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قراءة كتاب The Sheridan Road Mystery

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‏اللغة: English
The Sheridan Road Mystery

The Sheridan Road Mystery

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE SHERIDAN ROAD MYSTERY


by

PAUL AND MABEL THORNE




CONTENTS

I   THE SHOT
II   DETECTIVE SERGEANT MORGAN
III   INVESTIGATION
IV   THE APARTMENT ACROSS THE HALL
V   PECULIAR FACTS
VI   THE CABLE FROM LONDON
VII   MR. MARSH
VIII   A DEFINITE CLUE
IX   THE LAST LETTER
X   THE STOLEN SUITCASE
XI   THE TRAIL GROWS CLEARER
XII   MISSING
XIII   STARTLING DISCLOSURES
XIV   THE NIGHT CALL
XV   "DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES"
XVI   THE CLOSED COUNTRY HOUSE
XVII   WHAT THE CARETAKER SAW
XVIII   THE ENEMY SHOWS HIS HAND
XIX   KIDNAPPED
XX   THE FALLEN PINE
XXI   THE CHIMNEY THAT WOULDN'T DRAW
XXII   CORNERED
XXIII   SUNSET




THE SHERIDAN ROAD MYSTERY


CHAPTER I

THE SHOT

It was a still, balmy night in late October. The scent of burned autumn leaves hung in the air, and a hazy moon, showing just over the housetops, deepened the shadows on the streets.

Policeman Murphy stopped far a moment, as was his custom, at the corner of Lawrence Avenue and Sheridan Road. He knew that it was about two o'clock in the morning as that was the hour at which he usually reached this point. He glanced sharply up and down Sheridan Road, which at that moment seemed to be completely deserted save for the distant red tail-light of a belated taxi, the whir of whose engine came to him quite distinctly on the quiet night air.

JUST THEN POLICEMAN MURPHY HEARD A SHOT!

Instantly his body quickened with an awakened alertness, and he glanced east and west along the lonely stretch of Lawrence Avenue. He saw nothing, and concluded that the sound he had heard must have come from one of the many apartment buildings which surrounded him.

Murphy pondered for a moment. Was it a burglary, a domestic row, or perhaps a murder? The position of the shot was hard to locate, for it had been but the sound of a moment on the still night. Murphy, however, decided to take a chance, and started stealthily north on Sheridan Road, keeping within the shadow that clung to the buildings.

He had moved only a short distance in this way when a man in a bath robe dashed out of the doorway of an apartment house just ahead of him and ran north. Murphy instantly broke into pursuit. At the sound of his heavily shod feet on the pavement, the man in the bath robe stopped and turned. Murphy slowed up and the man advanced to meet him.

"I'm glad you're handy, Officer," panted the man. "I think somebody has been murdered in our building. Come and investigate."

"Sure," assented Murphy. "That's what I'm

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