“Matches is d' dip I chins youse about, who gets d' Hummin' Boid t'run into him.”
“Matches,” as Chucky called him, was a sad, grey, broken man. Years and a life of flight and anxious furtivity had told on him. His eye was dancing and birdlike; resting on nothing, roving always; the sure mark of one sort of criminal. Matches drank for an hour before he felt at ease. That time arrived, however, and I took advantage of it to feed my curiosity. It was no easy matter, but at last I won him by a deft blending of flattery and drink to talk of his crimes. And indeed I fear—for I suppose the expert thief does plume himself a bit on his art—that Matches took some sort of wretched pride in his illicit pocket searchings.
“D' biggest touch I ever makes,” said Matches, in response to a query, “was $36,000; quite a bunch of dough. Gettin' it was easy; gettin' away wit' it was d' squeak.
“We toins d' trick on d' train from Albany. D' tip comes straight to me in New York that a bloke is goin' to draw $36,000 from d' Albany bank on such a day. I makes up a mob; t'ree stalls an' meself;—all pretty fly we was—an' lands in Albany.
“We gets onto d' party who's to be woiked early in d' mornin', an' shadows him so dost he's never out of reach. Our play is to follow him to d' bank an' do him wit 'd' drop game. If that misses, we're to stay wit' him till d' bundle's ours be one racket or another.
“This sucker is pretty soon himself, see! He ain't such a mut as we figgers. His train starts at 1 o'clock, an' he takes in d' bank on his way to d' station.
“Of course we was wit' him; but he's dead leary an' never t'rows himself open to be woiked. D' stuff is in t'ousand-dollar willyums, an' as he just sinks it in his keck d' minute his hooks is onto it, an' never stops to count or run his lamps over it, we don't get no chanct to do d' drop. D' instant d' money's in his mits he plants it—all stretched out long in a big leather, it is—in his inside pocket, an' screws his nut for d' door. D' hack slams an' he's on his way to d' train.
“Yes; we starts for d' station be another street. D' bloke ain't onto us yet, an' we tries not to plant a scare into him. He's leary enough as it is; just havin' such a roll wit' him rattles him.
“So I makes up me mind to do d' job on d' train runnin' into New York. As he sinks d' stuff away, I notes how d' ends of d' bills sticks out over d' pocket-book. Me idee is to weed it—get d' dough an' leave d' leather in his pocket—if I can make d' play. Weedin' was d' way to do; you gets d' long green an 'd' sucker still has d' leather to feel of, an' it's some time before he tumbles he's been touched, see!
“D' guy wit 'd' stuff plants himself in a seat. Two of me stalls sits ahead of him, me an' me other pal is behint him. We only waits now for him to get up an' come along d' aisle of d' car to get in our hooks.