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Verity grimaced. “A certain matter of whether you deceive people or not. Marty Laws roped me in.”

Marty was explaining to the judge that, because he had had no chance to talk with this witness himself beforehand, his illustrious co-counsel would conduct the examination. “The girl is young and fragile, and they have established a rapport.”

Verily thought that the idea of Webster and Amy having rapport wasn't very promising when it came to getting honest testimony from her, but he had to tread carefully. She was a child, and a girl child at that. He couldn't seem to be hostile or fearful of her before she spoke, and in cross-examination he'd have to proceed delicately lest he seem to be a bully. Unlike Makepeace Smith and Hank, Dowser, who were obviously angry and malicious, Amy Sump was absolutely believable. She spoke shyly and reluctantly. “I don't want to get Alvin in no trouble, sir,” she said.

“And why not?” asked Daniel Webster.

Her answer came in a whisper. “Because I still love him.”

“You… you still love him?” Oh, Webster was a fine actor, worthy of the boards in Drury Lane. “But how can you– why do you still love him?”

“Because I am with child,” she whispered.

A buzzing arose through the courtroom.

Again, Webster feigned grieved surprise. “You are with… Are you married, Miss Sump?”

She shook her head. Glistening tears flew from her eyes onto her lap.

“Yet you are with child. The child of some man who didn't even have the decency to make an honest woman of you. Whose child, Miss Sump?”

This was already out of control. Verily leapt to his feet. “Your Honor, I object on the grounds that this can have no conceivable connection with–”

“It goes to the issue of deception, Your Honor!” cried Daniel Webster. “It goes to the issue of a man who will say whatever it takes to get his way, and then absconds without so much as a farewell, having taken away that which is most precious from the very one who trusted him!”

The judge smacked down his gavel. “Mr. Webster, that was such a fine summing up that I'm inclined to charge the jury and end the trial. Unfortunately this is not the end of the trial and I'd appreciate it if you'd refrain from jumping up on a stump and making a speech when it ain't speechifying time.”

“I was responding to my worthy opponent's objection.”

“Well, you see, Daniel, that's where you made your mistake. Because his objection was addressed to me, me being the judge here, and I didn't really need your help at that moment. But I'm grateful to know that your help is right there, ready for me, if ever I do need it.”

Webster answered the sarcasm with a cheerful smile. What did he care? His point was already made.

“The objection is overruled, Mr. Cooper,” said the judge. “Who is the father of your child, Miss Sump?”

She burst into tears– still on cue, despite the interruption. “Alvin,” she said, sobbing. Then she looked up and gazed soulfully across the court into Alvin's eyes. “Oh, Al, it ain't too late! Come back and make a wife of me! I love you so!”

Chapter 15 – Love

Verily Cooper, doing his best to hide his astonishment, turned languidly to, look at Alvin. Then he raised an eyebrow.

Alvin looked vaguely sad. “It's true she's pregnant,” he whispered. “But it ain't true I'm the father.”

“Why didn't you tell me if you knew?” Verily whispered.

“I didn't know till she said it. Then I looked and yes, there's a baby growing in her womb. About the size of a nib. No more than three weeks along.”

Verily nodded. Alvin had been in jail for the past month, and traveling far from Vigor Church for several months before that. The question was whether he could get the girl to admit under cross-examination that she was barely a month along in her pregnancy.

In the meantime, Daniel Webster had gone on, eliciting from Amy a lurid account of Alvin's seduction of her. No doubt about it, the girl told a convincing story, complete with all kinds of details that made it sound true. It seemed to Verily that the girl wasn't lying, or if she was, she believed her own lies. For a few moments he had doubts about Alvin. Could he have done this? The girl was pretty and desirable, and from the way she talked, she was certainly willing. Just because Alvin was a Maker didn't mean he wasn't a man all the same.

He quickly shook off such thoughts. Alvin Smith was a man with self-control, that was the truth. And he had honor. If he really did such things with this child, he'd certainly marry her and not leave her to face the consequences alone.

It was a measure of how dangerous the girl's testimony was, if she could get Alvin's own attorney to doubt him.

“And then he left you,” said Daniel Webster.

Verily thought of objecting, but figured there was no point.

“It was my own fault, I know,” said Amy, breaking down again into pathetic tears. “I shouldn't have told my best friend Ramona about Alvin and me, because she mouthed it around to everybody and they didn't understand about our true love and so of course my Alvin had to leave because he has great works to do in the world, he can't be tied down to Vigor Church just now. I didn't want to come here and testify! I want him to be free to do whatever he needs to do! And if my baby grows up without a pa, at least I can tell my child that she comes of noble blood, with Makery as her heritage!”

Oh, that was a nice touch, making her the suffering saint who is content that “her” Alvin is a lying seducing deceiving abandoning bastard-making cradle-robber, because she loves him so.

It was time for cross-examination. This had to proceed delicately indeed. Verily couldn't give a single hint that he believed her; at the same time, he didn't dare to be seen to attack her, because the jury's sympathy was all with the girl right now. The seeds of doubt had to be planted gently.

“I'm sorry you had to come all the way down here. It must be a hard journey for a young lady in your delicate condition.”

“Oh, I'm doing all right. I just puke once in the morning and then I'm fine for the rest of the day.”

The jury laughed. A friendly, sympathetic, believing laugh. Heaven help me, thought Verily.

“How long have you known you were going to have a baby?”

“A long time,” she said.

Verily raised an eyebrow. “Now, that's a pretty vague answer. But before you hear my next question, I just want you to remember that we can bring your mother and father down here if need be, to establish the exact time this pregnancy began.”

“Well I didn't tell them till just a few days ago,” said Amy. “But I've been pregnant for–”

Verily raised his hand to silence her, and shook his head. “Be careful, Miss Sump. If you think for just a minute, you'll realize that your mother certainly knows and your father probably knows that you couldn't possibly have been pregnant for more than a few weeks.”

Amy looked at him in a puzzled way for a long moment. Then dawning realization came across her face. She finally realized:, Her mother would know, from washing rags, when she last menstruated. And it wasn't months and months ago.

“Like I was going to say all along, I got pregnant in the last month. Sometime in the last month.”

“And you're sure that Alvin is the father?”

She nodded. But she was no fool. Verily knew she was doing the math in her head. She obviously had counted on being able to lie and say she'd been pregnant for months, since before Alvin left Vigor; when the baby was born she could say it had taken so long because it was a Maker's child, or some such nonsense. But now she had to have a better lie.

Or else she'd been planning this lie all along. That, too, was possible.

“Of course he is,” she said. “He comes to me in the night even now. He's really excited about the baby.”

“What do you, mean by 'even now'?” asked Verily. “You know that he's in jail.”