By Advice of Counsel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 270 pages of information about By Advice of Counsel.

By Advice of Counsel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 270 pages of information about By Advice of Counsel.

Suddenly Kasheed Hassoun, accompanied by a smaller and much darker man, had entered and striding up to the table exclaimed in a threatening manner:  “Where is he who did say that he would spit upon the beard of my bishop?”

Thereupon Sardi Babu had risen and answered:  “Behold, I am he.”

Immediately Kasheed Hassoun, and while his accomplice held them at bay with a revolver, had leaned across the table and grabbing Sardi by the throat had broken his neck.  Then the smaller man had fired off his pistol and both of them had run away.  The simplest story ever told.  There was everything the law required to send any murderer to the chair, and little Mr. Pepperill had a diagram made of the inside of the restaurant and a photograph of the outside of it, and stamped the indictment in purple ink:  Ready for Trial.

Contemporaneously Mr. Tutt was giving his final instructions to Mr. Bonnie Doon, his stage manager, director of rehearsals and general superintendent of arrangements in all cases requiring an extra-artistic touch.

“It’s too bad we can’t cart a few hundred cubic feet of the Sahara into the court room and divert the Nile down Center Street, but I guess you can produce sufficient atmosphere,” he said.

“I could all right—­if I had a camel,” remarked Bonnie.

“Atmosphere is necessary,” continued Mr. Tutt.  “Real atmosphere!  Have ’em in native costume—­beads, red slippers, hookahs, hoochi-koochis.”

“I get you,” replied Mr. Doon.  “You want a regular Turkish village.  Well, we’ll have it all right.  I’ll engage the entire Streets of Cairo production from Coney and have Franklin Street crowded with goats, asses and dromedaries.  I might even have a caravan pitch its tents alongside the Tombs.”

“You can’t lay it on too strong,” declared Mr. Tutt.  “But you don’t need to go off Washington Street.  And, Bonnie, remember—­I want every blessed Turk, Greek, Armenian, Jew, Arab, Egyptian and Syrian that saw Sardi Babu kill Kasheed Hassoun.”

“You mean who saw Kasheed Hassoun kill Sardi Babu,” corrected Bonnie.

“Well—­whichever way it was,” agreed Mr. Tutt.

When at length the great day of the trial arrived Judge Wetherell, ascending the bench in Part Thirteen, was immediately conscious of a subtle Oriental smell that emanated from no one could say where, but which none the less permeated the entire court room.  It seemed to be a curious compound of incense, cabbage, garlic and eau de cologne, with a suggestion of camel.  The room was entirely filled with Syrians.  One row of benches was occupied by a solemn group of white-bearded patriarchs who looked as if they had momentarily paused on a pilgrimage to Mecca.  All over the room rose the murmur of purring Arabic.  The stenographer was examining a copy of Meraat-ul-Gharb, the clerk a copy of El Zeman, and in front of the judge’s chair had been laid a copy of Al-Hoda.

His honor gave a single sniff, cast his eye over the picturesque throng, and said:  “Pst!  Captain!  Open that window!” Then he picked up the calendar and read:  “‘People versus Kasheed Hassoun—­Murder.’”

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By Advice of Counsel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.