The Glass Village (13 page)

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Authors: Ellery Queen

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“It might appear so to you,” said Judge Shinn, “which shows how tricky appearances can be. Yes, there's Mert, and there's Sarah, who's twenty-nine, and that's two, and ten plus two make twelve. Only in this case they don't. Those two add up to one.”

“Coventry,” murmured Johnny. “I noticed Friday that Aunt Fanny's guests steered clear of Sarah and her little girl. The others wouldn't accept her, eh?”

“Oh, they'd accept her, especially in a thing like this,” said the Judge. “It's Mert who wouldn't.”

“Hér own father?”

“I didn't tell you about Sarah. Can't think of a better illustration of what we're up against.” The Judge sighed. “It happened—yes, Sarah was nineteen—about ten years ago. Mert's wife Hillie was alive then; Sarah was their only child. She was a bouncy, pretty girl, not the washed-out dishrag you see today.

“Well, it happened around Christmas time. A traveling man from New York, drygoods or notions or something, had his car break down during a blizzard, and between waiting for the county plows to come through and clear the road and his car to be fixed by Peter Berry, he was snowed in here till after New Year's. Stayed with the Berrys, as I recall, in their spare room. At a fee, of course. With the holiday goings-on and all, Sarah was in the village a good deal that week. And when the traveling man left, she left with him.”

“Elopement?”

“That's what we thought. Mert and Hillie were fit to be tied. Not only was the man a New Yorker, he had a furrin-sounding name—at least it wasn't Anglo-Saxon—and, what was worse, he was an atheist, or pretended to be. Good deal of a smart aleck; I don't doubt he was pulling the yokels' legs. His gibes at religion made Mert Isbel froth at the mouth. And this was the man who'd run off with his only daughter.

“As if that wasn't bad enough, about a year later Sarah came home. She hadn't written once during that year, and when she got home we realized why. She showed up with a baby, Mary-Ann, and no husband. In fact, she hadn't seen the man she'd run away with for months. He'd got her pregnant and abandoned her, and of course he'd never married her.”

“Dirty dog,” said Johnny pleasantly.

“Well, there are dirty dogs and dirty dogs,” said the Judge. “I give you Mert Isbel as a relative example.”

“What do you mean?”

“Hillie died. Between her daughter's disgrace and her husband's Biblical tantrums—and a heart that was never very strong—Hillie just gave up the ghost. And from the day Mert buried his wife, he hasn't uttered one syllable of recognizable human speech to Sarah or the child.”

“You're kidding!”

“Well, you've seen them together. Have you noticed Merton Isbel so much as glance Sarah's way, or at Mary-Ann? They live in the same farmhouse, Sarah keeps house for him, prepares his meals, makes his bed, darns his socks, separates his cream, churns his butter, helps him with the milking and in the fields, and he pretends she has no existence whatsoever. The invisible woman, with an invisible child.”

“And Shinn Corners?” said Johnny in a clipped way.

“No, no, you've got the wrong picture, Johnny. The people here feel very sorry for her. Mert's an exceptional case.

“Adultery to the Puritan,” said the Judge, “has always been a serious crime, because like murder it endangers the family and the town. But fornication was, and is, different. It's a private misdemeanor, hurting the offender chiefly.”

“And it's always been so common,” remarked Johnny.

“Yes, indeed. Remember, the Puritan is a practical man. He keeps the statute making fornication a crime on the books as a matter of principle, but he winks at it more often than not because he knows if he didn't there wouldn't be enough jail room to hold all the criminals.

“No, the stone in this furrow is Mert Isbel. We feel sorry for Sarah and Mary-Ann, but we can't show it except when Mert isn't around. And that's practically never. He compounds his cruelty by making sure Sarah doesn't get out of his sight. At church, or whenever they make a public appearance, we ignore Sarah and the little girl because if we didn't he'd make their lives even more hellish than they are. And he's quite capable of going on a rampage if he's balked. Then, too, of course, they're his daughter and granddaughter. In old Yankeeland, my boy, you don't interfere in a family affair. … Only one in town who ever gave Mert his comeuppance was Aunt Fanny. She didn't care if Mert was around or not. She invariably singled out Sarah and the child for special attention. For some reason, Mert was afraid of old Aunt Fanny. At least, he ignored her kindness to the outcasts.

