
audiobook
Secret Service. - THE Bradys' Chinese Clew. - OR, - The Secret Dens of Pell Street - By A New-York Detective. - August 19th 1910. - No 604. 5 Cents.
SECRET SERVICE - OLD AND YOUNG KING BRADY, DETECTIVES
CHAPTER I. - CAUGHT IN A TRAP.
CHAPTER II. - ED FINDS ETHEL.
CHAPTER III. - WORKING FOR A CHINESE CLEW.
CHAPTER IV. - SUNKEN TREASURE.
CHAPTER V. - FOLLOWING UP THE CHINESE CLEW.
CHAPTER VI. - ED GETS THE TIN CASE, AND THE CHINKS GET ED.
CHAPTER VII. - THE FATE OF AN INFORMER.
CHAPTER VIII. - A PRISONER IN THE SECRET DENS OF PELL STREET.
In the midst of a ferocious summer storm, the veteran King Brady and his sharp‑eyed son Harry find themselves holed up in the bustling Tuxedo restaurant on Pell Street, the heart of New York’s Chinatown. A mysterious young messenger arrives, wearing a yellow dahlia—the exact flower their elusive client, Edward Butler, had promised to use as a signal. The Bradys sense that the storm has forced a secretive rendezvous into the open, and they must act quickly before the clues slip away with the rain.
The detectives quickly discover that the case involves more than a simple missed appointment. A young woman from Albany, the daughter of a prominent family, has vanished after eloping with a Chinese tutor, sparking tensions between the local community and the city’s elite. As the Bradys navigate the labyrinthine alleys and hidden rooms of Pell Street, they must untangle family betrayals, cultural clashes, and a web of deceit that threatens to engulf everyone involved.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (163K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Edwards, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (Stanford University, SUL Books in the Public Domain)
Release date
2011-08-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1917
Best known for fast-paced dime novels and early detective adventures, this prolific American writer helped shape popular entertainment at the turn of the 20th century. He wrote for mass audiences in an era when weekly fiction was a major form of fun.
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