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Post, Melville Davisson, 1871?-1930

"The Sleuth of St. James's Square"

He had been
stabbed in the back, on the left side, where the neck joins to
the shoulder. A carving-knife had been used and a single blow
had accomplished the murder.
It was known that on the evening before the old banker had taken
from a safety-deposit vault the sum of $20,000, which it was his
intention to invest in some securities. This money, in bills of
very large denominations, was in the top drawer on the right side
of the desk. The dead man had apparently not been touched after
the crime, but the drawer had been pried open and the money
taken. An ice-pick from the butler's pantry had been used to
force it. The assassin had left no marks, finger-prints or
tell-tale stains. The victim had been instantly killed with the
blow of the knife which lay on the floor beside him.
The butler had been arrested, charged with the crime, and his
trial was now going on in the Criminal Court. Circumstantial
evidence was strong against him. The woman spoke as though she
echoed the current comment of the courtroom without realizing how
it affected her. She had done what she could. She had employed
an attorney at the recommendation of a person who had come to
interview her.


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