“Well, that's the story,” said Judge Shinn, “and now you know why Sarah Isbel can't serve on this jury. Mert simply wouldn't have it. It would have to be either Mert or Sarah, and of the two the town obviously will pick Mert. He's the head of a family, the taxpayer, the property owner, the deacon of the church.

“And that,” said the Judge, “makes eleven.”

“But there's no one left,” said Johnny. “Or have I forgotten somebody?”

“No, that's all there are.”

“Oh, I see. You're going to put an eleven-man jury over on them.”

“I doubt if I could get away with it.”

“But … then what are you going to do, Judge?”

“Well,” said the Judge, doodling on his pad, “there's you.”

“Me!” Johnny was flabbergasted. “You mean you're counting on
me
as the twelfth juror?”

“Well, I suppose you wouldn't want to bother.”

“But—”

“It would be kind of convenient, though,” said Judge Shinn vaguely.

“In what way, in God's name?”

“You sitting among these people, Johnny? Why, I'd have someone I could trust sitting in on the trial, hearing and seeing everything that goes on.”

“Might be a kick at that,” said Johnny.

“Then you'll do it?” The Judge dropped the pencil. “That's fine, Johnny! Even if a slipup occurs and by some miracle Sarah Isbel gets on the jury to make a twelfth—or Hosey Lemmon changes his mind or Earl Scott insists on being wheeled over—I'd still have you as the alternate; you heard me lay the groundwork for a thirteenth juror.”

“But how can I serve on a jury here?” asked Johnny. “I'm not a voter. I'm not even a resident of this state. They'd never accept a stranger.”

“Well, not exactly a stranger, Johnny. You do carry the Shinn name. Anyway,” said the Judge, “they're going to have to accept you. Did I ever tell you I know a dozen ways to skin a balky calf? Here's one of them.” He opened the top drawer of his desk and took out two sheets of legal-size paper clipped together. It was a printed form, its blank spaces filled in by typewriter.

“You finagler,” said Johnny. “You have that all made out. What is it?”

“Where defending constitutional democracy and due process is concerned,” said Judge Shinn, “I'm an unmitigated scoundrel. Why, Johnny, this is a warranty deed relating to a piece of property I own at the western boundary of my holdings, a house and ten acres. The house is usually rented under a lease, but the last lessee moved two years ago and it's stood untenanted ever since. This,” and the Judge took another paper from the drawer, “is a bill of sale. Under its terms I, Lewis Shinn, am selling you, John Jacob Shinn, the house and ten acres covered by the deed for the sum of—what do you offer?”

“At the moment,” said Johnny with a grin, “my checking account shows a balance of four hundred and five dollars and thirty-eight cents.”

“For the sum of ten thousand dollars in imaginary currency, and you will kindly sign a paper—this is my Yankee heritage speaking—promising to ‘sell' the property back to me at the same terms when this is over. I don't know how many laws I'm breaking,” said the Judge, “and I find myself singularly unable to worry about it just now. The point is, when Andy Webster gets here he can witness my signature and yours, and first thing tomorrow morning we'll take the deed over to the Town Hall and have Burney Hackett in his capacity as town clerk record same, for which you will pay him out of hand the sum of four dollars, thereby becoming a Shinn Corners property owner entitled to all the responsibilities thereof, which under the ruling I'm going to make when the jury is empaneled will include your responsibility to serve on a Shinn Corners jury. There's nothing impresses a Yankee more than the recording of a deed to a piece of land. Little side issues like length of residence, non-voting, and so forth, we shall conveniently ignore.”

Johnny was staring at the Judge in a puzzled way.

“What's the matter?” said the Judge.

“I'm trying to squeeze a feeling of reality out of this,” said Johnny. “I don't get it. I really don't. All these shenanigans … Aren't you whipping up an awfully big tempest for such a little teapot, Judge?”

“You think it's little?”

“It's subatomic. One man, who's probably guilty to begin with! And you stand a whole town on its head, befuddle a bunch of perfectly capable cops and county officials, drag the governor of your state into it …”

Judge Shinn got out of his chair and began to pace up and down before his law books, his brows coming together as if meeting a challenge.

