The Murder of the Miser
CHAPTER I
The Murder
The news spread like wildfire—Jacob, the miser, had been murdered.
No one in the village knew anything of his antecedents. The oldest inhabitants, when questioned about him, gave the following stereotyped answer: “He had come to the village about nine months after it had been founded by us, bringing with him an only child, a girl about three years old. He never spoke to anybody except to answer a cheery good morning or good day, and even then he sometimes would not answer a person. He was reputed to be very wealthy, but nobody knew the extent of his wealth, not even his daughter. He had lived (and now had died) in his cabin, which stood on the outskirts of the village. In the cabin there was no bed, but a pile of straw answered the purpose. But one chair was in the room (if room it could be called), and that had but three legs. No clock, no table, or any other article of furniture was to be seen, except a broken-down stove and a tallow candle, which, when lighted, made the room look more dismal than ever. On the straw lay the miser, in a pool of blood, stretched out at full length; beside him sat his daughter, now eighteen years of age, moaning and crying bitterly.
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“Say, William, did you hear the news?”
The man thus… Read More