Page:Henry Northcote (IA henrynorthcote00snairich).pdf/75

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of this case to me," said Northcote, "I shall beg to be conceded as free a hand as would have been conceded to Michael Tobin."

"Is your request quite reasonable?" said the solicitor. "Tobin has years of experience and success behind him."

"You can trust me not to attempt more than I can perform," said Northcote.

"Really, sir," said Mr. Whitcomb, genuinely alarmed by such an obduracy, "I cannot admit your right, in the circumstances in which you stand at present, to overstep the bounds that are so clearly indicated by persons of experience."

"I take this brief into court free of all restriction," was the young man's rejoinder.

"That one can hardly consent to," said the solicitor. "Would you say it is quite legitimate to make such a stipulation? We have our witnesses on the line of insanity, and we must ask to have them called."

"But do you not see," said Northcote, "that if we call those witnesses we admit the theory of the prosecution, and cut the ground from under our own feet?"

"Certainly, certainly. One would have thought that so much would be self-evident."

"Yet you sought me out in the capacity of a fighter. I take it that had you not desired to fight you would have gone straightway to Harris."

"I can only admit the possibilities of a fight within limits. The woman's guilt is established beyond question; our only concern is to mitigate its degree."

"For my own part," said the advocate, "I am