
BOOK I - CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
"J.L. POTTS."
CHAPTER VII
STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE OF A LONDON ART TEACHER - SUICIDE FEARED
CHAPTER VIII
A rain‑soaked train drags a solitary traveler into the grim, soot‑stained outskirts of Detton Magna, a town where soot‑blackened hedges and factory chimneys dominate the horizon. Philip Romilly steps off the platform in a threadbare coat, his restless stare hinting at a mind weighed down by quiet discontent. He carries a modest parcel wrapped in brown paper, the only splash of colour against the dreary landscape, and makes his way toward a familiar schoolyard before slipping into a nearby cottage.
Inside, the modest room betrays an unexpected touch of elegance—a polished Chippendale sideboard, a bowl of pink roses, and a mantelpiece photograph of a prosperous man whose likeness unsettles Philip. The contrast between the house’s refined trappings and the town’s bleakness raises questions that the young visitor can’t ignore. As he surveys the surroundings, a sense of foreboding settles, suggesting that the quiet interior may conceal a darker story waiting to unfold.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (412K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1866–1946
A master of early suspense fiction, he helped shape the modern spy thriller with fast-moving stories of glamour, danger, and international intrigue. In his lifetime he was hugely popular, writing fiction built for readers who wanted plot, pace, and high-stakes secrets.
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