The Datchet Diamonds

audiobook

The Datchet Diamonds

by Richard Marsh

EN·~5 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total
1

THE DATCHET DIAMONDS

0:30
2

CHAPTER I - TWO MEN AND A MAID

16:44
3

CHAPTER II - OVERHEARD IN THE TRAIN

19:41
4

CHAPTER III - THE DIAMONDS

14:36
5

CHAPTER IV - MISS WENTWORTH'S RUDENESS

22:13
6

CHAPTER V - IN THE BODEGA

26:12
7

CHAPTER VI - THE ADVENTURES OF A NIGHT

18:40
8

CHAPTER VII - THE DATCHET DIAMONDS ARE PLACED IN SAFE CUSTODY

10:13
9

CHAPTER VIII - IN THE MOMENT OF HIS SUCCESS

12:34
10

CHAPTER IX - A PROPOSAL OF MARRIAGE

14:23

Description

Miss Strong finds herself caught between propriety and desire, her life a series of chance meetings on Brighton’s bustling pier. A waltz at the Dome, an unexpected rainstorm on Devil’s Dyke, and a gentleman’s umbrella all weave a delicate tapestry of flirtation and social expectation. When Mr. Lawrence, a strikingly handsome but emotionally distant stranger, reappears as the band begins the familiar melody, the chemistry between them crackles with unspoken tension.

Their brief encounters hint at something larger than a simple romance. Whispers of the coveted Datchet diamonds circulate among the fashionable crowd, and the uneasy feeling that danger lingers beneath the glittering surface grows stronger with each dance. As Miss Strong navigates the expectations of chaperones, friends, and her own restless heart, she must decide whether to follow the allure of the mysterious man or retreat to the safety of familiar shores. The stage is set for a story where society’s glitter masks a deeper, potentially perilous intrigue.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (291K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by Google Books (Oxford University)

Release date

2012-07-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Marsh

Richard Marsh

1857–1915

A master of late-Victorian suspense, this prolific English writer is best remembered for The Beetle, the eerie 1897 thriller that once rivaled Dracula in popularity. Writing under a pseudonym, he built a huge readership with stories full of mystery, menace, and sharp twists.

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