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Автор: Burton Egbert Stevenson
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4057664627933
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       Burton Egbert Stevenson

      The Holladay Case: A Tale

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664627933

       THE HOLLADAY CASE

       CHAPTER I

       A Bolt from the Blue

       CHAPTER II

       In the Grip of Circumstance

       CHAPTER III

       The Coil Tightens

       CHAPTER IV

       I Have an Inspiration

       CHAPTER V

       I Dine with a Fascinating Stranger

       CHAPTER VI

       Godfrey's Panegyric

       CHAPTER VII

       Miss Holladay Becomes Capricious

       CHAPTER VIII

       The Mysterious Maid

       CHAPTER IX

       I Meet Monsieur Martigny

       CHAPTER X

       An Astonishing Disappearance

       CHAPTER XI

       I Unmask My Enemy

       CHAPTER XII

       At the Café Jourdain

       CHAPTER XIII

       En Voyage

       CHAPTER XIV

       I Prove a Bad Sentinel

       CHAPTER XV

       Two Heads are Better than One

       CHAPTER XVI

       I Beard the Lion

       CHAPTER XVII

       Etretat

       CHAPTER XVIII

       The Veil is Lifted

       CHAPTER XIX

       The End of the Story

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The atmosphere of the office that morning was a shade less genial than usual. We had all of us fought our way downtown through such a storm of wind, snow, slush, and sleet as is to be found nowhere save in mid-March New York, and our tempers had suffered accordingly. I had found a cab unobtainable, and there was, of course, the inevitable jam on the Elevated, with the trains many minutes behind the schedule. I was some half-hour late, in consequence, and when I entered the inner office, I was surprised to find Mr. Graham, our senior, already at his desk. He nodded good-morning a little curtly.

      "I wish you'd look over these papers in the Hurd case, Lester," he said, and pushed them toward me.

      I took them and sat down; and just then the outer door slammed with a violence extremely unusual.

      I had never seen Mr. Royce, our junior, so deeply shaken, so visibly distracted, as he was when he burst in upon us a moment later, a newspaper in his hand. Mr. Graham, startled by the noise of his entrance, wheeled around from his desk and stared at him in astonishment.

      "Why, upon my word, John," he began, "you look all done up. What's the matter?"

      "Matter enough, sir!" and Mr. Royce spread out the paper on the desk before him. "You haven't seen the morning papers, of course; well, look at that!" and he indicated with a trembling finger the article which occupied the first column of the first page—the place of honor.

      I saw our senior's face change as he