The Crime of the French Café and Other Stories
n two. Only half was in the
however, far away. It
been neatly lined with rubber cloth, apparently taken f
the trunks, when clo
saw," said Nick. "Come,
ed Gaspard, "that I k
pped on the door. He ha
d Nick; and th
gentlemen, I don't know nothing about this business. I ain't in it. I'm tell
the trunks he
ous to tell that he couldn't talk fast enough. "De French leddy
mbled to what she was a-givin' me. T
in an hour.' An' she gi
but dere ain't no such number. De
use when I got dere, her jiblets was a-s
ner,' says she, 'and' t
e, she showed me dese two tru
es for me fare, an' tole me ter come down here,
gan," said Nick. "Patsy, get a pol
he blue-coat in
to Fifty-seventh s
ace where, as Harrigan claimed, "de Fren
din'-house," said Harrigan. "Dere's a hash-mill dere o
amining the sidewalk with
The trunks were not dragged. That woman must be pretty strong
N
in any of these houses. She couldn't have got them out
e in the fence, which
nough now. The trunks were brought across this vacant
no gates in the fence between the yards of the houses and the lot, but Nick
taking away this board, he found him
owered down in the dumb waiter to the cellar and t
ny witnesses as you can get together, at the superintendent's office to-morrow afte
on began promptly at
e case-except, of course, the two victims-were present.
, "is perfectly clear. It begins with Gaspa
taurant when the crime was comm
the waiter, Corbut, obtained a knowledge of the crime. It
, testified to taking him and another man to a point on West Fifty-seventh stree
f Corbut was lost for a time
back to a place near the spot whe
d been removed from a flat hou
that house. He learned that the third flat had
Eliza Harris, who lives in that house, when she last saw
tle woman arose a
m now. Th
ted to J
he continued, "but I know
ut her hand tow
son to believe, Corbut was taken by Jones on that nig
s intended, probably, to remove it
very soon. But Jones was too closely watched. That work had
w Musgrave h
r up the details of the crime in the restaurant.
ed perfectly calm, uttered a horrible groan, an
or which even the shrewd superintenden
ing beside Nick, arose and cried, i
I can bear th
e man who begged N
xed upon Jones' face. He had watched the agony of fear g
for the accused to bear, Hammond al
d. "You shall not torture t
an?" asked the
l confess everything. Do you think I will sit here and let an innocent man be con
happy woman to the place where she met her deat
man, was her companion. The
an who was