The Detective’s Story
My name is – no matter. I am called Tony. I have never been a member of the regular police, and I hope my vanity will be pardoned when I say that I consider my occupation a grade or two above it; since it must be evident to every one that a dull person may be and often is a serviceable policeman, while a detective has no chance of success without a ready perception and a close study of human nature. I am intuitively possessed of a faculty of imitation, which I have cultivated to be of great service in my business, as it enables me to assume, in a very deceptive manner, the disguise of any character I please; indeed, so many different parts have I played, and in such various company have I mixed, that it seems to me a serious problem, at times, where my proper position in society lays.
I have a partner in business whose real name I have no right to make public. He is a coarse-featured person, and is capable of converting himself by means of dress into one of the most rough-looking and repulsive of men. While in one of the meanest of his disguises, some one gave him the name of “Slouch:” and this rather repulsive sobriquet attached to him at first in the spirit of pleasantry, is now about the only name by which I address him. He is a good hearted fellow; muscular and courageous, and he has, in more than one instance, saved me from great peril, if not actually my life. Slouch has a remarkable faculty of reading crime in the face. His conclusions are generally correct; yet how he arrives at them has always been a mystery to me. My own suspicions are the result of some theory, and I will freely confess that my… Read More