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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Leak, by Jacques Futrelle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Leak
+
+Author: Jacques Futrelle
+
+Release Date: August 21, 2011 [EBook #37146]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LEAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Starner, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Leak
+
+ By Jacques Futrelle
+
+
+"Really great criminals are never found out, for the simple reason that
+the greatest crimes--their crimes--are never discovered," remarked
+Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen positively. "There is genius in
+the perpetration of crime, Mr. Grayson, just as there must be in its
+detection, unless it is the shallow work of a bungler. In this latter
+case there have been instances where even the police have uncovered the
+truth. But the expert criminal, the man of genius--the professional, I
+may say--regards as perfect only that crime which does not and cannot be
+made to appear a crime at all; therefore one that can never under any
+circumstances involve him, or anyone else."
+
+The financier, J. Morgan Grayson, regarded this wizened little man of
+science--The Thinking Machine--thoughtfully, through the smoke of his
+cigar.
+
+"It is a strange psychological fact that the casual criminal glories in
+his crime beforehand, and from one to ten minutes afterward," The
+Thinking Machine continued. "For instance, the man who kills for revenge
+wants the world to know it is his work; but at the end of ten minutes
+comes fear, and then paradoxically enough, he will seek to hide his
+crime and protect himself. With fear comes panic, with panic
+irresponsibility, and then he makes the mistake--hews a pathway which
+the trained mind follows from motive to a prison cell."
+
+"These are the men who are found out. But there are men of genius, Mr.
+Grayson, professionally engaged in crime. We never hear of them because
+they are never caught, and we never even suspect them because they make
+no mistake. Imagine the great brains of history turned to crime. Well,
+there are today brains as great as any of those of history; there is
+murder and theft and robbery under our noses that we never dream of. If
+I, for instance, should become an active criminal----" He paused.
+
+Grayson, with a queer expression on his face, puffed steadily at his
+cigar.
+
+"I could kill you now, here in this room," The Thinking Machine went on
+calmly, "and no one would ever know, never even suspect. Why? Because I
+would make no mistake."
+
+It was not a boast as he said it; it was merely a statement of fact.
+Grayson appeared to be a little startled. Where there had been only
+impatient interest in his manner, there was now fascination.
+
+"How would you kill me, for instance?" he inquired curiously.
+
+"With any one of a dozen poisons, with virulent germs, or even with a
+knife or revolver," replied the scientist placidly. "You see, I know how
+to use poisons; I know how to inoculate with germs; I know how to
+produce a suicidal appearance perfectly with either a revolver or knife.
+And I never make mistakes, Mr. Grayson. In the sciences we must be
+exact--not approximately so, but absolutely so. We must know. It isn't
+like carpentry. A carpenter may make a trivial mistake in a joint, and
+it will not weaken his house; but if the scientist makes one mistake,
+the whole structure tumbles down. We must know. Knowledge is progress.
+We gain knowledge through observation and logic--inevitable logic. And
+logic tells us that two and two make four--not sometimes but all the
+time."
+
+Grayson flicked the ashes off his cigar thoughtfully, and little
+wrinkles appeared about his eyes as he stared into the drawn,
+inscrutable face of the scientist. The enormous, straw-yellow head was
+cushioned against the chair, the squinting, watery blue eyes turned
+upward, and the slender white fingers at rest, tip to tip. The financier
+drew a long breath. "I have been informed that you were a remarkable
+man," he said at last slowly. "I believe it. Quinton Frazer, the banker
+who gave me the letter of introduction to you, told me how you once
+solved a remarkable mystery in which----"
+
+"Yes, yes," interrupted the scientist shortly, "the Ralston Bank
+burglary--I remember."
+
+"So I came to you to enlist your aid in something which is more
+inexplicable than that," Grayson went on hesitatingly. "I know that no
+fee I might offer would influence you; yet it is a case which----"
+
+"State it," interrupted The Thinking Machine again.
+
+"It isn't a crime--that is, a crime that can be reached by law," Grayson
+hurried on, "but it has cost me millions, and----"
+
+For one instant The Thinking Machine lowered his squint eyes to those of
+his visitor, then raised them again. "Millions!" he repeated. "How
+many?"
