This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
5094 | A fight? |
5094 | A package? |
5094 | Ah-- then there is some one else you care more to dance with? |
5094 | And it is? |
5094 | And then? |
5094 | And you say there was nothing else in it? |
5094 | And you think you can trace it out? |
5094 | And you-- you went over everything about the wharf? |
5094 | And you? |
5094 | Another intruder? |
5094 | Are n''t you going to follow? |
5094 | Are n''t you going to play? |
5094 | Are you getting anything now? |
5094 | Are you hurt much? |
5094 | Are you quite sure it is for me? |
5094 | Are you ready to go ahead? |
5094 | Are you ready, my dear? |
5094 | Are you ready? |
5094 | Beg pardon, old man,I began,"but do n''t you think this is just a little raw? |
5094 | But how? |
5094 | But what are you going to do, now? |
5094 | But what do you suppose this is-- and who sent it to me-- and why? |
5094 | But who is it? |
5094 | Ca n''t we drive you back? |
5094 | Ca n''t you see I''m harming no one? |
5094 | Can we outdistance the submarine? |
5094 | Did any of you take the torpedo? |
5094 | Did you get a clue? |
5094 | Did you get it? |
5094 | Did you get them? |
5094 | Did you put it there? |
5094 | Did you see a man, masked, come out here? |
5094 | Did you want to see him? |
5094 | Do n''t you remember-- that ring? 5094 Do you mean that you are a magician?" |
5094 | Do you recognize it? |
5094 | Do you remember what became of the bottle of digitalin? |
5094 | Do you tell a good fortune reasonably? |
5094 | Do you think you can reach him? |
5094 | Do you want to kill her? |
5094 | Do you-- do you really mean it? |
5094 | Ever see anything like that? |
5094 | Excuse me just a moment, Mr. Del Mar? |
5094 | Find anything? |
5094 | Follow? 5094 For me-- are you sure?" |
5094 | Has Walter been scratching his ear? |
5094 | Have you a little stimulant? |
5094 | Have you been able to find out anything yet? |
5094 | Have you brought the map with you? |
5094 | Have you discovered anything? |
5094 | Have you ever seen anything that looks like this? |
5094 | Have you heard from him yet? |
5094 | Have you received any word yet? |
5094 | Her? |
5094 | How are you now? |
5094 | How are you, sergeant? |
5094 | How came it here? |
5094 | How did you get that? |
5094 | How do you do? |
5094 | How do you feel? |
5094 | How do you feel? |
5094 | How do you suppose it ever got here? |
5094 | How does that sound? |
5094 | How is he? |
5094 | How is she working? |
5094 | How? |
5094 | I beg your pardon,I excused myself to the alleged Mr. Bailey,"but may I speak to Miss Dodge alone just a minute?" |
5094 | I hope there''s nothing wrong? |
5094 | I may hope, then? |
5094 | I suppose a preparation for the fox or drag hunting season? |
5094 | I wonder what that can be? |
5094 | I wonder where they are taking them? |
5094 | Ill again? |
5094 | Is Lieutenant Woodward in? |
5094 | Is Miss Elaine in? |
5094 | Is Mr. Del Mar at home? |
5094 | Is Mr. Del Mar in? |
5094 | Is Mr. Kennedy there? |
5094 | Is Professor Kennedy here? |
5094 | Is everything ready? |
5094 | Is he? 5094 Is that you, Godowski?" |
5094 | Is the Professor out on his boat? |
5094 | Is this Miss Dodge? |
5094 | It is for Miss Elaine? |
5094 | Look,she cried, as I read with her: Do honest assistants search safes? |
5094 | May I get you an ice? |
5094 | May I go with you? |
5094 | May I go with you? |
5094 | May we join you? |
5094 | Mind? |
5094 | Miss Dodge? |
5094 | Miss Dodge? |
5094 | Miss Dodge? |
5094 | Miss Elaine Dodge? |
5094 | Mr. Del Mar? |
5094 | Mr. Del Mar? |
5094 | Mr. Kennedy,she said,"may I trouble you and Mr. Jameson a moment?" |
5094 | Mr. Kennedy? 5094 My dressing- table?" |
5094 | Nearly through? |
5094 | No interference? |
5094 | On the yacht, are they? |
5094 | Professor Arnold? |
5094 | Really? |
5094 | See? |
5094 | Shall I tell them you are here, sir? |
5094 | So-- you have found him at last? |
5094 | Stolen? |
5094 | Tell me, quick-- how did it happen? |
5094 | Tell me,she appealed to Dr. Godowski,"what is the matter?" |
5094 | The house you bought for Aunt Tabby, once belonged to Bennett, did n''t it? |
5094 | Then there is no test, none? |
5094 | Then you do n''t know of his escape? |
5094 | Then-- er-- you are not ill again? |
5094 | They-- they did n''t cut the cable-- did they? |
5094 | Walter,she said,"may I speak to you a moment? |
5094 | Was he a traitor? |
5094 | Well, Rusty? |
5094 | Well, gentlemen,greeted Kennedy as he met the two detectives,"what can I do for you?" |
5094 | Well, what do you know about that? |
5094 | Well, what do you think of that? |
5094 | Well, what luck? |
5094 | Well,demanded Woodward,"what''s your business?" |
5094 | Well,queried Aunt Josephine,"what are you going to do?" |
5094 | Well-- of all things-- what''s this, and where did it come from? |
5094 | Well? |
5094 | Well? |
5094 | Well? |
5094 | Well? |
5094 | Wh- what was it? |
5094 | Wh- where did I get that? |
5094 | What are you doing here alone? |
5094 | What are you doing? |
5094 | What are you going to do with it? |
5094 | What are you going to do? |
5094 | What brings you here? 5094 What can a crude drawing of a sunrise on the sea mean?" |
5094 | What can that have been? |
5094 | What caused it? |
5094 | What could have happened to Walter? |
5094 | What do you see? |
5094 | What do you suppose it is? |
5094 | What do you think it is, Walter? |
5094 | What do you think of it, Walter? |
5094 | What does it all mean? |
5094 | What does it mean? |
5094 | What does it mean? |
5094 | What does it mean? |
5094 | What have we here? |
5094 | What is it, Rusty? |
5094 | What is it, do you suppose? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is it? |
5094 | What is the trouble, Miss Dodge? |
5094 | What luck? |
5094 | What of this? |
5094 | What seems to be the difficulty? |
5094 | What seems to be the matter? |
5094 | What shall I do? |
5094 | What shall we do? |
5094 | What shall we do? |
5094 | What shall we do? |
5094 | What time is it? |
5094 | What was the matter? |
5094 | What would Craig do? |
5094 | What''s doing? |
5094 | What''s that noise? |
5094 | What''s that-- an oyster boat? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s that? |
5094 | What''s the matter now? |
5094 | What''s the matter, Walter? |
5094 | What''s the matter, old man? |
5094 | What''s the matter, old man? |
5094 | What''s the matter? |
5094 | What''s the matter? |
5094 | What''s the trouble? |
5094 | What''s this? 5094 When are we going to see the wonderful invention, Craig?" |
5094 | When did this thing come on Walter? |
5094 | Where am I? |
5094 | Where are YOU going? |
5094 | Where are they-- where''s the tramp? |
5094 | Where are they? |
5094 | Where are you going? |
5094 | Where did it come from? |
5094 | Where did you say you got that? |
5094 | Where is Mr. Del Mar? |
5094 | Where is the master? |
5094 | Where there should have been seven million dollars,he muttered to himself,"why is there only a mystic ring?" |
5094 | Where''s Elaine? |
5094 | Where''s Elaine? |
5094 | Where''s Elaine? |
5094 | Where''s HE going? |
5094 | Where''s the prisoner? |
5094 | Which way did they take him? |
5094 | Who goes there? |
5094 | Who is it, do you think? |
5094 | Who is this? |
5094 | Who the deuce did this? |
5094 | Who''s that? |
5094 | Who''s that? |
5094 | Why do n''t you have your fortune told by Ancient Anna? |
5094 | Why not set it up in the library? |
5094 | Why not-- down cellar? |
5094 | Why, Craig,cried Elaine, startled,"what''s the matter?" |
5094 | Why, how do you do? |
5094 | Why, what did he say? |
5094 | Why, what do you mean? |
5094 | Why, what do you suppose he can want? |
5094 | Why, what is the matter? |
5094 | Why, what''s all this about? |
5094 | Why, what''s the matter, Jameson? |
5094 | Why, what''s the matter? |
5094 | Why, where in the world did you get those togs? |
5094 | Why,she gasped, clutching at the desk,"what is the matter?" |
5094 | Why? |
5094 | Will she always cross my path? 5094 Will you excuse me a moment?" |
5094 | Will you go? |
5094 | Wo n''t you come and stay with me a few days up in the country, dear? |
5094 | Wo n''t you come in? |
5094 | Wo n''t you take this ice? |
5094 | Would she care to engage a magician? |
5094 | Would you go? |
5094 | Would you mind answering a few questions about these men? |
5094 | Would you mind getting that torpedo ready? |
5094 | Yes, I''ll see them,he said, then to us,"Please excuse me?" |
5094 | Yes? |
5094 | You are Professor Arnold''s man? |
5094 | You have them here, then? |
5094 | You just left them? |
5094 | You knew me? |
5094 | You know this fellow Del Mar? |
5094 | You must infect every instrument the doctor uses on Kennedy and Jameson,--see? |
5094 | You will excuse me? |
5094 | You''ll join us at the Wilkeshire hunt in a paper chase this afternoon, surely, Mr. Del Mar? |
5094 | You''ve got to get it, see? |
5094 | And you?" |
5094 | Are my things packed? |
5094 | Are you ready?" |
5094 | But was he there? |
5094 | But what about the ring? |
5094 | But what business of theirs was it? |
5094 | But which way? |
5094 | CHAPTER X THE CONSPIRATORS"You remember Lieutenant Woodward, the inventor of trodite?" |
5094 | Ca n''t you follow them and keep them out of trouble?" |
5094 | Can it be done?" |
5094 | Could it be one of the sentries? |
5094 | Do you want us all to get caught?" |
5094 | Dodge, is n''t it?" |
5094 | Excuse us, please?" |
5094 | Had his plans been carried out? |
5094 | Had she found anything? |
5094 | Had that uncanny watching eye observed his every action? |
5094 | Had the appointment been a hoax, after all, a scheme to get him away from the city for some purpose? |
5094 | Had the man been after the other model? |
5094 | How can we follow?" |
5094 | How could he get into that room? |
5094 | How''s that?" |
5094 | I exclaimed,"What''s that?" |
5094 | Is Miss Dodge at home?" |
5094 | Jameson?" |
5094 | Joshua says its haunts--""Haunts?" |
5094 | Kennedy?" |
5094 | Kennedy?" |
5094 | M.''Now, what''s all that?" |
5094 | Marie, will you look for it? |
5094 | Shall I send for a doctor?" |
5094 | Should he go out? |
5094 | Suppose Craig is n''t about? |
5094 | Then to the man, as he entered, he said,"Well, what''s new?" |
5094 | Was Elaine there? |
5094 | Was he merely torturing her, as a cat might torture a mouse? |
5094 | Was he running off with her car while she was waiting inside the hotel? |
5094 | Was he the automobile thief? |
5094 | Was it an hallucination, born of my nervous condition? |
5094 | Was it staring at him now in the blackness? |
5094 | Was it the hideous helmeted face that had dragged her down into the sewer once? |
5094 | Was it the work of human or superhuman hands? |
5094 | Was she a clever actress, hiding her discovery, he wondered? |
5094 | Was that Aunt Tabby''s"haunt"? |
5094 | Was that all? |
5094 | Was that face real, or a dream face? |
5094 | Was this the end of their great expectations? |
5094 | Was this the person he expected, or a"plant?" |
5094 | Were Bennett''s millions merely mythical? |
5094 | Were they under the floor? |
5094 | What could he do? |
5094 | What could it be? |
5094 | What could they do? |
5094 | What did it all mean? |
5094 | What did it mean? |
5094 | What did it mean? |
5094 | What had he done? |
5094 | What if it should go off? |
5094 | What might at any moment be happening to Elaine-- and he powerless to help her? |
5094 | What mischief was afoot? |
5094 | What should he do? |
5094 | What should he do? |
5094 | What should she do? |
5094 | What should she do? |
5094 | What was it about? |
5094 | What was it, I asked myself, that he should be so secret about it? |
5094 | What was it? |
5094 | What was it? |
5094 | What was that roaring noise? |
5094 | What''s it all about?" |
5094 | Where was Craig? |
5094 | Where was Del Mar? |
5094 | Where was Elaine? |
5094 | Where was Elaine? |
5094 | Where was it? |
5094 | Who could be below? |
5094 | Who was he? |
5094 | Who was this? |
5094 | Who''s going to do this, if Walter and I do n''t?" |
5094 | Who-- what was he? |
5094 | Wo n''t you be seated?" |
5094 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
5094 | Would Kennedy''s invention for which Del Mar had dared so much in the first place prove his final undoing? |
5094 | Would they get him? |
5094 | Would they never get it? |
5094 | Would we be in time? |
5094 | You understand?" |
5094 | he demanded sharply,"what''s all this?" |
5151 | A hound? 5151 A note?" |
5151 | And do n''t butt in-- see? |
5151 | And the pain? |
5151 | And they''re gone? |
5151 | And you really were-- put out by a kiss? |
5151 | And you remember to whom you married me? |
5151 | And you say they have no recollection of anything that happens? |
5151 | And you think this Clutching Hand has never recovered the incriminating papers that caused him to murder your father? |
5151 | And you-- you say-- you married this-- this woman to Taylor Dodge? |
5151 | And, oh, do you know, the strangest thing happened yesterday? 5151 Another watch?" |
5151 | Are there any operations going on now? |
5151 | Are you all right? |
5151 | Are you all right? |
5151 | Are you hurt? |
5151 | Are you sure? |
5151 | Are you-- all right? |
5151 | Are-- you willing-- to have your blood transfused? |
5151 | Back? |
5151 | But do you think that is all right? 5151 But suppose the door has no transom?" |
5151 | But why did it work so effectively? |
5151 | Ca n''t we drive you around? |
5151 | Ca n''t we go on the ship, too? |
5151 | Can I find a bloodhound about here? |
5151 | Can you go with me now? |
5151 | Care for it? |
5151 | Chief,he whispered eagerly,"You know Adventuress Mary? |
5151 | Did a car pass here, just now-- a big car? |
5151 | Did you notice the number of the car? |
5151 | Did you-- did you-- really-- love him? |
5151 | Do it? 5151 Do n''t you know better than to try to help anybody without INVESTIGATING?" |
5151 | Do n''t you understand? |
5151 | Do n''t you understand? |
5151 | Do you know why the servant allowed us to leave the apartment? |
5151 | Do you realize how little you can really see through a key hole? |
5151 | Do you see anything, Walter? |
5151 | Do you see that table-- and all those papers? 5151 Do you? |
5151 | Do? |
5151 | Doctor,he asked slowly as he worked,"do you know of Professor Leduc of the Nantes Ecole de Medicin?" |
5151 | Ever hear of Dr. Edward Reichert of the University of Pennsylvania and his wonderful discoveries of how blood crystals vary in different species? |
5151 | Everything progressing favorably? |
5151 | Give up the chase for the Clutching Hand? |
5151 | Got what? |
5151 | Has the watch purchased for Miss Elaine Dodge been delivered? |
5151 | Have you read them? |
5151 | Have you read them? |
5151 | Have you the money there? |
5151 | Have you the record? |
5151 | Have you-- found anything? |
5151 | Hey, you fellows-- what are you doing there? |
5151 | How about Mary Carson? |
5151 | How about those bracelet watches? |
5151 | How are you this afternoon? |
5151 | How can you tell anything by that?'' |
5151 | How did it happen? |
5151 | How did it happen? |
5151 | How do you do? |
5151 | How do you know? |
5151 | How do you propose to help me to escape? |
5151 | How does it work? |
5151 | How long has he known? |
5151 | How''s that? |
5151 | How''s the patient? |
5151 | How? |
5151 | How? |
5151 | I know,I said somewhat nettled,"but what can you see through that putty blower? |
5151 | I may write here? |
5151 | I wonder whether I locked these windows? |
5151 | I''ve rigged it so that you''ll reach him through Jameson, understand? |
5151 | If it is really a bomb,I remarked,"why not put the thing out of commission?" |
5151 | Indeed? |
5151 | Is Jennings there? |
5151 | Is he all right? |
5151 | Is he in New York? |
5151 | Is he sick, too? |
5151 | Is it all right? |
5151 | Is n''t it a beauty? |
5151 | Is n''t it stunning? |
5151 | Is n''t that fine? 5151 Is she-- going to-- die?" |
5151 | Is that so? |
5151 | Is that what you intend to do with me? |
5151 | Is that you, Craig? |
5151 | Is that you, Craig? |
5151 | Is that you? |
5151 | Is there anything I can do? |
5151 | Is there nothing that can save him? |
5151 | Is this it? |
5151 | Is-- is there no other way but to surrender? |
5151 | Lady,he disguised his voice,"will yer please ter call off the dog? |
5151 | May I take Rusty along with me? |
5151 | May I use your telephone? |
5151 | Might I-- er-- see your room, Miss Dodge? |
5151 | Miss Dodge, will you arrange that spark and throttle? |
5151 | Miss Dodge,he added,"will you and the rest excuse me if I ask you to wait just a moment longer?" |
5151 | Miss Dodge,he asked,"might I-- might I trouble you to let me see your arm?" |
5151 | Miss Sears,he asked of one of the nurses,"will you bring me that hypodermic needle? |
5151 | Miss Sears,he asked rather testily,"what have you done with the hypodermic and the scopolamine?" |
5151 | Moisture-- cold? |
5151 | Mr. Bennett,she exclaimed over the wire,"just guess who called on me?" |
5151 | Mr. Jameson, please-- can''t I go with you? |
5151 | Mr. Kennedy live here? |
5151 | My gracious,cried Aunt Josephine, in alarm,"where will this thing end?" |
5151 | No-- shall I? |
5151 | No-- why? |
5151 | Now, do you see what I have just thought of-- no? 5151 Oh, Mr. Kennedy, how can I ever thank you?" |
5151 | Oh, why did I send him away? 5151 Patient?" |
5151 | Remember you? |
5151 | Say, bo,he asked of the rough fellow,"what does Clutching Hand want with her? |
5151 | Say,blurted out the informer,"do you know Kennedy and Jameson are back?" |
5151 | See that old boiler down there at the edge of the water? 5151 See that?" |
5151 | See? |
5151 | So that strikes your fancy? |
5151 | Some new fandangled periscope arrangement, I suppose? |
5151 | Tell me,Elaine cried,"Is there-- can there be anything in it? |
5151 | That was n''t that way when we left, was it, Walter? |
5151 | That? 5151 The motive?" |
5151 | The way to do it is to separate Kennedy and Elaine-- see? |
5151 | Then what did you telephone for? |
5151 | Then you scrape the wire, just as you shave records to use it over again? |
5151 | Thermit? |
5151 | Was it natural, an accident, or-- or murder? |
5151 | Was it typewritten? |
5151 | We''re on the right trail,commented Elaine as he showed them to her,"but where do you suppose the owners are?" |
5151 | Weepy Mary,between sobs, managed to blurt out,"You are Miss Elaine Dodge, are n''t you? |
5151 | Well, how did your infra- red rays work? |
5151 | Well, now we''ve got her, what shall we do with her? |
5151 | Well, what do YOU want? |
5151 | Well, where DID he go? |
5151 | Well, where shall it be? |
5151 | Well,I gasped,"what do you know about that?" |
5151 | Well,she gasped again,"what''s the occasion of THIS?" |
5151 | Well-- are you coming, Walter? |
5151 | Were you watching me? |
5151 | Wh- what do you think of that? |
5151 | Wh- what''s the matter, Craig? |
5151 | Wh-- what''s it all about? |
5151 | What IS the matter? |
5151 | What are those curtains? |
5151 | What are we to do? |
5151 | What are you going here for, Thomas? |
5151 | What are you thinking of doing? |
5151 | What can I do for you? |
5151 | What can you do for this fellow? |
5151 | What d''ye see, Bill? |
5151 | What do you mean, sir, by such conduct? |
5151 | What do you mean-- tell me? |
5151 | What do you think of it? |
5151 | What do you think of that? |
5151 | What does all this mean? |
5151 | What happened? |
5151 | What has happened? |
5151 | What have you been up against? |
5151 | What have you to say about those? |
5151 | What is it, Doctor,I asked finally,"that interests you most in America?" |
5151 | What is it, Marie? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is it? |
5151 | What is that? |
5151 | What is that? |
5151 | What is the hotel? |
5151 | What is the matter, Marie? |
5151 | What is the poison? |
5151 | What is the trouble, do you think? |
5151 | What shall we do with this and the other stuff? |
5151 | What shall we do? |
5151 | What shall we do? |
5151 | What time is it, dear? |
5151 | What trick? |
5151 | What was her name? |
5151 | What was it? |
5151 | What was it? |
5151 | What was it? |
5151 | What was the message? |
5151 | What would a certain blonde young lady accept as a birthday present from her family lawyer? |
5151 | What''s all that? |
5151 | What''s all this, Elaine? |
5151 | What''s all this? |
5151 | What''s it all about, Craig? |
5151 | What''s that instrument you are using? |
5151 | What''s that thing? |
5151 | What''s that? |
5151 | What''s that? |
5151 | What''s the big idea, Walter? |
5151 | What''s the matter with Rusty? |
5151 | What''s the matter, here? |
5151 | What''s the matter, old fellow? |
5151 | What''s the matter, old man? |
5151 | What''s the matter? |
5151 | What''s the matter? |
5151 | What''s the matter? |
5151 | What''s the matter? |
5151 | What''s them pieces of tin-- hey? |
5151 | What''s your name, little boy? |
5151 | What-- not ready yet? |
5151 | What-- those little marks-- a clue? |
5151 | What? |
5151 | Where are you boys going? |
5151 | Where are you going? |
5151 | Where did this package come from? |
5151 | Where did you get this package? |
5151 | Where do you live? |
5151 | Where have you hidden the seven million dollars? |
5151 | Where is Bennett? |
5151 | Where is Greenwich 4494? |
5151 | Where is he? |
5151 | Where is she-- tell me? |
5151 | Where is the armor? |
5151 | Where is the young lady who was here? |
5151 | Where is-- Miss Dodge? |
5151 | Where shall I have them put these things, Miss Elaine? |
5151 | Where-- the deuce-- are you? |
5151 | Where? |
5151 | Which is? |
5151 | Which way did the big car go? |
5151 | Which way did they go? |
5151 | Which way-- which way? |
5151 | Who is it, Jennings? |
5151 | Who is that woman? |
5151 | Who is this? |
5151 | Who the devil-- why did n''t you tell me a reporter was here, Jennings? |
5151 | Who was that man who left you-- last-- the Clutching Hand? |
5151 | Who? |
5151 | Why did he let us go, though? |
5151 | Why not one of these? |
5151 | Why should our great Ksing Chau desire a white devil? 5151 Why, Craig,"I exclaimed excitedly,"what do you mean?" |
5151 | Why, Dad,she cried,"where have you been? |
5151 | Why, Miss Elaine-- what ees ze mattair? 5151 Why, do n''t you see? |
5151 | Why, what''s the matter? |
5151 | Why-- wh- what''s the matter? |
5151 | Why-- what is the matter? |
5151 | Why-- what''s the matter? |
5151 | Why-- yes,answered the doctor,"but what of him?" |
5151 | Why? 5151 Will you give me your name?" |
5151 | Will you take care of him? |
5151 | Wo n''t you come in? |
5151 | Wo n''t you sit down a moment? |
5151 | Wo n''t you step in? |
5151 | Wo n''t you step in? |
5151 | Would you like to follow our technique, Doctor? |
5151 | Would you like to see it? |
5151 | Would you mind-- er-- standing down the hall just a bit while I enter? |
5151 | Y- yes,I replied dubiously,"but what does it all mean?" |
5151 | Yes, I''m all right, thank you, Mr. Kennedy-- and I put the package you sent me into the safe, but--"Package? |
5151 | You killed him? |
5151 | You saw that limousine standing there? |
5151 | You see what will happen at the hour of three? |
5151 | You will? |
5151 | You''re something of a scientific detective, are n''t you? |
5151 | You-- kill him-- with knife? |
5151 | You-- you are very careful since that last warning? |
5151 | You-- you will not let that letter intimidate you? |
5151 | ''Do you know the combination?'' |
5151 | ''Where else did your father keep papers?'' |
5151 | ''Where else did your father keep papers?'' |
5151 | Approaching Tong Wah, he asked:"When will the death- drink be ready?" |
5151 | At exactly half past, I want you to do as I told you-- see?" |
5151 | At the signature of the Clutching Hand he frowned, then, noticing Dr. Hayward, turned to him and repeated his question,"What is the matter?" |
5151 | Before that happens, we must''get''her-- see?" |
5151 | Bennett?" |
5151 | Bennett?" |
5151 | Bennett?" |
5151 | But what could we do? |
5151 | Ca n''t you let us in so we can leave it?" |
5151 | Ca n''t you tell us how to get out?" |
5151 | Can he do it?" |
5151 | Can you arrange it?" |
5151 | Can your controlling spirit give him advice?" |
5151 | Carton?" |
5151 | Could it be Jennings? |
5151 | Could it have been to get the evidence which Dodge had that would incriminate the master criminal? |
5151 | Craig took the letter and we both read, with amazement:"Are you an enemy of society? |
5151 | Did you have any breakfast?" |
5151 | Do n''t you remember it?" |
5151 | Do n''t you see, I''m perfectly able to take care of myself? |
5151 | Do you see those lines? |
5151 | Do you want to speak to him? |
5151 | Dodge?" |
5151 | Get me?" |
5151 | Get me?" |
5151 | Had he been seeing things or hearing things, I wondered? |
5151 | Had he got so far in the chase, only to be outwitted? |
5151 | Have you done anything yet in the little matter we talked about? |
5151 | Have you done anything yet in the little matter we talked about?" |
5151 | He was plainly ill."How long has Rusty been in the room?" |
5151 | How are you getting on, Miss Stern?" |
5151 | How could any woman scorn him? |
5151 | How did it happen?" |
5151 | How futile was it all in the presence of the great destroyer? |
5151 | I know he wanted to laugh and say,"YOU-- a murderess?" |
5151 | I moved over toward him and whispered eagerly,"Is there anything new?" |
5151 | I suppose they''ve put some one up to saying she''s engaged?" |
5151 | If I did, might he not pick us both off, from a safe vantage point, by some sharp- shooting skill? |
5151 | If it was a murder, what was the motive? |
5151 | In the safe?" |
5151 | In which closet does the minister keep them?" |
5151 | Is it anything important-- any news?" |
5151 | Jameson?" |
5151 | Kennedy?" |
5151 | Kennedy?" |
5151 | Kennedy?" |
5151 | Might there not be some simple explanation of it, after all, which she had missed? |
5151 | Morton?" |
5151 | Or was it just the galvanic effect of the current? |
5151 | Or was it our heightened imaginations, under the spell of the darkness? |
5151 | Or was someone outside? |
5151 | See how I fixed it? |
5151 | See?" |
5151 | See?" |
5151 | Should I leave him and go to Craig? |
5151 | Should he defend his rudeness, if she did not understand? |
5151 | Should he flee? |
5151 | Silence? |
5151 | Suppose she should really be gone on only a short shopping trip and should return to find that she had been fooled over the wire? |
5151 | Suppose the oxygen gave out? |
5151 | Then he added to the policeman,"Where do you suppose it comes from?" |
5151 | Then, hesitating and a trifle embarrassed, he added,"May I-- may I have one?" |
5151 | There was a note of seriousness in it, too, that made me ask quickly,"Why?" |
5151 | Understand? |
5151 | Was anything wrong? |
5151 | Was he possessed by such an inordinate jealousy of Bennett? |
5151 | Was it a muffled scream? |
5151 | Was it mere prejudice, or was it her keen woman''s intuition? |
5151 | Was it the surprise of an innocent man? |
5151 | Was she dead? |
5151 | Was this Craig? |
5151 | Was this Kennedy? |
5151 | Was this the end? |
5151 | Were such things as these going to happen to her, without Kennedy''s help? |
5151 | Were we only to be shipwrecked in sight of port? |
5151 | What Is It? |
5151 | What did he think he could do-- blocks away? |
5151 | What did it all mean? |
5151 | What does she look like?" |
5151 | What does she mean?" |
5151 | What had we better do?" |
5151 | What is it that worries you now?" |
5151 | What is it?" |
5151 | What is it?" |
5151 | What is on your mind? |
5151 | What should I do? |
5151 | What should she do? |
5151 | What should she do? |
5151 | What should she do? |
5151 | What to do? |
5151 | What was that scratching noise? |
5151 | What was that? |
5151 | What was the matter? |
5151 | What''s that?" |
5151 | Where do you live?" |
5151 | Where was Clutching Hand? |
5151 | Where was Craig? |
5151 | Where was Kennedy? |
5151 | Who''s your friend?" |
5151 | Why did n''t I believe him?" |
5151 | Why had they quarreled? |
5151 | Why not put her in there? |
5151 | Why, he has been after that Clutching Hand now for three months-- and what has he accomplished? |
5151 | Will he shoot me? |
5151 | Will you allow me?" |
5151 | Would he never throw it? |
5151 | Would it bring help? |
5151 | Would no one hear her? |
5151 | Would the machine succeed? |
5151 | Would they succeed? |
5151 | Would we be in time to rescue Elaine? |
5151 | You say it is made up of separate words and type cut from newspapers and pasted on note paper?" |
5151 | asked the doctor peevishly,"Telephone? |
5151 | growled the master criminal, covering the fact that he was considerably relieved to see him at last,"where have YOU been? |
5151 | he exclaimed with mock politeness,"so, you thought you''d fool me, did you? |
5151 | he says, and as he dictates, I write--""This?" |
5150 | A dead hand? |
5150 | A phantom circuit? |
5150 | About Betty Blackwell? |
5150 | And nothing was taken except some old photographs? |
5150 | And the girl-- Betty Blackwell-- what did she have to do with it? |
5150 | And the taking of the photographs was merely a blind, after not finding it? |
5150 | And then? |
5150 | And you have discovered in this case? |
5150 | And you mean to say that in that way you can actually identify a voice? |
5150 | And you mean to say that that''s going on right here in this city? |
5150 | And you say you lost practically nothing? |
5150 | As a scientist, does the amnesia theory appeal to you, Craig? |
5150 | Besides the cigarettes, was there anything else? |
5150 | Blackened? |
5150 | But I meant how do you suppose he was killed? |
5150 | But what is your explanation? 5150 But who did put in the instrument, really-- did you?" |
5150 | But, you may ask, how about the automobile picture? 5150 But,"I asked, almost in a whisper, as if someone over there might hear me,"is n''t this a very dangerous proceeding, Craig? |
5150 | By the way, did you see Madame Margot herself? |
5150 | By the way,he said in a low voice, leaning over toward her,"have you heard that those pictures of her were faked? |
5150 | Ca n''t we all go together? |
5150 | Ca n''t we buy them off? |
5150 | Ca n''t you do something? |
5150 | Can-- we-- get it? |
5150 | Carton,he said in a milder tone, at length,"what''s the use of all this bluffing? |
5150 | Carton? |
5150 | Did it seem-- straight? |
5150 | Did she come to see whether you got the record? |
5150 | Did you get into the office, learn Langhorne''s habits, and so on, from her? |
5150 | Did you meet the Titian? |
5150 | Did you see anyone else? |
5150 | Do n''t you see it all now? 5150 Do n''t you see?" |
5150 | Do you feel thoroughly beautified? |
5150 | Do you know any more about her? |
5150 | Do you know that girl who just went out? |
5150 | Do you realize what time it is? |
5150 | Do you suppose I''m fool enough to come here and make a dishonest proposition-- here-- right in front of your own friends? |
5150 | Do you think Dorgan and Murtha are hunting the book as anxiously as-- some others? |
5150 | Do you think it is one of those cases like some that Carton has uncovered on the East Side and among girls newly arrived in the city? |
5150 | Do you want to go in? |
5150 | Do you want to know what has become of her, what you are responsible for? 5150 Dorgan?" |
5150 | Got her away-- how-- where? |
5150 | Has a record, I suppose? |
5150 | Has anyone called up? |
5150 | Have n''t you fellows finished yet? |
5150 | Have n''t you got another? 5150 Have you any idea what might have happened to her?" |
5150 | Have you any idea who might pull off such a thing for Dorgan or Murtha? |
5150 | Hello-- Julius? 5150 How about that safe robbery, Kennedy? |
5150 | How about the operator? |
5150 | How about the people there? |
5150 | How about the story of them? 5150 How can I? |
5150 | How did he seem-- irrational? |
5150 | How did you find out about the detectaphone being there? |
5150 | How did you get it? |
5150 | How do you do, Judge? |
5150 | How do you know? |
5150 | How do you study them? |
5150 | How do you suppose it happened? |
5150 | How do you suppose such a thing is possible-- that he could lie about the city, even here until the night keeper came on,--unknown? |
5150 | How is it working? |
5150 | How many private dining- rooms are there? |
5150 | How? |
5150 | How? |
5150 | How? |
5150 | How? |
5150 | How? |
5150 | I called you? |
5150 | I suppose you know what Miss Blackwell was? |
5150 | I suppose your investigators have had more or less to do with watching the progress of drug habits? |
5150 | I suppose, Miss Kendall, we may depend on you to join us? |
5150 | I wonder if you have ever heard of the Reichert blood test? 5150 I wonder if you would excuse me while I drop downstairs to look over things there-- perhaps ingratiate myself with that Titian? |
5150 | I wonder what that blonde woman wore that for? |
5150 | I wonder what that is that Harris seems to be passing out to them? |
5150 | In other words, you think the Reform League has you beaten? |
5150 | In what shape is the record, do you suppose? |
5150 | Is Dr. Harris in? |
5150 | Is it you, Professor Kennedy? |
5150 | Is n''t he back yet? |
5150 | Is n''t he going to say anything about it? |
5150 | Is n''t it clever, though? 5150 Is that true-- about the Montmartre?" |
5150 | Is there no one in all this great city,appealed the distracted little woman with outstretched arms,"who can find my daughter? |
5150 | Is there no way to correct the mistake? |
5150 | Just how do you think he might be involved? |
5150 | Know about Langhorne-- the fellow that was-- that I robbed? |
5150 | Lost his nerve? |
5150 | Mary Ogleby-- eloped? |
5150 | Meanwhile, would you like to know who your''wolf''is that has been spreading rumours about broadcast? |
5150 | Miss Kendall,asked Kennedy,"did you notice anything particularly downstairs? |
5150 | Miss Kendall? |
5150 | Must marriage end all-- all happiness? |
5150 | Must you go? |
5150 | No-- what was it? |
5150 | Nothing that might be used by an enemy for any purpose? |
5150 | Now Langhorne-- what do you know about him? |
