<h2><SPAN name="chap44"></SPAN>Chapter XLIV</h2>
<p>Meanwhile the great argument had been begun in the jury-room, and all the
points that had been meditatively speculated upon in the jury-box were now
being openly discussed.</p>
<p>It is amazingly interesting to see how a jury will waver and speculate in a
case like this—how curious and uncertain is the process by which it makes
up its so-called mind. So-called truth is a nebulous thing at best; facts are
capable of such curious inversion and interpretation, honest and otherwise. The
jury had a strongly complicated problem before it, and it went over it and over
it.</p>
<p>Juries reach not so much definite conclusions as verdicts, in a curious fashion
and for curious reasons. Very often a jury will have concluded little so far as
its individual members are concerned and yet it will have reached a verdict.
The matter of time, as all lawyers know, plays a part in this. Juries, speaking
of the members collectively and frequently individually, object to the amount
of time it takes to decide a case. They do not enjoy sitting and deliberating
over a problem unless it is tremendously fascinating. The ramifications or the
mystery of a syllogism can become a weariness and a bore. The jury-room itself
may and frequently does become a dull agony.</p>
<p>On the other hand, no jury contemplates a disagreement with any degree of
satisfaction. There is something so inherently constructive in the human mind
that to leave a problem unsolved is plain misery. It haunts the average
individual like any other important task left unfinished. Men in a jury-room,
like those scientifically demonstrated atoms of a crystal which scientists and
philosophers love to speculate upon, like finally to arrange themselves into an
orderly and artistic whole, to present a compact, intellectual front, to be
whatever they have set out to be, properly and rightly—a compact,
sensible jury. One sees this same instinct magnificently displayed in every
other phase of nature—in the drifting of sea-wood to the Sargasso Sea, in
the geometric interrelation of air-bubbles on the surface of still water, in
the marvelous unreasoned architecture of so many insects and atomic forms which
make up the substance and the texture of this world. It would seem as though
the physical substance of life—this apparition of form which the eye
detects and calls real were shot through with some vast subtlety that loves
order, that is order. The atoms of our so-called being, in spite of our
so-called reason—the dreams of a mood—know where to go and what to
do. They represent an order, a wisdom, a willing that is not of us. They build
orderly in spite of us. So the subconscious spirit of a jury. At the same time,
one does not forget the strange hypnotic effect of one personality on another,
the varying effects of varying types on each other, until a solution—to
use the word in its purely chemical sense—is reached. In a jury-room the
thought or determination of one or two or three men, if it be definite enough,
is likely to pervade the whole room and conquer the reason or the opposition of
the majority. One man “standing out” for the definite thought that
is in him is apt to become either the triumphant leader of a pliant mass or the
brutally battered target of a flaming, concentrated intellectual fire. Men
despise dull opposition that is without reason. In a jury-room, of all places,
a man is expected to give a reason for the faith that is in him—if one is
demanded. It will not do to say, “I cannot agree.” Jurors have been
known to fight. Bitter antagonisms lasting for years have been generated in
these close quarters. Recalcitrant jurors have been hounded commercially in
their local spheres for their unreasoned oppositions or conclusions.</p>
<p>After reaching the conclusion that Cowperwood unquestionably deserved some
punishment, there was wrangling as to whether the verdict should be guilty on
all four counts, as charged in the indictment. Since they did not understand
how to differentiate between the various charges very well, they decided it
should be on all four, and a recommendation to mercy added. Afterward this last
was eliminated, however; either he was guilty or he was not. The judge could
see as well as they could all the extenuating circumstances—perhaps
better. Why tie his hands? As a rule no attention was paid to such
recommendations, anyhow, and it only made the jury look wabbly.</p>
<p>So, finally, at ten minutes after twelve that night, they were ready to return
a verdict; and Judge Payderson, who, because of his interest in the case and
the fact that he lived not so far away, had decided to wait up this long, was
recalled. Steger and Cowperwood were sent for. The court-room was fully
lighted. The bailiff, the clerk, and the stenographer were there. The jury
filed in, and Cowperwood, with Steger at his right, took his position at the
gate which gave into the railed space where prisoners always stand to hear the
verdict and listen to any commentary of the judge. He was accompanied by his
father, who was very nervous.</p>
<p>For the first time in his life he felt as though he were walking in his sleep.
Was this the real Frank Cowperwood of two months before—so wealthy, so
progressive, so sure? Was this only December 5th or 6th now (it was after
midnight)? Why was it the jury had deliberated so long? What did it mean? Here
they were now, standing and gazing solemnly before them; and here now was Judge
Payderson, mounting the steps of his rostrum, his frizzled hair standing out in
a strange, attractive way, his familiar bailiff rapping for order. He did not
look at Cowperwood—it would not be courteous—but at the jury, who
gazed at him in return. At the words of the clerk, “Gentlemen of the
jury, have you agreed upon a verdict?” the foreman spoke up, “We
have.”</p>
<p>“Do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty?”</p>
<p>“We find the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment.”</p>
<p>How had they come to do this? Because he had taken a check for sixty thousand
dollars which did not belong to him? But in reality it did. Good Lord, what was
sixty thousand dollars in the sum total of all the money that had passed back
and forth between him and George W. Stener? Nothing, nothing! A mere bagatelle
in its way; and yet here it had risen up, this miserable, insignificant check,
and become a mountain of opposition, a stone wall, a prison-wall barring his
further progress. It was astonishing. He looked around him at the court-room.
