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Short Stories by Rex Stout
An Officer and a Lady (1917) The Rope Dance (1916) Warner & Wife (1915) Jonathan Stannard's Secret Vice (1915) A Tyrant Abdicates (1914) Rose Orchid (1917) The Pay Yeoman (1914) An Agacella Or (1914) The Mother of Invention (1914)
An Officer and a Lady
Bill Farden had had his eye on the big brick house on the corner for some time.
He had worked one in that block--the white frame with the latticed porch farther down toward Madison Street--during the early part of March, and had got rather a nice bag. Then, warned off by the scare and hullabaloo that followed, he had fought shy of that part of town for a full month, confining his operations to one or two minor hauls in the Parkdale section. He figured that by now things would have calmed down sufficiently in this neighborhood to permit a quiet hour's work without undue danger.
It was a dark night, or would have been but for the street lamp on the corner. That mattered little, since the right side of the house was in deep shadow anyway. By an oversight I have neglected to place the scene of the story in the vicinity of a clock tower, so Bill Farden was obliged to take out his watch and look at it in order to call attention to the fact that it was an hour past midnight.
He nodded his head with satisfaction, then advanced across the lawn to that side of the house left in deep shadow.
Two large windows loomed up side by side, then a wide expanse of brick, then two more. After a leisurely examination he chose the second of the first pair. A ray from his electric flash showed the old- fashioned catch snapped to.
Grinning professionally, he took a thin shinin