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Book, page 181 / 189 recognised it as the portrait of the clergyman before them--not of the prisoner in the dock, who stood there smiling blandly at Charles's discomfiture. The clergyman sat down. At the same moment the prisoner produced a second photograph. "Now, can you tell me who _that_ is?" he asked Charles, in the regular brow-beating Old Bailey voice. With somewhat more hesitation, Charles answered, after a pause: "That is yourself as you appeared in London when you came in the disguise of the Graf von Lebenstein." This was a crucial point, for the Lebenstein fraud was the one count on which our lawyers relied to prove their case most fully, within the jurisdiction. Even while Charles spoke, a gentleman whom I had noticed before, sitting beside White Heather, with a handkerchief to his face, rose as abruptly as the parson. Colonel Clay indicated him with a graceful movement of his hand. "And _this_ gentleman?" he asked calmly. Charles was fairly staggered. It was the obvious original of the false Von Lebenstein. The photograph went round the box once more. The jury smiled incredulously. Charles had given himself away. His overweening confidence and certainty had ruined him. Then Colonel Clay, leaning forward, and looking quite engaging, began a new line of cross-examination. "We have seen, Sir Charles," he said, "that we cannot implicitly trust your identifications. Now let us see how far we can trust your other evidence. First, then, about those diamonds. You tried to buy them, did you not, from a person who represented himself as the Reverend Richard Brabazon, because you believed he thought they were paste; and if you could, you would have given him 10 pounds or so for them. _Do_ you think that was honest?"
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