'How was she pardoned?' asked Mr. Bashwood, breathlessly. 'They told me at the time, but I have forgotten. Was it the Home Secretary? If it was, I respect the Home Secretary! I say the Home Secretary was deserving of his place.'
'Quite right, old gentleman!' rejoined Bashwood the younger. 'The Home Secretary was the obedient humble servant of an enlightened Free Press, and he
'Don't joke about it!' cried his father. 'Don't, don't, don't, Jemmy! Did they try her again? They couldn't! They durs'n't! Nobody can be tried twice over for the same offense.'
'Pooh! pooh! she could be tried a second time for a second offense,' retorted Bashwood the younger—'and tried she was. Luckily for the pacification of the public mind, she had rushed headlong into redressing her own grievances (as women will), when she discovered that her husband had cut her down from a legacy of fifty thousand pounds to a legacy of five thousand by a stroke of his pen. The day before the inquest a locked drawer in Mr. Waldron's dressing-room table, which contained some valuable jewelry, was discovered to have been opened and emptied; and when the prisoner was committed by the magistrates, the precious stones were found torn out of their settings and sewed up in her stays. The lady considered it a case of justifiable self-compensation. The law declared it to be a robbery committed on the executors of the dead man. The lighter offense—which had been passed over when such a charge as murder was brought against her—was just the thing to revive, to save appearances in the eyes of the public. They had stopped the course of justice, in the case of the prisoner, at one trial; and now all they wanted was to set the course of justice going again, in the case of the prisoner, at another! She was arraigned for the robbery, after having been pardoned for the murder. And, what is more, if her beauty and her misfortunes hadn't made a strong impression on her lawyer, she would not only have had to stand another trial, but would have had even the five thousand pounds, to which she was entitled by the second will, taken away from her, as a felon, by the Crown.'
'I respect her lawyer! I admire her lawyer!' exclaimed Mr. Bashwood. 'I should like to take his hand, and tell him so.'
'He wouldn't thank you, if you did,' remarked Bashwood the younger. 'He is under a comfortable impression that nobody knows how he saved Mrs. Waldron's legacy for her but himself.'
'I beg your pardon, Jemmy,' interposed his father. 'But don't call her Mrs. Waldron. Speak of her, please, by her name when she was innocent, and young, and a girl at school. Would you mind, for my sake, calling her Miss Gwilt?'
'Not I! It makes no difference to me what name I give her. Bother your sentiment! let's go on with the facts. This is what the lawyer did before the second trial came off. He told her she would be found guilty
The last effort of the son's sarcasm passed unheeded by the father. 'In prison!' he said to himself. 'Oh me, after all that misery, in prison again!'
'Yes,' said Bashwood the younger, rising and stretching himself, 'that's how it ended. The verdict was Guilty; and the sentence was imprisonment for two years. She served her time; and came out, as well as I can reckon it, about three years since. If you want to know what she did when she recovered her liberty, and how she went on afterward, I may be able to tell you something about it—say, on another occasion, when you have got an extra note or two in your pocket-book. For the present, all you need know, you do know. There isn't the shadow of a doubt that this fascinating lady has the double slur on her of having been found guilty of murder, and of having served her term of imprisonment for theft. There's your money's worth for your money—with the whole of my wonderful knack at stating a case clearly, thrown in for nothing. If you have any gratitude in you, you ought to do something handsome, one of these days, for your son. But for me, I'll tell you what you would have done, old gentleman. If you could have had your own way, you would have married Miss Gwilt.'
Mr. Bashwood rose to his feet, and looked his son steadily in the face.
'If I could have my own way,' he said, 'I would marry her now.'
Bashwood the younger started back a step. 'After all I have told you?' he asked, in the blankest astonishment.
'After all you have told me.'
'With the chance of being poisoned, the first time you happened to offend her?'