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Updated: June 15, 2025


"You're just capable of strikin' a woman," sneered Madge Scarlet. "I've seen such critters before. God never meant them for men, however." Mr. Elliston held his hand. He saw that he had come near making a mistake. "Forgive me, Mrs. Scarlet," he said in a subdued voice. "I was beside myself, but I had reason to be. Do you know that Nell Darrel is armed?" "No." "She IS, nevertheless, with a pistol.

Dyke Darrel possessed a suspicious mind, and he could not reconcile appearances with the innocence of young Harry Bernard. Deeply meditating, the detective scarcely noticed the opening of the car door opposite his position. His gaze, however, soon met the form of a man as he stepped across the narrow opening between the coaches. The detective was instantly on the alert.

If he was not fully satisfied, he did not permit Elliston to note the fact. "I did but try you, Harper," Dyke Darrel said with a smile, extending his hand. "You are true as steel and I am glad to find it so. I have endured misery since last night, because I feared, and came to believe otherwise." "You will trust me as of old?" "Yes." "Thanks.

Now tell me all about the facts regarding this poor girl." Dyke Darrel did as requested, although he kept back some things that he did not deem it necessary for Mr. Elliston to know. "And you saw this Hubert Vander peering into the cabin window the man who looks like me!" "I did."

It might be well to keep your eye out in that quarter." "It might," admitted Dyke Darrel. "This is all you know regarding the midnight tragedy?" "Oh, no; I can give you more particulars." "Let's have them, then." "But see here, how am I to know that you are a detective? I might get sold, you know," replied Mr. Wilks in a suspicious tone.

He knows I am guilty of no crime, but he does know that I am looking for Louis Leblanc, and he has fooled me with lying letters to keep me out of the way and win you with his guile." A serious look came into the eyes of Polly. "You are looking for Louis Leblanc," she whispered. "Yes; it is the first move in a plan to free Darrel, for I am sure that Leblanc committed the crime.

"A Pinkerton detective!" exclaimed the second officer. "I am a detective, and know my business without receiving instructions from the police of a one-horse town," retorted Dyke Darrel in anger. "I am willing, however, to visit your chief, who will confirm my words." "We had orders from him to arrest you." "Very good. I demand that you take me before him."

Pick out and explain the curious allusions in the play, noticing that these may be classed as geographical, mythological, astrological, or referable to persons or customs of the time, or books of the day. Encyc. art. Harsnett, 'A Discovery of the Fraudulent Practices of John Darrel, in which is narrated how the Starkeys' children were possessed by a demon, and how the Puritan minister, Mr.

Those many who sat before him and they standing there by the door had felt it and were deeply moved. There was a quick stir in the audience a stir of hands and handkerchiefs. Trove entered; the chaplain was now reading a hymn. Darrel sat behind him on a raised platform, the silken spray upon his brows, long and white as snow, his face thoughtful and serious.

"I will not rest until the wicked demons who compassed this foul work meet with punishment!" There were still several shreds of hair between the fingers of the dead, when Dyke Darrel made his examination, since the body had just arrived from the scene of the murder. The detective secured several of the hairs, believing they might help him in his future movements.

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