Anna Katharine Green

DETECTIVE CALEB SWEETWATER MYSTERIES (Thriller Trilogy)


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       Anna Katharine Green

      DETECTIVE CALEB SWEETWATER MYSTERIES

      (Thriller Trilogy)

       Published by

      

Books

      Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting

       [email protected] 2017 OK Publishing ISBN 978-80-7583-187-3

      Table of Contents

       Agatha Webb

       The Woman in the Alcove

       The House of the Whispering Pines

      Agatha Webb

       Table of Contents

       Book I. The Purple Orchid

       I. A Cry on the Hill

       II. One Night’s Work

       III. The Empty Drawer

       IV. The Full Drawer

       V. A Spot on the Lawn

       VI. “Breakfast Is Served, Gentlemen!”

       VII. “Marry Me”

       VIII. “A Devil That Understands Men”

       IX. A Grand Woman

       X. Detective Knapp Arrives

       XI. The Man With a Beard

       XII. Wattles Comes

       XIII. Wattles Goes

       XIV. A Final Temptation

       XV. The Zabels Visited

       XVI. Local Talent at Work

       XVII. The Slippers, the Flower, and What Sweetwater Made of Them

       XVIII. Some Leading Questions

       XIX. Poor Philemon

       XX. A Surprise for Mr. Sutherland

       Book II. The Man of No Reputation

       XXI. Sweetwater Reasons

       XXII. Sweetwater Acts

       XXIII. A Sinister Pair

       XXIV. In the Shadow Op the Mast

       XXV. In Extremity

       XXVI. The Adventure of the Parcel

       XXVII. The Adventure of the Scrap of Paper and the Three Words

       XXVIII. “Who Are You?”

       XXIX. Home Again

       Book III. Had Batsy Lived!

       XXX. What Followed the Striking of the Clock

       XXXI. A Witness Lost

       XXXII. Why Agatha Webb Will Never Be Forgotten in Sutherlandtown

       XXXIII. Father and Son

       XXXIV. “Not When They Are Young Girls”

       XXXV. Sweetwater Pays His Debt at Last to Mr. Sutherland

      Book I.

       The Purple Orchid

       Table of Contents

      Chapter I.

       A Cry on the Hill

       Table of Contents

      The dance was over. From the great house on the hill the guests had all departed and only the musicians remained. As they filed out through the ample doorway, on their way home, the first faint streak of early dawn became visible in the east. One of them, a lank, plain-featured young man of ungainly aspect but penetrating eye, called the attention of the others to it.

      “Look!” said he; “there is the daylight! This has been a gay night for

       Sutherlandtown.”

      “Too