Watching a Defaulter
by Willis Gribble
No doubt ingenuity is the first rudiment that combines with tact and energy to make a good detective. But once in a long stretch “good luck” is sure to gain a supremacy over those three virtues. At all events, there is an episode on record wherein luck not only gained the supremacy, but atoned for the absence of the other three.
To be sure the case was not a complicated one. There was no mystery that called for the keen instinct of an adept at unraveling to ferret it out. Instead, it was a most simple chain of circumstances. One Philip Brashear had been suspected of appropriating the funds of his employers, and while the firm was busy summing up the total of their losses, he decamped, carrying with him money and bonds to the value of half a hundred thousand. A futile search of the city and its environs followed; but to all appearances the culprit vanished, leaving no traces that might be followed up to the epoch of his apprehension.