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The sinister mark
by Lee Thayer
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 465 KB
Description
A famous actress named Mary Blake disappears suddenly, prompting suspicion and concern among those close to her. The novel, a detective story from the early 20th century, follows the efforts of private detective Peter Clancy and Mary’s admirer, Donald Van Loo Morris, as they investigate her disappearance. Clancy’s inquiries uncover various troubling clues, including a staged burglary, a blood-stained scarf, and the involvement of Mary’s secretive sister, Anne. The narrative combines elements of romance, mystery, and potential violence, illustrating the complexities of identity and loyalty in a suspenseful context.
The story opens with Mary Blake’s tense supper with Donald, where unspoken worries and emotional tensions are evident. Her subsequent disappearance leads to a series of cryptic communications and suspicious activities, considering possible motives linked to her personal relationships and hidden secrets. The novel reflects the literary style of early 20th-century American detective fiction, focusing on character motives and intricate plot developments.
The story opens with Mary Blake’s tense supper with Donald, where unspoken worries and emotional tensions are evident. Her subsequent disappearance leads to a series of cryptic communications and suspicious activities, considering possible motives linked to her personal relationships and hidden secrets. The novel reflects the literary style of early 20th-century American detective fiction, focusing on character motives and intricate plot developments.
From the opening pages
The woman stirred slightly, and with her strong, fine hand pushed her coffee cup away. She hesitated and looked down at the heavily shaded light which threw a rosy gleam upon the white tablecloth. Then her troubled glance travelled swiftly about the room, scarcely noting, at the other tables, the eager or bored faces, dimly lit; here and there a splash of colour on a salient jaw and chin, a flush on a bare, powdered shoulder, the rest melting into carefully designed obscurity, in which soft-footed waiters passed back and forth, ubiquitous, silent, and attentive. Her eyes came to rest, at last, on the face of her companion, but her firm red lips remained closed. "Something is troubling you, Mary. I can see it plainly," the man insisted. His voice was low and deep, thrilling with an emotion which was reflected in his strong bronzed face. "Tell me about it. Let me help you. I——" She interrupted him with a motion of her hand. "It's nothing that you can help, Donald," she said, slowly, bitterly. "'Fate stacks the cards,' my father used to say, 'and few of us have the courage to overturn the table.' I wonder——" She paused. There was a strange light in her fathomless eyes. The man opposite her leaned intently forward and strove in vain to plumb their depths. They had fascinated him from the first—those strange gold-gray eyes—more than her beautiful, mobile face, more, even, than her wonderful voice. There had always been in them a veiled expression of mystery, a something unexplained and unexplainable, a hint of tragedy which consorted oddly with her amazing success on the stage, before the most critical audience, perhaps, in the world. The fact that, in spite of her great achievements, in spite of her immense popularity, he alone, so far as he knew, had gained any degree of intimacy, thrilled Donald Van Loo Morris, cosmopolitan man of the world as he certainly was, more than, up to this time, he would have cared to admit even to himself. The long line of his stiff Dutch ancestry fought with the artistic temperament which he had inherited from a sporadic mésalliance , late in the last century, and so far had had the upper hand. Though he had realized for some time that all his senses were intrigued and all his mind filled with the fascination of
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