Josephine Tey

The Collected Works


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      Josephine Tey

      The Collected Works

      Inspector Alan Grant Novels & Other Detective Tales: The Daughter of Time, The Franchise Affair…

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2020 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066385873

      Table of Contents

       Inspector Alan Grant Mysteries

       The Man in the Queue

       A Shilling for Candles

       The Franchise Affair

       To Love and Be Wise

       The Daughter of Time

       The Singing Sands

       Other Mysteries

       Miss Pym Disposes

       Brat Farrar

      INSPECTOR ALAN GRANT MYSTERIES

       Table of Contents

      THE MAN IN THE QUEUE

       Table of Contents

       1. Murder

       2. Inspector Grant

       3. Danny Miller

       4. Raoul Legarde

       5. Danny Again

       6. The Levantine

       7. Things Move

       8. Mrs. Everett

       9. Grant Gets More Information Than He Expected

       10. The Burst to the North

       11. Carninnish

       12. Capture

       13. Marking Time

       14. The Statement

       15. The Brooch

       16. Miss Dinmont Assists

       17. Solution

       18. Conclusion

      To BRISENA

       WHO ACTUALLY WROTE IT

      Chapter 1.

       MURDER

       Table of Contents

      It was between seven and eight o’clock on a March evening, and all over London the bars were being drawn back from pit and gallery doors. Bang, thud, and clank. Grim sounds to preface an evening’s amusement. But no last trump could have so galvanized the weary attendants on Thespis and Terpsichore standing in patient column of four before the gates of promise. Here and there, of course, there was no column. At the Irving, five people spread themselves over the two steps and sacrificed in warmth what they gained in comfort; Greek tragedy was not popular. At the Playbox there was no one; the Playbox was exclusive, and ignored the existence of pits. At the Arena, which had a three weeks’ ballet season, there were ten persons for the gallery and a long queue for the pit. But at the Woffington both human strings tailed away apparently into infinity. Long ago a lordly official had come down the pit queue and, with a gesture of his outstretched arm that seemed to guillotine hope, had said, “All after here standing room only.” Having thus, with a mere contraction of his deltoid muscle, separated the sheep from the goats, he retired in Olympian state to the front of the theatre, where beyond the glass doors there was warmth and shelter. But no one moved away from the long line. Those who were doomed to stand for three hours more seemed indifferent to their martyrdom. They laughed and chattered, and passed each other sustaining bits of chocolate in torn silver paper. Standing room only, was it? Well, who would not stand, and be pleased to, in the last week of Didn’t You Know? Nearly two years it had run now, London’s own musical comedy, and this was its swan song. The stalls and the circle had been booked up weeks ago, and many foolish virgins, not used to queues, had swelled the waiting throng at the barred doors because bribery and corruption had proved unsuccessful at the box office. Every soul in London, it seemed, was trying to crowd into the Woffington to cheer the show just once again. To see if Golly Gollan had put a new gag into his triumph of foolery—Gollan who had been rescued from a life on the road by a daring manager, and had been given his chance and had taken it. To sun themselves yet once more in the loveliness and sparkle of Ray Marcable, that comet that two years ago had blazed out of the void into the zenith and had dimmed the known and constant stars. Ray danced like a blown leaf, and her little aloof smile had killed the fashion for dentifrice advertisements in six months. “Her indefinable charm,” the critics called it, but her followers called it many extravagant things, and defined it to each other with hand-wavings and facial contortions when words proved inadequate to convey the whole of her faery quality. Now she was going to America, like all the good things, and after the last two years London without Ray Marcable would be an unthinkable desert. Who would not stand for ever just to see her once more?

      It had been