
The story opens on a mist‑filled morning as a modestly dressed stranger steps off a boat in Harwich, his plain grey jacket and straw hat belying the powerful mind hidden beneath. He is Aristide Valentin, the celebrated head of the Paris police, on a covert mission to London to capture the elusive criminal Flambeau, who has slipped through the net of three nations. As Valentin wanders the quiet squares of Victoria, the bustling city becomes a chessboard where his careful observations begin to map the thief’s possible moves.
From that point the novel follows Valentin’s methodical chase through the streets and cafés of London during a grand Eucharistic Congress, where the ordinary and the extraordinary collide. His reliance on plain‑spoken French logic is tempered by a willingness to follow the “unreasonable” clues that surface, turning chance encounters into vital leads. The narrative weaves a cerebral cat‑and‑mouse game, offering listeners a richly atmospheric mystery driven by a detective whose intellect is matched only by his humility.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (438K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-07-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1874–1936
Best known for the Father Brown mysteries and a flood of lively essays, this English writer brought wit, paradox, and strong opinions to everything he touched. His books range from detective fiction to literary criticism and Christian apologetics, and they still feel fresh because of the energy of his voice.
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