never drinks nor has anything to do with other women — or other men, for that matter. He's hard working but he doesn't care the snap of his finger for me, nor for Mona here. He's never kissed the child since she was born. He's a cruel man — cruel to animals. He beat our cow so with a poker one day that one of the neighbors said she'd have him arrested if he did that again. I don't want you to think. Miss, that I'm runninor him down — for he has 10 ROBBERY UNDER LAW some good points. He's a good husband except in two points — he doesn't love me, and he likes to beat me — saving those two things he's as correct and proper a man as one could find — hard working and honest." Stutfield: "Is he perfectly right in his mind?" Mrs. BuUard: "Perfectly, sir, — no man with a harder head on his shoulders, or a harder heart below his shoulders, was ever born in England. We lived in Liverpool. He is a railway engineer, and good at any skilled work, most. We came to this country a few months ago to better ourselves — he's not saving. I don't know what he does with the money, he never smokes, drinks, nor gambles, but he never has any laid aside. He first went to work in the Locomotive Works in Richmond, and gave first-rate satisfaction — but they laid off about fifty or a hundred hands a few weeks ago and he was among them. Miss Cariston has told you the rest. Xow, what I want, sir, is this. I'm told you are a lawyer and a very kind-hearted gentleman — the friend of the poor and af- flicted. Now, I came over here for protection from my hus- band, and to find out from you if I can get a divorce from him in this country for wife-beating. I'm perfectly willing to stay, with my little girl, at one of your married white farmer's, and do anything in the way of sewing — ^I used to support myself with my needle in the old country before I was married — " Stutfield: "Pardon me, how long have you been mar- ried?" Mrs. Bullard: "Ten years. Mona is eight years old. I am willing to do anything in the way of sewing you may wish; by way of return for my board and lodging. Of course, if you get a divorce for me I cannot repay you — for I haven't a dollar on earth. I had a little property when he married me — one thousand pounds — five thousand dollars of your money — that's why he married me — but he squandered it all — made me — compelled me — to turn it over to him and then squandered it — " Stutfield: "You are completely under his thumb — par- don my bluntness. Mrs. Bullard — you are dominated and over- mastered by your husband, are you not? Besides being physi- cally afraid of him — frankly in terror of your life." ROBBERY UNDER LAW 11 Mrs. Billiard: "Yes, sir." Stutfield: "You are of a somewhat weak and yieldin"? disposition, are you not. Madam? Somewhat 'peace at any price, — even at that of a beating — are you not? Pardon my professional frankness, but if I am to have anything to do with your case there must be no mincing of words between us." Mrs. Bullard: "Yes, sir. I suppose I am. I dislike a row worse than anything in the world." Stutfield: "Even worse than a beating?" Mrs. Bullard: "I used to, but I do so no longer. Last night's beating finished it for me. I'd rather risk death — rather risk death itself than see him come at me with iron in his hands again — " Mona : "O ! sir, father beat mother dreadful last night. It was as she was undressing and her back was all black and blue and bloody after it." Viola : "You poor child ! I declare, it's an outrageous shame ! What a monster that man must be. Mr. Stutfield, I do hope you can protect this poor woman and free her from her awful bonds — it would be a really charitable, Chris- tian act, of the first magnitude." Stutfield: "I promise you to do both, provided the Vir- ginia law gives cruelty as a ground for divorce. If you will permit me, I'll go into the library and consult my authori- ties. I shall not be gone long, and shall always be within call. You know I am not a member of the Virginia bar, but of the bar of New York, and am therefore not familiar with the law here. Viola : "You are excused, Mr. Stutfield." Mona : "Oh ! What a nice, kind gentleman." Mrs. Bullard: "Hush, my child, he may hear you." Mona: "Suppose he does. Mother, what 's the harm?" Mrs. Bullard: "He would think you, perhaps, a pert little girl." !Mona: "I don't think he would Mother — he don't look that way." Viola : "You are right, my child, he wouldn't misunder- stand — ^but I don't want you to think that I am finding fault with vour mamma." 12 R 3 B E R Y U X D E Pw L A W Mona : "Oh! Xo. [Miss. I couldn't think that, for my Mamma is a loTelv Mamma — so kind and sweet to me — I only wish my Papa was — I hite Papa" (stamping her foot — she had meantime got down from her mother's lap and was stand- ing between the two women). Mrs. Bullard : "Shi Shi Mona. you must not use such language about your Father. I had to tell the gentleman all about it. or he wouldn't know what to do. but that's no ex- cuse for you to act like a ba'dly brought up little girl — ** (Enter Stutfield) Smtfield: "It's all right. I'm glad to say — Virginia 's all right. Cruelty is ground for divorce — in this grand old State." Viola : "Oh I I'm >:o relieved." Mrs. Bullard: "Thank (^^r/.i."' Stutfield: "Xow. [Mrs. Bullard, this is what I am pre- pared to do. I'll put ycu up free of charge with my head farmer, who has a wife and a little girl just your age. young lady." i turning and smiling and waving his hand to Mona L 'Tt will put some roses in your pretty cheeks to get some of the eggs and buttermilk off of this four hundred acre dairy farm — " Mona: "I ^-0\'^: buttermilk."^ Stutfield: ••Y':u shall have enough of it to swim in if you like, my child. To resume. Mrs. Bullard. 1*11 turn your case over to be charged to my accoimt. to my own lawyer in Charlottesville — fourteen miles from here — the coimty seat — the home of Jefferson. Fancy wife-beating taking place within a few miles of Monticello. Miss Cariston I" Viola: "It's infamous T' Stutfield: "I'll of course, charge you nothing for it. Furthermore, this is confidential, ladies — as I do not — I am a member of the Xew York bar — though of Virginia origin — carry my heart on my sleeve, hence my caution. I put in practice my religion. 'Bear ye one another's burdens.' hence my proposition to act as if it were / who wanted the divorce — ^liss Cariston — as though it were / that wanted the divorce — Miss Cariston — " Viola : "I heard you quite distinctly the first time you made the observation, Mr. Stutfield." ROBBERY UNDER LAW 13 Stutfield: "Thank you, Miss Cariston. To resume, 1 shall, furthermore, Mrs. Bullard, pay your return passage to Liverpool, first class, on a safe and comfortable line, running every two weeks from Norfolk, and give you enough money besides to make you comfortable from now until you land in Liverpool, and leave you some over." Mrs. Bullard: "I am sure the Lord will bless you for all your goodness to a helpless woman and her little girl in a strange land — " Stutfield: "I devoutly hope He will. And now, ladies, please make yourselves at home while I give a few orders." (Exit. Picking up the cap and holding it in his hand as he exits) . Mrs. Bullard : "I am sure. Miss, I cannot ever thank you sufficiently for bringing me to this kind gentleman. The Lord surely has raised up a helper for us in the hour of need." Viola: "He surely has, Mrs. Bullard; and Mr. Stut- field will carry out to the precise letter everything he has promised." (At this moment the door opens softly and John Bullard glides into the room. There is a seven-foot Japanese screen ten feet long, running alongside the whole length of the table, completely shutting off the door, and several feet of the room on either side. The door is in the middle of the room. Bul- lard is a powerfully built man, of medium height, with sandy hair, a sweeping military moustache of the same color and light blue eyes, dressed plainly, but neatly, in blue serge clothes — a sack suit — with heavy brogans, such as working- men wear, on his feet. His linen is clean, and his necktie neatly tied in a small bow. The door is to the left, directly opposite the fire-place, before which the women are seated. Bullard swiftly but noiselessly — despite his heavy shoes — glides round the edge of the screen between it and the audi- ence. Mona sees him first, and utters a little cry). Mona: "Oh, Mother! There 's Father!" Bullard: "Yes, you little brat, I've tracked you 'ere at last, and your fine, dutiful Parent — ^ha! ha! I've a little ac- count to settle with you. Madam, when I gets you 'ome — " Mrs. Bullard: "You'll never do that—" Bullard: "Never do that, and why not, pray?" 14 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Mrs. Bullard: ''Because I'm never going to your home any more. YouVe beaten me once too often, Mr. Bullard. The worm has turned at last. I go home with you no more." Bullard: "Well, we'll see about that — you may rest as- sured, Madam, — we'll see about that. In the meantime "ow do you propose to live and where do you propose to live?" Mrs. Bullard: "I propose to live at the head farmer's here — he has a wife and little girl, and take in sewing to support myself." Bullard: "Oh! You do, do you? A pretty notion that — a very pretty notion, indeed. Well, I'll have none of it, so come along now, come along now!" Mrs. Bullard: "I'll do no such thing." (Bullard has been standing at the foot of the table, half facing the audience, and facing the women. He thereupon darts forward and seizes a pair of tongs at the right of the fire-place, and raises them to strike his wife. She — so soon as he darts forward — hastily retreats with Mona by the hand, to a recess at the left of the fire-place — between it and the audience — here there is a large, closed wood-box. She kneels down by this with Mona under her, protecting the child, and her head bowed, awaiting Bullard's blows. Meantime Viola has darted toward the door and opening it screams). Viola : "Hugh, Help ! Help !" (Bullard begins to rain blows upon his wife's head. She has very heavy black hair, done up in a coil on top of her head. This saves her life. At the second cry for help Stut- field's voice is heard shouting). Stutfield: "All right. I'm coming!" (Bullard pays no attention to Stutfield's voice. Soon the sound of Stutfield's feet is heard, and followed by Viola he dashes into the room and hisses). Stutfield : "Wife-beater ! " (Stutfield darts round the end of the screen, rushes at Bullard and seizes him by the collar, jerks him away from his wife, and pinions him against the wall in the comer, by the throat. Stutfield's left hand on Bullard's throat. Bullard has the tongs still in his right hand. A tug of war then en- sues between Stutfield and Bullard. Stutfield trying to keep him pinned to the wall so that he cannot swing the tongs. ROBBERY UNDER LAW 15 Bullard trying to push Stutfield from him so that he can land a knock-down blow on top of Stutfield's head. Stut- field has on the Nile green and silver velvet Rugby School, England, football cap on his head on entering, and it is on during the struggle. Gradually Bullard pushes Stutfield away, and getting him far enough off for a half-arm blow, swings the tongs and knocks Stutfield down. Viola screams once, but stands her ground a few feet behind Stutfield. As he falls, she darts forward, and bends over his head, spread- ing out her arms saying). Viola: "Strike me, you bully — you can't hit him when he's down!" (Bullard sneers silently and disregarding Viola watches the unconscious Stutfield attentively. In about two seconds from the time Viola spoke, Stutfield opens his eyes, and be- fore either Viola or Bullard know, is on his feet and crouch- ing to spring once more at Bullard's throat. They watch one another silently for a few seconds. Then Stutfield advances straight at Bullard's throat with left arm outstretched stiff, to its fullest extent. He has hardly made two strides when Bullard brings down the tongs full on top of his head — which still has the heavy velvet cap on, with a silver knob the size of an acorn — of silver wire on the top. This knob saves his life. It and the velvet break the force of the blow. Stut- field drops insensible in his tracks. Once more, Viola screams, and once more stretches her arms over the prostrate Stut- field saying). Viola : "Kill me, if you like, but you shan't touch him." Bullard: (Sneering). "Your feller, eh? Well, I fancy I done for 'im that time. D — n 'im, interferin' in my family affairs. Now, I've got a little bone to pick with this lady." (Bullard moves towards the still crouching but silent woman — save for her low moans when he struck her, and frightened sobs from the little child. Just before he reaches her, Viola gives a piercing scream, and cries out immediately thereafter). Viola: ''Help! Murder r Bosco: (In low tones from the comer of the screen — the same round which Stutfield charged at Bullard). "I'se here, Miss. I'se here. Miss. Bosco here. Bosco '11 do him — 16 ROBBERY UNDER LAW watch Bosco! Lawd-Gawd! Is dat Mr. Stutfield layin' there? Your murderin' villain!" (With that, Bosco crouches like a tiger and springs upon BuUard from behind, bringing Bullard down flat on his back under him. By this time Stutfield has come to, and risen to his feet). Viola: (In a low tone). "Are you hurt, my darling?'' Stutfield: (In the same low voice). "No^ my dearest darling, not a bit. You precious child! It took the threat of death — of my death to melt your frozen bosom. Do you love me?" Viola: "Yes, my hero. I do." Stutfield: "'Thanh God. then^ for those two hlows! You saved the day though, dearie. As I went off into my two sleeps your sweet, bell-like voice was ringing in my ears — ^like a silver trumpet-call, sounding the charge ! And by Gad ! my black Bosco heard your bugle and "made good." Look at the black rascal holding that murderous villain down." I hereby crown you Queen of Love and Beauty of this tournament — this modern Ashby-de-la-Zouche of 'Ivanhoe' " (Kissing her hand. Viola blushing, smiles, and half with- draws her hand hastily glancing towards Mrs. Bullard and child, who, however, are too intent watching the group in the corner just vacated by themselves to pay any attention to the lovers. Seeing that there is no danger of being ob- served, she relinquishes her hand to Stutfield, and bowing smiling says) — Viola: "The Queen of Love and Beauty accepts the glorious crown placed upon her unworthy head, by thy glori- ous hand Sir Knight of ^Rokeby.' Whose head-dress sug- gests the oriental pomp of the dauntless, but ruthless Sir Brian de Bois Guilbert: and whose character that of the stainless Wilfred of Ivanhoe." Stutfield: "My adored darling" (kissing her hand once more) "You make me the proudest and happiest of men." (Mrs. Bullard has risen, and with Mona has seated her- self as before. She is dishevelled, her hair hanging about her waist, but no blood visible from the cuts afterward found in her scalp, and no wounds on her face. The child is un- touched). ROBBERY UNDER LAW 17 Viola: ''How do you do, now, my poor woman?" Mrs. Bullard: "Oh! It was dreadful— but he didn't break my skull, my hair saved that. The negro came just in time, though, for my hair was all that saved it, and that was falling — the last strands under the last blow, Mr. Stutfield, came into the struggle on. How are you sir?" Stutfield: "Very well, thank you. I'm delighted there are no bones broken. I can assure you of your divorce, Madam — with such witnesses to such an act, you could aknosi — I say almost — get a divorce from Rome herself. How's the little girl?" Mrs. Bullard : "She's quite untouched, Sir. I knelt over her." Stutfield: "I saw that you did — my brave woman — I saw that you did. You are a noble, self-sacrificing Mother. Now. ladies, watch me direct the manoevres on the field of battle with my heavy Numidian cavalry — to use a bold meta- phor. Bosco!" Bosco: "Yes, Suh." Stutfield : "Let the dog up, and as soon as he rises take the old hold — you know what I mean — the hold I've always told you to aim for." Bosco: "Yes, Suh." Stutfield : "And hold it till death do you part." Bosco: "Yes, Suh." Stutfield : Now watch him close and strike him a knock- out blow on the point of the jaw if he tries any tricks in ris- ing — ^but don't strike him unless he does. If he rises quietly, simply get the old hold." Bosco: "Yes, Suh." (Bosco with right fist clenched and drawn back to strike, rises crouchingly. Bullard rises slowly but warily. Bosco makes a feint at him as Bullard gets his feet, and half turns away from Bosco. This is the latter's chance. He, quick as a flash, jumps behind Bullard and throws both arms round him from behind, pinioning Bullard's arms to his sides. Bul- lard 's forearms are free, but not his arms. Bosco's head is on Bullard's right shoulder, right next his face. Bosco's arms are wrapped completely round Bullard. They whirl and wrestle for some moments in silence. Suddenlv, Stutfield IS ROBBERY UNDER L A ^' Tfhips out a .32 calibre Smirh l\: TTc-r::: revolver from his hip- pc^-c-ker. and lets it hang d.^r., T:-:iniing to the tI<>or. hi^ linger on the trigger). Stutfield: "Pray, dcn't be concerned at the sight of this little g\:n. hii-^, I ha^-"en'r :h- r-i;:::^^: i"^-:. :f rniploying it — na rJie r-:::::-;: — Vmi E\;ii:.r:: i~ :. :_;: :::' ;.-^-- riowerfu] man. He is — I hear — i^:^n r: ':.\-'^ "M.ir'. : ::..:i::;, i tie — always a ^b f;r t^: ~r: n; ::-.r:\ — ::: i.: — h : \i iers. and put it in piaor :ii;nr ::i :i:r :;:. i-ri. -: :: i^-::': '.:> to take too many chan:es vr:r:i a gcn:iT::::n ci :::= 5::"rn^:h :i arm and weakness oi m:r^.:ity, X:". Air. B";.ii; " - \i in your alabaster ear. Yo^Ve h^ari "i:::: I ^:.:;.. .:c::. -c^w ears are open, and you very v--i' irn;— ycvr own in: . _ :r — at least — vrh::.t i-iryear to you to be your c^r- inrrir-:.-. I have the determinuiion presently f:* have y:\; h;".;n:i, hand and foot, wamiiy wra^i^iri in ':i:::i:rrs. ':.n"i i:.::i ::'_ :. ": 7 :1 of straw. in the bottom of my four-mule wag:n. :.:.:• oni^r: : 7. -:::^d escort of my hands — who'll Vj,^ the i'r\ z -r:;;: ^^-:\ o if you attempt to es:are — haui y:o i :■ Ch:.;i:::r5'oiir, : ivi :orn you over to the sheriff. I shall then in-nroiT ;:: ;7T:i:ng; in Mrs. Bullard's behalf for a divcnoe. on t::^ gr:o:_;i z :rueity. Meantime. yo\-"ii ha""- b--n tried, and conarmnei ;:oi ^rnt tn the peni:en:iary f:^ a term of years for at:-::o":7i ;-r ";i: : kill— not ':nlv\;o.:.n Mrs. Bullard. but ut:::. -- v.::-:L:h- self. M^amime. Mrs. Bullard will hav, ^^oreirhaa 1:-.