From Whose Bourne
defence."     

       "Well, I have no doubt you can deal with them in such a way as to give them something to write up, and yet not disclose anything we do not wish known."     

       "I think you can trust me to do that," said Brown, with a self-satisfied air.     

       "I shall leave that part of the matter entirely in your hands," replied Benham. "It is better not to duplicate or mix matters, and if any newspaper man comes to see me I will refer him to you. I will say I know nothing of the case whatever."     

       "Very well," answered Brown. "Now, between ourselves, what do you think of the case?"     

  

       "Oh, it will make a great sensation. I think it will probably be one of the most talked-of cases that we have ever been connected with."     

       "Yes, but what do you think of her guilt or innocence?"     

       "As to that," said Benham, calmly, "I haven't the slightest doubt. She murdered him."     

       As he said this, Brenton, forgetting himself for a moment, sprang forward as if to strangle the lawyer. The statement Benham had made seemed the most appalling piece of treachery. That men should take a woman's money for defending her, and actually engage in a case when they believed their client guilty, appeared to Brenton simply infamous.     

       "I agree with you," said Brown. "Of course she was the only one to benefit by his death. The simple fool willed everything to her, and she knew it; and his doing so is the more astounding when you remember he was quite well aware that she had a former lover whom she would gladly have married if he had been as rich as Brenton. The supreme idiocy of some men as far as their wives are concerned is something awful."     

       "Yes," answered Benham, "it is. But I tell you, Brown, she is no ordinary woman. The very conception of that murder had a stroke of originality about it that I very much admire. I do not remember anything like it in the annals of crime. It is the true way in which a murder should be      
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