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Thereupon d.i.c.k and his chums had to tell the story. There was no way out of it. Officer Connors heard a little of it, then decided:
"The station house is the place to tell the rest of this. Come along, Tip. And you youngsters trail along behind."
Though the station house was not far away, a good-sized crowd was trailing along by the time they reached the business stand of the police. Tip was hustled in through the doorway, the three young freshmen following. Leaning over the railing, smoking and chatting with the sergeant at the desk, was plain clothes man Hemingway.
"Hullo," muttered that latter officer, "what's this?"
"A slice out of one of your cases, I guess, Hemingway, from what I've heard," laughed Connors. "According to these boys, Tip is the fellow who knows the inside game of the High School thefts."
"Let's have Scammon in the back room, then," urged Hemingway, leading the way to the guard room. The sergeant, also, followed, after summoning a reserve policeman to the desk.
Then followed a sharp grilling by the keen, astute Hemingway.
d.i.c.k and his chums told what they had heard Tip say before they pounced upon him. Tip, who was a round-headed, short, square-shouldered fellow of twenty-four, possessed more of the cunning of the prize ring than the cleverness of the keen thief.
"I've been caught with the packages on me," he admitted, bluntly, and with some show of bravado. "I guess I can't get outer delivering 'em."
"Then you stole that pin and the gold watch from the locker at the High School?" demanded Hemingway, swiftly.
"Yep."
"How did you get into the locker room?" shot out Hemingway.
"Guess!" leered Tip, exhibiting some cheap bravado.
"Maybe I can find the answer in your clothes," retorted the plain clothes man. "Stand still."
The search resulted in the finding of about ten dollars, a knife, and three queer-looking implements that Hemingway instantly declared to be pick-locks.
"You used these tools, and slipped the lock, did you?" asked Hemingway.
"Didn't have to," grinned Tip.
"Took an impression of the lock, then, and made a key, did you?"
"Right-o," drawled Tip.
"I'll look into your lodgings," muttered Hemingway. "Probably I'll find you've got a good outfit for that kind of work. I remember you used to work for a locksmith."
Tip, however, was not scared. He knew that there was nothing at his lodgings to betray him.
"Then you used these picklocks to open Prescott's locked trunk with?"
was Hemingway's next question.
"'Fraid I did," leered Tip.
"What time of the day did you get into the Prescott flat?"
"'Bout ten o'clock, morning of the same day ye went through Prescott's trunk an' found the goods there."
"The same goods that you placed in the trunk, Tip, after breaking into the Prescott flat while Mr. and Mrs. Prescott were down in their store and young Prescott was at the High School?"
"That's right," Tip grinned.
"You picked the lock of young Prescott's trunk, stowed the watch and pin away in there, and then sprung the lock again?"
"Why, say, ye muster seen me," declared Scammon, admiringly.
"The week before that day you must have been at the High School, helping your father, especially in the bas.e.m.e.nt during session hours."
"I sure was," Tip admitted. "I had ter, didn't I, to have a chance ter get inter the locker room?"
"What did you say the name of the fellow was who hired you to do the trick?" swiftly demanded Hemingway, changing the tack.
"I b'lieve I _didn't_ say," responded Tip, giving a wink that included all present.
"Tell me now, then."
"Not if ye was to hang me for refusing," declared Scammon, with sudden obstinacy.
"Yet you've told us everything else," argued the plain clothes man.
"Might jest as well tell ye everything else," retorted Tip. "Didn't these High School kids find the packages on me?"
"Then tell us who the chap was that you were talking with tonight."
"Not fer anything ye could give me," a.s.serted Tip Scammon, with great promptness.
"Oh, well, then," returned Hemingway, with affected carelessness, "Prescott can tell us the name of the chap he grappled with in that back yard."
"Yep! Let young Prescott tell," agreed Tip with great cheerfulness.
That was as far as the police could get with the prisoner. He readily admitted all that was known, and he had even gone so far as to tell how he had stolen the watch and the pin, and how he had secreted them in d.i.c.k's trunk, but beyond that the fellow would not go further.
"Did you have anything to do with placing Ripley's pin in Prescott's pocket?" questioned Hemingway.
"Nope," declared Tip, in all apparent candor.
"Know anything about that?"
"Nope."
"Then how did you know that that particular morning was the right morning to hide the other two stolen articles in Prescott's trunk?"
"I heard, on the street, what was happenin'," declared Tip, confidently. "So I knew 'twas the right time ter do the rest of the trick."
At last Hemingway gave up the attempt to learn the name of the party with whom Tip had been talking in Stetson's Alley on this night. Then Tip was led away to a cell.
"Come on, fellows," muttered d.i.c.k to his chums. "Since Tip is under arrest, anyway, and has confessed, and since the whole thing is bound to become public, I want to run down to 'The Blade' office, find Len Spencer, and send him up here to get the whole, straight story. _With this yarn printed I can go back to school in the morning_!"