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Kind Chance

A Detective Story


If you doubt there are any smart fellows among the New York detectives, just entrust them with some refreshingly mysterious case of robbery or other misdoing, and then follow the thread of their scheming to find the true parties concerned.

Much impressed by the able way, a young officer worked up a burglary at our place, and finding him intelligent and companionable, I kept up the acquaintance, and enjoyed many a bright chat when I happened to come across him.

I fell in with him one cool, pleasant evening, when the rush had died out of Broadway. As we sauntered up the great thoroughfare, a group of elderly, substantial men passed us and I saw a smile on my young friend Javert’s face. Not having observed anything particular in the men, I inquired what amused him.

He made the inquiry:

“Are you acquainted with the heavy parent in the white tie?”

I assured him I had not observed him at all. Whereupon he continued:

“I had a visit from him, and the occasion of it makes quite a neat little story.”

“Let me hear it by all means; your stories, Mons. Javert, are never without point.”

“Oh, it isn’t much, and yet it illustrates what all good detectives know—that stolen money found in one’s pocket does not always prove one a thief. You must know the white necktie is a deacon of an uptown church. I may as well call him Deacon Choker, if you want the story. As becomes a deacon, he had never had any very close dealings with wicked folks, and therefore was in a considerably shocked and perturbed state when he came to the office and told me he had been the victim of a series of small robberies, amounting to over a hundred dollars, practiced upon him, he had every reason to believe, by a servant woman named Huldah Stearns.

“He lived, it appeared, in a sober, stylish uptown boarding house, his only relative,… Read More