
Alfred Burton is a sharp‑eyed, fast‑talking clerk at a modest West‑End auction house, and the opening of the novel finds him juggling a cigar, a bundle of keys, and a nervous American client eager to secure a new home before his family arrives from New York. His polished sales pitch—full of clever arguments about climate, heating, and the quirks of a Lady’s “tricky” property—reveals a man who knows how to read people and turn a modest commission into something more intriguing. As he guides the client through the seemingly ordinary rooms of the house, a locked chamber hinted at in passing hints that there’s more behind the polished façade than mere real‑estate business.
Burton’s effortless charm masks a restless curiosity that draws him toward the mysteries hidden within the walls he rents out. The story unfolds with witty dialogue and a keen eye for the social pretensions of the era, inviting listeners to wonder whether the clerk’s double life is a harmless hustle or the start of something far more complicated. The narrative balances humor and suspense, setting the stage for a tale where every key might open a secret that changes everything.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (367K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-11-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1866–1946
Best known for fast-moving thrillers and political mysteries, this prolific English novelist helped shape early 20th-century popular suspense. His stories mixed high society, international intrigue, and sharp, readable plotting that kept generations of readers hooked.
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