The Burglar-Proof Man
A Detective’s Story
I don’t suppose you feel much interest in burglars, nor are their habits a very choice theme in polite literature; but then that occurrence at Glen Spring was really an extraordinary affair. I was on the police force at the time and knew Calico Charley well. His father was one of the best machinists in the country, and he took more pains to make a man of his boy than the fellow deserved. The old man had a little machine shop and had the boy Charley with him—a bright, smart chap he was then. When he was twenty-one he got to be pretty lively about town, for the old man had saved up a handsome property and let Charley have more money than was good for him. Then they got up a new safe lock, and it made a big stir, and I believe they went into that sort of thing pretty heavy. Any way Charley went over with the lock to the first world’s fair in London. There he got tipped up. I never heard exactly how it was. They put up a wicked job on him, and got him mixed up with a pretty bad London “mob.” The story that we heard was that he picked a safe lock for a party that shouldn’t have been picked. Any way, he got in with the wrong crowd and they wouldn’t let go of him. He stayed over there about five years and got to be a regular first-class sneak, and worked a half a dozen jobs in the most scientific manner. We got word from Scotland Yard that he was coming back, and I dropped in at the old man’s place to try to find out something. Old Calcott (that was his name) had got rich. What with his bank lock and his other inventions, his mean way of living, and his luck in buying some down town property before people had an idea how big the city was going to be, he’d come to be a regular nabob. I couldn’t get a word out of him about his boy. He said he’d given him up, and was going to retire from business. Money must have come pretty fast then to the old fellow. He… Read More