I'm in with a gang of thieves, and
that I'm only pretending to want to buy a diamond pin?"
"Oh, I guess I haven't known you, Tom Swift, ever since you were big
enough to toddle, not to be sure about what you're up to. But I certainly
didn't like the looks of that man. However, let's forget about him. He
seems to have gone down the street, and, after all, perhaps I was
mistaken. Just wait until I show you a few more styles before you
decide. The young lady may like one of these," and the jeweler went to
another showcase and took out some more trays of brooches.
"What makes you think she's a young lady, Mr. Track?" asked the lad.
"Oh, it's easy guessing, Tom. We jewelers are good readers of character.
I can size up a young fellow coming in here to buy an engagement or a
wedding ring, as soon as he enters the door. I suppose you'll soon be in
the market for one of those, Tom, if all the reports I hear about you are
true--you and a certain Mary Nestor."
"I--er--I think I don't care for any of these pins," spoke Tom, quickly,
with a blush. "I like the first lot best. I think I'll take the one I had in my
hand when that man alarmed you. Ha! That's odd! What did I do with
it?"
Tom looked about on the showcase, and glanced down on the floor. He
had mislaid the brooch, but the jeweler, with a laugh, lifted it out of a
tray a moment later.
"I saw you lay it down," he said. "We jewelers have to be on the watch.
Here it is. I'll just put it in a box, and--"
With an exclamation, Mr. Track gave a hasty glance toward his big
show window. Tom looked up, and saw a man's face peering in. At the
sight of it, he, too, uttered a cry of surprise.
The next instant the man outside knocked on the glass, apparently with
a piece of metal, making a sharp sound. As soon as he heard it, the
jeweler once more sprang from behind the showcase, and leaped for the
door crying:
"There's the thief! He's trying to cut a hole through my show window
and reach in and get something! It's an old trick. I'll get the police! Tom,
you stay here on guard!" and before the lad could utter a protest, the
jeweler had opened the door, and was speeding down the street in the
gathering darkness.
Tom stared about him in some bewilderment. He was left alone in
charge of a very valuable stock of jewelry, the owner of which was
racing after a supposed thief, crying:
"Police! Help! Thieves! Stop him, somebody!"
"This is a queer go," mused Tom. "I wonder who that man was? He
looked like somebody I know, and yet I can't seem to place his face. I
wonder if he was trying to rob the placer Maybe there's another one--a
confederate--around here."
This thought rather alarmed Tom, so he went to the door, and looked
up and down the street. He could see no suspicious characters, but in
the direction in which the jeweler was running there was a little throng
of people, following Mr. Track after the man who had knocked on the
window.
"I wish I was there, instead of here," mused the lad. "Still I can't leave,
or a thief might come in. Perhaps that was the game, and one of the
gang is hanging around, hoping the store will be deserted, so he can
enter and take what he likes."
Tom had read of such cases, and he at once resolved that he would not
only remain in the jewelry shop, but that he would lock the door, which
he at once proceeded to do. Then he breathed easier.
The town of Shopton, in the outskirts of which Tom lived with his
father, and where the scene above narrated took place, was none too
well lighted at night, and the lad had his doubts about the jeweler
catching the oddly-acting man, especially as the latter had a good start.
"But some one may head him off," reasoned Tom. "Though if they do
catch him, I don't see what they can prove against him. Hello, here I am
carrying this diamond pin around. I might lose it. Guess I'll put it back
on the tray."
He replaced in the proper receptacle one of the pins he bad been
examining when the excitement occurred.
"I wonder if Mary will like that?" he said, softly. "I hope she does.
Perhaps it would be better if she could come here herself and pick out
one--"
Tom's musing was suddenly interrupted by a sharp tattoo
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