[The Snare by Rafael Sabatini]@TWC D-Link book
The Snare

CHAPTER XVI
2/23

"Are you guilty of these charges or not guilty ?" "Not guilty." The president sat back and observed the prisoner with an eye that was officially benign.

Tremayne's glance considered the court and met the concerned and grave regard of his colonel, of his friend Carruthers and of two other friends of his own regiment, the cold indifference of three officers of the Fourteenth--then stationed in Lisbon with whom he was unacquainted, and the utter inscrutability of O'Moy's rather lowering glance, which profoundly intrigued him, and, lastly, the official hostility of Major Swan, who was on his feet setting forth the case against him.

Of the remaining members of the court he took no heed.
From the opening address it did not seem to Captain Tremayne as if this case--which had been hurriedly prepared by Major Swan, chiefly that same morning would amount to very much.

Briefly the major announced his intention of establishing to the satisfaction of the court how, on the night of the 28th of May, the prisoner, in flagrant violation of an enactment in a general order of the 26th of that same month, had engaged in a duel with Count Jeronymo de Samoval, a peer of the realm of Portugal.
Followed a short statement of the case from the point of view of the prosecution, an anticipation of the evidence to be called, upon which the major thought--rather sanguinely, opined Captain Tremayne--to convict the accused.

He concluded with an assurance that the evidence of the prisoner's guilt was as nearly direct as evidence could be in a case of murder.
The first witness called was the butler, Mullins.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books