Read Leave Her to Heaven Online
Authors: Ben Ames Williams
He read slowly, and at last finished, and Quinton took back the letter. âNow, Mr. Harland,' he asked, âknowing Ellen as you
did, do you think her capable of writing that letter if it were not true?'
Mr. Pettingill, who had foreseen this question, was a wise man. âYes,' Harland said. âYes, I do.'
Quinton's voice rose sharply. âYou think her capable, while she was planning suicide, of falsely accusing her own sister of causing her death?'
âI do!' There was in Harland a lucid and triumphant comprehension. This was the crisis for which Mr. Pettingill had hoped. He saw that Quinton was surprised by his answer, for the State Attorney suddenly was almost shouting; and as the other raged, Harland himself became calm.
âYou mean to say you think Ellen capable of falsely accusing her own sister of murder?' Quinton was black with anger, his own old passion for Ellen making him furious now.
âThey were not actually sisters, of course.'
âDon't quibble! We've had enough of that! You think she was capable of this?'
âEllen was capable of anything.'
âYou want us to think she was a monster?'
Harland said simply, sure now of what he meant to do: âShe was a monster!'
Quinton was livid. âReady to send an innocent woman to a living death in prison?'
Harland spoke quietly and clearly. âShe had already sent an innocent child to actual death,' he said.
A stir of excitement ran along the crowded benches, and Harland heard the point of a reporter's pencil snap under sudden pressure, heard the scrape of the knife that sharpened it. Quinton recoiled as though he had been struck, his lips working, completely at sea.
âYou mean your stillborn baby?'
âI mean my brother Danny,' Harland told him.
Quinton stood silent, digesting this. Then he swung to the table where Attorney General Shumate sat; and while they conferred, Harland, unwilling to meet Ruth's eyes, looked down at
his own hands tight clenched on the bar of the witness box. There was a deep peace in him, the peace of submission. He accepted freely this necessity which for Ruth's sake he must accept. Then in the silence Judge Andrus rapped his gavel, announced a recess.
As Harland approached the counsel table, Mr. Pettingill rose and went out into the corridor. Harland, alarmed by this departure, asked Ruth: âWhere's he gone?'
âLeick sent word he wants to see him.' She touched his arm, whispered: âDarling, darling! Why did you tell?'
He smiled at her. âIt's all right.' Quinton and Attorney General Shumate were talking together in low tones, and he watched them as a boxer during the interval between rounds watches his opponent. Ruth's hand pressed his arm, and he touched it lightly, and felt Roger Pryde's scrutiny, and turned to look at the reporters, thinking that tomorrow every newspaper in every city would headline his testimony, strip him naked to the shameful winds. The Attorney General left the courtroom, and Quinton spoke to Mrs. Parkins, and she made rapid notes of what he said.
When the. brief recess was done and Harland crossed to resume his place in the witness box, Mr. Pettingill had not returned from the corridor; but at once he did so. Quinton came to face Harland again. He spoke quietly and with complete composure.
âWell, Mr. Harland,' he said. âYour statement opens a new field of inquiry. We will go back to the time of your brother's death. That occurred when?'
âHe drowned in the lake at Back of the Moon, in August, a little over a year after Ellen and I were married.'
âHe was how old?'
âFourteen.'
âHe was an invalid?'
âHe had had infantile, and his legs were weak and shrunken.'
âCould he swim?'
âHe was a strong swimmer. He had swum across the lake that summer.'
âAt what time of day did his death occur?'
âEarly afternoon.'
âWho was at your camp that day?'
âEllen, Danny and myself.'
âWhere was Leick?'
âHe had gone to town for supplies.'
âLet us take things in order. Begin with breakfast. After breakfast, what did you do?'
âI went to work in my study over the boathouse.'
âDid you see Ellen or Danny during the morning?'
âI heard them row away up the lake.'
âAt what time?'
âI didn't notice.'
âHow long did you work?'
âTill I was tired. We seldom knew the time at Back of the Moon.' Harland was at last serene.
âWhat then?'
âI finished work and climbed the hill to camp, found no one there. I remembered that they had gone out on the lake, so I went on to the hilltop above camp. You could see most of the lake from there.'
âDid you see them?'
âI saw the skiff, about half a mile away. I took the binoculars we kept at the lookout and focussed on the skiff.'
He hesitated, and Quinton prompted: âGo on. What did you see?'