-:::^ ani with Mona will have sailed to England at my expense. That is the programmae that await= you. Mr. J'^hn Bullard." (During this spceah S:urh-ld has inaav-rrTuriy .irawn nearer Bullard than if disrieet. For. all of a sudden, the latter thrusts forth his left hand and seizes the ris::! by the butt and Stutfield's hand at the same timr. fa:a/;i:r.g with the butt in order to prize it out of Stutfield's hand, pointing the pistrd and Srutd^ld's hand at ^re and the ~a:ur t::u- full at Mrs. Buiiarl's fa/e. Sruiiieii :n-rantiy --;:._:; lOr .u~i';'l back by exerting all his force, and throwing his bc-dy into the swircr. Thev are now ~r n'ing against the wood-box — the pistol pointing past Bilara"; head, into the abutting chimney. Bosco holds Bulhird .^1 tanh;--. A diiel t-:* the death is in progress — a wr:~r- iuel. so> to speak, between Stut- field and Bullard. Suddenly Stutfield says) : ROBBERY UNDER LAW 19 Stutfield: "I see your fingers, Bullard, like a tarantula's legs, stalking down the pistol barrel. I see your little game. It 's this : to work your way down the barrel till your thumb is inside the trigger-guard of this self-cocker. Then push the barrel in one of two directions, either towards Mrs. Bul- lard, or, over backwards into my face. Whenever the muz- zle has reached whichever of the positions you aim at, you will then press your thumb against my trigger-finger and explode the piece — and if your aim is as good as your gall — in meditating such a piece of impertinence — to put it somewhat mildly — Mrs. Bullard or myself will drop dead. You will then wrench the pistol out of my dead hand and kill Bosco, and then Mrs. Bullard, and then Miss Cariston, and lastly, your little daughter, and then jump for the woods and hope to make good your "get-away." That 's your little programme. But there 's one little difficulty in putting the same into exe- cution — namely, that I'm your master when it comes to wrists. Of course, you don't know it, but I'm an expert fencer with both right and left hands, and nothing so steels the wrist, so strengthens and hardens it while keeping the muscle flexible, as fencing. You are stronger than I am at a tug of war. You won the push of war when I tried to pin you against that wall. You've won two rounds of this fight. I won the first when I frustrated your attempt to murder your wife be- fore my eyes, and pulled you off your prey — ^you won the next two with a knock-down to your credit in each round — so it now stands, first round, Stutfield's. Second round, Bullard's. Third round, Bullard's. Fourth and last round, (about to be) Stutfield's." (At that very instant the pistol explodes, and Bullard leaps into the air, a dead man.) Viola: "^y God! Hugh are vou hurt, darline?" Stutfield: "No, darling." (Bosco lets Bullard softly down on his back). Bosco: "He dade." Stutfield: (Gravely). "Yes, Bosco. 'He dade'.* End of Act I. Scene I. 20 ROBBERY UNDER LAW -THE WEAVING OF THE PLOT." Act II. :^le>-z I. Time : Four days later. 4 P. M. (Drawing-room at "Elsiiiore." Thi> room has door and fire-place facing each other — to right and left of stage. "Wia- dow in wall opposite stage opens onto conservatory. Sofa between door and fire-place. James Lawless, in morning suit — tall, portly, good looking, about 30. blond, light blue eyes: heavy blonde moustache. Discovered reading a news- paper, seated on sofa). Liiwless: "Xew York 'Herald.' March 17th. IS^T. — yes- terday's paper, eh? — 'Millionaire Law-Writer and Art Pa- tron acquitted of killing John Bullard. Hugh Stutneld. of 'Eokeby.' AJbemarle County. Virginia, was freed of the re- sponsibility for the death of John Bullard. the English wife- beater, who met his death in a struggle with Stutlield over the possession of a revolver. It was brought out at the in- quest held in the dining-room at 'Eokeby* that Stutneld was in the habit of carrying a revolver in the house — but not out of doors — owing to the loneliness of the situation of *Rokeby* and the fact that he slept entirely alone in the house — not another human being in it — not even a servant — and the con- sequent danger of a burglar's slipping into the house at any time and waylaying its rich owner, caused him therefore to have the weapon on when BuUard invaded his home. Cor- oner's jury compliments millionaire on courage he showed in voluntarily risking his life in a hand-to-hand struggle with the fiend, instead of drawing the revolver and forcing him — under pain of death — to desist from beating his wife — or summoning the powerful negro body-servant. "Bosco." who subsequently appeared and mastered Bullard — called to the scene by the screams of Miss Cariston. who had met and car- ried in her rimabout to 'Rokeby' Mrs. Bullard and her little eight-year-old daughter. Mona. fleeing from Bullard and on her way to "Eokeby' to ask legal advice concemincr divorce and temporary protection. Widow lodged with millionaire's married head-farmer. So soon as recovered from severe scalp- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 21 wounds inflicted by her husband — physician had to take three stitches in her scalp — will be returned to her brothers who are well-to-do hotel keepers in Liverpool — at expense of Law- Writer. Heavy velvet Rugby football cap which Stutfield used to wear when full-back on his team at Rugby School, in England, saves his life. Verdict of jury : 'We, the jury, of inquest, sitting on the body of eTohn Bullard, find that he came to his death by a bullet from a revolver in the hands of himself and Hugh Stutfield, while the latter was, in good faith, attempting to prevent Bullard from shooting his, Bul- lard's wife.'" (Laying aside newspaper). Lawless: ''The usual romantic fustian so dear to the heart of the city editor. But this farcical episode has a de- cidedly dangerous side to it for my hopes. Viola is a girl who can only be reached through the imagination. Pve tried every other way and found an icy harrier like that guarding the Antarctic pole. This ridiculous flash-in-the-pan, fire- works at Stutfield's may just *do the business' for me — put a spoke in my wheel and ruin my chances with the only girl I ever saw for whose possession I would sacrifice the rights and privileges of a bachelor life. It was most fortunate that I foresaw possible complications in the return to his native heath of Stutfield, after years of foreign wanderings, last January, and his consequent propinquity to my fair inamor- ita. Fortunate, indeed, that I carried my cares concerning disposing of a devilishly disagreeable factor in the situation to my father-confessor in law — if not religion — Belisarius P. Spink, attorney and counsellor at the New York bar, and about the slickest rascal — but at the same time, about the most deeply learned lawyer — practicing in any court on Man- hattan Island. Belisarius unfolded a plot to me about as damnahly hlack and foul as Hell itself ever held — short of actual assassination. Hardened as I am in the ways of the world — as a man-about-town in New York, with practically unlimited means for the purchase of the pleasures of the ap- petite — no matter which appetite or what appetite^ — sooner or later is bound to become — none the less, the plot unfolded to my far from virgin ears and developed before my far from virgin eyes, I am frank to say, appalled me. But necessity knows no law. Hence I snatched at the straw held out to my 22 ROBBERY UNDER LAW drowning hopes of having Viohi by fair means. Hence. I am here to weave the final meshes of that plot which shall forever free me from fear of competition from. Stutfield. And yet — at times — something, something resembling my old college friend and visitant. Kobert E. Morse. E. E. Morse — remorse — visits me. and stands at the foot of my bed and looks at me as I awake of a morning, as he used to do after a night with the boys in my college days at Harvard — but life is short and a man has but one life to live, so I decided to face Robert E. Morse himself before I'd forego the delights awaiting me in the arms of Miss Viola Cariston, whom I have been assiduously pursuing for one calendar year — "' (Enter negro servant, with telegram on tray). Servant: "A telegram for Mr. James Lawless, Suh, and a message from Miss Viola, Suh, sayin' that her horse done cast a shoe on her ride this afternoon, and she won't be back tell sundown. She*s waitin" at 'Airly' — de Miss Peytons* place, tell de nearest blacksmith shoe her horse." Lawless: ''Thank you. TTash. Here 's a quarter for you." Servant: ''Thank you. SukP (Exit servant). Lawless: (Opening telegram and reading) — '•Hot Springs. Virginia. March 18th. 1887. James Lawless. 'Elsinore.' Cobham, Va. Blettermole. Mrs. Blettermole and self arrive on his pri- vate car at Cobham about 4 P. M. to-day. Have instructed local storekeeper to have conveyance ready to carry us to 'Elsinore' immediately without troubling Captain Cariston to send for us — he can send us back after our conference. Blettermole enthusiastic over plan. Madame winced sharply at first but the benefits accruing to the children brought her round. I put forward that line of thought and won the day. Congratulations. B. P. Spink." "So far, so good." (Pulling out his watch). "They should be here now. I'm glad Viola is detained. It will give me ample time to conclude this little business here and now." (Voices are heard in hall. Enter Winston Blettermole. dressed in sack suit of very light, rough gray, dittoes — almost ROBBERY UNDER LAW 23 white — with a rainbow-hued tie, tied in a bow. He is about medium height and wears a brown beard, trimmed to a short point — French fashion — and closely clipped at sides. His hair is brushed straight off his forehead without a part. Bletter- mole's eyes are brown. He is about thirty, and good looking, with a good, trim figure. Without being in the least ner- vous Blettermole gesticulates gracefully and frequently. Con- stantia Blettermole is a tall, elegant woman, with light gray eyes and brown hair, and pale skin. Dressed in the mode of the day. Her voice is what the French call trainante^ and has a peculiar drawl, not unattractive. Spink is a man of fifty, splendidly preserved. Not a gray hair in his jet black, thick head of hair, which is straight, and parted on the side. His features are regular, but some- what sharp, and are accompanied by an expression of ex- treme shrewdness and coldness. His eyes are so dark as to be almost black. He is dressed in a travelling suit of dark brown dittoes — a sack suit. His voice is hard and cold. He never makes a gesture under any conceivable circumstances. He speaks somewhat slowly and enunciates each word with marked distinctness. Blettermole enters, followed closely by his wife, and at some little distance by Spink. Lawless rises and moves to meet them). Lawless: "Welcome to 'Elsinore,' my fair friend" (bow- ing and shaking hands with Constantia) "and you, too, Win- ston" (shaking hands with him) "and you, my guide, phil- osopher and friend" (shaking hands with Spink). Constantia : "As fond of 'Hamlet' as ever, James, I see." Lawless : "Quite." Blettermole: "Well, Jim, how goes it, old man, down here in these bucolic wilds?" Lawless: "Fairly well, thank you, Winston, fairly well." Spink: "How doth my very good friend and respected client?" Lawless: "Fairly well, thank you, B. P., fairly well." Spink: "I'm glad to hear that, for our affairs wag ex- ceeding well." Blettermole: "Yes, by Jove, Jim, that 's a great scheme of B. P.'s. It's the best I've heard yet for putting out of the runnino^ that devil. Stutfield." 24 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Spink: "Caution proclaims a lower tone, my most re- spected client, and co-conspirator in this most deep plot." Constantia : "Oh ! Mr. Spink, please don't use such words before me, at all events. You see, I am young at this sort of thing, and it shocks me horribly.*' Spink: "Pardon, madam, my gaucherie. We limbs of the law are apt to be brutally frank, when we are not beauti- fully vague, nebulous and dim in our meaning." Constantia: "Nothing, so help me heaven, could induce me to take a hand in a thing of this sort but the children's interests. When I think of those innocent lambs at home, and the wolves that prowl around the palaces of the rich — unless the rich have more than a million to call upon in case of need — I feel my mother's heart steel itself, and become deaf to all interests but those of my lambs. I feel that I am pro- tecting them from the wolves every time I add a hundred thousand onto the share each of my five chicks will inherit from Winston and me — ^you see, it takes a good, round sum of money to go round and leave a hundred thousand dollars in each dear little lap on its way. Hugh Stutfield I personally always liked. He always struck me as a singularly mag- netic, a singularly forceful personality, besides being, of course, what no one can very well deny when they claim to be in touch with the times and therefore know his record — his monumental law book on — Trial-by-Jury — a law-writer of renown." Spink: "Pardon my interruption, Madam, constitu- tional law is certainly widely and learnedly discussed therein, but the subject of the book is: 'The Absolute Rights of the Individual,' a subject dear to the heart of that great lumin- ary of our great profession, Sir William Blackstone, author of the immortal ^Commentaries Upon The English Common Law.' " Constantia: "Thank you, Mr. Spink, for setting me right — and his nationwide plan for the application of Na- poleon Bonaparte's Prix de Rome — his system of foreign scholarships for the cultivation of painting, sculpture, archi- tecture, music — the voice of both women and men, as well as the piano and violin — and finally, the art of acting — to which he subscribed so heavily himself — all these things show the ROBBERY UNDER LAW 25 brains and character of Hugh Stutfield. But. much as I api)re- ciate the attributes of head and heart of Mr. Stutfield, they wither and fade into insignificance beside the interests of my offspring, who will, each of them get about a million by in- heriting Mr. Stutfield's property of about five millions." Spink: "Spoken like Cornelia, the Mother of the Grac- chi, Madam — Cornelia, that flower of Eoman matrons, who, when asked where her jewels were by a lady calling upon her, and showing Cornelia her priceless gems replied, 'Here are my jewels,' pointing to her two sons — later, by their fame, worthy of such a Mother." Constantia : "Thank you, Mr. Spink, you have a happy faculty of bridging the 'dark backward and abysm of time' of the immortal Bard of Avon, separating the tawdry pres- ent from the purple splendors of imperial Eome." Blettermole: "Constantia, you make me sick with your forever holding up the debauched epoch of Rome to the dis- advantage of our day, which you very well know is the very topmost height civilization has yet reached." Constantia: "TYinston, you very well know, my dear, that there were epochs and emperors of Imperial Rome which were quite as marked for their law and order as our own more enlightened days. For instance, one of the gi^eatest his- torians that ever lived, maintained that the golden age of the world — or rather that which most approached that de- lightful period — was the age of the Roman Emperors known as the Antonines — of which one was a philosopher and up- right man, who, from his acts and thoughts might well have been a follower of the Founder of Christianity, namely, Mar- cus Aurelius — ^the historian was Gibbon, author of that mighty work 'The Decline and Fall.' " Spink : "Mrs. Blettermole spiked your guns there, my bellicose and pushful client." Blettermole : "Oh ! Constantia is pretty apt to be cor^ rect in whatever she says or does, B. P., I'll admit that. Only it does bore me to hear her mount her Roman and Greek hobbies." Constantia: "Winston, you are a mere boy when it comes to anything outside the realm of sport : or the certainly 26 ROBBERY UNDER LAW classic and literary, but very narrow vein of literature you favor with your very dijficile and eclectic regard." Blettermole : "Well, Constantia, let's let the matter drop, and get down to that plot of B. P.'s. You are aware that I am not much on head-work. I'd rather walk a mile than think a minute — '' Spink: "A shameful confession, wittily put, my re- spected client, most shameful, and for a man of your nat- ural wit and strength of repartee." Blettermole: "Drop your taffy, Spink, and get down to business. I caught Lawless yawning behind his hand a min- ute ago." Spink: "So be it. I shall, as Julius Caesar says, plunge in medids res — into the midst of things, without more ado. The plot is precisely this. The laws of New York State and those of about forty per cent, of the rest of the States of this grand and enlightened Union, lead the world — with the pos- sible exception of England — for rascality, ignorance, and vice upon one important but rarely worked vein of human activity. I allude to Insanity. Only those 4n the know' those, I mean, who live in large cities and happen to have property thai needs a lawyer's care, and also happen to have a lawyer who happens to be in touch with the dark and tortuous ways of lunacy legislation the world over^ as well as this nation over, i)Dly those far from numerous individuals may be said to be '^in the Iniow' in regard to lunacy law. I happen to be very much 'in the know.' Since I, Belisarius P. Spink, attorney and counsellor, am the man at the helm of the Steering Com- mittee that guides all legislation in lunacy matters at Al- bany, touching lunacy legislation. The great private lunatic asylums honey-combing the State of which 'Fairdale,' falsely so-called, for its real name is 'The Omnium Hospital' with hospital and offices on a side street, just west of Fifth Ave- nue — 'Fairdale' is the flower and pearl, of course, are not in business for the health of the owners and directors — quite the contrary, I do assure you. Well, now, what happens when a powerful interest, which makes hundreds of thousands out of the public yearly, gets its various heads together — why, what happens when railroads — steam or traction are in the same juxtaposition — there is something doing at Albany by I ROBBERY UNDER LAW 27 way of manipulated legislation in order to strengthen any weak spots in the lines of battle — so to speak — or to reach out and develop — reach out after new business. So said in- terests keep an organization at Albany, which has its finger on the pulse of any and all legislation taking place, or even most remotely threatening to take place, concerning lunacy legislation at Albany. Furthermore, the