Nick Carter Stories No. 131, March 13, 1915: A fatal message; or, Nick Carter's slender clew

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Nick Carter Stories No. 131, March 13, 1915: A fatal message; or, Nick Carter's slender clew

by Nicholas (House name) Carter, Roland Ashford Phillips

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

In this brisk, early‑20th‑century mystery, the legendary sleuth finds himself in a bustling café, eavesdropping on a seemingly innocuous conversation between two men at the next table. A cryptic telegram—“Dust flying. S. D. on way. Ware eagle”—signed only “Martin,” catches his attention, hinting at a hidden code and a purpose far beyond ordinary news. Intrigued, he shadows the telegraph operator, Arthur Belden, whose routine job may mask a more dangerous assignment.

The detective’s quick thinking leads him to disguise himself and follow Belden across town, confronting the man in his private office. There, he begins to untangle the mysterious dispatch, aware that a single careless word could set off a chain of events with serious consequences. As the puzzle unfolds, listeners are drawn into a world of secret messages, shadowy figures, and a race against time that only a master investigator can navigate.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (194K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

David Edwards, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Northern Illinois University Digital Library at http://digital.lib.niu.edu/)

Release date

2021-07-09

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.

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RA

Roland Ashford Phillips

A prolific American pulp writer, he published adventure fiction under his own name and apparently under pseudonyms as well. His best-known novel, Golden Isle (1925), mixes sea adventure, invention, and lost-world fantasy.

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