5150 | Now if you find such a break in the same letter in another piece of typewriting, what would you think? |
5150 | Now, how did the robber get in? |
5150 | Now, who was the man above you, to whom you reported? |
5150 | Oh, Murtha,he remonstrated with just a twinkle in his eye,"you do n''t think I believe that sort of soft stuff, do you? |
5150 | Oh,exclaimed Clare, as she ran through the writing,"that is this new portrait parle, the spoken picture, is n''t it?" |
5150 | Pat Murtha,ejaculated Craig,"in a sanitarium?" |
5150 | Pomeroy? |
5150 | Real ones? |
5150 | Right there? |
5150 | Rumour? 5150 Say, Kennedy, you''re not going to desert me?" |
5150 | Say-- what are youse guys doin'', huh? |
5150 | Shall I? |
5150 | She-- at a dinner-- with Mr. Murtha? 5150 Silly? |
5150 | So they''ve retained you, have they, Ike? |
5150 | So you knew about thermit, then? |
5150 | So, you have already investigated the Little Montmartre? |
5150 | So,he shouted at last,"you are going to try some of those fine little scientific tricks on us, are you?" |
5150 | Suppose we walk a little way downtown with Carton? |
5150 | Tanguez- vous? |
5150 | That robbery of Langhorne''s safe was a most peculiar thing, was n''t it? |
5150 | That was your gun moll who just went out, was n''t it? |
5150 | The door was open when you returned? |
5150 | The guy with the glasses? |
5150 | The question is, whom are we going to get whom we can trust to go to that dope joint and explore it? |
5150 | Then it is war-- without quarter? |
5150 | Then it must have been someone in the house or at least familiar with it? |
5150 | Then we can be-- friends? |
5150 | Then what of it? |
5150 | Then you can identify these letters positively? |
5150 | Then you have n''t heard it? |
5150 | Then you think it is a good tip? |
5150 | Then you think you can trace down the forger of those pictures before it is too late? |
5150 | Then you would stick your foot out-- and perhaps lose the race yourself? |
5150 | Then you-- you have n''t forgotten poor little me? |
5150 | Then,pursued Kennedy, pacing the floor thoughtfully,"the next question is, How are we to proceed? |
5150 | Thermit? |
5150 | These are the marks on the door, I presume? |
5150 | They heard you talking that last time, and you have locked the door against them? 5150 Think of it?" |
5150 | To- day''s the day, is it? |
5150 | Too late? |
5150 | Under arrest? 5150 Veronal?" |
5150 | Well, Mr. Carton, have n''t I made good? |
5150 | Well, what do you think of that? |
5150 | Well,asked Murtha persuasively,"you''ll think it over, first, wo n''t you?" |
5150 | Well? |
5150 | Well? |
5150 | What are they that they should take such pains with them? |
5150 | What are you doing now? |
5150 | What are you going to do? |
5150 | What are you-- according to your own confession? 5150 What did he do with it?" |
5150 | What did you think of Miss Ashton? 5150 What do I care about Martin? |
5150 | What do you call it? |
5150 | What do you mean? |
5150 | What do you mean? |
5150 | What do you mean? |
5150 | What do you mean? |
5150 | What do you suppose Mrs. Ogleby meant in her references to Carton? |
5150 | What do you think it is? |
5150 | What do you think of it? |
5150 | What do you think of that? 5150 What do you think of the rest of the letter?" |
5150 | What do you think of this, Miss Kendall? |
5150 | What has he done? |
5150 | What has that to do with Miss Blackwell, anyhow? |
5150 | What is it, Mary? |
5150 | What is it-- what did you find? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is it? |
5150 | What is that bit of ruled glass? |
5150 | What is the thing? |
5150 | What kind of a weird thing is that? |
5150 | What luck? |
5150 | What makes you suspect him? |
5150 | What of it all? |
5150 | What shall I write? |
5150 | What sort of place was it in which the receivers of the detectaphone were located-- do you know? |
5150 | What was in the book-- mostly, do you imagine? |
5150 | What was it that was overheard? |
5150 | What was that-- a plant? |
5150 | What was the difficulty? |
5150 | What were they? |
5150 | What''s back there? |
5150 | What''s that thing you put on the ledge up there-- a detectaphone? |
5150 | What''s that? |
5150 | What''s the lay? |
5150 | What''s the matter with her? |
5150 | What''s the matter? |
5150 | What''s this I hear about Jack Rubano, Carton? |
5150 | What''s up, Ike? |
5150 | What-- you here? |
5150 | What-- you, Miss Kendall? |
5150 | What? 5150 Where could she go?" |
5150 | Where did he take her? |
5150 | Where did it lead? |
5150 | Where did they take her? |
5150 | Where have you been? |
5150 | Where is Betty Blackwell? |
5150 | Where, then,asked Kennedy,"can photography be considered as irrefutable evidence? |
5150 | Who else was there? |
5150 | Who is it? |
5150 | Who is she? |
5150 | Who is that dark- haired, dark- skinned woman, Marie, do you suppose? |
5150 | Who is that,''way back there, with his chair tipped to the wall, talking to the man with his back to us? |
5150 | Who was it? |
5150 | Who will believe a story like that? |
5150 | Why was it necessary to get Betty Blackwell out of the way? |
5150 | Why was she here? |
5150 | Why will men in a public capacity get mixed up with women of the adventuress type like that, even innocently? |
5150 | Why, what has happened? |
5150 | Why, what is the matter? |
5150 | Why-- why did you go to that dinner with Murtha? |
5150 | Why? 5150 Why?" |
5150 | Wo n''t you dance? |
5150 | Wo n''t you sit down? 5150 Would n''t the telegraphone do?" |
5150 | Would you like to look it over? 5150 Would you like to make twenty- five dollars-- just like that?" |
5150 | Yes,prompted Carton,"and what then-- what did you do with it?" |
5150 | Yes,prompted Kennedy,"but, impersonation-- what do you mean by that?" |
5150 | You did n''t go? |
5150 | You do n''t think people are going to swallow all that stuff, do you? |
5150 | You do n''t think that Langhorne is really in the inner ring, then? |
5150 | You have heard nothing, have no idea where she might have gone-- even for a time? |
5150 | You have heard of the character of some of those dinners? |
5150 | You know all this? |
5150 | You know what Miss Kendall said of decorative surgery, there? 5150 You know where she is, then?" |
5150 | You know young Haxworth? |
5150 | You mean that he wants to lay a foundation now for questioning the accuracy of the Black Book if it ever comes to light? |
5150 | You mean the son of the millionaire who is investigating vice and whom the newspapers are poking fun at? |
5150 | You robbed? |
5150 | You saw Ike the Dropper go out with that man? |
5150 | You see that shadow of the gable, Dorgan? |
5150 | You want me to try a course in artificial beautification, do n''t you? |
5150 | You will come along? |
5150 | You will dine with us, Miss Kendall? |
5150 | You''ll come to see me-- afterwards? |
5150 | You''ll-- think it over? |
5150 | 72? |
5150 | Above all, what was his game? |
5150 | Almost before I had finished with the carefully framed, glib excuse that I was to make, he shouted to me over the wire,"What do you think, Jameson? |
5150 | Am I to be charged with everything this gang, as you call it, does? |
5150 | And above Murtha?" |
5150 | And the manner? |
5150 | Are you all right?" |
5150 | As for myself, I could not help wondering whether, after all, Murtha might not have been the victim of foul play-- and, if so, by whom? |
5150 | As the encore struck up again, a voice, almost as if it were in the little room alongside us, said,"Why, hello, Maty, why are n''t you dancing?" |
5150 | But I mean what she had actually done? |
5150 | But beyond that-- what?" |
5150 | But did you notice anything else-- as we came in, for instance?" |
5150 | But was that a stall? |
5150 | But you-- well, what''s the answer? |
5150 | But, tell me, how do you know already? |
5150 | By the way, are n''t those orchids gorgeous?" |
5150 | By the way, what have you done with him?" |
5150 | By the way, where''s that thing I left down here for recording voices?" |
5150 | Ca n''t you dig up something from your Star connections?" |
5150 | Ca n''t you help me with some of these parts?" |
5150 | Can you spare the time to run down to the Reform League headquarters with me?" |
5150 | Carton?" |
5150 | Could he have known of the intimacy of his guest at the Gastron dinner with Langhorne, rather than with Murtha, with whom she had gone? |
5150 | Did n''t you ever see them? |
5150 | Did you notice anything about the means of communicating with the outside-- the telephones, for instance?" |
5150 | Did you see it?" |
5150 | Do n''t you ever use them for dictating letters?" |
5150 | Do n''t you see the scheme? |
5150 | Do n''t you suppose the crooks read the scientific and technical papers? |
5150 | Do you go into court with clean hands? |
5150 | Do you want to know what club I think you really belong to-- you who have involved one girl after another in the meshes of this devilish System? |
5150 | Ever hear of that? |
5150 | Evidently the answer was in the affirmative, for Craig asked next,"Well, ca n''t we have the small one?" |
5150 | For what?" |
5150 | Had Kennedy turned medium and sought a message from the other world to solve the inexplicable problems of this? |
5150 | Had she, too, surmised that Murtha had employed his henchman, Dopey Jack, to recover the book from Langhorne? |
5150 | Had they been double- crossed by the man they had chosen for the work, assuming that they knew of and had planned the"job"? |
5150 | Had they failed in it? |
5150 | Have you any objection to going down with me and posing as a reporter from the Star?" |
5150 | Have you ever been up in that part of town?" |
5150 | Have you heard anything of the rumours about Hartley Langhorne and his pool being insolvent? |
5150 | He could n''t be on such intimate terms with one who was paying graft to him as collector otherwise; do you think so?" |
5150 | Hello-- what is it?" |
5150 | Here? |
5150 | How about a private dining- room for three, Julius?" |
5150 | How are you? |
5150 | How did you get it?" |
5150 | How do I know what that fellow is doing now-- perhaps using my name?" |
5150 | How do you know he''s here? |
5150 | How do you know?" |
5150 | How do you suppose they found out that she was interested?" |
5150 | How is it to be done? |
5150 | How would Miss Ashton take it? |
5150 | I have sent for Mr. Kennedy and---""Nothing-- on your honour?" |
5150 | I may keep this and study it at my leisure?" |
5150 | I presume you do n''t want to go up there and look the place over yourself, do you, Carton?" |
5150 | I wonder what he really knew about it-- what secrets he carried away with him?" |
5150 | I wonder what it is?" |
5150 | IV THE ANONYMOUS LETTER"What do you make of that?" |
5150 | If Carton slipped away in this fashion before we could warn him, what might not happen? |
5150 | If this can happen to Dopey Jack, what might not happen to me?" |
5150 | In fact, could the thing have been done by a woman? |
5150 | Is it possible that a girl can disappear in broad daylight in the streets and never be heard of again? |
5150 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
5150 | It looks to me as if he were waiting for someone-- didn''t it to you, Walter?" |
5150 | Kennedy had been, so far, little more than an interested listener, but now he asked pointedly,"You have copies of the pictures?" |
5150 | May I see it?" |
5150 | Miss Kendall never could, could you? |
5150 | Murtha?" |
5150 | No, do n''t you, as a reporter, see it? |
5150 | Now it''s worth twenty- five beans to me to get that package-- get me?" |
5150 | Ogleby?" |
5150 | Ogleby?" |
5150 | Oh, wo n''t you find her? |
5150 | Oh-- er-- by the way-- what is his name?" |
5150 | Or did they know something about Betty Blackwell? |
5150 | Or had Carton''s relentless pursuit, the raid of Margot''s, and the conviction of Dopey Jack, driven the Smiling Boss really insane? |
5150 | Or was it a result of his excesses? |
5150 | Rather wonderful, is n''t it?" |
5150 | Rubano? |
5150 | See?" |
5150 | Shall I see you to- morrow at headquarters?" |
5150 | She was the girl we saw paying money to Ike the Dropper, you remember-- the one none of us recognized? |
5150 | The question was, however, which of these causes had been in operation in the case of Betty Blackwell? |
5150 | Then, too, in the other house-- You remember I spoke about the girl whom we saw paying Ike the Dropper? |
5150 | There was a battery of white manicure tables, and then the hairdressers and the artists who lay on these complexions-- what do you think of mine? |
5150 | There was a tense look on many a face, as if the owner were asking himself the question,"What are we coming to? |
5150 | There was an unmistakable air of familiarity about it and about the reply,"Why are n''t you, Hartley?" |
5150 | They are battering it down? |
5150 | Vernon Harris, M. D.''You recall that the letter said something about a doctor who was very friendly with that clique the writer mentioned? |
5150 | Wait until--""Wait?" |
5150 | Was Clare safe? |
5150 | Was ever a situation of such peculiar, mixed motives? |
5150 | Was he ill? |
5150 | Was he playing to spare the girl''s feelings merely by allowing the election to go on without a scandal to Carton? |
5150 | Was it about Dopey Jack? |
5150 | Was it because the Bertillon dynamometer appeared at first sight to exonerate Betty Blackwell, at least so far, from any connection with the crime? |
5150 | Was it merely a sham? |
5150 | Was it still some vestige of the old fear under which she had been held so long? |
5150 | Was it that he meant to imply that, after all, the missing Betty Blackwell had had something to do with it? |
5150 | Was she being held as a white slave in some obscure den? |
5150 | Was there an organized band? |
5150 | Was this some kind of spiritism? |
5150 | We could not hear the reply, but Craig added quickly,"I thought there were two?" |
5150 | We have had no chance to finger- print that woman and what good would it do if we had? |
5150 | Were these disappearances merely accidents-- or was there an epidemic of amnesia? |
5150 | Were they framing up something themselves? |
5150 | What are they? |
5150 | What did he mean? |
5150 | What did he mean? |
5150 | What did it mean? |
5150 | What did it mean? |
5150 | What did she say?" |
5150 | What did you think of Carton?" |
5150 | What do you know about graft up there?" |
5150 | What do you mean? |
5150 | What had Craig said to Dorgan? |
5150 | What have we to lose? |
5150 | What if Murtha had got it and had destroyed it before his death? |
5150 | What impressed you about it?" |
5150 | What is her name?" |
5150 | What is it?" |
5150 | What is it?" |
5150 | What is your point number two?" |
5150 | What might be the effect on her of any disillusionment, of any ridicule that Langhorne might artfully heap up? |
5150 | What more natural than to use the dope fiends and the degenerates of the Montmartre gang?" |
5150 | What more natural, then, than while she must keep in hiding to make one visit to the beauty parlour to which so many society women went-- Margot''s? |
5150 | What was a beauty parlour, a cosmetic surgery, for, if it could not be used to save them? |
5150 | What was it that seemed to freeze her tongue now? |
5150 | What was more likely than that Martin Ogleby should have heard of his wife''s escapade? |
5150 | What was the matter with Kahn? |
5150 | What was the significance of the added mystery? |
5150 | What was the thing to do, then? |
5150 | What was this Dopey Jack when ruin stared himself so relentlessly in the face in the person of Carton, calm and cool? |
5150 | What was to be done? |
5150 | What were they talking about? |
5150 | What would happen then? |
5150 | What would they do? |
5150 | What''s that-- you threaten him-- you threaten me? |
5150 | Whatyer givin''us? |
5150 | Whatyer givin''us?" |
5150 | Where does Kahn hang out? |
5150 | Where had she gone? |
5150 | Where had this whole army of vanishers disappeared? |
5150 | Where is Betty Blackwell? |
5150 | Where is Miss Kendall?" |
5150 | Where would that be done in the Montmartre? |
5150 | Where''s Kennedy?" |
5150 | Where-- my mother-- oh, where is mother?" |
5150 | Who are you, anyway? |
5150 | Why do n''t you use the detectaphone-- get our own little Black Book?" |
5150 | Why do you come to me? |
5150 | Why do you suspect Langhorne?" |
5150 | Why not?" |
5150 | Why should I not have my-- my freedom, too? |
5150 | Why, they have thought out the only possible way in which to beat it, do n''t you see? |
5150 | Why,"he pursued,"do n''t you see what it means? |
5150 | Will someone find Carton? |
5150 | Will you or wo n''t you take twenty- five of easy money?" |
5150 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
5150 | Would you deliberately stop and stick your foot out, in order to trip up the man who was coming in second?" |
5150 | Would you mind if we made an attempt to apply it?" |
5150 | You are sure that the only thing missing is the photographs?" |
5150 | You can have him held until they have time to report?" |
5150 | You can say that-- you, the tool of that-- that monster?" |
5150 | You have n''t forgotten the studio dance I''m giving on the twelfth? |
5150 | You know the first rule of equity? |
5150 | You recall Carton discovered that in some way these people found out that we were using it? |
5150 | You remember how artificial she looked?" |
5150 | You remember the detectaphone instruments which we have used?" |
5150 | You say you have discovered a clue? |
5150 | You think perhaps there might be some professional jealousy? |
5150 | You''ll get us both, will you? |
5007 | ''Shall I tell you a fact, sir, about yourself?'' 5007 A fake?" |
5007 | An explosive mixture? |
5007 | And Madame de Nevers''s maid? 5007 And Madame de Nevers?" |
5007 | And are the pipes leading air down into the tunnel perfectly straight? |
5007 | And forgive me for suspecting you,replied Kazanovitch,"but how did you come to shadow Kharkoff?" |
5007 | And give just one plausible reason why you wished so much to have it known that you were going to Palm Beach when in reality you were in New York? |
5007 | And have you? |
5007 | And how much does Miss Lovelace know? |
5007 | And if you find out, will you go with me to that house near Chatham Square, providing it was some one in that gang? |
5007 | And it works? |
5007 | And let those higher up escape while their tools take all the blame? |
5007 | And names? |
5007 | And the girl? |
5007 | And then? |
5007 | And to whom may it be dangerous? |
5007 | And what for Heaven''s sake does it reveal? |
5007 | And you have no idea why it was there? |
5007 | And you have no trace of him? |
5007 | And you think you can make good? |
5007 | And you-- are you going or coming? |
5007 | And your husband''s? |
5007 | Any word from Chicago yet? |
5007 | Are you game to go inside? |
5007 | At least, under what name was she registered? |
5007 | Besides her liking for Dudley Lawton and her rather romantic nature, there are no other things in her life that would cause a desire for freedom? |
5007 | Brass knuckles? |
5007 | But how did you do it? |
5007 | But the flames which the night watchman saw, what of them? |
5007 | But what excuse are you going to have for getting into this yegg- resort? |
5007 | But what has happened since to arouse suspicion? |
5007 | But what made you anticipate it? |
5007 | But why do you connect that incident with this case of Madame de Nevers? |
5007 | But you have a pretty good description of her, one that you could send out in order to find her if necessary? |
5007 | But you have no reason to think that there has ever been any secret communication between them? 5007 But, you may ask, how about the automobile picture? |
5007 | But,asked Kennedy sympathetically,"what makes you think that you will find your man, whoever he proves to be, in New York?" |
5007 | But,persisted the coroner,"if she was murdered by the use of chloroform, how do you account for the fact that it was done without a struggle? |
5007 | But--"And you are prepared now to make another affidavit to that effect? |
5007 | By what right do you stop me? 5007 Ca n''t you think up a scheme? |
5007 | Ca n''t you turn on the lights? |
5007 | Can I help you in any way? |
5007 | Can you come along? |
5007 | Can you get me a couple of old telephone instruments? |
5007 | Could chloroform be discovered in the lungs or viscera after so many days? 5007 Could he have cast her off when he found that in spite of her parents''protests she was still in his power?" |
5007 | Could they have left the goods in Paris, after all? |
5007 | Could you tell me anything about a Madame de Nevers who was staying at the Vanderveer? |
5007 | Craig Kennedy? |
5007 | Craig, do you know how I found him? 5007 Craig,"I remonstrated,"you do n''t mean to say you attach any importance to vapourings like that? |
5007 | Did n''t I tell you? |
5007 | Did she have any visitors? 5007 Did she leave any card or message? |
5007 | Do n''t you know it is dangerous to smoke in compressed air? |
5007 | Do n''t you suppose I know all that? 5007 Do you feel better in the air?" |
5007 | Do you know who that woman was? |
5007 | Do you remember that scene in''The Grass Widower,''he said slowly,"where Jack Delarue meets his runaway wife at the masquerade ball?" |
5007 | Do you see those blots on the back? 5007 Do you suppose some one has broken in and substituted this Lytton letter for the Thurston letter?" |
5007 | Do you suppose the Duc de Chateaurouge would be able to identify her? |
5007 | Do you think he could have kept up the acquaintance secretly? |
5007 | Ever been in Danbridge? |
5007 | Fine,said Kennedy,"and can you produce him at any time when it is necessary?" |
5007 | Forgery insurance? |
5007 | Good heavens, man, what has happened? |
5007 | Had Miss Lytton any enemies whom you think of, people who were jealous of her professionally or personally? |
5007 | Has n''t this farce been allowed to go far enough? 5007 Has nothing in her actions about the hotel offered any clue, no matter how slight?" |
5007 | Have n''t you heard? 5007 Have you any copies of the forged certificates?" |
5007 | Have you ever met Saratovsky? |
5007 | Have you yourself seen any evidences of rival influences hindering the work? |
5007 | He''s coming to see you today, is n''t he? |
5007 | His word? 5007 How about the affidavits? |
5007 | How about the handwriting? |
5007 | How are you fixed for a little trip out to Riverwood? |
5007 | How can I? 5007 How did you get it? |
5007 | How did you get your first hint? |
5007 | How do you know he opened it? |
5007 | How is Saratovsky? |
5007 | How was the body discovered? |
5007 | I beg your pardon,began Craig as we came to a turn in the shadow of the arc lights,"but have you a match?" |
5007 | I do n''t suppose Scotland Yard has neglected to furnish you with photographs and a description of this Forbes? |
5007 | I guess that winds the case up, eh? |
5007 | I have reason to believe that the duke is in this country incognito-- is he not? |
5007 | I may keep it? |
5007 | I may keep these to study at my leisure? |
5007 | I shall want to see you early to- morrow, and,--might I ask you to be sure to wear that hat which you have on? |
5007 | I suppose Dawson was a man of exemplary habits? 5007 I suppose they told nearly all the story, but what caused her death? |
5007 | I suppose you have heard nothing? |
5007 | I suppose you have heard of the''endormeurs''of Paris? |
5007 | I suppose you have no objections to my doing so? |
5007 | I suppose you have shadowed them ever since? |
5007 | I, identify her? 5007 Is Mr. Gonzales in?" |
5007 | Is Professor Kennedy coming soon? |
5007 | Is Professor Kennedy here? |
5007 | Is n''t it enough that some of the newspapers have said so? 5007 Is there anything else that you wish to say?" |
5007 | Is this Professor Kennedy? |
5007 | It was true about the jar of ammonia? |
5007 | Just what is it that you suspect? |
5007 | Just what makes you think that there is a firebug-- one firebug, I mean-- back of this curious epidemic of fires? |
5007 | Louise, shall I tell you a secret? 5007 May I count on having this note for further examination, of course always at such times and under such conditions as you agree to?" |
5007 | Might I ask,interrupted Kennedy,"what that curious greenish or bluish light from the tube is composed of?" |
5007 | Might I have some of your writings to look over in the meantime? |
5007 | Might I try one or two reactions with that sample? |
5007 | Mr. Kennedy,exclaimed the house man deferentially,"are you very busy just now?" |
5007 | Mrs. Branford,exclaimed Blake, advancing and bowing most profoundly,"I trust that you understand my awkward position? |
5007 | Must my every act be watched and misrepresented? 5007 Nitrogen?" |
5007 | No? |
5007 | Not dead? |
5007 | Not the worst? 5007 Now, how did the robber get in? |
5007 | Now, what do you suppose that was for? |
5007 | Now,continued Kennedy suavely,"what COULD happen? |
5007 | Oh, Mr. Kennedy, why did you ask me to do this? |
5007 | Operator, give me the south tube-- quick-- what-- they do n''t answer? |
5007 | Or have ye had enough of the air? 5007 Or perhaps you have caught another art dealer red- handed?" |
5007 | Quite right,he agreed hastily;"the note was queer, though, was n''t it? |
5007 | Say, Dean, you''re not going to desert me? |
5007 | Say, do you add telepathy to your other accomplishments? |
5007 | September 19th was the date alleged, I believe? |
5007 | Shall I tell, Miss Ashton? |
5007 | Shall I? |
5007 | She had no hobbies? |
5007 | She was dressed to receive some one-- did you notice? |
5007 | Shelton,asked Kennedy,"what sort of flash oil is used to lubricate the machinery?" |
5007 | Should I have done so? |
5007 | So far, I suppose, it is true that neither you nor the police have received even a hint as to where she went after leaving the book- store? |
5007 | So you say I am this Williams, the counterfeiter? |
5007 | Straight? |
5007 | Tell me, what happened? |
5007 | The manuscript? 5007 The office was locked, I suppose?" |
5007 | The package? 5007 Then I can leave that part of it to you, McBride?" |
5007 | Then it must have been some one in the house or at least some one familiar with it? |
5007 | Then she was murdered? |
5007 | Then the case has nothing to do with your trouble, nothing to do with the bends? |
5007 | Then there''s a woman in the case, and she wrote the first note for the firebug-- is that what you mean? |
5007 | Then you are to meet your friend in Washington to- night? 5007 Then you know of our daughter''s strange-- er-- departure?" |
5007 | Then you perhaps think that Prescott and Mrs. Martin are in some way connected in this case? |
5007 | Then you will take up the case? |
5007 | Then, for Heaven''s sake, what did you find? |
5007 | There are a good many chemicals mentioned here-- I wonder if any of them is poisonous? 5007 There was no way to slip this letter in among the others since you obtained them?" |
5007 | To Mr. Jameson or the rest of us? |
5007 | Walter, did you notice he said not a word of condemnation of Dixon, though the note was before his eyes? 5007 Walter, what''s on for to- night?" |
5007 | Well, now, did you ever hear of such blasted impudence? 5007 Well, then, if I should call here to- night at, say, half- past nine, Could you be here? |
5007 | Well,he said at length,"what of all this? |
5007 | Well-- er-- do you suppose you could do the house a little-- er-- favour? |
5007 | Wh-- where did you get that? |
5007 | What about the partner? 5007 What are they that he should set such a price on them?" |
5007 | What colour are they? |
5007 | What did you make that affidavit for? 5007 What do you know about them? |
5007 | What do you make of it? |
5007 | What do you think of the Revalenko story? |
5007 | What do you think of the case? |
5007 | What do you think of this? 5007 What does Dudley Lawton say about the newspapers bringing his name into the case?" |
5007 | What does it say? |
5007 | What has happened since last night to increase your anxiety, Jack? |
5007 | What has happened? |
5007 | What has he been doing now? |
5007 | What has that to do with customs reform? |
5007 | What is it that you wished to see me about? |
5007 | What is it? |
5007 | What is it? |
5007 | What is it? |
5007 | What is it? |
5007 | What is that? |
5007 | What is this germ? |
5007 | What of it? |
5007 | What sort of place is it? |
5007 | What success? |
5007 | What time does the office close? |
5007 | What was her name? |
5007 | What was it about? |
5007 | What was it that caused Miss Gilbert''s death? |
5007 | What was the character of the forgeries? |
5007 | What was the result? 5007 What''s all this stuff on the table?" |
5007 | What''s on your mind now? |
5007 | What''s that? |
5007 | What''s the matter? |
5007 | What''s the matter? |
5007 | What''s up? |
5007 | What? 5007 What? |
5007 | What? |
5007 | What? |
5007 | Where are they? |
5007 | Where is Nevsky? |
5007 | Where is the letter? 5007 Where''s Paddy?" |
5007 | Where''s the woman? |
5007 | Where, then, can photography be considered as irrefutable evidence? 5007 Who identified her?" |
5007 | Who is the treasurer of the company? |
5007 | Who is this third man who comes in and with whom Harriet Wollstone goes away so willingly? |
5007 | Who turned in the alarm? |
5007 | Who was that detective who forced his way to see her the night they discovered Marie''s body? |
5007 | Who was that man who just went out with the lady? |
5007 | Who was this visitor, do you suppose? |
5007 | Who? |
5007 | Whose are those? |
5007 | Why are you so particular, Henri? |
5007 | Why believe it? |
5007 | Why believe it? |
5007 | Why did I forget that lump of paraffin? 5007 Why did n''t he destroy it?" |
5007 | Why did n''t you bring Herndon over and break into the boxes, if you think the stuff is hidden in one of them? |
5007 | Why did n''t you tell me you were coming? |
5007 | Why do you ask me? |
5007 | Why do you ask? |
5007 | Why not take a chance? 5007 Why, Walter, he is the most gentle, engaging old philosopher----""That ever cut a throat or scuttled a ship?" |
5007 | Why, if Dixon contemplated anything against Miss Lytton, should he preserve this letter from her? |
5007 | Why, what''s the matter-- more sugar frauds? |
5007 | Will you guarantee that he will not blow us up with a bomb? |
5007 | Will you never stop spying on me? |
5007 | Will you please write your names and addresses on the outside sheet of this pad, then tear it off and keep it? |
5007 | With the fall and winter trade just coming on? |
5007 | Wo n''t ye stay down an''see some more, gintlemen? |
5007 | Would it be too much to ask just to see that note that was found in the Boncour bungalow? |
5007 | Would n''t it be a good thing to fill the box with water? |
5007 | Would you taste an unknown drug again to discover the nature of a probable poison? |
5007 | Yeggmen--''fence''? |
5007 | Yes,replied Kennedy,"what of him?" |
5007 | You are willing to risk it? 5007 You ca n''t find him? |
5007 | You do n''t think people are going to swallow all that stuff, do you? |
5007 | You have never seen this Mrs. Martin or her husband? |
5007 | You recall, Mr. Kennedy, reading in the papers that my country house out on Long Island was robbed the other day? 5007 You said the house had been closed-- absolutely closed?" |
5007 | You say the police have n''t a single clue to any one who might be responsible for the fires? |
5007 | You see that shadow of the gable? 5007 You see that woman over there?" |
5007 | You think there is some connection between her death and the letters? |
5007 | You will excuse me if I get some cigarettes downstairs? 5007 You will trace down the forger of those pictures before it is too late?" |
5007 | You would n''t believe it, Walter, would you? |
5007 | You''re all right? |
5007 | You''re not offended at my kicking over the traces, are you? |
5007 | You''re on the Star, I believe? |
5007 | You, Miss Ashton? |
5007 | You-- you do n''t mean to say that there is no other way, that I''ll have to admit even before Bennett-- and others that I''m in bad? |
5007 | ''The truth as I see it by means of my wonderful invention? |
5007 | ''What''s wrong?'' |
5007 | 144 made up yet?" |
5007 | A million dollars?" |
5007 | A very talented girl, too-- you remember her in''The Taming of the New Woman''last season? |
5007 | Above all, what was his game? |
5007 | And how are you, Walter? |
5007 | Are n''t you going to attend to him?" |
5007 | Are the police there?" |
5007 | Are you game? |
5007 | Are you ready? |
5007 | As we hurried over to the information booth, I gasped, in a whirl:"Now, look here, Kennedy, what''s all this lightning calculation? |
5007 | As we passed a door on the second floor, a woman''s voice called out,"Is that you, Boris?" |
5007 | As we sped across the city in a taxicab, Craig remarked:"I wonder what is the trouble? |
5007 | Bennett shrugged his shoulders hopelessly and looked at Kennedy in mock resignation as if to say,"What can you do with such a fellow?" |
5007 | Boris Kazanovitch, do you stand there SILENT and let this insult be heaped upon me?" |
5007 | Boy, boy,"he shouted to a newsboy who passed,"what''s the latest sporting edition you have?" |
5007 | Burned human flesh? |
5007 | But ca n''t it be done with the soft pedal? |
5007 | But then why should she commit suicide? |
5007 | But what makes you so positive that it is all the work of one man?" |
5007 | But what was the mystery that the tunnel held in its dark, dank bosom? |
5007 | But where was the fire? |
5007 | But--""And you swore falsely before Kimmel that you were not?" |
5007 | By the way, Craig,"I exclaimed,"do n''t you think it would be a good plan to drop down and see O''Connor? |
5007 | Ca n''t you stop him?" |
5007 | Can you be here early in the morning? |
5007 | Can you bear something further? |
5007 | Can you keep it?" |
5007 | Can you look into the case before it grows any worse, Professor?" |
5007 | Carroll had to take up more or less active duty, with the result that a new man unearthed the-- but, say, are you really interested in this case?" |