+
+"Six, eight, perhaps ten," was the reply. "Briefly, there is a leak in
+my office. My plans become known to others almost by the time I have
+perfected them. My plans are large; I have millions at stake; and the
+greatest secrecy is absolutely essential. For years I have been able to
+preserve this secrecy; but half a dozen times in the last eight weeks my
+plans have become known, and I have been caught. Unless you know the
+Street, you can't imagine what a tremendous disadvantage it is to have
+someone know your next move to the minutest detail and, knowing it,
+defeat you at every turn."
+
+"No, I don't know your world of finance, Mr. Grayson," remarked The
+Thinking Machine. "Give me an instance."
+
+"Well, take this last case," said the financier earnestly. "Briefly,
+without technicalities, I had planned to unload the securities of the
+P., Q. & X. Railway, protecting myself through brokers, and force the
+outstanding stock down to a price where other brokers, acting for me,
+could buy far below the actual value. In this way I intended to get
+complete control of the stock. But my plans became known, and when I
+began to unload everything was snapped up by the opposition, with the
+result that instead of gaining control of the road I lost heavily. This
+same thing has happened, with variations, half a dozen times."
+
+"I presume that is strictly honest?" inquired the scientist mildly.
+
+"Honest?" repeated Grayson. "Certainly--of course."
+
+"I shall not pretend to understand all that," said The Thinking Machine
+curtly. "It doesn't seem to matter, anyway. You want to know where the
+leak is. Is that right?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"Well, who is in your confidence?"
+
+"No one, except my stenographer."
+
+"Who is he, please?"
+
+"It's a woman--Miss Evelyn Winthrop. She has been in my employ for six
+years in the same capacity--more than five years before this leak
+appeared. I trust her absolutely."
+
+"No man knows your business?"
+
+"No," replied the financier grimly. "I learned years ago that no one
+could keep my secrets as well as I do--there are too many temptations.
+Therefore, I never mention my plans to anyone--never--to anyone!"
+
+"Except your stenographer," corrected the scientist.
+
+"I work for days, weeks, sometimes months, perfecting plans, and it's
+all in my head, not on paper--not a scratch of it," explained Grayson.
+"When I say that she is in my confidence, I mean that she knows my plans
+only half an hour or less before the machinery is put into motion. For
+instance, I planned this P., Q. & X. deal. My brokers didn't know of it;
+Miss Winthrop never heard of it until twenty minutes before the Stock
+Exchange opened for business. Then I dictated to her, as I always do,
+some short letters of instructions to my agents. That is all she knew of
+it."
+
+"You outlined the plan in those letters?"
+
+"No; they merely told my brokers what to do."
+
+"But a shrewd person, knowing the contents of all those letters, could
+have learned what you intended to do?"
+
+"Yes; but no one person knew the contents of all the letters. No one
+broker knew what was in the other letters. Miss Winthrop and I were the
+only two human beings who knew all that was in them."
+
+The Thinking Machine sat silent for so long that Grayson began to fidget
+in his chair. "Who was in the room besides you and Miss Winthrop before
+the letters were sent?" he asked at last.
+
+"No one," responded Grayson emphatically. "For an hour before I dictated
+those letters, until at least an hour afterward, after my plans had gone
+to smash, no one entered that room. Only she and I work there."
+
+"But when she finished the letters, she went out?" insisted The Thinking
+Machine.
+
+"No," declared the financier, "she didn't even leave her desk."
+
+"Or perhaps sent something out--carbon copies of the letters?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Or called up a friend on the telephone?" continued The Thinking Machine
+quietly.
+
+"Nor that," retorted Grayson.
+
+"Or signaled to someone through the window?"
+
+"No," said the financier again. "She finished the letters, then remained
+quietly at her desk, reading a book. She hardly moved for two hours."
+
+The Thinking Machine lowered his eyes and glared straight into those of
+the financier. "Someone listened at the window?" he went on after a
+moment.
+
+"No. It is sixteen stories up, fronting the street, and there is no fire
+escape."
+
+"Or the door?"
+
+"If you knew the arrangement of my offices, you would see how utterly
+impossible that would be, because--"
+
+"Nothing is impossible, Mr. Grayson," snapped the scientist abruptly.
+"It might be improbable, but not impossible. Don't say that--it annoys
+me exceedingly." He was silent for a moment. Grayson stared at him
+blankly. "Did either you or she answer a call on the 'phone?"
+
+"No one called; we called no one."
+
+"Any apertures--holes or cracks--in your flooring or walls or ceilings?"
+demanded the scientist.
+
+"Private detectives whom I had employed looked for such an opening, and
+there was none," replied Grayson.
