Samuel Hopkins Adams

The Secret of Lonesome Cove


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       Samuel Hopkins Adams

      The Secret of Lonesome Cove

      Published by

      Books

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       [email protected]

      2019 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066051266

      Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I—THE BODY ON THE BEACH

       CHAPTER II—PROFESSOR KENT MAKES A CALL

       CHAPTER III—MY LADY OF MYSTERY

       CHAPTER IV—AN INQUIRY

       CHAPTER V—ONE USE FOR A MONOCLE

       CHAPTER VI—THE RETREAT IN ORDER

       CHAPTER VII—SIMON P. GROOT DOES BUSINESS

       CHAPTER VIII—RECKONINGS

       CHAPTER IX—CHESTER KENT DECLINES A JOB

       CHAPTER X—THE INVASION

       CHAPTER XI—HEDGEROW HOUSE

       CHAPTER XII—THE UNBIDDEN VISITOR

       CHAPTER XIII—LOOSE ENDS

       CHAPTER XIV—THE LONE FISHERMAN

       CHAPTER XV—THE TURN OF THE GAME

       CHAPTER XVI—THE MEETING

       CHAPTER XVII—CHANCE SITS IN

       CHAPTER XVIII—THE MASTER OF STARS

       CHAPTER XIX—THE STRANGE TRYST

       CHAPTER XX—IN THE WHITE ROOM

       CHAPTER XXI—REWARDS

      TO ONE UNKNOWN

      The only living being who possesses the secret of the

      strangely clad and manacled body found beneath the

      cliffs of Cornwall on April 30, 1909, this story, changed

      in the setting as he will understand, is blindly inscribed.

      CHAPTER I—THE BODY ON THE BEACH

       Table of Contents

      Lonesome Cove is one of the least frequented stretches on the New England seaboard. From the land side, the sheer hundred-foot drop of Hawkill Cliffs shuts it off. Access by water is denied; denied with a show of menacing teeth, when the sea curls its lips back, amid a swirl of angry currents, from its rocks and reefs, warning boats away. There is no settlement near the cove. The somber repute suggested by its name has served to keep cottagers from building on the wildly beautiful uplands that overbrood the beach. Sheep browse between the thickets of ash and wild cherry extending almost to the brink of the height, and the straggling pathways along the edge, worn by the feet of their herders, afford the only suggestion of human traffic within half a mile of the spot. A sharp-cut ravine leads down to the sea by a rather treacherous descent.

      Near the mouth of this opening, a considerable gathering of folk speckled the usually deserted beach, at noon of July sixth. They centered on a dark object, a few yards within the flood-tide limit. Some scouted about, peering at the sand. Others pointed first to the sea, then to the cliffs with the open gestures of those who argue vehemently. But always their eyes returned, drawn back by an unfailing magnetism, to the central object.

      From some distance away a lone man of a markedly different type from the others observed them with an expression of displeasure. He had reached the cove by an arduous scramble, possible only to a good climber, around the jutting elbow of the cliff to the northward. It was easily to be read in his face that he was both surprised and annoyed to find people there before him. One of the group presently detached himself and ambled over to the newcomer, with an accelerated speed as he drew nearer.

      “Swanny!” he ejaculated, “if it ain’t Perfessor Kent! Didn’t know you at first under them whiskers. You remember me, don’t you? I used to drive you around when you was here before.”

      “How are you, Jarvis?” returned the other. “Still in the livery business, I suppose?”

      “Yes. What brings you here, Perfessor?”

      “Holidays. I’ve just come out of the woods. And as you have some very interesting sea currents just here, I thought I’d have a look at them. Nobody really knows anything about coast currents, you know. Now my opportunity is spoiled.” He indicated the crowd by a movement of his head.

      “Spoilt? I guess not. You couldn’t have come at a better time,” said the local man eagerly.

      “Ah, but you see, I had planned to swim out to the eddy, and make some personal observations.”

      “You was going to swim into Dead Man’s Eddy?” asked the other, aghast. “Why, Perfessor, you must have turned foolish. They ain’t a man on this coast would take a chance like that.”

      “Superstition,” retorted the other curtly. “On a still day such as this there would be no danger to an experienced swimmer. The conditions are ideal except for this crowd. What is it? Has the village gone picnicking?”

      “Not sca’cely! Ain’t you heard? Another one’s come in through the eddy. Lies over yonder.”

      Professor Kent’s eyebrows went up, as he glanced toward the indicated spot; then gathered in a frown.

      “Not washed up there, surely?” he said.

      “Thet’s what,” answered Jarvis.

      “When?”

      “Sometime early this morning.”

      “Pshaw!” said the other, turning to look at the curving bulwark of rocks over which the soft slow swell was barely breaking. “If it were the other end of the cove, now, I could understand it.”

      “Yes,”