The Detective’s Story
by Geo. Melnotte Grummond
One dark and stormy night in November, 1874, when the rain was beating a dismal tattoo on the window pane, and the wind was howling and shrieking around the gables of the neighboring houses in a lonesome accompaniment to the splashing of the water in the gutters, swelled by the fast-falling rain, I sat in my cozy little office, where the ruddy fire-light cast a comfortable contrast to the darkness without, where the mellow light from a student’s lamp barely lit up the space outside the shadow of the shade upon it, and utterly failed to dispel the darkness and ghostly sombreness that clung to the piles of old books, manuscripts, old papers, ancient pictures, and innumerable other “old things” with histories and tales attached to them; making their dim, dull outlines take upon themselves the light and glory of romance.
On the opposite side of my desk sat a life-long friend, Tom O’Hara. We had been schoolboys together, mates at college; and the firmest of friends in after years. Tom was a detective in the City of New York and one of the shrewdest men on the force, and having run down to Riverside on private business, had spent his leisure time with me. And on this evening, just mentioned, we were talking over the old scenes which had taken place long ago in our schooldays, and many were the laughs our pranks in younger days brought up. So vivid was memory that I almost felt myself again grasping the ball-bat or skimming over the glassy ice as we had often done;… Read More