Ingenious Bank Robberies
A Detective's Story
by C. V. Walls
I had been one of Pinkerton’s detectives two years when I first met Kate Putnam, the prettiest and sweetest girl—to me—that I had ever seen. She was fair as a lily, with eyes of impenetrable blue, cheeks and lips like roses, and a wealth of golden ringlets that captivated me completely. She possessed a well-rounded and rather plump form, and was below the medium height, but as I was rather tall and slender I naturally admired the plumpness that I lacked in my own person; so true it is that we poor mortals desire most that which nature has failed to provide us with.
Kate had been a resident of Blakesburg but a few weeks when I was sent by my chief to perform a little job of detective work in that village, and I first met her at a church fair. I was thrown into her society by purchasing a supper, which was sold by numbers and served in baskets, and, as fate would have it, I luckily drew the number of her basket. As is usual on such occasions, I shared the lunch with her. This was the beginning of an acquaintance that soon ripened into mutual respect and admiration, and later, into love.
I succeeded in securing the evidence in the case I was working up—that of arson—but I was… Read More