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

CHAPTER XXX
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Instantly every voice was hushed and every eye was strained to watch the countenances of these arbiters of fate who slowly entered and took their seats.
Bucholz was laughing gayly with some acquaintances, but he became instantly serious--the smile died away from his lips, and he anxiously awaited the announcement that was to convey to him the blessing of life or the doom of death.
Slowly the jurors arose and faced the court.
"Gentlemen of the jury, have you determined upon your verdict ?" Breathlessly they all listened.
"We have." These words fell like a thunderbolt upon the assembly.

The prisoner's face grew pale; he grasped the railing in front of him and gazed wistfully at the jurors who stood beside him.
"Prisoner at the bar, stand up," said the clerk; and Bucholz arose immediately, turning his pallid face toward the jury-box.
The gray-haired foreman, whose elbow almost touched the prisoner, looked at him with a glance in which was depicted a sympathy, which, while it was heartfelt and sincere, was not of sufficient force to outweigh a conscientious discharge of duty.
"Gentlemen of the jury, how say you?
Is the prisoner at the bar guilty or not guilty ?" With trembling voice the venerable foreman said, slowly: "Guilty of murder in the first degree!" The guilty man fell back in his seat, as though he had been struck a heavy blow, and bowing his head upon the railing, he sobbed wildly.
The trial was over.

Justice had triumphed, and this crime-stained man, who was now the object of so much attention, was decreed to pay the penalty of his misdeeds.
The mystery of the murder of Henry Schulte had been judiciously solved, and the detective had triumphed over the assassin..


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