+
+Again The Thinking Machine was silent for a long time. Grayson lighted a
+fresh cigar and settled back in his chair patiently. Faint cobwebby
+lines began to appear on the dome-like brow of the scientist, and slowly
+the squint eyes were narrowing.
+
+"The letters you wrote were intercepted?" he suggested at last.
+
+"No," exclaimed Grayson flatly. "Those letters were sent direct to the
+brokers by a dozen different methods, and every one of them had been
+delivered by five minutes of ten o'clock, when 'Change begins business.
+The last one left me at ten minutes of ten."
+
+"Dear me! Dear me!" The Thinking Machine rose and paced the length of
+the room.
+
+"You don't give me credit for the extraordinary precautions I have
+taken, particularly in this last P., Q. & X. deal," Grayson continued.
+"I left positively nothing undone to insure absolute secrecy. And Miss
+Winthrop, I know, is innocent of any connection with the affair. The
+private detectives suspected her at first, as you do, and she was
+watched in and out of my office for weeks. When she was not under my
+eyes, she was under the eyes of men to whom I had promised an
+extravagant sum of money if they found the leak. She didn't know it
+then, and doesn't know it now. I am heartily ashamed of it all, because
+the investigation proved her absolute loyalty to me. On this last day
+she was directly under my eyes for two hours; and she didn't make one
+movement that I didn't note, because the thing meant millions to me.
+That proved beyond all question that it was no fault of hers. What could
+I do?"
+
+The Thinking Machine didn't say. He paused at a window, and for minute
+after minute stood motionless there, with eyes narrowed to mere slits.
+
+"I was on the point of discharging Miss Winthrop," the financier went
+on, "but her innocence was so thoroughly proved to me by this last
+affair that it would have been unjust, and so----"
+
+Suddenly the scientist turned upon his visitor. "Do you talk in your
+sleep?" he demanded.
+
+"No," was the prompt reply. "I had thought of that too. It is beyond all
+ordinary things, Professor. Yet there is a leak that is costing me
+millions."
+
+"It comes down to this, Mr. Grayson," The Thinking Machine informed him
+crabbedly. "If only you and Miss Winthrop knew those plans, and no one
+else, and they did leak, and were not deduced from other things, then
+either you or she permitted them to leak, intentionally or
+unintentionally. That is as pure logic as two and two make four; there
+is no need to argue it."
+
+"Well, of course, I didn't," said Grayson.
+
+"Then Miss Winthrop did," declared The Thinking Machine finally,
+positively; "unless we credit the opposition, as you call it, with
+telepathic gifts hitherto unheard of. By the way, you have referred to
+the other side only as the opposition. Do the same men, the same clique,
+appear against you all the time, or is it only one man?"
+
+"It's a clique," explained the financier, "with millions back of it,
+headed by Ralph Matthews, a young man to whom I give credit for being
+the prime factor against me." His lips were set sternly.
+
+"Why?" demanded the scientist.
+
+"Because every time he sees me he grins," was the reply. Grayson seemed
+suddenly discomfited.
+
+The Thinking Machine went to a desk, addressed an envelope, folded a
+sheet of paper, placed it inside, then sealed it. At length he turned
+back to his visitor. "Is Miss Winthrop at your office now?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Let us go there, then."
+
+A few minutes later the eminent financier ushered the eminent scientist
+into his private office on the Street. The only person there was a young
+woman--a woman of twenty-six or-seven, perhaps--who turned, saw Grayson,
+and resumed reading. The financier motioned to a seat. Instead of
+sitting, however, The Thinking Machine went straight to Miss Winthrop
+and extended a sealed envelop to her.
+
+"Mr. Ralph Matthews asked me to hand you this," he said.
+
+The young woman glanced up into his face frankly, yet with a certain
+timidity, took the envelope, and turned it curiously in her hand.
+
+"Mr. Ralph Matthews," she repeated, as if the name was a strange one. "I
+don't think I know him."
+
+The Thinking Machine stood staring at her aggressively, as she opened
+the envelope and drew out the sheet of paper. There was no expression
+save surprise--bewilderment, rather--to be read on her face.
+
+"Why, it's a blank sheet!" she remarked, puzzled.
+
+The scientist turned suddenly toward Grayson, who had witnessed the
+incident with frank astonishment in his eyes. "Your telephone a moment,
+please," he requested.
+
+"Certainly; here," replied Grayson.
+
+"This will do," remarked the scientist.
