The Rim of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 474 pages of information about The Rim of the Desert.

The Rim of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 474 pages of information about The Rim of the Desert.

The men on the jury looked thoughtful but not altogether convinced.  One glanced at his neighbor with a covert smile.  This man, whom the Government had selected to prosecute the coal fraud cases was undeniably able, often brilliant, but his statements showed he had brought his ideas of Alaska from the Atlantic coast; to him, standing in the Seattle courtroom, our outlying possession was still as remote.  As his glance moved to the ranks of outside listeners, who overflowed the seats and crowded the aisles to the doors, he must have been conscious that the sentiment he had expressed was at least unpopular in the northwest.  Faces that had been merely interested or curious grew suddenly lowering.  The atmosphere of the place seemed surcharged.

The following morning Morganstein took the stand.  Though in small matters that touched his personal comfort he was arrogantly irritable, under the cross-examination that assailed his commercial methods he proved suave and non-committal.  As the day passed, the prosecutor’s insinuations grew more open and vindictive.  Judge Feversham sprang to his feet repeatedly to challenge his accusations, and twice the Court calmed the Government’s attorney with a reprimand.  The atmosphere of the room seemed to seethe hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness.  Finally, during the afternoon session, Foster was recalled.

Through it all Tisdale waited, listening to everything, separating, weighing each point presented.  It was beginning to look serious for Foster.  Clearly, in his determination to win his suit, the prosecution was losing sight of the simple justice the Government desired.  And a man less dramatic, less choleric, with less of a reputation for political intrigue than Miles Feversham might better have defended Stuart Foster.  Foster was so frank, so honest, so eager to make the Alaska situation understood.  And it was not an isolated case; there were hundreds of young men, who, like him, had cast their fortunes with that new and growing country, to find themselves, after years of hardship and privation of which the outside world had no conception, bound hand and foot in an intricate tangle of the Government’s red tape.

The evening of the fourth day the attorney for the prosecution surprised Tisdale at his rooms.  “Thank you,” he said, when Hollis offered his armchair, “but those windows open to the four winds of heaven are a little imprudent to a man who lives by his voice.  Pretty, though, isn’t it?” He paused a moment to look down on the harbor lights and the chains of electric globes stretching off to Queen Anne hill and far and away to Magnolia bluff, then seated himself between the screen and the table that held the shaded reading lamp.  “Has it occurred to you, Mr. Tisdale,” he asked, “that a question may be raised as to the legality of your testimony in these coal cases?”

“No.”  Hollis remained standing.  He looked at his visitor in surprise.  “Please make that clear, Mr. Bromley,” he said.

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The Rim of the Desert from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.