“I feel sure that he is not,” the girl declared stoutly. “No matter what evidence they bring against him, I cannot believe that Owen could be a thief.”
“Humph!” grunted the judge, looking at her quizzically. “May I ask, Miss Worthington, how long you have known the young man?”
“About six months.”
“And previous to that time you never even heard of him—didn’t know that any such person as Owen Sheridan existed?”
“No, sir.”
“Then what makes you so sure that he couldn’t be a thief?” the lawyer demanded sternly. “Surely you cannot form a positive estimate of a person’s character in such a short period as six months?”
“If I had never met him before yesterday, I should be just as confident of his innocence,” declared the girl simply. “You only have to meet Owen once to realize that he is honest—that he isn’t the kind of fellow who could do anything mean or dishonorable.”
The lawyer’s face softened. “My dear young lady, I agree with you heartily,” he said. “I, too, took a great liking to the young man the very first time I saw him. I am not a man of quick impressions. Long experience has taught me that appearances are sadly deceiving, but there are some men whose personalities compel confidence and respect the minute you meet them. Owen Sheridan is one of these. I, too, am absolutely confident that he is innocent of this charge of robbing the mails. If I were not, I should not have undertaken his defense. I don’t take criminal cases as a rule, and never when I believe the accused to be guilty.”
“Then you believe that he is in no danger of—of being sent to prison?” asked Dallas, quickly.
The lawyer’s face grew very grave. “I am in hopes that young Sheridan’s personality will impress the jury as favorably as it has impressed us; and, of course, I am going to do all I can to combat the sinister influences which I have reason to believe are back of his arrest; but,[Pg 45] to be frank with you, Miss Worthington, I must admit that they have built up a startlingly strong case against him.”