+
+He leaned forward over the desk where Miss Winthrop sat, still gazing at
+him in a sort of bewilderment, picked up the receiver, and held it to
+his ear. A few moments later he was talking to Hutchinson Hatch,
+reporter.
+
+"I merely wanted to ask you to meet me at my apartment in an hour," said
+the scientist. "It is very important."
+
+That was all. He hung up the receiver, paused for a moment to admire an
+exquisitely wrought silver box--a "vanity" box--on Miss Winthrop's desk,
+beside the telephone, then took a seat beside Grayson and began to
+discourse almost pleasantly upon the prevailing meteorological
+conditions. Grayson merely stared; Miss Winthrop continued her reading.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, distinguished scientist, and
+Hutchinson Hatch, newspaper reporter, were poking round among the
+chimney pots and other obstructions on the roof of a skyscraper. Far
+below them the slumber-enshrouded city was spread out like a panorama,
+streets dotted brilliantly with lights, and roofs hazily visible through
+mists of night. Above, the infinite blackness hung like a veil, with
+starpoints breaking through here and there.
+
+"Here are the wires," Hatch said at last, and he stooped.
+
+The Thinking Machine knelt on the roof beside him, and for several
+minutes they remained thus in the darkness, with only the glow of a
+flashlight to indicate their presence. Finally, The Thinking Machine
+rose.
+
+"That's the wire you want, Mr. Hatch," he said. "I'll leave the rest of
+it to you."
+
+"Are you sure?" asked the reporter.
+
+"I am always sure," was the tart response.
+
+Hatch opened a small handsatchel and removed several queerly wrought
+tools. These he spread on the roof beside him; then, kneeling again,
+began his work. For half an hour he labored in the gloom, with only the
+flashlight to aid him, and then he rose.
+
+"It's all right," he said.
+
+The Thinking Machine examined the work that had been done, grunted his
+satisfaction, and together they went to the skylight, leaving a thin,
+insulated wire behind them, stringing along to mark their path. They
+passed down through the roof and into the darkness of the hall of the
+upper story. Here the light was extinguished. From far below came the
+faint echo of a man's footsteps as the watchman passed through the
+silent, deserted building.
+
+"Be careful!" warned The Thinking Machine.
+
+They went along the hall to a room in the rear, and still the wire
+trailed behind. At the last door they stopped. The Thinking Machine
+fumbled with some keys, then opened the way. Here an electric light was
+on. The room was bare of furniture, the only sign of recent occupancy
+being a telephone instrument on the wall.
+
+Here The Thinking Machine stopped and stared at the spool of wire which
+he had permitted to wind off as he walked, and his thin face expressed
+doubt.
+
+"It wouldn't be safe," he said at last, "to leave the wire exposed as we
+have left it. True, this floor is not occupied; but someone might pass
+this way and disturb it. You take the spool, go back to the roof,
+winding the wire as you go, then swing the spool down to me over the
+side of the building, so that I can bring it in through the window. That
+will be best. I will catch it here, and thus there will be nothing to
+indicate any connection." Hatch went out quietly and closed the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Twice the following day The Thinking Machine spoke to the financier over
+the telephone. Grayson was in his private office, Miss Winthrop at her
+desk, when the first call came.
+
+"Be careful in answering my questions," warned The Thinking Machine when
+Grayson answered. "Do you know how long Miss Winthrop has owned the
+little silver box which is now on her desk, near the telephone?"
+
+Grayson glanced round involuntarily to where the girl sat idly turning
+over the leaves of her book. "Yes," he answered, "for seven months. I
+gave it to her last Christmas."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the scientist. "That simplifies matters. Where did you
+buy it?"
+
+Grayson mentioned the name of a well-known jeweler.
+
+Considerably later in the day The Thinking Machine called Grayson to the
+telephone again.
+
+"What make of typewriter does she use?" came the querulous voice over
+the wire.
+
+Grayson named it.
+
+While Grayson sat with deeply perplexed lines in his face, the
+diminutive scientist called upon Hutchinson Hatch at his office.
+
+"Do you use a typewriter?" demanded The Thinking Machine.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What kind?"
+
+"Oh, four or five kinds--we have half a dozen different makes in the
+office."
+
+They passed along through the city room, at that moment practically
+deserted, until finally the watery blue eyes settled upon a typewriter
+with the name emblazoned on the front.
+
+"That's it!" exclaimed The Thinking Machine. "Write something on it," he
+directed Hatch.
