The Ebony Stick - Earl Derr Biggers - E-Book

The Ebony Stick E-Book

Earl Derr Biggers

0,0
1,99 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
  • Herausgeber: DigiCat
  • Kategorie: Krimi
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022
Beschreibung

Earl Derr Biggers' novel, 'The Ebony Stick,' is a classic piece of detective fiction set in the early 20th century. The story follows the investigative adventures of Detective Charlie Chan as he unravels a complex murder mystery. Biggers' writing style is engaging and suspenseful, keeping readers on the edge of their seats until the very end. The novel is part of the literary genre known as 'whodunit,' where readers are encouraged to solve the mystery alongside the protagonist. 'The Ebony Stick' is a standout in the detective fiction genre, with intricate plot twists and well-developed characters that make for a captivating read. Earl Derr Biggers' attention to detail and carefully crafted narrative make this novel a must-read for fans of mystery and suspense. The book is a perfect choice for anyone looking to dive into a gripping detective story that will keep them guessing until the final reveal.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB
Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.


Ähnliche


Earl Derr Biggers

The Ebony Stick

 
EAN 8596547019206
DigiCat, 2022 Contact: [email protected]

Table of Contents

Cover
Titlepage
Text

The Ebony Stick

Table of Contents

AT nine o'clock on a bright June morning Clay Garrett, colored, intermittent sweeper and duster of the leading bank in a large Texas city. opened the heavy doors that led from the street into that most marble of bank interior. Two minutes later—this being also part of the regular schedule——Major Tellfair, white-haired but erect crossed the threshold, nodded to Clay and to the boy behind the bars, and passed into the office where he ruled as president. There he opened his desk, lighted a cigar, and began the perusal of his morning paper.

He had got no farther than the headlines of the first page when the door of his office opened and young Dick Merrill of the Silver Star Ranch came in. Merrill was covered with the dust he had collected on his ride in from the ranch that morning. Lighting his fate was the Merrill smile, human and kindly, and it brought the major to his feet in hearty welcome.

"Sit down, Dick," he aid. "Beautiful morning, ain't it? How are things out at the Silver Star?"

"The Silver Star's all right," Merrill answered. "But, say. I got a cablegram from Bob this morning." He explored a pocket "Here it is. I wish you'd read it. Bob's in Italy—at a place called Rome—over there among them I-talians."

His tone was as disapproving as the pleasant Merrill tone could be. He deposited his husky length in a mahogany chair and waited for the major to adjust his glasses The bank president noted the truth of Merrill's scornful statement as to Rome, and then read the message slowly:

Cable thousand dollars immediately, care National express. Keep matter under hat.Bob

"What do you make of it, major?" Merrill asked.

The major smiled.

"It looks to me like somebody had annexed your brother's roll," he replied.

"That's how I figure it," Merrill said, also with a smile. "He's been in Italy less than a week too—they work fast, them boys. Bob had two thousand dollars small change, along with all his tickets, which he bought from this man Cook in New York. I hope they didn't clean him out of those too. Well, it serves him right for wandering off the range. He ain't got no business over on the other side"

The major cleared his throat.

"I don't wish to seem inquisitive." he said. "But l was utterly at a loss to understand your brother's sudden dash for Europe. particularly at a time when the nations over there are engaged in the most bloody and terrible warfare"—

"A woman," interrupted Dick Merrill. "It was a woman that done it. Maybe you remember her—Celia Ware—she used to sing at church concerts hereabouts a few years back."

"Ah. yes. I have heard her sing," said Major Tellfair reminiscently.

“You'll hear her again," said Merrill. "I reckon you don't pay much attention to such things, but old Bob sure was far gone on her. And she seemed to think a heap of him too."

"Naturally," nodded the major.

"But when it came to a showdown she picked her art. Wedded to music she was. Went over to Italy to get better acquainted with it. Bob got a letter from her 'bout a month back: wants to divorce her art now. Maybe it's grounds of nonsupport, maybe the war's upset her, maybe she just naturally loves old Bob—I don't know. Anyhow, she told him to come for her. and they're to be married over there: in Florence. Ain't that a devil of a sissy name for a town?"

"It's an Italian name, I believe," responded the major. "Miss Ware struck me as a singularly attractive young woman. I'm sure I congratulate your brother most heartily."

"Oh, Celia's all right." said Merrill. "How she'll pan out on a ranch I don't know, but she's a mighty fine girl, even if she did drag poor old Bob all them thousands of miles to Italy."

“We must send him his thousand," mused the major. "No man wants to be broke on his wedding day."

"Sure: dig into his account and send it along," agreed Merrill. "He's boss. and it's his money. Shoot it to him. Only I wish he hadn't been so all-fired brief. I wonder what happened. Bob's too childlike and simple to wander around among them I-talians. Somebody got to him. I wonder—oh, well—Send him the money, major: I leave it to you."

The major promised to attend to the matter immediately, and Dick Merrill, still wondering, set out for the Silver Star Ranch.

There was a rumor in that Texas city to the effect that Major Tellfair was growing too old and forgetful for the position he held, and, unkind as this assertion sounds. subsequent events seemed to justify it. The gentle old president turned back for a moment to his newspaper. Shortly after he was interrupted by the cashier, who had an important matter to discuss. The cabled appeal from Bob Merrill slipped out of sight on his cluttered desk, and for two days the Texas ranchman waited forlorn in the city of Rome.

He might have waited indefinitely had not Clay Garrett, the aged negro custodian of the bank, been a devotee of that art which has made Caruso wealthy. On the third day following the visit of Dick Merrill to the bank, Major Tellfair entered at two minutes past nine in the morning to hear Clay giving a spirited rendering of a favorite song. Fortunately for Bob Merrill, two lines of that song reached the ears of the major:

"Darling—Ah am growin' ol'— Silver threads among the gol'—"

Silver! The Silver Star Ranch! Bob Merrill's cablegram! In an agony of remorse the old major rushed into his office, unearthed the message, and sent the thousand dollars speeding toward Italy. Then he returned to sit before his desk in humble and pathetic contrition, while the sneers of his enemies regarding his age and absent-mindedness filled his thoughts. He was a most unhappy man.

Perhaps he would not have been so unhappy had he known that by those two days of delay he had done Bob Merrill a most unexpected service. For he had caused the ranchman to break his sacred contract with Thomas Cook & Son to leave Rome on an appointed day, and thereby enabled him—

BUT we are far, far ahead of the story. Offensive to the schools of short-story writing it must be when we confess that the incident already related bisects squarely the tale we have to tell. The most seemly thing to do then is to go back quietly to the beginning—back to that rainy Saturday morning when the little Italian liner slipped away from the fog-engulfed pier in the North River. New York, carrying Bob Merrill ultimately to his ladylove, but first to the adventure of the ebony stick.