The Sleuth of St. James's Square by Melville Davisson Post (black authors fiction txt) π
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- Author: Melville Davisson Post
Read book online Β«The Sleuth of St. James's Square by Melville Davisson Post (black authors fiction txt) πΒ». Author - Melville Davisson Post
βI intended to put the hobo out of business,β Walker went on, βbut the effect of my words on him were even more startling than I anticipated. His jaw dropped and he looked at me in astonishment.
β'No such person!' he repeated. 'Why, Governor, before God, I found a man like that, an' he was a bankerβone of the big ones, sure as there's a hell!'β
Walker put out his hands in a puzzled gesture.
βThere it was again, the description of Mulehaus! And it puzzled me. Every motion of this hobo's mind in every direction about this affair was perfectly clear to me. I saw his intention in every turn of it and just where he got the material for the details of his story. But this absolutely distinguishing description of Mulehaus was beyond me. Everybody, of course, knew that we were looking for the lost plates, for there was the reward offered by the Treasury; but no human soul outside of the trusted agents of the department knew that we were looking for Mulehaus.β
Walker did not move, but he stopped in his recital for a moment.
βThe tramp shuffled up a step closer to the bench where I sat. The anxiety in his big slack face was sincere beyond question.
β'I can't find the banker man, Governor; he's skipped the coop. But I believe I can find what he's hid.'
β'Well,' I said, 'go and find it.'
βThe hobo jerked out his limp hands in a sort of hopeless gesture.
β'Now, Governor,' he whimpered, 'what good would it do me to find them plates?'
β'You'd get five thousand dollars,' I said.
β'I'd git kicked into the discard by the first cop that got to me,' he answered, 'that's what I'd git.'
βThe creature's dirty, unshaved jowls began to shake, and his voice became wholly a whimper.
β'I've got a line on this thing, Governor, sure as there's a hell. That banker man was viewin' the layout. I've thought it all over, an' this is the way it would be. They're afraid of the border an' they're afraid of the customhouses, so they runs the loot down here in an automobile, hides it up about the Inlet, and plans to go out with it to one of them fruit steamers passing on the way to Tampico. They'd have them plates bundled up in a sailor's chest most like.
β'Now, Governor, you'd say why ain't they already done it? An' I'd answer, the main guyβthis banker manβdidn't know the automobile had got here until he sent me to look, and there ain't been no ship along since then.... I've been special careful to find that out.' And then the creature began to whine. 'Have a heart, Governor, come along with me. Gimme a show!'
βIt was not the creature's plea that moved me, nor his pretended deductions; I'm a bit old to be soft. It was the 'banker man' sticking like a bur in the hobo's talk. I wanted to keep him in sight until I understood where he got it. No doubt that seems a slight reason for going out to the Inlet with the creature; but you must remember that slight things are often big signboards in our business.β
He continued, his voice precise and even
βWe went directly from the end of the Boardwalk to the old shed; it was open, an unfastened door on a pair of leather hinges. The shed is small, about twenty feet by eleven, with a hard dirt floor packed down by the workmen who had used it; a combination of clay and sand like the Jersey roads put in to make a floor. All round it, from the sea to the board fence, was soft sand. There were some pieces of old junk lying about in the shed; but nothing of value or it would have been nailed up.
βThe hobo led right off with his deductions. There, was the track of a man, clearly outlined in the soft sand, leading from the board fence to the shed and returning, and no other track anywhere about.
β'Now, Governor,' he began, when he had taken a look at the tracks, 'the man that made them tracks carried something into this shed, and he left it here, and it was something heavy.'
βI was fairly certain that the hobo had salted the place for me, made the tracks himself; but I played out a line to him.
β'How do you know that?' I said.
β'Well, Governor,' he answered, 'take a look at them two lines of tracks. In the one comin' to the shed the man was walkin' with his feet apart and in the one goin' back he was walkin' with his feet in front of one another; that's because he was carryin' somethin' heavy when he come an' nothin' when he left.'
βIt was an observation on footprints,β he went on, βthat had never occurred to me. The hobo saw my awakened interest, and he added:
β'Did you never notice a man carryin' a heavy load? He kind of totters, walkin' with his feet apart to keep his balance. That makes his foot tracks side by side like, instead of one before the other as he makes them when he's goin' light.β'
Walker interrupted his narrative with a comment:
βIt's the truth. I've verified it a thousand times since that hobo put me onto it. A line running through the center of the heel prints of a man carrying a heavy burden will be a zigzag, while one through the heel prints of the same man without the burden will be almost straight.
βThe tramp went right on with his deductions:
β'If it come in and didn't go out, it's here.'
βAnd he began to go over the inside of the shed. He searched it like a man searching a box for a jewel. He moved the pieces of old castings and he literally fingered the shed from end to end. He would have found a bird's egg.
βFinally he stopped and stood with his hand spread out over his mouth. And I selected this critical moment to touch the powder off under his game.
β'Suppose,' I said, 'that this man with the heavy load wished to mislead us; suppose that instead of bringing something here he took one of these old castings away?'
βThe hobo looked at me without changing his position.
β'How could he, Governor; he was pointin' this way with the load?'
β'By walking backward,' I said. For it occurred to me that perhaps the creature had manufactured this evidence for the occasion, and I wished to test the theory.β
Walker went on in his slow, even voice:
βThe test produced more action than I expected.
βThe hobo dived out through the door. I followed to see him disappear. But
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