[Bucholz and the Detectives by Allan Pinkerton]@TWC D-Link book
Bucholz and the Detectives

CHAPTER XIX
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After the old man was murdered; I was arrested; I was closely questioned, and I did say some things that I should not have said.

I had no lawyer, and a white-haired fox whose name was Illing did every thing he could against me.

I did not have an opportunity to explain myself at all." "That was too bad, indeed," added Sommers; "but it can all be shown right upon the trial, and then you will come out safely." "Oh, yes, it will come out all right on the trial, I know, for then I will have my lawyers to defend me." "But, tell me, William, how did this murder occur ?" Thus questioned, Bucholz, without hesitation, at once commenced and related to his friend the circumstances of the affair, adhering strictly to the same story which he had told at the inquest, and which he had religiously repeated ever since.
While they were thus conversing, the jailer came to lock them in their cells for the night.

Brown slipped quietly away, and the two men, thus so strangely thrown together, shook hands and retired to their separate apartments, where they spent the night in slumber.

But ah, how pleasant or how fatiguing was that slumber!.


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