The Diamond Cross Mystery Being a Somewhat Different Detective Story
to have been much read, the tall, military-appearing occupant of a middle se
w with the hook in his upper lip, and letting him swim up and down about mid-water, or a little lower, and you still keeping h
-a-
t, as though, in fancy, he could look off across sunlit meadows to a stream sparkling beneath a blue sky, white-studded with fleecy clouds, where
-a-
don, sir
ha
h a jerk into sudden stiffness, while
ork pa
New York paper
vered book, again let his eyes seek its pages.
then. Th
the skin of his leg, toward the upper
e newsboy who had stopped beside the parlor-car chair of the military-looking traveler, i
ading my Izaak Walton I'll have you put off the t
lm of one hand with a report like that of a pistol, thereby causing a
ting up and looking about in startled surprise, her bonnet very
n one hand, and bowed his apologies. "I regret exceedingly that I startled you. But that insufferable young pupp
, did you?" asked the
ed on my part, I merely spoke to him. It was this-this
t we at Col
happy to let you know when we arrive. And if you are without any one to
ill meet me. I must have dozed o
am," interposed the military-app
d his seat and tried to read, but his feelings had been too much ruff
tly, and as though angry at not being admitted to the warmth and light of the car. For dusk had fallen and the electric lights we
rsnapper interrupting him with-Shag! I say, Shag!" he went on, raising his voice from a m
fringe of white, kinky hair, shuffled from the porter's quarters, where he had been enjoy
sufferable train-boy-that rascal who probably doesn't know an ant-fly from a piece of cheese-has bothered me
een cover the words: "Walton's Complete Angler," and laughed silently, the wrinkles of h
hat do you think that nincompoop had the infer
, Colonel-not th' le
e a-detective
Lord, Colone
Shag! A dete
ah goo
iced in the prefixes of George Washington, threw up his hands in horror, and shook his he
evening. When, as you walk by a brook, and shall hear
l waiting Shag, he went on: "There's nobody in the wide world who can bring
onel, they is
d! I'm glad you ag
sah, C
mean anything; but never again must he interrupt me when he sees me
onel. I done t
s sacrilegi
Colonel;
llar. Now don't disturb me again until we
l, it's-it's sorte
ter by to-morrow, I exp
ds when you take the gr
even my oldest one, I-
to you
, I knows
ar. Maybe he never read Walton,
ck in his chair, and, wit
t a grasshopper, put it on your hook with your line about two
the colone
ewsboy, and, chuckling as had his
r?" questioned the l
give it to you fo'
want a book-a, paper? Say, I
ed out of the
kes, don't!" gasped Shag, grabbing him just
uy a dollar's worth of books and papers. I
'? Jes' listen to me right now! De colonel don'
? What road's
fishin' poles, an' dat's all the colonel reads when he ain't worki
said a man, who passed by just then on his way to th
orms. Well, boy, dat book's all de colonel ever reads when he
I don't want t' heah 'bout no battles, murder an' sudden deaths. I jest wants peace an' quiet an' fish!' He done come up heah t' go fishin' laik h
agent," object
t, but yo' sells books, an' dat's whut's de trouble.
nd say! it's a swell
hag. "Dat's de wustest ever!" and
ps of men read detective stories. Judge Dolan-he rides on my trai
nt on Shag, slowly recovering from his fit of chuckling,
asked t
fully, and saw that the strange man had moved on and they were alon
' mine too, at detectin'. He says he don't ever want t' read 'em, 'cause dey ain't at all like whut happens. De colonel was one of de biggest private detectives in d
detective?" asked the bo
whut
e is Colonel
ks bodder him. If I was t' tell yo' his real name yo'd open yo' eyes wider yet. But take it from me,"
"And to think I was offering him a detec
ag, still chuckling as he thought
ble chair Colonel Ashley read his Walton, the ingratiating humor
distinction in the Spanish-American war, among his exploits being the capture of a number of spies
ry interest, and realizing that the routine of police work was too hampering for him, the colonel had opened an office in New York, where, straightway, he received from the government and private persons more work than he could well attend to. Now that he was getting old, he
o Colchester. "Don't you so much as scratch the varnish on the tip of one of my rods. And if
s military associations. Then, having kept his promise in seeing that the old lady was sa
olonel was to occupy for a two weeks' vacation and rest, for the military detective was sm
laid out his master's clothes, and was preparing t
n't usually in such haste to leave me, even if you have laid
nel! No, indeedy!
Why are you in such
ks fo' t' tell yo' Colonel
u black rascal! don't try to hide anythin
! Dat's jest why I don't wan t' tell
ascal, look here! Have yo
et yo' hab so much as a snift at it, Colonel! De train-boy, whut yo' gib a dollar t', he handed
g! What's in it that's
yo' see-yo'
g! I'll forgive you,
e got in it an 'count ob a strang
to have some quiet fishing in the suburbs, to get a complete rest, and yet not be too far from civilization, and no soone
owed. He was trying to keep from slipping from under his vest, where he had hidden
m, bearing out its promise of the morning, had lasted all day, changing from a drizzle to a downpour and from a downpour to a d
persons. It hath been highly prized in al
d the book shut, and
" he e
sah, C
e talk of fishing and
Colonel; many a
ctive work is a sort of
any an' many a time I'se done heah yo' say y
d it's a sort of fis
heah yo' say as how yo' had t' fish an
id you say you've got a newspaper with an account in it o
ere we done come t' hab puffick rest an' quiet a
t I heard the newsboys shouting something about it at
sah, it's a poo
rested in a case when I told you if you so much as breathed an
yo' did,
d for the little green book. Then, as if in despera
's a mystery a
he made a motion toward the paper t
the shade of a big tree along some quiet brook. If you so much as bring a
sah, C
s pacing of the room, his hands behind hi
e suddenl
sah, C
mean-er-anything but the us
g gold statue, an' a gold knife stab in her side, an' a watch shut up tight in her hand, tickin' an' tickin' an' tickin', laik it was her heart beatin', an' he
rly shouted
sah, C
nt, and don't you dare come
sah, C
the door. His manner was dejected. Ev
fore he had stepped over the threshh
ha
sah, C
I see under your vest. I may have occasion to-to glance at it
sah, C
drew the black-lettered paper from under his waistcoa