LEONARD
. Well—I mean naturally, yes.MYERS
. Yes, very convenient. How was it, Mr. Vole, that you never took your wife to see Miss French?LEONARD
. I don’t know. It just didn’t seem to crop up.MYERS
. You say Miss French knew you were married?LEONARD
. Yes.MYERS
. Yet she never asked you to bring your wife with you to the house?LEONARD
. No.MYERS
. Why not?LEONARD
. Oh, I don’t know. She didn’t like women, I don’t think.MYERS
. She preferred, shall we say, personable young men? And you didn’t insist on bringing your wife?LEONARD
. No, of course I didn’t. You see, she knew my wife was a foreigner and she—oh, I don’t know, she seemed to think we didn’t get on.MYERS
. That was the impression you gave her?LEONARD
. No, I didn’t. She—well, I think it was wishful thinking on her part.MYERS
. You mean she was infatuated with you?LEONARD
. No, she wasn’t infatuated, but she, oh, it’s like mothers are sometimes with a son.MYERS
. How?LEONARD
. They don’t want him to like a girl or get engaged or anything of that kind.MYERS
. You hoped, didn’t you, for some monetary advantage from your friendship with Miss French?LEONARD
. Not in the way you mean.MYERS
. Not in the way I mean? You seem to know what I mean better than I know myself. In what way then did you hope for monetary advantage? (LEONARD
. You see, there’s a thing I’ve invented. A kind of windscreen wiper that works in snow. I was looking for someone to finance that and I thought perhaps Miss French would. But that wasn’t the only reason I went to see her. I tell you I liked her.MYERS
. Yes, yes, we’ve heard that very often, haven’t we—how much you liked her.LEONARD
. (MYERS
. I believe, Mr. Vole, that about a week before Miss French’s death, you were making enquiries of a travel agency for particulars of foreign cruises.LEONARD
. Supposing I did—it isn’t a crime, is it?MYERS
. Not at all. Many people go for cruisesLEONARD
. I was hard up. I told you so.MYERS
. And yet you came into this particular travel agency—with a blonde—a strawberry blonde—I understand—and . . .JUDGE
. A strawberry blonde, Mr. Myers?MYERS
. A term for a lady with reddish fair hair, my lord.JUDGE
. I thought I knew all about blondes, but a strawberry blonde . . . Go on, Mr. Myers.MYERS
. (LEONARD
. My wife isn’t a blonde and it was only a bit of fun, anyway.MYERS
. You admit that you asked for particulars, not of cheap trips, but of the most expensive and luxurious cruises. How did you expect to pay for such a thing?LEONARD
. I didn’t.MYERS
. I suggest that you knew that in a week’s time you would have inherited a large sum of money from a trusting elderly lady.LEONARD
. I didn’t know anything of the kind. I just was feeling fed up—and there were the posters in the window—palm trees and coconuts and blue seas, and I went in and asked. The clerk gave me a sort of supercilious look—IMYERS
. You really expect the Jury to believe that?LEONARD
. I don’t expect anyone to believe anything. But that’s the way it was. It was make-believe and childish if you like—but it was fun and I enjoyed it. (MYERS
. So it was just a remarkable coincidence that Miss French should be killed, leaving you her heir, only a few days later.LEONARD
. I’ve told you—I didn’t kill her.MYERS
. Your story is that on the night of the fourteenth, you left Miss French’s house at four minutes to nine, that you walked home and you arrived there at twenty-five minutes past nine, and stayed there the rest of the evening.LEONARD
. Yes.MYERS
. You have heard the woman Romaine Heilger rebut that story in Court. You have heard her say that you came in not atLEONARD
. It’s not true!MYERS
. That your clothes were bloodstained, that you definitely admitted to her that you had killed Miss French.LEONARD
. It’s not true, I tell you. Not one word of it is true.MYERS
. Can you suggest any reason why this young woman, who has been passing as your wife, should deliberately give evidence she has given if it were not true?