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"Howard!" she sobbed.
"Is it you, Annie?" came a weak voice through the bars.
"Can't I go in to him?" she asked pleadingly.
The keeper shook his head.
"No, m'm, you must talk through the bars, but I won't disturb you."
He walked away and the husband and wife were left facing each other. The tears were streaming down Annie's cheeks. It was dreadful to be standing there so close and yet not be able to throw her arms around him. Her heart ached as she saw the distress in his wan, pale face.
"Why didn't you come before?" he asked.
"I could not. They wouldn't let me. Oh, Howard," she gasped. "What a dreadful thing this is! Tell me how you got into such a sc.r.a.pe!"
He put his hand to his head as if it hurt him, and she noticed that his eyes looked queer. For a moment the agony of a terrible suspicion crossed her mind. Was it possible that in a moment of drunken recklessness he had shot Underwood? Quickly, almost breathlessly, she whispered to him:
"Tell me quickly, 'tis not true, is it? You did not kill Robert Underwood."
He shook his head.
"No," he said.
"Thank G.o.d for that!" she exclaimed. "But your confession--what does that mean?"
"I do not know. They told me I did it. They insisted I did it. He was sure I did it. He told me he knew I did it. He showed me the pistol. He was so insistent that I thought he was right--that I had done it." In a deep whisper he added earnestly, "But you know I didn't, don't you?"
"Who is _he_?" demanded Annie.
"The police captain."
"Oh, Captain Clinton told you you did it?"
Howard nodded.
"Yes, he told me he _knew_ I did it. He kept me standing there six hours, questioning and questioning until I was ready to drop. I tried to sit down; he made me stand up. I did not know what I was saying or doing. He told me I killed Robert Underwood. He showed me the pistol under the strong light. The reflection from the polished nickel flashed into my eyes, everything suddenly became a blank. A few moments later the coroner came in and Captain Clinton told him I confessed. But it isn't true, Annie. You know I am as innocent of that murder as you are."
"Thank G.o.d, thank G.o.d!" exclaimed Annie. "I see it all now."
Her tears were dried. Her brain was beginning to work rapidly. She already saw a possible line of defense.
"I don't know how it all happened," went on Howard. "I don't know any more about it than you do. I left you to go to Underwood's apartment. On the way I foolishly took a drink. When I got there I took more whiskey.
Before I knew it I was drunk. While talking I fell asleep. Suddenly I heard a woman's voice."
"Ah!" interrupted Annie. "You, too, heard a woman's voice. Captain Clinton said there was a woman in it." Thoughtfully, as if to herself, she added: "We must find that woman."
"When I woke up," continued Howard, "it was dark. Groping around for the electric light, I stumbled over something. It was Underwood's dead body.
How he came by his death I have not the slightest idea. I at once realized the dangerous position I was in and I tried to leave the apartment un.o.bserved. Just as I was going, Underwood's man-servant arrived and he handed me over to the police. That's the whole story.
I've been here since yesterday and I'll be devilish glad to get out."
"You will get out," she cried. "I'm doing everything possible to get you free. I've been trying to get the best lawyer in the country--Richard Brewster."
"Richard Brewster!" exclaimed Howard. "He's my father's lawyer."
"I saw your father yesterday afternoon," she said quietly.
"You did!" he exclaimed, surprised. "Was he willing to receive you?"
"He had to," she replied. "I gave him a piece of my mind."
Howard looked at her in mingled amazement and admiration. That she should have dared to confront a man as proud and obstinate as his father astounded him.
"What did he say?" he asked eagerly.
"I asked him to come publicly to your support and to give you legal a.s.sistance. He refused, saying he could not be placed in a position of condoning such a crime and that your behavior and your marriage had made him wash his hands of you forever."
Tears filled Howard's eyes and his mouth quivered.
"Then my father believes me guilty of this horrible crime?" he exclaimed.
"He insisted that you must be guilty as you had confessed. He offered, though, to give you legal a.s.sistance, but only on one condition."
"What was that condition?" he demanded.
"That I consent to a divorce," replied Annie quietly.
"What did you say?"
"I said I'd consent to anything if it would help you, but when he told me that even then he would not come personally to your support I told him we would worry along without his a.s.sistance. On that I left him."
"You're a brave little woman!" cried Howard. Noticing her pale, anxious face, he said:
"You, too, must have suffered."
"Oh, never mind me," she rejoined quickly. "What we must do now is to get you out of this horrid place and clear your name before the world.
We must show that your alleged confession is untrue; that it was dragged from you involuntarily. We must find that mysterious woman who came to Underwood's rooms while you lay on the couch asleep. Do you know what my theory is, Howard?"
"What?" demanded her husband.
"I believe you were hypnotized into making that confession. I've read of such things before. You know the boys in college often hypnotized you.
You told me they made you do all kinds of things against your will. That big brute, Captain Clinton, simply forced his will on yours."
"By Jove--I never thought of that!" he exclaimed. "I know my head ached terribly after he got through all that questioning. When he made me look at that pistol I couldn't resist any more. But how are we going to break through the net which the police have thrown around me?"
"By getting the best lawyer we can procure. I shall insist on Judge Brewster taking the case. He declines, but I shall go to his office again this afternoon. He must----"
Howard shook his head.
"You'll not be able to get Brewster. He would never dare offend my father by taking up my case without his permission. He won't even see you."