steering-committee keeps in touch with the State Lunacy Commission at Albany — a body consisting of a physician, a lawyer and a layman, who have practically supreme power over the said chain of private lunatic asylums honeycombing the Empire State. For instance: The Lunacy Commission has the duty to inspect the private lunatic asylums and visit each and every inmate of either sex, and satisfy itself that he or she is properly con- fined as a lunatic. Also, the said Commission in Lunacy is expected to set free a man or woman who recovers his or her sanity after a certain amount of confinement. How honestly and faithfully the said Commission does its work is vividly illustrated by two instances — to go no farther afield. The head of the said State Commission in Lunacy, who is always the physician on the board, was caught by the Governor of the State of New York at bribe-taking from the heads of said private lunatic asylums — or certain heads, at least. The plan of the doctor was ingenious. He didn't do so dull a thing as take a money-bribe — the money might have been marked, you know, or the stub of the cheque tell-tale in its nature — he did no such dull thing. What he did was to ask these gentlemen to subscribe to a certain snug number of shares of stock in a gold mine he owned out in Utah. The ratiocination in the premises is fairly obvious. The doctor did not want his gold mine inspected too closely by holders of its stock — any more than the heads of said private lunatic asylums desired their gold mines, their private lunatic asylums, inspected too close- ly by the doctor. The Governor promptly removed the head of the State Lunacy Commission at Albany, from office — our having, at the time, a Governor who was actually, honestly interested in pure politics — politics that were pure — I desire to imply. The second and last instance of the strength of the honesty and fidelity to duty of this all-powerful Com- mission is aptly illustrated as follows. A poor devil — when 28 ROBBERY UNDER LAW I say poor devil, I desire to be understood as alluding to a millionaire inmate of 'Fairdale,' who had the Devilish poor luck to run foul of the man at the helm of the steering com- mittee of the private lunatic asylum Trust — your humble ser- vant — Belisarius P. Spink — this aforesaid poor devil f had, in the course of the four years he spent at 'Fairdale,' before he died there, been visited but once by the said Lunacy Com- mission, and, upon that occasion by only one member of the said Commission. I hope I have said enough to intimate to this select and distinguished audience, that a man once in- carcerated in 'Fairdale' has about as much chance of ever drawing a free breath of air again as though he were in- carcerated in Hell — " Constantia : "You surely have, Mr. Spink, you make me shudder. Of all the places on earth that fill me with dread, that place is a lunatic asylum. A person would be safer and more sympathetically entouree if she were surrounded by drunkards in all the horrid and various stages of intoxica- tion." Lawless: (Aside to Spink). "B. P., be on your guard. You have painted the situation so strongly that Mrs. Bletter- mole's feminine susceptibilities have taken alarm. Beware lest you destroy your own handiwork by the eloquence of your pictorial powers. Spink: (Aside to Lawless). "The point is admirably taken. I am so utterly unused to take women into considera- tion — except as the play-things — ^that it's next to impos- sible for me to take them seriously. I shall amend the complaint." (Aloud). "Of course, you must make allow- ance for my professional habit of exaggerating the points in my favor, and minimizing those opposed — Mrs. Blettermole. I do not intend to convey that there is really the slightest similarity between a private lunatic asylum and Hades. Far from it. Nothing could be more luxurious than the grounds, say, of 'Fairdale.' Expensive hot-house plants are set out everywhere along the border of the closely cropped sward — looking more like one of the stately homes of England than a tThe author is the "poor devil" referred to. Only once was he visited by the Lunacy Commission in four years' incarceration. ROBBERYUNDERLAW 29 place for the amelioration of the physical and mental condi- tion of those unfortunates whose minds are clouded." Constantia: ^'Mr. Spink, you surely are a lawyer. You surely are an advocate — " Blettermole: "An advocate! I should say he was an advocate. Ha ! Ha ! An advocate ! Why, doesn't he belong to the Church of the Holy Advocate — on Fifth Avenue, New York, a recent million dollar edifice built almost entirely by subscriptions from members of the legal profession of New York City, not forgetting that conglomeration and galaxy of legal talent, the New York City Bar Association — and isn't he the senior warden of the vestry of that most sacrosanct congregation — which vestry is composed entirely of law- yers? Advocate! I should say Spink was an advocate!" Spink: "A-hem, A-hem. My dear Mr. Blettermole, permit me to observe that I have been forced more than once in the course of our business relations to curb your bounding wit when directed against my religious proclivities. ' My re- ligion is something entirely aside and apart from my work — " Blettermole: "I should say it was!" Spink: "Be good enough to permit me to conclude. As I was about to observe, my religion is something quite apart from my work — and I cannot permit even a client for whom, socially, and otherwise, I have so profound a regard as I entertain for Mr. Winston Blettermole and his charming wife — one of the reigning queens of the Four Hundred — to make light of the most serious — ^the most sacred thing to me on earth — " Blettermole: "Pardon me, Spink. I shall not offend again." Spink: "To conclude rapidly my plan for the perma- nent, forcible retirement for life into obscurity of that vig- orous and gifted personality, Mr. Hugh Stutfield, of Vir- ginia and New York. My scheme will sequester Stutfield, sequestrate his entire estate, and — to cap the delicious climax — one of the law partners of one of the most prominent mem- bers of the Board of Governors — so-called — of 'Fairdale' Pri- vate Insane Asylum, shall, by the act of a certain New York Supreme Court Judge, whose ear I have — as we lawyers say — be appointed the sequestrator of Stutfield's superb estate of 30 ROBBERY UNDER LAW some five million dollars, while brother Stutfield is wearing out his vitality and indignation behind the bars of 'Fairdale' on a charge of being a dangerous lunatic — a maniac with sui- cidal and homicidal tendencies — said charges to be preferred by the gentlemen here present — Mr. Winston Blettermole and Mr. James Lawless — the former, as his nearest blood-relative and heir-at-law, the latter as his 'best friend,' as we term it in law — " Lawless: "Permit a momentary interruption of your most interesting and instructive dissertation, Mr. Spink — but the idea of my being under any conceivable circumstances the 'best friend' — or any hind of a friend — to the tenth degree removed, if there is such a thing — of Mr. Hugh Stutfield, is far from bad. Indeed, very far from bad." Spink: "I agree with you absolutely, there, Mr. Law- less. But the law, you know, does not inquire too curiously. The law, you know — for a lawyer who really understands its profound principles and is not a mere case-chaser a mere authority-hunter, but stands upon and defends before more or less unlearned and superficial judges — while there are noble exceptions — as the vast majority of judges undoubtedly are — defends and stands upon the eternal principles of the law — for such a lawyer the law is the most marvellous engine for achieving objects contrary to the law — contrary to equity — contrary to justice, and contrary even to common sense, ever conceived by a mind less dazzling than that of his Satanic Majesty himself. Fortunately for the peace of society, there are very few such lawyers, and therefore the fower for ill of the law is a closed ho oh to the slothful^ ignorant, anibition- less gamhlers who mahe up the ranh and fie of nuy august profession — men for whom I have about as much respect as a wolf has for a herd of sheep." Lawless: "The New York City Bar Association would be highly edified, my distinguished counsel, at your above ohiter dictay Spink : "Ah, my distinguished client, you are very right there — very right there. But you should differentiate and ut- terly bar apart — as much so as sheep from goats — my remarks before that dignified assemblage, the New York City Bar As- sociation, and — and my millionaire clients about to engage in a ROBBERY UNDER LAW 31 war with a brother millionaire who for audacity and fertility of resource is a foeman worthy of our steel.'' Constantia: "Bravo! Mr. Spink. You fire my imagina- tion — this is the age of gold — if not the Golden Age — and it is right that in such an age, millionaires — the historical heirs of the Barons of old — should war upon one another. I shall assuage the qualms of my conscience by murmuring to my- self 'All 's fair in love and war' and The Battle of the Mil- lionaires is now onP'' Spink: "Brava ! My fair client. Brava!" (Aside to Lawless). "Gad! That was a lucky shot of mine — she 's ours from now on — mark my words we'll have no more backing and filling upon Constantia Blettermore's part — ^but, on the contrary, the iron will and inflexible purpose of a Lady Mac- beth." Lawless : "By Jove I I believe you're right. My felicita- tions." Spink: (Aloud). "There 's nothing more to be un- folded of this most warlike and romantic mediaeval plot — not another solitary word. Trust me to look to the details — it would take off the cream from your interest, Mrs. Bletter- mole, were you to know it all on the very brink of the in- ception of hostilities. No. Be advised, and permit me to de- velop my work before your eyes — as though you were a spec- tator in a theatre — who was unaware of the turnings and windings of the sufficiently tortuous and devious plot upon the boards." Constantia: "The only objection I see to your deeply laid and superbly prepared plot, Mr. Spink, is its absurdity." Spink: "Pardon me, I do not quite catch that." Constantia: "The only objection I see to your deeply laid and superbly laid plot is its absurdity." Spink: "You amaze me, Madam. My plot absurd?" Constantia: ^'The most absurd I ever heard, to be as sound and thoroughly prepared — outside of its absurdity." Spink: "Please oblige me. Madam, by naming a few of the absurdities." Constantia: "With pleasure. First, no man in the United States — I except no one — ^has given such infallible proof of reasoning power of the highest order as has Mr. 1 . - - ~ :11s -rri. • -:r^ :»^-.:rc reie..-^-^ t-:. '-•_r :_ -.Lf -r: ;: ;; ^:.. ::-^ H-'-V; "-T -:T -' I -7-1. - - - _ : .1 . - " ':.:i;l:i : i. "z. :-ir ::.'^: : : '.--'. - "" " -IT ~ Z - "! _ T . . :-ir ^; -^- - ^ 1- ~7:^::^i -::: -' - -■- - _ : - -^ • " - - ■ _.- -. - - - s" L- : 2: ^ : : _;--_-" -;;■--;■ ^- - - - -- - ; iruitii — --- ^ "• -^^ ^- — There r ~ — _ _ "^ _ , _ - 55 z:: 1 :r:: ii. ; - - -i-i-tt - -. "- -^i (/.' -'.:- — :: -z; I-tTt t; = t — :- t;::j.— ::-" - - 7 ' ^- I. JiT:rl:= :i :"i ■ - has, for the rei ^ _ - " 7 —--.-_- - _ - _ ' : — - a ifoxd, tis£ (k - , - :: r :;:.T ^; :- T * ■ T ~ - . r - - - - ^ ; - -TT.. :i Li: i-rz. ^ T :i%aficei.. ---_ ■ .. . - •^:-::_ :■: .1 L ' . , CordoTa, ^z^i . _ , _ — - _ - . , - - - "=^ ' - ' ^ T '^ - r T ! T '. " . ___ L. -^_ " ' T :i^ ::. ::: r" J.- — ^- ~ --" - ^ ... _-.--... . _ — ^ .:.'.- -■ ^ - - - - / r"""- ^1:"- rT:s:i_Lr iz. ::iT:r -:::£— _T_ T. - ... - . .:. _ - _ . _ -: - ._ .---.: — - - - - : i. .--LW* 7. ]■'. £ '.Z. 1: r:: ir :ii :_r ~ -It " t! - t ■- . _ ^ ' 1 ..-- ' ^ ~:. — : :it :".iT — " r " - - •-^ ■---—" ' . Z ". ^ _z^ " . Tt : T I. : : — : ' :1 *" - - :;:-• -/ '' - - _ ~ > " " T— — •. . . _ . ^ ■ = : 'Z.:-?. 1 I.T ^ : . 7 - - — - . ::; A ■nrs to a "Titm in bj a man like JeTms— the ~ ~3e in all IThiYeraties em- Atlantic. This fital flaw sed too strong a word for me ' the Aiistoldian method Der cent, of the i£n(»ant ROBBERYUNDERLAW 33 and fallacious, vain and foppisii opinions from the American bench — I except only the Supreme Court of the United States. Thus spoke the lawyer." Spink: "Powerfully put, my fair client — with your per- mission, Mr. Blettermole — 'my fair Portia. And I say 'Amen' to both premises, namely, that Mr. Stutfield is a logician with- out a peer in the United States to-day, and that the average American judge is a sophist without a peer in the United States to-day. Butj what has that to do with the case? It is no more essential or necessary that a rnan should he insane in order to imprison him for life on a charge of insanity^ in forty per cent, of the States and Territories of the United States to-day^ than iti is that he should have red hair — that he should he red-headed^ Constantia: "In that extraordinary event, I have noth- ing farther to say except 'So be it' — with, of course, the con- sent of these gentlemen." Blettermole: "O. K. for me." Lawless: "I agree, provided one sole thing. You know, Blettermole, that the only reason I came into this thing was to free my field of the only dangerous rival to Viola Caris- ton's hand that has ever entered it — namely, Stutfield. Your secret is safe with me; and if the condition I now am about to name is not fulfilled, and I am forced to withdraw, all you will have to do will be to hunt up another 'best friend' from among Stutfield's worst enemies to take my place, and the trick will be turned. Don't look so black, Blettermole. And you, Spink, reserve your sarcastic smile till you hear. Perhaps my condition will prove no barrier, but by Gad ! an added incentive to my zeal to join with you to the bitter end. I shall propose once more to Miss Cariston upon her return this afternoon — she's expected any moment now. If she ac- cepts me — which is damnably — pardon me that slip of the tongue, Constantia — doubtful — I withdraw. If not, I'm with you to the death. Blettermole : "Agreed." Constantia : "Agreed." Spink: "Agreed." Lawless: "Many thanks. iN'ow there 's going to be no Romeo and Juliet business about my venture in the field of 34 ROBBERY UNDER LAW love — presumably — in a few minutes. I'm neither in the mood for Romeo's part, nor is there occasion. Eomeo's part will very well keep. I shall make occasion to see Miss Caris- ton privately upon her return from riding and promptly pro- pose. "\ATiereupon, she will either refuse or accept me. I've been there before — she does not dilly dally over the cere- mony of decapitating rejected suitors — " Constantia : "Viola is a dear girl, and my very best and sweetest — and one of my oldest — girl friends on earth; I'd have you understand, James, and I cannot and will not per- mit even a breath against her." Lawless: "My dear Constantia, I hadn't the faintest idea of breathing so much as a syllable against the woman I'm risking my soul for — if I have a soul, which at times I very much doubt — " Constantia: "You stand excused." Lawless: "If she accepts me, all well and good. Mr. Spink can hunt up another 'best friend.' If she refuses. I re- turn with you in your car to-night, and hostilities begin to- morrow in the offices of Belisarius P. Spink, Esq., attorney and counsellor, "Wall street, New York. I shall deputize you, Constantia, as my fair ambassadress with Miss Cariston — I trust to your woman's tact to get her to me, and keep Cap- tain Cariston off, and herd these men in the library for the five minutes necessary for me to learn my preliminary fate — for my real fate will not be in issue until Stutfield has been put out of the way — then I shall lay siege to her hand in true style." Constantia: "With pleasure. James. And whatever the prayers of a poor, sinful, temptation-tossed mother like me, are worth are at your disposal." Lawless: "I thank you, Constantia, from my heart." (Kisses her hand). (The light has been gradually lowering till it is now dusk. Spink goes to the fireplace and pokes the logs. A bright blaze bursts up. As he does so, the door opens and in walks Viola, followed by Captain Cariston, in riding cos- tume. He is a rather tall, slender man with grizzled mous- tache and imperial — short imperial — with acquiline features and erect, militarv but courteous, but non-pompous, non- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 35 exaggerated bearing. Viola is dressed in a ball gown in the style of 1887. In other words decolletee but without the un- sightly and hypocritical gauze fringe or, so to speak, panta- lets; which nowadays shroud the outline of the bust as though it were a shameful thing: while throwing into relief the armpits and navel — or. at the very least, near-navel of the lady. We are Pro-Allies to the last degree, in the present European unpleasantness; but we do earnestly wish that bet- ter men may be spared, and that German bullets may find a lodgment in the degraded and degenerate carcasses, as re- gards taste in female apparel, at least, of Paul Poiret and the rest of his pirate crew — the balance of the randy French- men who bedeck our dames; so that they make a man-about- town think of a group of soiled doves, "sitting for company" in the parlour of a "sporting-house," upon glimpsing, a bevy of society maidens and matrons at the opera, or other social function, nowadays.) Viola: "Connie!" Constantia: "Viola!" (They hurriedly move towards each other and embrace affectionately.) Viola: "I slipped this dress on to save dressing twice, after my ride with Papa — since I'm booked to a ball at the Country Club to-night." Constantia: "How well you're looking, dear. I haven't seen you since the Patriarch's in January — " Captain Cariston : (After shaking hands with the men, and later, Mrs. Blettermole) . "How d'ye do, gentlemen. De- lighted to welcome you to 'Elsinore.' How do you do, Mr. Lawless, and you, Mr. Blettermole?" Lawless: "Permit me to introduce to you a legal friend of mine, Mr. Belisarius P. Spink, of the Metropolitan bar." (Captain Cariston and Spink shake hands). Constantia: "Now I want you to show me once more, and particularly Mr. Spink, those old Shakspeares you have — the folio edition that has been in your family for ages — " Captain Cariston: "With pleasure." (They start out, and Lawless catches Viola's eyes and makes a slight motion with his right hand — the others all se ?: '!■ 3 z z ?: Y 7 X !