Trailing A Crime
by An English Ex-Detective
I have not a great story of the marvelous to relate, but what I have to say possesses the merit of being absolutely true.
About a dozen years ago complaints were continuously made to us of repeated robberies from a luggage train, which at that time was doing service between London and a certain provincial town which I will call Hubbleton.
Time after time, in spite of the traffic manager’s strictest vigilance, valuable freight was stolen, and the thief or thieves remained undetected. The most mysterious part of the affair was that not unfrequently the missing goods consisted of very heavy and cumberous articles, such, for instance, as bales of raw wool, heavy pieces of finished woolen cloths, and now and again bags of logwood, boxes of indigo, &c.
The guards of certain trains were keenly questioned, their every movement was observed,—in fact the company’s own detectives placed the whole of the servants under the most watchful surveillance.
Still, consignors and consignees continued to complain, dispatched materials remained undelivered, and, as a consequence, the directors were made to smart pretty sharply in the shape of awarded compensation.
It was at this ruinous juncture that my services were called into requisition.
“Sleeky” (that is the nickname I was best known by then), said the inspector to me one morning, “I have got an intricate little matter I want you to undertake. The Grangewood Limited Liability Company have compromised that job you have been working, consequently you are the only member I have disengaged at the present moment.”
He gave me the details of the case, which I have just recited, suggested a few important hints, and concluded by advising me to take a day or two so as to deliberate my plans for attack.
“Of course you know the importance of the thing,” he said just… Read More