CASSEL PUBLISHING COMPANY.

All rights reserved.

CONTENTS.

* * * *

CHAPTER
I.[My Wife Makes Up her Mind to Move,]
II.[House-Hunting à la Mode,]
III.[An Old Friend Unexpectedly Presents Himself]
IV.[Bob Millet Gives us Some Curious Information about theHouse in Lamb's Terrace,]
V.[We Look Over the House in Lamb's Terrace and Receive aShock,]
VI.[The Answer to the Bell,]
VII.[I Make Some Singular Experiments,]
VIII.[I Take Bob into my Confidence,]
IX.[I Pay Bob Millet a Visit,]
X.[Ronald Elsdale Gives Opinions,]
XI.[Bob Relates to me Some Particulars of Ronald Elsdale'sDelusions,]
XII.[A House on Fire,]
XIII.[I Take the Haunted House,]
XIV.[A Meager Report from the Inquiry Agent,]
XV.[What the Inquest Revealed,]
XVI.[In 79 Lamb's Terrace,]
XVII.[Barbara,]
XVIII.[Molly,]
XIX.[Important Information,]
XX.[Dr. Cooper,]
XXI.[Barbara Gives us Some Valuable Information,]
XXII.[Mr. Nisbet Visits Lamb's Terrace,]
XXIII.[On the Track,]
XXIV.[We Arrive in Paris,]
XXV.[We Come to a Halt,]
XXVI.[A Good Night's Work,]
XXVII.[A Word with Mme. Bernstein,]
XXVIII.[Mme. Bernstein Reveals,]
XXIX.[Dr. Cooper is Impressed,]
XXX.[Mr. Nisbet Takes a Decided Step,]

THE LAST TENANT

* * * *

CHAPTER I.

[MY WIFE MAKES UP HER MIND TO MOVE.]

From a peculiar restlessness in my wife's movements, I gathered that she was considering some scheme which threatened to disturb the peaceful surroundings of my life. Upon two or three occasions lately she had reproached me for not being sufficiently lofty in my social views, and although the tone in which she addressed me was free from acerbity, her words conveyed the impression that in some dark way I was inflicting an injury upon her. Familiar with her moods, and understanding the best way in which to treat them, I made no inquiries as to the precise nature of this injury, but waited for her to disclose it--which I was aware she would not do until she was quite prepared.

I am not, in any sense of the term, an ambitious man, being happily blessed with a peaceful and contented mind which renders me unwilling to make any departure from my usual habits. As regards old-fashioned ways I am somewhat of a conservative; I do not care for new things and new sensations, and I am not forever looking up at persons above me, and sighing for their possessions and enjoyments. Indeed, I am convinced that the happiest lot is that of the mortal who is neither too high nor too low, and who is in possession of a competence which will serve for modest pleasures, without exciting the envy of friends and acquaintances. Such a competence was mine; such pleasures were mine. Secure from storms and unnecessary worries--by which I mean worries self-inflicted by fidgety persons, or persons discontented with their lot--I should have been quite satisfied to remain all my life in our cozy ten-roomed house, which we had inhabited for twenty years, and in which we had been as comfortable as reasonable beings can expect to be in life. Not so my wife, the best of creatures in her way, but lately (as I subsequently discovered) tormented with jealousy of certain old friends who, favored by fortune, had moved a step or two up the social ladder. It was natural, when these friends visited us, that they should dilate with pride upon their social rise, and should rather loftily, and with an air of superiority, seize the opportunity of describing the elegances of their new houses and furniture. Their fine talk amused me, and I listened to it undisturbed; but it rendered my wife restless and uneasy, and the upshot of it was that one morning, during breakfast, she said:

"You have nothing particular to do to-day, my dear?"