5007 | Could anything be more dramatic than his willing penalty for his devotion to medicine?" |
5007 | Could it be that a man had deliberately amputated his fingers and grafted on new ones? |
5007 | Could it be that one of their own number was playing false? |
5007 | Did n''t I see her with tears in her eyes right in this room when he was n''t lookin'', and a smile when he was? |
5007 | Did this Mr. Gonzales call?" |
5007 | Did you see her wraps in the chair? |
5007 | Dixon?" |
5007 | Do you come to learn of the faith?" |
5007 | Do you think he owned up? |
5007 | Do you think such a wreck as I am now has any right to be engaged to the dearest girl in the world?" |
5007 | Do you think they could have suspected anything?" |
5007 | Do you think you can hold me back now with those little white hands on my wrists? |
5007 | Do you think you could locate her?" |
5007 | Does it occur to you that, after all, Forbes may not be dead?" |
5007 | Er-- r, had Miss Gilbert any-- love affair, any trouble of such a nature that it might have preyed on her mind?" |
5007 | F.''if he knew, as he must have known, that you would communicate with London and by means of the prints find out all about him?" |
5007 | Finally Craig asked,"You have copies of the pictures?" |
5007 | Gone? |
5007 | Had Kennedy a clue? |
5007 | Had it indeed been a suicide, in spite of McBride''s evident conviction to the contrary? |
5007 | Had it really been a put- up job? |
5007 | Had the blow affected his brain? |
5007 | Had the man gone crazy? |
5007 | Had they played fair? |
5007 | Had we not better call the police and let them take the risk, even if it does get into the papers?" |
5007 | Haswell?" |
5007 | Have n''t found the firebug yet, have you? |
5007 | Have you a good connection? |
5007 | Have you ever heard of him?" |
5007 | Have you found anything that gives a hint among them?" |
5007 | Have you found that out yet? |
5007 | Have you no chivalry, or justice, or-- or mercy?" |
5007 | Have you still that place on the telegraphone record, Vivian?" |
5007 | He dipped a pen into a little bottle, and wrote on a piece of paper: What is your opinion about Cross''s Headache Cure? |
5007 | He said nothing of his own unsuccessful search through the house, but continued:"What do you suppose she has done with the jewels? |
5007 | Hello, 297? |
5007 | Here goes, our names and addresses, and underneath I''ll write,''What has become of Georgette Gilbert?''" |
5007 | How am I ever to thank you?" |
5007 | How are you for a walk until we can see Orton again?" |
5007 | How are you? |
5007 | How are you? |
5007 | How can I prevent any one from learning my trade secret, leaving me, and making gold on his own account? |
5007 | How do you feel?" |
5007 | How does that suit Your Majesty? |
5007 | How is my love affair? |
5007 | How long do you think it will take us to get over to---""Police headquarters?" |
5007 | How many more of these are there?" |
5007 | How much of this stuff do you suppose has been put into circulation?" |
5007 | How then was I to explain it? |
5007 | How was that, Bennett?" |
5007 | How were we to get ahead of him in Washington better than in New York? |
5007 | How''s your end of the line? |
5007 | How? |
5007 | I believe that I can trust you as a friend of justice-- a friend of Russian freedom?" |
5007 | I guess he''d want to recall the decision if it went against him-- hey?'' |
5007 | I should like to hear you tell some of them, if you are not yourself too---""Perhaps you''d rather see one instead?" |
5007 | I suppose you have no objection to going with me?" |
5007 | I suppose you have seen portraits of Georgette in the newspapers and know what a dreamy and artistic nature her face indicates?" |
5007 | I thought I heard him ask:"Who are those men? |
5007 | I wrench them loose-- so-- and-- ugh!--What''s this? |
5007 | IX THE UNOFFICIAL SPY"Craig, do you see that fellow over by the desk, talking to the night clerk?" |
5007 | If New York has suddenly become too hot, what more natural than to leave it? |
5007 | If anything should happen----""Is it as urgent as that?" |
5007 | If it is the truth, will you believe in me? |
5007 | If you see it in the newspapers, it''s so-- perhaps-- isn''t it?" |
5007 | Inter- River? |
5007 | Is he, too, hurt or ill?" |
5007 | Is it aphasia or amnesia, or whatever the doctors call it, and do you think she is wandering about somewhere unable to recover her real personality?" |
5007 | Is she dead?'' |
5007 | Is that all you see? |
5007 | Is that you, Clark? |
5007 | Is that you, O''Connor?" |
5007 | Is there any clue to her?" |
5007 | Is there any reason why this fake detective should make fools out of us all and keep my wife longer in this court? |
5007 | Is this the president''s office? |
5007 | It is the outward sign of the unity of nature, the--""The means by which you secure the curious telepagrams I have heard of?" |
5007 | It was a good"haul,"but where was the vast spoil the counterfeiters had accumulated? |
5007 | It''s a queer sort of honeymoon, hey?" |
5007 | Knight or Williams, which was it? |
5007 | Like a flash it occurred to me: Where would they be most likely to go next to work off some of the bills? |
5007 | Maid chloroformed? |
5007 | Maloney sullenly refused to look at his former employer, as Blake rushed over and grasped Kennedy''s hand, asking eagerly:"How did you do it, Kennedy? |
5007 | Meanwhile what might not happen to us? |
5007 | Miss Georgette left no letters or anything that would indicate that her former infatuation survived?" |
5007 | No doubt you have heard hints of Dudley Lawton''s name in connection with the case? |
5007 | No speculating or fast living with him as with Brown?" |
5007 | No? |
5007 | Not so bad, eh? |
5007 | Now just what is a firebug trust? |
5007 | Now, Kennedy, do n''t you agree with me? |
5007 | Now, do you suppose that they are after me in a professional way or are they trying to round me up as an independent voter?" |
5007 | Now, is there any method by which lost finger- tips can be restored? |
5007 | Oh, Harris, ca n''t you settle with him if he asks anything? |
5007 | Oh, Jack, ca n''t you DO something to show them they are wrong, and do it quickly? |
5007 | Oh, what are we to do, what are we to do?" |
5007 | Oh, you''ve heard about Orton, have you? |
5007 | One case? |
5007 | Or does it mean that he foresees defeat and is taking this way to recoup himself under cover of being held up?" |
5007 | Or was it after all the last desperate blow of the Boss? |
5007 | Or was it merely that I found the great writer of fiction seeking the dramatic effect always at the cost of sincerity? |
5007 | Or was it that she at last began to realise that the toils were closing about her and that things began to look unmistakably black? |
5007 | Or was"K."Kazanovitch? |
5007 | Samarova is head over heels in love with Kazanovitch-- you heard her call for him just now? |
5007 | Scott?" |
5007 | Scott?" |
5007 | See that?" |
5007 | See?" |
5007 | Shall I see if I can get him on the wire?" |
5007 | She says the tariff has gone up, or something, but it has n''t, has it?'' |
5007 | Squelch the pictures now at any cost, then follow the thing up and, if we can, prosecute after election?" |
5007 | Suppose Kennedy should let loose this deadly foe, these germs of death, whatever they were? |
5007 | That''s understood, is it, before I undertake the case?" |
5007 | The Branford pearls-- stolen? |
5007 | The choking air, the hissing steam, the ghastly object under the tarpaulin-- what did it all mean? |
5007 | The hospital? |
5007 | The old man moved restlessly on the bed, and over my shoulder I could hear him gasp faintly,"Where''s Grace? |
5007 | The premiums or the epidemic?" |
5007 | The question that arises here is, Was she murdered or did she commit suicide? |
5007 | The rest of this tells how to attack various makes, does n''t it?" |
5007 | Then again, might not other substances be generated in a dead body which would give a reaction very much like chloroform? |
5007 | There-- what do you know about that?" |
5007 | This print is composed of long shaded lines, some parts light, others dark, giving the effect of a picture, you understand?" |
5007 | Thurston, who was the man whom you saw enter the Boncour bungalow as you left-- the constant visitor?" |
5007 | To tell the truth, I imagine most of Violette''s goods were-- well--''"''Smuggled?'' |
5007 | Travis?" |
5007 | Travis?" |
5007 | Wait until----""Wait?" |
5007 | Walter, will you open that door into the main hall?" |
5007 | Was Kennedy, who had been engaged by her father to defend her fiance, about to convict him? |
5007 | Was he convinced? |
5007 | Was he playing to spare the girl''s feelings by allowing the election to go on without a scandal for Travis? |
5007 | Was he relying on that, or on his difference in features? |
5007 | Was it poison or violence?" |
5007 | Was it that I was prejudiced by a puritanical disapproval of the things that pass current in Old World morality? |
5007 | Was she lying? |
5007 | Was the man crazy? |
5007 | Was the stake sufficient for such a game? |
5007 | We felt we could send out a strange detective and have him pick them out of a crowd-- you know the system, I presume?" |
5007 | Well, Dr. Kharkoff, what can I do for you? |
5007 | Well, Miss Roberts?" |
5007 | Were they-- ah-- friendly?" |
5007 | Were we doomed to blindness, too? |
5007 | What are the tips of a few fingers compared with life, liberty, wealth, and a beautiful woman? |
5007 | What could cause such a catastrophe naturally? |
5007 | What did it all mean? |
5007 | What do they care anyhow as long as it is against you? |
5007 | What do you mean?" |
5007 | What do you say to that, madame?" |
5007 | What do you see?" |
5007 | What do you suppose has happened to him? |
5007 | What do you think of me? |
5007 | What do you think of the possibility of his going to the Lexington track, now that he finds it too dangerous to remain in New York?" |
5007 | What do you want?" |
5007 | What had Miss Ashton overheard and what had Kennedy said to McLoughlin? |
5007 | What had happened? |
5007 | What has become of her?" |
5007 | What is YOUR story?" |
5007 | What is it-- a''con''man or a hotel''beat''?" |
5007 | What is it? |
5007 | What is more beautiful than the true unblemished love of one person for another? |
5007 | What is sweeter, better, or more to be desired than perfect harmony and happiness? |
5007 | What is this''portrait parle''they talk about, anyway?" |
5007 | What makes you think he has n''t sailed yet?" |
5007 | What more natural than to complete the conspiracy by carrying out the coup and at the same time get rid of the dangerous enemy of the conspirators? |
5007 | What occurred?" |
5007 | What possible connection is there between a lump of paraffin and one of the few places in the country where they still race horses?" |
5007 | What role does he play in your suspicions?" |
5007 | What should I say? |
5007 | What was it she was battling for? |
5007 | What was it that you would not tell me just now at luncheon?" |
5007 | What was it? |
5007 | What was she like?" |
5007 | What was that force? |
5007 | What was that gruesome odour in the room? |
5007 | What was the cause of the death of the deceased? |
5007 | What was the meaning of it? |
5007 | What was the terrible secret in that scientific essay I had puzzled so unsuccessfully over, the night before? |
5007 | What was the use of a piece of paraffin? |
5007 | What would it reveal? |
5007 | What''s that? |
5007 | What''s that?" |
5007 | What''s the use of repeating it now? |
5007 | What-- really? |
5007 | When are you going over?" |
5007 | When are you going to see him?" |
5007 | When do you start, Henri? |
5007 | When she had disappeared he returned and remarked,"I suppose you have heard of Miss Margaret Ashton, the suffragette leader, Mr. Kennedy? |
5007 | When will you return to me, Henri?" |
5007 | Where am I?" |
5007 | Where have these letters been?" |
5007 | Where is Mr. Orton''s office?" |
5007 | Where is it?" |
5007 | Where''s Kennedy?" |
5007 | Who had received it? |
5007 | Who is it?" |
5007 | Who knows?" |
5007 | Who knows?" |
5007 | Who let them in?" |
5007 | Who was she? |
5007 | Why did not Kennedy hire a special if the affair was so important as it appeared? |
5007 | Why do you come to me? |
5007 | Why had Miss Lovelace gone to Washington, of all places, at this torrid season of the year? |
5007 | Why is he not here?" |
5007 | Why not tell me all that you really know about the pearls and trust me to bring it out all right?" |
5007 | Why?" |
5007 | Will you be here?" |
5007 | Will you put money into my invention? |
5007 | Will you share in becoming fabulously rich?'' |
5007 | Will you tell my man, who must be somewhere about, that I would like to have him hold that woman who was in the auto smash until I can-- what? |
5007 | Would it be found in time to be of use? |
5007 | Would the up- state returns, I had wondered at first, be large enough to overcome the hostile city vote? |
5007 | Would you like to meet him? |
5007 | Would you recommend it for a nervous headache? |
5007 | Yes? |
5007 | You are acquainted with Mendeleeff''s periodic table?" |
5007 | You do n''t think it would be better to wait until after the election is won?" |
5007 | You have doubtless heard of the By- Products Company of Chicago?" |
5007 | You know the Stacey department- stores and their allied dry- goods and garment- trade interests?" |
5007 | You mean the plans for the coaling station on the Pacific near the Canal? |
5007 | You recall we were discussing the Georgette Gilbert case this morning, Walter?" |
5007 | You remember I told you what happened at the Vanderveer the night you and Madame arrived? |
5007 | You remember doubtless that the element selenium varies its electrical resistance under light? |
5007 | You see the blots? |
5007 | You see what I am driving at? |
5007 | You understand? |
5007 | You will be very careful while I am gone?" |
5007 | You will pardon me if I excuse myself now? |
5007 | You''ll be up in half an hour? |
5007 | he asked, adding,"Before I complete my part of the compact and blot out the whole affair?" |
5007 | when our backs were turned and whisked the goods invisibly into the country? |
5054 | A bulletless gun? |
5054 | A cocaine fiend? |
5054 | A fish- eye lens? |
5054 | A poisoning, then? |
5054 | Agnes,Miss Blaisdell had said,"will you go into the writing- room and bring me some paper, a pen, and ink? |
5054 | Agnes? |
5054 | And Clendenin? |
5054 | And Haddon knows? |
5054 | And Mr. Maitland,asked Kennedy,"was he a patient, too?" |
5054 | And that is? |
5054 | And the Star,inquired Kennedy, coming to the door and adding with an aggravating grin,"the infallible?" |
5054 | And the door to the side street? |
5054 | And the motive for such a terrible crime? |
5054 | And the murder of the chef? |
5054 | And the pieces? |
5054 | And they operate so secretly that Brixton can trust no one about him? |
5054 | And were engaged, were you not? |
5054 | And what is a thermopile?'' |
5054 | And who are these Elmores? |
5054 | And who might you be? |
5054 | And you were not with them? |
5054 | Annie Grayson? 5054 Are they salable; that is, could any one dispose of the emeralds or the other curios with reasonable safety and at a good price?" |
5054 | Are you aware of any scandal, any skeleton in the closet in the family? |
5054 | Are you going to keep up this debauch? |
5054 | Are you going to put in a detectaphone? |
5054 | Are you going? |
5054 | Are you hurt badly? |
5054 | Are you hurt? |
5054 | Are you sure that it is a fact? |
5054 | Blown? |
5054 | But have you any idea who would go so far to protect his investments as to kill? |
5054 | But what about Annie Grayson? |
5054 | But what do you expect to gain by it? |
5054 | But why should the Chinaman shoot my sister? |
5054 | But, man,shouted Brixton,"you do n''t suppose anything in the world counts beside her, do you?" |
5054 | But,I objected,"how about the oil of turpentine?" |
5054 | By some jiu jitsu trick? |
5054 | By the way,he remarked, just before we left,"you used a good deal of canned goods at the Godwin house, did n''t you?" |
5054 | Captain,he cried,"can you send a wireless message? |
5054 | Cobra venom? |
5054 | Could I--he slipped a crumpled treasury note into her hand--"could I speak to Mr. Thornton''s nurse?" |
5054 | Could a current from one of the batteries have influenced the receiving apparatus? |
5054 | Could it have been some medical students, body- snatchers? |
5054 | Could it have been through something internal? |
5054 | Could you point it out to me from the window? |
5054 | Count Wachtmann? |
5054 | Cushing? |
5054 | Did Mr. Borland and his new chemist Lathrop believe it, too? |
5054 | Did you ever see Mr. Phelps take any drugs-- not habitually, but just before this sleep came on? |
5054 | Did you notice anything unusual? |
5054 | Did you try artificial respiration? |
5054 | Do you know anything about his scheme? |
5054 | Do you know who he is? |
5054 | Do you recall using any that were-- well, perhaps not exactly spoiled, but that had anything peculiar about them? |
5054 | Do you think he could have been kidnapped or murdered? |
5054 | Do you think he oversteps his position in trying to learn of the mental life of his patients? |
5054 | Do you think he was right? |
5054 | Do you think it was a suicide? |
5054 | Do you use it often? |
5054 | Do you wish to speak to him? 5054 Does that mean that he has gone-- escaped?" |
5054 | Emery Pitts? |
5054 | Engaged? |
5054 | Had a mousey smell? 5054 Had you ever noticed that he took any drug?" |
5054 | Has anything happened? |
5054 | Have you any idea who it could be? |
5054 | Have you come any closer to the truth? |
5054 | Have you ever heard of or used cobra venom in any of your medical work? |
5054 | Have you no clue, no suspicions? |
5054 | Have you struck a snag? |
5054 | Have you-- er-- any one here named Thornton-- er--? |
5054 | He is talking into a very sensitive telephone transmitter and--"But the voice-- here? |
5054 | He was a friend of Mrs. Maitland''s, was he not? |
5054 | Heart failure-- what does that mean? 5054 Hello-- yes-- is that you, Burke? |
5054 | Here? 5054 How are the tests coming along?" |
5054 | How can you? |
5054 | How could any one have got in from the outside? |
5054 | How could she have any connection with the case? |
5054 | How did that land there? |
5054 | How did you enjoy it? |
5054 | How did you get him so that he is even considering turning state''s evidence? |
5054 | How did you know I was interested? |
5054 | How did you know he was here? |
5054 | How do you mean? |
5054 | How do you mean? |
5054 | How is she now? |
5054 | How long ago did the coma first show itself? |
5054 | How-- what do you mean? |
5054 | Hulloa-- what''s this? |
5054 | I have n''t looked into the case very deeply, but I''m not so sure that he had the secret, are you? |
5054 | I may keep these for the present? |
5054 | I send that? 5054 I suppose you have heard of this?" |
5054 | I suppose you saw that despatch from Washington in this afternoon''s papers? |
5054 | I trust he is all right here? |
5054 | I wonder if he''d recognise me? |
5054 | I wonder if the long arm of this vice trust could have reached out and gathered them in, too? |
5054 | I? |
5054 | If any one dares to do that to him, what will they do to me? |
5054 | In his note,resumed Kennedy,"he spoke of Dr. Ross and--""Oh,"she cried,"ca n''t you see Dr. Ross about it? |
5054 | In the kitchen? |
5054 | Indeed? |
5054 | Indol? |
5054 | Inert? |
5054 | Is he very-- very badly? |
5054 | Is n''t this a marvellous picture? 5054 Is that so? |
5054 | Is this Professor Kennedy? |
5054 | Kidnapped, you say? 5054 Kronski? |
5054 | Merciless? |
5054 | Mice? |
5054 | Minna,murmured Pitts, falling back, exhausted by the excitement, on his pillows,"Minna-- forgive? |
5054 | Miriam? |
5054 | Mr. Maitland had no enemies that you know of? |
5054 | Mr. Masterson, I believe? |
5054 | Mrs. Maitland, I believe, is a patient of yours? |
5054 | Mrs. Pitts,began Kennedy,"I suppose you are aware of the physical condition of your husband?" |
5054 | Must that grim prison take in others, even if my husband goes free? |
5054 | Must-- must it be an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth? |
5054 | My dear,he said to her at length,"will you call some one and have them taken to the kitchen?" |
5054 | No one? |
5054 | Nordheim? |
5054 | Not a suicide? |
5054 | Now where was the body, exactly, when you opened the door? |
5054 | Of Dr. Thompson Lord? |
5054 | Oh, Walter, on Broadway? 5054 Or perhaps bribed?" |
5054 | Or was it simply a piece of vandalism? 5054 Outside the hull?" |
5054 | Perhaps, Ruth, I had better-- ah-- see these gentlemen alone? |
5054 | Professor Kennedy? |
5054 | Saw whom? |
5054 | Say, do you and your gun- moll want to pick up a piece of change to get that mouthpiece I heard you talking about? |
5054 | Secret service-- rummage baggage? |
5054 | Shall I order them to bring Mrs. Willoughby and Annie Grayson to the superintendent''s office and have them searched? |
5054 | She broke off the engagement? |
5054 | Siege? |
5054 | Since when were you admitted into society? |
5054 | So you are a cocaine fiend, also? |
5054 | So you think he really did have the secret of artificial rubber? |
5054 | Stand it? |
5054 | Strange delusions? |
5054 | Strangled? |
5054 | Suicide? |
5054 | Telautomatics? |
5054 | The Jap-- Nichi Moto? |
5054 | The Stamford cottage? |
5054 | The body is really there? |
5054 | The coast or Down East? |
5054 | The phantom circuit? |
5054 | The question is, who and what was he working for? |
5054 | Then how did she get it? |
5054 | Then she is dancing at the Mayfair yet? |
5054 | Then what did he do? 5054 Then who did get it, do you think?" |
5054 | Then why are you here? |
5054 | There could not have been any substitution? |
5054 | There-- see? 5054 They have submarines in Germany, do n''t they? |
5054 | They have? 5054 They?" |
5054 | This? 5054 Those people in there,"he nodded his head back in the direction of the Millefleurs,"do you suspect them? |
5054 | To what am I indebted for this pleasure? |
5054 | To you? |
5054 | Walter, you''ll come, too? |
5054 | Walter,almost shouted Kennedy,"I''m over at the Washington Heights Hospital with Dr. Barron-- you remember Barron, in our class at college? |
5054 | Was any doctor called? |
5054 | Was it incontestible without the suicide clause? |
5054 | Was she a patron, too? |
5054 | Was your husband a man of neurotic tendency, as far as you could judge? |
5054 | Well, then,I persisted,"body- snatchers, medical students?" |
5054 | Well, what do you think of that? |
5054 | Well? |
5054 | Well? |
5054 | Well? |
5054 | Wh- what does it all mean? |
5054 | What are you doing, mixed up in this? |
5054 | What can I do for you? |
5054 | What did she do with it? |
5054 | What did you discover? |
5054 | What did you do that for? |
5054 | What do you know about Mrs. Brainard? 5054 What do you make of that, Professor Kennedy?" |
5054 | What do you mean? |
5054 | What do you mean? |
5054 | What do you see, Walter? |
5054 | What do you suppose is in that, Kennedy? |
5054 | What do you think of him? |
5054 | What do you think of it yourself? |
5054 | What does anything amount to? |
5054 | What does he want? |
5054 | What does this mean? |
5054 | What have you done since? |
5054 | What have you found? |
5054 | What is it? |
5054 | What is it? |
5054 | What is it? |
5054 | What is on that other point? |
5054 | What is the Red Brotherhood? |
5054 | What is the latest from the Near East? |
5054 | What is this principle? 5054 What is this, anyhow-- gang- war?" |
5054 | What is this-- a gathering of the clans? 5054 What then?" |
5054 | What was it? |
5054 | What was left? 5054 What was that?" |
5054 | What was the purpose of that outburst? |
5054 | What were you writing? |
5054 | What''s it all about? |
5054 | What''s that, those little spots on her tongue and throat? 5054 What''s that?" |
5054 | What''s that? |
5054 | What''s that? |
5054 | What''s that? |
5054 | What''s the lay? |
5054 | What''s the matter? |
5054 | What''s the matter? |
5054 | What''s the matter? |
5054 | What''s the matter? |
5054 | What''s the matter? |
5054 | What''s the news from Washington, Burke? 5054 What''s this-- a zoo?" |
5054 | What''s this? |
5054 | What''s this? |
5054 | What-- Gladys-- you--"Florence-- tell them-- it is n''t so-- is it? 5054 What-- leave him here-- alone-- in the last days? |
5054 | What? |
5054 | What? |
5054 | What? |
5054 | When did you first notice the interference with the Turtle? |
5054 | Where are the papers in the case, the documents showing the application for the patent, for instance? |
5054 | Where away? |
5054 | Where did you find it? |
5054 | Where does he get the supply to sell? |
5054 | Where is Borland''s office? |
5054 | Where is Nordheim? |
5054 | Where is his office? |
5054 | Where is it? |
5054 | Where is my hat-- wh- where am I? 5054 Which end of the rubber works is it?" |
5054 | Which tong does he belong to? |
5054 | Who are these men, Conrad? |
5054 | Who do you suppose could have sent it? |
5054 | Who has been hounding him? |
5054 | Who have rival companies? |
5054 | Who is Nordheim? |
5054 | Who is it? |
5054 | Who is that? |
5054 | Who is this girl Agnes who discovered Miss Blaisdell? |
5054 | Who was caught in your kitchen, Mr. Pitts, and, to escape detection, killed your faithful chef and covered his own traces so cleverly? |
5054 | Who was it? |
5054 | Who was this madman? 5054 Who were the others?" |
5054 | Who would have known the new process of healing wounds? 5054 Who,"asked Kennedy,"was chiefly interested in the rubber works where Cushing was formerly employed?" |
5054 | Who-- who is this Thornton? |
5054 | Who? |
5054 | Who? |
5054 | Whom did he call? |
5054 | Why all this secrecy? |
5054 | Why did n''t you say that before? |
5054 | Why impossible? |
5054 | Why, what do you mean? |
5054 | Why, what''s the trouble, Mr. Willoughby? 5054 Why, why do you and Mr. Andrews worry me? |
5054 | Why,she asked with real alarm,"is he so very badly?" |
5054 | Why? 5054 Why?" |
5054 | Wo n''t you come back to the house for dinner? |
5054 | Would you fight such a move? |
5054 | Yes,I said,"but will one of us have to watch here all the time?" |
5054 | Yes-- how did you know his name? |
5054 | You are already holding it up? |
5054 | You are going into town to- morrow? |
5054 | You called in Dr. Forden the last night? |
5054 | You can tell it all when the chief takes you to headquarters, see? |
5054 | You do n''t know? |
5054 | You do n''t mean to say that you attach any importance to a dream? |
5054 | You expect us to believe that? |
5054 | You get me? |
5054 | You had had no quarrel? |
5054 | You have heard, I suppose, of the strange death of Price Maitland? |
5054 | You have known Mrs. Maitland a long time? |
5054 | You have n''t given this letter out to the press? |
5054 | You have no idea who the murderer might be? |
5054 | You have not given up hope in the appeal? |
5054 | You have theories of your own on the case? |
5054 | You knew that they had discovered the poisoned wall- paper? |
5054 | You know where that stuff will land you, I presume? |
5054 | You mean he refused to talk? |
5054 | You met him at the Naval building, that night, do n''t you remember? |
5054 | You recall the peculiar marking on the nose of those bullets? 5054 You recall,"he began,"that no one seemed to know just who took the jewels in both the cases you first reported? |
5054 | You remember my use of the sphygmomanometer? |
5054 | You saw it? |
5054 | You see that fellow, Coke Brodie? 5054 You see, Walter,"he smiled,"how soon one gets into a habit? |
5054 | You think he was bitten by a snake? |
5054 | You want me to stay here until the last minute so that I can overhear whether any alarm is given for her? 5054 You were his personal physician?" |
5054 | You were sent for by Mrs. Phelps, that last night, I believe, while Phelps was still alive? |
5054 | You will keep me advised of any progress you make in the case? |
5054 | You''ll be within call, if we let you go now, any time that we want you? |
5054 | You''ll do that, Walter? |
5054 | ''Look, do n''t you see it? |
5054 | A half- hour later, when he had left and had gone to the hotel, I asked Kennedy suspiciously,"Why did you expose your hand to Hollins, Craig?" |
5054 | All the way she kept crying over and over:''Look, do n''t you see it? |
5054 | And have you had time to study the records? |
5054 | And if it was his conspiracy, would he succeed in tempting his friend, Miss Winslow, to fall in with this glittering offer? |
5054 | Any clues?" |
5054 | Any dizziness?" |
5054 | Are n''t you going to the Novella this morning?" |
5054 | Are you game to go in?" |
5054 | Are you going to keep that up? |
5054 | Are you going?" |
5054 | Assuming the presence of conine, where did it come from?" |
5054 | At last he leaned over and asked quickly,"Can I trust you?" |
5054 | Brainard?" |
5054 | Brainard?" |
5054 | Brainard?" |
5054 | But did he do it himself or did some one else do it? |
5054 | But had he taken anything lately, either of his own volition or with the advice or knowledge of any one else?" |
5054 | But how did you know that? |
5054 | But now that I am here, I wonder if it is possible that I could bring any influence to bear to see your husband?" |
5054 | But what was it she had really seen? |
5054 | By George, it does look badly for them, does n''t it, when you come to think of it? |
5054 | By telepathy? |
5054 | By the way, who else is there in the immediate family?" |
5054 | Ca n''t you see Doctor Forden?" |
5054 | Can not you come and advise me? |
5054 | Can we visit the mausoleum to- night?" |
5054 | Can you come to the Municipal Hospital-- right away?" |
5054 | Can you help me out with it?" |
5054 | Can you meet me to- night? |
5054 | Clendenin?" |
5054 | Could it be that he was playing a game with Carton and had given him a double cross? |
5054 | Could she have been poisoned by these phosphorescent bacilli? |
5054 | Count Wachtmann''s car is there? |
5054 | Craig evidently had the same thought in his mind, however, for he continued:"Was it a woman who killed the chef? |
5054 | Craig, are you sure nobody is hoaxing you?" |
5054 | Did n''t I just tell you I had n''t heard from her until I called up the theatre just now?" |
5054 | Do n''t you know that synthetic rubber would ruin the business system that I have built up here?" |
5054 | Do you know, the scientific slaying of human beings has far exceeded organised efforts at detection? |
5054 | Do you see how those strokes of the long letters are-- well, wobbly? |
5054 | Do you see the closet?" |
5054 | Do you want to come along? |
5054 | Dr. Ross, I think, is acquainted with the new and remarkable theories of Dr. Sigmund Freud, of Vienna?" |
5054 | Gentlemen of the press?" |
5054 | Had he been in league with them, executing a flank movement to divert our attention? |
5054 | Had that been what she was concealing? |
5054 | Had the bomb- maker left before we arrived? |
5054 | Had the powers of evil in the city learned that he was weakening and hurried him out of the way at the last moment? |
5054 | Had there been anything more than superstition in the girl''s evident fright? |
5054 | Had you thought of going to- day?" |
5054 | Has not Haddon cast me off? |
5054 | Has some one else been victimised, too?" |
5054 | Have you a pen or a pencil?" |
5054 | Have you ever seen it?" |
5054 | Have you noticed this room?" |
5054 | He came to me originally--""Arnold Masterson?" |
5054 | He paused, then added quickly:"What machine was it in this case? |
5054 | His chauffeur has started the car without waiting for the Count, who is coming down the platform?" |
5054 | How are things going?" |
5054 | How can he? |
5054 | How can we watch both places at once and yet remain hidden?" |
5054 | How could you?" |
5054 | How do I know what you are?" |
5054 | How do you feel to- day?" |
5054 | How much were you stung for?" |
5054 | How was he to profit by it? |
5054 | How were we to get past that door? |
5054 | How would we find it out? |
5054 | How?" |
5054 | I asked myself the usual query of the lawyers and the detectives-- Who would benefit most by the death of Pitts? |
5054 | I believe it was midnight before you finished?" |
5054 | I gasped,"another case before even this one is fairly cleaned up? |
5054 | I suppose Yvonne has shown you one of the letters I am receiving?" |
5054 | I suppose that an expert like Mr. Borland could tell me, perhaps?" |
5054 | I suppose you have noticed the precautions we are taking against intruders? |
5054 | I trust you wo n''t consider it an impertinence if I ask you whether you were aware that Dr. Ross was Mrs. Maitland''s physician?" |
5054 | I wonder if there could have been any jewels buried with him, as Shaughnessy said? |
5054 | I wonder if you could let me have a sample of this cobra venom?" |
5054 | Inert? |
5054 | Is he here?" |
5054 | Is he really guilty? |
5054 | Is it a curse four thousand years old that has fallen on me?" |
5054 | Is n''t it bad enough to hound him, without hounding me, too? |
5054 | Is that the way the Z99 has behaved always lately?" |
5054 | Is that you, Dr. Guthrie? |
5054 | Is that you, Ella? |
5054 | Is there no rest for the wicked?" |
5054 | Just what had Loraine Keith to do with it? |
5054 | Kennedy fingered the now set impressions, then resumed:"Before I answer that question, what else does the spectroscope show? |
5054 | Kennedy?" |
5054 | Meanwhile, Captain, will you explain to Professor Kennedy just how things are? |
5054 | My friend here knows Dr. Lord very well, do n''t you, Walter?" |
5054 | My heavens-- is there still another day of it? |
5054 | Nordheim?" |
5054 | Number seven? |
5054 | Oh, Price-- why did you? |
5054 | Or could it all have been part of a conspiracy? |
5054 | Or did the cadaveric conine develop only in the body after death? |
5054 | Or had it all been pure chance? |
