登陆注册
15442400000008

第8章 P. H. Woodward(1)

Adventures in the Secret Service of the Post-Office Department*

* The author of the pages that follow was chief special agent of the Secret Service of the United States Post-Office Department during pioneer and romantic days. The curious adventures related are partly from his own observation, and partly from the notebooks of fellow officers, operating in many sections of the Country.

The stories are true, although, of course, justice demands that in some cases persons and places be usually disguised under fictitious names.

The stories have interest not only for their exciting play of honest wits against dishonest, but also for the cautions they sound against believing things "too good to be true" from the pen of strangers.

There is a class of post-office thieves who make a specialty of rifling the registered letters that pass through their hands in transit on journeys of greater or less length. Some of them have managed operations very shrewdly, in the evident belief that they had discovered an infallible method for doing the work and at the same time escaping detection. Too late they generally learn by sad experience that no patents can be taken out for the protection of crime.

In this class of cases something tangible always remains to exhibit the peculiar style of workmanship belonging to each; and it would often surprise the uninitiated to learn how many traits of character, what indexes of habit and vocation, can be picked up by careful study of the minute points presented for inspection.

Unless, however, an agent cultivates a taste for thoroughness even to details and trifles that might at first view appear utterly insignificant, he will never succeed in interpreting the hieroglyphics.

At intervals of two or three weeks, beginning in the summer of 1871, registered packages passing to and fro from Chicago to a town in the interior of Dakota Territory, which for convenience will be called Wellington,--though that was not its name,--were reported to the department as rifled. As the season wore on, the complaints increased in frequency. Under the old method of doing business at headquarters, which often amounted practically to a distribution of the cases about equally "among the boys," the agent stationed at Chicago received most of them at first; then a part were sent to an agent in Iowa; and as the number multiplied, Furay, at Omaha, was favored with an occasional sprinkling. Under the present more perfect system, great care is taken to group together all the complaints growing out of each series of depredations, to locate the seat of trouble by comparisons carefully made in the department itself, and to give everything bearing on the subject to the officer specifically charged with the investigation.

March came around before Mr. Furay found time to give personal attention to this particular thief. He then passed over the route to Wellington, eighty miles by stagecoach from the nearest railroad station, with ten intermediate offices. All the packages remained over night at Sioux City, Iowa, a fact sufficiently important to invite close scrutiny; but the detective soon became satisfied that he must look elsewhere for the robber. His suspicions were next directed to another office, where also the mails lay over night; but the postmaster bore a countenance so open and honest that he too was eliminated from the problem.

He continued on to Wellington, skirmishing along the line, and observing the faces of the postmasters; but these studies in physiognomy threw no light on the mystery, as the officials of the department on the route, though far removed from central supervision, seemed to be all that their affectionate uncle at Washington could wish. On the return trip the detective was equally observant and equally perplexed. At that season the stage stopped for the night at Hannibal; but there, likewise, the postmaster shared the honest looks that seemed to prevail through eastern Dakota.

Proceeding on, the passengers dined at Raven's Nest, where one Michael Mahoney, Sr., kept a small store and the post-office, running also--with the aid of a young son and a son-in-law--a farm.

The store was managed by Michael Mahoney, Jr., a married son, who happened to be absent both when the special agent went up and when he returned. The face of the old man indicated that he was vicious, ignorant, and unscrupulous; but clearly he was not sharp enough to execute nice work like that under investigation.

With the exception of a general knowledge of the offices, the special agent returned but little wiser for the trip, and concluded, as the best that could be done under the circumstances, to allow the bird to flutter a little longer before renewing the hunt. Meanwhile the thief grew more reckless, and the papers that came to Mr. Furay, though covering a fraction only of the depredations, located the thief on the lower end of the route, within fifty miles of the terminus.

During the summer one or two other agents took up the matter cursorily, but made no discoveries. In the meantime Mr. Furay was kept too busily occupied with a succession of important cases in Nebraska to give much thought to the outlying territory of Dakota.

At length, in September, he went carefully over the papers that had accumulated during his late prolonged absences, and soon knew exactly where to look for the chap who had so long plundered the public with impunity.

For some time Chicago had been closing registered package envelopes with wax, which, on this route at least, effectually secured them against molestation. Imitating the example, Camden, Dakota, began to do the same; but, having no seal suitable for the purpose, improvised a substitute by using the flat surface of a rasp.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天庭契约

    天庭契约

    面对天庭发来的契约牛奋只说了三个字:“老子不签!”结果玉帝告诉牛奋:不签切你小丁丁,当时牛奋就傻了,为了子孙为了白富美,他签了这不平等的契约从此牛奋和天庭有了一段不得不说的故事
  • boss你干嘛,小的先撤了

    boss你干嘛,小的先撤了

    驯服男神很简单系类为躲避追杀,男扮女装潜入凌氏集团。可是,为什么boss对我各种宠溺,各种动手动脚呢?怎么感觉狼入虎口了呢?某boss:林秘书,你来一下。某秘书:是,boss。某boss:林秘书,看你最近挺辛苦,本boss决定慰劳一下你。某秘书:老板你干嘛?小的先撤了。第无数次的“慰劳”后某秘书:boss,干嘛又亲我。精彩片段:“林秘书恭喜你啊,把我掰弯,又掰直了。某boss迫不及待的亲小秘书。”呜呜,总裁,你还是弯回去吧。“小秘书可怜的说。”宝,我弯了,你怎么办,全天下除了我还有谁适合当你老公。告诉我,刀已经磨好了,上来一个看一个。“
  • EXO之青涩恋曲

    EXO之青涩恋曲

    晨曦抬头一看,一位像从漫画里走出来的男生映入她的眼帘,眼泪还在脸上划过......男生问:“你没事吧?”......在盛夏学院,EXO和几位女主编写了一首青涩恋曲。
  • 三国志之刘岱的崛起

    三国志之刘岱的崛起

    滚滚长江东逝水,浪花淘尽英雄。是非成败转头空,青山依旧在,几度夕阳红。白发渔樵江渚上,惯看秋月春风。一壶浊酒喜相逢,古今多少事,都付笑谈中。
  • 美女老婆要重追

    美女老婆要重追

    有房有车有娇妻的吴飞先生悲哀的发现自己重生了,一觉睡回了八年前。那一年,他大学毕业,而他老婆还在另一所大学读大二。老婆很抢手,人妻要插手,萝莉要牵手,还有一群时空守护者要送他回去。吴飞先生大手一挥,怒吼:“我一定要把老婆追回来。”
  • 再一次的初恋

    再一次的初恋

    周铭从没想过,会在不知不觉中把他的初恋对象变成他的铁哥们加好职员,更没想到当他重拾起这段情愫的时候,她的身边又多出了个的前男友。本来只想帮助她远离前男友的阴影,却不小心重新爱上她。当花花公子周铭,重新爱上了自己的初恋,该如何才能让她相信自己的一片真心?这一次的恋爱,要认真谈!
  • 毒医傻妃:鬼君,轻点宠

    毒医傻妃:鬼君,轻点宠

    “嗯!我得了花柳病,你还是不要靠近我比较好……喂!喂!你干嘛?你干嘛靠近啊?我得了花柳病哎!”她一本正经的说着惊人的话。“娘子,可是,我听人说,花柳病好像一般都是发生在男人身上哎!”他的脸上挂着邪魅的笑。“那个谁,我记得这是我的房间,你是不是走错了?”某女揉着眼睛,半醒的看着面前这个不要脸的男人。“娘子,是你记错了哦!这可是为夫的房间。”某男认真的看着某女,眼睛还一眨一眨的,在邪魅的脸上又增加了几分可爱之气。“哎?为什么你们都看着我,我做了什么事吗难道?”某女脸上充满了疑问。“没错,本王选她当本王的王妃,本王相信她有这个资格。”邪魅的声音响在耳边,只是那个她,是谁?
  • 决斗怪兽那些你所不知道的事

    决斗怪兽那些你所不知道的事

    这是关于游戏王的一篇同人故事集。由于开学万机,现在不定时更了!那些支持我的读者,谢谢你们!也希望那些对这小说一点兴趣的读者们多多包涵,多多支持!
  • 仙道霸业

    仙道霸业

    皇图霸业谈笑间,可是人生在世为的就是名和利,生命不息则追求不停。我为皇时,我要这天下在没有饿殍,我为皇时,我要这天下再也没有战争,我为皇时,我要这天下在没有怀才不遇的人才,我为皇时,我要这天下人人可以追求长生,我为皇时,我要这天下——————朕在此下诏,天下之人,凡来我大隋者皆是我之臣民,凡有能力者都可来我大隋为官,一展才华。朕之所辖一视同仁。
  • 最后的深爱

    最后的深爱

    她,曾是天之骄女,却在一夜之间锒铛入狱,母亲身死,未婚夫转娶她人。四年后,她华丽归来,成为贺家大少爷的心上宠。他为她豪掷千金,为她扫平障碍,为她做了一切的一切。让她渐渐分不清,真实与假象。直到后来,他牵着另外一个人出现在她面前。她才恍悟,原来那些情爱与时光,终究是一场错付。她明知这蜜糖裹着毒药,依然咬牙喝下。后来的后来,随着尘埃落定,她转身消失。他才渐渐明白,有一些爱是假装不出来的,它已早早深入骨髓……