An Evening with a Detective
by James Franklin Fitts
An Alibi
If there is anything more calculated to sharpen a man’s wits, and keep him continually on the lookout than the detective’s business, I don’t know what it can be. A few years of the life that we in this peculiar business have to lead makes it a man’s second nature to be watchful without seeming to be so at all, and to take notice of what is going on even when not engaged on any particular “lay,” as the rouges say. I have two little stories to tell which will illustrate this.
One Sunday, about ten years ago, I found myself at Carlisle, a flourishing town on the Blank and Blank Railroad. I was considerably acquainted there, and had been there pretty often on business; but my being there at this time was the result of an accident merely. I had been three hundred miles west of this, trying in vain to find a clue to the whereabouts of an absconding defaulter; and coming back to take a fresh start, I found that a flood had submerged the track for several miles east of Carlisle, and that there would be no getting away till Monday, at the least. So I made a virtue of necessity, and telegraphing my detention and its cause to my family, I went up town.
After dinner at the hotel, I dropped in at the office of the district attorney, with whom I was well acquainted. I found him arranging the details of a number of criminal cases which were to be tried at the court which began the following Monday.
“Anything of importance?” I asked, rather carelessly.
“One, at least,” he replied. “Joe Slifer, a notorious scoundrel, is to be tried for highway robbery. The victim was dragged out of his buggy on a lonely road, beaten insensible, and robbed of a thousand dollars. He identifies Slifer positively as one… Read More