5054 | Ruth looked up at him with tearful eyes wistful with pain,"Would Mr. Kennedy work on it?" |
5054 | Shall I call her?" |
5054 | She is a very handsome and attractive woman-- you have seen her? |
5054 | Should the confederates of Phelps wait? |
5054 | Stand it? |
5054 | Suppose I just drop off at your place?" |
5054 | Suppose we should start and this Kronski should change his plans at the last minute? |
5054 | Tell me-- what has happened?" |
5054 | The nine- o''clock train is five minutes late? |
5054 | The ten- two? |
5054 | Then, improving the opening, I hastened:"Is this Mr. Thornton violent? |
5054 | They will hold the boat for us? |
5054 | Thornton?" |
5054 | Walter, breathe as little of it as you can-- but-- come here-- do you see?--over there, near the other door-- a figure lying on the floor? |
5054 | Was Dr. Ross desperately shifting suspicion from himself? |
5054 | Was Wachtmann a party to it? |
5054 | Was he going to wait until the bomb- maker had finished what he had come to accomplish? |
5054 | Was he, too, crazy? |
5054 | Was it Clendenin? |
5054 | Was it human or wraith? |
5054 | Was it of some one who had visited the tomb, who was surprised there or surprised some one else there? |
5054 | Was it that which Kennedy was driving at disclosing? |
5054 | Was not Kennedy actually taxing her with loving another? |
5054 | Was she acting a part now? |
5054 | Was she herself part of the plot to victimise, perhaps kill, him? |
5054 | Was she in any way responsible? |
5054 | Was she shielding some one? |
5054 | Was she telling the truth? |
5054 | Was the bomb- maker there still? |
5054 | Was there any way of escape? |
5054 | Was there not something still that she was concealing? |
5054 | Was there some secret which medical ethics kept locked in his breast? |
5054 | Was this a case for the oculists, the spiritualists, the Egyptologists, or for a detective? |
5054 | We met him to- day at the country club, a kindly looking, middle- aged fellow?" |
5054 | What are all these pictures?" |
5054 | What are you doing for it?" |
5054 | What black magic was this? |
5054 | What did you mean?" |
5054 | What do you make of it? |
5054 | What do you think of it?" |
5054 | What do you think of that?" |
5054 | What had been her purpose in coming at all? |
5054 | What has happened?" |
5054 | What is he to me, now?" |
5054 | What is it? |
5054 | What is there to forgive? |
5054 | What is this thing, anyhow?" |
5054 | What must they have done to her? |
5054 | What new scientific engine of death was that little hollow cylinder? |
5054 | What reason, I asked myself, was there to suppose that it would be different now? |
5054 | What threat would be used to back this demand on the Phelpses?" |
5054 | What train are you going to take? |
5054 | What was back of it all? |
5054 | What was he doing-- convicting the man over again? |
5054 | What was he preparing to do? |
5054 | What was it, I wondered? |
5054 | What was it-- a strange new mouth- malady that had attacked this notorious adventuress and woman of luxury? |
5054 | What was it? |
5054 | What was the implication of his startling, almost gruesome, discovery? |
5054 | What was the secret hidden in it? |
5054 | What was to be done? |
5054 | What was to be done? |
5054 | What''s that? |
5054 | What''s that? |
5054 | What''s the matter with it?" |
5054 | What''s this?" |
5054 | What, after all, had been the net result of our activities so far? |
5054 | When that went out what was the use?" |
5054 | Where is Clendenin, do you suppose?" |
5054 | Where is it? |
5054 | Where was he? |
5054 | Which window did you say was Borland''s? |
5054 | Who are they? |
5054 | Who knew about the fatal properties of indol? |
5054 | Who put it in the food? |
5054 | Who was it whose voice Brixton had recognised as familiar over Kennedy''s hastily installed detectaphone? |
5054 | Who was this wounded criminal? |
5054 | Who was willing to forego a one- hundred- thousand- dollar prize in order to gain a fortune of many hundreds of thousands?" |
5054 | Who were the men who went on that expedition to the Congo with Borland which you mentioned?" |
5054 | Who will come to the Novella now?" |
5054 | Whose blood was it? |
5054 | Whose were the teeth?" |
5054 | Why can not we make the world see our case as we see it? |
5054 | Why did I come? |
5054 | Why did I come?" |
5054 | Why have I? |
5054 | Will that serve?" |
5054 | Will this appeal be denied, also? |
5054 | Will you come?" |
5054 | Will you merciless detectives drive us all from, place to place with your brutal suspicions?" |
5054 | Will you not go? |
5054 | Would he hesitate a moment to send us all to perdition along with himself? |
5054 | Would she be used to get at the millionaire and his treasures? |
5054 | Would she stop at anything to avoid the scandal and disgrace of the charge of bigamy? |
5054 | Would you like to see why?" |
5054 | Yes-- what? |
5054 | Yes? |
5054 | Yes? |
5054 | Yes? |
5054 | Yes? |
5054 | Yet here was the one great question, Whence had come the impulse that had sent the famous Z99 to her fate? |
5054 | You do n''t think it is anything serious, do you, Doctor?" |
5054 | You have heard of the Indian fakirs who bury themselves alive and are dug up days later? |
5054 | You have read Ellen Key, I presume? |
5054 | You poor creature, do n''t you think a little trip into town might make you feel better? |
5054 | You received the impulses all right? |
5054 | You remember Burke of the secret service? |
5054 | You remember him? |
5054 | You remember the field glass I used?" |
5054 | You remember the girl at the hospital? |
5054 | You see the evident disguise of the roughly written address?" |
5054 | You understand? |
5054 | You will be at your office?" |
5054 | You will excuse us, Captain, for a few hours? |
5054 | You''d never see that in the original, but when it is enlarged you see how plainly visible the tremors of the hand become? |
5054 | You''re sure it is the nine- o''clock train she is due on? |
5054 | asked Kennedy,"and why do you connect it with this case?" |
5054 | in the morning paper?" |
5270 | A storm? |
5270 | Again-- why do you play vampire roles, Miss Loring? |
5270 | All ready now? |
5270 | All set? 5270 All seven?" |
5270 | An author on the lot at the filming of his picture, to bother the director and to change everything? 5270 And the needle?" |
5270 | And this was the way you had the scene lighted when she dropped unconscious? |
5270 | Any disturbance in the library? |
5270 | Anything which might point to a motive, so that I can approach the case from both directions? |
5270 | Are they distributed widely? |
5270 | Are you accusing Manton of the cold- blooded murder of Stella Lamar to further various financial schemes? |
5270 | Are you insinuating anything, Mackay? |
5270 | Are you sure of your servants? 5270 Are you sure your deputy is n''t romancing?" |
5270 | Are you sure? |
5270 | As a matter of fact, Craig, why should the finding of that cigarette case be a cause for suspicion at all? 5270 But I can assume--""If you are going to assume anything, Walter, why not assume he was the second man, the man who watched the actual intruder?" |
5270 | But can they keep it up? 5270 But how about Gordon?" |
5270 | But is Manton himself financially sound? |
5270 | But what of it if the film makes a big clean- up? 5270 But you have n''t identified it yet?" |
5270 | But you were out here yesterday before the actors arrived, before Manton or any of his technical staff and crew came? |
5270 | But, where did he get the belladonna? |
5270 | Ca n''t you change the story about some way, so you wo n''t lose the value of her work? |
5270 | Can it be the director''s glass? |
5270 | Can you drop us off at the university? |
5270 | Can you point out which one it is? |
5270 | Can you tell me just how the antivenin counteracts the effects of the venom? |
5270 | Can''t-- Isn''t there anyone we can say is innocent, at least, even if we can not begin to fasten the guilt upon somebody? |
5270 | Could I have that for a few days? |
5270 | Could death have resulted from poison administered in some other fashion, by something she had eaten, for instance? |
5270 | Could n''t the scratch be coincidental? |
5270 | Could you give me blood smears and some of the stomach contents, at once? 5270 Craig Kennedy?" |
5270 | Craig,I started, eagerly,"is n''t this all unnecessary? |
5270 | Did she change her clothes out here? |
5270 | Did she have heart trouble? |
5270 | Did she seem her usual self at the start of the scene? |
5270 | Did you ever hear of Mohammed and the mountain, Miss Faye? |
5270 | Did you ever see a print from a dupe negative? 5270 Did you find anything?" |
5270 | Did you have any business with Stella? |
5270 | Did you have any opportunity to talk to Miss Lamar? |
5270 | Did you have your stands any farther back? |
5270 | Did you learn anything else? |
5270 | Did you leave the car then? |
5270 | Did you make any progress? |
5270 | Did you move at all while she was going through her part? |
5270 | Did you notice Millard and Gordon, and now Enid and Marilyn? |
5270 | Did you notice anything particularly out of the way, anything which might be a clue to the manner in which Miss Lamar met her death? |
5270 | Did you notice how they acted? |
5270 | Did you notice the terror in her face when she cried out? 5270 Did you question Manton?" |
5270 | Did you think I expected some one to go walking around the studio scratching his hands? 5270 Did you think I was going to forget you?" |
5270 | Did you try his office at seven hundred and twenty- nine? |
5270 | Did you watch the people at all, Walter? |
5270 | Did-- did you find that here? |
5270 | Do I understand you, Phelps? |
5270 | Do n''t you see? |
5270 | Do n''t you want justice done? |
5270 | Do you feel it is necessary for me to remain any longer? |
5270 | Do you include Gordon in that? |
5270 | Do you know Mr. Phelps''s reason? |
5270 | Do you know anything about Miss Lamar''s death? |
5270 | Do you know anything of a quarrel between Miss Lamar and Gordon? |
5270 | Do you know much about the personal affairs of Miss Lamar? |
5270 | Do you know that Enid Faye''s contract is not with Manton Pictures but with Manton himself? 5270 Do you really suspect Marilyn or Enid?" |
5270 | Do you suppose Enid Faye suggested the use of the drug to Shirley as part of the scheme to kill him? 5270 Do you suppose anyone could have left a package in there-- a bomb, in other words?" |
5270 | Do you suppose it was used because it was quick and was colorless, so as not to be noticed in the glass? |
5270 | Do you suspect Manton of killing her himself? |
5270 | Do you suspect anyone? |
5270 | Do you think he plans something of that kind this morning? |
5270 | Do you think, Mr. Kennedy, that the little can he told you about started the fire? |
5270 | Do you understand now why the night intruder at Tarrytown did not die-- if he is one of our suspects-- from the scratch of the needle? |
5270 | Do you want a ride in to the city, both of you? |
5270 | Do you want to know what I think? |
5270 | Do you--I guess my eyes went wide--"do you expect to dig up a dead man somewhere? |
5270 | Do you-- do you know who it is? |
5270 | Do you-- do you know who it is? |
5270 | Does this mean,he asked,"that the guilty man or woman is some outsider? |
5270 | Dupes? |
5270 | Enid? |
5270 | Everyone is out? 5270 Find something?" |
5270 | For all this, what justification has he had? 5270 Germs?" |
5270 | Granting that Gordon actually had been down there, why should the fact concern us? 5270 Had you been having any trouble?" |
5270 | Half an hour? |
5270 | Has the wonderful Craig Kennedy discovered something? |
5270 | Have n''t about a dozen people described it for you already? |
5270 | Have those other scenes come down? |
5270 | Have you any copies of that particular film? |
5270 | Have you any idea why the doors were open when we went through? |
5270 | Have you any theory as to who killed her? |
5270 | Have you forgotten little Enid altogether? 5270 Have you found out anything yet?" |
5270 | Have you learned anything yet? |
5270 | Have you succeeded in gleaning any facts about the life of Miss Lamar? |
5270 | He has more than one? |
5270 | He is n''t usually that way? |
5270 | He''ll straighten everything up in a hurry, wo n''t he? |
5270 | How about Shirley? |
5270 | How about the itching salve? |
5270 | How about the nocturnal visitor who removed the needle in the dark? 5270 How about the other spots, not the Chinese yellow?" |
5270 | How about the''Black Terror''? |
5270 | How about this solution? |
5270 | How can the towel be a clue to the crime? |
5270 | How could he have died from an overdose of the drug, when he has n''t taken any recently? |
5270 | How could that be? 5270 How could that cause Stella''s death?" |
5270 | How did it happen? |
5270 | How did it work? |
5270 | How did you get in the cellar? |
5270 | How do you account for it yourself? |
5270 | How do you account for the dialogue Jameson overheard? |
5270 | How do you mean, Walter? |
5270 | How do you mean? |
5270 | How do you mean? |
5270 | How do you obtain the serum in quantity? |
5270 | How do you propose to go about things? |
5270 | How do you suppose it got in the car? |
5270 | How do you suppose they could all remain in the same company? |
5270 | How does a fish swim? |
5270 | How does he do it? |
5270 | How does this concern me? |
5270 | How long could it have been there? |
5270 | How long have the other cars been here? |
5270 | How long have you known Millard? |
5270 | How long was the machine alone here in the yard this morning? |
5270 | How long would it take to make a print from the scene where Shirley took the poison? |
5270 | How recently have you seen her? |
5270 | How''s that, Walter? |
5270 | How? |
5270 | I may keep these for a little bit? |
5270 | I suppose you do n''t know Manton is behind this Fortune Features? |
5270 | I wonder what company he got the taxi from? |
5270 | If you can prove who the murderer is, Mr. Kennedy,he exploded,"why do n''t you apprehend him before some one else meets the fate of Werner?" |
5270 | If you have positives,Kennedy asked,"ca n''t you make new negatives?" |
5270 | If you have the blood of another man on your hands--What more could Kennedy want? |
5270 | Is Millard here? |
5270 | Is Millard here? |
5270 | Is Professor Kennedy in? |
5270 | Is everyone here? |
5270 | Is he outside? |
5270 | Is it a man-- or a woman you suspect? |
5270 | Is it necessary to sit back and wait for this unknown to strike again? |
5270 | Is it off with the old and on with the new? 5270 Is it something you can tell me?" |
5270 | Is n''t it hell? |
5270 | Is n''t it possible,I suggested,"that this is a plant; that the tube was put there deliberately, to throw us off the track?" |
5270 | Is n''t there something we can do, Kennedy? |
5270 | Is that all? |
5270 | Is there anything I can do to- night? |
5270 | Is this the largest portion of the room they used? |
5270 | Is this the usual thing or-- or an exception? |
5270 | Is this the way they carry on in the picture world, Walter? |
5270 | It could n''t be broken, by being trampled on? |
5270 | It has been-- it has been in the washroom ever since poor Stella''s death? |
5270 | Just how does the venom act? |
5270 | Just what do you mean, then? |
5270 | Just when do you suppose Stella was pricked? |
5270 | Just who approached closely to Miss Lamar in the making of that thirteenth scene? 5270 Manton has other writers, has n''t he?" |
5270 | Manton? 5270 Marilyn Loring?" |
5270 | May I speak to you a moment, Professor Kennedy-- alone? |
5270 | Millard? |
5270 | Millard? |
5270 | Miss Lamar was''up- stage''? |
5270 | Mr. Phelps is interested in the company? |
5270 | No? |
5270 | Not to save money? |
5270 | Now what connection has the towel with the case? 5270 Now what?" |
5270 | Now--? |
5270 | One of those samples should correspond, I suppose, to the trace of blood on the portieres? |
5270 | Outside? |
5270 | Perhaps you know also that things have n''t been going just right with Manton Pictures? |
5270 | Ready to run the negative? |
5270 | Remember once telling me you wanted to become a director, that you wanted to make pictures for me? |
5270 | Remember that can of undeveloped stuff, a two- hundred roll? |
5270 | Shall I make the collar? |
5270 | Shall I show you the way again? |
5270 | She made a fool of me, and-- and I was engaged to Marilyn Loring--"Were engaged? 5270 Shirley?" |
5270 | Shirley? |
5270 | Some other poison as rare and little known as the snake venom? |
5270 | Stella? 5270 Suppose I start out while you''re busy and try to dig up some more facts about these people?" |
5270 | Tell me all you know about him? |
5270 | Tell me just what happened? |
5270 | Tell me, have you discovered something? 5270 That was the venom?" |
5270 | That''s a theatrical word for cussedness, is n''t it? |
5270 | That''s all you know about Gordon? |
5270 | The camera men, the extras, the technical and studio staffs-- they are not worthy of consideration, are they? |
5270 | The fight with Phelps was over money? |
5270 | The finger- nail files should show a trace of the itching salve? 5270 The mark was n''t made by the needle which scratched her, then?" |
5270 | The negative of that snake picture is here, you said? |
5270 | The three of you were here at the time, were n''t you? |
5270 | The use of the itching salve was unnecessary? |
5270 | Their visits may have been perfectly innocent? |
5270 | Then the apple juice they used for the wine was bad, spoiled? |
5270 | Then what was it? 5270 Then--?" |
5270 | There has been no real trouble between you? |
5270 | There was a second man, and--"A second man? |
5270 | This antivenin was your product, doctor? |
5270 | Understand? |
5270 | Was Stella Lamar making any trouble, of a business nature, such as threatening to quit Manton Pictures? |
5270 | Was anyone, any of those on our list of possible suspects at least, alone in the room-- or in the house? |
5270 | Was n''t he the murderer of the father, also? |
5270 | Was that all you called me out here for? 5270 Was the place guarded well last night?" |
5270 | Was there anything suspicious at that time? |
5270 | Was--Kennedy framed his question carefully--"was your infatuation for Miss Lamar of long duration?" |
5270 | Well, has any regular stuff been brought to you to put away; anything which might have hidden an explosive? |
5270 | Well, how goes it? |
5270 | Well, if it was not an attempt at murder, what was it? |
5270 | Well,he exclaimed,"I do n''t suppose it occurred to any of you SCIENTIFIC guys to search the fellow, now did it?" |
5270 | Were all the scenes in which Miss Lamar appeared before her death in this corner of the room? |
5270 | Were there rattlers in the film? |
5270 | Were you away from the car at Tarrytown? |
5270 | Were you here the night before the murder? |
5270 | Were you watching the taking of the scenes? |
5270 | What about the deputy posted outside? |
5270 | What about the story? 5270 What are they?" |
5270 | What are you driving at, anyway? |
5270 | What are you going to do? |
5270 | What became of the locket about the girl''s neck? 5270 What can Pentangle do for you? |
5270 | What did Marilyn Loring want? 5270 What did the intruder look like?" |
5270 | What did you do with orders like that, such as the one you claim came with the can of undeveloped negative? |
5270 | What do we find? |
5270 | What do you know about Fortune Features? |
5270 | What do you make of it, offhand? |
5270 | What do you make of that? |
5270 | What do you make of the feeling between the different people? |
5270 | What do you mean by tangled motives? |
5270 | What do you mean by that? |
5270 | What do you mean, Jameson? |
5270 | What do you mean? |
5270 | What do you mean? |
5270 | What do you mean? |
5270 | What do you mean? |
5270 | What do you think caused the death? |
5270 | What do you think of her? |
5270 | What do you think of this, Craig? |
5270 | What do you think? |
5270 | What do you wish me to do, Miss Loring? |
5270 | What does it do? |
5270 | What does it mean? |
5270 | What happened? |
5270 | What have these little marks to do with that? |
5270 | What if you do have to wear a bandage around your head? 5270 What is Manton up to?" |
5270 | What is it, Miss Faye? |
5270 | What is it? |
5270 | What is that? |
5270 | What is the invisible menace of which you spoke, Craig? |
5270 | What is the little fact? 5270 What is the story you are making? |
5270 | What is the trouble with Manton Pictures? |
5270 | What is''Fortune Features''? |
5270 | What symptoms did you observe? |
5270 | What then? |
5270 | What was Mr. Shirley down there for, Miss Loring? |
5270 | What was it you wanted to say? |
5270 | What was she supposed to do in the very first scene? 5270 What''s an actor doing down in the film vaults?" |
5270 | What''s that? |
5270 | What''s the idea, Craig? |
5270 | What''s the idea? |
5270 | What-- what''s happened? |
5270 | What? |
5270 | What? |
5270 | When did you close the vaults? |
5270 | When was this? |
5270 | Where are the dressing rooms? |
5270 | Where are the first- aid kits? |
5270 | Where can I find Manton now? |
5270 | Where can I hire about a dozen good men to hang around and watch-- and-- and help you get to the bottom of this? |
5270 | Where did you say Wagnalls went? |
5270 | Where is Millard? 5270 Where''s Wagnalls?" |
5270 | Where-- where did you find it? |
5270 | Which is--? |
5270 | Who are they? |
5270 | Who could have been in the washroom just before me? |
5270 | Who else entered the scene besides Gordon? |
5270 | Who else is in the building here? |
5270 | Who has been in the set since I left with the doctor? |
5270 | Who is Werner? |
5270 | Who is it? |
5270 | Who killed her? |
5270 | Who rode in your car yesterday? |
5270 | Who shall I say was here, sah? |
5270 | Who was in the cast, Mr. Werner? 5270 Who was it? |
5270 | Who were the various callers? |
5270 | Who''s the second girl, I wonder? |
5270 | Who-- who do you want present in the projection room? |
5270 | Whom did he see hanging around? |
5270 | Why Jacques''? |
5270 | Why could n''t you just put it somewhere without all the preparation,Mackay suggested,"and watch to see who came after it?" |
5270 | Why did you come to see me this morning? 5270 Why did you leave? |
5270 | Why did you wish the scenes in''The Black Terror''actually taken in your library? |
5270 | Why did you wish these scenes photographed out here? |
5270 | Why do you''vamp''? |
5270 | Why should Jack Gordon, the leading man, be down there? |
5270 | Why upon Gordon? |
5270 | Why were you taking these scenes out here? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Will I be unable to act before the camera any more? |
5270 | Will it make a scar? |
5270 | Will the antivenin show in the blood after four, perhaps five days? |
5270 | Will they do justice to your work,Kennedy inquired,"putting you in a partially finished picture in this way?" |
5270 | Will you arrange to keep the people I have yet to question separate from the ones I have examined already? |
5270 | Will you be able to help me, to stay with Jameson and myself all day? |
5270 | Will you describe just what happened? |
5270 | Will you do it for me, Kauf? |
5270 | Will you have Miss Loring next? |
5270 | Will you lend me a pocket knife for a moment? |
5270 | Will-- will you be able to save him, Professor? |
5270 | Wo n''t you phone me sometime? 5270 Would anyone have time to do it?" |
5270 | Would n''t it have been easier and cheaper in the long run to reproduce it in the studio? |
5270 | Would n''t some pigment, some color, have served the purpose better? |
5270 | Would you care to go down to the negative vaults with me? |
5270 | Yes, Huroki? |
5270 | Yes? |
5270 | Yes? |
5270 | Yes? |
5270 | Yes? |
5270 | You are familiar with the script of''The Black Terror,''are n''t you? 5270 You are responsible for the trouble between Miss Lamar and Gordon, then?" |
5270 | You are sure you have missed nothing? |
5270 | You brought the three to the studio here? |
5270 | You can see that Manton''s the logical man? |
5270 | You do n''t think the poison was planted later during the excitement? |
5270 | You expect to find the blood of one of those people showing traces of the antivenin? |
5270 | You have a sample of each article of food now? |
5270 | You have had no trouble, no disagreements recently? |
5270 | You have no hypothesis? |
5270 | You have no more description than of the first man? |
5270 | You have the bag and all the evidence? |
5270 | You have used them, though? |
5270 | You know nothing of her difficulties with her husband? |
5270 | You mean something by that, do n''t you? |
5270 | You mean, then, that you may be attacked yourself? 5270 You played the millionaire yourself?" |
5270 | You recognize me, McGroarty, the chauffeur as found the little bottle? |
5270 | You remember that my deputy heard the sound of a departing automobile? 5270 You say she only pretended to be cool?" |
5270 | You say you were just trying to get me, Mackay? 5270 You simply want to assure me of his innocence?" |
5270 | You suspected something of this kind, then, when you first examined Stella Lamar? |
5270 | You think Miss Lamar was n''t as bad as painted? |
5270 | You think they are the most likely suspects? |
5270 | You think this has something to do with the case? |
5270 | You think, then, she was scratched deliberately by some one during the taking of the scenes? |
5270 | You were engaged to her? |
5270 | You were not here the night before the murder, then? |
5270 | You''ll excuse us? |
5270 | You''ll say nothing of this? |
5270 | You''re going to plant the towel,I asked,"so that the interested party will try to get hold of it?" |
5270 | You-- you want to project the NEGATIVE? |
5270 | All the other things point to him, do n''t they?" |
5270 | Am I right?" |
5270 | And had Phelps in insane passion revenged himself on her? |
5270 | And who had been involved? |
5270 | But what of him? |
5270 | Ca n''t you see it? |
5270 | Ca n''t you see that Shirley is the guilty man? |
5270 | Can you see that if Manton Pictures fails the Fortune company will be able to pick up the studio and all the equipment for a song? |
5270 | Could Enid, by any chance, be concerned in that? |
5270 | Could Gordon''s debts have any bearing upon the case? |
5270 | Could Werner have been at Tarrytown? |
5270 | Could he prefer deliberate murder to granting her her freedom? |
5270 | Could it be possible that Millard was unwilling, after all, to surrender her? |
5270 | Did n''t she?" |
5270 | Did she think him dead? |
5270 | Did you just want to show me the pinholes in those portieres?" |
5270 | Did you see the reference to stabilizing the industry? |
5270 | Do you follow me?" |
5270 | Do you get that?" |
5270 | Do you realize that there is n''t room both for this older company and the new Fortune Features? |
5270 | Do you want it?" |
5270 | Does n''t it make you laugh, what the public think he is-- clean- cut, hero, and all that sort of thing? |
5270 | G.''?" |
5270 | Had Kennedy, after all, some knowledge of motion pictures stored away with his vast fund of general and unusual information? |
5270 | Had Manton taken fright in earnest at the possibility of fire, or had he given his employees a genuine scare? |
5270 | Had Stella broken him? |
5270 | Had Stella received an injection of some new and curious substance? |
5270 | Had Werner known we were coming for him? |
5270 | Had an attempt been made yet to steal it from the locker? |
5270 | Had he been watching us? |
5270 | Had he forgotten? |
5270 | Had he thought to bring about his own end in the most spectacular fashion possible? |
5270 | Had that constant high tension forced him to find relief in the most violent relaxation? |
5270 | Had the mystery been solved? |
5270 | Had there been another encounter with fists? |
5270 | Has n''t he been eliminated from our calculations as surely as the man slain yesterday?" |
5270 | Have n''t you noticed how stockily and powerfully the director is built?" |
5270 | Have they the money?" |
5270 | Have you discovered any possible clue? |
5270 | He''s been trying to hold up the company for fifteen hundred a week, which would double his salary-- perhaps you''ve heard that?" |
5270 | How could he, really loving her, think of such things as the make- up left on his face, or his clothes? |
5270 | How could the deductive method produce results in a case as mysterious as this? |
5270 | How did you uncover his trail?" |
5270 | How far are you going?" |
5270 | How would anyone know where her arm would be?" |
5270 | How would you like to finish the direction?" |
5270 | However, I reflected, if Stella had chosen to play the little fool, why should Millard have allowed that to ruin his own chances? |
5270 | I thought perhaps the heat--""You saw nothing suspicious,"interrupted Kennedy,"nothing in the actions or manner of anyone in the room?" |
5270 | I thought quickly, then inquired;"Could it be the snake venom again?" |
5270 | I-- I wonder if belladonna would n''t brighten them up a bit and-- well, get you by, for to- day?" |
5270 | III TANGLED MOTIVES"Do you wish to examine the people now?" |
5270 | IX WHITE- LIGHT SHADOWS"What do you think of it?" |
5270 | If Manton Pictures goes up, then he will have to swing her into Fortune Features-- the other Manton enterprise, do n''t you see?" |
5270 | If Shirley had taken you into his confidence, for instance--?" |
5270 | If it was Werner, how do you account for the fact that he is still alive?" |
5270 | In fact, did n''t Enid make her agreement with Manton personally? |
5270 | Is Phelps to be cast aside like a squeezed- out lemon, and Leigh taken on for a new citrus fruit?" |
5270 | Is n''t it enough?" |
5270 | Is n''t it funny?" |
5270 | Is n''t that likely to be the director? |
5270 | Is that correct, Craig?" |
5270 | Is that still your answer?" |
5270 | Is there any trouble between Manton and yourself?" |
5270 | Is there anything at all I can do to help?" |
5270 | Is there some clue to the guilty man?" |
5270 | Is there some one we suspect and have n''t seen since yesterday?" |
5270 | Is there something I can do?" |
5270 | It''s a masked ball, is n''t it? |
5270 | Jameson?" |
5270 | Kennedy''s face was noncommittal,"Why do you say that?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Kennedy?" |
5270 | Manton?" |
5270 | Manton?" |
5270 | Manton?" |
5270 | Manton?" |
5270 | Merle Shirley?" |
5270 | Millard?" |
5270 | Now who, out of all our people with possible motives, are intelligent enough and clever enough to be guilty?" |
5270 | On a chance I went on, with a knowing smile,"I guess it was pretty late when he came in last night?" |
5270 | Phelps?" |
5270 | Phelps?" |
5270 | Remember the action of the script?" |
5270 | Shirley?" |
5270 | Shirley?" |
5270 | Suppose, after all, Werner should return home unexpectedly? |
5270 | Tell me, do you like little Enid?" |
5270 | Tell me, have you found anything? |
5270 | Tell me, what''s your first name?" |
5270 | That was built for Stella, was n''t it?" |
5270 | That''s the experience of any girl who rises to a position of prominence and--""How were the relations between Miss Lamar and yourself?" |
5270 | Then Manton was n''t talking for effect when he told Miss Faye that the company was broke?" |
5270 | Understand?" |
5270 | Was Manton framing up the same sort of game again on Leigh? |
5270 | Was he connected in some way with the vague mystery Kennedy seemed to sense in connection with the basement and the film vaults? |
5270 | Was he trying to be witty at Manton''s expense? |
5270 | Was it because the thought of poison reminded him of the two deaths so close to him, or was it from some more potent twinge of conscience? |
5270 | Was it blackmail Stella had levied on Phelps, I wondered? |
5270 | Was it due to the high pressure of his profession? |
5270 | Was n''t an attempt made to kill him just now? |
5270 | Was n''t it evident that he was considered as dangerous to the unknown as Werner, the director? |
5270 | Was she taking from him to give to Gordon? |
5270 | Was she the real cause of the tangle in his affairs? |
5270 | Was that terror, really? |
5270 | Was this a case of suicide? |
5270 | Was this another clue? |
5270 | Was this the fancy of a drug- weakened brain? |
5270 | We was lookin''at it because it was on the varnish and the butler he says--""Where''s the locket?" |
5270 | Well, I do n''t like the way the heavy man Mr. Werner had--""Shirley? |
5270 | What I wonder is, was Marilyn as jealous of Stella as her screen character would make her in a story? |
5270 | What good did it do? |
5270 | What is it?" |
5270 | What was the poison that killed Stella Lamar?" |
5270 | What was the use of disputing the matter? |
5270 | What were they playing and just exactly what was each doing at the time of Miss Lamar''s collapse?" |
5270 | What, I wondered, was Phelps telephoning here for? |
5270 | Who could the self- constituted watcher have been? |
5270 | Who had struck down an innocent man to save a guilty neck? |
5270 | Who possessed such amazing callousness that an exhibition of this sort brought no outcry? |
5270 | Who was interested in this case other than the proper authorities? |
5270 | Who was near enough to have inflicted a wound, or to have subjected her, suppose we say, to the fumes of some subtle poison?" |
5270 | Who was the guilty person? |
5270 | Who-- who is Larry, I wonder?" |
5270 | Why did you wait for''The Black Terror''?" |
5270 | Why go over to McCann''s in business hours?" |
5270 | Why not at the studio? |
5270 | Why not cancel Lamar contract after"Black Terror,"if she continues up- stage? |
5270 | Why should he wreck Manton Pictures, you ask? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Why? |
5270 | Will you lunch Tuesday at the P. G. tearoom? |
5270 | Will you superintend the assembly of the scenes, so that you can be sure nothing is taken out or omitted?" |
5270 | With all these troubles, how could he pilot us about? |
5270 | Won''t-- won''t YOU come down and dance?" |
5270 | Would you like to come along?" |