■ Z R L ^ SI.::!:: .:^-" ^.void looki::^' at V::li and Li -*ri.' V:^i : Aj^, La^-ess ani I wiU ioiii you in the library." iS: SMu as tie aior clrfes. La-'ess sajs gravely, as he leads Viola towards tie £:ia — :1: r ina is sill cilj lit by Lai^fkss: *-T:la. I seizei rlis -:::::■ i.:" --Mse I am called to Xevr Y::s :::__:::, :i. 3^r::e:zile s car — " VMa: -TTl-. Jazies, I ::::;.^1- ":■_:, -e:- .rlii^ to be wiOi us for several aajs luge:, aa.:! aan:- ~::-i iie at tie ball to-ni^t^^ liairless: ^I -a a: aai-:e -■::':- -:::.. aaaer al — I a:::.~ :::r:~ up fliis vitallT aiaa a::::: — a aa::_Tr — a a :' — :::^lv important laarter. It al aTSTs ~:la 7- v.." powea :: ga'a^: — la: ":"a aesaa^ — " Lavr:,as; •Yar hand/^ Vila: •■•11 : Jaaiaes, I emk so sorry — ^you know how muil I a:laa:ar 7:aa :rilliaiit ndnd, and cool, calm person- altv. Bat. as I lava told yon once beftwre, a laaa: ai Tr^::r te-aeraaaea.: :a' -erar :- ::^t l-asband." La-lss: "Aza -^t aar :ea;-.eranirait?'' Vila ; X:t to be : ^ :a:el -:aDse yoa are t: 1 azaa :zl:a:^l -.i:^ -atteriy iii:e:a:i^-as:a-::: — n'^t. to be ^:a:ar::-~ fas: :^a::'r : — -jy many — a:: a^ — "ii a. a little a s tla aae a have been and s: 1 it — lnt ont of l:ir a : a. f:a a::a 1:1_^ zie. Yon see. I aar. s: lar-sila.tea I aiusi -.-it^ entiaasasaa la. a man — VaHr? : - La-l55: '-If rlat 's al 7:;: ~a-:. I :— ^e as enthusi- jis::: as :a_e aaasiest t7r:' an tJae l:vreas :f love you ever dreaanea :a," Vila: "B\:t ia: tlat very -ana^aai event. Janae>. you would he a::inr."' La-i^as: ^Sa ^e it, I tale n:v • •; • 1 Do not think I part in an^er I Irnlv :e ie a I - li n you in time. G a n ra: n — * r ra^ aa — n:— r 1 va Via. good-bye. W:l- -:a: -ernaissian. -av I k:s,5 vour land." ROBBERY UNDER LAW Viola : ''Certainly, James. You know I will always care for you as. and value you as one of my most valued friends." Lawless: ^'May the Gods forbid P^ (They leave the room together. The door opens shortly thereafter and enter Stutfield, in evening dress, with a pair of saddle-bags over his arm. Stands leaning on mantel- piece). Stutfield: "As close a shave as I care to experience! Phew ! As soon as I drove in on one side of the oval before the house, the Blettermole gang and that crafty rascally but deeply learned shyster, Belisarius P. Spink, Esq., attorney and counsellor and pillar of the bar of Manhattan Island, with his hopeful client, that cold-blooded rogue and delicate debauchee, Mr. James Lawless, multi-millionaire, drove out on the other. A close shave, indeed. The moon came out from behind a cloud and shone full in their faces in the open carriage — they saw me, and I saw them — " (Door opens, and Yiola enters). Viola: "Hugh! You here?- Stutfield: "Yes, darling. I slipped into the house after the others left, and slipped a quarter into Wash's hands to keep 'mum,' and get you in here at once by hook or crook — " Viola: "Oh! I see now the cause of Wash's mysterious looks and words. He said: 'Miss Vi, Mr. Lawless tol' me befo' he left to ax you partickler. Miss, to go in de drawin' room an stan' befo' de fire for a minute, tell you f oun' a note he leff for you under de clock on de mantelpiece — ' " Stutfield : "Good for Wash — he 's got the imagination of a darkey, all right. Now, dearie, just slip out and see the Captain and tell him I have important business with you, that won't brook delay and will not long detain you from dinner — possibly dinner's not impending immediately — " Viola : "It is not." Stutfield: "Good! I'll only detain you about fifteen or twenty minutes." Viola: "Then you must stop to dinner, and go to the ball with us after." Stutfield: "Delighted — provided you will honour me with a dance — in fact — the majority of them." Viola : "With pleasure." Stutfield: "Now that I've protected my lines — as they 38 ROBBERY UNDER LAW say in military parlance — 111 do what I've not had time to do before." (A pause). Viola: "And what might that be, my dear Hugh?" Stutfield: "That might be almost anything — speaking by and large — but it happens to be but one thing — and that is kiss you, my precious sweetheart." (They embrace). Stutfield: "Now, darling, please post the pickets with the Captain so that we shall not be interrupted." Viola: "I sha'nt be a moment, Hugh." (Stutfield sits down and gazes thoughtfully at the saddle- bags). Stutfield: "One hundred thousand — two hundred thou- sand — " (Enter Viola); Viola : "It's all right, darling. Papa's immersed in some papers connected with his live-stock — you know this is a three thousand acre stock farm, and he raises beef for the Northern market — we have very fine corn and grazing land — blue grass — and it's his delight. He won't budge till we go to him." Stutfield: "Good. Now my angel darling — " (kissing both her hands and putting his arm around her and taking both her hands in his left as they seat them- selves on the sofa) "what I am about to say sounds more like the Arabian Nights or Monte Cristo and 'The World is MineP with that supremely good romantic actor, James O'Neil, in the role, than anything you ever heard of in modem life. I should like nothing better than to sit here and fondle and caress your lovely, bewitching self for the next twenty minutes. But I have matters more unattractive, but — now that I'm your accepted suitor, and the engage- ment known only to you and me, and to be announced shortly — more important. It is this. You know that I am a student ever since my Columbia University days in old New York, of Ps5'Chology and fExperimental Psychology at that. Now I am going to tell you a secret. I am what they call, vulgarly, a clairvoyant — the sort of thing generally, if not always — of your charming sex — nearly always women — you see advertised in the Sunday 'Herald' and even week day 'Herald' not to say 'World,' 'Sun,' 'Tribune,' 'American,' fThe statements concerning: Experimental Psychology found above are taken almost verbatim from the "Statement by Dr. Horatio Curtis Wood, Dec. 10, 1900," found on pages 68-73, inclusive, of "Four Years Beliind the liars of Bloomin»dnle," Dr. Wood being one of the Plaintiff's alienists in the case of Chaloner v. Sherman, being at said date Pro- fessor of Nervous Diseases in the University of Pennsylvania. ROBBERY UNDER LAW 39 ^Globe, and 'Telegraph' to name but a handful of the big New York dailies. I've never been to one, but I know people who have — I don't believe in them — if they were bona fide clairvoyants they'd make more money on their own account than pretending to mind other peoples' business for them. To resume. Not a human being knows of this faculty of mine but you. For one reason because I've been investigating it secretly until I could produce results worth while giving to the scientific world in book form — you know that I am a Master of Arts as well as a Bachelor of Arts — " Viola: "I knew that, Hugh." Stutfield: "I've been at work on this thing for three years and am only at the outer door of the mysteries of the human mind — the normal human mind. I cannot go into a trance or even a trance-like state as yet — such as these clair- voyants do — they don't go to sleep, but lie back in a chair and in a dreamy, slow voice speak at the instigation of their sub- consciousness. I can't do that as yet. But I may do so in time. What I can do is just this, and that is why I am here contrary to all the rules of Hoyle, with a rival in the house — or I thought was here when I came — but I was bound to see 3^ou — but alone, of course — so it made no difference to me whether Lothario Lawless — my nick-name for him — whether the gay Lothario were here or no. Now here 's the point. I've got intuitions — or premonitions — down to so fine a point — finer than those recorded in any of the scientific works on Psychology, even including The Society for Psychical Ee- search of England, of which Professor William James, Pro- fessor of Psychology at Harvard was once President, as well as Arthur Balfour, late Premier of Great Britain, and Sir Wil- liam Crookes, inventor of Crookes' Tubes — without which there would be no X-Eay — I've got it down so fine that I can tell for twenty-four hours in advance whether I am going to have good luck, bad luck, or 'nothing doing' good or bad. Now, this is done thus. When I wake in the morning I take ac- count of stock the instant I recover consciousness. I ask my- self how I feel — I don't mean physically — for I'm a very moderate, careful liver and always wake up feeling physi- cally the same — O. K. that is to say — ^but how I feel as regards my spirits — am I depressed — exhilarated — or neither 40 ROBBERY UNDER LAW one nor the other, just a flat calm. If I feel exhilarated — three years carefully kept written record proves that I will surely have good news that day — in the next twenty-four hours — a favorable telegram or letter will surely arrive, or a messenger will bear me a favorable message. If I feel de- pressed it is just as sure as 'eggs is eggs' that a bad letter or wire will arrive : if neither hilarity nor depression, that noth- ing will arrive and I may take a day off from business. 1 have been working this rabbit-foot in my large and multi- farious business affairs to the Queen, her most gracious Maj- esty's taste, for the past year or more. My brother directors on boards wondered why I pursued so bold or — on occasion so wisely — cautious a course, fighting for the control of each and every board I am on, and invariably achieving that de- sired end. But I did not oblige them by informing them, ^ow, on waking this morning I was most extraordinarily de- pressed. You know, my darling, no man on earth has more cause for heartfelt joy than your devoted and proud accepted lover — " Viola: ''''Dear Hugh!" (He kisses her). Stutfield : "So I acted accordingly. Now, I am not able to foretell — as yet — the future, for more than twenty- four hours. Nor am I able as yet to foretell a solitary detail there- of beyond the fact that something good is going to occur — something bad is going to occur — or, lastly, that nothing is go- ing to occur — good or bad — in my personal, private affairs for the ensuing twenty-four hours. I, of course, before going to bed the night before, know whether I have cause to wake up this, that, or the other way, next day — ^^depressed, exhilarated, or neither — ^but that, of course "cuts no ice" whatever. It is en- tirely outside and beyond known and recognized causes for exhilaration, depression or stagnation in my affairs, that these premonitions or intuitions work. / can hy them foretell^ pro- phesy, or what you will, with mathematical accuracy — the accuracy of a ship's barometer, which foretells loithin twenty- fonr hours the approach of the hurricane, or the change of the hurricane into fair weather — regarding storm^ favonng gale^ or calm^ in my private affairs. In a word, I am a hu- man barometer, as regards one sole thing— namely— my own personal affairs— ^nd only one of three aspects of them, name- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 41 ly, success, threatened difficulty, or 'nothing doing, Mr. Stut- field, to-day.' That is the mysterious and highly valuable in- formation telegraphed me — so to speak — on waking from a distance of tim(' twenty-four hours removed from my waking hour — by my subconsciousness. An extremely useful asset I have found it. Miss Cariston — and I hereby go on record and stake my reputation as an embryo clairvoyant — that the time will come %ohen you will admit that I did loell to follow the promptings of my sul) consciousness and bring these saddle- bags here to-night — absolutely outside and beyond the reach of any judge — for I can well imagine contingencies when it would pay me to go to jail for contempt of court for an ex- tended period, rather than divulge the whereabouts of so tempting a thing as their contents." Viola: "Do they contain Aladdin's Lamp, Hugh?" Stutfield : "Something very like it, my child. Now to wind this weird talk up. Here 's how I act on my premoni- tions. On waking, I take instant account of stock as to my feelings. If exhilarated, I push sharply all plans of action made before going to sleep the previous night. If depressed, I ride for a fall, pull in my horns, fight a rear-guard action, close reef my sails — or even prepare to scud under bare pol»*»> before the storm. Now if it so happens that I have no im- mediate plan of action I carefully scan my personal horizon and see where ill chance might injure me. Instantly, like a ship in a storm I make for port with whatever might be in- jured by ill fortune. That 's why I'm here so hastily to- night. I have here the tidy sum of two million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars." (Touching the saddle-bags with his foot). "In these good old saddle-bags, twenty-two hun- dred thousand dollars in Government bonds and the balance in cash — fifty thousand dollars in cash in one thousand dol- lar bank notes, neatly tied in packets of ten thousand dollars each." Viola: ''Hughr Stutfield: "A fact, my darling. Now give me a sweet kiss. A kiss for two million and a quarter — " Viola: (Putting up her lips, quietly). "There. Now why is all this money here?" Stutfield: "I prefaced this interview by saying — you 42 R B E E R Y U X D E R L A W will remember my darling." (kissing her two hands, still held in his left while his right arm still encircles her waist) "that it smacked of Monte Cristo and the Arabian Xights.*' (Viola smilingly bows assent). Viola : '"I was somewhat struck by that remark, my darl- ing, and am therefore not so OTerwhelmed with surprise at the contents of those saddle-bags as I most assuredly other- wise would have been." Stutfield: So far. so good. The reason for this extra- ordinary act is this. This is the result of a sale I have just put through of a patent I bought for about sixty thousand dollars, some five years ago. I saw the possibilities in it. It 's what they call a "basic patent." which means an elementary new principle in mechanical devices, as the original sewing- machine invented by Howe was a basic patent. If proper- ly covered it could not be got round by any improvement whatever for the seventeen years of life patents have to run. Any improvement on a basic patent can only be used by paying a royalty to the inventor. TTell. I met the inventor — an honest, amusingly shrewd and original real gerdus — all basic inventors are geniuses — and backed him to develop the patent — which then looked about as much like the compact, graceful thing a man can now carry in his waistcoat pocket. as a mowing machine looks like a lawn tennis racquet. It was cumbersomeness. complexity, and clumsiness itself. But, pardon my saying so, I am something of a judge of my fel- low man. and spotted Albert TTedge — of *Up State* Xew York — as an original genius, and therefore capable of devel- oping the patent sufficiently to sell. My friends — some — not all — thought I was a damn fool — excuse me. Viola, that slip- ped out — *■ Viola : "You are excused, my dear.'" Stutfield: "A thousand thanks. Some of my friends thought I was a fool to blow in sixty thousand dollars on an undeveloped patent. I stuck to it for five mortal years, and spent the sixty thousand in developing it. and. at last was rewarded by TTedge's out-TTedginof himself and producing something so supremely simple, cheap and easy to make, so light, and of small compass and of about as wide a market de- mand as the world hold=. namelv. an attachment for the sew- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 13 ing-machine by which the needle is threaded by a pressure of the foot—" Viola : "The needle threaded with one's foot." (Laugh- ing). Stuttield: "Precisely — it's an open-eyed needle with a slot, and the thread is pushed into the slot by a simple con- trivance every time the needle enters the goods and is released from the thread the instant it leaves the goods; thus the bore of threading the needle and the expense of breaking needles by bending them, by inadvertently pulling the goods from under the pressure-bar, is entirely obviated — since the needle is never in the goods. I owned ninety per cent, of the stock of the company buying the patent to develop. So after five years of the most fearful care and constant anxiety, I have turned my sixty thousand dollars into two millions and a quarter — not bad for a young fellow spending most of his time in Paris, and pushing Wedge by flying visits and con- stant letters and cablegrams. Wedge's genius pulled me through — saved the day and my sixty thousand — and I now take care of him for life. Of course, like all inventors, he had sold his interest early — before I got hold of him — and for a song." Viola: "I should say, indeed, not at all bad, Hugh, for a young fellow." Stutfield : "Thank you my dear. Only a few days ago a London syndicate bought the entire world-rights of the pat- ent for five hundred thousand pounds, or two million five hun- dred thousand dollars. They handed me that amount which I converted yro tern into Government Bonds, after deduct- ing ten per cent, or a quarter of a million dollars for the other stockholders in the patent — and paying the same over to them — and placed the two million and a quarter in my fire- proof safe at 'Eokeby' to await investment; and, mark you, darling, be meanwhile quite out of the highly improbable but possible reach of absconding bank presidents." Viola: "It certainly sounds like the Arabian Nights," Stutfield: "With this difference, my darling. It 's no dream; but two million and a quarter of the good 'long- green.' " 44 ROBBERY UNDER LAW (Viola laughs merrily and he kisses her on the lips. He then goes on) — Stutfield: '"I had sold forty thousand dollars worth of the SeLf -Threading Sewing-iMachine attachments, in the first six months the mechanism — in its final perfected form by Wedge — was ready for the market. We booked and filled forty thousand dollars worth of orders, at five dollars an or- der, five dollars a Self-Threader, within six months last past. These sales were made without going outside of Xew York City. A sewing-machine drummer or sewing-machine repairer was given a grip-sack full of ^S. T.