A Mysterious Disappearance
NEW YORK EDWARD J. CLODE 156 FIFTH AVENUE 1905
Copyright, 1905, by Edward J. Clode
The Plimpton Press Norwood Mass.
Alice, Lady Dyke, puckered her handsome forehead into a thoughtful frown as she drew aside the window-curtains of her boudoir and tried to look out into the opaque blackness of a November fog in London.
Behind her was cheerfulness—in front uncertainty. Electric lights, a nice fire reflected from gleaming brass, the luxury of carpets and upholstery, formed an alluring contrast to the dull yellow glare of a solitary lamp in the outer obscurity.
But Lady Dyke was a strong-minded woman. There was no trace of doubt in the wrinkled brows and reflective eyes. She held back the curtains with her left hand, buttoning a glove at the wrist with the other. Fog or no fog, she would venture forth, and she was already dressed for the weather in tailor-made costume and winter toque.
She was annoyed, but not disconcerted by the fog. Too long had she allowed herself to take things easily. The future was as murky as the atmosphere; the past was dramatically typified by the pleasant surroundings on which she resolutely turned her back. Lady Dyke was quite determined as to her actions, and a dull November night was a most unlikely agent to restrain her from following the course she had mapped out.
Moving to the light again, she took from her pocket a long, closely written letter. Its details were familiar to her, but her face hardened as she hastily ran through it in order to find a particular passage.
At last she gained her object—to make quite sure of an address. Then she replaced the document, stood undecided for a moment, and touched an electric bell.
“James,” she said, to the answering footman, “I am going out.”
“Yes, milady.”
Louis Tracy
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GORDON HOLMES
CONTENTS
“LAST SEEN AT VICTORIA!”
INSPECTOR WHITE
THE LADY’S MAID
NO. 61 RALEIGH MANSIONS
AT THE JOLLITY THEATRE
MISS MARIE LE MARCHANT
IN THE CITY
THE HOTEL DU CERCLE
BREAKING THE BANK
SOME GOOD RESOLUTIONS
THEORIES
WHO CORBETT WAS
A QUESTION OF PRINCIPLE
NO 12 RALEIGH MANSIONS
MRS. HILLMER HESITATES
FOXEY
A POSSIBLE EXPLANATION
WHAT HAPPENED ON THE RIVIERA
WHERE MRS. HILLMER WENT
MR. SYDNEY H. CORBETT
HOW LADY DYKE LEFT RALEIGH MANSIONS
A WILFUL MURDER
THE LETTER
THE HANDWRITING
MISS PHYLLIS BROWNE INTERVENES
LADY HELEN MONTGOMERY’S SON
MR. WHITE’S METHOD
SIR CHARLES DYKE’S JOURNEY
HOW LADY DYKE DISAPPEARED
SIR CHARLES DYKE ENDS HIS NARRATIVE
VALEDICTORY
Transcriber’s Note: