The Bellamy Trial

The Judge

Anthony Bristed Carver

The Prosecutor Daniel Farr Counsel for the Defense Dudley Lambert

The Defendants

Susan Ives

Stephen Bellamy

First Day
Opening speech for the prosecution
Second Day
Mr. Herbert Conroy, real estate agent
Dr. Paul Stanley, physician
Miss Kathleen Page, governess
Third Day
Mr. Douglas Thorne, Susan Ives’s brother
Miss Flora Biggs, Mimi Bellamy’s schoolmate
Mrs. Daniel Ives, Susan Ives’s mother-in-law
Mr. Elliot Farwell, Mimi Bellamy’s ex-fiancé
Mr. George Dallas, Mr. Farwell’s friend
Fourth Day
Miss Melanie Cordier, waitress
Miss Laura Roberts, lady’s maid
Mr. Luigi Orsini, handy man
Mr. Joseph Turner, bus driver
Sergeant Hendrick Johnson, state trooper
Fifth Day
Opening speech for defence
Mrs. Adolph Platz, wife of chauffeur
Mrs. Timothy Shea, landlady
Mr. Stephen Bellamy
Dr. Gabriel Barretti, finger-print expert
Sixth Day
Mr. Leo Fox, mechanician
Mr. Patrick Ives, Susan Ives’s husband
Susan Ives
Seventh Day
Susan Ives—conclusion
Stephen Bellamy—recalled
Closing speech for the defence
Closing speech for prosecution
Eighth Day
Mr. Randolph Phipps, high-school principal
Miss Sally Dunne, high-school pupil
The judge’s charge
The verdict

Chapter I

The red-headed girl sank into the seat in the middle of the first row with a gasp of relief. Sixth seat from the aisle—yes, that was right; the label on the arm of the golden-oak chair stared up at her reassuringly. Row A, seat 15, Philadelphia Planet. The ones on either side of her were empty. Well, it was a relief to know that there were four feet of space left unoccupied in Redfield, even if only temporarily. She was still shaken into breathless stupor by the pandemonium in the corridors outside—the rattling of regiments of typewriters, of armies of tickers, the shouts of infuriated denizens of telephone booths, the hurrying, frantic faces of officials, the scurrying and scampering of dozens of rusty-haired freckled-faced insubordinate small boys, whose olive-drab messenger uniforms alone saved them from extermination; the newspaper men—you could spot them at once, looking exhausted and alert and elaborately bored; the newspaper women, keen and purposeful and diverted; and above and around and below all these licensed inhabitants, the crowd—a vast, jostling, lunging beast, with one supreme motive galvanizing it to action—an immense, a devouring curiosity that sent it surging time and time again against the closed glass doors with their blue-coated guardians, fragile barriers between it and the consummation of its desire. For just beyond those doors lay the arena where the beast might slake its hunger at will, and it was not taking its frustration of that privilege amiably.