+
+Hatch drew up a chair and rolled off several lines of the immortal
+practice sentence, beginning, "Now is the time for all good men--"
+
+The Thinking Machine sat beside him, squinting across the room in deep
+abstraction, and listening intently. His head was turned away from the
+reporter, but his ear was within a few inches of the machine. For half a
+minute he sat there listening, then shook his head.
+
+"Strike your vowels," he commanded; "first slowly, then rapidly."
+
+Again Hatch obeyed, while the scientist listened. And again he shook his
+head. Then in turn every make of machine in the office was tested the
+same way. At the end The Thinking Machine rose and went his way. There
+was an expression nearly approaching complete bewilderment on his face.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For hour after hour that night The Thinking Machine half lay in a huge
+chair in his laboratory, with eyes turned uncompromisingly upward, and
+an expression of complete concentration on his face. There was no change
+either in his position or his gaze as minute succeeded minute; the brow
+was deeply wrinkled now, and the thin line of the lips was drawn taut.
+The tiny clock in the reception room struck ten, eleven, twelve, and
+finally one. At just half-past one The Thinking Machine rose suddenly.
+
+"Positively I am getting stupid!" he grumbled half aloud. "Of course! Of
+course! Why couldn't I have thought of that in the first place?..."
+
+So it came about that Grayson did not go to his office on the following
+morning at the usual time. Instead, he called again upon The Thinking
+Machine in eager, expectant response to a note which had reached him at
+his home just before he started to his office.
+
+"Nothing yet," said The Thinking Machine as the financier entered. "But
+here is something you must do today. At one o'clock," the scientist went
+on, "you must issue orders for a gigantic deal of some sort; and you
+must issue them precisely as you have issued them in the past; there
+must be no variation. Dictate the letters as you have always done to
+Miss Winthrop--_but don't send them_! When they come to you, keep them
+until you see me."
+
+"You mean that the deal must be purely imaginative?" inquired the
+financier.
+
+"Precisely," was the reply. "But make your instructions circumstantial;
+give them enough detail to make them absolutely logical and convincing."
+
+Grayson asked a dozen questions, answers to which were curtly denied,
+then went to his office. The Thinking Machine again called Hatch on the
+telephone.
+
+"I've got it," he announced briefly. "I want the best telegraph operator
+you know. Bring him along and meet me in the room on the top floor where
+the telephone is at precisely fifteen minutes before one o'clock
+today."
+
+"Telegraph operator?" Hatch repeated.
+
+"That's what I said--telegraph operator!" replied the scientist
+irritably. "Goodbye."
+
+Hatch smiled whimsically at the other end as he heard the receiver
+banged on the hook--smiled because he knew the eccentric ways of this
+singular man, whose mind so accurately illuminated every problem to
+which it was directed. Then he went out to the telegraph room and
+borrowed the principal operator. They were in the little room on the top
+floor at precisely fifteen minutes of one.
+
+The operator glanced about in astonishment. The room was still
+unfurnished, save for the telephone box on the wall.
+
+"What do I do?" he asked The Thinking Machine.
+
+"I'll tell you when the time comes," responded the scientist, as he
+glanced at his watch.
+
+At three minutes of one o'clock he handed a sheet of blank paper to the
+operator, and gave him final instructions.
+
+There was ludicrous mystification on the operator's face; but he obeyed
+orders, grinning cheerfully at Hatch as he tilted his cigar up to keep
+the smoke out of his eyes. The Thinking Machine stood impatiently
+looking on, watch in hand. Hatch didn't know what was happening, but he
+was interested.
+
+At last the operator heard something. His face became suddenly alert. He
+continued to listen for a moment, and then came a smile of recognition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Less than ten minutes after Miss Winthrop had handed over the
+typewritten letters of instruction to Grayson for signature, and while
+he still sat turning them over in his hands, the door opened and The
+Thinking Machine entered. He tossed a folded sheet of paper on the desk
+before Grayson, and went straight to Miss Winthrop.
+
+"So you did know Mr. Ralph Matthews after all?" he inquired.
+
+The girl rose from her desk, and a flash of some subtle emotion passed
+over her face. "What do you mean, sir?" she demanded.
+
+"You might as well remove the silver box," The Thinking Machine went on
+mercilessly. "There is no further need of the connection."
