Mrs. Grant. Too, but it wasn’t—I already had known that from the conversation Saturday afternoon, it didn’t look good.
Mr. Hubert. Did he comment upon this telephone call that he answered himself?
Mrs. Grant. No; he hardly did any talking that afternoon.
Mr. Hubert. Well, you mentioned the telephone call, I wonder why you did so, that is to say, what import you had put on it?
Mrs. Grant. You want to know the truth?
Mr. Hubert. Yes; I want to know the truth.
Mrs. Grant. I was not thinking anything about it but he is coming back for a trial and I told Phil recently, I thought he was going to get his trial transferred from the Texas Bar Association and I guess he can’t. I wasn’t going to say anything about it—I figured—he’s never coming back, but now I am a little scared. I wouldn’t like anything—look, you don’t want a lawyer in a case?
Mr. Hubert. Let me finish about this phone call—is there any other significance to that phone call that you heard him answer? You mentioned it in connection with this.
Mrs. Grant. It didn’t look right when he left—left the phone.
Mr. Hubert. That’s just an impression, though, he didn’t say anything to indicate the nature of it?