5270 | XII EMERY PHELPS"There-- there is something the matter with the curtains?" |
5270 | XXI MERLE SHIRLEY OVERACTS Appalled, I wondered who it was who had, to cover up one crime, committed another? |
5270 | You are sure everybody is safe?" |
5270 | You had heard?" |
5270 | You know how it is?" |
5270 | You saw it? |
5270 | You''ve got a monk''s cowl over everything but your features, have n''t you?" |
5270 | You''ve heard of Fortune Features, perhaps?" |
5270 | You''ve heard of him, the greatest villain ever known to the films? |
5270 | You''ve something to tell me and you want me to come right out-- you have summoned Phelps and he''s on his way from the city also--?" |
5270 | he asked,"to get a hang- nail?" |
5270 | or ask me for a dance?" |
33466 | ''But what''s the use?'' 33466 A cat?" |
33466 | A fake Watteau? |
33466 | A rebate,Kennedy went on insinuatingly,"a commission on the bill-- you understand? |
33466 | A specialist? |
33466 | A yacht? |
33466 | Absolutely? |
33466 | Against_ you_? |
33466 | And madame-- has she any idea where she is? |
33466 | And she? |
33466 | And that that picture of Faber''s is the real original, after all? |
33466 | And what does it do? |
33466 | And what is a geophone? |
33466 | And why was she talking with Preston? |
33466 | And you think this was such a case? |
33466 | And you think,he queried,"that in some way this woman is connected with the strange change that has taken place in your father?" |
33466 | Any trace yet of the Invincible? |
33466 | Anything peculiar? |
33466 | Are they living? 33466 Are you sure it was a Secret Service man?" |
33466 | Attacked and carried off? |
33466 | Authenticated? |
33466 | Blow us up first? |
33466 | But her valuables? |
33466 | But how about the other one? |
33466 | But how can you? |
33466 | But is that all? |
33466 | But the motive? |
33466 | But they did n''t travel in the same circle, did they? |
33466 | But what does it do? |
33466 | But what other reason could there have been for her condition? |
33466 | But why did she go there? |
33466 | But why do you come to me? |
33466 | But will you attend to that end of the affair for me, Walter? 33466 But, is it impossible, as some of the old scientists have proved to their own satisfaction it must be?" |
33466 | By a Miss Fleming? |
33466 | By the way, Dunn,remarked Craig at length,"who is that fellow-- over there with the woman in blue-- the fellow with the heavy braided coat?" |
33466 | By the way, do you know that Miss Fleming was said to have had the original-- and that it is gone? |
33466 | By the way, have you found out anything about the Baroness? |
33466 | Ca n''t you have her get acquainted-- just as a precaution-- with that man? 33466 Can I help you out?" |
33466 | Can you be here at, say, eight? |
33466 | Can you go down with me now and meet Mr. Tresham? 33466 Can you go over to Brooklyn with me now?" |
33466 | Can you locate Castine and that woman and come up to the laboratory-- right away? |
33466 | Can you tell me why? |
33466 | Chase,he instructed, when we were seated in the office,"you recall that advertisement of the lost necklace in the_ Star_ by La Rue& Co.?" |
33466 | Chickens? |
33466 | Could you discover them if they were? |
33466 | Creighton,I repeated, looking at the man on the floor,"a dummy?" |
33466 | Cyanogen? |
33466 | Did I hear you refer to the Invincible? |
33466 | Did Madame Dupres know the Baroness Von Dorf? |
33466 | Did Signor Franconi-- ever go with them? |
33466 | Did anything happen downtown? |
33466 | Did she recognize anything, say anything? |
33466 | Did you ever hear of the great diamond, the Invincible? |
33466 | Did you never hear of a picture with a dual personality? |
33466 | Did you see anything peculiar take place in the locker- room? |
33466 | Disappeared? |
33466 | Do n''t you see? 33466 Do n''t you think a cancer specialist would be more likely to help you?" |
33466 | Do n''t you think we might leave the door ajar a little? |
33466 | Do n''t you want more light? |
33466 | Do they explain Rawaruska''s death? |
33466 | Do you happen to know that girl, Cecilie Safford, that Broadhurst''s trainer, Murchie, eloped with? |
33466 | Do you know of any enemies of his on the boat? |
33466 | Do you know the new wireless operator who goes with us tonight? |
33466 | Do you know what I''ve just heard? |
33466 | Do you know,he whispered so faintly that it was almost lost,"sometimes I think there is a plot against me?" |
33466 | Do you know? |
33466 | Do you remember that bottle I picked up last night? 33466 Do you suppose she is as intimate with Creighton as she implies?" |
33466 | Do you suppose that means the clever little Russian dancer who was in the''Revue''last year? |
33466 | Do you suppose vibration caused it? |
33466 | Do you think it is possible for an owner to make a financial success of racing without betting? |
33466 | Do you think they have been doped? |
33466 | Does Mrs. Seabury herself understand it? |
33466 | Dope? 33466 Doped?" |
33466 | Electrolysis? |
33466 | Forsythe& Co.? |
33466 | Friends of his? |
33466 | Gaskell? |
33466 | H- m,mused Kennedy, looking fixedly at Burke,"that complicates matters, does n''t it? |
33466 | H. Morgan Sherburne? |
33466 | Had n''t we better warn her? |
33466 | Has that taxicab gone? |
33466 | Have you a photograph of Gloria? |
33466 | Have you any idea what the papers mean by that? |
33466 | Have you communicated with the Baroness? |
33466 | Have you found anything definite? |
33466 | Have you found anything yet? |
33466 | Have you found anything yet? |
33466 | Have you found anything? |
33466 | Have you heard anything new? |
33466 | Have you searched? |
33466 | Have you the letter here? |
33466 | He wanted it thrown overboard? |
33466 | Hello-- oh, Miss Tourville, how do you do? 33466 His own trunk?" |
33466 | How about Benson, the steward? |
33466 | How about exercise? |
33466 | How about that other little woman we saw? |
33466 | How about the Señora? |
33466 | How about the other admirers? |
33466 | How about those things you found in the maid''s room? |
33466 | How can I ever thank you? |
33466 | How could Leon have been killed? |
33466 | How could anyone take it out, without being seen? 33466 How did you become interested in this perpetual motion machine, Miss Laidlaw?" |
33466 | How did you find it out? |
33466 | How do you figure that woman out? |
33466 | How was she discovered? |
33466 | How would she relish having that told to Mr. Seabury-- backed up by the possession of the key? |
33466 | How''s that? |
33466 | I hope you''ll excuse me? |
33466 | I know,persisted Craig,"but had he taken out his naturalization papers here?" |
33466 | I may photograph your copy of the Fête? |
33466 | I suppose he did n''t notice what kind of wagon it was? |
33466 | I suppose you are acquainted with Watteau''s''Fête du Printemps''? |
33466 | I suppose you have animals here for experiment? |
33466 | I suppose you have heard of the famous''Fête du Printemps,''by Watteau? |
33466 | I suppose you have no objection to my taking some of this sample of the contents of the organs of her body, have you? |
33466 | I suppose you know that I have a country estate not far from my daughter? |
33466 | I understand,agreed Craig,"but why did they suspect your son?" |
33466 | I understand,he went on, not waiting for a reply,"that you are interested in the case of that little Russian actress, Rawaruska?" |
33466 | I wonder if he''s waiting for her? |
33466 | I wonder what he dropped in for? |
33466 | I wonder whether you know a Dr. Adam Loeb? |
33466 | I-- in New York? |
33466 | If that''s the case, who would be the most likely person to do such a thing? |
33466 | If you get on the trail, will you wire me? |
33466 | If you would-- how could I ever thank you? 33466 In what is Mr. Morehouse most interested? |
33466 | Installing a wireless plant? |
33466 | Is Mr. Allison at home? |
33466 | Is it that you think it possible to produce cancer artificially and purposely? |
33466 | Is that detectaphone thing out of business now? |
33466 | Is there a Mr. Kennedy there? |
33466 | Is there anyone here who might know something about him-- his habits, associates,--that sort of thing? |
33466 | Is there anyone you suspect? |
33466 | Is there anything about the matter-- of a personal nature-- that you have n''t told? 33466 It could not be delivered to a woman who was once the maid of Rawaruska, the Russian dancer?" |
33466 | It does n''t follow that he was killed in his room, does it? |
33466 | Just what is this force you call vibrodyne? |
33466 | Loeb? |
33466 | Madame Dupres? |
33466 | May I look around? |
33466 | May I use your telephone? |
33466 | May there not be molecular, atomic, even ionic forces of which we have not dreamed? 33466 Meanwhile, I may have the key, I suppose?" |
33466 | Miss Tourville''s, also? |
33466 | Must pay-- we''ll never get anything on you? |
33466 | Narcophin? |
33466 | Nikola-- what is the matter? |
33466 | No one suspects? |
33466 | No peculiar odor, no receptacle of any kind near her that might have held poison? |
33466 | No? |
33466 | Not ergot? |
33466 | Nothing? |
33466 | Of course-- why not? |
33466 | Oh, Mr. Jameson,I heard Mrs. Ferris''s voice calling over long distance from Briar Lake anxiously,"is Mr. Kennedy there? |
33466 | Oh, Professor Kennedy,she exclaimed in a sudden burst of renewed feeling,"do n''t you understand? |
33466 | Oh, ca n''t you help me find Nikola? |
33466 | Oh,I breathed, with a sigh of relief,"that''s it, is it?" |
33466 | Oh-- will you? |
33466 | Petzka? |
33466 | Sherburne, you say? |
33466 | So-- you are a detective? |
33466 | Someone might have lowered the trunk from the window by a rope, might they not? |
33466 | Something afterward? |
33466 | Still,I objected,"dancing even in the wild, stimulating emotional manner you see here need not be merely an incitement to love, need it? |
33466 | Surrounded by all this junk that may blow us to kingdom come any second? |
33466 | Suspect? |
33466 | That holder? |
33466 | That''s all right,I said in desperation,"But suppose they blow us up, first?" |
33466 | That? |
33466 | The door was not locked, you say? |
33466 | The safety vault company have n''t complained? |
33466 | The weed of madness? |
33466 | Then you are, as I suspected, a detectif? |
33466 | Then you have the telephote in actual operation? |
33466 | Then you think Lady Lee was doped? |
33466 | Then you will come down tonight? |
33466 | Then you will take it up-- you are interested? |
33466 | There''s a woman-- what? 33466 Us?" |
33466 | War brokers? |
33466 | Was anyone associated with Delaney in the syndicate here? |
33466 | Was he poisoned? 33466 Was she conscious?" |
33466 | Was there any evidence of a struggle? |
33466 | Well, are you ready for them? |
33466 | Well,I asked,"do you find anything there?" |
33466 | Well,I said, when we were alone,"what is it-- a romance or a crime?" |
33466 | Were there any other people on the boat who might be worth watching? |
33466 | Were there any others? |
33466 | Wh- what do you find? |
33466 | What are they? |
33466 | What are you doing? |
33466 | What are you doing? |
33466 | What are you working on now? |
33466 | What could it have been, then? |
33466 | What did Collette mean by her frightened cry of the''voodoo sign''? |
33466 | What did cause them, then? |
33466 | What did you do? |
33466 | What did you say? 33466 What do they show to an expert?" |
33466 | What do you know of the bankers, Forsythe& Co.? |
33466 | What do you mean? 33466 What do you mean?" |
33466 | What do you suppose he has done with the motor? |
33466 | What do you think it is? |
33466 | What do you think of Creighton''s motor? |
33466 | What do you think? |
33466 | What does Miss Allison think? |
33466 | What happened to shake your brother''s faith? |
33466 | What has happened? |
33466 | What has it been used for? |
33466 | What have you found? |
33466 | What have you there? |
33466 | What is he-- a Hungarian or a Servian? |
33466 | What is it? |
33466 | What is it? |
33466 | What is it? |
33466 | What is it? |
33466 | What is it? |
33466 | What is that? |
33466 | What is that? |
33466 | What is the case, Doctor? |
33466 | What is the curse of Mansiche? |
33466 | What is the matter? |
33466 | What is this thing? |
33466 | What line of work had he taken up? |
33466 | What motive would there be? |
33466 | What sort of places? |
33466 | What then? |
33466 | What was it you had the Señorita drop into his coffee? |
33466 | What was it? |
33466 | What was it? |
33466 | What was to be done? 33466 What works?" |
33466 | What''s doing now? |
33466 | What''s that? 33466 What''s that?" |
33466 | What''s the instrument? |
33466 | What''s the matter? |
33466 | What''s the matter? |
33466 | What''s the matter? |
33466 | What''s the matter? |
33466 | What''s the trouble with Hayti, then? |
33466 | What''s the trouble? |
33466 | What''s the use of that? |
33466 | What''s this? |
33466 | When did he disappear? |
33466 | Where can I see Gloria? |
33466 | Where did you put them? |
33466 | Where did you usually-- er-- meet Sherburne? |
33466 | Where is my husband? |
33466 | Where is the body? |
33466 | Where was Benson''s room? |
33466 | Who are these rapid youngsters? |
33466 | Who are they all, do you suppose? |
33466 | Who found her? |
33466 | Who is he? |
33466 | Who is he? |
33466 | Who is it? |
33466 | Who is she? |
33466 | Who is that Mrs. Barry of whom Miss Laidlaw spoke? |
33466 | Who is that woman? |
33466 | Who is this Señora de Moche? |
33466 | Who recommended you? |
33466 | Who was her husband? |
33466 | Who was it that went out? |
33466 | Who was it? |
33466 | Whose car was that? |
33466 | Whose shop is that? |
33466 | Whose yacht do they think it is? |
33466 | Why did you suppose I let them go? |
33466 | Why do you suppose he went to all that trouble? |
33466 | Why not? 33466 Why not?" |
33466 | Why should she have taken it? |
33466 | Why that anxiety from him? 33466 Why, do n''t you understand? |
33466 | Why, what do you mean? |
33466 | Why, what''s the matter? |
33466 | Will you be so kind as to step into the little anteroom with me? |
33466 | Will you tell me what your precise business is in this hotel? |
33466 | Would you mind baring your arm a moment? |
33466 | Would you mind meeting him there again this afternoon so that I could see him? |
33466 | Yes,said Burke, in surprise,"do you know anything about him?" |
33466 | Yes-- I can do that-- but do n''t you think it is risky? 33466 Yes?" |
33466 | You are Professor Kennedy, the detective? |
33466 | You assume, then, that it was the blow that killed Evans? |
33466 | You ca n''t make up your mind which one you care for most, then? 33466 You did n''t do anything more about that electrolysis clew?" |
33466 | You do n''t believe it, then? |
33466 | You do n''t know anything more about her-- where she came from-- her connections? |
33466 | You have a theory of your own? |
33466 | You have eaten nothing today, then, I am to understand? |
33466 | You knew Monsieur Leon well? |
33466 | You knew her, of course? |
33466 | You know Mrs. Barry''s number? |
33466 | You know her? |
33466 | You know the jimson weed-- the Jamestown weed? 33466 You mean Castine?" |
33466 | You mean that somehow a copy by Miss Fleming has come really to Jacot with instructions to palm it off on some gullible buyer? |
33466 | You mean, do I believe her story-- of her relations with this fellow, Sherbourne? |
33466 | You mean,I asked as the result of Craig''s quick thinking dawned on me,"that you told him Sherburne was_ your_ operative?" |
33466 | You must go back to the boat? |
33466 | You remember how Gloria seemed to stand in fear of Du Mond? 33466 You remember the mercury vapor light?" |
33466 | You saw that? |
33466 | You say you have never written a line to the fellow nor he to you? |
33466 | You were present when they were demanding that his body be thrown over, were you not? 33466 You will think over my proposition?" |
33466 | You''ve heard of anthrax? |
33466 | You''ve seen it, I suppose? |
33466 | You-- you''ll forgive me-- for my-- unjust suspicions-- Agatha? |
33466 | Your husband was not a reservist of any of the countries at war, was he? |
33466 | _ Was_ it one of Anita Allison''s many admirers who did this thing? |
33466 | And Margot? |
33466 | And if anything were ever discovered, what more natural than to throw the suspicion on a veterinary who was supposed to know all about anthrax?" |
33466 | And what do I find? |
33466 | And who would bear the blame? |
33466 | Are they here now?" |
33466 | As soon as the things are detonated I will get off, some way, by wireless the S O S-- as if it came from the fleet, you understand?" |
33466 | Before he could speak, Kennedy asked,"Who was that woman?" |
33466 | But a woman? |
33466 | But had she been cleared from one peril only to fall a victim to another-- the one she already feared? |
33466 | But might not the harm have already been done? |
33466 | But then, I reasoned, would he have been so free in showing the key if he had realized that it might cast suspicion on himself? |
33466 | But there was Allan Wyndham-- he''s a friend of the Allisons,--why should n''t they suspect him? |
33466 | But to see the eyeballs turn green is uncanny, is n''t it?" |
33466 | But was he a scientific villain? |
33466 | But who could have wanted her kept on the boat? |
33466 | But who put it there? |
33466 | But why should I do anything to him? |
33466 | But why? |
33466 | But with such a scandal-- how can we expect it? |
33466 | But with whom? |
33466 | But, by Jingo, no sooner was I over the side of the ship than what do you suppose I ran up against?" |
33466 | But, why? |
33466 | By the way, has he told you his own theory?" |
33466 | CHAPTER XXII THE ABSOLUTE ZERO"Is n''t there some way you can save him, Professor Kennedy? |
33466 | CHAPTER XXVIII THE CANCER HOUSE"You''ve heard of such things as cancer houses, I suppose, Professor Kennedy?" |
33466 | Ca n''t you help me?" |
33466 | Ca n''t you imagine anyone who might want you detained longer?" |
33466 | Can it be natural, I ask myself? |
33466 | Comprenez- vous?" |
33466 | Could it be that someone was using these new forces with devilish ingenuity? |
33466 | Could it have been Petzka who was responsible for the fires? |
33466 | Could it have been a suicide, after all? |
33466 | Could the man have been drugged, perhaps, and then shot? |
33466 | Could there be, I wondered, an X- ray outfit or perhaps radium concealed about the living rooms of the house? |
33466 | Could they be of use?" |
33466 | Could you take us up to Delaney''s rooms? |
33466 | Creighton?" |
33466 | Did Dr. Goode refer indirectly to him? |
33466 | Did McGee figure that the horses ahead of him were setting such a fast clip that they would drop back to him before the race was over? |
33466 | Did n''t anyone hear anything?" |
33466 | Did n''t you notice that? |
33466 | Did she suspect that we knew something or was she herself seeking information? |
33466 | Did you get your photograph?" |
33466 | Did you notice how it contracted his pupils almost back to normal again?" |
33466 | Do you know him?" |
33466 | Do you think there is any way I can get free from him? |
33466 | Does it occur to you that he might perhaps think he was playing us for suckers, after all?" |
33466 | Does n''t her husband support her?" |
33466 | Had Craig deliberately let Creighton have a chance to get away, in order that he might convict himself? |
33466 | Had Margot been simply a high- class"fence"for the disposal and convenient reappearance of stolen goods? |
33466 | Had he fled, too,--perhaps forced her to go with him when Mrs. Du Mond appeared? |
33466 | Had he or someone else got wind of the raids and tipped off Dr. Loeb? |
33466 | Had it been by a deft touch on a nerve of her beautiful, soft neck that had constricted the throat and cut off her breath? |
33466 | Had she accepted Miss Laidlaw''s invitation to call in order to look us over, knowing that we had come to do the same? |
33466 | Had the message which we had seen her read at the start been from Du Mond? |
33466 | Had the unconscious blunder betrayed something which perhaps she herself consciously did not realize? |
33466 | Had we not heard him say that the signal was to be an S O S sent, as it were, from the fleet far out on the ocean? |
33466 | Has some one of her friends taken advantage of her to learn our habits and get into the house and get it? |
33466 | Have you found out anything?" |
33466 | He had raised his voice from the whisper and I caught the Señorita looking anxiously at Kennedy, as much as to say,"You see? |
33466 | Here, in this projector--""That is the transmitting part of the apparatus?" |
33466 | How about that?" |
33466 | How can we reconstruct them?" |
33466 | How could it be done? |
33466 | How could one ever find out now where she was, in the present state of affairs abroad, even supposing it were not a ruse to cover up something? |
33466 | How do you explain them? |
33466 | How friendly were they?" |
33466 | How should I know anything of that? |
33466 | How would after dinner do? |
33466 | How would he meet it? |
33466 | I have heard him ask fifty times,''Where have they taken him?'' |
33466 | I suppose you know how stray or vagrant currents affect steel and concrete?" |
33466 | I suppose you remember him?" |
33466 | I wonder what the man is doing?" |
33466 | I wonder whether you are acquainted with my methods of treatment?" |
33466 | I wondered whether someone had sought to conceal the fact that he had a copy of the famous Watteau, made by Miss Fleming? |
33466 | I''ll see you, I presume, when the Señorita and Don Luis come back?" |
33466 | If I should go out to Norwood with you as soon as you feel better, would n''t that be all right?" |
33466 | If Rita had warned Faber against us, and Leila had warned Jacot, which had copy and which original? |
33466 | If not that, what object could there be for anyone to cause such a condition? |
33466 | In furniture? |
33466 | In pictures? |
33466 | Is it for fear that we might discover something which might be covered up?" |
33466 | Is it mere chance?" |
33466 | Is it merely meeting her here? |
33466 | Is that it?" |
33466 | Is the body still there?" |
33466 | Is there any way of sending a wireless message from this place?" |
33466 | Is there not something back of it?" |
33466 | It was only a moment later that the hatch was broken open and we heard the welcome brogue of Burke, calling,"Kennedy-- are you and Jameson all right?" |
33466 | Jacot leaned over confidentially to Kennedy and added,"Why not sell as an original, not this, but another copy-- a-- a-- what you call it?--a fake?" |
33466 | Kennedy looked at the purser keenly for a moment, then asked,"Were they traveling together?" |
33466 | Loeb?" |
33466 | May I?" |
33466 | May it not be a normal gratification of the love instinct-- eroticism translated into rhythm? |
33466 | Might it be for the purpose of robbery? |
33466 | Might not someone have taken the keys from his pocket, gone up to the room without making any noise and let the trunk down here by a rope? |
33466 | Morehouse?" |
33466 | Mr. Seabury, how long have you felt as you say that you do?" |
33466 | Oh, Mr. Jameson, what does it all mean? |
33466 | Oh, ca n''t you find out? |
33466 | On it were the initials"R. T."Had Rita Tourville visited him? |
33466 | Or had it been asphyxiation due to a poison that had paralyzed the chest muscles? |
33466 | Or might it be for revenge? |
33466 | Or were they both copies and had the original been hidden? |
33466 | Or, had there been a"triangle,"perhaps a quadrangle here? |
33466 | Or, have they put her up to getting it?" |
33466 | Perhaps it will strike me-- or my brother, Lionel-- who can tell? |
33466 | Perhaps the thing is all right, but,--well, what do I really know about it?" |
33466 | Pine business-- eh? |
33466 | Preston?" |
33466 | Ritter will call for you? |
33466 | Still, they might be inside the walls, might n''t they?" |
33466 | The race had been won-- but had the problem been solved? |
33466 | Then if he had dropped the rope, locked the door, and returned the keys to Benson''s pockets-- how about that?" |
33466 | Then why the struggle? |
33466 | Understand?" |
33466 | Was Creighton afraid of arousing the jealousy of Adele Laidlaw? |
33466 | Was Jacot hinting at something known in the trade? |
33466 | Was Sherburne to escape, after all, and ruin her? |
33466 | Was he afraid of a love forbidden by race prejudice? |
33466 | Was he hopelessly out of date, or really ahead of his time? |
33466 | Was it Faber, or Jacot, or was it someone else? |
33466 | Was it Tresham, after all, whom she really admired and wanted to see? |
33466 | Was it a fact or was it merely imagination? |
33466 | Was it a sort of auto- hypnotism? |
33466 | Was it because Creighton had gone off with her money, or was it pique because Mrs. Barry had, perhaps, won him? |
33466 | Was it in his eyes, or was it merely his ardent foreign grace? |
33466 | Was it merely to get this cattle contract, big as that was? |
33466 | Was it merely to vindicate his professional pride at the failure he and the Coroner had had so far with the case? |
33466 | Was it on account of the telephone call? |
33466 | Was it really, I wondered, that Creighton, more than his motor, has fascinated her? |
33466 | Was it to prevent anyone from thinking that the owner had ever had any connection with Rhoda Fleming?" |
33466 | Was it too late? |
33466 | Was she really afraid of him? |
33466 | Was the plan to elope and so avoid his wife? |
33466 | Was the"evil eye"of superstition a scientific fact? |
33466 | Was there a baneful beam that could be directed at will-- one that could not be seen or felt until it worked its havoc? |
33466 | Was there a power that steel walls could not hold, which, in fact, was the more surely transmitted by them? |
33466 | Was there any significance in the mistake? |
33466 | Was there some subtle, unknown poison which had hitherto baffled science, but which now he was about to reveal to us? |
33466 | Was there such a thing as the drug of the evil eye? |
33466 | Was there treachery in the crew? |
33466 | Was this the"safe"poison at last? |
33466 | Were we really on the right track at last? |
33466 | What can I do for you?" |
33466 | What could have been more evident than that she was seeking evidence and such evidence could only have been for a court of law in a divorce suit? |
33466 | What could these women be thinking of? |
33466 | What did Craig mean? |
33466 | What did he mean? |
33466 | What did it mean? |
33466 | What did it mean? |
33466 | What did it mean? |
33466 | What did it mean? |
33466 | What did she mean? |
33466 | What did they know of the men, except their clothes and steps? |
33466 | What do you think of it?" |
33466 | What had Rita told him? |
33466 | What had done it, I wondered? |
33466 | What if he had been observed and someone were down there investigating? |
33466 | What more natural, then, than for him to visit that locker when he returned from town, open it? |
33466 | What shall I do? |
33466 | What was his connection with Rita, I wondered? |
33466 | What was it he had discovered? |
33466 | What was the purpose back of it all? |
33466 | What would they show? |
33466 | What''s your theory, then,--foul play?" |
33466 | Where had she placed the diamond? |
33466 | Where have they gone?" |
33466 | Where was Du Mond? |
33466 | Which of them typified Creighton? |
33466 | Who had been dining with her that fatal evening?" |
33466 | Who had it been? |
33466 | Who had the knowledge that would suggest using such a poison? |
33466 | Who had the motive? |
33466 | Who had the real masterpiece? |
33466 | Who is he?" |
33466 | Who knows but that he made her get it to save her reputation? |
33466 | Who next?" |
33466 | Who was foremost in that?" |
33466 | Who was it who had conceived and executed this devilish plot? |
33466 | Who was it? |
33466 | Who was that?" |
33466 | Who was the little woman who had been like a skeleton at a feast? |
33466 | Who were these to scorn her race, her family? |
33466 | Who were they?" |
33466 | Whom was she shielding? |
33466 | Why do n''t they suspect Wyndham? |
33466 | Why do n''t they suspect-- some of the others?" |
33466 | Why had Kennedy not foreseen this risk? |
33466 | Why was he so careful about it? |
33466 | Why, Kennedy-- how are you? |
33466 | Why, do you know anything about it?" |
33466 | Why? |
33466 | Why?" |
33466 | Why?" |
33466 | Wonderful, is n''t it?" |
33466 | Would anyone take advantage of the opportunity to tamper with that box of cigarettes on Mendoza''s table? |
33466 | Would he succeed in whatever it was that he was planning? |
33466 | Would he, perhaps at the last moment, lose his nerve? |
33466 | Would she escape finally, after all? |
33466 | You are acquainted with the test? |
33466 | You are familiar with it, I presume?" |
33466 | You are sure that you can detonate them when the time comes?" |
33466 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you knew her?" |
33466 | You''re off at seven? |
33466 | You-- you will help me-- I mean, help Gloria?" |
33466 | and''Is he to be embalmed?''" |
33466 | he ground out, then paused, cutting the next remark short as he gritted,"What do you mean? |
33466 | queried Craig finally,"so as to use it in identifying the real one?" |
5149 | A cat? |
5149 | A plant? |
5149 | Afraid of him-- why? |
5149 | And Jameson, too? 5149 And Mr. Lockwood, who is he?" |
5149 | And Professor Kennedy? |
5149 | And did she notice it? |
5149 | And the curse? |
5149 | And these attacks on you-- this cigarette business-- how do you explain that,asked Craig,"if you have n''t the dagger?" |
5149 | And you believe what HE says, too? |
5149 | And you did n''t care, as long as he had it,added Craig, then, turning to the de Moches,"And what is your tale?" |
5149 | And you think that may have something to do with the case? |
5149 | And you? |
5149 | And? |
5149 | Another car? |
5149 | Any news of Inez? |
5149 | Anything else? |
5149 | Anything from Burke yet? |
5149 | Are you all right now, old man? |
5149 | Are you going up toward the University? |
5149 | Are you hurt? |
5149 | Are you quite sure you are able to stand the strain of this interview? |
5149 | Are you ready, Walter? |
5149 | Are you ready? |
5149 | Are you sure that he knew nothing about it before? |
5149 | Broken? |
5149 | But did he say anything, has he done anything? |
5149 | But do n''t you suppose they know it? |
5149 | But do you think she was going to accept as truth what you told her? 5149 But is n''t it dangerous?" |
5149 | But what has that to do with the evil eye? |
5149 | But where is she now-- where is he? 5149 But who could it have been?" |
5149 | But whom does it mean? |
5149 | Ca n''t they tell it? |
5149 | Ca n''t you call him up again? |
5149 | Can they hear us? |
5149 | Can we not expect you? |
5149 | Can you make anything out of that? |
5149 | Chester-- is that you? |
5149 | Could he have been made insane, do you think? |
5149 | De Moche-- with her, now? |
5149 | Did Lockwood or Mendoza know about the dagger and its importance? |
5149 | Did anything happen after I left? |
5149 | Did he have a visit from one of his detectives? |
5149 | Did he have a visit from one of his detectives? |
5149 | Did he tell her that? |
5149 | Did he tell you any more than he told us? |
5149 | Did n''t that satisfy you? |
5149 | Did you get them? |
5149 | Did you see any ladies? |
5149 | Do n''t you think we might have the door ajar a little? |
5149 | Do n''t you think you ought to preserve the marks? |
5149 | Do n''t you want more light? |
5149 | Do you know Senora de Moche well? |
5149 | Do you know anything more about these men, Lockwood and de Moche? |
5149 | Do you know him? 5149 Do you mind telling me whose feet made these prints?" |
5149 | Do you suppose that woman could be using Whitney for some purpose? |
5149 | Do you want me to tell you the truth? |
5149 | Do you want to answer it? |
5149 | Do? |
5149 | Does Whitney know about this-- or Lockwood? |
5149 | Does n''t Mr. Lockwood count? |
5149 | Doped? |
5149 | Great heavens, you do n''t mean to say that they went over that? |
5149 | Had your father any enemies who might desire his death? |
5149 | Has anything else happened? |
5149 | Has anything happened? |
5149 | Have they found her? |
5149 | Have you any idea who it could be? |
5149 | Have you any idea who might have an object in stealing the dagger? |
5149 | Have you any recollection of what the inscriptions on it said? |
5149 | Have you asked my mother? |
5149 | Have you found any one who saw her? |
5149 | Have you found anything? |
5149 | Have you found out anything about the poison? |
5149 | Have you heard anything from him? |
5149 | Have you heard anything of a report that the dagger has been found? |
5149 | Have you no suspicions of what became of it and who took it? |
5149 | Have you or any one you know ever sought to discover its secret and search it out? |
5149 | Have you seen Whitney since I had the break with him? |
5149 | He never told you of it? |
5149 | Hello, is Mr. Whitney there? |
5149 | Hello, is that you, Kennedy? 5149 Hello, is this Professor Kennedy?" |
5149 | Hello, what''s new? |
5149 | How about the Senora''s eyes? 5149 How could you, a stranger, know?" |
5149 | How do you feel after your thrilling experience? |
5149 | How''s that? |
5149 | How''s that? |
5149 | How-- what do you mean? |
5149 | I believe you are acquainted with Mr. de Moche, Professor Norton? |
5149 | I do n''t know whether you have noticed it,began Craig,"but I wonder how you feel?" |
5149 | I may ask Professor Kennedy, too? |
5149 | I suppose I may count on your help as the case develops? |
5149 | I suppose Jameson has already told you that I called you up last night-- and what I said? |
5149 | I suppose you know that the old Chimu tribes in the north were the wealthiest at the time of the coming of the Spaniards? |
5149 | I suppose you realize what this means? |
5149 | I suppose you suspected all along that the dagger had something to do with the Gold of the Gods, did you not? |
