(Sharply.) "Because I wished to. I was able to take care of myself."

"Why did you visit the forward house?"

"I was nervous and could not sleep. I thought no one safe while

the axe was on the ship."

"Did you see the body of Burns, the sailor, lying on the deck at

that time?"

"He might have been there; I did not see him."

"Are you saying that you went to the forward house to throw the

axe overboard?"

"Yes--if I could get in."

"Did you know why the axe was being kept?"

"Because the murders had been committed with it."

"Had you heard of any finger-prints on the handle?"

"No."

"Did it occur to you that you were interfering with justice in

disposing of the axe?"

"Do you mean justice or law? They are not the same."

"Tell us about your visit to the forward house."

"It was between two and three. I met no one. I had a bunch of

keys from the trunks and from four doors in the after house. Miss

Lee knew I intended to try to get rid of the axe. I did not need

my keys. The door was open---wide open. I--I went in, and--"

Here, for the first time, Mrs. Johns's composure forsook her. She

turned white, and her maid passed up to her a silver smelling-salts

bottle.

"What happened when you went in?"

"It was dark. I stood just inside. Then something rushed past me

and out of the door, a something--I don't know what--a woman, I

thought at first, in white."

"If the room was dark, how could you tell it was white?"

"There was a faint light--enough to see that. There was no noise

--just a sort of swishing sound."

"What did you do then?"

"I waited a moment, and hurried back to the after house."

"Was the axe gone then?"

"I do not know."

"Did you see the axe at that time?"

"No."

"Did you touch it?"

"I have never touched it, at that time or before."

She could not be shaken in her testimony and was excused. She had

borne her grilling exceedingly well, and, in spite of her flippancy,

there was a ring of sincerity about the testimony that gave it weight.

Following her evidence, the testimony of Tom, the cook, made things

look bad for Singleton, by connecting him with Mrs. Johns's intruder

in the captain's room. He told of Singleton's offer to make him a

key to the galley with wire. It was clear that Singleton had been

a prisoner in name only, and this damaging statement was given weight

when, on my recall later, I identified the bunch of keys, the file,

and the club that I had taken from Singleton's mattress. It was plain

enough that, with Singleton able to free himself as he wished, the

attack on Burns and the disappearance of the axe were easily enough

accounted for. It would have been possible, also, to account for

the white figure that had so alarmed the men, on the same hypothesis.

Cross-examination of Tom by Mr. Goldstein, Singleton's attorney,

brought out one curious fact. He had made no dark soup or broth for

the after house. Turner had taken nothing during his illness but

clam bouillon, made with milk, and the meals served to the four women

had been very light. "They lived on toast and tea, mostly," he said.




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