LEONARD
. (USHER
. ((ROMAINE
JUDGE
. Sir Wilfrid.SIR
WILFRID. ((
LEONARD
. I swear by Almighty God that the evidence that I shall give shall be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. ((
SIR
WILFRID. Now, Mr. Vole, we have heard of your friendship with Miss Emily French. Now I want you to tell us how often you visited her.LEONARD
. Frequently.SIR
WILFRID. Why was that?LEONARD
. Well, she was awfully nice to me and I got fond of her. She was like my Aunt Betsy.SIR
WILFRID. That was an aunt who brought you up?LEONARD
. Yes. She was a dear. Miss French reminded me of her.SIR
WILFRID. You’ve heard Janet MacKenzie say Miss French thought you were a single man, and that there was some question of marrying you. Is there any truth in this?LEONARD
. Of course not. It’s an absurd idea.SIR
WILFRID. Miss French knew that you were married?LEONARD
. Yes.SIR
WILFRID. So there was no question of marriage between you?LEONARD
. Of course not. I’ve told you, she treated me as though she was an indulgent aunt. Almost like a mother.SIR
WILFRID. And in return you did everything for her that you could.LEONARD
. (SIR
WILFRID. Will you tell the Jury in your own words exactly what happened on the night of October the fourteenth?LEONARD
. Well, I’d come across a kind of a cat brush—a new thing in that line—and I thought it would please her. So I took it along that evening. I’d nothing else to do.SIR
WILFRID. What time was that?LEONARD
. Just before eight I got there. I gave her the cat brush. She was pleased. We tried it out on one of the cats and it was a success. Then we played a game of Double Demon—Miss French was very fond of Double Demon—and after that I left.SIR
WILFRID. Yes, but did you not . . .JUDGE
. Sir Wilfrid, I don’t understand this piece of evidence at all. What is a cat brush?LEONARD
. It’s a brush for brushing cats.JUDGE
. Oh!LEONARD
. A sort of brush and comb combined. Miss French kept cats—eight of them she had, and the house smelt a bit . . .SIR
WILFRID. Yes, yes.LEONARD
. I thought the brush might be useful.SIR
WILFRID. Did you see Janet MacKenzie?LEONARD
. No. Miss French let me in herself.SIR
WILFRID. Did you know Janet MacKenzie was out?LEONARD
. Well, I didn’t think about it.SIR
WILFRID. At what time did you leave?LEONARD
. Just before nine. I walked home.SIR
WILFRID. How long did that take you?LEONARD
. Oh, I should say about twenty minutes to half an hour.SIR
WILFRID. So that you reached home . . . ?LEONARD
. I reached home at twenty-five minutes past nine.