[The Tragedy of the Chain Pier by Charlotte M. Braeme]@TWC D-Link book
The Tragedy of the Chain Pier

CHAPTER III
2/11

I should hardly call this murder." "It was a life taken away, whether you call it murder or not," said the old man.
"May be; but I am not sure.

I have seen many mad with misery, but murder is a rare thing." "What is it ?" I asked.
"A child, sir--only a little child," said the sturdy boatman.

"The body of a little child found drowned off the pier here." Now, why should I start and tremble and grow sick at heart?
What had it to do with me?
I knew nothing of any murdered child, yet great drops formed on my brow, and my very heart trembled.
"A little child found drowned," I repeated; "but how do you know it was murdered?
It may have fallen into the water." "It was not old enough for that, sir," said the elder boatman; "it is but a fair little mite--a baby girl; they say not more than three months old." Ah! why did the beautiful, desperate face I had seen the night before flash before my eyes then?
The boatman went on: "It is plain to my eyes that it is a murder, although the child is but a tender babe; all the greater murder for that; a bigger child might have helped itself; this one could not." "Tell me about it," I said.
Ah! if my heart would but stop beating, or if the beautiful, desperate face would but fade from my memory.
"It was James Clayton who found it," continued the old man.

"He was at work in the jetty this morning when he caught sight of something moving up and down with the waves.

At first he thought it looked like an old rag, and he took no notice of it; then something about it attracted his attention more and more.


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