Nick Carter Stories No. 121, January 2, 1915: The call of death; or, Nick Carter's clever assistant

audiobook

Nick Carter Stories No. 121, January 2, 1915: The call of death; or, Nick Carter's clever assistant

by Nicholas (House name) Carter, Burke Jenkins

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

A daring vault heist in Westchester County has left the police baffled. The burglars slipped past the bank’s defenses, stealing nearly two hundred thousand dollars before a citizen’s gunfire wounded one of them and sent the loot fleeing. Detective Nick Carter, called in for his unrivaled eye for detail, quickly identifies the mechanical signature of the infamous cracksman James Nordeck, a seasoned master of vault‑breaking.

Carter’s senior assistant, Chick, provides a grim portrait of Nordeck’s criminal record, confirming the detective’s suspicions. Yet Carter insists the real mastermind lies behind the seasoned thief, a shadowy leader who orchestrated the whole operation. With a generous reward advertised and the trail growing cold, the investigation turns to uncovering the hidden hand that pulled the strings, promising a tense race against time before the culprits vanish forever.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (193K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: Street & Smaith, 1914,copyright 1915.

Credits

David Edwards, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Northern Illinois University Digital Library)

Release date

2022-07-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Nicholas (House name) Carter

Nicholas (House name) Carter

Best known as the shared pen name behind the classic Nick Carter detective adventures, this byline helped shape one of the most popular dime-novel sleuths in American popular fiction. Rather than belonging to one writer, it stood for a long-running storytelling tradition built by multiple hands.

View all books
BJ

Burke Jenkins

A prolific early 20th-century writer, he is remembered today for pulp fiction and silent-film screenwriting. His surviving credits point to a career that moved between popular magazine storytelling and Hollywood in the 1920s.

View all books

You may also like