<h2 id="XII">CHAPTER XII. <br/> <small>NICK SPRINGS A SURPRISE.</small></h2>
<p>During all this excitement, Patsy was trying to find
out where Chick was.</p>
<p>Patsy had found Nick and Lieutenant Brockton, in
charge of the squad that was to take part in the raid,
sitting in the captain’s room, smoking and wondering
how long it would be before Chick would give them
the signal.</p>
<p>They had expected it by telephone—that having
been the orders to Chick—and the lieutenant hardly
ever took his eyes off the instrument on the desk
before him.</p>
<p>When Patsy came bounding in, after a brief explanation
to the sergeant behind the desk, Nick was glad
his young assistant had taken this course. It enabled
Nick, as well as the lieutenant, to get a better idea of
the situation than if they had had it over a wire. Besides,
this way made it certain there could not be any
“leak.”</p>
<p>Lieutenant Brockton did not quite like putting himself
and the policemen told off to him under the orders
of Nick Carter. But the detective would not consent
to any other arrangement, and the lieutenant was
obliged to comply. He could not afford to antagonize
Carter, who seemed to have a knowledge of everything
in the underworld, although he never boasted of it.</p>
<p>As they hurried to the house on foot—for Nick
would not allow the use of a patrol wagon, which
would have attracted general attention—Patsy gave the
detective a very good idea of the general plan of the
house.</p>
<p>“It’s just a few little things that ought to make it
easier to put one over on the gang,” he explained.
“You can’t know too much about a house when you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
are going to get in suddenlike,” he added, with his
usual good-humored grin.</p>
<p>“You’re quite right, Patsy,” agreed Nick. “And, as
you say, the point we have to look out for particularly
is at the back. They might go scooting over the back
fence and get away by the other street.”</p>
<p>Lieutenant Brockton stationed a couple of his
youngest and most agile men in the back yard. They
were down the alley at the side, and climbed over the
side fence.</p>
<p>A third man was placed in the alley, to remain there,
and two more went into the front yard, below the level
of the street. It was one of these two who afterward
distinguished himself by capturing Chick.</p>
<p>The remaining three men, with the lieutenant and
Nick Carter, went into the house, going in by the
front yard door, which Chick had carefully left unfastened,
as has been described.</p>
<p>Carter was in the lead. He pushed open the door
in the yard without difficulty, and swiftly mounted
to the floor above, where the artists in rascality were
at work.</p>
<p>They found the room at once. It was the only one
which showed a light under the door. Listening intently,
they made out voices and the click of tools
inside.</p>
<p>“Now,” whispered Nick to the men behind him.
“Follow close when I open the door. Don’t give them
time to rally from their first surprise! Get all that?”</p>
<p>“We have it,” grunted the lieutenant. “Drive on,
Carter!”</p>
<p>The detective turned the handle without any sound,
and flung the door wide open.</p>
<p>“Drop everything!” he commanded, in sharp, metallic
tones.</p>
<p>He had stepped into the room as coolly as if he lived
there. The lieutenant and his men were on his heels,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
and they were prepared to subdue any of the operators
who might show signs of resistance.</p>
<p>For a moment there was nothing of the kind. The
surprise was complete. The advent of the detective
and his men had been like a thunderbolt dropped into
this hive of misdirected industry.</p>
<p>The two men still at work on the polished plates at
the bench leaped up as if their chairs had suddenly
become red-hot. The fellow who had been examining
and passing upon the spurious bills sprang into the
middle of the room. With the movement, he scattered
thousands of dollars’ worth of phony money, like
leaves in a wintry gale. At the same time he grunted
a fierce but futile oath.</p>
<p>“Don’t make any fuss, gentlemen!” begged Nick
blandly. “You are all prisoners! Lieutenant, you and
your men attend to these parties. I have something
else to look after.”</p>
<p>“All right, Carter.” Then, to the prisoners, the lieutenant
went on: “The house is covered, back and
front. Don’t try to make a get-away. If you do, some
of you will get hurt, as sure as you’re here!”</p>
<p>“Here! Quit that!” shouted Nick. “Look out,
lieutenant!”</p>
<p>The detective had seen one of the raided counterfeiters
reaching for an iron bar under the bench, and
he gave instant warning. None of the others had noticed
the movement, but the detective had sharp eyes
and sharp wits. He was not to be fooled by any such
attempt as this.</p>
<p>Without waiting for the lieutenant or his men to
take action, Nick sprang upon the rascal even as he
shouted. By the time Brockton and his men had
hurled themselves into the fracas, Nick had taken
away the bar of iron, and the man who had wielded it
was lying on his back.</p>
<p>But Nick did not give much time to this little incident.
