Read Leave Her to Heaven Online
Authors: Ben Ames Williams
âMrs. Harland did?'
âYes.'
âDid she later have another cup of coffee?'
âI didn't notice.'
âWhat became of the envelope?'
âWhen we were through eating, she folded the corner down so's the sugar wouldn't spill out, and put it back in the basket.'
âWas it an envelope like this one?'
âNear as I can tell.'
Quinton changed his tone. âNow referring to the last summer of Mrs. Harland's life, did she and Mr. Harland and the defendant take a trip together?'
âThey went fishing on the Miminegouche.'
âThat's in Canada.'
âYes.'
Quinton led him to describe the trip, and the forest fire which cut it short, and he asked: âNow, Leick, you took tents?'
âYes.'
âWhat was the sleeping arrangement?'
âMrs. Harland and her had the big tent, and Mr. Harland and me had one, and the guides the other.'
âThe two ladies slept together, so that Mr. and Mrs. Harland did not share the same tent?'
âNo.' That Leick spoke unwillingly was plain.
âReferring to the summer Mr. and Mrs. Harland spent at Back of the Moon, were their relations that summer affectionate?'
âYes.'
âWere they equally affectionate during those days on the river?'
âWhy, with Tom Pickett and Sime Verity along, naturally they wouldn't â â '
âYou needn't explain,' Quinton said curtly. âWere they equally demonstrative?'
âAllowing for the guides â â '
âPlease let the jury make its own allowances. Were they less openly affectionate than they had been at Back of the Moon, or more so, or the same?'
âWell, if you put it that way, less.'
âYou said you guided Mrs. Harland? How did you and she escape the fire?'
âWent up river out of its way.'
âWhere were the others?'
âDown river in the middle of it.'
âWhen did you rejoin them?'
âWhy, when the fire burned down so we could travel, we started down river till we came to where they were.'
âWhere were they?'
âOn a gravel bar in the middle of the river.'
âAwake or asleep?'
âThe guides were awake.'
âMr. Harland? Ruth?'
âThey were asleep.'
âDid you see them asleep?'
Leick looked helplessly at Harland. âWhy yes, I did,' he admitted.
âWhat was their position?'
âCurled up in the sand.'
âHow near each other were they?'
âWhy, it'd been a cold night. They was keeping warm.
âHow near each other were they?'
âRight together.' Leick's lips were tight, his eyes dark with anger.
âDescribe their position.'
Leick hesitated, then said in a rush of words: âMr. Harland had his arms around her, keeping her warm.'
Quinton half-smiled; he nodded, gave the witness to Mr. Pettingill, and the big man came slowly to his feet. âEver sleep out on a chilly night, without blankets, Leick?' he asked.
âYes, sir.'
âAnyone with you?'
âSometimes there was.'
âHow did you sleep?'
âClose together as we could get.' There was relief in Leick's
tone. âIt's the only way to keep even half-way comfortable.'
Mr. Pettingill nodded. âBefore the fire that day, where were you and Ellen Harland fishing?'
âUpstream from camp.'
âWhere were the other two canoes?'
âDownstream.'
âHow did that happen?'
âWhy, Mrs. Harland â Miss Ruth â had found a sightly spot down river, and she wanted them all to go down there that day. The other one said she'd stay at camp. They tried to get her to go but she said for them to go without her.'
âSo it was at Ellen's insistence that Ruth and Mr. Harland went downstream together.'
âYes, it was.'
âI see. Now Brother Quinton has had you tell us twice about that envelope with sugar in it, but I want to go over it once more. Who poured the coffee?'
âMrs. Harland did.'
âMiss Ruth?'
âYes.' Ruth half-smiled, touched by Leick's persistent refusal to speak of Ellen as âMrs. Harland.'
âDid she pour all the cups at once?'
Leick frowned, trying to remember. âWhy no, come to think of it, she said she wasn't ready for hers.'
âYou mean Mrs. Ellen Harland said that?' Mr. Pettingill was patient.
âYes.'
âWas anything said about the sugar?'
