Mrs. Robertson. Yes; I certainly was.
Mr. Hubert. Do you remember what time you went to work there and what time you left?
Mrs. Robertson. Yes; at that time I was coming to work at 7:15 and leaving at 4:15—those were my hours.
Mr. Hubert. At 7:15 in the morning?
Mrs. Robertson. At 7:15 in the morning and leaving at 4:15 in the afternoon. Now, as to the exact time I left that afternoon, I cannot tell you to the minute because, well, further on in the testimony you will probably want to ask, but Jack Revill, Lieutenant Revill, asked me to take a letter for him, the exact time of which I cannot tell you, but I do remember this very well—my husband had a vacation. He had been on a hunting trip and he was at home, so when Jack asked me to write this letter I went in and phoned home and I said, "I might run just a few minutes late because I don't know if this will be a long letter or a short letter, or what it will consist of," and I did have the car, and ordinarily I would have been home, say, leaving the office at 4:15, in 20 or 25 minutes, you know, but I did get home more or less around 5 o'clock—which was the usual time. I mean, I didn't run, you know, real late or anything, but that part—I definitely remember, and my husband does, too.
Mr. Hubert. And the letter of Lt. Jack Revill you just talked about was the thing that caused you to be delayed?
Mrs. Robertson. That was what I stayed to write—yes.
Mr. Hubert. And that is a fact?
Mrs. Robertson. That is a fact.
Mr. Hubert. So, that was the last thing you did that day?