5149 | I''ve got to go out on a murder case--"An interesting case? |
5149 | I? 5149 If some one has the secret,"he cried hastily,"who knows when and on whom next he may employ it?" |
5149 | If you had asked where Whitney was, I could have understood, but--"Well, where is he? |
5149 | Imply? |
5149 | Indeed? |
5149 | Inez? |
5149 | Is Kennedy in-- oh, he has n''t come back yet? |
5149 | Is Professor Kennedy here? |
5149 | Is either 823 or 827 vacant? |
5149 | Is everything all right? |
5149 | Is he at the Prince Edward Albert? |
5149 | Is that so? |
5149 | Is there a road leading off before you get to the house? |
5149 | Is there any message I can take? |
5149 | Is there any special thing you want to find out? |
5149 | Is there any trace of Inez? |
5149 | It was n''t the maid? |
5149 | It was something about Norton, was n''t it? |
5149 | It was you, I believe, Mr. Lockwood, who found Senor Mendoza last night? |
5149 | It''s as noticeable as that? |
5149 | Just how did you get possession of the dagger? |
5149 | Just what are Mr. Lockwood''s relations with him-- and yours? |
5149 | Kennedy, how did you ever think of such a thing? |
5149 | Kennedy,appealed Lockwood at last, as I hung up the receiver,"will you listen to my story?" |
5149 | Let me see,continued Whitney,"your concessions are all about here, in the north, are n''t they?" |
5149 | Lockwood-- can''t you recognize his voice? 5149 Lockwood?" |
5149 | May I have a cigarette out of that case over there? |
5149 | Mr. Lockwood and Senor Mendoza had some joint interests in the country, too, did n''t they? |
5149 | My God,he exclaimed,"tell me-- she isn''t-- hurt, is she? |
5149 | Nitrous oxide? |
5149 | No bottle, no glass? 5149 No more anonymous letters, I hope?" |
5149 | No one has ever stumbled on the secret? |
5149 | No-- who is this? |
5149 | None of you have seen Whitney here? |
5149 | Not another trace? |
5149 | Nothing else is gone? |
5149 | Oh, Professor Kennedy,she cried finally,"ca n''t you see it? |
5149 | Oh, by the way, any word of Norton? |
5149 | Oh, why did her father ever bring her here to this land of danger? |
5149 | Other warnings? |
5149 | Perhaps it may have been sent to divert suspicion-- who can tell? |
5149 | Professor Kennedy? |
5149 | Say,he ejaculated,"it was Norton brought you into this case, was n''t it?" |
5149 | Senorita,he said finally, in a voice that was deep and thrilling with feeling,"have I ever been other than a friend to you? |
5149 | Shall I send it by a messenger? |
5149 | She thinks it referred to you, then? |
5149 | So-- you''re another rival, are you? |
5149 | Speaking of weapons,broke in Kennedy,"you have had no further idea of why the dagger might have been taken?" |
5149 | Take these gentlemen as far as Smith''s corner, will you? |
5149 | Tell me, Professor Kennedy,she cried, her hands clasped before her in frantic appeal,"tell me-- it is n''t true-- is it? |
5149 | Tell me,urged Kennedy,"how did it happen? |
5149 | The point is,cut in Craig, interrupting,"who was the mysterious visitor to Mendoza the night of his murder?" |
5149 | The weed of madness? |
5149 | Then he might have known? |
5149 | Then how came you here? |
5149 | Then it is pure tradition on which Mr. Lockwood and Mr. Whitney depend in their search for the treasure? |
5149 | Then that was what was the matter? |
5149 | Then what has happened that makes you use the oxygen? |
5149 | Then who has it? |
5149 | Then you fear that in some way she may be connected with these strange changes? |
5149 | Then you have thought of something? |
5149 | Then you know the secret of the hiding- place of the treasure? |
5149 | Then you were listening while I was talking to Professor Norton? |
5149 | Then you-- you believe what he says? |
5149 | Then,he exclaimed, rising,"you must know of the ruins of Chan- Chan, of Chima-- those wonderful places?" |
5149 | Want any help? |
5149 | Was he alone? |
5149 | Was it about anything I should know? |
5149 | Well, have you found out anything more? |
5149 | Well, of all things, what do you think of that? |
5149 | Well, what do you think of that? |
5149 | Well, where are the gold and silver of the conquistadores? 5149 Well,"I remarked, as we walked along,"what do you think it is-- a romance or a simple crime- hunt?" |
5149 | Well,asked Kennedy, pausing with a test- tube poised over a Bunsen burner,"have you found anything yet? |
5149 | Well,he remarked, as we seated ourselves,"how did you come out in your tete- a- tete?" |
5149 | What about it? |
5149 | What are they? |
5149 | What are you doing? |
5149 | What are you going to do-- give it up? |
5149 | What are you going to do? |
5149 | What can we do? |
5149 | What did Lockwood say about Norton? |
5149 | What did he say about me? |
5149 | What did he say? |
5149 | What did he say? |
5149 | What did you find? |
5149 | What did you think of him then? |
5149 | What do you attribute it to? |
5149 | What do you know about that fellow Norton, up at your place? |
5149 | What do you make out of it? |
5149 | What do you mean, man? 5149 What do you suppose is the matter?" |
5149 | What do you think of Lockwood? |
5149 | What do you think of her? |
5149 | What does it mean to you? |
5149 | What does it mean? |
5149 | What has Whitney been doing? |
5149 | What has happened? |
5149 | What has she done to make you fear it? |
5149 | What have you found? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is it? |
5149 | What is the effect? |
5149 | What is this deadly poison that was used on Mendoza? |
5149 | What is this''curse of Mansiche''which the Senorita has mentioned? |
5149 | What is your suggestion? |
5149 | What seems to be the matter now? |
5149 | What shall I do? 5149 What the matter?" |
5149 | What then? |
5149 | What was it about? |
5149 | What was it about? |
5149 | What was it you had Inez drop into Whitney''s coffee? |
5149 | What was it? |
5149 | What was that? |
5149 | What was that? |
5149 | What''s he doing? |
5149 | What''s that? 5149 What''s the result of your detective work on Norton?" |
5149 | What-- you here, Kennedy? |
5149 | Whe- where''s Kennedy? |
5149 | When do you expect him? |
5149 | Where are they? |
5149 | Where are you now? 5149 Where did Mr. Whitney go?" |
5149 | Where did he get it? |
5149 | Where did it come from-- and how? |
5149 | Where is Inez Mendoza? |
5149 | Where on earth are you? 5149 Where was Burke-- that man that the police sent up to protect her?" |
5149 | Which way to Stuart Whitney''s estate? |
5149 | Whitney knows her pretty well now, does n''t he? |
5149 | Who is Haggerty? |
5149 | Who is afraid? |
5149 | Who is it? |
5149 | Who is this Senor de Moche? |
5149 | Who is this Senora de Moche? |
5149 | Who sent it? |
5149 | Who told you? |
5149 | Who was it? |
5149 | Who''s this? |
5149 | Who? |
5149 | Who? |
5149 | Whom does it mean? |
5149 | Whose is it? |
5149 | Why do n''t they come out into the open, whoever they are? |
5149 | Why do n''t you and Kennedy try to see Senora de Moche? 5149 Why is it that you fear it?" |
5149 | Why should he have wanted to get me? |
5149 | Why was he here? |
5149 | Why, Juanita,encouraged Kennedy,"what''s the matter?" |
5149 | Why, what has he done? |
5149 | Why-- what has happened? |
5149 | Why-- what''s the matter? |
5149 | Why? |
5149 | Why? |
5149 | Why? |
5149 | Why? |
5149 | With a lantern? |
5149 | With this weed of madness, as you call it? |
5149 | Wo n''t you ask him to come in, Nita? |
5149 | Wo n''t you be seated? |
5149 | Would you care to meet them? |
5149 | Would you like to know why you feel that way? |
5149 | Yes, yes,repeated Kennedy,"but what about her? |
5149 | Yes,repeated Norton,"but have you been able to do anything toward identifying them?" |
5149 | Yes? |
5149 | You are acquainted, I suppose, with a Senora de Moche? |
5149 | You are sure of it? |
5149 | You can read mystery-- like a book? |
5149 | You do n''t think he could have known something about the dagger all along? |
5149 | You had been trying the poison on YOURSELF? |
5149 | You have no idea who could have sent such a note? |
5149 | You have not seen Mr. Lockwood since, I suppose? |
5149 | You have something to report? |
5149 | You have told Inez that? |
5149 | You have? |
5149 | You heard Mr. Lockwood say that he had become associated with a Mr. Whitney, Mr. Stuart Whitney, down in Wall Street? |
5149 | You heard what he said? 5149 You knew that it might offer some clue to the hidden treasure of Truxillo?" |
5149 | You know Mr. Whitney, I suppose? |
5149 | You know Senora de Moche and Alfonso? |
5149 | You know the jimson weed-- the Jamestown weed, as it is so often called? |
5149 | You remember that time in the tea room when we were sitting with Senora de Moche? |
5149 | You remember when we were talking to the watchman down there at the station, Walter? |
5149 | You remember, of course, the various mechanical and electrical ears, such as the detectaphone, which we have used for eavesdropping in other cases? |
5149 | You saw no weapon-- a dagger? |
5149 | You saw nothing about the den that aroused any suspicions? |
5149 | You saw that? |
5149 | You saw the dagger which Norton brought back, did you not? |
5149 | You saw them? |
5149 | You say the dagger was triangular, Norton? |
5149 | You say your father knew the Senora? |
5149 | You see that wound? 5149 You see?" |
5149 | You still have no idea who could have sent it, or why? |
5149 | You suppose? |
5149 | You think you will have something tangible soon? |
5149 | You were acquainted with Lockwood? |
5149 | You were going out? |
5149 | You will drop in on me if you hear anything? |
5149 | You will excuse me a moment? |
5149 | You will excuse me? 5149 You will excuse us?" |
5149 | You will let me know of any development, no matter how trivial? |
5149 | You will tell Mr. Kennedy-- you will both be-- so careful? |
5149 | You''ll let me know, Kennedy, if you discover anything? |
5149 | You''ll wait around a little longer? |
5149 | You-- you are a detective? |
5149 | You-- you got it? |
5149 | A moment later we heard a voice,"I''m sorry to have had to keep you waiting, but what is it that I can do for you?" |
5149 | Ah, well, perhaps it will be better-- who can tell? |
5149 | And if I could not make out Lockwood, a man at least of our own race and education, how could I expect to fathom Alfonso? |
5149 | And if they have"--she paused to emphasize it--"what does that mean?" |
5149 | And it was that, partly, that ailed Mendoza?" |
5149 | And supposing you have it-- what does that imply?" |
5149 | Better yet, you remember how Whitney''s eyes looked, how Inez said her father stared, and how she feared for Lockwood?" |
5149 | Beware of Mr. Lockwood? |
5149 | But did it seem to do so now? |
5149 | But did you notice how the treatment contracted the pupils of Whitney''s eyes almost back to normal again?" |
5149 | But had you no other reason? |
5149 | But is there none left? |
5149 | But what good would that do, around a corner and so far away? |
5149 | But what has that to do with Norton?" |
5149 | But, say, there is a change in Whitney, is n''t there? |
5149 | But, then, it flashed over me, was not my own case worse? |
5149 | By the way, may I trouble you and Leslie to go over to the Museum of Natural History with a letter?" |
5149 | By the way, you know the young man pretty well, do n''t you? |
5149 | Could a human fly have scaled the walls, or an aeroplane have dropped an intruder at the window ledge? |
5149 | Could he have spoken so heartily if he had known what it was, damning to himself, that Kennedy had tucked away in the laboratory? |
5149 | Could he trust being unarmed, while Kennedy and I had all the weapons? |
5149 | Could it be that Senorita Mendoza had some antipathy which did not include the son? |
5149 | Could it be that we were only half right-- that they had gathered here but that Inez had really disappeared? |
5149 | Could it be the same whom we heard over the vocaphone addressed as"Doc"? |
5149 | Could she be in the room? |
5149 | Could she be such a heartless woman as to play on the very heartstrings of one whom she had wronged? |
5149 | Could some one have sent the letter not to produce the effect apparently intended, but with the ultimate object of diverting suspicion from himself? |
5149 | Could there be some scientific explanation of the evil eye? |
5149 | Could they have been hurt, picked up by some one and carried where they could get aid?" |
5149 | Did he know more about the dagger than appeared? |
5149 | Did he know something of the dagger? |
5149 | Did he mean the de Moches? |
5149 | Did it betoken a further tragedy? |
5149 | Did it mean that the treasure would then be left for her family? |
5149 | Did n''t you notice that? |
5149 | Did that mean, necessarily that he committed the murder with it, that he now had it? |
5149 | Did they carry her off-- as they tried to do the other time?" |
5149 | Did you notice a change in Mr. Whitney, or have n''t you known him long enough? |
5149 | Did you tell the elevator boy that she had suddenly been taken ill? |
5149 | Did you, down in your heart, think them really fairy tales?" |
5149 | Do n''t you think that it would be worth while watching Norton?" |
5149 | Do you feel strong enough to go down to Whitney''s with me?" |
5149 | Do you see anything peculiar?" |
5149 | Had Whitney intended the capture of Inez for Lockwood? |
5149 | Had both of them got out of each other all that they wanted-- Norton his reputation and Whitney-- what? |
5149 | Had he been laying low, waiting his opportunity to get away? |
5149 | Had he found a continuation of the tire- tracks? |
5149 | Had he left a legacy of fear of a love forbidden by race prejudice? |
5149 | Had he perhaps had something to do with the nasty business? |
5149 | Had it been for the purpose of throwing us off the track? |
5149 | Had she been preparing to go somewhere, too? |
5149 | Had she really accepted it? |
5149 | Had she telephoned to Alfonso and had he gone alone? |
5149 | Had that been the purpose for which we had been sent on wild- goose chases? |
5149 | Had the Gold of the Gods lured him into its net, too? |
5149 | Had the truth come out in his jests? |
5149 | Had they, then, some significance? |
5149 | Had we been hoaxed and was all this risk in vain? |
5149 | Has any one been here since we have been gone?" |
5149 | Has he ever been here before?" |
5149 | Have I ever given you cause to suspect even one little motive of mine?" |
5149 | Have I no one to trust?" |
5149 | Have you ever done anything with those shoe- prints you found in the dust of the mummy case?" |
5149 | Have you found out anything about the de Moches?" |
5149 | He had raised his voice from the whisper, and I caught Inez looking anxiously at Kennedy, as much as to say,"You see? |
5149 | Hello-- what''s this?" |
5149 | House party?" |
5149 | How about them? |
5149 | How are you making out? |
5149 | How are you? |
5149 | How could he be such a boob as to let the chance slip through his fingers?" |
5149 | How did it happen?" |
5149 | How is Senorita Inez?" |
5149 | How was she when she arrived home?" |
5149 | I guess you know something about that dagger he lost, do n''t you?" |
5149 | I had and said so, adding,"But what was your idea?" |
5149 | I hope your mother is well?" |
5149 | I knew that its three- sided sheath inclosed a sharp blade, yet who would have dreamed that that blade was poisoned?" |
5149 | I presume I shall see you again?" |
5149 | I suppose you know of the loss of the old Inca dagger from the University Museum and that it was that with which Don Luis was murdered?" |
5149 | I suppose you will have to turn in a story to the Star soon?" |
5149 | I trust everything is all right?" |
5149 | I trust that answers your question?" |
5149 | I wonder if you could find him anywhere about the University this morning and persuade him to visit me?" |
5149 | I wonder if you''d object if we had a little luncheon up here, to- morrow? |
5149 | I wonder what caused it?" |
5149 | Inez Mendoza without friends just now would be a mark, would n''t she?" |
5149 | Is it all over?" |
5149 | Is not that enough?" |
5149 | Is she gone?" |
5149 | Is the Gold of the Gods worth it?" |
5149 | Is there anything wrong?" |
5149 | Just a flying trip, I guess-- or does he expect you?" |
5149 | Lockwood seemed to take it as though it applied to himself very readily, did n''t he? |
5149 | Lockwood?" |
5149 | Lockwood?" |
5149 | Luis de Mendoza is the name, and it seems--""Don Luis de Mendoza?" |
5149 | May I see that you get home safely? |
5149 | Might he not have lost it? |
5149 | Might not Mendoza have been murdered with it by some other hand to obtain or to hide the secret on its bloody blade? |
5149 | Might not some of her feelings be readily accounted for? |
5149 | Might not some one else-- the Senora, or Alfonso, or both-- have obtained it? |
5149 | Might not some unseen hand strike at me, perhaps sooner than at him? |
5149 | Might that very fear which the Senorita had of the Senora engender a feeling that would produce the very result that she feared? |
5149 | My God-- where is she?" |
5149 | Now, was she more than a clever actress? |
5149 | Oh, my poor, little girl, what has become of her? |
5149 | Oh, what is it? |
5149 | Oh-- what shall I do? |
5149 | Or was he playing a lone hand? |
5149 | Or was she hinting at Inez accepting Alfonso''s suit? |
5149 | Perhaps somehow it bore the secret of the big fish-- who knows? |
5149 | Perhaps, somehow, Mendoza had the secret of the peje grande?" |
5149 | Put him on, will you?" |
5149 | Rockledge? |
5149 | See? |
5149 | She spoke bitterly; yet might she not mean that the loss of the dagger, the secret, was a curse, too? |
5149 | Such eyes, such a figure-- did you ever see a more beautiful woman?" |
5149 | Suppose the first message were true? |
5149 | Surely you must have some other suspicions,"he persisted,"something that you feel, even though you do not know?" |
5149 | Then are their chances better than others? |
5149 | Then were their chances of finding the treasure any better than any one else had? |
5149 | Then what does he do? |
5149 | There was n''t the odour of any gas or drug?" |
5149 | Understand?" |
5149 | Walter, may I ask you to leave me here in the laboratory undisturbed?" |
5149 | Was Inez really kidnapped this time? |
5149 | Was Lockwood really innocent, after all? |
5149 | Was he implying that it was sent to cast suspicion on him, because he felt that way himself or because he himself was her friend? |
5149 | Was he telling the truth? |
5149 | Was he the one who had got away and now calculated to come back and throw us off guard? |
5149 | Was it Inez, not the dagger, that he really wanted? |
5149 | Was it a coincidence, or was it merely a blind? |
5149 | Was it a fact, or was it merely my imagination? |
5149 | Was it a freak of my mind, or was there some reason for it? |
5149 | Was it a sort of auto- hypnotism? |
5149 | Was it actually a look of relief that crossed her face? |
5149 | Was it possible that there might be something in it-- not objectively, but subjectively? |
5149 | Was it pure fancy, or did I detect a trace of coldness as though there had sprung up something between them? |
5149 | Was it really empty? |
5149 | Was it through loyalty to the man who had contributed to financing his expeditions to South America? |
5149 | Was that the reason why the Senorita so evidently feared her? |
5149 | Was the same idea in his mind, also? |
5149 | Was there some intruder there? |
5149 | Was there still to be vengeance for his downfall? |
5149 | Was there such a thing, I wondered hastily, as the drug of the evil eye? |
5149 | Was this his cover-- to disown Norton? |
5149 | Was this, after all, but a reincarnation of the bloody history of the Gold of the Gods? |
5149 | Well, is Kennedy there? |
5149 | What can it mean?" |
5149 | What could we do? |
5149 | What could we do? |
5149 | What did it all mean? |
5149 | What did it mean? |
5149 | What did it mean? |
5149 | What did you expect to accomplish by it?" |
5149 | What else was there to do? |
5149 | What had happened to him? |
5149 | What has happened? |
5149 | What if there should be something in it? |
5149 | What is it?" |
5149 | What makes them so-- well, effective?" |
5149 | What might not they do with some weird South American poison? |
5149 | What more natural than to think that we were both there? |
5149 | What then more likely to cover himself up than to return when he knew that his entrance would be known, and find the thing himself?" |
5149 | What then?" |
5149 | What was back of it all? |
5149 | What was it, I wondered, that kept him delving into the archaeological lore of the library? |
5149 | What was it-- man or devil? |
5149 | What was it? |
5149 | What was it? |
5149 | What was its message? |
5149 | What was the reason back of it all, I asked, as I thought of those wonderful eyes of hers? |
5149 | What were we to do? |
5149 | What were we to do? |
5149 | What will it be next? |
5149 | What would he ask? |
5149 | What''s that? |
5149 | What? |
5149 | Where are you?" |
5149 | Where did it come from? |
5149 | Where have they taken her? |
5149 | Where is it?" |
5149 | Where is she-- what have you done with her?" |
5149 | Where is she? |
5149 | Where should we go? |
5149 | Where will it end?" |
5149 | Which was he working for, now-- or was he working for himself alone? |
5149 | Which way shall we turn?" |
5149 | Whitney?" |
5149 | Whitney?" |
5149 | Whitney?" |
5149 | Whitney?" |
5149 | Whitney?" |
5149 | Who could have sent the messages to us all? |
5149 | Who could it possibly have been that had conceived this devilish plot? |
5149 | Who had sent the warnings? |
5149 | Who knows? |
5149 | Who knows? |
5149 | Who was likely to have known of curare? |
5149 | Who was the man addressed as"Doc"? |
5149 | Who were these to scorn her race, her family? |
5149 | Who would go in? |
5149 | Why did you pick out this house?" |
5149 | Why do n''t they come out and face me? |
5149 | Why do n''t you go home and take a rest? |
5149 | Why not meet it now?" |
5149 | Why not pause before it is too late?" |
5149 | Why should I do otherwise?" |
5149 | Why tempt fate, then? |
5149 | Will you do it?" |
5149 | With what?" |
5149 | Would any one take advantage of the opportunity to tamper with the box of cigarettes on the table? |
5149 | Would that be natural for one so high- strung?" |
5149 | Would you remember the boy?" |
5149 | Would you treat it seriously or disregard it? |
5149 | XVII THE VOICE FROM THE AIR"Do you believe it?" |
5149 | XXIII THE ACETYLENE TORCH Do you suppose he really had the dagger, or was that a lie?" |
5149 | XXV THE GOLD OF THE GODS"What are you doing here?" |
5149 | You are shadowed by some one-- you think it is by Whitney?" |
5149 | You can come?" |
5149 | You do not think it is Professor Norton, for instance-- or myself?" |
5149 | You have met her?" |
5149 | You have no clue, I suppose?" |
5149 | You have the Star? |
5149 | You know as well as I do that you have planned to get Inez Mendoza away from my influence-- to kidnap her, in other words--""We kidnap her?" |
5149 | You remember the sample of blood which I squeezed from your thumb? |
5149 | You say de Moche is in there yet?" |
5149 | You see how neat it all is? |
5149 | You were poisoned by gas that--""Yes,"I interrupted,"but how, with all the doors locked?" |
5149 | You''re cracking a crib? |
5149 | You''ve been trying to get me all day? |
5149 | asked the coroner eagerly,"nux vomica?" |
5149 | queried Craig,"or to whom it might refer?" |
5087 | A Jap, too? |
5087 | A poison? |
5087 | A psychanalysis? |
5087 | A spangle from a sequin dress,he muttered to himself; then, turning to Miss Grey,"Did any one wear such a dress last night?" |
5087 | A visitor? |
5087 | A woman? |
5087 | A wreck-- some spectacular stroke at the nations that are shipping the gold? |
5087 | All of them? |
5087 | And it''s this stuff that somebody has been putting into her tonic? |
5087 | And that indicates? |
5087 | And that is what was on the bullet? |
5087 | And that? |
5087 | And the shot? |
5087 | And with not a word? |
5087 | And you have put Granville Barnes out of the way, first? |
5087 | And you, Miss Euston? |
5087 | And? |
5087 | Another example of a mind confused even on recent events? |
5087 | Any servants? |
5087 | Are you going to take it up? |
5087 | Beriberi-- in New York? |
5087 | But another patient might have known what Marchant was being treated for? |
5087 | But how are you going to get in? |
5087 | But how do you think it could have happened? |
5087 | But what''s its use? |
5087 | But who could have used it? |
5087 | But you know good mushrooms when you see them? |
5087 | But you succeeded finally? |
5087 | But,I cut in,"the hand- bag-- the dinner-- what of them?" |
5087 | Ca n''t anything be done to save my father in spite of himself? |
5087 | Ca n''t you come and see Jose, Professor Kennedy? 5087 Can you make it out? |
5087 | Could it be some one who is projecting a deadly wireless force which causes the explosions? |
5087 | Could it have been a robbery? |
5087 | Could it have been a word for them and half an hour for herself? |
5087 | Could it have been my wife? |
5087 | Could you see? |
5087 | Did you ever see anything like that? |
5087 | Did you get anything out of her? |
5087 | Did you get it? |
5087 | Did you hear a shot? |
5087 | Did you know Captain Shirley? |
5087 | Did you know that the Medical Society were interested in you and your clinic before the demonstration before Professor Gaines was arranged? |
5087 | Did you notice anything else at the dinner-- no matter how trivial? |
5087 | Did you observe anything peculiar? |
5087 | Do you find anything? |
5087 | Do you know yet how the thing was done? |
5087 | Do you really fear that there is something wrong? |
5087 | Do you recall any of his symptoms? |
5087 | Do you recall anything peculiar about the mushrooms? |
5087 | Do you remember anything that happened after that? |
5087 | Do you suppose one of the servants could have been''planted''for the purpose of pulling it off? |
5087 | Do you suppose that is part of Burr''s system, or did Miss Giles lighten her work by putting it into the tonic? |
5087 | Do? |
5087 | Doctor Aitken has never expressed any suspicion? |
5087 | Doctor Chapelle? |
5087 | Doctor Murray is his personal physician? |
5087 | Does that look like agricultural machinery? |
5087 | Done by wreckers, then? |
5087 | Especially if they are women? |
5087 | Favors at each place? |
5087 | Had Captain Shirley any friends in the city? |
5087 | Has Doctor Aitken been here? |
5087 | Has Mr. Kennedy found out anything yet? |
5087 | Has any one seen my daughter? |
5087 | Has any one told you that Garretson''s car went down the river road, too? |
5087 | Has anybody-- died? |
5087 | Has anything happened here? 5087 Have it? |
5087 | Have you any suspicion about when the robbery took place? |
5087 | Have you discovered anything? |
5087 | Have you done any investigating yourself? |
5087 | Have you ever heard anything more that he did? |
5087 | Have you ever heard of Teresa de Leon? |
5087 | Have you found anything? |
5087 | Have you found anything? |
5087 | Have you found anything? |
5087 | Have you found out anything? |
5087 | Have you found out yet? |
5087 | Have you made any attempt to examine it? |
5087 | Have you seen anything-- er-- suspicious about this Kato? |
5087 | Have you taken any other precautions now that you did n''t take before? |
5087 | He will come? |
5087 | How about the food? |
5087 | How about the robbery? |
5087 | How could they have been taken, do you think? |
5087 | How did Mrs. Gaines become interested in the thing? |
5087 | How did he die? |
5087 | How did the fire start? |
5087 | How did you first hear of it? |
5087 | How did you get away from the watchman? |
5087 | How do you account for his strange actions? |
5087 | How do you suppose I''ll be able to get out there, now? |
5087 | How has this machine been improved? 5087 How is she, anyway?" |
5087 | How is that? |
5087 | How is that? |
5087 | How was it? |
5087 | How was that? |
5087 | I believe you have a patient, a Miss Virginia Blakeley? |
5087 | I believe you were acquainted with Senior Barrios, who died to- night? |
5087 | I may keep this? |
5087 | I may look over the office? |
5087 | I may take some of these samples to study myself? |
5087 | I suppose there is no objection to my seeing Doctor Haynes? |
5087 | I suppose you know that Senor Barrios is very seriously ill? |
5087 | I suppose you never heard the story of the Antilles? |
5087 | I suppose you''ve noticed over Miss Blakeley''s nose a red sore? |
5087 | I think I have a prior claim there, have n''t I? |
5087 | Illness-- robbery? |
5087 | In what way? |
5087 | Indeed? |
5087 | Is Barrios any better? |
5087 | Is anything missing from his room? |
5087 | Is everybody daffy over those little islands? 5087 Is he any better?" |
5087 | Is it a clue or a stall? |
5087 | Is it all right? |
5087 | Is it in my hands? |
5087 | Is it possible that she can be in this revolutionary propaganda? |
5087 | Is that Englishwoman a member of the cult? |
5087 | Is there a place in town where I can get the films in this developed quickly? |
5087 | Is there any one in the hotel whom you might suspect? |
5087 | Is there anything more you wish to ask? |
5087 | Is there still time to catch the last morning edition of the Star, Walter? |
5087 | Is-- Lane-- hiring the men-- himself? |
5087 | It''s a pretty ticklish piece of business, then? |
5087 | It''s something like that you meant, I presume, when you called it a''phantom destroyer''a moment ago? |
5087 | Jackson''s? |
5087 | Just what do you mean? |
5087 | Just what was it you overheard? |
5087 | Know him? 5087 Korsakoff''s syndrome?" |
5087 | Lane, may I install this thing in your telegraph- room outside? |
5087 | Like carbon- monoxide poisoning? |
5087 | Located in one of the best protected and most inaccessible parts of the body,Kennedy considered, slowly,"how could the pituitary be reached? |
5087 | May I have your car to- night? |
5087 | May I try something? |
5087 | Message? |
5087 | Might this present trouble be a recurrence of the old trouble? |
5087 | Miss Blakeley? 5087 Mrs. Blakeley, may I trouble you to get that beauty mask which your daughter wore?" |
5087 | No clue yet to my crank? |
5087 | No one else has felt any ill effects from the supper, I suppose? |
5087 | No one has been down on the wreck yet? |
5087 | No question? |
5087 | No, but I hope it''s something I can add to my report? |
5087 | Not shot? |
5087 | Nothing? 5087 Now that we''re here,"I whispered,"what can we do?" |
5087 | Of twenty million dollars? 5087 Oh yes"--she recalled herself--"I suppose you know something of his gems? |
5087 | Oh, I hope he will find something Wo n''t you go to him and tell him to hurry? |
5087 | Oh, Mr. Kennedy, have you heard? |
5087 | Or of who sent the telegram? |
5087 | Perhaps some drug? |
5087 | Perhaps? |
5087 | Petromortis? |
5087 | Queer about that Barnes case, is n''t it? |
5087 | Quick-- what DO you mean? |
5087 | Robbery? |
5087 | Rodman-- can you-- forgive me? |
5087 | Roger Cranston? |
5087 | Sandoval had warned against this De Leon? |
5087 | See the bands gradually fade? |
5087 | Seems as if she was a good drawing- card for the house, does n''t it? |
5087 | Shadowing the shadowers? |
5087 | So,returned Chapelle, drawing back and placing his head on one side as he nodded it with each word,"you think I''ve spoiled her looks? |
5087 | So? |
5087 | Some one placed the wrong salt in there-- took out oxygen, added nitrogen, instead of removing carbon dioxide? |
5087 | Some poisonous Amanita got mixed with the edible mushrooms? |
5087 | That? |
5087 | The planters are not putting in modern machinery, then? |
5087 | Then Hampton Haynes has been here? |
5087 | Then Wardlaw did n''t attend her himself? |
5087 | Then how was he killed? |
5087 | Then it was an accident? |
5087 | Then one of the ramekins was poisoned? |
5087 | Then she was not a patient? |
5087 | Then that is how Traynor died? |
5087 | Then that would mean that they might have been taken by any one, do n''t you see? 5087 Then there are other causes?" |
5087 | Then this is really the second attack of the morbid sleep? |
5087 | Then what is it for? |
5087 | Then you know Mr. Sandoval also? |
5087 | Then you made no effort to find out? |
5087 | Then you think Doctor Wardlaw has it, too? |
5087 | Then you think that some one present placed something in the tea? |
5087 | Then you''ll go down to Nitropolis? |
5087 | Then you''re going to desert us? |
5087 | There was no one else in the kitchen while you prepared them? |
5087 | They''ve called the new plant Nitropolis-- rather a neat name for a powder- works, do n''t you think? |
5087 | To come here? |
5087 | Was any one else here? |
5087 | Was she committed by her husband? |
5087 | Was there anything that might give you a hint of what had happened? |
5087 | Well, doctor,demanded the detective as he entered,"what''s the verdict?" |
5087 | Well,I exclaimed, as we passed through the dining- room,"what was all that?" |
5087 | Were there candles? |
5087 | Were you acquainted with a Captain Shirley? |
5087 | What about that little bottle of keratin? |
5087 | What are the beads? |
5087 | What are the seeds? |
5087 | What are the symptoms? |
5087 | What are you doing? |
5087 | What can this thing be? |
5087 | What can you do? |
5087 | What could she want? |
5087 | What could we do, just two girls, all alone? 5087 What did Miss Hackstaff do?" |
5087 | What did you do? |
5087 | What did you think of her? |
5087 | What do you know about him? |
5087 | What do you make of it yourself? |
5087 | What do you make of that Dolores incident? |
5087 | What do you make of that? |
5087 | What do you suppose it is? |
5087 | What do you think of the spangle? |
5087 | What do you think? |
5087 | What else might there be? |
5087 | What good will it do, Lewis? |
5087 | What has happened? 5087 What has happened?" |
5087 | What have you done? |
5087 | What is Miss Belleville''s interest in Karatoff? |
5087 | What is it you suspect? |
5087 | What is it, Carl? |