He disposed of it as a matter of course, and,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
having seen that the man was in the hands of two
of the policemen, he turned to the rocker in which the
elegant T. Burton Potter still slumbered as sweetly as
if he had been in a comfortable bed in a silent room.
He seemed to have heard nothing of the noise of the
raid.</p>
<p>“This will end a puzzling case,” muttered the detective,
as he pushed his way through the struggling
men—for all of the bench workers were at grips with
the police by this time. “Who would have expected
this? If I can only get to him before he wakes, why
I can——”</p>
<p>But Nick was not to have so much luck. The man
who called himself T. Burton Potter was a very wide-awake
young man, indeed, when once he <em>was</em> awake.
At a glance he saw what had occurred. He knew there
was a police raid, and he did not want to stay and
see how it would come out. He preferred to find his
way out himself.</p>
<p>“Deuce take him!” muttered Nick. “He always
was as quick as a cat! If he’d only stand still for a
second, he’d save me a great deal of trouble—and himself,
too.”</p>
<p>But T. Burton Potter did not see it that way. Leaping
from his chair, he swung it around, so that it
would be right in the detective’s way, and pushed in
between the bench and press.</p>
<p>Nick was not foiled by the chair, however. Agile as
a panther, he placed one hand lightly on the back of
the chair, and vaulted completely over it, at the same
moment stretching forth a hand to seize Potter.</p>
<p>But Potter had vaulted over the table and was
through the doorway before the detective could get
him, notwithstanding that he leaped over the table
just the splinter of a second behind the man he wanted
to capture.</p>
<p>But the rascal’s luck was with him. He reached the
top of a long flight of stairs to the basement, and went<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
down them in a huddled heap, part of the time on his
feet, and the rest of it rolling down like a ball.</p>
<p>Again Carter was so close to him that he almost had
him, when a big man, with a knife in his hand, rushed
up from the bottom, and came right between them.</p>
<p>It was the man Chick had seen trimming off the
plaster molds in the old kitchen, while the metal boiled
on the stove that had so nearly been the death of Carter’s
principal assistant.</p>
<p>“Look out, Davis! The cops!” bellowed T. Burton
Potter. “It’s a raid! Hand him one! Croak him!”</p>
<p>The big man, whose name, it seemed, was Davis,
made a lunge at Nick with his long, dirty knife.</p>
<p>The detective was too quick for him, however.
Dodging the knife stroke, he feinted with his right
fist, and then sent his left straight into Davis’ face, between
the eyes.</p>
<p>The blow was a magnificent one from a boxer’s
point of view. Not only did it send Davis down the
few stairs up which he had come, but it drove him six
or eight feet along the hall.</p>
<p>It was not altogether satisfactory to Nick, however.
He had to dispose of the big man, of course. But, in
the meantime, T. Burton Potter was getting away.</p>
<p>Flying up the stairs, three at a time, the elegant-appearing
crook ran into the first room he came to,
which looked over the back yard.</p>
<p>Skipping to the window, he unlatched the sash and
threw it wide open. He intended to drop out to the
back yard. But just as he was ready to do so, he
saw two officers waiting to receive him, and he ran
back into the room.</p>
<p>“Euchred that way!” he muttered. “But I don’t
know. There are others. They haven’t landed me
yet.”</p>
<p>By this time Nick was at the doorway. He was just
in time to see Potter’s head and shoulders in outline<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
against the dim light of the window, and made a
spring to make him prisoner.</p>
<p>There was a derisive chuckle, and Potter slithered
around the dark walls of the room. The next moment,
as Nick advanced to the center of the chamber,
Potter had slipped out of the door.</p>
<p>“Confound the fellow! I almost had him!” exclaimed
Nick, in a low tone, and half inclined to laugh
at the slipperiness of the fellow. “He’s gone! Well,
I’ll have to begin all over again. If he knew what I
wanted him for, perhaps it would be different. But
I can’t tell him till I’ve had a chance to talk to him
and make a few notes for comparison.”</p>
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