âYes. She asked if Mrs. Harland had brought it, and Mrs. Harland took the envelope out of the hamper and gave it to her.'
âEllen asked for it and Ruth gave it to her?'
âYes, sir.'
âWas that after Ruth poured Ellen's coffee?'
âNo, before.'
âDo you remember what Ellen did with the envelope till shr was ready to use it?'
Why yes, I mind she put it in her pocket.'
âIn her pocket?'
âShe had on an old leather coat with some big pockets.'
âWhen she was ready to use the sugar, what then?'
âShe took the envelope and tore the corner off and poured some into her cup and put the envelope back into her pocket.'
âYou testified that she put the envelope back into the hamper. When did she do that?'
âAfter she had all the coffee she wanted, when we were cleaning up the beach. We threw the lobster shells and the paper plates and napkins that we'd used and all that rubbish into the fire, and what they wanted to keep went into the basket.'
Ruth listened in puzzled attention, wondering what was in Mr. Pettingill's mind.
âWho repacked the basket?'
âI guess I did, much as anybody. Mrs. Harland and her went up and sat on the bank, and Mr. Harland and me set there talking some, and I scrubbed the wash boiler, and I scrubbed the forks with sand and put them in.'
Quinton on redirect examination asked only one question. âBut you saw Miss Berent give Mrs. Harland the envelope, and you saw Mrs. Harland put it in the basket?' he insisted.
âYes,' Leick assented, and Quinton let him go, and he called to the deputy at the door:
âSimon Verity.'
Ruth had not seen Sime since they left the river, and she almost smiled now at the difference in his appearance. In comfortable old clothes he had been at ease, his every movement inspiring confidence in his capacities; but now he wore a stiff suit and a white collar and he was shaved pink, his hair slicked down and then brushed up in a barberâs curl above his left eye. She suspected that the strain of this elegance might at any moment prove too much for him, and she wondered how Quinton had persuaded him to come so far from home.
Quinton drew from him the story of their days on the river; and at length he asked: âNow did you during those days see any
affectionate gestures or caresses between Mr. and Mrs. Harland?'
Sime said readily: âSure. They'd kiss each other, most every morning.'
âShe kissed him? Or he kissed her?'
âWell, I most generally tended to my own business, figured not to look. B'en my experience two's enough for a kiss.'
A murmur of amusement ran among the spectators, and Quinton said drily: âI suppose your experience has been a wide one.'
âWell, wider than some folks, I judge,' Sime retorted, and Judge Andrus rapped for order. Quinton asked:
âWhat was the apparent relationship between Mr. Harland and Miss Ruth Berent?'
âFriendly.'
âDuring the forest fire, while Mrs. Harland and Leick were elsewhere, was Mr. Harland attentive to Miss Berent?'
âHe took care of her.'
âStayed near her?'
âYes. We all stuck together.'
âDid you see him touch her?'
âWhy, she got pretty tired,' Sime assented. âHe sat and held her, the way anyone would.'
âNever mind what anyone would do. What did he do?'
âBeing in the water so long takes it out of you,' Sime explained.
âShe couldn't hardly keep her head out of water, so he set behind her with his arms around her, kind of bracing her and holding her up.'
âHe held her in his arms?'
âYes, to keep her from drowning.'
âThe jury will judge for themselves his reasons. He did hold her in his arms?'
âYes.'
âHow long?'
âMost all the last part of the time we was in the water.'
âNow as to the night you all spent on the gravel bar, did you sleep?'
âWhy yes. We hadn't had a chance to sleep for a long time.'
âWhere did Mr. Harland sleep with relation to Miss Berent?'
âWe scraped away the ashes and all from a patch of sand, and they slept there.'
âHow far from where you slept?'
âMaybe a couple of rods.'
âWho waked first in the morning?'
âI did. Then Tom.'
âWhen you waked, what was their position relative to each other?'
âI sh'd judge she'd got cold during the
âNever mind what you judged.'
âHe had her hugged up to him to keep her warm.'
âYou don't know the reason. You say he had her hugged up to him. Describe their position.'
