O'Brien gasped. Then he made a funnel of his hands and whispered toward the bench: “Take it away, for heaven's sake!”

“That is all!” remarked Mr. Tutt with deep sarcasm, making an elaborate bow in the direction of Mr. Hepplewhite. “Thank you for your excellent intentions!”

A snicker followed Mr. Hepplewhite as he dragged himself back to his seat among the spectators.

He felt as though he had passed through a clothes wringer. Dimly he heard Mr. Tutt addressing the court.

“And I move, Your Honor,” the lawyer was paying, “that you take the counts for burglary in the first, second and third degrees away from the jury on the ground that there has been a complete failure of proof that my client broke into the house of this man Hepplewhite either by night or by day, or that he assaulted anybody or stole anything there, or ever intended to.”

“Motion granted,” agreed the judge. “I quite agree with you, Mr. Tutt. There is no evidence here of any breaking. In fact, the inferences are all the other way.”

“I further move that you take from the consideration of the jury the remaining count of illegally entering the house with intent to commit a crime and direct the jury to acquit the defendant for lack of evidence,” continued Mr. Tutt.

“But what was your client doing in the house?” inquired the judge. “He had no particular business in it, had he?”

“That does not make his presence a crime, Your Honor,” retorted the lawyer. “A man is not guilty of a felony who falls asleep on my haycock. Why should he be if he falls asleep in my bed?”

The judge smiled.

“We have no illegal entry statute with respect to fields or meadows, Mr. Tutt,” he remarked good-naturedly. “No, I shall be obliged to let the jury decide whether this defendant went into that house for an honest or dishonest purpose. It is clearly a proper question for them to pass upon. Proceed with your case.”

Now when, as in the case of the Hepplewhite Tramp, the chief witness for the prosecution throws up his hands and offers to repay the defendant for the wrong he has done him, naturally it is all over but the shouting.

“There is no need for me to call the defendant,” Mr. Tutt told the court, “in view of the admissions made by the last witness. I am ready to proceed with the summing up.”

“As you deem wise,” answered the judge. “Proceed then.”

Through a blur of sight and sound Mr. Hepplewhite dimly heard Mr. Tutt addressing the jury and saw them lean forward to catch his every word.

Beside him Mr. Edgerton was saying protestingly: “May I ask why you made those fool statements on the witness stand?”

“Because I didn't want an innocent man convicted,” returned Mr. Hepplewhite tartly.

“Well, you'll get your wish!” sniffed his lawyer. “And you'll get soaked for about twenty thousand dollars for false arrest!”

“I don't care,” retorted the client. “And what's more I hope Mr. Tutt gets a substantial fee out of it. He strikes me as a lawyer who knows his business!”

The oldest and fattest court officers, men so old and fat that they remembered the trial of Boss Tweed and the days when Delancey Nicoll was the White Hope of the Brownstone Court House-declared Mr. Tutt's summation was the greatest that ever they heard. For the shrewd old lawyer had an artist's hand with which he played upon the keyboard of the jury and knew just when to pull out the stops of the vox humana of pathos and the grand diapason of indignation and defiance. So he began by tickling their sense of humor with an ironic description of afternoon tea at Mr. Hepplewhite's, with Bibby and Stocking as chief actors, until all twelve shook with suppressed laughter and the judge was forced to hide his face behind the Law Journal; ridiculed the idea of a criminal who wanted to commit a crime calmly going to sleep in a pink silk bed in broad daylight; and then brought tears to their eyes as he pictured the wretched homeless tramp, sick, footsore and starving, who, drawn by the need of food and warmth to this silk nest of luxury, was clubbed, arrested and jailed simply because he had violated the supposed sanctity of a rich man's home.

The jury watched him as intently as a dog watches a piece of meat held over its nose. They smiled with him, they wept with him, they glared at Mr. Hepplewhite and they gazed in a friendly way at Schmidt, whom Mr. Tutt had bailed out just before the trial. The very stars in their courses seemed warring for Tutt &Tutt. In the words of Phelan: “There was nothing to it!”

“Thank God,” concluded Mr. Tutt eloquently, “that in this land of liberty in which we are privileged to dwell no man can be convicted of a crime except by a jury of his peers-a right sacred under our Constitution and inherited from Magna Charta, that foundation stone of English liberty, in which the barons forced King John to declare that 'No freeman shall be taken, or imprisoned, or disseized, or outlawed, or exiled, or in any way harmed… save by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land.'

“Had I the time I would demonstrate to you the arbitrary character of our laws and the inequality with which they are administered.

“But in this case the chief witness has already admitted the innocence of the defendant. There is nothing more to be said. The prosecution has cried 'Peccavi!' I leave my client in your hands.”

He resumed his seat contentedly and wiped his forehead with his silk handkerchief. The judge looked down at O'Brien with raised eyebrows.

“I will leave the case to the jury on Your Honor's charge,” remarked the latter carelessly.

“Gentlemen of the jury,” began the judge, “the defendant is accused of entering the house of Mr. Hepplewhite with the intent to commit a crime therein-”

Mr. Hepplewhite sat, his head upon his breast, for what seemed to him several hours. He had but one thought-to escape. His ordeal had been far worse than he had anticipated. But he had made a discovery. He had suddenly realized that one cannot avoid one's duties to one's fellows by leaving one's affairs to others-not even to the police. He perceived that he had lived with his head stuck in the sand. He had tried to escape from his responsibilities as a citizen by hiding behind the thick walls of his stone mansion on Fifth Avenue. He made up his mind that he would do differently if he ever had the chance. Meanwhile, was not the jury ever going to set the poor man free?

They had indeed remained out a surprisingly long time in order merely to reach a verdict which was a mere formality. Ah! There they were! Mr. Hepplewhite watched with palpitating heart while they straggled slowly in. The clerk made the ordinary perfunctory inquiry as to what their verdict was. Mr. Hepplewhite did not hear what the foreman said in reply, but he saw both the Tutts and O'Brien start from their seats and heard a loud murmur rise throughout the court room.

“What's that!” cried the clerk in astonished tones. “What did you say, Mister Foreman?”

“I said that we find the defendant guilty,” replied the foreman calmly.

Mr. Tutt stared incredulously at the twelve traitors who had betrayed him.

“Never mind, Mr. Tutt,” whispered Number Six confidentially. “You did the best you could. Your argument was fine-grand-but nobody could ever make us believe that your client went into that house for any purpose except to steal whatever he could lay his hands on. Besides, it wasn't Mr. Hepplewhite's fault. He means well. And anyhow a nut like that has got to be protected against himself.”

He might have enlightened Mr. Tutt further upon the psychology of the situation had not the judge at that moment ordered the prisoner arraigned at the bar.

“Have you ever been convicted before?” asked His Honor sharply.

“Sure,” replied the Hepplewhite Tramp carelessly. “I've done three or four bits, I'm a burglar. But you can't give me more than a year for illegal entry.”