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Louis Tracy (1863 - 1928) was a British journalist, and prolific writer of fiction. He used the pseudonyms Gordon Holmes and Robert Fraser, which were at times shared with M. P. Shiel, a collaborator from the start of the twentieth century. He was born in Liverpool to a well-to-do middle-class family. At first he was educated at home and then at the French Seminary at Douai. Around 1884 he became a reporter for a local paper - 'The Northern Echo' at Darlington, circulating in parts of Durham and North Yorkshire]; later he worked for papers in Cardiff and Allahabad. During 1892-1894 he was closely associated with Arthur Harmsworth, in 'The Sun' and 'The Evening News and Post' (font: Wikipedia)
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2015
The Bartlett Mystery
Louis Tracy
CONTENTS
I. A GATHERING AT A CLUB
II. A DARING CRIME
III. WINIFRED BARTLETT HEARS SOMETHING
IV. FURTHER SURPRISES
V. PERSECUTORS
VI. BROTHER RALPH
VII. STILL MERE MYSTERY
VIII. THE DREAM FACE
IX. THE FLIGHT
X. CARSHAW TAKES UP THE CHASE
XI. THE TWO CARS
XII. THE PURSUIT
XIII. THE NEW LINK
XIV. A SUBTLE ATTACK
XV. THE VISITOR
XVI. WINIFRED DRIFTS
XVII. ALL ROADS LEAD TO EAST ORANGE
XVIII. THE CRASH
XIX. CLANCY EXPLAINS
XX. IN THE TOILS
XXI. MOTHER AND SON
XXII. THE HUNT
XXIII. "HE WHO FIGHTS AND RUNS AWAY
XXIV. IN FULL CRY
XXV. FLANK ATTACKS
XXVI. THE BITER BIT
XXVII. THE SETTLEMENT
CHAPTER I
A GATHERING AT A CLUB
That story of love and crime which figures in the records of the New York Detective Bureau as "The Yacht Mystery" has little to do with yachts and is no longer a mystery. It is concerned far more intimately with the troubles and trials of pretty Winifred Bartlett than with the vagaries of the restless sea; the alert, well-groomed figure of Winifred's true lover, Rex Carshaw, fills its pages to the almost total exclusion of the portly millionaire who owned the Sans Souci. Yet, such is the singular dominance exercised by the trivial things of life over the truly important ones, some hundreds of thousands of people in the great city on the three rivers will recall many episodes of the nine days' wonder known to them as "The Yacht Mystery" though they may never have heard of either Winifred or Rex.
It began simply, as all major events do begin, and, of course, at the outset, neither of these two young people seemed to have the remotest connection with it.
On the evening of October 5, 1913--that is the date when the first entry appears in the diary of Mr. James Steingall, chief of the Bureau--the stream of traffic in Fifth Avenue was interrupted to an unusual degree at a corner near Forty-second Street. The homeward-bound throng going up-town and the equally dense crowd coming down-town to restaurants and theater-land merely chafed at a delay which they did not understand, but the traffic policeman knew exactly what was going on, and kept his head and his temper.
A few doors down the north side of the cross street a famous club was ablaze with lights. Especially did three great windows on the first floor send forth hospitable beams, for the spacious room within was the scene of an amusing revel. Mr. William Pierpont Van Hofen, ex-commodore of the New York Yacht Club, owner of the Sans Souci, and multi-millionaire, had just astonished his friends by one of the eccentric jests for which he was famous.
The Sans Souci, notable the world over for its size, speed, and fittings, was going out of commission for the winter. Van Hofen had marked the occasion by widespread invitations to a dinner at his club, "to be followed by a surprise party," and the nature of the "surprise" was becoming known. Each lady had drawn by lot the name of her dinner partner, and each couple was then presented with a sealed envelope containing tickets for one or other of the many theaters in New York. Thus, not only were husbands, wives, eligible bachelors, and smart dbutantes inextricably mixed up, but none knew whither the oddly assorted pairs were bound, since the envelopes were not to be opened until the meal reached the coffee and cigarette stage.
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