âI saw Ellen sitting in the skiff. Danny was floundering in the water about twenty feet from the skiff, obviously in distress. She made no move to help him. I saw him go under. She let him drown.' He was surprised that he could speak so steadily; held himself under an iron control.
âCould Ellen swim?'
âShe was an excellent swimmer, better than I.'
âWhat did you do?'
âI ran down to the boathouse. We had an outboard motorboat, a fast one. I took it and raced up the pond to come to them. It's a mile or so. They were just west of a long narrow point of land that runs out into the pond. There's a ledge on the east side of that point. I knew it was there, but I forgot it, ran hard on to it. I was thrown out, cut my head. I waded and swam ashore and ran across the point.' He waited for no prompting now. âI saw Ellen diving for Danny. The skiff was drifting away across the pond. I took off my clothes and helped her dive for him, but the water was too deep for me to get to the bottom, most of the time. She finally got him, brought him to the surface.'
âWhat then?'
âI took him ashore and tried to resuscitate him, but he was dead.'
âWhat did she do, while you were doing this?'
âShe swam after the skiff and brought it back and we took Danny home to camp.'
âYou said, before recess, that she â ' He looked at a bit of paper in his hand. âThat she had sent an innocent child to actual death. What did you mean by that?'
âDanny had tried to swim the length of the pond. She went along in, the skiff to help him out of the water if he tired. He caught a cramp and she let him drown.'
âYet you say you found her trying to rescue him?'
âI saw her let him sink without trying to help him.'
âBut she tried to rescue him. It was she who actually brought his body to the surface.'
âShe deliberately let him drown.'
âHow do you know?'
âShe told me so.'
âAt the time?'
âNo, months later.'
âDid you accuse her at the time?
âNo.'
âWhy not?'
âAt first the shock stunned me. I had loved her completely, and to find her capable of murdering my brother was like being hit on the head. Then before I reached the point of being able to talk at all, she told me she was going to have a baby. After that, for the baby's sake, I couldn't say anything. I never told her I knew the truth till after our baby died.'
âIf she let Danny drown, she must have had a reason.'
âShe hated sharing me with him, didn't want him living with us. She had often urged me to send him away somewhere so she and I could be alone.'
âDid you report her act to the authorities?'
âNo. I protected her. I couldn't accuse my wife of murder. Certainly not with a baby coming. I made up a lie to tell Leick and everyone else, to explain his death. I said Danny had been running the motorboat and that he fell out and that it cut circles till it ran ashore on that ledge. I said Ellen and I had been swimming on the beach at the west end of the pond and had seen it happen.'
âYou say now that that was a lie.'
âYes, it was.'
âDid Leick believe you?'
âAs far as I know. I was afraid he might find my tracks on the point and know that it was I who had wrecked the motorboat, so I went up early next morning â we'd sent him out to Joe Severin's the night before â and smoothed my tracks, so he couldn't find them and know I was lying.'
Quinton asked quietly: âIn other words, you not only failed to report Ellen's crime; you also lied to protect her, and you concealed evidence which would have revealed her guilt.'
âYes.'
âYou are aware that you thus become an accessory after the fact to this crime?'
âYes.'
âMr. Harland, are you also an accessory, before or after the fact, to the murder of Ellen?'
Harland flushed under this abrupt attack, but he held his voice
steady. He said quietly: âEllen was not murdered. She committed suicide.'
âAnd you say that she caused Danny's death, and that you destroyed the evidence of her crime?'
âYes.'
Quinton turned away. âYou may have him, Mr. Pettingill,' he said in drawling scorn.
Mr. Pettingill rose, came slowly nearer Harland. âWell now, Mr. Harland,' he said. âYou told Brother Quinton that Ellen had urged you to send Danny away so that you and she could be alone.'
âYes, sir.'
âWhere did she want you to send him?'
âShe wanted me to leave him at Warm Springs for the summer while we came to Back of the Moon.'
âDid she make any other attempt to get rid of him?'
âOn the way north, we stopped in Boston. She asked me to leave him there with Mrs. Huston; and later she asked me to leave him at Bar Harbor with Ruth.'
âWhat was your reply?'
âI said Danny was our joint responsibility; that he would either come with us or we would stay with him.'
âI see. And now you say that when she saw a chance to let him drown and thus be rid of him forever, she seized it.'
âYes.'
âThank you. Now we'll just get back to the point again for a minute, keep the record straight. Brother Quinton asked you whether you thought Ellen capable of planning suicide and plotting to have her sister blamed for it, and you answered yes. Is that correct?'
