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suddenly on the shrinking new-comer. "Well, sir, I'd been drinking, and I thought she was--a girl I knew." "Yes? and when you caught her in the vestibule what happened?" "Nothin' much. She fought, and the door flew open, and----" here the shifting eyes wandered around until they rested on Forrest--"this gentleman kicked me out. I wouldn't 'a' said anything about it, only--him there found me afterwards." And he nodded at Elmendorf. "Didn't you declare to me you'd seen the lady going in there with him? Didn't you see them together late at night up near her own home?" asked Elmendorf, excitedly. "Well, you took me up and showed 'em to me." "Didn't you tell me you knew she often went to his rooms?" "Well, you asked me if I hadn't seen her, and I said no, and then you asked if I didn't think it was more'n likely, and----" Here Starkey's friend faltered. "That will do," said the judge-advocate. "You both knew very well then, and you know now, that it is an apartment-house, in which several families dwell, some of them friends of the young lady in question. You can go, young man,--I merely introduced that party as a specimen of the evidence for the prosecution. Now, Mr. Elmendorf, let me give you a specimen of the evidence for the defence.--Colonel," said he to the chief of staff, "would you mind saying in the presence of these gentlemen whether the faintest inkling of any such charge as this of Mr. Elmendorf's against Mr. Forrest had ever reached you?" "Not a whisper." "Were Mr. Forrest's sudden orders in any way the result of any such rumor?" "Not in the least. He was selected by the general to make certain confidential investigations regarding the encroachments of settlers, boomers, etc., on the Oklahoma tract. It was necessary that the object should not be heralded beforehand by the press, and so we had to keep it quiet." "There, Mr. Elmendorf; admitting these as specimen bricks of the probable testimony, we decline to reinstate the clerk, or to attach the slightest importance to your allegations at the expense of Mr. Forrest, and I am constrained to say that your propensity for meddling has got you into a nasty mess. So far as head-quarters are concerned, we've done with you. Now I'll leave you to settle with the friends of the young lady." Here Elmendorf made for the door. "I'm not to be assaulted, and----" he began; but Allison blocked the way. "You lied to me and mine," he cried. "You d
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