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قراءة كتاب Mr. Marx's Secret

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‏اللغة: English
Mr. Marx's Secret

Mr. Marx's Secret

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">XXIX.—A Dinner Party Sub-rosa 169

XXX.—Écarté with Mr. Fothergill 174
XXXI.—A Startling Discovery 182
XXXII.—Forestalled 190
XXXIII.—A Gleam of Light 195
XXXIV.—Dr. Schofield’s Opinion 199
XXXV.—An Invitation 204
XXXVI.—A Metamorphosis 209
XXXVII.—Mr. Marx is Wanted 218
XXXVIII.—I Accept a Mission 223
XXXIX.—My Ride 225
XL.—My Mission 229
XLI.—The Count de Cartienne 232
XLII.—News of Mr. Marx 240
XLIII.—About Town 246
XLIV.—A Midnight Excursion to the Suburbs 252
XLV.—A Mysterious Commission 258
XLVI.—A Brush with the Police 261
XLVII.—Light at Last 264
XLVIII.—A Page of History 269
XLIX.—I will Go Alone 278
L.—I Meet my Father 280
LI.—Dawn 284
LII.—Where is Mr. Marx? 287
LIII.—Messrs. Higgenson and Co. 293
LIV.—A Raid 299
LV.—The Mystery of Mr. Marx 304
LVI.—The End of It 308


MR. MARX’S SECRET

CHAPTER I.
NEWS FROM THE PACIFIC.

My home was a quaint, three-storeyed, ivy-clad farmhouse in a Midland county. It lay in a hollow, nestled close up against Rothland Wood, the dark, close-growing trees of which formed a picturesque background to the worn greystone whereof it was fashioned.

In front, just across the road, was the boundary-wall of Ravenor Park, with its black fir spinneys, huge masses of lichen-covered rock, clear fish-ponds, and breezy hills, from the summits of which were visible the sombre grey towers of Ravenor Castle, standing out with grim, rugged boldness against the sky.

Forbidden ground though it was, there was not a yard of the park up to the inner boundary fence which I did not know; not a spinney where I had not searched for birds’ nests or raided in quest of the first primrose; not a hill on which I had not spent some part of a summer afternoon.

I was a trespasser, of course; but I was the son of Farmer Morton, an old tenant on the estate, and much in favour with the keepers, by reason of a famous brew which he was ever ready to offer a thirsty man, or to drink himself. So “Morton’s young ’un” was unmolested; and, save for an occasional good-humoured warning from Crooks, the head-gamekeeper, during breeding-time, I had the run of the place.

Moreover, the great estates of which Ravenor Park was the centre knew at that time no other master than a lawyer of non-sporting proclivities, so the preserves were only looked after as a matter of form.

I was eight years old, and an unusually hot summer was at its height. It was past midday, and I had just come out from the house, with the intention of settling down for an afternoon’s reading in a shady corner of the orchard. I had reached the stack-yard gate when I stopped short, my hand upon the fastening.

A most unusual sound was floating across the meadows, through the breathless air. The church-bells of Rothland, the village on the other side of the wood, had suddenly burst out into a wild, clashing peal of joy.

In a country district everybody knows everyone else’s business; and, child though I was, I knew that no marriage was taking place anywhere near.

I stood

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