Page:Henry Northcote (IA henrynorthcote00snairich).pdf/76

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not prepared to accept your proposition. To my mind, so far is the woman's guilt from being already established, that I am prepared to give an undertaking that it never will be established."

The solicitor drummed his fingers on the table-*cloth.

"I should like Tobin to hear you say that. I wish you had been at the police-court when the case came before the magistrate. There is enough evidence to hang an archdeacon."

"Very likely. But we shall be getting back to those abstract principles for entertaining which I have already suffered reproof."

The solicitor gave an uneasy eye to his watch.

"You force me to deliver an ultimatum," said he, in an uncompromising tone. "Please have the goodness to give an undertaking to conduct the defence on the lines indicated by Tobin, or return the brief."

A wave of blood surged through the brain of the young advocate. A dismal sickness overspread his veins. Tantalus was about to pluck away that which he had fasted and prayed for before he could take it in his grasp.

"You have entrusted it to me already," he said, in a dull, dry voice.

"In a case of this magnitude," said the solicitor, with an almost brutal precision, "I reserve to myself the right to alter my mind. You have forced me to issue an ultimatum. Accept or reject it, whichever you choose."

The solicitor called for his bill in a hectoring manner, and threw a bank-note on the waiter's salver.