“One man,” he said slowly. “Yes, put that way it sounds ridiculous. But that's only because you're thinking of Josef Kowalczyk as if he existed in a vacuum. What's one man? Well, Johnny, one man is not merely Josef Kowalczyk. He's you, he's me, he's Hube Hemus—he's everybody. It always starts with one man. A man named John Peter Zenger, a German immigrant, was tried for seditious libel in 1735 in New York for having published some polemical articles in his weekly. One man. Another man, named Andrew Hamilton, defended Zenger's right to print the truth. Hamilton's success in securing Zenger's acquittal established freedom of the press in America.

“Someone has to keep on the alert, Johnny. We've been lucky. Luckier, maybe, than we deserve. We've always had someone to watch over us.

“You take the debates during the founding of the Constitution,” said Judge Shinn. “The debaters who demanded guarantees of procedural due process weren't arguing from mere theory. The adoption of the Bill of Rights, in particular the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, had behind it real fears, fears that had grown out of actual happenings in colonial history. For instance, the witchcraft trials in Massachusetts in 1692.

“In those trials,” said the Judge, “the judges were laymen, the Attorney General was a merchant. Not a single person trained in the law was involved with the court or the trial proceedings in any way whatsoever. The witch court, under the highsounding name of Special Court of Oyer and Terminer, allowed its prosecutor to present what they called ‘spectral evidence' and to put on the stand a parade of confessed or reformed ‘witches' to testify against the accused. Anybody from the crowd who clamored to be heard, irrespective of the relevance or legal propriety of his testimony, was allowed to do so. Result: twenty persons smeared by hearsay, superstition and hysteria, found guilty, most of them hanged—one, an octogenarian, was actually pressed to death. The same kind of thing is going on today before the so-called Supreme People's Courts in Communist China. And for that matter in Washington, where men's reputations are destroyed and their capacity to earn a living is paralyzed without a single safeguard of due process.

“And let's not shunt the blame onto the Congressional committees,” said the Judge. “The blame is ours, not theirs. The demagogue in Congress couldn't operate for one day in an atmosphere of common horse sense. It's public hysteria that keeps him going strong.

“Proving, Johnny,” said Judge Shinn, “that people
can't
always be trusted. Human beings, even in a democracy, are too prone to degenerate into mobs. That's why the Shinn Corners versus Josef Kowalczyk teapot, Johnny, contains a tempest big enough to destroy all of America. Who's going to protect the people from their worst enemy—themselves—except the individual here and there seizing on an individual case and refusing to let go?”

“Hear, hear,” said Johnny.

Judge Shinn stopped pacing. He bent over his desk to finger the yellow pad, throwing a sidelong look at Johnny.

“Sorry,” said Johnny. “But I'm so damned fed up with words.”

The Judge nodded. “Don't blame you,” he said briskly. “Let's get down to cases. Suppose I tell you, Johnny, my real reason for wanting you on that jury.”

Johnny stared.

The Judge studied him speculatively, pinching his lip.

“Yes?” said Johnny.

“No,” the Judge said. “I'll let you tell me. Let's go across the road and pay a visit to Josef Kowalczyk.”

Eddie Pangman was on late afternoon guard duty before the church. He no longer looked unhappy. He whistled as he marched, and he executed his sentry turns with a military gusto, in an excited solemnity that enlivened his long face and made it curiously little-boyish.

He passed the Judge and Johnny along gravely.

Drakeley Scott, patroling the rear, was another story. Drakeley Scott was not a boy exuberantly playing games. He was like a man who, under severe strain to escape the pressures of manhood, has gone back to the child. His pimpled face was pinchy, with a ghastly overcast; he held his narrow shoulders in tense readiness; there was something furtively eager in his excitement.

When he saw the two men he looked uncomfortable, and something of the hurt Johnny had seen in his eyes in Peter Berry's store Friday morning came back into them; but only for a moment.

He said defiantly, “I don't know if I'm s'posed to let you through, Judge. Hube Hemus said—”

“I'll tell you what, Drakeley,” said Judge Shinn with tremendous earnestness. “At the first move Johnny Shinn or I makes to let the prisoner escape, you shoot to kill. Fair enough?”

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