âWhy, they was both laying on their left sides, and she was backed up against him and he had his arms around her.'
âBoth arms?'
âYes.'
Ruth, feeling the whispering interest of the crowded spectators, held her head high and steady; but she remembered Ellen's coming in the morning, and the anger in Ellen's eyes when she found them thus. Then Quinton turned to Mr. Pettingill. âYour witness,' he said triumphantly.
Pettingill leaned nearer Ruth. âDid Ellen see you that way?' he asked.
âYes.'
âWell,' he decided, âwe'd better get that in.' He rose and led Sime to describe Ellen's arrival, then let him go.
Quinton called Tom Pickett. Tom, awkward and embarrassed, obviously friendly to Ruth as Sime had been, nevertheless told the same story. Him Mr. Pettingill allowed to go unquestioned.
There were three more witnesses. Mrs. Huston, resentful and angry not only at Quinton's questions but because he kept her under a curb, forever checking her runaway tongue, nevertheless admitted that during the months while Ellen waited for her
baby, Harland left her alone almost every afternoon. âAnd why wouldn't he?' she demanded. âWith her forever . . .'
âWait, Quinton warned her. âJust answer the questions, please. Now when was the baby expected to be born?'
âThe doctor said May; but if you ask me . . .'
âThe doctor said May. Did Mr. Harland in March and April spend more time at home?'
âI tell you, she wouldn't let him. And at the last of it, when she was trying to . . .'
âHow often did he leave her alone in April?'
âRight along. She got rid of him because she was trying to . . .'
âTwice a week? Four times? Everyday?'
âShe got him out of the house so she could paint, and run up and down . . .'
âI'm asking you only what he did.
âWell, I'm a-telling you what she did; and I ain't told the half of it. Walking herself into . . .'
Quinton interrupted, himself angry now. Harland understood completely what the old woman was trying to say; and he found himself for the moment on Quinton's side, hoping the State Attorney would be able to silence her eager tongue.
âYou'll tell me only what I ask you,' Quinton insisted. âNothing more.'
âSleep-walking my foot!' the old woman exclaimed, and tossed her head, and Quinton said:
âYou leave it that up to the day the baby was stillborn, Mr. Harland left the house practically every day. Is that correct?'
âI said so, didn't I? But she . . .'
Quinton said curtly: âThat is all.'
âYou mean you ain't going to let me . . .'
âThat is all,' Quinton insisted, and looked at Mr. Pettingill, and the big man came to his feet. But before he could move away from the table, Harland caught his sleeve, and Mr. Pettingill turned back. Harland whispered:
âLet her go.'
Pettingill looked doubtful. âShe's trying to tell something. The jury wants to hear it.'
âLet her go,' Harland insisted. From this at least Ellen could be saved. âShe blamed Ellen for losing the baby,' he explained. âBut don't let her say so, please.'
Pettingill caught Ruth's eye, and she agreed. âYes, let her go.'
So Pettingill, though with obvious reluctance, said: âNo questions.' Mrs. Huston started to speak, but caught Harland's eye and was silenced; and Quinton called:
âAlice Murphy.'
She was the maid who had served Ruth and Mrs. Berent in Boston, and she said Harland came regularly to see them, that he did not always see Mrs. Berent, saw sometimes only Ruth.
Then Mr. Carlson, grunting and grumbling at the necessity of thus openly discussing the private affairs of his clients, took the stand to explain in detail how Professor Berent's estate had come almost intact into Ruth's hands.
âNow, Mr. Carlson,' Quinton asked at last. âWhen did you last see Mrs. Harland before her death?'
âAugust thirty, two years ago.'
âFive or six days before her death?'
âYes.'
âUnder what circumstances?'
âShe came to me on business.'
âWhat was that business?'
âTo sign her will. Some other matters.'
âWho was to be executor under her will?'
âI was named executor.'
âDid she have other instructions for you, not included in her will?'
âShe gave me a sealed envelope.'
Quinton drew from him the story of that envelope and of what he eventually did with it; and he asked: âDid she give you any other instructions?'