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Short Stories (story)

The Adventure of the Naval Treaty (nava)

13920    Presently he stooped and picked out a square piece of board, such as is usually left to enable plumbers to get at the joints of the gas pipes.
13921    This one covered, as a matter of fact, the T-joint which gives off the pipe which supplies the kitchen underneath.
13922    Out of this hiding-place he drew that little cylinder of paper, pushed down the board, rearranged the carpet, blew out the candles, and walked straight into my arms as I stood waiting for him outside the window.
13923    'Well, he has rather more viciousness than I gave him credit for, has Master Joseph.
13924    He flew at me with his knife, and I had to grasp him twice, and got a cut over the knuckles, before I had the upper hand of him.
13925    He looked "murder" out of the only eye he could see with when we had finished, but he listened to reason and gave up the papers.
13926    Having got them I let my man go, but I wired full particulars to Forbes this morning.
13927    If he is quick enough to catch his bird, well and good!
13928    But if, as I shrewdly suspect, he finds the nest empty before he gets there, why, all the better for the Government.
13929    I fancy that Lord Holdhurst, for one, and Mr. Percy Phelps, for another, would very much rather that the affair never got so far as a police-court.'
13930    'My God!' gasped our client.
13931    'Do you tell me that during these long ten weeks of agony, the stolen papers were within the very room with me all the time?'
13932    'So it was.'
13933    'And Joseph!
13934    Joseph a villain and a thief!'

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