
In the quiet dawn of July, Jean Bertaud and his son Philippe set out for a routine fishing trip along the Seine, their lives marked by poaching and a reputation for skirting the law. When Philippe’s shout halts them, they discover a woman’s blood‑stained body floating near the Count de Tremorel’s park, thrusting the pair into a moral dilemma: should they report the crime or hide their own trespass? Their uneasy decision to inform the mayor sets the stage for a tense confrontation between personal survival and civic duty.
Orcival itself is painted as a picturesque riverside village, its white houses, blooming honeysuckles, and distant châteaux creating a tranquil backdrop that belies the darkness now seeping into its streets. As rumors spread and the local authorities become involved, the community’s fragile peace is tested, and the Bertauds find themselves unwittingly tangled in a mystery that could expose secrets far deeper than a simple murder.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (578K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1873
A key early master of detective fiction, he helped shape the modern mystery through fast-moving serialized novels and the cool-headed investigations of Monsieur Lecoq. Writing in 19th-century Paris, he blended crime, suspense, and careful police work in ways that influenced generations of thriller writers.
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