A Detective’s Story of New York Life
“You are too young to remember the case of Miss P—,” said the detective as he gave a twist to his moustache and crossed one leg over the other, as if settling himself down for a narrative in which he had a personal interest. “Well, it was one of the most remarkable cases that I ever had anything to do with, and John Young will tell you the same thing. He took a hand in working it up, and if he wasn’t as much astonished as any of us before we got things ‘dead to rights’ you can set me down as a donkey. Now, if you’ve got time I’ll tell you all about.”
The detective was informed that he would be attentively listened to.
“It happened—let me see, it’s now 1870—well, it happened [seventeen] years ago. ‘Old Man’ Matsell was an officer then, and things were not allowed to go begging to be worked up in those days, I can tell you. I remember that I was sitting in the office one cold night all alone. It was raining furiously, and the wind shook the windows as though bent on making short work of the old shanty in Broome street. A good fire was burning in the stove and I felt particularly comfortable; in fact, I was just falling into a doze when the office door opened without anybody knocking. The sharp gust of wind that came rushing in brought me to my senses, and on starting to my feet, half unconsciously, I saw the outline of a female form before me in the dim light, for I had weak eyes then, you know, and couldn’t bear the gas at its full height. I turned the burner hinge at once, and saw that the person who stood before me shivering with the cold, and with water dripping down from the shawl she had drawn over her head, was a girl apparently about seventeen years of age. Her face was a comely one, and as she raised her hand to her eyes to brush away a… Read More