[The Burglar’s Fate And The Detectives by Allan Pinkerton]@TWC D-Link bookThe Burglar’s Fate And The Detectives CHAPTER XX 8/10
He then looked anxiously toward the coach, and seemed relieved to find that his daughter still remained inside. "We bound up as well as we could the wounds of the other two, and lifted them to the top of the coach.
When it came to the dead one, some of the passengers were in favor of lettin' him lie where he was, but others objected and wanted to take him along with us, as we did not have far to go." "While we were discussin' the question, the young woman, who had got out of the coach while we were talkin', and without her father observin' her, caught sight of the bandit's face, as he lay on his back in the snow, and with a wild scream of anguish, she pushed the men aside and flung herself upon the lifeless body.
Her sobs were terrible to hear, and many a strong man turned away to hide the tears that came to their eyes in spite of them.
Her father approached her and tried to draw her away, but all to no use, until at length her strength gave out, and she fainted dead away. "You see," continued the driver, "that dead man was her lover.
He had been engaged in the business of robbin' stage coaches for a long time, and only hired with the old man as a cover to hide his real business, and to try and win the girl, whom he had frequently seen before. "The old man was all broke up about the girl, but he was glad that things had happened as they did, and he felt sure that after her grief was over, she would not fail to see the danger she had escaped, and to thank her father for savin' her from a life of shame and disgrace. "We lifted the girl into the coach, and put the dead man along with the others on the top.
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