5087 | What is it-- for God''s sake? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is it? |
5087 | What is known about him? |
5087 | What is that? |
5087 | What is the trouble? |
5087 | What made you turn in here?'' |
5087 | What makes you think he has been poisoned? |
5087 | What makes you think it is beriberi, of all things? |
5087 | What of him? |
5087 | What shall we do next? |
5087 | What sort of craft is this other? |
5087 | What sort of place is it? |
5087 | What was in it? |
5087 | What was the matter? 5087 What''s henbane?" |
5087 | What''s that? 5087 What''s that?" |
5087 | What''s the big story here now? |
5087 | What''s the big story? |
5087 | What-- you here, Maude? |
5087 | When did you receive it? |
5087 | When does the next shipment start? |
5087 | When is the demonstration? |
5087 | Where are the others? |
5087 | Where is my nail file-- and brush? |
5087 | Where''s Gertrude? |
5087 | Where? |
5087 | Who are the others? 5087 Who else is there in the household?" |
5087 | Who else was there? |
5087 | Who is Karatoff, anyhow? |
5087 | Who is she? |
5087 | Who is the little manicure girl? |
5087 | Who is this Julia Giles? |
5087 | Who is this Kato? |
5087 | Who was interested enough to plot this postponement of the wedding until the danger to the fortune was finally removed? |
5087 | Who was she? |
5087 | Who were in the supper- party? |
5087 | Who were these agents sent over to wage this secret war at any cost? |
5087 | Who? |
5087 | Whose is it? 5087 Why do you fear for your sister and Mr. Everson? |
5087 | Why not? |
5087 | Why, do you know what I''ve discovered? |
5087 | Why, what was that? |
5087 | Why, what''s the trouble? |
5087 | Why-- what is this? |
5087 | Why? |
5087 | Will Mr. Lane go with you? |
5087 | Will she live? |
5087 | Will you let me have one of the blood smears? |
5087 | Would he like that, too? |
5087 | Would you come out to the Key with me? |
5087 | Would you like to go up there and see them? |
5087 | You had done nothing that might have been dangerous? |
5087 | You have a vacuum cleaner, I suppose? |
5087 | You have engaged Professor Kennedy? |
5087 | You have formed no theory of your own? |
5087 | You have heard of a Dr. Carl Chapelle? |
5087 | You have no idea what could have caused it? |
5087 | You have no idea who it was? |
5087 | You know her? |
5087 | You know him? |
5087 | You know him? |
5087 | You never cared for her? |
5087 | You prepared the mushrooms yourself? |
5087 | You remember the paper I gave Mrs. Cranston when the excitement in the hall broke loose? |
5087 | You remember,she cried, breathlessly,"you said that a jequirity bean was sent to Captain Shirley?" |
5087 | You saw her? |
5087 | You think there is danger, then? |
5087 | You were all in the kitchen? |
5087 | You will let me know-- if there is-- any hope? |
5087 | You would like to get at the truth, if I promise to hold the story back? |
5087 | You would? |
5087 | You-- don''t think Doctor Chapelle had anything to do with it? |
5087 | You-- you do not think it could be the mushrooms-- that have caused Mr. Mansfield''s illness, do you? |
5087 | ''Who took those letters?'' |
5087 | Above all, how was I, on the outside, to find out? |
5087 | Above all, what had this to do with the mysterious phantom slayer that had wrecked so much of the works in less than a week? |
5087 | Above all, what was it they had planned for the launching? |
5087 | Above all, who was it? |
5087 | And had Barnes really been the victim of an attack-- or of an accident? |
5087 | And then? |
5087 | Anthony?" |
5087 | Anything new? |
5087 | Are n''t the freckles gone?" |
5087 | Are you ready, Whiting?" |
5087 | As the music started up again, I heard her say,"Ca n''t we have just one more dance?" |
5087 | But about whom? |
5087 | But had Lewis, with a quick flash of genius, sought to cover up something, protect somebody? |
5087 | But if the bit that I gave this fellow causes such distress, what would a larger quantity do?" |
5087 | But the other? |
5087 | But what could any one want with a yacht?" |
5087 | But who knows how long that will last? |
5087 | But who was it? |
5087 | By whom do you suppose he really was sent?" |
5087 | Ca n''t we DO something?" |
5087 | Can not you get in to see me as a doctor or friend? |
5087 | Carita Belleville, the dancer, you know?" |
5087 | Could it be a signal of trouble? |
5087 | Could it be that?" |
5087 | Could it have been Hampton? |
5087 | Could that be the scheme? |
5087 | Could there be some latent jealousy? |
5087 | Could this be a case of that sort? |
5087 | Cranston?" |
5087 | Did Gage know more about these mysterious happenings than appeared? |
5087 | Did he expect to see the fast express cruiser, lurking like a corsair about the islands of the river? |
5087 | Did he have some suspicion of Mrs. Anthony? |
5087 | Did not this, I asked myself, indicate plainly enough that Leslie might be right in his suspicions of beriberi? |
5087 | Did the newspapers ever do anything but harm to your poor dear father? |
5087 | Did the same explanation shed any light on the mystery of the nautch- girl and the jequirity bean sent to Shirley? |
5087 | Did they know more of this Mexican gun- running business than Marlowe had hinted at? |
5087 | Do n''t you see it?" |
5087 | Do n''t you see? |
5087 | Do n''t you see? |
5087 | Do n''t you suppose I could predict the nature of any report he would make?" |
5087 | Do you think he was posing?" |
5087 | Do you think we can get there in a car before it''s dark?" |
5087 | Do you want me to tell you, young lady?" |
5087 | Gaines?" |
5087 | Grady?" |
5087 | Had Chapelle ignorantly done something that would leave its scar forever? |
5087 | Had I been finding food for suspicion because I was myself suspicious? |
5087 | Had Jose been making love to another woman at the same time that he was engaged to Eulalie Sandoval? |
5087 | Had Lane really been in it? |
5087 | Had Mrs. Gaines expressed her own self-- or was it Karatoff-- or Marchant-- or Errol? |
5087 | Had Mrs. Snedden been killed by the carbonic oxide? |
5087 | Had Norma instinctively fled from his attentions? |
5087 | Had he been posing before Kennedy, and were they really trying to put Mrs. Cranston out of the way? |
5087 | Had he discovered something that it was inconvenient to know? |
5087 | Had he done any real deep diving?" |
5087 | Had he known that Leontine had been with Sydney on the deck? |
5087 | Had his better nature yielded to his worse? |
5087 | Had it anything to do with the dispute in the hotel which Kenmore had witnessed? |
5087 | Had it anything to do with the"tonic"? |
5087 | Had it been an accident, after all? |
5087 | Had it been deliberately placed there, it flashed over me, in order to compromise Madeline Hargrave and divert suspicion from some one else? |
5087 | Had it been done for the purpose of inflicting a more frightful wound if it struck the captain? |
5087 | Had it been interest in Errol that had led her to visit the laboratory? |
5087 | Had it been interest in Leontine or in the dining- room that had drawn him thither? |
5087 | Had it been that I had distrusted the woman merely because I was suspicious of the type, both male and female? |
5087 | Had it been the same person who had sent the single jequirity bean? |
5087 | Had revenge or jealousy brought her to New York, or was she merely a tool in the hands of another? |
5087 | Had she been overcome first and, in a stupor, been unable to move to save herself? |
5087 | Had she misinterpreted his attentions to Mrs. Rogers? |
5087 | Had some one again tampered with the apparatus? |
5087 | Had some one been using her, and now was afraid of her and sought to get her out of the way for safety? |
5087 | Had some one hoaxed him into a wild- goose chase, after all? |
5087 | Had the party thought it out and were they now playing the game with the main chance in view? |
5087 | Had we been getting too close on her trail, or had Mrs. Anthony been attacked? |
5087 | Have you any idea?" |
5087 | Having failed to stop the work, failed to kill Marlowe-- what was left? |
5087 | How can I ever thank you for getting me out of it?" |
5087 | How can I help you?" |
5087 | How did she get there-- and why? |
5087 | How do you feel?" |
5087 | How does Shirley fit into this thing?" |
5087 | How does it work?" |
5087 | How had Shirley met his death, and why? |
5087 | How is it, then?" |
5087 | How? |
5087 | I can not see how it could be due to poisoning, can you?" |
5087 | I suppose it never occurred to the police that the rubber dagger might have covered up a peculiar poisoning? |
5087 | If orders had been given for such secrecy by Barry Euston, how could my despatch do any good? |
5087 | If she had sent it to him, was it as a threat? |
5087 | If there was a plot and Barnes had been a victim, what was its nature? |
5087 | Is Doctor Burr''s system better?" |
5087 | Is Mrs. Wardlaw any better?" |
5087 | Is he RIGHT?" |
5087 | Is it polyneuritis of beriberi-- or something else?" |
5087 | Is there anything new?" |
5087 | Is there more still?" |
5087 | Kennedy was evidently firing, but at what? |
5087 | Kennedy?" |
5087 | Killed by a rubber dagger? |
5087 | Lane?" |
5087 | Marbury?" |
5087 | Marchant?" |
5087 | Might not Kato have been forced or enticed into a scheme that promised a safe return and practically no chance of discovery? |
5087 | My work is so far in advance of any that the conservative psychologists do that he would naturally feel hostile, would he not?" |
5087 | Oh, Professor Kennedy, what is it? |
5087 | Oh, ca n''t you take up the case and look into it?" |
5087 | Oh, what shall I do? |
5087 | Or did it mask some deeper, more sinister motive? |
5087 | Or was he one of the few who were honest and careful? |
5087 | Or was he really exercising some occult power? |
5087 | Or was her own brother the murderer of Eulalie''s lover? |
5087 | Or was it more than that? |
5087 | Or was it weakness following the high mental tension of her own hypnotization? |
5087 | Page?" |
5087 | Perhaps you have heard of the Old Grove Amusement Park, which failed? |
5087 | Perhaps-- but what was the game? |
5087 | Rogers?" |
5087 | Say, what do you think we are? |
5087 | See?" |
5087 | Should we run and desert the train for which we had dared so much? |
5087 | Slowly the question was shaping in my mind, was it, as Karatoff would have us believe, an accident? |
5087 | Snedden?" |
5087 | Sprague, can you mount that on the plane?" |
5087 | Terrible, was n''t it? |
5087 | The point is, veratrine from what source? |
5087 | The woman turned to him:"Suppose this news of the robbery is out? |
5087 | Then how could it have occurred? |
5087 | Then, scarcely waiting for her even to nod, he added:"What did he say? |
5087 | Then, too, why had she been here at all? |
5087 | Then, with an anxious glance at the rest of us,"Is your sister any better?" |
5087 | Then, without suggesting that we were more than casually interested,"What does the Street think of it?" |
5087 | They mentioned the name of Granville Barnes, treasurer of father''s company--""Is that so?" |
5087 | Thomas?" |
5087 | Thomas?" |
5087 | To whom do these deadly germs point? |
5087 | Traynor?" |
5087 | Treasure? |
5087 | Under the circumstances, might not his professional reputation be at stake? |
5087 | Was Aitken suspiciously interested in the pretty nurse-- or was she suspiciously interested in him? |
5087 | Was everything all right? |
5087 | Was he jealous of Lane, or did his words have a deeper meaning? |
5087 | Was he secretly working with them still? |
5087 | Was he still employed by the insurance company? |
5087 | Was he trying to estimate the relative popularity of the two in this strange group? |
5087 | Was he working for two masters? |
5087 | Was it Barnes? |
5087 | Was it a case of gas poisoning? |
5087 | Was it a suicide? |
5087 | Was it a suspicion of which she had not told us? |
5087 | Was it arteriosclerosis for which you were treating him?" |
5087 | Was it because the quest seemed to be leading away from himself? |
5087 | Was it connected with the rumors we had heard of gun- running to Mexico? |
5087 | Was it fear or suspicion? |
5087 | Was it fear, hate, love, jealousy? |
5087 | Was it merely the unpleasant notoriety? |
5087 | Was it possible that Sandoval had one of those Jekyll- Hyde natures which seem to be so common in some of us? |
5087 | Was it possible? |
5087 | Was it that consciously or unconsciously she was taking the slender dancer as her model? |
5087 | Was it, in a sense, retribution? |
5087 | Was n''t she competent?" |
5087 | Was one of her lovers the murderer of Anitra''s brother? |
5087 | Was she looking for Gage, I wondered? |
5087 | Was she playing with Sydney, seeking to secure his influence to further her schemes? |
5087 | Was she wrecked, at last, after all? |
5087 | Was some one using a band of these crooks for ulterior purposes? |
5087 | Was that a clever attempt at confession and avoidance on his part? |
5087 | Was there a plot to frustrate Everson''s plans? |
5087 | Was this another of that sort? |
5087 | Was this such a case? |
5087 | Were they playing a game against each other? |
5087 | Were they working together, or were they really opposed? |
5087 | What brings you out here at such an hour?" |
5087 | What can you do now?" |
5087 | What could be done? |
5087 | What could be the purpose of her visit? |
5087 | What could it mean? |
5087 | What did it all mean and why should Mrs. Blakeley pay money to an old woman, a charity patient? |
5087 | What did it all mean? |
5087 | What did it all mean? |
5087 | What did it mean, if anything? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did it mean? |
5087 | What did the treachery of one member of the expedition mean? |
5087 | What did you find when you entered, sergeant?" |
5087 | What difference could it have made if Lane had a free hand in managing the shipment of treasure for the company? |
5087 | What do you mean?" |
5087 | What else could they do with it? |
5087 | What good would it do if, after hours, his cleverness might solve the cipher-- too late? |
5087 | What gruesome mystery had been unveiled by the anonymous letter which had first excited our curiosity? |
5087 | What if a hint like this got abroad among his rich clientele? |
5087 | What is it all about?" |
5087 | What letters?'' |
5087 | What of it and what of its secret sender? |
5087 | What shall I do?" |
5087 | What should I do? |
5087 | What strange power could it be that we could not see or feel in broad daylight? |
5087 | What takes you down there, Burke?" |
5087 | What was back of it all? |
5087 | What was it he was after? |
5087 | What was it that Mrs. Blakeley so feared? |
5087 | What was it that had made this beautiful woman such a wreck? |
5087 | What was it? |
5087 | What was it? |
5087 | What was its purpose? |
5087 | What was the cause? |
5087 | What was the matter? |
5087 | What was the motive back of this sinister murder that had been so carefully planned that no one would ever suspect a crime? |
5087 | What was the part played by Carita Belleville? |
5087 | What was the secret locked in her silent lips? |
5087 | What was there in the motives that actuated them? |
5087 | What were they? |
5087 | What will happen? |
5087 | What would she do next? |
5087 | Where are they? |
5087 | Where''s Kennedy?" |
5087 | Which is it here?" |
5087 | Which is it-- yes or no?" |
5087 | Which might be using the other? |
5087 | Who can tell?" |
5087 | Who dum- dummed and poisoned the bullet? |
5087 | Who else is stricken?" |
5087 | Who had sent the anonymous telegram to Eulalie so soon after it had been evident that Kennedy had entered the case? |
5087 | Who had shut her up? |
5087 | Who was in it? |
5087 | Who was it who had deserted, as I had heard over the wire? |
5087 | Who was it? |
5087 | Who was it? |
5087 | Who was she, friend or foe? |
5087 | Who was their agent? |
5087 | Who, then, was their agent who had fired the shot? |
5087 | Whose own fingers, in spite of antiseptics and manicures, point inexorably to a guilty self?" |
5087 | Why Aitken''s solicitude in asserting that he was? |
5087 | Why did he place them in the safe so soon, instead of wearing them the rest of the evening?" |
5087 | Why had he so persistently sought her? |
5087 | Why had it been done and where had the cultures come from? |
5087 | Why had she followed him? |
5087 | Why have they fled? |
5087 | Why her anxiety to know whether Wardlaw himself was affected? |
5087 | Why is it? |
5087 | Why should it be hanging about? |
5087 | Why was he watching Mrs. Rogers? |
5087 | Why, do you want it?" |
5087 | Will you wait here?" |
5087 | Would she carry the secret with her, after all? |
5087 | Would that suggest anything to you?" |
5087 | Would the antitoxin work? |
5087 | Would they never bring him up? |
5087 | Would you like to come with me? |
5087 | Would you mind stepping down around the bend in the hall?" |
5087 | Yet how explain the apparent success with Cynthia? |
5087 | You recall the brightness of her eyes? |
5087 | You will pardon me if I do a little telephoning-- through the central office of the detective bureau? |
5087 | what shall I do?" |
56902 | ''Come, come, now,''Chase said,''what''s the use of that? 56902 ''Do n''t care?'' |
56902 | ''Know what?'' 56902 ''Was n''t_ she_ at Mr. Wilford''s office?'' |
56902 | A bean? 56902 A bean?" |
56902 | A case? |
56902 | A clue? 56902 A sort of marble woman?" |
56902 | A train? |
56902 | About any of them in particular? |
56902 | About any one contemplating a suit for divorce? |
56902 | Ah-- then there had been a quarrel between Mrs. Wilford and her husband the day before? |
56902 | All parlor socialists? |
56902 | And Honora Wilford? |
56902 | And Vina Lathrop-- was she interested, too? 56902 And he is--?" |
56902 | And now you are going to--? |
56902 | And that was--? |
56902 | And then what? |
56902 | And were engaged once, were you not? |
56902 | And what then? |
56902 | And when you find yourself up against it, you come to me? |
56902 | And you saw him? 56902 And you were alone?" |
56902 | And you, Honora? |
56902 | And-- physostigmine-- is what? |
56902 | Are there any other dreams that you have thought of since? |
56902 | Are they still just as insolent up here to you? |
56902 | Are they true? 56902 Are those all the dreams you can remember?" |
56902 | Are you sure that it was not Vina Lathrop? |
56902 | Are you sure-- absolutely sure that on the night Mr. Wilford was murdered madame was here-- that she was not out-- at all? |
56902 | Belladonna-- eh? |
56902 | But about the atropin-- in one glass and nothing in the other? |
56902 | But ca n''t you see that it''s placing her in a wrong light-- supposing everything she did that night was innocent? 56902 But did he say anything definite about it? |
56902 | But do you think there is anything in the story about them? |
56902 | But he was, was n''t he? 56902 But how are you going to do that?" |
56902 | But how do you think dreams arise in the first place? |
56902 | But how does that all apply in this case? |
56902 | But is that all there is to the dream theory? |
56902 | But what about the atropin in the glass-- and in the bottle? |
56902 | But what about the note? 56902 But what about these dream doctors who profess to be able to tell you what is going to happen-- the clairvoyants?" |
56902 | But what business of yours-- or anybody''s, for that matter-- is that? |
56902 | But what of Honora? |
56902 | But what of the physostigmine? |
56902 | But what sort of condition did you think her in before you reassured her at the start by the association test? |
56902 | But what sort of dreams are there? 56902 But why did he have Vina shadowed here to the tea- room-- that is, if that is the case? |
56902 | But you saw her? |
56902 | But, madame-- did she not know her? |
56902 | But,I interrupted,"how does this analysis apply to the case of Honora Wilford?" |
56902 | But,I objected,"there was no trace of physostigmine in either glass, was there?" |
56902 | Calabar? |
56902 | Celeste,began Doyle, with an easy familiarity which I knew the French maid resented deeply,"you saw that man who was here and went away?" |
56902 | Could n''t you see that when we came there she was in a state verging on hysteria? |
56902 | Could she have been there when he died? 56902 Devoting too much time to the practice?" |
56902 | Did I do all right? |
56902 | Did Mrs. Wilford see him there? |
56902 | Did he ever discuss things with you-- I mean Freud-- current topics of conversation? |
56902 | Did he mention Shattuck''s name? |
56902 | Did he really go? |
56902 | Did he see her? |
56902 | Did he see or hear anything? |
56902 | Did she leave soon? |
56902 | Did she make a scene-- I mean did every one see it? |
56902 | Did she meet Shattuck? |
56902 | Did she say she would? |
56902 | Did she threaten again to leave him? |
56902 | Did they bear a resemblance to any one you know? |
56902 | Did you ever have any of these ordeal beans? |
56902 | Did you ever see Mr. Wilford or Mrs. Wilford with Mrs. Vina Lathrop? |
56902 | Did you ever see these people here? |
56902 | Did you ever try it? |
56902 | Did you finally sell the stock? |
56902 | Did you find physostigmine in the stomach contents I sent you? 56902 Did you get one?" |
56902 | Did you get them down? |
56902 | Did you get them? |
56902 | Did you have any motive? |
56902 | Did you locate Rascon? |
56902 | Did you read them? |
56902 | Did you serve them? |
56902 | Did you wait on her? |
56902 | Did_ he_ send you-- or was it that woman? |
56902 | Do n''t you think you have done enough, hounding Mrs. Wilford with your confounded science? |
56902 | Do they show anything that is evidential? |
56902 | Do you dream more-- or less, lately? |
56902 | Do you know him? |
56902 | Do you know? |
56902 | Do you mean that? |
56902 | Do you recall a night when there was a scene here-- another woman? |
56902 | Do you remember anything that happened? |
56902 | Do you remember anything that was said? |
56902 | Do you think Celeste can be relied on? |
56902 | Do you think that he sometimes oversteps his mark in trying to find out about the mental life of his patients? |
56902 | Doctor Lathrop really knew of the incident, did n''t he?--at least, learned of it afterward? |
56902 | Doctor Lathrop? |
56902 | Does Mr. Shattuck know where you are? |
56902 | Does it affect your plans at all? |
56902 | Done? 56902 Done?" |
56902 | Ever see anything like it? |
56902 | Ever see one of those? |
56902 | Explain it? 56902 Explain it?" |
56902 | For what, may I ask, am I indebted to you for_ this_ visit? |
56902 | Had Mrs. Wilford contemplated similar action on her part, do you think? |
56902 | Has Doctor Lathrop been told? |
56902 | Has Kennedy done anything? |
56902 | Has he learned anything yet? |
56902 | Has she been told all this yet? |
56902 | Have you any idea what it may be? |
56902 | Have you any idea? |
56902 | Have you any more? |
56902 | Have you discovered something already? |
56902 | Have you found anything yet? |
56902 | Have you met Mrs. Wilford recently? |
56902 | Have you no need of help, no need of a friend? |
56902 | Have you read the news? |
56902 | Have you the letter? |
56902 | Have you told Doyle anything about it? |
56902 | Have you told him? 56902 He is yours, too, is he not?" |
56902 | He seemed interested in Freud? |
56902 | Honora-- why-- why have you said this? |
56902 | How about that Calabar bean? |
56902 | How about the changes? |
56902 | How about those reports? |
56902 | How about your suspects? |
56902 | How did Mrs. Wilford take it? |
56902 | How did you come here? |
56902 | How did you find out about this fellow? |
56902 | How did you find out where she had gone-- really? |
56902 | How do I know you come from_ her_? |
56902 | How do I know? |
56902 | How do you suppose it was given? |
56902 | How does Mrs. Lathrop take the affair-- with bravado? |
56902 | How was that? 56902 How''s that?" |
56902 | Human? |
56902 | I believe she has some reputation as an interpreter of Freud-- you know, the dream doctor? 56902 I believe she was a patient of yours?" |
56902 | I did n''t leave him, though, did I? |
56902 | I mean-- when did she use it last? 56902 I see-- and did you find anything?" |
56902 | I suppose I may reach you at your place of business, later, if I need? |
56902 | I suppose you have heard of the death of Vail Wilford? |
56902 | I suppose you have read in the newspapers about the troubles of the Lathrops and what has happened? |
56902 | I suppose you know of the suicide of Vail Wilford? |
56902 | I suppose you know that she has been suffering from nervous trouble for some time? |
56902 | I suppose you know that some of these private detectives are really scandalous in their operations? |
56902 | I suppose you''ve heard that they''ve found a Calabar bean down in Vail''s office, on the floor? |
56902 | I wonder whether you would mind writing them down for me? |
56902 | I-- in the office? |
56902 | I? 56902 If only what?" |
56902 | Important? |
56902 | Indeed? |
56902 | Indeed? |
56902 | Indeed? |
56902 | Is he woman- crazy? |
56902 | Is it just some little theatricals-- or is it a little Spanish Inquisition stuff? |
56902 | Is it true? |
56902 | Is she clear for that night? |
56902 | Is that all? |
56902 | Is that what you''ve found out? |
56902 | Is that you, Vina? |
56902 | Is there anything I can do? |
56902 | Is there anything else that comes into your mind? |
56902 | Is this you, Honora? |
56902 | It was n''t such a terrible thing, after all, was it? |
56902 | It would n''t look right-- at this stage of the case-- for me to write, do you think? 56902 Just why are you so interested in studying me, Professor Kennedy?" |
56902 | Let me read it, if you do n''t mind? |
56902 | Like Rascon? |
56902 | Might I see them? |
56902 | Motive? 56902 Mr. Doyle is n''t here, I suppose?" |
56902 | Mr. Wilford got similar reports-- and believed them? |
56902 | Never saw it? |
56902 | No one? |
56902 | Now, might I ask you to leave me? 56902 Oh yes-- and favors, too, you call them?" |
56902 | Oh-- a suicide? |
56902 | Oh-- oculists use it, do they? |
56902 | On which of us would the thing take effect first? 56902 Or am I like John Alden-- not speaking enough for myself, Priscilla?" |
56902 | Pete,demanded Leslie, sharply,"did you see a woman here that night?" |
56902 | Playing a deep game? |
56902 | Professor Kennedy is on the case, is n''t he? 56902 Rascon?" |
56902 | Raw? 56902 Really?" |
56902 | Say,pursued Doyle, with a knowing nod,"you remember I found out that some one had been at that office the night Wilford was murdered?" |
56902 | She broke off the engagement? |
56902 | She had been crying the night before-- eh? |
56902 | She has won you, has n''t she? |
56902 | She would n''t talk at all over the wire, if she did, would she? 56902 Should I scream out for help? |
56902 | So,she continued in the same defiant tone,"it''s another poison, this time-- this physostigmine?" |
56902 | Something about Rascon? |
56902 | Suppose I refuse to do it? |
56902 | Suppose it was either? |
56902 | That is, is it in a dream? 56902 That is,"he added,"I mean-- how did you know that? |
56902 | That may be,I confessed,"but why did she pay? |
56902 | That there was a-- duel by poison? |
56902 | That? 56902 That?" |
56902 | The maid? 56902 Then I suppose you have no objection to my sharing the examination with you?" |
56902 | Then ca n''t you understand how a woman who knows might be driven desperate by it? 56902 Then it''s to him you''ve been talking-- not to me?" |
56902 | Then what is his theory? |
56902 | Then what was it? |
56902 | Then what was it? |
56902 | Then what? |
56902 | Then who was it called Shattuck? |
56902 | Then why did you mention belladonna? |
56902 | Then you are n''t going to write it, after all? |
56902 | Then you credit the Shattuck rumors? |
56902 | Then you knew all about-- what was going on, all along? |
56902 | Then you mean you think that Wilford ate one of these things? |
56902 | Then you really regard the dreams as important? |
56902 | Then you swear that these reports are true? |
56902 | Then you think that that''s what Lathrop meant when he said he strongly disagreed with the theory? |
56902 | Then you think that you will be able to find out from Mrs. Wilford''s dreams more than she''ll ever tell you or any one else about the case? |
56902 | Then you''ll go? |
56902 | There was another woman came in, was n''t there? |
56902 | They merely rode down to the beach and had lunch together? |
56902 | To what am I indebted for the honor? |
56902 | Trouble? 56902 Vina called on Honora Wilford? |
56902 | Want me to find out? |
56902 | Want to use it? |
56902 | Was it Mrs. Lathrop or Shattuck-- or-- was it Mrs. Wilford herself? |
56902 | Was it Vina Lathrop? |
56902 | Was it a man or a woman? |
56902 | Was it belladonna? |
56902 | Was n''t she jealous of Mr. Wilford-- and some one? |
56902 | Was that all that happened? |
56902 | Well, what is this wonderful Freud theory, anyhow? |
56902 | Well, what''s your opinion? |
56902 | Well,I exclaimed,"what was all that kindergarten stuff?" |
56902 | Well-- what then? 56902 Well-- which were you following?" |
56902 | Well-- who was it? |
56902 | Were the dreams I wrote for you all right? |
56902 | Were there any flowers? |
56902 | What about Lathrop''s wife, Vina? |
56902 | What about that bean Jameson picked up here? |
56902 | What about them? |
56902 | What about this new development? |
56902 | What did Shattuck say to that? |
56902 | What did Shattuck tell her? |
56902 | What did he do? |
56902 | What did he say to that? |
56902 | What did he say? |
56902 | What did he want this time? |
56902 | What did you do with it? |
56902 | What did you do? |
56902 | What did you hear? |
56902 | What difference does that make, Walter? |
56902 | What do I care-- for anything-- now? |
56902 | What do we know now that we did n''t know before? |
56902 | What do you call it and what was it really for? |
56902 | What do you know about Mrs. Wilford''s whereabouts on the night Mr. Wilford was killed? |
56902 | What do you know about him? |
56902 | What do you make of it all? |
56902 | What do you mean-- ordeal bean? |
56902 | What do you mean? |
56902 | What do you mean? |
56902 | What do you really_ know_ about her? |
56902 | What do you think is the trouble? |
56902 | What do you think it indicates? |
56902 | What do you think of it? |
56902 | What do you think? |
56902 | What do youse want? |
56902 | What does it do? |
56902 | What does it mean? |
56902 | What else could it have been? 56902 What happened on one of these occasions?" |
56902 | What have I done? 56902 What have_ you_ found?" |
56902 | What is it that I can do for you now? |
56902 | What is it you want me to do now? |
56902 | What is it you want to know? |
56902 | What is it? |
56902 | What is it? |
56902 | What makes you say that? |
56902 | What next? |
56902 | What next? |
56902 | What of Doctor Lathrop? |
56902 | What of Doctor Lathrop? |
56902 | What of him? |
56902 | What of it? |
56902 | What of it? |
56902 | What of the dream about Lathrop? |
56902 | What seems to be the trouble? |
56902 | What was Chase''s answer? |
56902 | What was I to do? |
56902 | What was all that rigmarole of the numbers? |
56902 | What was in it? |
56902 | What was in them? 56902 What was that test?" |
56902 | What was the cause of death? |
56902 | What was your idea in having her write those dreams out again? |
56902 | What were the exact words? |
56902 | What were you thinking about that person? |
56902 | What''s in them? |
56902 | What''s next? |
56902 | What''s on your mind, McCabe? |
56902 | What''s that? |
56902 | What''s that? |
56902 | What''s that? |
56902 | What''s that? |
56902 | What''s the idea, Kennedy? |
56902 | What''s the matter? |
56902 | What''s the trouble? |
56902 | What''s this-- phy-- physos-- what you call it? |
56902 | What, may I ask, were the grounds? |
56902 | What-- to trail her? |
56902 | When Mr. Shattuck called up, he asked her first,''I suppose they''re watching you yet, Honora?'' 56902 Where are they?" |
56902 | Where are they? |
56902 | Where did you find out? |
56902 | Where did you find out? |
56902 | Where did you get it? |
56902 | Where did_ he_ get his information? |
56902 | Where do you suppose she got it? |
56902 | Where else? |
56902 | Where has Mrs. Lathrop gone? |
56902 | Where has she gone? |
56902 | Where is Chase? |
56902 | Where were Shattuck and Lathrop last night? |
56902 | Which one-- Rascon or Chase? |
56902 | Which would I save? |
56902 | Which? 56902 Who is it that you were thinking about?" |
56902 | Who is this Zona Dare, did you say? |
56902 | Who should know better than I what madame was doing? |
56902 | Who told you? |
56902 | Who was it? |
56902 | Who was she? |
56902 | Who was she? |
56902 | Who''s he? |
56902 | Who? |
56902 | Who? |
56902 | Who_ must_ it have been? 56902 Why did Doctor Lathrop say he dissented from the theory?" |
56902 | Why did Shattuck meet her here? |
56902 | Why did n''t you tell me this before? |
56902 | Why did that McCabe tell you he had a day off? |
56902 | Why did you tell me that in the first place? |
56902 | Why do you make these-- these accusations? |
56902 | Why do you think you know so much? |
56902 | Why have you followed me here? |
56902 | Why not ask Mrs. Wilford herself about it? |
56902 | Why not rest while we talk? |
56902 | Why not? |
56902 | Why should I? 56902 Why was she here? |
56902 | Why, Mr. Jameson, you''ve beaten me to it-- and have you got the story? |
56902 | Why, that''s a place on the west coast of Africa, is n''t it? 56902 Why, what has he done now?" |
56902 | Why, you poor foolish little girl-- don''t you understand yet? 56902 Why? |
56902 | Why? |
56902 | Why? |
56902 | Why? |
56902 | Will you write it? |
56902 | Yes? |
56902 | Yes? |
56902 | Yes? |
56902 | You did? 56902 You do n''t expect her to help you?" |
56902 | You do n''t mean to say that you attach any importance to dreams? |
56902 | You do n''t suppose I''d let her get away, do you? |
56902 | You do n''t suppose she suspects anything of this? |
56902 | You gave him up? |
56902 | You got the money with you? |
