Mr. Hubert. So it was not your normal way of doing?
Mr. Crafard. No.
Mr. Hubert. And it was the middle of the night, Larry?
Mr. Crafard. That is right.
Mr. Hubert. Why do you think you did that?
Mr. Crafard. Just talked to her, somebody to talk to. I wasn’t sleepy. Somebody to talk to more than anything.
Mr. Hubert. You see the point—that that would be a story that would be much easier to accept if the time element was not present.
Mr. Crafard. Yes; I understand.
Mr. Hubert. You must admit it is rather extraordinary for two strangers to speak as long as you did on two separate occasions when apparently there was no particular purpose about it, and no particular future to it.
Mr. Crafard. I can’t explain it.