Sharp Detective Work
The Story of a Government Detective
by James Bagley
One day last winter I was sitting in the small waiting-room of the West Shore ferry-house at New York, looking through the dingy panes of glass at the icy river in hopes that the boat would come some time. I was in a hurry to cross to the Jersey shore and was impatient at the delay. The ferrymaster, a kindly old man with gray whiskers and a ruddy, smiling face, had told me that the boat would leave at 3 o’clock, and now, looking at my watch, I found that the hands marked quarter past three. Would the boat ever come? I had an engagement at Weehawken at 4 o’clock, and did not want to miss it. I saw the ice crush and crackle as the pieces were jammed against each other by the moving water, and the snow drip from the beams of the bridge and make little rivulets in the furrows of the much-worn planks, but I saw no boat. Just as visions of the little steamer lying wedged in the ice or sinking beneath the blow of some heavier vessel rose before me, I saw the object of my anxiety poke her blunt nose around the pier head and come throbbing into the slip. A deep voice behind me exclaimed, “It’s time.” Another impatient traveler, I thought, and then something familiar in the voice caused me to turn around. I was not mistaken. The owner of the voice was an old friend of mine—John Sullivan De Belle, United States Secret Service officer. I reached out my hand to him cordially—we had not met in ever so long—and together we entered the boat. In answer to my inquiries, he said he was crossing the river on “business.” With natural curiosity I wanted to know what the “business” was.
“Business for the Government” (noncommittal).
… Read More