^s — Self -Threaders — and turned loose on Xew York. They are as simple to attach to the sewing-machine as any other attachment. Hence they went like hot cakes — forty thousand dollars culled, reaped, garnered, out of hard old Xew York, inside of six months, and not one dollar for advertising agents, traveling expenses, or even salary. We gave them fifty per cent on the first twenty-five 'S. T.'s' each sold, and twenty-five per cent, there- after. It was on the strength of this marvellous showing, and the basic nature of my patents — ^I'd girdled the world — wid\J scope and reach of patents — I'd girdled the world — literally girdled the world with vS. T.' patents — it was on the strength of the quick spot cash sales of 'S. T.', the strength of her pat- ents, and the reach thereof that clinched the deal with the big British Syndicate. That 's capitalized at ten million dollars, and is going to make things hum. My darling, I de- spise a man that exaggerates — a man that exaggerates is sim- ply a more or less good-natured non-malicious, but none the less, liar. So I shall recapitulate the countries in which 'S. T.' Ls covered by patents. The whole of Europe — down to so small a country as Belgium and Switzerland. All of South America. Central America, and Mexico — except Pat- agonia, where they produce ostriches — but not patents. In- dia, China and Japan. Xew Zealand. Australia and South Africa — winding up with Canada and the United States." Viola : "A comprehensive purview of the world, surely, my dear Hugh — it revives one's knowledge of geogi'aphy to gj over the list of 'S. T.' " Stutfield: "It sureh* does, my dearie. The handful of other stockholders were amazed at the scope, and the thou- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 45 sands of dollars it required yearly to keep patents alive throughout the world, but they were confident of my business judgment, and now are rewarded. Now, to wind up this un- usual interview, and go in to dinner. My reason for doing this extraordinary thing — ^bringing two and a quarter mil- lions in securities and cash to you by night, in a pair of sad- dle-bags, in Government bonds and bills — is briefly as follows. My property is divided into three divisions. When I say that I ignore for the moment the saddle-bags and their interesting contents. Division one is the largest. It lies in New York. In New York real estate — all on Manhattan Island, and all choice, picked parcels of land. There is but one exception to this — that is a 350 acre villa site on the Hudson, opposite the Catskills, in the township of Khinebeck. . The loveliest and lordliest view of mountain and river on earth — it dwarfs the magic Rhine even. That has no house but a farm-house on it. My father bought it years ago. All the rest of my property is on Manhattan Island. It amounts to one and a half mil- lion dollars. Of this, one million is in fee simple — is mine out and out. The balance is about half real estate and half gilt-edged securities — the balance is in trust, and, in the event of my death without issue, goes to my dearly beloved cousin, Winston Blettermole, the only relative I have. Division two and division three are almost exactly equal in value. Divi- sion two, consists of five hundred thousand dollars worth of real estate and water-power rights on the Roanoke river in eastern North Carolina. This is a property with an enor- mous prospective value when the South comes into her own — that is, becomes the cotton manufacturing centre of the United States. This place is the extreme northern limit of the cotton belt, so no one can cut in between us and the Northern markets. Also, besides having two competing rail- roads — the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Air Line — which salutary fact assures low freight rates — it is within five miles — five miles below us, on the Roanoke — of water transportation — on the Roanoke to Norfolk — via the Dismal Swamp canal — and thence to Europe. Cotton grows up to the very doors of the mills there, is ginned on the spot, and carried into the mills." Viola : "It must be a wonderful sight to see cotton first 46 ROBBERY UNDER LAW grow before your eyes, and then turn — before your eyes — into cloth." Stutfield : "It is highly interesting. But the great thing about it is the water power, which does away entirely with the necessity of coal; and besides saving an enormous num- ber of thousand dollars per annum in coal, puts the manu- facturers beyond the reach of slow delivery of coal, during strikes." Viola: "I had no idea you were such a variegated man of affairs, Hugh. I knew you were of professional, legal and literary, and publicist bent, but that you were a man of af- fairs of such world-wide scope, I had not the vaguest idea." Stutfield: "Very probably, my dear. I've alwaj^s kept my business affairs pretty strictly to myself. Lastly, Division Three consists of sound securities to the extent of half a mil- lion, tucked away in several large, deep, and commodious safe-deposit boxes, in the vaults of the leading trust company in Richmond. When I say gilt-edged, I desire to qualify that statement to the following extent. I do not mean high-priced securities, so near par or so far above it, as to loudly pro- claim that they have seen their best days, by which I mean their days of vigorous growth. In a word, securities which are now at — or about at — ^the top notch. I've no particle of use for such — no use on earth. Marshall Field — a merchant prince for whom I have a high regard, and whom I laiow personally — Marshall Field, of Chicago — than whom an hon- ester, 'whiter,' business man never breathed — quite different from certain other of our hundred million dollar million- aires — for that 's Marshall Field's figure — a hundred mil- lion — Marshall Field once said to me after dinner: 'Stutfield, the stocks you've just mentioned are too high-priced for me — I can't afford to buy them. I'm not a rich enough man to be able to afford to own such stocks. The stocks I buj^ are stocks that are sound, but are around thirty or thereabouts — have n^ver been any higher — and have, therefore some 'come out' to them — some growth — some development. Some day, they'll reach 75 or 100. Then I'll sell them and buy other stock at say thirty or thereabouts.' I took my cue from Marshall Field — and carefully invested half a million — taking several years to do it — in vigorous young stocks — so to speak — and ROBBERY UNDER LAW 47 therefore the half million in my vaults in Richmond, bids fair to be a million or more one of these days. That makes a million and a half in New York; a half million in North Carolina, and a half million in Richmond, Virginia — that 's two mllions and a half. Now we come to the milk in the cocoanut — the two and a quarter millions in these saddle- bags, and just why they are in these saddle-bags. Here 's the very simple — if very unusual reason, my darling. FOR THE PRESENT I WANT THE TWO MILLION AND A QUARTER I HAVE JUST BROUGHT INTO THIS ROOM (slowly) WHERE NO COURT ORDER CAN REACH IT. The law is a queer thing. In the hands of learned and honest judges it is next to the actual personal presence of Jehovah — of God Almighty — on earth — for good,, for the good it brings about. But, on the other hand, with ignorant, self-indulgent, or dishonest judges, it is one of the crue.lest, wickedest and most Hellish instruments in the whole armoury of Hell. Now, when I met you on horseback yester- day afternoon — followed by your groom — you told me — in answer to my question — that you had a large safe of your very own — that no one but you knew the combination of, I mean — for the safekeeping of your splendid Stradivarius violin — upon which I desire to hear you play one of these days — for I heard in New York that your tone and execution are realty remarkable — quite professional, in fact — " Viola : "If that 's so, Hugh, it 's the result of my two years with Mamma and Papa in Paris, just before I came out — two years under the great French master Vieuxtemps." Stutfield: "I was told, my dearie, that it is literally true — that your playing has a passion and strength joined to a delicacy and feeling which appears to join the two sexes as you play, and give masculine force and feminine tenderness." Viola: "Again, I have only to say, my dear Hugh, if that is so — thank my great master." Stutfield : "To resume. Now I want to get into that big safe — not personally — but two million and a quarter of me — to do that, I shall have to ask you to take the Strad. out and sleep with it alongside you, so that in case of fire you can escape with it — that 's the only possible danger in this quiet, 48 R O B B E R Y U X D E R L A W peaceful section of Virginia, not thieves but — and that dan- ger no greater than anvwhere else in the county — fire." Viola : '*I shall, with pleasure." Stutfield: "'Many thanks, indeed, my dear, for I know how you value that violin. Plere is my will and one or two other important papers in the same envelope. In my will I have left 3^ou the income of these two million and a quarter. The balance of my property — bar the half million in Xew York — goes to educational institutions when my estate vests, upon your death — that is to say — and another, who with you form what is called in Jaw the cestui quit rusts — the two people at whose death property left in trust vests or is turned over to the heirs. I want no receipt from you, my darling. I only want you to keep this money till I can have time to invest it in something in neither Xew York, Virginia, nor Xorth Carolina, so that I may have an entirely new set of courts ruling the money — for the judges are our rules — our modern kings, my dear, whatever fustian talk ignorant poli- ticians may vamp up about this being a Eepublic. The courts can defend or destroy your property and I want to have as large and varied a line of judges bossing my goods as my property is large and varied. Verhum sap. A word to the wise." Viola: (Smiling). "You. a distinguished law-writer appear to look upon the judges much as a criminal might — you appear, my dear Hugh, to be afraid of them — " Stutfield: "Because as a law-writer I know their igno- rance, I am afraid of them, my darling — of their ignorance, their dishonesty, or their favoritism or prejudice. How many judges have a college education — it varys in different sec- tions. In Xew York, for instance — about 33 1-3 per cent., at a rough estimate I In other words an educated client or suitor 'has to lay his case before an inferior "counsellor": or an in- ferior garbed in ermine and throned on a bench. Should said rule, developed further on; namely, that a judge must possess not only a College edu-cation, hui the only possible receipt — so to speak — for possessing same — to-irit — the degree of Bachelor of Arts — ever become general it will work havoc with such a college say as our own University of Virginia — founded by our own Albemarle Countv Thomas Jefferson himself I For in ROBBERY UNDER LAW 49 that splendid institution of learning the short-sighted, selfish and cruel rule exists by which every degree given by the Uni- versity is practically an honour degree — by which I mean the percentage required to get the degree is almost as great as the percentage required by such universities as Columbia and Harvard to obtain an honour degree. This is all wrong. There should be an honour degree and a degree for the gen- tleman of leisure or professional man not after honours, l)ut after a degree from his alma mater. The consequence is that the percentage of men who have matriculated at the Univer- sity of Virginia and get degrees is about the smallest in the country. The average student of the University of Virginia never dreams of taJdng a degree! If my rule comes to pass no lawyer would ever think of going to the University of Vir- ginia for a college education, but to the fine Colleges of Wil- liam and Mary, and Washington and Lee, of the same State. The term, 'learned judge' is in every sj^cophantic lawyer's mouth — and yet the infernal rascals know that they lie when they use the term — because why ? Because Judges are — bar the rarest exceptions — never learned— they are as ignorant of the law in the case as any shyster lawyer tbat ever bluffed a fee. Until what time? Why vrntil the lawyers have taught them what the law in each given case is — hy their opposing hriefs! The judge is a mere student^ a mere law-student to the law- yers who instruct his honour in the premises ! I'll tell you all that the so-called "learned judge" dwindles dow^n to — and that is a good guesser — the most respected judge among lawyers is he who can guess hest. The hest judge is the best guesser! The judge who oftenest guesses right which side has the law with them, — as shown by that side's lawyer's brief — is the most respected judge in the legal community's purview. The wise remarks you read in judges' opinions, as well as the learned cases cited, are l)odily copied verhatim from one or other of the lawyers^ 'briefs. This sounds strange but it is true. I am divulging a professional secret in lifting this sombre veil. No man should be elevated to the bench who has not received a college education from a reputable incor- porated college. Lawyers might be admitted to the bar on a mere common or high school education, but not so men who have the power of life or death, and the fearful responsibility 50 ROBBERY UNDER LAW of holding the scales governing property. These men should boast as fine an education as the civilization and culture of the nation affords." Viola : '*! thoroughly agree with you, Hugh." (Stutfield bows his acknowledgments). Stutfield: ''Any lawyer who ever hopes to qualify him- self for the august office of judge should be forced to acquire a college education — ^by which I mean the degree of Bache- lor of Arts. As aforesaid — as about at a rough guess — one- third of the legal profession have the bench as the goal of their professional ambitions, consequently^ about one-third of the legal profession of practicing lawyers will be well edu- cated — as well educated as their clients for instance! .V^ man could have a more profound admiration and respect for the mighty office of judge^ than ycnir devoted^ lover, my darl- ing — Jehovah Jah was a judge — Abraham that 'mighty man of valour' when pleading for the lost inliabitants of Sodom, exclaims: 'Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?' — or words to that effe'Ct. Jesus Christ was a lawyer. He is called 'Our Advocate with the Father.' or words to said ef- fect. As the Judaic law was a canon or religious law — the law of the Rabbis, the law of Moses — Christ in arguing with the Rabbis and Scribes, who were lawyers, had to he — and proved himself to be — a lawyer of the highest learning and dialectic and forensic skill. Therefore nothing could he higher than the august professions of Judge and Advocate. It is the damnable prostitution of these God-like offices to-day., which disgusts^ dismays and appalls me. Instead of a judge being selected because he towers above his brother lawyers for the logic displayed in his briefs, and the uprightness of his con- duct of a case — the absence of chicanery, mendacity, or as is but alas! too often the case — flat perjury upon the part of his witnesses industriously trained therein — after having heen deeply suborned — ^by himself — instead of that a judge is a 'good fellow,' 'a good sort,' a 'popular' man in the profes- sion ; always kow-towing — as lawyers always do — to a brother lawyer, always hat in hand to one another, and always crawl- ing on their bellies to the court — to the judge — and cringing before him. Instead of being an honour to his profession the modern judge is but too often a man who stands in with the ROBBERY UNDER L.A/\V ol machine and has a powerful political pull — and stands in — in New York — with the malodorous boss of Tammany Hall ; who at a breath can unmake any judge of the New^ York Supreme Court, as by said bosses' breath said judge was made. It is this damnable state of things which makes me despair of the future of this country : and see our government burn up as a scroll in the fires of the Day of Doom. The people are grad- ually awaking to the chicanery, tyranny, and dishonesty of the bench ! "Labour, particularly, has it's 'red right eye' on the courts, and their iniquitous injunctions; and labour, will have to be reckoned with when the battle of Armageddon, for the United States, dawns. I am in favour of the initiative, refer- endum and recall of judges, but not of the recall of judicial de- cisions. Because law is as much above the heads of laymen — to steer a course safely and justly through — as is chemistry. We must always have judges, and the people cannot be judges as to reversing and recalling their decrees. Where would the right of life and of property go if a decision made one day, could be recalled by what amounts to a mob, — so far only as law is technically concerned — could be recalled by a mob — the next? No: Judges must be recalled for misconduct: but not their opinions. The subject of logic — which is the compass by which only a judge steers his course where two legal au- thorities conflict, where two decisions by former judges upon the point then up before him for decision conflict — the study of logic needs a national professional revival. Provided a judge is a sound logician — ^which means a man trained in the intricacies of the Aristotelean syllogism, which means again a college bred manf and a college bred man only — he can he almost infallihy trusted to give a just and learned decision. For the opposing lawyers have hunted up the law governing the case in their briefs. So all he has to do is to balance the au- thorities and see on which side the weight of authority lies and — where authorities conflict as aforesaid — steer his course by the compass — the pole star of the Aristotelian syllogism. There'^s no word in English oftener in a lawyer\^ or judge^s mouth than the word Hogic^'' than the words 'logical^'' '"illogi- cal^ '"fallacious^ '"fallacy'^ ! And yet there's no hook less often tA man possessing the degree of A. B. from an incorporated college. ROBBERY UNDER LAW in the hands of judge or lawyer than a text hooh on logic! — by which alone the intricate rules of that mighty science may be kept fresh: by which rules alone the highest reasoning is guided and kept right: as the sextant guides the mariner hy showing the position of the sun. Logic to-day is a joke! a dead dog! a stinMng carcass floating doxrn a canal. Hence the damnably unjust, ignorant, and dishonest opinions of but too many of the judges of this fair land both State and Fed- eral. Logic should be revived as it was in the middle ages so that a judge may stand on his own feet when authorities conflict. Xo candidate for a judgeship should be permitted to mount the bench until he had proved himself by briefs of his in litigated cases, that he was a logican of the first rank — a7id the hurdeii of proof would he on him to show that he actually wrote each hrief. If an illogical, fallacious or ig- norant brief could be thrown up at him from the past years of his