By a Hair’s Breadth
by Piercy Wilson
chapter first
guilty or not guilty?
“‘But was he really murdered?’ Well, that’s a pretty question. Why, Grosfils, mon enfant, you must have taken leave of your senses to make such a suggestion. Did not the poor fellow proclaim the fact before he succumbed to his tortures? Did he not, also, tacitly denounce the assassin? And are the laws of the nation to be outraged with impunity, because the most direct proofs of the crime cannot possibly be furnished? Ma parole d’honneur vous me faites rire avec de pareilles balicernes.”
The speaker was a portly, middle-aged gentleman, whose blue eyes and florid face, capped by a mass of light brown curly hair, showed him to be of German extraction. There was not in Pau a man better known, or more generally esteemed, than Monsieur Swarz, the Police Commissioner, whose only fault was, perhaps, an overweening confidence in his own perceptive and deductive faculties[.] The individual he thus addressed in this serio-comic vein, was a government detective, with coarsely formed features half hidden by a luxuriant beard and moustache. As he listened to the banter of his chief, he was rolling a cigarette between his fingers, but when he raised his head, one could but observe a striking peculiarity in his physiognomy, in the dark flashing eyes, which almost imparted a shade of beauty to his otherwise homely face. Grosfils was never known to laugh, as other mortals do, his hilarity being distinguished by a quiet chuckle, and countless wrinkles that puckered round those twinkling orbs, which, however, were generally masked under a… Read More