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Called to Account.


A Detective’s Story.


Some years ago, when I was quite a young man, I was sent down to Evan’s Corners, about a big robbery that had occurred, and while I was there, working the thing up, my attention was attracted by a pretty girl I used to see at the hotel where I stopped. Nobody could help noticing her, she was such a beauty. Her hair and eyes were very dark, but her skin was as fair as a lily, with just a dash of red that came and went in her cheeks. Her form was slender, but well rounded, and her hand was as white and finely formed as any lady’s in the land. Her name was Rose Wynne, and of course she had plenty of admirers, but she coquetted with them all. However there were two who were a long way ahead of the others. I used to wonder which she liked the best, but I could never guess, for while she smiled sweetly on one, she would fling a merry word at the other, and so on. Both young men were good looking—one fair, the other dark—and both were carpenters. One was called Andrew Davis, and the other Mark Sheldon. 

Sheldon was a jealous fellow, and showed it. Davis was jealous, too, but didn’t show it so plain. Sheldon was always in a quarrel with her. Davis, I fancied, was angry enough at her coquetteries sometimes to eat her, but he never let on. 

Rose Wynne knew I was a detective, and had a sort of awe and curiosity about me. Many a yarn I told her, some true, some not. It was so pretty to see her big eyes kindle and grow bigger. 

I used to joke her sometimes and try and discover which she liked best, Davis or Sheldon. But she would never tell me. 

“See here, Rose,” I said to her one day when she had been playing those two chaps… Read More