+
+Miss Winthrop glanced down at the telephone extension on her desk, and
+her hand darted toward it. The silver "vanity" box was directly under
+the receiver, supporting it, so that all weight was removed from the
+hook, and the line was open. She snatched the box and the receiver
+dropped back on the hook. The Thinking Machine turned to Grayson.
+
+"It was Miss Winthrop," he said.
+
+"Miss Winthrop!" exclaimed Grayson, "I can't believe it!"
+
+"Read the paper I gave you, Mr. Grayson," directed The Thinking Machine
+coldly. "Perhaps that will enlighten her."
+
+The financier opened the sheet, which had remained folded in his hand,
+and glanced at what was written there. Slowly he read it aloud:
+"PEABODY--Sell ten thousand shares L. & W. at 97. MCCRACKEN Co.--Sell
+ten thousand shares L. & W. at 97." He read on down the list,
+bewildered. Then gradually, as he realized the import of what he read,
+there came a hardening of the lines about his mouth.
+
+"I understand, Miss Winthrop," he said at last. "This is the substance
+of the orders I dictated, and in some way you made them known to persons
+for whom they were not intended. I don't know how you did it, of course;
+but I understand that you did do it, so----" He stepped to the door and
+opened it with grave courtesy. "You may go now."
+
+Miss Winthrop made no plea--merely bowed and went out. Grayson stood
+staring after her for a moment, then turned to The Thinking Machine and
+motioned him to a chair. "What happened?" he asked briskly.
+
+"Miss Winthrop is a tremendously clever woman," replied The Thinking
+Machine. "She neglected to tell you, however, that besides being a
+stenographer and typist she is also a telegraph operator. She is so
+expert in each of her lines that she combined the two, if I may say it
+that way. In other words, in writing on the typewriter, she was clever
+enough to be able to _give the click of the machine the patterns in the
+Morse telegraphic code_--so that another telegraph operator at the other
+end of the 'phone could hear her machine and translate the clicks into
+words."
+
+Grayson sat staring at him incredulously. "I still don't understand," he
+said finally.
+
+The Thinking Machine rose and went to Miss Winthrop's desk. "Here is an
+extension telephone with the receiver on the hook. It happens that the
+little silver box which you gave Miss Winthrop is just tall enough to
+lift this receiver clear of the hook, and the minute the receiver is off
+the hook the line is open. When you were at your desk and she was here,
+you couldn't see this telephone; therefore it was a simple matter for
+her to lift the receiver, and place the silver box underneath, thus
+holding the line open permanently. That being true, the sound of the
+typewriter--_the striking of the keys_--would go over the open wire to
+whoever was listening at the other end. Then, if the striking of the
+keys typed out your letters and, by their frequency and pauses,
+simultaneously tapped out telegraphic code, an outside operator could
+read your letters at the same moment they were being written. That is
+all. It required extreme concentration on Miss Winthrop's part to type
+accurately in Morse rhythms."
+
+"Oh, I see!" exclaimed Grayson.
+
+"When I knew that the leak in your office was not in the usual way,"
+continued The Thinking Machine, "I looked for the unusual. There is
+nothing very mysterious about it now--it was merely clever."
+
+"Clever!" repeated Grayson, and his jaws snapped. "It is more than that.
+Why, it's criminal! She should be prosecuted."
+
+"I shouldn't advise that, Mr. Grayson," returned the scientist coldly.
+"If it is honest--merely business--to juggle stocks as you told me you
+did, this is no more dishonest. And besides, remember that Miss Winthrop
+is backed by the people who have made millions out of you, and--well, I
+wouldn't prosecute. It is betrayal of trust, certainly; but--" He rose
+as if that were all, and started toward the door. "I would advise you,
+however, to discharge the person who operates your switchboard."
+
+"Was she in the scheme, too?" demanded Grayson. He rushed out of the
+private office into the main office. At the door he met a clerk coming
+in.
+
+"Where is Miss Mitchell?" demanded the financier hotly.
+
+"I was just coming to tell you that she went out with Miss Winthrop just
+now without giving any explanation," replied the clerk.
+
+"Good day, Mr. Grayson," said The Thinking Machine.
+
+The financier nodded his thanks, then stalked back into his room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the course of time The Thinking Machine received a check for ten
+thousand dollars, signed, "J. Morgan Grayson." He glared at it for a
+little while, then indorsed it in a crabbed hand, _Pay to the Trustees'
+Home for Crippled Children_, and sent Martha, his housekeeper, out to
+mail it.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Leak, by Jacques Futrelle
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