Chapter 23
“With regards to the slander you mentioned,
Lord Ravenscar, that remains a civil suit and not under my jurisprudence,” said
Justice Henbury.
“With respect, your honour, not in this
case, since the slander involved touches upon the succession of my house and
the ability of my bride to provide a suitable heir,” said Julian. “The grounds
of the slanders passed around suggest that she is not able to bring a competent
child to term which would give grounds for divorce, calling the succession into
question.”
“I see,” said Henbury.
“It’s not as bad as what you did to me!”
howled Denver. “All those mice all over the place, and writing letters
purporting to be from a mistress!”
“I have no idea what you are talking
about,” said Julian.
“You wrote them! You wrote steamy letters
about tying up my member with a garter, and other very intimate things!” cried
Denver.
Julian’s face took on the Stormcrow look.
“Your honour, this further public slander,
indeed, libel, since it will be recorded, suggesting that I have engaged in the
crime of intimacy with the defendant, is a further attack upon the succession,”
he said.
“A very serious crime with which to accuse
you,” said Henbury, coldly. “Mr. Denver! Are you seriously accusing Lord
Ravenscar of engaging in intimate acts with you?”
“God, no!” said Denver. “Only of writing
the letters as if from a woman suggesting intimacy.”
“Did you do such a thing, Lord Ravenscar?”
asked the judge.
“No, my lord; I wouldn’t know how to set
about the task,” said Julian. It was true; he would not. It was why he had
hired a professional to do so.
“I think we will turn next to the matter of
the housebreaking at the house at Finchley,” said Henbury. “The property
belonging to Lady and therefore Lord Ravenscar, but you may sit down, my lord
as you were not personally involved.
Call Mr. Jilkins."
By the end of the day, Mr. Knightley was
looking rather harrowed. His client had picked up a year’s worth of gaol time
for contempt of court so far, and the matter of the slander.
“I hope he paid you in advance,” said
Julian.
Mr. Knightley looked at him severely.
“Mr. Denver is a gentleman,” he said.
“No, he ain’t,” said Julian. “Not when it
comes to paying bills. Good luck!”
Mr Knightley gave him a jaundiced look.
“I have no doubt that I will be paid,” he
said, loftily.
“Of course,” said Julian.
The trial took three days. Judge Henbury
wanted every matter addressed and
considered in relation to everything else. He was pernickety and wanted detail.
Amelia Denver testified against her
husband, and tearfully declared that trying to burn her in her own bed surely
counted as cruelty worthy of a divorce being granted.
“I would be prepared to sign an affidavit
to that effect assuming your husband is found guilty,” said Henbury,
cautiously.
“He is the bane of my life! Him with his
ideas of making it seem that Anne was insane to have power of attorney on her
money, but did he check that she was already betrothed with a prenuptial giving
control to Ravenscar? Of course he didn’t!” cried Amelia. “And then when there
was notice that the plantation he owned so much of had been struck by a
hurricane, and he sets out to cheat someone with a straight exchange of shares,
and does he remember the spelling of the place the broker said was valuable? No,
of course not, he lets the other party cheat him by giving him worthless shares
with a different spelling. He isn’t even efficient when he’s being crooked!”
she was ignoring Denver’s frantic signals to be quiet.
“The plaintiff moves to have Mrs. Denver as
a witness in the defamation case,” said Julian.
“Granted,” said Henbury. “The defence
should consider her a hostile witness.”
“Of course I’m hostile! He tried to burn me
in my own bed! And he’s a poor sort of husband anyway, and I should not have
believed for one minute that he had a mistress who would write him steamy
letters, she’d be too busy laughing at him and his little winkle which isn’t
much good at anything. I had to screw a footman to get my daughter! If you ask
me, he stole those letters to pretend he had a mistress to make himself seem
bigger, and maybe to bring his winkle to over three inches!” declared Amelia.
“He had an insurance policy on my poor Clarinda and me, and he took it out
three days before he set fire to the house!
But he bungled that, as well, thank God, he can’t get anything right, he
can’t even manage to be a monster, he’s too pathetic!”
“The jury should disregard Mrs. Denver’s
polemic,” said Henbury, whose mouth was twitching again.
“Don’t you dare!” said Mrs. Denver to the
jury. “Don’t you let him go making light of my woes, men are all the same, they
hang together and if you ask me they should all be hanged together for there’s
no use to be had of him that a woman can’t get from a dildo.”
“Madam, I was not making light of your
considerable woes,” said Henbury. “Merely pointing out that your comments were
not wholly germane to the case currently under consideration. You will have
full rein on the subject when covering your husband’s indictment for fraud, and
for the defamation case.”
Somewhat mollified, Mrs. Denver allowed
herself to be ushered off the witness stand when Mr. Knightley indicated an
unwillingness to cross examine.
He was afraid that whatever she said would
be even more damning.
The fire brigade gave evidence.
The insurance broker gave evidence.
Dr. Matheson took the stand.
“Tell us about the night of sixteenth
inst,” said Henbury.
“Indeed; what a night that was,” said
Matheson. “I had been dining with Ravenscar in St. James’ Hotel, a very fine
meal it was, beef with mushrooms and a delicate pepper sauce with creamed
potatoes and turnips, cabbage, leeks, and peas, as a remove after a very fine
salmon en croute with cream cheese and dill, with spinach tossed in
butter with a touch of garlic, green peas, and celery. We had a plum pudding
to conclude, with a creamy sauce made, I believe, with cream and brandy.” He
absently rubbed the belly which still remembered the repast. The Judge cleared
his throat and got out his watch, ostentatiously. Matheson flushed. “Anyway,
after the meal, Ravenscar’s man drove me home, which is in the same street as
that in which Mr. Denver resided, and Ravenscar came in for brandy and coffee,
whilst his men went to the kitchen; and we discussed Plato. A most enjoyable
evening, up to the time when he came to leave, when we perceived fire. His men
left the carriage in the street to accompany us in running towards the fire to
rouse all the residents in the street to the danger ensuing, and to get
servants out, his coachman going to the back mews which he knew, and pretty
soon we had a chain gang with buckets going.