âYes, sir.'
âHe asked you why you believed her capable of such a thing and you said because she'd let your brother drown. Correct?'
âYes, sir.'
âReferring to that hour in the canyon when you first declared your love, what did she say?'
âShe said: “I will never let you go.”'
âAnd now she reaches back from the grave to punish you through Ruth for escaping her.' Quinton rose with an angry haste, but Mr. Pettingill said easily: âThat is all.' He turned away, Quinton made a contemptuous. gesture, and Harland, trembling with the reaction from his ordeal, left the stand.
For a moment after Harland sat down, the courtroom rustled and whispered. Then with a glance at the clock, Mr. Pettingill said:
âWell, Your Honor, we've time for one more witness before adjournment. This evidence has just come to my knowledge. It won't take five minutes. I'll call Leick Thorne.'
When Leick took the stand, Harland forced himself to pay attention, wondering what was to come; and Mr. Pettingill began:
âNow, Leick, you've already told the, jury about that shore picnic the day Ellen died, but we'll go back to it again. Do you recall anything you haven't told before that might be important?'
âYes, sir.'
âSuppose you just go ahead and tell us what it is.'
âWell, it's like this,' Leick explained. âWhen she finished eating . . .'
âBy “she” you mean whom?'
Leick said shortly: âEllen.' He began again. âWhen she finished eating, she had some napkins â paper napkins â that she hadn't used, and she rolled them up in a tight roll and threw them into the fire.'
âYes?'
âThe outside of the roll begun to burn, and I happened to watch it. After a while a jet of smoke begun to come out of it, maybe three-four inches long and half as thick as a lead pencil. Then the smoke turned to flame, and then some black stuff like tar begun to drip out of the hole the flame was coming out of, and
drip down into the fire; and it burned too, in the ashes, sizzling like tar, till it all burned out.'
âDid you know what caused this?'
âNo, sir. They were all talking and laughing and I was listening and watching the fire, and I noticed it, and thought it was a funny way for paper to burn . . .'
âBrother Quinton would rather you didn't tell us what you thought. But describe what you saw once more, if you please.'
âWell, it was just like I said,' Leick repeated. âShe twisted up some paper napkins in a sort of roll . . .'
âHow big was the roll?'
âOh, maybe an inch thick and six inches long.'
âGo on.'
âAnd she threw it into the fire. It lit crossways on a couple pieces of driftwood, and the twisted ends caught fire, and the outside of the paper begun to burn, and then this jet of smoke came out, puffing straight out, steady; and then this black stuff like melted tar â only it was more brown than black â begun to drip out of the hole, and drip into the hot coals, and it caught fire, and kept burning till it all burned out.'
âHad you ever seen anything like that before?'
âNo.'
âHave you ever seen anything like it since?'
âYes, sir.'
âWhen?'
âToday.'
âUnder what circumstances?'
âWhy, last night I got to thinking about the picnic â â '
âNever mind what you were thinking. What did you do or see?'
âWell, I went down to the shore here and built a fire, near as I could about as hot as the fire we had that day. I'd bought some paper napkins and borrowed half a cup of sugar, or maybe a little less, and an envelope from the post office. I put the sugar in the envelope and wrapped it in the paper napkins, to look as near as I could like the bundle she threw in the fire, the same
size and shape and all; and I put it on the fire as near as I could in the same sort of place.'
âYes.'
âWell, sir,' said Leick. âIt behaved just the same as that rolled-up bundle she threw on the fire at my place that day. Same smoke, same flames â only there was two jets this time â and the same black stuff running out and burning in the ashes.'
Mr. Pettingill turned to Mr. Quinton. âThat is all,' he said.
Harland, with a strong exultation, understood the significance of this testimony. If Ellen committed suicide by substituting for the envelope Ruth had prepared another containing arsenic as well as sugar, then she must somehow have disposed of the original envelope. Leick's story tended to show how she had done so; and he wondered whether Quinton would recognize this fact. But Quinton faced Leick almost casually.
âYou're an old friend of Mr. Harland's, aren't you?'
âGuess't you could say so.'
âAny time he or Mrs. Harland was in trouble, you'd do anything you could to help them, wouldn't you?'
âYes, I sure would. They're fine people.'
âYou'd even remember things that never happened, wouldn't you?'
Leick drawled: âDon't see how I could remember them if they didn't happen.'
âInvent them, then?'
âIf I was smart enough, I might,' Leick assented.
Quinton nodded. âI thought so. That's all.'