How large and bare and cold it was! Still he was Frank A. Cowperwood. Why
should he let such queer thoughts disturb him? His fight for freedom and
privilege and restitution was not over yet. Good heavens! It had only begun. In
five days he would be out again on bail. Steger would take an appeal. He would
be out, and he would have two long months in which to make an additional fight.
He was not down yet. He would win his liberty. This jury was all wrong. A
higher court would say so. It would reverse their verdict, and he knew it. He
turned to Steger, where the latter was having the clerk poll the jury, in the
hope that some one juror had been over-persuaded, made to vote against his
will.</p>
<p>“Is that your verdict?” he heard the clerk ask of Philip Moultrie,
juror No. 1.</p>
<p>“It is,” replied that worthy, solemnly.</p>
<p>“Is that your verdict?” The clerk was pointing to Simon Glassberg.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Is that your verdict?” He pointed to Fletcher Norton.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>So it went through the whole jury. All the men answered firmly and clearly,
though Steger thought it might barely be possible that one would have changed
his mind. The judge thanked them and told them that in view of their long
services this night, they were dismissed for the term. The only thing remaining
to be done now was for Steger to persuade Judge Payderson to grant a stay of
sentence pending the hearing of a motion by the State Supreme Court for a new
trial.</p>
<p>The Judge looked at Cowperwood very curiously as Steger made this request in
proper form, and owing to the importance of the case and the feeling he had
that the Supreme Court might very readily grant a certificate of reasonable
doubt in this case, he agreed. There was nothing left, therefore, but for
Cowperwood to return at this late hour with the deputy sheriff to the county
jail, where he must now remain for five days at least—possibly longer.</p>
<p class="p2">
The jail in question, which was known locally as Moyamensing Prison, was
located at Tenth and Reed Streets, and from an architectural and artistic point
of view was not actually displeasing to the eye. It consisted of a central
portion—prison, residence for the sheriff or what you will—three
stories high, with a battlemented cornice and a round battlemented tower about
one-third as high as the central portion itself, and two wings, each two
stories high, with battlemented turrets at either end, giving it a highly
castellated and consequently, from the American point of view, a very
prison-like appearance. The facade of the prison, which was not more than
thirty-five feet high for the central portion, nor more than twenty-five feet
for the wings, was set back at least a hundred feet from the street, and was
continued at either end, from the wings to the end of the street block, by a
stone wall all of twenty feet high. The structure was not severely prison-like,
for the central portion was pierced by rather large, unbarred apertures hung on
the two upper stories with curtains, and giving the whole front a rather
pleasant and residential air. The wing to the right, as one stood looking in
from the street, was the section known as the county jail proper, and was
devoted to the care of prisoners serving short-term sentences on some judicial
order. The wing to the left was devoted exclusively to the care and control of
untried prisoners. The whole building was built of a smooth, light-colored
stone, which on a snowy night like this, with the few lamps that were used in
it glowing feebly in the dark, presented an eery, fantastic, almost
supernatural appearance.</p>
<p>It was a rough and blowy night when Cowperwood started for this institution
under duress. The wind was driving the snow before it in curious, interesting
whirls. Eddie Zanders, the sheriff’s deputy on guard at the court of
Quarter Sessions, accompanied him and his father and Steger. Zanders was a
little man, dark, with a short, stubby mustache, and a shrewd though not highly
intelligent eye. He was anxious first to uphold his dignity as a deputy
sheriff, which was a very important position in his estimation, and next to
turn an honest penny if he could. He knew little save the details of his small
world, which consisted of accompanying prisoners to and from the courts and the
jails, and seeing that they did not get away. He was not unfriendly to a
particular type of prisoner—the well-to-do or moderately
prosperous—for he had long since learned that it paid to be so. To-night
he offered a few sociable suggestions—viz., that it was rather rough,
that the jail was not so far but that they could walk, and that Sheriff Jaspers
would, in all likelihood, be around or could be aroused. Cowperwood scarcely
heard. He was thinking of his mother and his wife and of Aileen.</p>
<p>When the jail was reached he was led to the central portion, as it was here
that the sheriff, Adlai Jaspers, had his private office. Jaspers had recently
been elected to office, and was inclined to conform to all outward appearances,
in so far as the proper conduct of his office was concerned, without in reality
inwardly conforming. Thus it was generally known among the politicians that one
way he had of fattening his rather lean salary was to rent private rooms and
grant special privileges to prisoners who had the money to pay for the same.
