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PAGE 14

The Twinkling Of An Eye
by [?]

“But how could he open the safe?” cried Mr. Wheatcroft. “You didn’t know the new combination.”

“I did not tell him the combination I did know,” said the old book-keeper, with pathetic dignity. “And I didn’t have to tell him. He can open almost any safe without knowing the combination. How he does it, I don’t know; it is his gift. He listens to the wheels as they turn, and he sets first one and then the other; and in ten minutes the safe is open.”

“How could he get into the store?” Mr. Whittier inquired.

“He knew I had a key,” responded the old book-keeper, “and he stole it from me. He used to watch on Sunday afternoons till Mike went for a walk, and then he unlocked the store, and slipped in and opened the safe. Two weeks ago Mike came back unexpectedly, and he had just time to get out of one of the rear windows of this office.”

“Yes,” Paul remarked, as the Major paused, “Mike told me that he found a window unfastened.”

“I heard you asking about it,” Major Van Zandt explained, “and I knew that if you were suspicious he was sure to be caught sooner or later. So I begged him not to try to injure you again. I offered him money to go away. But he refused my money; he said he could get it for himself now, and I might keep mine until he needed it. He gave me the slip yesterday afternoon. When I found he was gone I came here straight. The front door was unlocked; I walked in and found him just closing the safe here. I talked to him, and he refused to listen to me. I tried to get him to give up his idea, and he struck me. Then I left him, and I went out, seeing no one as I hurried home. That’s when Mr. Wheatcroft followed me, I suppose. The boy never came back all night. I haven’t seen him since; I don’t know where he is, but he is my son, after all–my only son! And when Mr. Wheatcroft accused me, I confessed at last, thinking you might be easier on me than you would be on the boy.”

“My poor friend,” said Mr. Whittier, sympathetically, holding out his hand, which the Major clasped gratefully for a moment.

“Now that we know who was selling us to the Tuxedo people, we can protect ourselves hereafter,” declared Mr. Wheatcroft. “And in spite of your trying to humbug me into believing you guilty, Major, I’m willing to let your son off easy.”

“I think I can get him a place where he will be out of temptation, because he will be kept hard at work always,” said Paul.

The old book-keeper looked up as though about to thank the young man, but there seemed to be a lump in his throat which prevented him from speaking.

Suddenly Mr. Wheatcroft began, explosively, “That’s all very well! but what I still don’t understand is how Paul got those photographs!”

Mr. Whittier looked at his son and smiled. “That is a little mysterious, Paul,” he said, “and I confess I’d like to know how you did it.”

“Were you concealed here yourself?” asked Mr. Wheatcroft.

“No,” Paul answered. “If you will look round this room you will see that there isn’t a dark corner in which anybody could tuck himself.”

“Then where was the photographer hidden?” Mr. Wheatcroft inquired, with increasing curiosity.

“In the clock,” responded Paul.

“In the clock?” echoed Mr. Wheatcroft, greatly amazed. “Why, there isn’t room in the case of that clock for a thin midget, let alone a man!”

Paul enjoyed puzzling his father’s partner. “I didn’t say I had a man there or a midget either,” he explained. “I said that the photographer was in the clock–and I might have said that the clock itself was the photographer.”

Mr. Wheatcroft threw up his hands in disgust. “Well,” he cried, “if you want to go on mystifying us in this absurd way, go on as long as you like! But your father and I are entitled to some consideration, I think.”