Thorne Mabel

The Sheridan Road Mystery (Mystery Classics Series)


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       Mabel Thorne, Paul Thorne

      The Sheridan Road Mystery

      (Mystery Classics Series)

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2019 OK Publishing

      EAN 4057664560025

      Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I THE SHOT

       CHAPTER II DETECTIVE SERGEANT MORGAN

       CHAPTER III INVESTIGATION

       CHAPTER IV THE APARTMENT ACROSS THE HALL

       CHAPTER V PECULIAR FACTS

       CHAPTER VI THE CABLE FROM LONDON

       CHAPTER VII MR. MARSH

       CHAPTER VIII A DEFINITE CLUE

       CHAPTER IX THE LAST LETTER

       CHAPTER X THE STOLEN SUITCASE

       CHAPTER XI THE TRAIL GROWS CLEARER

       CHAPTER XII MISSING

       CHAPTER XIII STARTLING DISCLOSURES

       CHAPTER XIV THE NIGHT CALL

       CHAPTER XV "DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES"

       CHAPTER XVI THE CLOSED COUNTRY HOUSE

       CHAPTER XVII WHAT THE CARETAKER SAW.

       CHAPTER XVIII THE ENEMY SHOWS HIS HAND

       CHAPTER XIX KIDNAPPED

       CHAPTER XX THE FALLEN PINE

       CHAPTER XXI THE CHIMNEY THAT WOULDN'T DRAW

       CHAPTER XXII CORNERED

       CHAPTER XXIII SUNSET

      CHAPTER I

       THE SHOT

       Table of Contents

      It was a still, balmy night in late October. The scent of burned autumn leaves hung in the air, and a hazy moon, showing just over the housetops, deepened the shadows on the streets.

      Policeman Murphy stopped far a moment, as was his custom, at the corner of Lawrence Avenue and Sheridan Road. He knew that it was about two o'clock in the morning as that was the hour at which he usually reached this point. He glanced sharply up and down Sheridan Road, which at that moment seemed to be completely deserted save for the distant red tail-light of a belated taxi, the whir of whose engine came to him quite distinctly on the quiet night air.

      JUST THEN POLICEMAN MURPHY HEARD A SHOT!

      Instantly his body quickened with an awakened alertness, and he glanced east and west along the lonely stretch of Lawrence Avenue. He saw nothing, and concluded that the sound he had heard must have come from one of the many apartment buildings which surrounded him.

      Murphy pondered for a moment. Was it a burglary, a domestic row, or perhaps a murder? The position of the shot was hard to locate, for it had been but the sound of a moment on the still night. Murphy, however, decided to take a chance, and started stealthily north on Sheridan Road, keeping within the shadow that clung to the buildings.

      He had moved only a short distance in this way when a man in a bath robe dashed out of the doorway of an apartment house just ahead of him and ran north. Murphy instantly broke into pursuit. At the sound of his heavily shod feet on the pavement, the man in the bath robe stopped and turned. Murphy slowed up and the man advanced to meet him.

      "I'm glad you're handy, Officer," panted the man. "I think somebody has been murdered in our building. Come and investigate."

      "Sure," assented Murphy. "That's what I'm here for," and as they mounted the steps of the apartment house, he inquired, "What flat was it?"

      "The top floor on the north side," replied the man, who then informed Murphy that his name was Marsh, and that he lived on the second floor, just below this apartment. "You see," Marsh continued, "a little while ago my wife and I were awakened by a noise in the apartment over us. It sounded like a struggle of some kind. As we listened we felt sure that several people were taking part in it. Suddenly there was a shot, and a sound followed as if a body had fallen to the floor. After that there was absolute silence. I hastily put on my bath robe, and was hurrying out to find a policeman when I met you."

      By this time, Marsh, with Murphy at his heels, had reached the door of the third floor apartment. Murphy placed a thick forefinger on the button of the electric hell and rang it sharply several times. The men could distinctly hear the clear notes of the bell, but no other sound reached them. Again Murphy pressed the button without response.

      "Murder, all right, I guess," muttered Murphy, "and the guy's probably slipped down the back stairs. Who lives here, anyway?" he inquired, turning to Marsh.

      "That's the peculiar part about it," was the reply. "The people who rent this apartment went to Europe this summer, and as I understand it, they won't be back for another month. The apartment has been closed all summer. That is what amazed Mrs. Marsh and myself when we heard this sound above us."

      "It looks like we'll have to break in," said Murphy. "Let me use your telephone."

      "Certainly," agreed Marsh, and led the way to his apartment.

      Murphy sat down at the telephone. His hand was on the receiver when he suddenly paused and turned to Marsh. "You know," he commented, half meditatively, "it's funny we haven't seen anybody else show up in the halls. I heard that shot way down at Lawrence Avenue. At least the people across the hall ought to have been waked up by it.