to recall it. It is all here,
and you may read it for yourself. It was all public ten years ago, and in this package are
the reports of the trial. I have read them over so often that I almost know them by heart;
and I know, too, the haste of that trial, and the looseness of that evidence. I have marked
it in places--for your eyes only, dearest--for I prepared it for you, to be handed to you in
case of my death. My life, however, has been preserved, and I now give this into your
own hands. You must take it to your own room, and read it all over by yourself. You will
learn there all that the world believes about your father, and will see in his own words
what he says about himself. And for my part, even if the testimony were far stronger, I
would still take the word of Frederick Dalton!"
Miss Plympton held out the parcel, and Edith took it, though she was scarce conscious of
the act. An awful foreboding of calamity, the mysterious shadow of her father's fate,
descended over her soul. She was unconscious of the kiss which Miss Plympton gave her;
nor was she conscious of any thing till she found herself seated at a table in her own room,
with the door locked, and the package lying on the table before her. She let it lie there for
a few moments, for her agitation was excessive, and she dreaded to open it; but at length
she mastered her feelings, and began to undo the strings.
The contents of the parcel consisted of sheets of paper, upon which were pasted columns
of printed matter cut from some newspaper. It was the report of the trial of Frederick
Dalton, upon charges which ten years before had filled the public mind with horror and
curiosity. In these days the most cursory reader who took up the report came to the work
with a mind full of vivid interest and breathless suspense; but that report now lay before
the eyes of a far different reader--one who was animated by feelings far more intense,
since it was the daughter of the accused herself. That daughter also was one who hitherto
had lived in an atmosphere of innocence, purity, and love, one who shrank in abhorrence
from all that was base or vile; and this was the one before whose eyes was now placed the
horrible record that had been made up before the world against her father's name.
The printed columns were pasted in such a way that a wide margin was left, which was
covered with notes in Miss Plympton's writing. To give any thing like a detailed account
of this report, with the annotations, is out of the question, nor will any thing be necessary
beyond a general summary of the facts therein stated.
* * * * *
CHAPTER II
THE CONTENTS OF THE MANUSCRIPT.
On the date indicated in the report, then, the city of Liverpool and the whole country were
agitated by the news of a terrible murder. On the road-side near Everton the dead body of
a Mr. Henderson, an eminent banker, had been found, not far from his own residence.
The discovery had been made at about eleven o'clock in the evening by some passers-by.
Upon examination a wound was found in the back of the head which had been caused by
a bullet. His watch and purse were still in their places, but his pocket-book was gone.
Clasped in one of the hands was a newspaper, on the blank margin of which were some
red letters, rudely traced, and looking as though they had been written with blood. The
letters were these:
"DALTON SHOT ME BEC--"
It was evident that the writer intended to write the word "because," and give the reason
why he had been shot, but that his strength had failed in the middle of the word.
A closer search revealed some other things. One was a small stick, the point of which was
reddened with a substance which microscopic examination afterward showed to be blood.
The other was a scarf-pin made of gold, the head of which consisted of a Maltese cross,
of very rich and elegant design. In the middle was black enamel inclosed by a richly
chased gold border, and at the intersection of the bars was a small diamond of great
splendor. If this cross belonged to the murderer it had doubtless become loosened, and
fallen out while he was stooping over his victim, and the loss had not been noticed in the
excitement of the occasion.
At the coroner's inquest various important circumstances were brought to light. The fact
that his watch and purse remained made it
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