The Stolen White Elephant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 30 pages of information about The Stolen White Elephant.

The Stolen White Elephant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 30 pages of information about The Stolen White Elephant.

“Allow me to think a moment, please.”

So saying, he sat down at his office table and leaned his head upon his hand.  Several clerks were at work at the other end of the room; the scratching of their pens was all the sound I heard during the next six or seven minutes.  Meantime the inspector sat there, buried in thought.  Finally he raised his head, and there was that in the firm lines of his face which showed me that his brain had done its work and his plan was made.  Said he—­and his voice was low and impressive: 

“This is no ordinary case.  Every step must be warily taken; each step must be made sure before the next is ventured.  And secrecy must be observed—­secrecy profound and absolute.  Speak to no one about the matter, not even the reporters.  I will take care of them; I will see that they get only what it may suit my ends to let them know.”  He touched a bell; a youth appeared.  “Alaric, tell the reporters to remain for the present.”  The boy retired.  “Now let us proceed to business—­and systematically.  Nothing can be accomplished in this trade of mine without strict and minute method.”

He took a pen and some paper.  “Now—­name of the elephant?”

“Hassan Ben Ali Ben Selim Abdallah Mohammed Moist Alhammal Jamsetjejeebhoy Dhuleep Sultan Ebu Bhudpoor.”

“Very well.  Given name?”

“Jumbo.”

“Very well.  Place of birth?”

“The capital city of Siam.”

“Parents living?”

“No—­dead.”

“Had they any other issue besides this one?”

“None.  He was an only child.”

“Very well.  These matters are sufficient under that head.  Now please describe the elephant, and leave out no particular, however insignificant—­that is, insignificant from your point of view.  To me in my profession there are no insignificant particulars; they do not exist.”

I described he wrote.  When I was done, he said: 

“Now listen.  If I have made any mistakes, correct me.”

He read as follows: 

“Height, 19 feet; length from apex of forehead insertion of tail, 26 feet; length of trunk, 16 feet; length of tail, 6 feet; total length, including trunk, and tail, 48 feet; length of tusks, 9 feet; ears keeping with these dimensions; footprint resembles the mark left when one up-ends a barrel in the snow; the color of the elephant, a dull white; has a hole the size of a plate in each ear for the insertion of jewelry and possesses the habit in a remarkable degree of squirting water upon spectators and of maltreating with his trunk not only such persons as he is acquainted with, but even entire strangers; limps slightly with his right hind leg, and has a small scar in his left armpit caused by a former boil; had on, when stolen, a castle containing seats for fifteen persons, and a gold-cloth saddle-blanket the size of an ordinary carpet.”

There were no mistakes.  The inspector touched the bell, handed the description to Alaric, and said: 

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The Stolen White Elephant from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.