Carolyn Wells

The Complete Detective Fleming Stone Series (All 17 Books in One Edition)


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       Carolyn Wells

      The Complete Detective Fleming Stone Series (All 17 Books in One Edition)

      The Clue, The Gold Bag, A Chain of Evidence, The Maxwell Mystery, The Curved Blades…

       Published by

      

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      Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting

       [email protected] 2017 OK Publishing ISBN 978-80-272-2310-7

      Table of Contents

       THE CLUE

       THE GOLD BAG

       A CHAIN OF EVIDENCE

       THE MAXWELL MYSTERY

       ANYBODY BUT ANNE

       THE WHITE ALLEY

       THE CURVED BLADES

       THE MARK OF CAIN

       VICKY VAN

       THE DIAMOND PIN

       RASPBERRY JAM

       THE MYSTERY OF THE SYCAMORE

       THE MYSTERY GIRL

       SPOOKY HOLLOW

       PRILLILGIRL

       THE BRONZE HAND

       WHERE’S EMILY

      THE CLUE

       Table of Contents

       I. The Van Normans

       II. Miss Morton Arrives

       III. A Cry in the Night

       IV. Suicide Or—?

       V. A Case for the Coroner

       VI. Fessenden Comes

       VII. Mr. Benson's Questions

       VIII. A Soft Lead Pencil

       IX. The Will

       X. Some Testimony

       XI. “I Decline to Say”

       XII. Dorothy Burt

       XIII. An Interview With Cicely

       XIV. The Carleton Household

       XV. Fessenden's Detective Work

       XVI. Searching for Clues

       XVII. Miss Morton's Statements

       XVIII. Carleton Is Frank

       XIX. The Truth About Miss Burt

       XX. Cicely's Flight

       XXI. A Successful Pursuit

       XXII. A Talk With Miss Morton

       XXIII. Fleming Stone

       XXIV. A Confession

      Chapter I.

       The Van Normans

       Table of Contents

      The old Van Norman mansion was the finest house in Mapleton. Well back from the road, it sat proudly among its finely kept lawns and gardens, as if with a dignified sense of its own importance, and its white, Colonial columns gleamed through the trees, like sentinels guarding the entrance to the stately hall.

      All Mapleton was proud of the picturesque old place, and it was shown to visiting strangers with the same pride that the native villagers pointed out the Memorial Library and the new church.

      More than a half-century old, the patrician white house seemed to glance coldly on the upstart cottages, whose inadequate pillars supported beetling second stories, and whose spacious, filigreed verandas left woefully small area for rooms inside the house.

      The Van Norman mansion was not like that. It was a long rectangle, and each of its four stories was a series of commodious, well-shaped apartments.

      And its owner, the beautiful Madeleine Van Norman, was the most envied as well as the most admired young woman in the town.

      Magnificent Madeleine, as she was sometimes called, was of the haughty, imperious type which inspires admiration and respect rather than love.