There's something happening here. What it is, ain't exactly clear.
For the past two weeks, the U.S. Senate recount trial has featured wearying hours of questions about voter registration applications, ballot envelopes, voting machine tapes and just about every Election Day document short of the take-out food orders filled out by polling place volunteers.
But as the 10th day of Norm Coleman's legal challenge to Al Franken's lead in the recount drew to a close, the unanswered questions were flying faster than the uncounted ballots:
Are officials from all 87 Minnesota counties going to take the stand? What do the three judges plan to do with all those ballots they're receiving as exhibits?
And, above all, just how long is this thing going to last, anyway?
Hard to say, shrug the lawyers. Dunno, echo court officials.
And the only people who may have answers -- Judges Elizabeth Hayden, Kurt Marben and Denise Reilly -- aren't talking.
Reilly let slip a couple of clues in court Friday, when she reiterated that the panel plans to "make sure that every legally cast and wrongfully rejected ballot is opened and counted."