professional work it should dishench him. All briefs should be filed under control of a special court officer — that is to say — all those of lawyers who put themselves in line for ju- dicial honours — and upon these hriefs irould the professional record of the candidate for judicial preferment he hased. A crooked or fallacious brief would ipso facto disqualify him for the bench. He would have to draw his own hriefs and every hrief he had ever drawn vjould have to he filed, as well as the opponents' hnef ! Hal PTa ! My dearie, it makes me lausfh when I think of the wrv faces such a rule would cause among the suave followers of Ananias; who form so large a part of my august profession! ^Yhat a salutary effect it w.ould have upon hrief -drawing to know that the foul hirds of lying hriefs — of per jury -punctured hriefs — woidd surely come home to roost one of these days, inhen the question of the er?nine cam.e to he considered! Hence courts would scru- tinize briefs of noTi-candidates for the ermine, far more care- fully for lies, perjuries and follies than those of candidates- for-the-ermine. Gradually the people would get to employ candidates for the ermine — lawyers qualified to write 'C. F. E.' after their names — for the above reason — and so by the time the millenium dawns — we shall have in America, a highly educated, and. outwardly, at least, upright bar and ditto ROBBERY UNDER LAW 53 bench. If some such thing does not take phice, this coun- try will, — and will rightly — be placed forever under martial law, by the Military Dictator of the United States, which our aforesaid Armageddon is bound to produce. Who wouldn't rather have one hig Boss, one Oliver Cromwell — one grand Boss of genius — ^than the ten thousand vulgar-born, ignorant, piifling, plug-uglies that Boss the United States to-day? Pardon my professional zeal, darling — only a cl — n fool! Permit me to briefly enumerate our rulers. We have in every county in the United States to-day in the country: the Pre- cinct Boss, the District Boss, the County Boss. In the city the Ward Boss, the District Boss, the City Boss, the Boss. Finally : the State Boss! As Herbert Spencer said in effect, when he held the mirror up to the people of this great and mighty nation, on his recent visit to us of a quarter of a century ago, ''a republic is the most ideal forrn of government., l)ut it is the most difficvit to live up to; for it expects every ^tnan to do his duty without coercion^ or the fear of deaths or jail before his eyes; and thafs something that the delectable race of Tnan flatly refuses to do. Hence, instead of being the best form, a republic is practically the foulest, most corrupt and tyranni- cal form of government possible. You know that it's a by- word for ingratitude!" Viola: "I sadly do, my dear Hugh." Stutfield: "You are an inspiring auditor — my darling — but I must hurry on. This question of reform of Bench and Bar is the question of the cancer eating the heart out of the country of Washington and eTohn Marshall. To resume and conclude. This is the motto of a Eepublic, 'Whafs every- body's business is nobody's business.'' So there you are. So after the rottenness which reeks to Heaven from the United States; has brought down the purifying flames that did the business for Sodom and Gomorrah — the two prototypes of the cities of New York, Chicago and Philadelphia — figura- tively speaking, all this, of course, regarding the flames — and the bloodiest revolution the world has ever seen has ensued between the forces of Labour on one hand, and Capital, sup- ported by the Bench, the Bar, and the Churches, on the other; in which Labour will eventually win. by means of the acces- sion to her side of the great mass of the people, who stand 54 ROBBERY UNDER LAW betwixt and bet^vei?n — and a compromise has resulted — not between Labour and Capital, far from it — that fights to a fin- ish. — but a compromise between Labour and the said vast body of neutrals. After the thunder, and the s/noke. and the hlood of the aforesaid Armageddon shall have cleared aicay 'a new heaven and a new earth' — again strictly figuratively — will appear; and the folly and vice^ now only too frequently en- throned on the Bench iciU l>e forever done away! Pardon the length of this dissertation, darling, but something solid was needed to support the e.xtraordinar-y speetacle of a law- writer's standing in dread and horror of the courts: and scheming to get as long a line of judges strung out along his property as might be ! In the desperate hcpe of finding a learned or an honest one — or — by a miracle almost — hoth — learned and honest — in the lot I"" Viola : "Br-r-r I My dear Hugh, you make me feel cold all over ! It's lil^e listening to a page from Carlyle's French Eevolution to hear you sum up the virtues of the American Bench and Bar." Stutfield: "I don't wonder at your chill. The French I^evolution is what is going to repeat itself in this country. / am no prophet, but I am a student of history: and as such I judge the future by the past. Some duffers say. 'How can there be a revolution in a country where the majority rules?' The fools I That's just it. Suppose the majority is no larger than the — 'majority* that differentiated the followers of Eutherford B. Hayes and Samuel J. Tildenl And suppose the so-called minority prefers to fight — to remaining a tech- nical minority — what then \ Armageddon.'^ Viola: "You make me shiver, but I'm afraid you may be right." Stutfield : "Thank you. my darling, for giving me the benefit of the doubt. Xobody dislikes the idea of blood- shed, woimds and death more than your hiunble servant : but History shows that that is the 07'dy avenue possible to funda- mental political and judicial change. There are noble ex- ceptions to the dark rule I have laid down — exceptions among lawyers and exceptions among judges — but alas I my dearie — they are few and far. There are noble exceptions. hut they are few and far. To resmne and wind up. I may i ROBBERY UNDER LAW 55 invest in a half dozen different States. No Virginia Judge — or any other judge, for that matter — can rule on these two million and a quarter I noAv hand you." (Kaises and hands saddle-bags to her). Stutfield : "For / no longer have them — you have it — but nobody does, or will, or can — since torture is abolished in court procedure — know that valuable fact. The future is ominous of war in my affairs. Blettermole lusts after my propert}^ only less fiercely than he does after my life. He actually hates me Avith a fifteenth century Benvenuto Cellini hatred — it's laughable, but a fact. I could never understand it — he's always attracted me — he's a charming man — super- ficially, at least — and goodness knows, I never injured him — one's not generally given to injuring people who are attract- ive to one." Viola: "I can unravel that mystery, my dear." Stutfield: '^Can you, darling? Well, you will set at rest a care that has been disturbing me for years and years." Viola: "You know, Constantia's almost my most inti- mate and beloved girl friend. She was in Paris finishing her musical education — you know she is a remarkably talented pianist — " Stutfield: "I do. But her playing to me is cold — fin- ished, but cold — like herself, in fact." Viola: "Well, Constantia attracted me by the extreme artistic, literary and musical bent of her really unusual mind — beside her refined and charming personality. I saw her constantly during those two years. We, with Papa and Mamma used to go to the Frangais every Saturday night^ — when the plays were not too dreadfully risque — other nights, we were at work on our instruments, she the piano, I the violin, for we each worked about eight hours a day except Saturdays and Sundays, during those two years — allowing two hours for outdoor exercise daily. The consequence was that when she married, she confided in me and I do not think I am betraying that confidence in saying what I am about to now. She said to me once: 'Viola, I am sometimes con- cerned about the hatred Winston has for Hugh Stutfield. It is the most intense and persistent thing in his cool, indiffer- ent, charming, inconsequential temperament. It's absolutely 56 ROBBERY UNDER L A W ferooious I I've questioned him. and questioned him upon it, but in vain. His answers are always unsatisfactory and vague. At last I am compelled to believe that it springs from jealousy — ^years ago. when they were boys at college — dif- ferent Colleges — diii'erent Universities — Hugh got in without conditions and achieved his college career and subsequent de- grees without one. although he had to work like a Trojan to do so — for the classics and mathematics always came hard to him. whereas Winston, who had a natural talent for lan- guages, and to whom mathematics came easier than to Hugh, got conditions upon entering Harvard, got new conditions each year he was there — and finally — in order to get rid of them, had actually to take ice years to complete the four years* course. This was a case of the hare and the tortoise. TVinston neglected his superior talents for languages, for Latin and Greek, as well as for algebra, geometry and trig- onometry, and suiiered severely thereby. Hugh Stutfield. on the other hand, toiled and won. Xow. strange as it may seem, this boyish incident has been the fons tt origo. the fountain and source of a gi^owing animosity in manhood's years." Stutfield: "Lord I Is tliaf the only reason for his Eenais- sance hatred of me. TTell. great oaks from little acorns spring sure enough. Xow. to conclude. Lawless desires my disap- pearance, owing to his being a suitor for your hand. Beli- sarius P. Spink knows more law than any man in the United States, and has less scruple than any lawyer, yet outside the bars. Behind Blettermole and Lawless are their millions, and behind their millions, is Belisarius P. Spink — like Beli- sarius of old — the great general of the Roman Emperor Jus- tinian — ready to lead their massed cohorts — their ready mil- lions — to any goal they may select. A powerful combina- tion — not to say. a dangerous one — you must admit." Viola: ''Hugh, you frighten me I" Stutfield: '"Do not be alarmed. I am my own Beli- sarius — my own lawyer — and 1*11 back myself against Spin^: or any other lawyer in or out of shoe leather. Serorid. I'm not a pauper by any means.*' (Kicking the saddle-bags). Third. I'm so near being a clairvoyant — a prophet in the modern sense — that there *s absolutely nothing funny in it. ROBBERY UNDER L.A(W 57 ni hack my Subconsciousness to warn me of all their damMa* hie plots in time to prepare against therrb, and — m the end — frustrate them. Now, my angel, will you take my will, my private papers, and my two million and a quarter, and prom- ise me that you will neither admit you have them, nor sur- render them to anyone without a written order from me?" Viola: "Certainly, Hugh, I will accept this grave re- Bponsibility if you desire it. Shall I inform my father?" Stutfield; "Not for the present. I have the highest re- gard for Captain Cariston's war record, and business record, »ince the war hy tohich he made half a million in a twenty years' exile in the wilds of West Virginia coal fields, exiling himself to that wilderness in order that you and your mother —his only kin — might live here at 'Elsinore' in comfort mean- while, and be independent for life at the end of his twenty years in Siberia. He achieved his end, and now has the sturdy sum of a round half million salted down, in improv- ing real estate in Richmond and Atlanta. But the very fact that he is such a sound and yet bold business man, makes me shy at putting him in touch with this highly unusual per- formance to-night." Viola: "As you prefer, Hugh, dear: it's true that he does not yet know of our engagement." (Smiling). "He has hardly had time to learn of it." Stutfield: "A thousand thanks. Then you promise me that you will neither admit you have my will, private papers, and two million and a quarter, nor surrender them to any- one without a written order from me?" Viola: "I do, Hugh. And now, one word with you. I have had a frightful dream. Last night I seemed to be stand- ing on the edge of a broad, moonlit stream with you at my side. A large, black, funereal looking barge draped in black, approached with three ancient woxuen — resembling the Three Fates, on the deck. Before them — facing you — ^^stood a man in antique armor. As the barge drew near a most terrific shout — as of a mighty host, smote the air, and the figure on the barge drew his sword and saluted you. I felt you straighten yourself. I then glanced at you, and found to my surprise, that you, too, were in antique Roman or Greek armor. So soon as the man saluted you, you returned his salute with dS K 3 E E R Y U X d e r l a w your sword : whereupon, a second appalling shout as of a mightT host, smote the air. The barge reached us. You turned and said: 'Viola. I go. but I return.' Thereupon, you mounted the deck, and disappeared. It frightened me hor- ribly — I'm not in the least superstitious and disbelieve in dreams: but I never had one so vivid as that." Stutfield: "My darling. I'm a fatalist. I believe that whatever is to be will be — to the fall of a cocl'-sparroio — *• Viola : "I share that belief, largely." Stutfield : "Let that belief buoy you. my darling, until we are one." (Embraces her). End of Act 11. ROBBERY UNDER LAW 59 IN THE SHADOW OF THE LABYRINTH. Act III. Scene I. Stutfield's suite in the Hotel Kensington, 15th Street and Fifth Avenue. Stutfield in bed. Bed head to right of stage. Small room. Door to right leading into drawing-room. Door to left leading into bath room. Window at foot of bed. No fireplace in room — heated by a flue. Bureau between win- dow and bath-room door. Time, one month later, April il2th, 1887, 6:30 P. M. Stutfield wears a green sack coat, though in bed, a curtain goes up, a man. Dr. Barkus, enters. Weather is cold. Backward spring, snow on the ground. Barkus above medium height, strongly knit. About 55, grayish hair, slight- ly bald. Sharp, keen face; very cold. Wears glasses. Light gray eyes, square cut beard, turning white. Stutfield is read- ing a morning paper as he enters. Barkus affects a solicitous air, and approaches bed with both hands extended and close together. He has black frock coat on — overcoat and hat left in drawing-room). Barkus : "Ah ! my dear Mr. Stutfield, I am so distressed to see you thus. I met Mr. Blight in the lobby on my way into the hotel, and he told me that you were ailing — " Stutfield: "Blight 's far too fresh. I've only got a slight cold, Doctor. The only reason I go to bed for a cold is that I inherit a tendency to pneumonia — both my Parents died of it, my Mother in perfect health, and with a magni- ficent constitution at thirty, and my Father ditto at fifty-two — within two years of her. I have lungs like one of my regis- tered Jersey bulls — ^but like my bull, am susceptible to pneu- monia — to the scourge o'f the strong up here in New York with its treacherous humid climate." Barkus: "You appear to be quite learned in the care of the human frame." Stutfield : "Oh ! I don't know — every man 's his own doctor or a fool at forty, you know — I'm just thirty, but I like to be ahead of the game in such an important factor in the game, as life and death." 60 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Barkus: (Frowning). "You can hardty expect a physi- cian to subscribe to that alleged maxim, Mr. Stutfield." Stutfield: "No, scarcely. You gentlemen would practi- cally starve to death if there were not so many millions of fools. For men and women under forty of normal health are rarely under the weather, whereas those over, you may almost say, are always so, now and then — to commit a bull — through their abominable, fool-carelessness. The average man takes more care of his horse or dog than of himself — and this through no spirit of unselfish devotion — far from it — but from a fool spirit of carelessness and laziness." Barkus: "Permit me to observe that you are somewhat severe upon your fellow man. But I am not here to bandy words with you. Sir." Stutfield: "You are very correct." Barkus: "Now our Oriental friend, Rumdumbagore, will ibe here shortly and prepared to assist at the proposed interesting experience of observing you enter a trance. Per- mit me to inquire your opinion on the distinguished Par see, Eumdumbagore ? " Stutfield : "To be perfectly frank, I think he's about the biggest faker I ever saw — his name should me Rumdum- /flkore." Barkus: "Again, I must observe that you are some- what severe upon your fellowman." Stutfield: "Why, the jargon the man talks is enough to turn one against him. It sounds precisely as though he had spent a number of years in the French colony in McDougal Street, and caught the French way of pronouncing 'th' and saying 'zat' for 'that,' and had then gone to Mulberry Street and resided among our Italian citizens long enough to learn how to clip the end off of a word, as, for example, to clip ^banana' into 'banan' and 'money' into 'mon'; and finally wound up in the neighborhood of Tattersall's, or some other horse-exchange and learned from the Cockney grooms how to decapitate the letter 'H'. " Barkus: "But, my dear Mr. Stutfield, I was at pains to inform you prior to the first two visits to you of Mr. Rum- dumbagore and myself, two or three days subsequent to your arrival here, about ten days ago from the South, with ROBBERY UNDER LAW 61 your intimate friend, Mr. Blight,— the distinguishtA^l New York sculptor, who suggested to you that you permit my- self, as a dabbler in oriental trances and trance-like states, and Mr. Rumdumbagore, who knows all about them — coming direct from India, to lecture upon that very subject before learned societies throughout the United States. Mr. Blight suggested that you permit us to observe you enter a trance, since he had walked in on you — as you were first learning how to do so at 'Rokeby' and suggested your coming on to New York and getting some Psychologist who was more familiar with trances and trance-like states than yourself, to advise with you about them, and act as your as- sistant in carrying on your most interesting investigations in this mysterious domain of the brain. Upon your con- senting to both Mr. Blight's propositions, I was introduced to you by him, and in turn introduced you to the distinguished Orientalist who expressed himself as interested in your inves- tigations, and willing to assist for one or two seances before leaving for Chicago to lecture before the faculty of the Uni- versity