The Blue Trooper
A Tale of Circumstantial Evidence
by G.G.H.
Towards the close of the last century there lived in the quiet little town of Arnhem, in Holland, a widowed lady named Andrecht. Her health had long prevented her mixing much in society, and for sometime previous to that at which our tale begins, the infirmities of age had rendered her a close prisoner in her old-fashioned snugly-furnished house in the Oberstraat. Although in easy circumstances, her style of living had for many years been extremely plain, and at the time we are speaking of, her whole establishment consisted of an elderly female, who discharged the duties of housekeeper, servant, and companion.
In the month of June, the widow allowed herself to be persuaded by her son, who was established as a doctor in a neighboring village, to pay him a short visit. Consultations were held with a neighboring blacksmith, and a magnificent system of bolts and bars was the result; so strong, indeed, was the confidence reposed in it by the old lady and her maid, that it never occurred to them to ask a neighbor to “keep an eye” upon the premises until their return. The house was, therefore, locked up and left alone. In order, however, that the reader may appreciate the importance of the many apparently trifling circumstances in the drama he is about to witness, it may be will for him to have an outline of the leading features of the locality which was the scene of it.
Parallel to the Oberstraat, and in the rear of the houses on the side of Madame Andrecht’s was a canal, the towing-path of which was separated from the gardens of the several dwellings by a thick hedge. The widow’s house (which, by the way, was of… Read More