The New Tenant
Thurwell Court, by Thurwell-on-the-Sea, lay bathed in the quiet freshness of an early morning. The dewdrops were still sparkling upon the terraced lawns like little globules of flashing silver, and the tumult of noisy songsters from the thick shrubberies alone broke the sweet silence. The peacocks strutting about the grey stone balcony and perched upon the worn balustrade were in deshabille, not being accustomed to display their splendors to an empty paradise, and the few fat blackbirds who were hopping about on the lawn did so in a desultory manner, as though they were only half awake and had turned out under protest. Stillness reigned everywhere, but it was the sweet hush of slowly awakening day rather than the drowsy, languorous quiet of exhausted afternoon. With one's eyes shut one could tell that the pulse of day was only just beginning to beat. The pure atmosphere was buoyant with the vigorous promise of morning, and gently laden with the mingled perfumes of slowly opening flowers. There was life in the breathless air.
The sunlight was everywhere. In the distance it lay upon the dark hillside, played upon the deep yellow gorse and purple heather of the moorland, and, further away still, flashed upon a long silver streak of the German Ocean. In the old-fashioned gardens of the court it shone upon luscious peaches hanging on the time-mellowed red-brick walls; lit up the face and gleamed upon the hands of the stable clock, and warmed the ancient heart of the stooping, grey-haired old gardener's help who, with blinking eyes and hands tucked in his trousers pockets, was smoking a matutinal pipe, seated on the wheelbarrow outside the tool shed.
Around the mansion itself it was very busy, casting a thousand sunbeams upon its long line of oriel windows, and many quaint shadows of its begabled roof upon the lawns and bright flower-beds below. On one of the terraces a breakfast-table was laid for two, and here its splendour was absolutely dazzling. It gleamed upon the sparkling silver, and the snow-white tablecloth; shone with a delicate softness upon the freshly-gathered fruit and brilliant flowers, and seemed to hover with a gentle burnished light upon the ruddy golden hair of a girl who sat there waiting, with her arm resting lightly upon the stone balustrade, and her eyes straying over the quaint well-kept gardens to the open moorland and dark patches of wooded country beyond.
E. Phillips Oppenheim
THE NEW TENANT
AUTHOR OF "THE YELLOW HOUSE," "TO WIN THE LOVE HE SOUGHT," "A DAUGHTER OF ASTREA," ETC.
CONTENTS
THE NEW TENANT
FALCON'S NEST
THE MURDER NEAR THE FALCON'S NEST
MR. BERNARD BROWN
AN EVIL END TO AN EVIL LIFE
THE INNER ROOM AT THE FALCON'S NEST
A TERRIBLE ENEMY
HELEN THURWELL'S SUSPICIONS
DID YOU KILL SIR GEOFFREY KYNASTON?
MR. BROWN DINES AT THE COURT
THE TRAGEDY OF RACHEL KYNASTON.
A JEWEL OF A SON
A STRANGE MEETING
HELEN THURWELL ASKS A DIRECT QUESTION
A LITERARY CELEBRITY
A SNUB FOR A BARONET
BERNARD MADDISON AND HELEN THURWELL
A CHEQUE FOR £1,000
AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY FOR BERNARD BROWN
GOD! THAT I MAY DIE!
SIR ALLAN BEAUMERVILLE HAS A CALLER
"GOD FORBID IT!"
LOVERS
A WOMAN'S LOVE
MR. LEVY, JUNIOR, GOES ON THE CONTINENT
HELEN DECIDES TO GO HOME
MR. THURWELL MAKES SOME INQUIRIES
SIR ALLAN BEAUMERVILLE VISITS THE COURT
THE SCENE CHANGES
BENJAMIN LEVY RUNS HIS QUARRY TO EARTH
BENJAMIN LEVY WRITES HOME
A STRANGE TRIO OF PASSENGERS
VISITORS FOR MR. BERNARD MADDISON
ARRESTED
COMMITTED FOR TRIAL
MR. LEVY PROMISES TO DO HIS BEST
BERNARD A PRISONER
"THERE IS MY HAND. DARE YOU TAKE IT?"
MR. BENJAMIN LEVY IS BUSY
A STRANGE BIRTHDAY PARTY
INNOCENT
AT LAST