of that city — I was at pains to inform you. that Mr. Rumdumbagore had had the misfortune to be first initiated into the mysteries of English pronunciation — so difficult to the subtle oriental tongue — when a child in Bombay — by an Italian nurse who had married an Englishman, after being first divorced from a French dentist. The Englishman was not high type — he was a coachman and born within the sound of Bow bells — hence he hadn't an ^h' in his head. The re- sult is the unfortunate, somewhat polyglot patois, somewhat mixed accent of our distinguished friend." Stutfield: "Your explanation. Doctor, is as unusual as is the appearance, aspect, and actions of Brother Rumdum- bagore." Barkus: "You are as suspicious of men as most law- yers, my distinguished patient." Stutfield: "Permit me to observe that I'm not your pa- tient, nor am I suspicious bv nature. But I am not a damn fool." Barkus: "Well, I hear his voice in the hallway, and shall usher him in." Stutfield: "Prav do." (So soon as the door is closed 62 ROBBERY UNDER LAW and he is alone, aloud, meditativelv). ''This is a very rum state of affairs here. I can't quite make it out. Blight has always been a close friend of mine and one in whom IVe al- ways had the utmost confidence. He walked in on me at 'Rokeby' as Dr. Barkus remarked just as I was in the very act of pushing my investigations of intuitions into the trance form, mentioned in my last talk with Viola, as employed by trance-mediums or clairvoyants. Spiritualism I despise and utterly disbelieve in as the haunt of fakers and cheats, but undoubtedly the trance, or trance-like state is the work-shop in which to experiment in the mysteries of the human brain. For instance, hypnotism is the direct result of a state closely allied to that of the trance, but differs from it in that while consciousness is clouded or entirely submerged in the hyp- notic trance, in the mediumistic or clairvoyant-trance, noth- ing of the sort occurs. In a trance or trance-like state I am as normal and keenly alive as when eating breakfast. There- fore I am willing to go through the d — d bore of entering the trance or trance-like state before witnesses since my Sub- consciousness informs me that it will not operate the trance or trance-like state for me in relation to my business affairs unless I enter it twice before scientific men. Otherwise I cant get the Ijloomiiv perishiri trance to operate. For oper- ate it without the co-operation of one's Suh consciousness is an impossihility . Blettermole may be at the bottom of this. He is my inveterate enemy, and would stop at nothing. What his object can be. I fail to see, but I shall without hesitation allow him all the scope he wants, for I understand that this is a law-abiding community — this fair City of Xew York — and therefore the law can redress any injuries I may sustain in pushing legitimate, scientific experiments to a conclusion." (Enter Dr. Barkus and Rumdumbagore. The latter is a tall, stout man, dressed in a black frcck coat, waistcoat and trousers, high collar and dark fcur-in-hand tie. The only thing out of the way about his costume is a turban, of large dimensions, and snowy whiteness, wound round the top of his head. His skin is a dark olive, and he wears a heavy black moustache. His motions are slow and pompous and so is his intonation. He bows with oriental depth to Stutfield stand- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 63 ing on the threshold, bringing both pahns towards his mid- dle. Stutfield carelessly returns the salute and says) : Stutfield^' 'Day, gentlemen." Rumdumbagore : " 'Ow does my young frien' find he- self to-da}^? I trus' zat ze indisposish' is not acute?" Stutfield: (Smiling pleasantly). "No, 'ze indispozish it not acute — " Rumdumbagore : "Ah ! My young frien' mock me." Stutfield: "Your young 'frien' is tickled to death over your accent, my learned Sir — 'zat's all — ^2at''s allP Barlms: "Mr. Stutfield, we will proceed to go into the trance, if you please, and cut short this unseemty ridicule of my learned friend who suffers through no fault of his own — " Stutfield: "No, by Jove, it was no fault of his own, but of that much married Italian-French- Cockney- English nurse —eh ?" Barkus: "I heg of you to proceed to enter the trance." Stutfield: "Very well, Doctor. But I should very much like to know why our learned friend wears that turban on his head, right here in New York." Barkus: "Mr. Rumdumbagore is a very devout follower of his cult — fire-worshipping — the Parsees, you know, are Persian Fire-worshippers — refugees — who, centuries ago, were expelled from their native land by the sword of the Prophet — the conquering Mahommedan — and sought and ob- tained asylum in India. They worship fire still. Now as to just why he wears a turban here in New York. Mr. Rum- dumbagore is under a vow — he is as a very devout Parsee — never to appear in public Without a turban — no matter v^here he may he — until India is rid of British rule." Stutfield : "Ah ! ha ! A patriot. I had no least inkling that so rare a fire as unselfish, unpolitical patriotism burned within that brawny bosom. Now for the experiment. What goes on inside the head during a trance — hoio it is operated — is shrouded in m/ystery so far as Science knows at present — a^ deeply shrouded as the nature of electricity or the cause of the X-ray — outwardly, however nothing could be simpler. You cannot detect the slightest difference in me physically when in a trance, or when out of a trance — except in my language. I need not warn scientists of your standing that 64 ROBBERY UNDER LAW I am no more responsible for trance-utterances than for sleep- talk — talking in my sleep — to which it is closely allied — all trances heing merely a forra of somnanihidis?n or sleep-walk- ing. The first hint I gave of being what is vulgarly called a medium was when I was a child, by sleep-walking. That has passed off with the lapse of time and taken on the rarer phase of trances and trance-like states. From the moment I say: 'Here goes I' Iiii wholly irresponsible for my utterances. 'Here goes I' 'Hugh Stutfield, you are in the hands of the Philistines. These hoary old rogues are bought, body and soul, by certain persons. Who or what said persons are I re- fuse to say. But be not concerned. Your destiny — like that of every man, woman and child on earth was fore-ordained from the beginning. Xothing these two bloody-minded, soul- less, sordid, old reprobates can do or say can alter or change your destiny one jot or' tittle — they are necessary that your destiny may he fulfilled. Proceed as though they did not exist, and know that in the end you will triumph over these two disgraces to the medical profession — to the noble Art of Healing, and those back of them. I say no more. Farewell.' Well, gentlemen, what do you think of the trance?" Barkus : "Infamous ! Infamous I The most absurd and slanderous utterance I ever heard." Eumdumbagore : ''My young frien* it grieve my *eart to 'ear you zay zuch zings — it grieve my 'eart. But in my 'eart — ze deep warm 'eart of an Oriental — I know it is not you zat zay zuch zings — it is not you but ze trance, ze trance. Zo nudding 'ard, no 'ard veeling rests in my great warm Oriental 'eart towards zee, towards zee. My young frien', I take my leave. May ze spirit of ze great founder of our Faith, Zoroaster, ze great Zarathustra 'imzely. who shed ze light of his countenance over ze land of ze Medes and Per- sians one thousand years before ze Christian era, watch over and guard your steps in zis wicked but populous city." Stutfield: "Amen to that, my learned fire-eater — beg pardon — fire- worshipper — Amen to that." (With a profound salaam Eumdumbagore leaves, fol- lowed by Barkus, who merely bows slightly. The door has hardly closed before heavy footsteps are heard in the hall- ROBBERY UNDER LAW 65 way, and there is a loud knock at the door of Stutfield's bed-room). Stiitfield: ''Come in." (The door opens and Barkus and Rumdumbagore ap- pear at the head of three burly, rough looking men). Barkus: "You must get up. Resistance is useless as you see, and dress and follow me. You are insane." Stutfield: (With a sarcastic smile). "On what grounds?" Barkus: "On the grounds of what you said when in a trance, or trance-like state just now." Stutfield: "But I was at pains to explain to you, only a few minutes ago, that that was not my mentality talking, but my Subconsciousness." Barkus: "I'm quite well aware of that." Stutfield: "Who's back of these proceedings?" Barlms: "Mr. Winston Blettermole and Mr. James Lawless." Stutfield: "Ah! My two worst enemies. Well, gentle- men, what do you propose to do about it?" Barkus: '''Propose to do? Why, that you obey my or- ders." Stutfield: "You haven't brought enough men with you, Doc." Barkus: '''Seize himP'' (The men dash towards Stutfield. There is a small table with a pile of large, heavy books on it at his bedhead, which prevents direct attack, so they come round that and are about to spring upon him — the head of the bed is towards the door of the drawing-room — when Stutfield whips out a revolver from under his pillow and says sharply) : Stutfield: "Hands up, you blackguards, hands up!" (The roughs at once obey. Barlms and Rumdumbagore, who are standing at the foot of the bed, shrink away from the pistol). Stutfield: "Now then, you bloody villains — you East Side thuofs and mid-night assassins, make tracks out of here or I'll fill you full of lead." (It is now dark and the electric light has been turned on for some time. The roughs leave hurriedly). f6 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Stutfield: "Now then you two promising specimens of medical rascality — for of course, you're a brace of alienists in disguise, lying as fast as you can open your dirty mouths — now then, you two apostles of perjury and crime, why shouldn't I put a bullet into each of you and rid the world of two such human hyenas? Come — pull yourselves together and answer me that. First throw up your hands — ^you, too, Eumdum." Barkus: (Clearing his throat and showing all signs of fear after swiftly throwing up his hands — Rumdumbagore does the same). "I trust, my dear Mr. Stutfield, that you will not take any unfair advantage of me." Stutfield: "No, I never take an unfair advantage of any man. But I shall particularly well see to it that you don't succeed in taking an unfair advantage of me. I'd have you understand that I hold a license to carry a pistol in New York." Barkus: "What are you willing to do?" Stutfield : "I am willing to discuss this interesting situ- ation with you to-morrow, say, at 3 P. M." Barkus: "But how do I know that you're not going to run away?" Stutfield : (Bursting out laughing) . "Eun away ! That's something I'm not in the habit of doing." Barkus: "In that event, I'll be very glad to meet you to-morrow at 3 P. M." Stutfield: "So be it. And now you may permit your hands to assume a normal position, and retire." (Both leave rather hurriedly. As soon as the door closes) — Stutfield: "Well, here's a how de do, sure enough! Viola's dream has come true!" End of Act III. Scene I. ROBBERY UNDER LAW 67 THE LABYRINTH. Act III. Scene II. Time: Three months later. July 12th, 1887, 4 P. M. (Stiitfield's cell in 'Fairdale.' A dark, gloomy, small room with heavily-barred, small windows. Room scantily and barely furnished. An engraving or two on the wall; a small dressing-table with mirror, washstand, and some common chairs. Stutfield in bed, dressed in a striped blue and white flannel outing jacket, over a silk gauze undershirt. The bed is brown wood, and has a canopy over it in the shape of a mosquito-netting on four slender rods. By his bedhead is a table, covered with ponderous books. He has just finished a letter as the curtain rises. There are two doors to the cell; one leading to his keeper's adjoining cell, and one to a bath-room. He begins to read the letter he has just written in blue pencil) — Stutfield: (Reading hastily, and with frequent glances at the door). "My own darling Viola: It seems ages since I've seen your sweet face, and heard your silvery voice, buried alive as I have been for a quarter of a year amid dangerous lunatics, even maniacs. This is how it all happened. Blet- termole and Lawless put their heads together, and one as my nearest blood relation, and the other as my 'best friend' signed and swore to a petition saying that I was insane, and dan- gerously so. They were evidently steered by Belisarius P. Spink, who is the lawyer of both Blettermole and Lawless, for the game has been worked to the Queen's taste from the start — not a blunder anywhere except that crime is always a blunder in the long run, and both Lawless and Blettermole have rendered themselves liable to a term at hard labor at Sing Sing for perjury. So far, so good. Now I shall de- scribe how I come to be here, flat on my back. Before doing so, knowing your sweet solicitude for my health, I shall touch briefly upon that. I never was better in my life. I once overworked and consulted a specialist on overwork and the preventive and cure thereof. He said: 'Lie down for 68 ROBBERY UNDER LAW twenty-two hourg out of the twenty-four and rest your spine, which )H the trunk-line of the nervous system, and exercise for the other two hours not severely, but lightly — even for much less than two hours if you feel disinclined for any cause not slothful irj it-- origin.' So I stay in bed. for twenty-two hours out of the twenty-four. 1 even take my three meals in bed, and then walk for the greater part of two hours — this walk is, of course, with a strapping six-f^ot, fighting- Irish keeper — come in, bathe, and go back to bed. 1 sleep for at least nine hours. The balance of the time I (:('p rny rriind constantly f^ccupied fry reading five daily Xew York moinirjg papers, and two daily evening papers from first page to last, including the most amusing of the ads. n.ji'\ }.'>in<- of the. u(\h. are distinctly amusing. I find that fi(>tJ))rj;/ t;ikfs (/nc r>ut of oneself so easily, so without effort of thoij//}it or brain work of any description, as newspaper rcu<]\r\f/. It r Ii.kf' cjifiD:/ thf- \]'i\ii<-\. flimsiest kind of pastry Hi f>h»ce of solid fr>orj. I <\<) rjot laitr to the editorials when T say no effort of tfiouj/ht or f^rain is needed to master the ^ofiNrit, f,f ji firedure. Yom know, my darling, that my Mother was born and bn'd in New York, and that T was raised here, and largely cflnr'itcd here, therefore it is ruitural that 1 shoidd feel the sti'on'^ affection for this great and beauliful city which I do. It is not with the people of New York City or N<'w ^'ork State I have a. (|uarrel on account of tJiesc, lunaey hiws, but with ttu^ rich rascals high in the counsels of the Four Ilundr-ed, wdio uuike money out of ROBBERY UNDER LAW 69 them. Xow you are prepared to hear how I came here. First and foremost, I desire to state, my precious darling, that it is through no lack of strategy or generalship upon my part that I am here. I had the situation entirely in my hand in New York, from the simple fact that I had had the foresight to make use of my license, to carry a revovlver in New York, by having it under my pillow when they tried to overpower me by sending three strong-arm men into my room at the 'Kensington' after dark to carry me off. There was a sinis- ter purpose lurking behind the act, namely, their desire to make me catch my death of cold by hauling me out of a sick bed to dress and take a cold drive in a cab to the train, and a colder one after the hof train from the AAliite Plains sta- tion here, there being snow on the ground. But I decided to. so to speak, go as a lamb to the slaughter, or to play detective, and get an insight into the working of this gilded Hell, 'Fairdale.' from the inside, in order that I may devote my life to wiping infamous lunacy laws off of the statute books of about half of the States and Territories of the Union, founded by George Washington and safeguarded by Abra- ham Lincoln. That was my wish and aim in risking my life coming here. For I could easily have walked down the fire- escape from my window and got away, had I cared to do so. But liberty to me is as sweet as life and I am willing to risk my life to insure liberty for the rest of my countrymen and country-women unable to fight for it in this labyrinth from the fact that they are not professional fighters — that is to say, lawyers. Now. I shall wind this long letter up by saying that it will be handed Captain Cariston — addressed to him — by a man I have complete confidence in, the inventor of the Self- Threading Sewing Machine Attachment, that brought me so much mone}^ — his name is Albert Wedge. He is still in my employ because I promised to support him for life, so soon as I sold the mechanism. I promised him twenty-five hun- dred dollars a year for life, besides a present of twenty thou- sand dollars. I have had no chance to pay him more than a portion of the first year's allowance. He is let though the lines here because before surrendering to the police they sent to take me next day from the "Kensington" — Barlms, one of the doctors in the plot lied and broke his word and instead of 70 ROBBERY UNDER LAW coming sent a brace of plain-clothesmen from police head- quarters in Mulberr}^ street — I had sent a wire to AVedge at his place at Allentown, New Jerse}^ to come in the first thing in the morning. This Wedge promptly did. Whereupon I told him the situation and that if he ever expected to put his hands on that twenty thousand dollars he must co-operate with me, and get me a lawyer to bring habeas corpus pro- ceedings to get me out. Well, my dear, what do you sup- pose. Wedge — supported by full credentials from me — has been utterly unable to get a solitary Xew York lawyer to take my case and bring the habeas corpus proceedings ! They hem and haw but do nothing. The authorities here know that Wedge ma}^ tvj to get counsel for me, but will you be- lieve it, so sure are they of their position that they are in- different, knowing that he will not be able to get a lawyer in New York with the courage to take my case. They hold back for three reasons. First: Because of the old maxim, *Give a dog a bad name and hang him.' Being once inside a madhouse I am supposed by the intelligent public to be mad. No matter what crimes and villainies were perpetrated to falsely put me there. Second: New York lawyers shy at the case because of fear of Blettermole and Lawless. Bletter- mole is a millionaire several times over, and Lawless is a multi-millionaire — has at least seven millions