“Well, he hasn't been tried yet,” replied Bonnie Doon. “If you feel that way about it why don't you defend him?”
“I will!” shouted Mr. Tutt, springing to his feet. “I'll defend him and acquit him!”
He seized his tall hat, placed it upon his head and strode rapidly through the door.
“He will too!” remarked Bonnie, winking at Tutt.
“He thinks that tramp is either a statesman or a prophet!” mused Tutt, his mind reverting to his partner's earlier remarks.
“He won't think so after he's seen him,” replied Mr. Doon.
It sometimes happens that those who seek to establish great principles and redress social evils involve others in an involuntary martyrdom far from their desires. Mr. Tutt would have gone to the electric chair rather than see the Hepplewhite Tramp, as he was popularly called by the newspapers convicted of a crime, but the very fact that he had become his legal champion interjected a new element into the situation, particularly as O'Brien, Mr. Tutt's arch enemy in the district attorney's office, had been placed in charge of the case.
It would have been one thing to let Hans Schmidt-that was the tramp's name-go, if after remaining in the Tombs until he had been forgotten by the press he could have been unobtrusively hustled over the Bridge of Sighs to freedom. Then there would have been no comeback. But with Ephraim Tutt breathing fire and slaughter, accusing the police and district attorney of being trucklers to the rich and great, and oppressors of the poor-law breakers, in fact-O'Brien found himself in the position of one having an elephant by the tail and unable to let go.
In fact, it looked as if the case of the Hepplewhite Tramp might become a political issue. That there was something of a comic side to it made it all the worse.
“Holy cats, boys!” snorted District Attorney Peckham to the circle of disgruntled police officers and assistants gathered about him on the occasion described by the reporters as his making a personal investigation of the case, “Why in the name of common sense didn't you simply boot the fellow into the street?”
“I wish we had, counselor!” assented the captain of the Hepplewhite precinct mournfully. “But we thought he was a burglar. I guess he was, at that-and it was Mr. Hepplewhite's house.”
“I've heard that until I'm sick of it!” retorted Peckham.
“One thing is sure-if we turn him out now Tutt will sue us all for false arrest and put the whole administration on the bum,” snarled O'Brien.
“But I didn't know the tramp would get Mr. Tutt to defend him,” expostulated the captain. “Anyhow, ain't it a crime to go to sleep in another man's bed?”
“If it ain't it ought to be!” declared his plain-clothes man sententiously. “Can't you indict him for burglary?”
“You can indict all day; the thing is to convict!” snapped Peckham. “It's up to you, O'Brien, to square this business so that the law is vindicated-somehow It must be a crime to go into a house on Fifth Avenue and use it as a hotel. Why, you can't cross the street faster than a walk these days without committing a crime. Everything's a crime.”
“Sure thing,” agreed the captain. “I never yet had any trouble finding a crime to charge a man with, once I got the nippers on him.”
“That's so,” interjected the plain-clothes man. “Did you ever know it was a crime to mismanage a steam boiler? Well, it is.”
“Quite right,” agreed Mr. Magnus, the indictment clerk. “The great difficulty for the perfectly honest man nowadays is to avoid some act or omission which the legislature has seen fit to make a crime without his knowledge. Refilling a Sarsaparilla bottle, for instance, or getting up a masquerade ball or going fishing or playing on Sunday or loitering about a building to overhear what people are talking about inside-”
“That's no crime,” protested the captain scornfully.
“Yes, it is too!” retorted Mr. Magnus, otherwise known to his fellows as Caput, because of his supposed cerebral inflation. “Just like it is a crime to have any kind of a show or procession on Sunday except a funeral, in which case it's a crime to make a disbursing noise at it.”
“What's a disbursing noise?” demanded O'Brien.
“I don't know,” admitted Magnus. “But that's the law anyway. You can't make a disbursing noise at a funeral on Sunday.”
“Oh, hell!” ejaculated the captain. “Come to think of it, it's a crime to spit. What man is safe?”
“It occurs to me,” continued Mr. Magnus thoughtfully, “that it is a crime under the law to build a house on another man's land; now I should say that there was a close analogy between doing that and sleeping in his bed.”
“Hear! Hear!” commented O'Brien. “Caput Magnus, otherwise known as Big Head, there is no doubt but that your fertile brain can easily devise a way out of our present difficulty.”
“Well, I've no time to waste on tramp cases,” remarked District Attorney Peckham. “I've something more important to attend to. Indict this fellow and send him up quick. Charge him with everything in sight and trust in the Lord. That's the only thing to be done. Don't bother me about it, that's all!”
Meantime Mr. Hepplewhite became more and more agitated. Entirely against his will and, so far as he could see, without any fault of his own, he suddenly found himself the center of a violent and acrimonious controversy respecting the fundamental and sacred rights of freemen which threatened to disrupt society and extinguish the supremacy of the dominant local political organization.
On the one hand he was acclaimed by the conservative pulpit and press as a public-spirited citizen who had done exactly the right thing-disinterestedly enforced the law regardless of his own convenience and safety as a matter of principle and for the sake of the community-a moral hero; on the other, though he was president of several charitable organizations and at least one orphan asylum he was execrated as a heartless brute, an oppressor of the poor, an octopus, a soulless capitalist who fattened on the innocent and helpless and who-Mr. Hepplewhite was a bachelor-probably if the truth could be known lived a life of horrid depravity and crime.
Indeed there was a man named Tutt, of whom Mr. Hepplewhite had never before heard, who publicly declared that he, Tutt, would show him, Hepplewhite, up for what he was and make him pay with his body and his blood, to say nothing of his money, for what he had done and caused to be done. And so Mr. Hepplewhite became even more agitated, until he dreamed of this Tutt as an enormous bird like the fabled roc, with a malignant face and a huge hooked beak that some day would nip him in the abdomen and fly, croaking, away with him. Mrs. Witherspoon had returned to Aiken, and after the first flood of commiserations from his friends on Lists Numbers One, Two, Three and Four he felt neglected, lonely and rather fearful.
And then one morning something happened that upset his equanimity entirely. He had just started out for a walk in the park when a flashy person who looked like an actor walked impudently up to him and handed him a piece of paper in which was wrapped a silver half dollar. In a word Mr. Hepplewhite was subpoenaed and the nervous excitement attendant upon that operation nearly caused his collapse. For he was thereby commanded to appear before the Court of General Sessions of the Peace upon the following Monday at ten a.m. as a witness in a criminal action prosecuted by the People of the State of New York against Hans Schmidt. Moreover, the paper was a dirty-brown color and bore the awful name of Tutt. He returned immediately to the house and telephoned for Mr. Edgerton, his lawyer, who at once jumped into a taxi on the corner of Wall and Broad Streets and hurried uptown.