The Mandarin's Fan
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Оглавление
Hume Fergus. The Mandarin's Fan
CHAPTER I. The Advertisement
CHAPTER II. Dr. Forge
CHAPTER III. Miss Wharf at Home
CHAPTER IV. Rupert's Secret
CHAPTER V. Concerning the Fan
CHAPTER VI. Burgh's Story
CHAPTER VII. The Warning
CHAPTER VIII. The Beginning of the Ball
CHAPTER IX. The End of the Ball
CHAPTER X. A Mysterious Case
CHAPTER XI. The Canton Adventure
CHAPTER XII. At the Inquest
CHAPTER XIII. The Will
CHAPTER XIV. A Mysterious Letter
CHAPTER XV. The Rotherhithe Den
CHAPTER XVI. The Fan Mystery
CHAPTER XVII. A Disappearance
CHAPTER XVIII. A Surprise
CHAPTER XIX. A Visitor
CHAPTER XX. The Mandarin Explains
CHAPTER XXI. Who is Guilty?
CHAPTER XXII. After-Events
CHAPTER XXIII. The Chase
CHAPTER XXIV. The Fulfilled Prophecy
Отрывок из книги
Royabay was distant five miles from Marport, a rising watering place on the Essex coast. In fact so large was the town, and so many the visitors, that it might be said to be quite risen, though the inhabitants insisted that it had not yet attained the height it yet would reach. But be this as it may, Marport was popular and fashionable, and many retired gentlepeople lived in spacious houses along the cliffs and in the suburbs. The ancient town, which lay in a hollow, was left to holiday trippers, and these came in shoals during the summer months. There was the usual pier, the Kursaal, the theatre, many bathing machines and many boarding houses – in fact the usual sort of things which go to make up a popular watering-place. And the town had been in existence – the new part at all events – for only fifteen years. Like Jonah's gourd it had sprung up in a night: but it certainly showed no signs of withering. In fact its attractions increased yearly.
Major Tidman was a wise man, and had not travelled over the world with his eyes shut. He had seen colonial towns spring up and fade away, and knew how the value of land increases. Thus, when he returned to his own country with a certain sum of money, he expended the same in buying land, and in building thereon. This policy produced a lot of money, with which the Major bought more land and more houses. Now, he possessed an avenue of desirable villa residences in the suburbs which brought him in a good income, and which, by reason of their situation, were never empty. The Major did not live here himself. He was a bachelor and fond of company: therefore he took up his quarters in the Bristol Hotel, the most fashionable in Marport. As he had shares in the company which built it, he managed to obtain his rooms at a comparatively moderate rate. Here he lived all the year round, save when he took a trip to the Continent, and, as the Bristol was always full of people, the Major did not lack company. As he was a good-humoured little man, with plenty of small talk and a fund of out-of-the-way information, he soon became immensely popular. In this way the crafty Major had all the comforts of home and the delights of society without bearing the burden of an establishment of his own. His sole attendant was a weather-beaten one-eyed man, who acted as his valet, and who knew how to hold his tongue.
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"I'm going to get that five thousand pounds," said Rupert, obstinately, "as soon as I can recollect where I saw that fan. The memory will come back to me. I am sure it will. Doctor you won't help me."
"No," said Forge decisively. "I advise you to leave the matter alone."
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