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A Traitor's Wooing

A Traitor's Wooing

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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A
TRAITOR'S WOOING

By

HEADON HILL

Author of "Her Splendid Sin," "The Hidden Victim,"
"A Race with Ruin," etc. etc.


ILLUSTRATED

LONDON
WARD LOCK & CO. LTD
1909

"'Is that all you have to say to me?' asked Violet quietly." "'Is that all you have to say to me?' asked Violet quietly."
(Page 168)
A Traitor's Wooing           [Frontispiece]

BY THE SAME AUTHOR.

THE AVENGERS.

The Tribune.—Mr. Headon Hill's new book, "The Avengers," has not a dull line, and one's pulse is kept on the jig all the time. He deserves the highest admiration for the consistent way in which he has avoided the slightest suspicion of probability.

The Liverpool Courier.—We can strongly recommend the story. It is one of the best things Mr. Hill has done.

The Dundee Advertiser.—"The Avengers" maintains the highest reputation of Mr. Headon Hill as a novelist. The story is crowded with incident, and, unlike many novels of its class, commands the closest interest of the reader from start to finish.

MILLIONS OF MISCHIEF.

The Globe.—Ingenuity could no further go; and besides its ingenuity the story can boast of some clever and effective writing.

The Stage.—Not even the late Guy Boothby imagined anything more magnificently preposterous than the motive of Mr. Headon Hill's "Millions of Mischief."

Morning Leader.—Mr. Hill has woven a clever and dramatic plot. He has seldom put greater finish into his work, and the result is a striking and vigorous book.

HER SPLENDID SIN.

The Perthshire Courier.—Headon Hill is a master hand at devising and unravelling mysteries. He always gives us good reading with plenty of thrilling incident. He has never told an intensely absorbing story with more dramatic directness than this one. The story is admirably written, the interest never flagging.

The Northern Whig.—Her Splendid Sin stands for sensationalism of a decidedly striking sort. The novel is written with vigour and is based on ideas which go to the making of a rattling good story.

The Dundee Courier.—The reader is hurried breathless from one exciting situation to another, till in the end the nefarious schemes of a syndicate of villains are checkmated, and virtue is rewarded. The book is written in the author's best style.

UNMASKED AT LAST.

The Morning Leader.—Mr. Headon Hill is a past master of thrills and, like Mr. Holmes, causes us almost to believe that the most innocent professions are really dangerous.

The Christian World.—The various sensations are very cleverly devised and Mr. Headon Hill knows how to hold one's attention. The motor car race, which is the closing episode of a well conceived plot, is full of sport, from start to finish.

The Liverpool Courier.—The Author has never told an intensely absorbing story with more dramatic directness, and none who once dip into its pages can lay it down willingly until the last chapter has been read.

A RACE WITH RUIN.

The Morning Advertiser.—A book by Headon Hill may always be relied on to provide good reading with plenty of incident. In "A Race with Ruin" he fully maintains his reputation, and readers will not be disappointed in their expectation of finding a good, stirring story with an admirable and well-worked out plot.

The Leicester Post.—It is an admirable sporting story, and should not only enhance the reputation of its Author, but materially enlarge the circle of his readers. The plot is deftly planned, and not only soon arouses interest, but broadens and deepens it until the close.

THE HIDDEN VICTIM.

The Morning Leader.—A fine story of blackmail and plotting. "The Hidden Victim" abounds in unusual and surprising situations.

The Northern Whig.—Mr. Headon Hill handles his chosen topics with great facility and a commendable degree of craftsmanship. In this novel there is an amazing series of entanglements.

The Liverpool Courier.—It is quite equal to anything the writer has done. The plot is skilfully devised to carry a weighty load of exciting episode. The narrative goes forward breathlessly and holds the attention.

RADFORD SHONE.

The Leicester Post.—Radford Shone is another very welcome volume from an accomplished pen. The exploits at once rivet attention and hold it spellbound to the end. Once begun it will be eagerly read right through to the end.

The Standard.—This novelist has a real genius for the constructional stories. He knows to a hair's-breadth the best theme to select, and almost unerringly what details to omit. His power of invention is remarkable.


CONTENTS

  CHAP. PAGE
I Two Villains and the Heroine 9
II "A Screw Loose Somewhere" 18
III Presage of Storm 31
IV Nugent moves a Pawn 42
V Under the Searchlight 50
VI The Cry from the Train 60
VII The Face in the Pool 71
VIII

Pages