said the clerk, "and you'll find that I have made no
mistake."
"Come with me to the station house, and prepare your complaint," said
the policeman.
By this time a crowd had gathered, and the thief appealed to them.
"Gentlemen," he said, "I am a reputable citizen of St. Louis, come to
Boston to buy goods, and I protest against this outrage. It is either a
mistake or a conspiracy, I don't know which."
The thief was well dressed, and some of the bystanders were disposed to
put confidence in him. He had not seen Herbert and George Melville, who
had left the car and joined the throng, or he might not have spoken so
confidently.
"He doesn't look like a thief," said one of the bystanders, a
benevolent-looking old gentleman.
"I should say not," said the thief, more boldly. "It's a pretty state
of things if a respectable merchant can't enter a store here in Boston
without being insulted and charged with theft. If I only had some of
my friends or acquaintances here, they would tell you that it is simply
ridiculous to make such a charge against me."
"You can explain this at the station house," said the policeman. "It is
my duty to take you there."
"Is there no one who knows the gentleman?" said the philanthropist
before referred to. "Is there no one to speak up for him?"
Herbert pressed forward, and said, quietly:
"I know something of him; I passed the morning in his company."
The thief turned quickly, but he didn't seem gratified to see Herbert.
"The boy is mistaken," he said, hurriedly; "I never saw him before."
"But I have seen you, sir," retorted our hero. "You saw me draw some
money from a bank in State Street, scraped acquaintance with me, and
tried to rob me of it on Bunker Hill."
"It's a lie!" said the prisoner, hoarsely.
"Do you wish to make a charge to that effect?" asked the policeman.
"No, sir; I only mentioned what I knew of him to support the charge of
this gentleman," indicating the jeweler's clerk.
The old gentleman appeared to lose his interest in the prisoner after
Herbert's statement, and he was escorted without further delay to the
station house, where a gold watch and the diamond ring were both found
on his person. It is scarcely needful to add that he was tried and
sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the very city--Charlestown--where
he had attempted to rob Herbert.
"It is not always that retribution so quickly overtakes the wrongdoer,"
said Melville. "St. Louis will
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