
A down‑on‑his‑luck drifter named James Southam finds himself clutching a newspaper “agony” column that promises a mysterious advantage. With only a half‑crown left in his pocket, he follows the cryptic ad to a shabby solicitor’s office on Bacup Street, where two oddly bemused men await. Their cramped, dimly lit chambers set the stage for a curious mix of humor and intrigue, as Southam’s desperate charm meets the lawyers’ inscrutable professionalism.
From the first uneasy handshake, the story twirls between witty banter and the suspense of what that “advantage” might be. The narrative captures the bustling streets of London, the uneasy feeling of stepping into a place that looks more like a cupboard than a law firm, and the peculiar characters who populate it. Listeners will be drawn into Southam’s quest, wondering whether he’ll uncover a hidden opportunity or simply become another footnote in the curious world of “Mr. Ely’s Engagement.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (283K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by Google Books (Oxford University)
Release date
2012-08-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1915
Best known for the eerie bestseller The Beetle, this prolific late-Victorian writer mixed suspense, horror, and crime in stories that helped shape popular fiction at the turn of the 20th century. Writing under the name Richard Marsh, he reached a wide audience with fast-moving tales full of menace, mystery, and strange twists.
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