The Detective's Story
by Frank Lee Benedict
“The neatest case that ever came under my personal knowledge?” questioned Detective Sparkle, in a meditative tone.
I nodded, looking interested in advance.
“Well, I don’t know that I could decide as to that, on the spur of the moment, but I’ll tell you one that ranks high on my list of tidy things. It happened ten years ago, and the only person to whom I promised secrecy is dead. The truth was kept so quiet that nobody except the people concerned would recognize the facts, even if you put them in a story; and what’s more, nobody that read it would ever believe but what you made the thing up out of your own head.”
Mr. Sparkle indulged in a brief meditation, apparently collecting his memories, and presently began his narrative, in these words:
“I was summoned one morning from Scotland Yard to go to the residence of Colonel Helstone, near Kensington Gardens. It was the finest house in the street, standing in grounds of its own, with a carriage-drive in front, hen-houses and grape-vines in the rear, and every other outward sign of wealth and luxury.
“I rang the bell, and when I mentioned my name to the servant who opened the door, he said that Mr. Helstone was expecting me; but I saw by the expression on his face that he had no idea of my identity, or of the business that brought me there.
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