Mr. Denver tried to jump out of a downstairs window, but it was over the
area, and smoke was billowing out of the coal hole, and he dared not risk it so
he went back in to exit via the front door.
Lord Ravenscar and I followed Lord Ravenscar’s man into the house, and
Lord Ravenscar brought out Miss Denver, whilst I helped Mrs. Denver and her
dresser, then we all went back for the servants upstairs, the staircase falling
in moments after we had run up it to the first floor. I confess my prayers were
fervent but not coherent,” he added. “We got up to the top floor and Ravenscar
said we should go to the house next door, the one to the door side, not the one
to the coal cellar side, and we did, and went through the box-room window, and
down the stairs and onto the street. I might note that there was a powerful
strong smell of lamp oil in the vestibule, and I saw stains laid on the stairs
on my first trip up, which I avoided, and where flames leaped up as it
collapsed. I could not swear that was lamp oil, but I cannot think what else it
might be.”
“Anyone who was involved is to be commended
that there was no loss of life at all in the conflagration,” said Henbury.
“Yourself, Lord Ravenscar, Mr. Watkins and Mr. Hobson as well, of course, as
the fire brigade, whose prompt arrival means, I understand, that no harm came
to either of the adjacent houses, and that the structural integrity of the
building is unharmed. You may cross examine, Mr. Knightley.”
Knightley mopped his brow.
“Are you in the habit of dining with Lord
Ravenscar?” he asked.
“No, sir, not at all; it was, however, a
dinner in which he wished to obtain my advice and testimony in a civil case
against Mr. Denver, with relation to the supposed madness of Lady Ravenscar. As
a man of letters, I was able to demonstrate that I had noted in my diary that
the lady’s symptoms, as Miss Anne Bonnet, seemed most odd, though I fear I did
not follow that thought through, to my guilt and distress on behalf of the poor
young lady.”
“Yes, well, that is beyond the question
that I asked,” said poor Knightley. “Do
you not consider it a coincidence that Mr. Denver’s house….”
“Objection; it’s my house,” said Julian.
“He merely lived there and was under foreclosure.”
Knightley cleared his throat.
“The residence of Mr. Denver, then… do you
not think it a coincidence that it went on fire the night Ravenscar was dining
with you, in light of the belief of my client that Ravenscar was the author of
some nasty practical jokes on him?”
“You can object on the grounds that it
calls for speculation on the part of the witness, if you wish,” said Henbury.
“I have no need to object; I was with Dr.
Matheson all evening, and after we retired to his house, my men were in the
company of his man and his curate,” said Julian.
“Is it not true that Mr. Denver had invited
you to dinner that night, and you declined?” Asked Knightley.
“I did; I did not put it past him to drug
me,” said Julian. “You ain’t supposed to be questioning me yet.”
“And is it not odd that both dinner
appointments should fall on the same night?” Knightley persisted to Matheson.
“Why? The sixteenth was a perfectly natural
night for any party,” said Matheson.
“May I ask how you come to that
conclusion?”
“It was full moon, of course,” said
Matheson. “Come, sir, is your social calendar so sparse that you do not
consider the state of the moon as a matter of course?”
“I object, the witness should not be
questioning me,” said Knightley.
“Sustained,” said Henbury. “Limit your
answers to the questions, please, Mr. Matheson.”
“Of course, your honour,” said Matheson. “I
might speculate that it pleased the viscount to wreak some childish revenge
upon Mr. Denver in terms of schoolboy-type pranks, but there is a big step from
hiding a few dead fish about the place or letting mice loose to arson. And
moreover, given leave to speculate, I would speculate that whoever took out
extra insurance would be seen to be more likely to be the culprit in what is a
crime, not a prank. We must consider Cicero, and as ‘Cui bono?’ who benefits? Surely
Ravenscar is not the beneficiary of the life insurances on Mrs. and Miss
Denver? And I also heard Denver arguing with the Sun Alliance as he was
convinced, he was to get the insurance on the house as well as its contents.”
“Well played, Ravenscar,” said Knightley,
ruefully. “This is why we don’t like witnesses speculating.”
Julian smirked.
The fire brigade were off the opinion that
lamp oil had been splashed liberally about the coal cellar, kitchen, and up the
stairs into the vestibule and main stairs.
Their conclusion was that it was arson, and
that it would be virtually impossible for anyone not of the household to set
the fire.
“Mr. Denver was up and dressed, in his
study with a banyan on but over his clothes,” said the leading fireman.
A surprise witness was a doctor whom Julian
had called for Mrs. and Miss Denver at the hotel, before he retired to the
country.
“It is my opinion,” said that worthy, “That
both ladies showed signs of Laudanum use, and both deny taking it voluntarily.
I am told that the cook also slept soundly and had to be dragged out of the
house leading to speculation that laudanum was introduced via a dish which one
person plainly did not partake of.”
“He didn’t touch the goose!” shouted Mrs.
Denver from the gallery.
“You must not shout out or I will hold you
in contempt,” said Henbury.
“But you need to know!” said Mrs. Denver.
Henbury sighed, and pinched the top of his
nose with an incipient headache.
It was one of those cases.
“I call the cook and Mrs. Denver,” he said.
It was officially recorded that the cook
had eaten the left overs of the goose, as had Mrs. and Miss Denver; and that
Mr. Denver had not.
“No further questions,” said Mr. Knightley.