A Mysterious Valise
The Story Told by an Ex-Life-Guardsman
“Sentry, will you kindly keep your eye on my bag for a few minutes? I am going to have a plunge in the Serpentine,” said a well-dressed, middle-aged gentleman to me, one warm summer morning a few years ago, as I was on duty at the park gate of Knightsbridge Cavalry Barracks.
“All right, sir,” I replied. “If I am relieved before your return, I shall hand it over to the next sentry.”
“Oh, I shan't be more than half an hour at the latest, as I must be in the city by nine. I prefer leaving my valise with you; there are so many vagabonds always swarming about Hyde Park, that it is quite possible that one of them might take a fancy to it while I am bathing. It doesn’t contain very valuable property—only a suit of clothes and a few documents ‘of no use to any one but the owner,’ as the saying is. All the same, however, I have no desire to lose it.” So saying, the gentleman turned away, and walked briskly across the park in the direction of the Serpentine.
The request to look after his property did not in the least surprise me, as numerous robberies from the clothing of persons bathing had for some time before been reported to the police. I lifted the bag—upon which the letters W. N. were painted, and which was in the battered condition indicative of having been much tumbled about and placed it behind the low wall that lay between the barracks and the footpath.
The barracks clock struck eight. Fully half an hour had elapsed since the owner of the bag departed, and as yet there was no sign of him; the ‘quarter-past’ was chimed from the neighboring clocks, and still he did not turn up; and, as the minutes passed, I thought to myself that it was time he was looking sharp if he really wished to be in the city by nine.
About half-past eight I perceived a great commotion in the park. Men were rushing from all… Read More