The Dishonest Clerk and the Fatal Slip of Paper
In an Ugly Mood with Myself—A Visit from a Cincinnatian—A Loss Detailed—The Fate of a Banking-House Resting on “Collaterals” Stolen, Which Must Be Recovered—A Lawyer Figures in the Matter and is Baffled—The Thieves Speculating for a Settlement—The Scheme Laid for Their Detection—A Business Visit to the Banking-House—The Chief Clerk Sent to Chicago on Business—A Search Revealing Love Letters, and a Lovely Literary Lady—On Track of Mysterious “Papers”—The Fatal Slip of Paper—The Way the Stolen Bonds Were Recovered—The Chief Clerk, and How He was “Enlightened”—A Novel and Quiet Arrest in a Carriage—The Clerk’s Confederate Caught—The Property Restored—The Scamps Decamp—The Innocent Literary Lady’s Eyes Opened
by George McWatters
I was sitting in my office one day, meditating over a case I had had in hand to work up, for some four months, off and on. An hour before one of the parties interested in the matter, and who had furnished considerable money to press the investigation of the affair had left my office in a state of dissatisfaction, evident enough to me, although his interest compelled him to express in words his pleasure at the course I had taken, and his hope that my theory of the case would soon be worked into practical demonstration. But I fancied, nevertheless, that he had secretely resolved to abandon the matter, or to abandon me, and procure some one else to undertake the job; and I was conjuring in my mind who this might be, whom he would secure to aid him; and resolving myself into a happy state of mind that this point, namely, that he could find nobody who could or would for the like slight encouragement I had had, undertake the affair, and into a somewhat unhappy state of mind on this other point, namely, that I had been induced to enter upon the… Read More