The Thousandth Woman - E. W. Hornung

The Thousandth Woman

THE THOUSANDTH WOMAN
Author of THE AMATEUR CRACKSMAN, RAFFLES, ETC.
ILLUSTRATED BY
FRANK SNAPP
INDIANAPOLIS THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY PUBLISHERS
Copyright 1913 The Bobbs-Merrill Company
PRESS OF BRAUNWORTH & CO. BOOKBINDERS AND PRINTERS BROOKLYN, N. Y.
I wonder who can have done it.

THE THOUSANDTH WOMAN
Cazalet sat up so suddenly that his head hit the woodwork over the upper berth. His own voice still rang in his startled ears. He wondered how much he had said, and how far it could have carried above the throb of the liner's screws and the mighty pounding of the water against her plates. Then his assembling senses coupled the light in the cabin with his own clear recollection of having switched it off before turning over. And then he remembered how he had been left behind at Naples, and rejoined the Kaiser Fritz at Genoa, only to find that he no longer had a cabin to himself.
A sniff assured Cazalet that he was neither alone at the moment nor yet the only one awake; he pulled back the swaying curtain, which he had taken to keeping drawn at night; and there on the settee, with the thinnest of cigarettes between his muscular fingers, sat a man with a strong blue chin and the quizzical solemnity of an animated sphinx.

E. W. Hornung
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2011-08-13

Темы

Detective and mystery stories; Murder -- Fiction

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