Other sheriffs had done it before him. In fact, when Jaspers was inducted into
office, several prisoners were already enjoying these privileges, and it was
not a part of his scheme of things to disturb them. The rooms that he let to
the “right parties,” as he invariably put it, were in the central
portion of the jail, where were his own private living quarters. They were
unbarred, and not at all cell-like. There was no particular danger of escape,
for a guard stood always at his private door instructed “to keep an
eye” on the general movements of all the inmates. A prisoner so
accommodated was in many respects quite a free person. His meals were served to
him in his room, if he wished. He could read or play cards, or receive guests;
and if he had any favorite musical instrument, that was not denied him. There
was just one rule that had to be complied with. If he were a public character,
and any newspaper men called, he had to be brought down-stairs into the private
interviewing room in order that they might not know that he was not confined in
a cell like any other prisoner.</p>
<p>Nearly all of these facts had been brought to Cowperwood’s attention
beforehand by Steger; but for all that, when he crossed the threshold of the
jail a peculiar sensation of strangeness and defeat came over him. He and his
party were conducted to a little office to the left of the entrance, where were
only a desk and a chair, dimly lighted by a low-burning gas-jet. Sheriff
Jaspers, rotund and ruddy, met them, greeting them in quite a friendly way.
Zanders was dismissed, and went briskly about his affairs.</p>
<p>“A bad night, isn’t it?” observed Jaspers, turning up the gas
and preparing to go through the routine of registering his prisoner. Steger
came over and held a short, private conversation with him in his corner, over
his desk which resulted presently in the sheriff’s face lighting up.</p>
<p>“Oh, certainly, certainly! That’s all right, Mr. Steger, to be
sure! Why, certainly!”</p>
<p>Cowperwood, eyeing the fat sheriff from his position, understood what it was
all about. He had regained completely his critical attitude, his cool,
intellectual poise. So this was the jail, and this was the fat mediocrity of a
sheriff who was to take care of him. Very good. He would make the best of it.
He wondered whether he was to be searched—prisoners usually
were—but he soon discovered that he was not to be.</p>
<p>“That’s all right, Mr. Cowperwood,” said Jaspers, getting up.
“I guess I can make you comfortable, after a fashion. We’re not
running a hotel here, as you know”—he chuckled to
himself—“but I guess I can make you comfortable. John,” he
called to a sleepy factotum, who appeared from another room, rubbing his eyes,
“is the key to Number Six down here?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Let me have it.”</p>
<p>John disappeared and returned, while Steger explained to Cowperwood that
anything he wanted in the way of clothing, etc., could be brought in. Steger
himself would stop round next morning and confer with him, as would any of the
members of Cowperwood’s family whom he wished to see. Cowperwood
immediately explained to his father his desire for as little of this as
possible. Joseph or Edward might come in the morning and bring a grip full of
underwear, etc.; but as for the others, let them wait until he got out or had
to remain permanently. He did think of writing Aileen, cautioning her to do
nothing; but the sheriff now beckoned, and he quietly followed. Accompanied by
his father and Steger, he ascended to his new room.</p>
<p>It was a simple, white-walled chamber fifteen by twenty feet in size, rather
high-ceiled, supplied with a high-backed, yellow wooden bed, a yellow bureau, a
small imitation-cherry table, three very ordinary cane-seated chairs with
carved hickory-rod backs, cherry-stained also, and a wash-stand of
yellow-stained wood to match the bed, containing a washbasin, a pitcher, a
soap-dish, uncovered, and a small, cheap, pink-flowered tooth and shaving brush
mug, which did not match the other ware and which probably cost ten cents. The
value of this room to Sheriff Jaspers was what he could get for it in cases
like this—twenty-five to thirty-five dollars a week. Cowperwood would pay
thirty-five.</p>
<p>Cowperwood walked briskly to the window, which gave out on the lawn in front,
now embedded in snow, and said he thought this was all right. Both his father
and Steger were willing and anxious to confer with him for hours, if he wished;
but there was nothing to say. He did not wish to talk.</p>
<p>“Let Ed bring in some fresh linen in the morning and a couple of suits of
clothes, and I will be all right. George can get my things together.” He
was referring to a family servant who acted as valet and in other capacities.
“Tell Lillian not to worry. I’m all right. I’d rather she
would not come here so long as I’m going to be out in five days. If
I’m not, it will be time enough then. Kiss the kids for me.” And he
smiled good-naturedly.</p>
<p>After his unfulfilled predictions in regard to the result of this preliminary
trial Steger was almost afraid to suggest confidently what the State Supreme
Court would or would not do; but he had to say something.</p>
<p>“I don’t think you need worry about what the outcome of my appeal
will be, Frank. I’ll get a certificate of reasonable doubt, and
that’s as good as a stay of two months, perhaps longer. I don’t
suppose the bail will be more than thirty thousand dollars at the outside.
You’ll be out again in five or six days, whatever happens.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood said that he hoped so, and suggested that they drop matters for the
night. After a few fruitless parleys his father and Steger finally said good
night, leaving him to his own private reflections. He was tired, however, and
throwing off his clothes, tucked himself in his mediocre bed, and was soon fast
asleep.</p>
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