The next day was a more eventful one
still in the annals of Danmouth, and people stood
in knots about the place discussing the new horror.
Doctor Asher was dying, and his colleague
had sent for the nearest magistrate that morning,
to take down the dying man’s deposition in the
presence of witnesses, Trevithick being of those summoned
to the bed.
The deposition was brief, but convincing,
telling how the dying man had, when attending Gartram,
found in his pocket-book sundry directions to his
executors, explaining how his wealth was bestowed.
The temptation had been too great for him, and after
waiting long for an opportunity, he had taken advantage
one evening of being at the house to add a certain
drug to the chloral Gartram was in the habit of taking
from time to time.
“As a dying man about to appear
before my Maker,” he said, “I swear I
had no intention of taking his life. I wished
to make his sleep so sure that I could easily take
what notes I wished, and this I did, to the amount
of forty thousand pounds, but I did not calculate that
the drug would be so strong, and I was horrified when
I found that I could not bring him back from his deadly
sleep.”
“What was the drug?” asked
the magistrate, in the midst of a terrible silence.
“Better that it should not be
known,” said the dying man feebly. “I
have told the truth. The money is in the iron
safe in my study. All but a few hundred pounds
or so I sent abroad, and a note or two I passed beside.
I gave Glyddyr that one by mistake, and ”
The words that would have followed
were never uttered, for insensibility supervened,
and Doctor Asher never spoke again.
The law moves slowly, but it is pretty
sure, and in due course the two men accused of complicity
in Gartram’s death were discharged without a
stain upon their character, so it was said, but Glyddyr
was re-arrested upon another charge.
A guilty conscience had kept him silent
about the accusation of murder, for he had added to
the draught Gartram was in the habit of taking, but
other hands had thrown this away. Still, he had
always suffered mentally from the idea that he had
murdered the man who had chosen him as a son.
Against the charge of bigamy he fought
savagely, for there was the impending punishment to
dread, and the loss of an almost princely fortune;
but Denise made good her claim. The pleas of
her being an alien fell to the ground, and the law
cut asunder the tie that held Claude Gartram to one
who passed for ever from her sight. Glyddyr’s
term of imprisonment was but short, for his health
had been so shattered that he was shortly after set
at liberty, to die in Denise’s arms.
Of the rest of the actors who played
their parts in this life drama, no more need be said
than is contained in the French proverb: Cela
va sans dire.