at a safe esti- mate. They are afraid of the serried ten millions opposed to me. Third: New York lawyers shy at the case because they are afraid of antagonizing the powerful array of pluto- crats on the Board of Governors as it is popularly termed of this Bastile of the Four Hundred, where is buried alive for life any member of the Four Hundred who has had a falling out with his family or next of kin. The most power- ful men in Finance, Law and Society are gathered together on the Board of this private insane asylum in order to overawe the New York County Bar. So here is what I propose to do. Wedge is absolutely devoted to my interest. He is a bachelor alone in the world and entirely dependent upon me for the means to carry on his experiments — for like all inventors, he is never happy except when inventing. So he is willing to risk State's Prison to get me out of here. I am willing to risk my life to get out of here, and here is what I propose. Wedge ROBBERY UNDER LAW 71 comes up about once a fortnight. He is due to-day. I'll give him this. He has money enough to pay his way to Virginia. So soon as you have read this letter, read it to your Father. I am enclosing this sealed and addressed to you in one to Captain Cariston, briefly stating that the bearer is an in- ventor in my employ and patentee of the Self Threading Sewing Machine Attachment — and has access to me — is thor- oughly trustworthy and able to shed light on my present predicament. Then, please ask him to do as follows. I do not intend to stay here until I go crazy from my health break- ing down. I'd much prefer to die with my boots on attempt- ing — like an American citizen worthy the name of an Ameri- can citizen — to escape. Or if I should be forced to kill a keeper in my dash for liberty, and the jury went back on American love of freedom and sent me to the electric chair, I would much prefer that quick and easy death to lingering here for years. There is no warrant in law for this out- rage against an American citizen. Now a man would be per- fectly justified in killing a 'black-hander' who held him in perpetual life imprisonment — as I am being illegally held for a five thousand two hundred dollar yearly ransom — not counting extras — and making his escape. Further argument in support of my contention would be a work of supereroga- tion. I hope and believe it will be unnecessary to put Pat Sligo out of business permanently, but the Law-Giver, Moses himself had less warrant in law or equity — I highly approve of Moses's noble act, mind you — ^but Moses the Law-Giver had less warrant in law and equity for killing that Egyptian task-master than I would have in killing Pat Sligo when he bars with his bulky carcass my road to freedom — and any American who disagrees with that sentiment is unworthy of the spirit of the founders of this mighty Republic. ''Blood will tell^ is an old and true maxinh. My hlood is Revolution- ary to the last drop. I am related by blood to three lead- ing Generals in the Revolution. First: General Nathaniel Greene — the second greatest General on the American side after Washington. Second: General Marion, of South Carolina, known as the 'Swamp Fox.' Third: General John Armstrong, author of the "Newburgh Letters." Not only American Revolutionary blood runs in my veins, but French 72 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Revolutionary blood — I'm not descended from her — for she died a maid on the scaffold — under the guillotine — ^but I am re- lated by blood to Charlotte de Corday, the slayer of one of the bloodiest villains who ever disgraced the earth, namely, Marat, of the Bloody Triumverate, Danton, Robespierre and Marat. Now you way well imagine how such blood would brook such treatment as I have received for three months, and am intended to receive for life. As Charlotte de Corday struck a blow that forever freed France from Marat with a simplr .inner knife, so I propose to strike a blow that shall forever free lunacy legislation in the United States of the crime masquerading under the guise of law therein. The blow possibly may land me on the scaffold as it did her, but not if American Judges and American Juries have a spark of the spirit of '76 in their veins. But, however, that may be, whether 1 mount the scaffold or not, lunacy law will be brought before the rulers of this country — the people — in a way so plain and striking that they will be more than apt — speaking guardedly — to set their house in order and give a man^ accused of lunacy as fair a rmn for his rn,oney^ as fair a trial hefore a Judge and Jury in open Court as is now given a man accursed, of hurgla^y^ rape^ or murder. I dislike to go over such gruesome things with you, but it is essentially neces- sary for you and Captain Cariston to know just what I am prepared to do in the event of your not rescuing me. I have the means of killing the brawniest, bravest keeper in 'Fair- dale' — on me now — it 's always on me when I have my jacket on — and otherwise it 's always within arm's reach, in the right hand pocket of my sack coat, folded up on a chair by the head of my bed, and between it and the wall. This is some- thing as Providentially mine) as was the jaw bone found by Sampson, for I picked this up one day when walking with my keeper. This something is a horse-shoe. I picked it up this way. I spied it ahead of us. He did not. So I dropped slightly behind as we approached the horse-shoe and swiftly stooped and slipped it into my right-hand sack coat pock,et without his noticing me. It is wrapped up — I washed it in my bath tub at night, after he'd gone to bed, and I heard him snoring in the next cell — which opens into mine — it is wrapped up in a handkerchief to hide it. Now with this, I ROBBERY UNDER LAW 73 could first break the leg, and, as lie fell forward, fracture the skull of any man that ever lived, including Goliath of Gath. So you see that even here — in the jaws of death and Hell — I am not so helpless as I might appear on a cursory view. Now I don't want to make anybody die a violent death nor do I care to. So I shall not draw my horse-shoe and 'Strike for your altars and your fires. Strike for the green graves of your Sires, God and your native land,' as Fitz-Green Halleck puts it in 'Marco Bozzaris' unless you, my sweetheart, through 3^our gallant father are unable to rescue me. So here goes for the plan of campaign to culminate in my gaol-delivery. Put him in touch with everything I've told you — and my being se- cretly engaged to you, and also that you hold certain funds of mine. Then give him enough money out of the war-chest to cover the following items: Twenty-fiA-e hundred dollars for Wedge. Twentj^-five hundred dollars each for three ex-Con- federate veterans not too old to shoot straight, with the prom- ise that upon placing me upon Virginia soil the amount will be doubled. Twelve hundred and fifty dollars for the owner of a Norfolk, Virginia, ocean-going-tug, with the promise that the amount will be doubled upon his return with me, dead or alive, to any point on the Virginia coast. Twenty- five hundred dollars for a Connecticut farmer — just over the line from Westchester County in which White Plains is — who is a boyhood-friend of Wedge, and is well to do, and often has Wedge to spend the summer with him free of charge. This man is of old Revolutionary stock — is a descendant, on the female side, of General Israel Putnam of Revolutionary fame — 'Old Put,' as he was affectionately dubbed by his troops — and is py^oud of it. He is outraged at my predicament and has pledged himself to transport any four men I bring to New Rochelle — just opposite here, on Long Island Sound — to- gether with Wedge and myself, in a light, closed, three-seated wagon — closed by curtains only — so as not to attract attention by the crowd — behind a pair of powerful seventeen and a half hand standard bred trotting stallions, that he has so broken that they travel amicably in harness, inside half an hour from the boundary wall of 'Fairdale,' on the Marmaroneck Avenue road, a beautiful stretch of eight miles of macadam- ized road running flat as a plate from 'Fairdale' to Lono* 74 ROBBERY UNDER LAW Island Sound — he has pledged himself — or forfeit the prize- money of twentj^-fiYe hundred dollars — to do this inside thirty minutes. Xoay I propose that the Captain lead this rescue party himself. He was Captain of Squadron A, First Vir- ginia Cavalry, in the Army of Northern Virginia, under Stuart. Let him pick three of his most dare-devil troopers and lead them to the charge against the trespassers on the rights of a Virginia citizen. Once we get into the wagon we are safe, for nothing can touch us. There 's no car line of any kind along Marmaroneck Avenue and so nothing can touch us, or head us. Xow here is how I propose to join forces with your father. Wedge will act as scout to your father and his men from the time they disembark from the ocean-going-tug off Xew Rochelle, and enter the closed wagon, till the time we join forces; so I need say no more, as I shall put him — Wedge — au courant Avith what a certain deeply devout, fire-worshipping friend of mine— of whom a whole lot anon — when I have you in my arms once more, my precious darling, after this cruel war is over — your dream you see^ came true^ and I now am, atout to return to you — Wedge will to-day be put au courant with what a pro- foundly learned and deeply pious fire-worshipper I know, would term 'the situaish.* N. B. — Ask your father to have half a dozen Winchester rifles and plenty of ammunition on board in case we should be held up by a police boat when passing New York. It 's not likely that that will happen, but I take no chances in war. Also be sure that each of his men has on a belt of cartridges and a forty-four Colt re- volver — not in view of course — and to bring me mine — the ivory-handled forty-four at the head of my bed at 'Rokeby,' with its belt of cartridges. The chances are a hundred to one against a contretemps — against blood-shed — once I join forces with the rescuing party. I propose to put my husky keeper, Pat Sligo — a six-foot, one hundred and ninety pound Hiber- nian, down and out. in the lonely wood at 'Fairdale,' whither I shall invite him to escort me on a walk. I shall not by any means kill him, or use the horseshoe at all — though I shall haA^e it as cA^er in my pocket — but I shall put him down and out, and then join the rescuers on the edge of the Avood. As a matter of pride I propose to leave no more trace — no ROBBERY UNDER LAW more trail — after putting Pat Sligo down and out — no more clue to the direction of my change of base — than if the earth had swallowed me. As I have shown, I come of a long line of military ancestors — and the only reason I didn't enter the army was because there was no prospect of vrar in m}^ time, hence my remark about its being a matter of pride — military pride — soldierly self-respect — to leave no more trace of my change of base than if the earth had swallowed me. Also, it might make it disagreeable for the Connecticut farmer if it got out that he aided in the escape. He is not a resident of Xew York nor a citizen of Xew York — since he is both of Connecticut, but the local authorities might trump up — or attempt to trump up — trouble for him the next time he crossed the New York State line. It would, of course, be im- possible to achieve this desired end of complete mystery re- garding my movements South in any other way than I have outlined — namely, my personally putting — unaided, unwit- nessed, and alone — Pat Sligo down and out. Naturally I would prefer the dramatic coup of having the Captain ap- pear, accompanied by his men, who would, at a word from him, draw and hold him up. But tempting as that is to my dramatic sense it is utterly out of the question and not to be considered for a moment — for reasons stated. I propose about three weeks from now, as the time for pulling off the big event. Till then, may God bless and comfort you, my sweet child, and prosper our plans and thwart those of the enemy. Your devoted Hugh." Stutfield: (Sealing the addressed envelope into which he has put the letter). "Phew! The longest letter I ever wTote, I verily believe." (Noise of voices approaching. Stutfield hastily conceals the letter in his inside coat pocket. The door of the next cell opens and Albert Wedge enters, followed by Pat Sligo. Wedge is a small, thin man, with a sharp, shrewd, face, clean- shaved — ^honest-looking with his shrewdness — and neatly dressed. He has a way of turning his head on one side when listening to a person, and before replying to a question de- manding any thought he expels his breath violently and pre- 76 ROBBERY UNDER LAW faces all his remarks with '^Well^ I don't know!" or ^^Wellf That may be !" or ^'Wellf Let me see !*' He expels his breath on the word, "TF^ZZ." Sligo is a powerful, forbidding-looking Irishman with beetling brows. His head is bullet-shaped, and hair cropped short like a convict's. He has a short, thick neck. He is dressed in the regulation 'Fairdale' uniform, dark navy blue suit with brass buttons. He swings the door open with a flourish and says in low gutteral tones) : Sligo : "Walk in.'' (Sligo glares at Stutfield sullenly. Stutfield looks at him carelessly and says) : Stutfield": "Ah, Pat!" (Sligo merely growls and says nothing. He goes out, slamming the door after him. Stutfield smiles significantly as he watches Sligo disappear, and then turns to Wedge and says) : Stutfield: "Have a chair. Wedge." (Wedge seats him.self. Stutfield then pulls out the let- ter and says in a low voice : Stage Direction — Stutfield speaks rapidly all through this scene loith frequent glances at the door of Sligo's cell). Stutfield: "For Captain Cariston. 'Elsinore,' Cobham. Va. — on the Chesapeake & Ohio Eailway, ten hours from Xew York, Wedge. You are to please start at once. You need not remain at 'Elsinore' more than a few hours. Your train leaves Jersey City at eight A. M., and reaches Cobham at about six P. M. Send the following wire the night before you start — to-night, that is — I presume you can get off to- morrow — " Wedge: (lin a low voice as he pockets the letter). "Ye-e-s. I did want to take about a week to work round a snag that 's turned up in my patent hydraulic pump — " Stutfield : "Of course, you did, my good Wedge — and of course, you ever will — if it isn't one thing it's another with you artists and poets in power and steel and electricity — you inventors — but, my good friend, Wedge, if you don't get my affairs started, you'll run out of money — the last quarterly payment I made you on your allowance is pretty nearly used up, I should say — what ?" ROBBERY UNDER LAW 77 Wedge: ^"Well! Come to think on 't, yes, His. Pll start to-morrow.'''' Stutfield: "Good. Send this wire on reaching New York, fro7n New York — not Allendale: 'Captain Cariston, 'Elsinore', Cobham, Va. Shall arrive for a few hours at six to-morrow. Please have me met. (Signed) A friend of H. S.' I'll write it out for you." (Does so, and hands it to Wedge, who, after scrutinizing it, carefully pockets it). Stutfield: "Can you make it out?" Wedge: ''Well! Yes, I guess so." Stutfield: "Good. Now pay strict attention to what 1 am about to say. I am going to clinch with that offer of your Connecticut farmer friend — General Israel Putnam's de- scendant — and promise him twenty-five hundred dollars for meeting my party of rescuers at New Rochelle and driving them to the Marmaroneck side of 'Fairdale,' and waiting for them on the edge of the 'Fairdale' wood, and then driving them back to whence they came. He will receive half of that sum the moment the Captain and his men enter the wagon, and the balance just before they leave it with me, on the edge of Long Island Sound. Then he can make tracks for the Con- necticut line. An ocean-going tug will bring Captain Caris- ton and three reliable men — men who can be depended upon to stand by one at a pinch — from Norfolk. They will bring you with them, so your party will be 'all present or accounted for' as they say in the army when you present yourself to me prepared to make the get-a-way. You will take the Old Do- minion Line to Norfolk from New York, a day or so before the tug will be ready to put out for New York from Nor- folk. You will keep in close touch with Captain Cariston meantime. He is a rich man and a very old friend of mine, besides being a neighbor — so he will be my banker till 1 triumph and turn the tables on these gilded thieves who are attempting to rob and civilly murder me, by making me pay one hundred dollars a week, not counting extras, for this cell, a bath-room, and the cell you entered by, which is my keep- er's. I've been here three months and twelve hundred dol- lars of my good 'long green' have found their reluctant way into the yawning insatiate coffers of 'Fairdale.' " Wedge: "It 's a d — n shame." XDER LAW Srotfirl I "Ycu rt voy n^it. Wedge. To resume. Captain C spent iweratr years in the West Virginia Coal Field' :/ r war, and, as a resnllv is worth a good half niilli::i "7 He will be mv baEfcer and will pay yon twentr-fiTe hundred dcJlais, for ~ :r i.rxt Tears allow- ance in adTanee — so soon as you land " rrinia you 11 put your hands on the twenty thoiisi:_ i Z : raised you. so socm as I i::: zi~ TiiTe frank flie L-:' i r. S~' 1: ite for your marred - : :: i r :dT t :::r r : ' w here are fisi^- :^-": ::: :_> d" ::. Y:;^ ^c. '^^::_ -.-e:j-_ C^pfaic CarislcHi, : : r any and all questions pcrfecdy £ranklf, h- :j. : ~ — he knows Fm locked up cm a charge '>f :z= : : — '.: r : " -^ few days after I was rail- roade«d d^r-^ — ^ :t rain Cariston that Fire in- structs : " : -d: It! di- orders, and carry then* out tc« :iiT 1 t::t: — ^i: r r di : die and your happiness in £his w : r :' r tT : d soipe- That I put him in comr^i ^ - - :ir : : r ?d ? a veteran CaTahy Officer :;Z : d - t - - :: be grave respon- sibility :z "dr : d : I : : entirely in his hawda until ^re jmn f*:r:e^ — ~dr:i I -z^2.'3. a^nme cmnmand. Seetmd^ and last, the r r - _ r ^jj^ going to join farces with the reset::: ^ ::::; I ^ned to find out by accident fliat the keepers hsxe never hit an iiiiri ::- — :d-T choke him into insen^tnlity and then put him ii:' jacket. I saw Pat SKgo do it to a prisoner a - '^ ago. Mow. since then Fve been doing a good de: ing about throats, and half-Melsons and stran^e-d d t can this the ''Fairdalc' hold' among the keeper— d Pat Sligo worked cm the patient. It consists in clasping the hands round tl^ man'^s neck till they overlap at the back of his neck and pre^ng