56902 | You have examined the contents of the stomach? |
56902 | You have records of what she has told you? |
56902 | You know the talk about the Lathrops? |
56902 | You know this little thing-- the blood- pressure measurer that is used by the doctors? 56902 You love madame, do n''t you, Celeste?" |
56902 | You made him write one for you? |
56902 | You mean it? |
56902 | You mean they_ eat_ it-- a poison? |
56902 | You never really cared for her-- did you? |
56902 | You recall what Leslie told us, what Mrs. Wilford told us, and what Doctor Lathrop later confirmed-- her dream of fear? |
56902 | You remember Celeste? |
56902 | You remember that, at the end, I suggested that she might have overlooked something? 56902 You remember the two glasses on the desk when they found him?" |
56902 | You remember, I found his pupils contracted almost to a pin- point? |
56902 | You saw that list of words? |
56902 | You say there was a woman there? |
56902 | You say you saw a woman? |
56902 | You think I ca n''t observe them without experiencing them? 56902 You were acquainted with Honora Wilford, I believe?" |
56902 | You will excuse me a moment? |
56902 | You will excuse me a moment? |
56902 | You''ve been down in Mrs. Smith''s apartment? |
56902 | You''ve heard about Vina and the doctor? |
56902 | You''ve heard nothing more about the gossip regarding Mrs. Lathrop and Shattuck? |
56902 | You''ve told Doyle? |
56902 | _ Où est Ma''m''selle Zona?_she asked. |
56902 | ''To see you again, Vance? |
56902 | ''You do n''t care if Kennedy finds out about your interest in the play, about your life, about Freud, the"soul scar"theory, and all that? |
56902 | A case, you say-- eh?" |
56902 | Above all, was the report true? |
56902 | And so, when I knew what it was that was taking place-- what was I to do?" |
56902 | And then, who of us has not sown his wild oats?" |
56902 | And then? |
56902 | And was Honora not the simple, unsophisticated woman I had thought? |
56902 | And were n''t you protecting yourself? |
56902 | And what''s the reason for that break in the report? |
56902 | And who is he that he should set himself up to determine fact and fake? |
56902 | And why had she made the substitution that she did? |
56902 | And yet, in the girlhood days, who shall say she did not learn something of the Calabar bean, of the drug, and of its properties? |
56902 | And yet, was it proof? |
56902 | Are n''t there motives enough that we know for you to have wanted him out of the way?" |
56902 | Are they true?" |
56902 | Are you acquainted with the nature of the dreams?" |
56902 | Are you afraid of something?" |
56902 | Are you detective?" |
56902 | Are you writing them into your column?" |
56902 | As for Honora, was she, I kept wondering, after all, the consciously frigid, unconsciously passionate woman? |
56902 | As for Shattuck, was he really fascinated by Vina, after all? |
56902 | At least, she was friendly with him?" |
56902 | At the same time was he playing a game with Vina Lathrop? |
56902 | Before she could recover from the shock that the bald statement seemed to give her, Craig shot out,"Has Doyle told you?" |
56902 | But it''s a poison just the same-- ain''t it?" |
56902 | But the truth-- what was it? |
56902 | But then without that eternal curiosity, who could write? |
56902 | But was it about herself? |
56902 | But was it true? |
56902 | But what do you suppose it is all about, Vance?''" |
56902 | But why? |
56902 | But, if the obvious were rejected, what remained? |
56902 | But, then, who is not, just now? |
56902 | By the way, I suppose you know about that little affair between Mrs. Wilford and Mrs. Lathrop out at the Brent Rock Country Club?" |
56902 | Ca n''t we put two and two together? |
56902 | Ca n''t you see she really does n''t love you-- never did-- never could?" |
56902 | Ca n''t you see she really does n''t love you-- never did-- never could?" |
56902 | Ca n''t you see she really does n''t love you-- never did-- never could?''" |
56902 | Could I have been right? |
56902 | Could it be possible that we ourselves, in turn, were being watched by her? |
56902 | Could it be such a thing which Kennedy was driving at disclosing? |
56902 | Could it have been because she did not love him?" |
56902 | Could it have been because she did not really want to go to him? |
56902 | Could it have been to the maid?" |
56902 | Could it have been with Honora Wilford herself that he was talking? |
56902 | Did Wilford write that letter, or was it written for him? |
56902 | Did he know something about his client that he must shield her from, or was he just a bit vexed at her himself for a certain lack of frankness? |
56902 | Did he realize that he was getting hopelessly tangled? |
56902 | Did it mean anything, this immediate appeal by Vina for help from the Freudian interpreter of the Village? |
56902 | Did n''t you know that, when you planned this ordeal you speak about? |
56902 | Did n''t you really force Mr. Wilford to eat that bean? |
56902 | Did she know something-- and was she really afraid of us? |
56902 | Did she know that Shattuck had possessed some, after all? |
56902 | Did she know that he knew it? |
56902 | Did that mean that at the present moment, as she faced Kennedy, she was repeating the same performance? |
56902 | Did you ever see this man here-- or this woman?" |
56902 | Did you get that?" |
56902 | Do n''t you remember when Lathrop told us she had told him that the bull was so close to her that she could feel its hot breath?" |
56902 | Do n''t you see now what I mean? |
56902 | Do n''t you see? |
56902 | Do n''t you see? |
56902 | Do n''t you think it concerns us-- just a bit more intimately than it does men?" |
56902 | Do n''t you think that significant?" |
56902 | Do you catch the idea? |
56902 | Do you get what I mean? |
56902 | Do you know her?" |
56902 | Does it make any difference?" |
56902 | Doyle?" |
56902 | Ever hear love described as a fire? |
56902 | For a moment Kennedy''s manner seemed to take the doctor off his professional guard-- or did he intend it to seem so? |
56902 | For what? |
56902 | Get it? |
56902 | Get me?" |
56902 | Get that''dear''at the end? |
56902 | Had Doctor Lathrop been the lion in her path, in some way? |
56902 | Had Honora been clever enough to penetrate our ruse? |
56902 | Had Shattuck and Honora, cornered, as they thought by Doyle, leaped at any suggestion? |
56902 | Had Shattuck lied to save her, when he saw that Doyle was framing a case against her? |
56902 | Had Vail Wilford stood in his way with both women? |
56902 | Had Vina and Shattuck, as well, been dabbling in the new dream philosophy? |
56902 | Had a new scandal been brewing and had the sensational press of the city been deprived of it by some untoward circumstance? |
56902 | Had he a reason? |
56902 | Had he framed this duel by poison, preparing safety for himself, death for Wilford? |
56902 | Had he some inkling that Vina was merely using him? |
56902 | Had he suddenly taken leave of his senses? |
56902 | Had it been really an interest in our visit that had prompted it? |
56902 | Had it been really jealousy-- or was it merely wounded pride? |
56902 | Had it been said by Vina of Honora-- or by Honora of Vina? |
56902 | Had it been smuggled in on vessels from the near- by wharves? |
56902 | Had she come to watch Shattuck? |
56902 | Had she known of Shattuck''s regard for Honora and had that aroused in her a desire to break it up, for her own advantage? |
56902 | Had she loved Vail Wilford deeply? |
56902 | Had she rejected one word to cast about for another equally natural? |
56902 | Had she steeled herself for this ordeal, as merely the first of many? |
56902 | Had she told the truth? |
56902 | Had the remark in some way been a shot at the doctor? |
56902 | Had we been followed here? |
56902 | Has his treatment done you any good?" |
56902 | Has n''t she told you?" |
56902 | Her husband or Shattuck-- I wonder which?" |
56902 | His eyes were narrowed, the pupils to a pin- point-- am I right about that, Professor? |
56902 | How about that?" |
56902 | How did he take it?" |
56902 | How far was she piqued at the thought of not having hold enough over Shattuck, also, to keep him from Vina? |
56902 | How was Lathrop-- and why there?" |
56902 | I ask you-- why?" |
56902 | I guess it was what he wanted to know-- eh?" |
56902 | I mean, anything connecting it with Shattuck?" |
56902 | I suppose Doctor Lathrop used to say that too?" |
56902 | I suppose Doyle described it to you-- its devilish uses in the Calabar-- the way the natives use it in ordeals-- and all that sort of thing?" |
56902 | I wanted to warn him-- yet how could I? |
56902 | I''m sure you wo n''t mind?" |
56902 | If I can reconstruct what_ both_--see? |
56902 | If Shattuck was known to have had in his possession some of the fatal Calabar beans, what interpretation could be placed on it? |
56902 | If so, judged by Village standards, was it a hint, a strange example of the so- called"new morality"? |
56902 | If the report of this Rascon had been true, did it not seem to explain and motivate Honora? |
56902 | Is anybody listening?" |
56902 | Is he mixed up in it?" |
56902 | Is it a confession?" |
56902 | Is it?" |
56902 | Is n''t it clear?" |
56902 | Is n''t it likely that it was a frame- up against her?" |
56902 | Is n''t it, Belle?" |
56902 | Is n''t that so?" |
56902 | Is that why you left Mr. Wilford''s name out? |
56902 | Is the maid, Celeste, here?" |
56902 | Is there anything else?" |
56902 | It will go hard with you, you understand?" |
56902 | Know him?" |
56902 | Lathrop?" |
56902 | Lathrop?" |
56902 | Let me tell it-- listen to me-- will you? |
56902 | May I?" |
56902 | Might it not be that he was laying the foundations for an alibi in case Kennedy or some one else retailed stories to her? |
56902 | Moreover, had my own interpretation of his Freudian analysis of her been correct? |
56902 | Must one incriminate oneself by dreams?" |
56902 | No? |
56902 | Oh, why must I be badgered and hounded this way?" |
56902 | Or had Doyle and McCabe executed their end of the scheme clumsily? |
56902 | Or had Honora really discovered the dictagraph in her own home? |
56902 | Or had she confessed to something, in the hope of saving him? |
56902 | Or was Honora contemptuous of a woman of Vina''s type and was silence without any admission her sweetest revenge? |
56902 | Or was he dissembling so as not to betray anything to us? |
56902 | Or was it really to watch her husband? |
56902 | Or was it that Chase was working to protect his client and save her-- at any cost and in spite of her own wishes? |
56902 | Or was it to watch Vina? |
56902 | Or was there some deeper reason? |
56902 | Or, it suddenly occurred to me, was Honora deeper than I suspected, and was her seeming ignorance only a pose? |
56902 | Passing by the paraldehyde cocktail, what''s good?" |
56902 | Picked up here? |
56902 | Pretty pointed, was n''t it? |
56902 | Remember Freud?--a crowd, something secret? |
56902 | See?" |
56902 | Sexless women wo n''t have children-- then after whom will the next generation after them take?" |
56902 | Shattuck had been pursuing Mrs. Lathrop, had n''t he?" |
56902 | She glanced at him covertly, as much as to say,"So, then, you have been talking about me to him?" |
56902 | She had been treated for some time by Doctor Lathrop-- you know, the society physician they all run to?" |
56902 | She ought to tell for her own sake-- don''t you think?" |
56902 | Strange, do n''t you think, Kennedy?" |
56902 | Then, leading the detective on,"Now, Rascon, what did your employer, Mr. Wilford, say when that report was presented to him?" |
56902 | There-- don''t you see? |
56902 | To cap it all, what of Honora? |
56902 | Was Celeste to be trusted-- even over a dictagraph? |
56902 | Was Craig, also, laying a foundation for the ultimate conviction of Honora? |
56902 | Was Rascon ready to risk anything rather than to have those reports pass into unfriendly hands? |
56902 | Was Shattuck proof? |
56902 | Was Shattuck telling the truth about what happened-- or was he coloring it to save himself? |
56902 | Was Vina fishing-- or did she really know something? |
56902 | Was he determined to save his client, even at the cost of her lover? |
56902 | Was he inhuman? |
56902 | Was he not building up motives? |
56902 | Was he still woman- crazy? |
56902 | Was he waiting for more conclusive evidence? |
56902 | Was he, after all, just a murderer? |
56902 | Was it a clue? |
56902 | Was it a trap? |
56902 | Was it an elaborate camouflage? |
56902 | Was it because he was sure that she would not believe it? |
56902 | Was it because she had checked a first thought suggested by the word and had taken extra time to substitute something for it? |
56902 | Was it because they knew nothing, or was there a tacit understanding between them never to mention some mutual secret? |
56902 | Was it because they recognized it as a dangerous subject? |
56902 | Was it due to her more emotional nature? |
56902 | Was it merely due to her insane infatuation for Shattuck? |
56902 | Was it morphine, as in the cases Doyle cited?" |
56902 | Was it not what he would have said to Honora, anyway? |
56902 | Was it superficial-- as so much of that little world into which Kennedy had plunged me? |
56902 | Was it that Doyle, by his manner, antagonized her? |
56902 | Was it wholly natural reticence? |
56902 | Was it, as I had believed at first,"heart"? |
56902 | Was not Kennedy practically taxing her with loving another man than her husband? |
56902 | Was she jealous of Shattuck paying attentions to the woman who had so fascinated her own husband? |
56902 | Was she telling the truth-- or was she really a great actress who had just found herself? |
56902 | Was she the marble woman he had made me think her? |
56902 | Was she, after all, guilty-- or at least a party to the crime? |
56902 | Was that why Honora was silent? |
56902 | Was this all confirmation of the rumored relations between Vina Lathrop and Vail Wilford, as Doyle had dug the story up? |
56902 | Was this call what he had been waiting for? |
56902 | Was this the jealous soul mate pursuing her affinity and finding him false? |
56902 | What about you?" |
56902 | What about?'' |
56902 | What are the numbers?" |
56902 | What could be better advertising than for the celebrated case in the news to be connected with the tea- room? |
56902 | What could be the purpose of bringing the stranger to us now? |
56902 | What did he mean by the inflection of his voice and by the look? |
56902 | What did it mean? |
56902 | What did it mean? |
56902 | What did it mean? |
56902 | What did it mean? |
56902 | What do these comfortable nibblers at anarchy expect to get out of it?" |
56902 | What do you mean?" |
56902 | What do you think?" |
56902 | What does he say?" |
56902 | What does that mean, you ask? |
56902 | What had Craig overheard through that dictagraph? |
56902 | What had that dream meant? |
56902 | What held her back? |
56902 | What is it that this man knows? |
56902 | What next? |
56902 | What of it?" |
56902 | What was back of it all? |
56902 | What was human emotion, compared to a good record and report in the files at Headquarters? |
56902 | What was it-- fear for him or of him? |
56902 | What was it?" |
56902 | What was it?" |
56902 | What was the matter? |
56902 | What was the purpose that lay back of this visit? |
56902 | What was the reason? |
56902 | What were her emotions? |
56902 | What would a Calabar bean be lying on the floor here for?" |
56902 | What''s he done? |
56902 | What''s that, Kennedy? |
56902 | What''s the explanation?" |
56902 | What''s the use? |
56902 | What, indeed, was the viewpoint-- according to the"new morality"? |
56902 | When? |
56902 | Where are_ your_ children? |
56902 | Where did you get it?" |
56902 | Where is the body?" |
56902 | Where was she?'' |
56902 | Who wanted her husband out of the way? |
56902 | Why did she cut out that about the hot breath of the bull? |
56902 | Why did she deny absolutely the face of Shattuck?" |
56902 | Why did she? |
56902 | Why did you do it?" |
56902 | Why did you tell him to give her up-- that she never had loved him, did not, and never could love him?" |
56902 | Why had he not spoken it? |
56902 | Why should she try to conceal under a cloak of indifference her real interest in the thing? |
56902 | Why was he in Shattuck''s apartment? |
56902 | Why was she unable to go to him? |
56902 | Why, what do you mean?" |
56902 | Why, you and Doyle and the newspapers"--nodding insultingly at me--"ought to be able to do that best, do n''t you think? |
56902 | Why? |
56902 | Wilford?" |
56902 | Wilford?" |
56902 | Wilford?" |
56902 | Wilford?" |
56902 | Will you help me?" |
56902 | Wo n''t you write that other dream for me, also?" |
56902 | Would I ever have hit on it by luck?" |
56902 | Would he not be able to discover that secretly she cared really very deeply for him and not for Vail?" |
56902 | Would she have acted in just this manner if it had been that she believed Kennedy to be making a direct accusation against her? |
56902 | XIII THE MECHANICAL EAR"Then it was Honora you overheard over the dictagraph?" |
56902 | XVI THE FINESSE"What''s the next move?" |
56902 | Yes?" |
56902 | You and Doyle will keep me informed?" |
56902 | You did n''t find any traces of others about, did you?" |
56902 | You have been reading the French detective tales-- eh?--_Cherchez la femme_?" |
56902 | You know the lawyer, Vail Wilford? |
56902 | You know this ordeal bean from the Calabar? |
56902 | You might tell that to Doyle-- but why tell me? |
56902 | You remember old Honore Chappelle? |
56902 | You remember the Buchanan case?" |
56902 | You see, he next asked her:''Ca n''t you see me? |
56902 | You''re not acquainted with the test? |
56902 | greeted Doctor Leslie; then catching sight of Kennedy, he entered and asked,"Have you discovered anything yet, Professor?" |
56902 | he queried,"or do you mean you think he was devoting too much time and attention to the particular client?" |
5073 | A Mexican? |
5073 | A murder? |
5073 | A note? |
5073 | A pawnbroker''s? |
5073 | A tenement? |
5073 | Ah,he remarked,"an anxiety dream? |
5073 | An Ainu? |
5073 | And Dr. Maudsley,I asked quickly,"do you think it is through him or in spite of him?" |
5073 | And Edith Atherton? |
5073 | And I? |
5073 | And how did you repay it? 5073 And if Lynn finds that the necklace in our wall safe is of paste-- as he will find, for he is an expert in diamonds-- oh-- what shall I do? |
5073 | And it has proved effective? |
5073 | And she got away? |
5073 | And the children-- what did you mean by that? |
5073 | And the other man, Otaka? |
5073 | And then? |
5073 | And there is not a clue? |
5073 | And you would do it in war time, too? |
5073 | And your plan? |
5073 | Another one? |
5073 | Antoinette Moulton a steerer for a gambling joint? 5073 Anything else?" |
5073 | Are there no other relatives? |
5073 | Are we in time? |
5073 | Are you going down toward the station? 5073 Are you sure he did it?" |
5073 | Are you sure? |
5073 | Baron Kreiger, I presume? |
5073 | Belle Aire? 5073 Buster?" |
5073 | But do n''t you think this is a case for a-- a doctor, rather than a detective? |
5073 | But how about the treasure? |
5073 | But how do you suppose it was possible for anyone to administer it? 5073 But the letter?" |
5073 | But the pipes are of lead, are they not? |
5073 | But the struggle here, the sleeve of the dress, the pistol-- could he have been shot? |
5073 | But this Aquaero-- who is he? |
5073 | But who would do it? |
5073 | But you must have read of the famous Moulton diamonds? |
5073 | But--? |
5073 | By the way,he said, breaking off naturally,"what is that?" |
5073 | By the way,she asked anxiously,"do you think there are any precautions that I should take for Mrs. Blake-- and the rest?" |
5073 | By what? |
5073 | Ca n''t they find out by-- er, interference? |
5073 | Can people affect you for good or evil, merely by thinking about you? |
5073 | Can you arrange to spend the week- end with me at Stuyvesant Verplanck''s at Bluffwood? |
5073 | Can you guess who that was? |
5073 | Can you repeat these numbers after me? |
5073 | Capper? |
5073 | Carter-- Wickham-- Australia Mac? |
5073 | Cocaine? |
5073 | Could n''t get it? |
5073 | Could one always be true to oneself in the face of any temptation? |
5073 | Could you get us-- initiated? |
5073 | Craig,I remarked contemplatively, after a while,"how about Atherton himself? |
5073 | Did anything happen to him? 5073 Did auto- suggestion, self- hypnotism explain what I have seen? |
5073 | Did he call-- er-- yesterday? |
5073 | Did he swallow it-- necessarily? |
5073 | Did n''t you know-- he-- came back from Vera Cruz yesterday? |
5073 | Did the intruder get anything? |
5073 | Did you ever hear of coating the skin by a substance which is impervious to water, smooth and elastic? |
5073 | Did you notice how that diamond in her neck sparkled? |
5073 | Did you see anyone in the museum who looked suspicious? |
5073 | Did you see him go? |
5073 | Did you want to get rid of him? |
5073 | Do n''t you begin to see the scheme? 5073 Do n''t you understand?" |
5073 | Do you feel any better? |
5073 | Do you know anything about this Australia Mac? |
5073 | Do you remember seeing Northrop here yesterday afternoon? |
5073 | Do you see that? |
5073 | Do you smell the odor in this room? 5073 Do you suppose there is anything significant in that?" |
5073 | Do you think I''d keep dynamite, even in the safe? |
5073 | Do you think he robbed himself? |
5073 | Do you think radium could have had anything to do with that? |
5073 | Do you think she has run away? |
5073 | Do? |
5073 | Does Haughton know of this note? |
5073 | Does Moulton play? |
5073 | Does Mrs. Hazleton know of-- of his reputed intimacy? |
5073 | Does he know? 5073 Does she get along badly with Edith? |
5073 | Does there seem to be any immediate danger? |
5073 | Done? |
5073 | Dr. Bryant,she appealed,"is he-- is he, really-- so badly?" |
5073 | Dr. Hopf? 5073 Dr. Maudsley is your family physician?" |
5073 | Dr. Maudsley,Craig added, dropping his voice,"is Morton III the son of Millicent Hazleton or not? |
5073 | Er-- yes,I stammered in surprise at seeing him so unexpectedly,"but where did you come from? |
5073 | Felicie,called a rather nervous voice from the second floor,"is it some one from the company?" |
5073 | Fireworks? |
5073 | Food? |
5073 | For God''s sake, Kennedy,shouted a voice at the street door,"what are you doing here?" |
5073 | For the sake of-- that baby-- would she-- would she forgive? |
5073 | For which the latest thing is the radium water cure, I suppose? |
5073 | Gone? |
5073 | Gossip? |
5073 | Had he any visitors during the day? |
5073 | Had there been anything that would foreshadow the-- er-- disappearance? |
5073 | Happy dust? |
5073 | Has Dr. Wilson been here this morning? |
5073 | Has anything else happened? |
5073 | Has anything new developed? |
5073 | Has that been the effect of our story, Walter? 5073 Have any of the plans been carried out yet?" |
5073 | Have n''t they taken Minturn''s body away? |
5073 | Have there been any threatening letters? |
5073 | Have they a sufficient value, even on appreciative Fifth Avenue, to warrant murder? |
5073 | Have they found out yet? |
5073 | Have you any clue to the cause of her death? |
5073 | Have you any idea how the lead poisoning could have been caused? |
5073 | Have you any idea what it can be? |
5073 | Have you any idea? |
5073 | Have you any of the letters that Archer wrote home? |
5073 | Have you heard the news? |
5073 | Have you made any progress? |
5073 | Hello, O''Connor,I heard Kennedy say;"you read that story in the Star this morning about the drug fiends at that Broadway cabaret? |
5073 | Hour after hour, Rapport and the rest repeated over and over again,''Why does not some one kill him? 5073 How about that bandage about Haughton''s neck?" |
5073 | How about the letters? |
5073 | How about the windows? |
5073 | How are the signals given? |
5073 | How could it have been introduced? |
5073 | How did it happen? |
5073 | How did the Lucie come to be equipped with wireless? |
5073 | How did you come to use it first? |
5073 | How did you discover it? |
5073 | How did you discover it? |
5073 | How did you know? 5073 How do they take them? |
5073 | How do you feel, this morning? |
5073 | How does it work? |
5073 | How is it? |
5073 | How is she to- day? |
5073 | How is she? |
5073 | How long since society took you up? |
5073 | How much is in it? |
5073 | How should I know? |
5073 | How should I know? |
5073 | How were you to-- reach the Baron? |
5073 | How would Rapport use the death thought, I wonder? |
5073 | How-- where? |
5073 | How? |
5073 | How? |
5073 | How? |
5073 | I could n''t get it all, but I did hear her repeating over and over to Hazleton,''Are n''t you all mine? 5073 I guessed as much,"remarked Kennedy,"but how does she get it here?" |
5073 | I had hoped so,remarked Kennedy,"Do you know the woman?" |
5073 | I may keep these? |
5073 | I presume you carry burglary insurance? |
5073 | I suppose you are more or less familiar with what Northrop brought back? |
5073 | I suppose you have heard of the''billionaire baby,''Morton Hazleton III? |
5073 | I suppose you have heard of this rumor from London of a trust that is going into the radium field internationally? |
5073 | I suppose you have no idea what Dr. Maudsley has prescribed for her? |
5073 | I wonder if I could see her? |
5073 | I wonder whether the lead lining fits closely to the steel? |
5073 | In the dream? 5073 In the paper this morning? |
5073 | In the woods? |
5073 | In your dream when Dr. Maudsley appeared,asked Kennedy, evidently interested in filling in the gap,"what did he do?" |
5073 | Indeed? |
5073 | Indeed? |
5073 | Indeed? |
5073 | Ions? |
5073 | Is Mrs. Blake stricken now by the same trouble that seems to have affected Buster? |
5073 | Is he a frequent visitor? |
5073 | Is he much of a player? |
5073 | Is he trying to hide something? |
5073 | Is it the curse that she dreaded? |
5073 | Is that all? |
5073 | Is the habit so extensive? |
5073 | Is there a gang operating? |
5073 | Is there anything besides your dream that alarms you,he asked, changing the subject quickly,"any suspicion of-- say the servants?" |
5073 | Is this Professor Kennedy? |
5073 | Is this another of those radium safes? |
5073 | Is this the German embassy in Washington? |
5073 | Is-- he-- all right? |
5073 | It is not a very modern safe, is it? |
5073 | Jermyn? 5073 Just a moment, Hartley,"she answered, then, lower to her mother, added,"I do n''t think it can do any harm, do you, mother?" |
5073 | Just what is an electro- magnetic gun? |
5073 | Just what is it you fear? |
5073 | Kennedy,he blurted out in a tone of suppressed excitement,"can I trust you to keep a big secret?" |
5073 | Know her? |
5073 | Lead? |
5073 | Like what? |
5073 | Lloyd''s? |
5073 | May I have a glass of water? |
5073 | May I see it? |
5073 | May I see the bath? |
5073 | Might I see your jewel case? |
5073 | Might we go over with you now? 5073 Minturn-- dead?" |
5073 | Miss Lowe,he said, catching her eye and holding it almost hypnotically,"why have you come to see me?" |
5073 | Miss Sears,asked her mistress,"will you get Buster, please?" |
5073 | Mold? |
5073 | More''happy dust''? |
5073 | Mrs. Lynn Moulton, for instance? |
5073 | Mrs. Lynn Moulton? |
5073 | Mrs. Moulton,he said slowly, rising and handing it back to her,"have you told me all?" |
5073 | Mrs. Sutphen? 5073 Muller?" |
5073 | Mummery? |
5073 | No bad news from Mitla, I hope? |
5073 | No epilepsy, no insanity of any form? |
5073 | Nothing? |
5073 | Now, for example,went on Craig,"how would you advise him to marry?" |
5073 | Now, if I may see Morton? |
5073 | Now, why was Mrs. Sutphen there? |
5073 | Oh, Mr. Kennedy,he exclaimed,"who now will come to my baths? |
5073 | Oh, ca n''t you understand yet? |
5073 | Oh, ca n''t you understand? |
5073 | Oh, then you have actually already acted on the hint in the letter? |
5073 | Other man-- Otaka? 5073 Over what?" |
5073 | Persecuting her? |
5073 | Poisoning? |
5073 | Poker? |
5073 | Poor mother,he remarked anxiously,"do you think she will pull through, Professor? |
5073 | Professor Kennedy? |
5073 | Read? |
5073 | Really,he answered,"you see how impossible it is for me to have an opinion? |
5073 | Say,exclaimed one of the men,"what''s the matter? |
5073 | Seems purposeless, insane, does n''t it? |
5073 | She had a doctor, I suppose? |
5073 | She had n''t been feeling well for several days, had she? |
5073 | She told nothing of herself? |
5073 | She''s getting the stuff now? |
5073 | So,Craig exclaimed,"you are the-- the air pirate?" |
5073 | Some gentlemen from the company? 5073 Still,"considered Kennedy,"there might have been something latent in her family germ plasm back of the time through which you could trace it?" |
5073 | Strange how some of these waiters grow rich? |
5073 | Sulphate of strychnine? |
5073 | Suppose we go in my little runabout, the Streamline II? 5073 Suppose you could n''t get it, what then?" |
5073 | Tell me,she said eagerly,"how did Mr. Minturn die? |
5073 | Tell me-- have you and this other woman met the Baron yet? 5073 That''s what they mean by stray or vagabond currents, is n''t it?" |
5073 | The Baron? |
5073 | The Bowery? |
5073 | The Schofields come of good stock? |
5073 | The actress and professional beauty? 5073 The body has been removed?" |
5073 | The door was locked? |
5073 | The leader? |
5073 | The pneumogastric nerves? |
5073 | The point is, then,ruminated Kennedy,"what happened in the interval between the ringing of the alarm and the arrival of the special officers? |
5073 | The stones were unset? |
5073 | Then I-- I failed? |
5073 | Then it is the alpha rays with which we are concerned mostly now? |
5073 | Then it was for medical treatment that Mr. Minturn was taking the bath? |
5073 | Then there were no recessive traits in her family,asked Kennedy quickly,"of the same sort that you find in the Athertons?" |
5073 | Then what is it? |
5073 | Then you do n''t know the gossip? |
5073 | Then you do not feel like continuing the tests we abandoned last night? |
5073 | Then you have refused to go into the combine? 5073 Then you have suspicions of something worse?" |
5073 | Then you think he may be right? |
5073 | Then,I put in,"the toxin was produced by germs, after all?" |
5073 | There had been no sound-- no cry to alarm you? |
5073 | They will? |
5073 | To whom? |
5073 | Toe- prints? |
5073 | Treasure? |
5073 | WAS it a snake bite? |
5073 | Warner Pearcy? |
5073 | Was I in time? 5073 Was Northrop in his room while these people were here?" |
5073 | Was he here last night? |
5073 | Was it Wickham-- or intended for Wickham? |
5073 | Was it drowning that caused her death? |
5073 | Well,he asked,"what do you think of it, now?" |
5073 | Well? |
5073 | Well? |
5073 | Well? |
5073 | Were-- were there any germs in the letter? |
5073 | Wh-- where did you get so much of it? |
5073 | What Baron? |
5073 | What are ions? |
5073 | What are they? |
5073 | What are you doing in this case? |
5073 | What are you doing? |
5073 | What are you looking for? |
5073 | What can be the matter? |
5073 | What did he say? |
5073 | What did he say? |
5073 | What did she look like? |
5073 | What did they do? |
5073 | What did you conclude, then, was the explanation of what you saw last night? |
5073 | What did you do? |
5073 | What did you make of it? |
5073 | What do you call it? |
5073 | What do you find? |
5073 | What do you intend doing? |
5073 | What do you know of these anarchists? |
5073 | What do you make of THAT? |
5073 | What do you make of her? |
5073 | What do you make of it? |
5073 | What do you mean, for instance? |
5073 | What do you mean? |
5073 | What do you mean? |
5073 | What do you mean? |
5073 | What do you propose to do about it? |
5073 | What do you suppose it is? |
5073 | What do you think it is? |
5073 | What do you think of Verplanck? |
5073 | What does it mean when the leaves collapse? |
5073 | What does she say? |
5073 | What does that mean? |
5073 | What has Lloyd''s to do with the billion- dollar baby? |
5073 | What has happened? |
5073 | What has happened? |
5073 | What has happened? |
5073 | What has happened? |
5073 | What have you discovered? |
5073 | What have you found? |
5073 | What is at five hundred and one East Fifth? |
5073 | What is it then? |
5073 | What is it you are planning? |
5073 | What is it, Sam? |
5073 | What is it-- strychnine? |
5073 | What is it-- that light again? |
5073 | What is it-- what have you found? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is it? |
5073 | What is that? |
5073 | What is that? |
5073 | What is that? |
5073 | What is the date set? |
5073 | What is the street address of Bleecker, 7180? |
5073 | What is this treatment of lead poisoning by electrolysis? |
5073 | What is this? |
5073 | What is to be the method, do you suppose? |
5073 | What is your theory? |
5073 | What luck? |
5073 | What makes it? |
5073 | What message are you sending him? |
5073 | What message did you send? |
5073 | What object can such a man as Dr. Vaughn possibly have in frequenting such a place? |
5073 | What of that? |
5073 | What seems to be the trouble? |
5073 | What shall I do? |
5073 | What shall I do? |
5073 | What shall we do? |
5073 | What was all that rigmarole? |
5073 | What was that for? |
5073 | What was the poison? |
5073 | What was the purpose of all that elaborate mummery out at the Red Lodge? |
5073 | What was the use? |
5073 | What were those little cuts? |
5073 | What would you suggest? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s the matter? |
5073 | What''s this? |
5073 | What''s your opinion? |
5073 | What-- closed up yet-- Joe? |
5073 | What-- no test-- NONE? |
5073 | What? |
5073 | What? |
5073 | Where can I find Halsey Haughton at this hour? |
5073 | Where did it come from? |
5073 | Where is he? |
5073 | Where is she? |
5073 | Where is the headquarters of the inner circle? |
5073 | Where shall I go? |
5073 | Where was the last attempt? |
5073 | Where''s Duncan? |
5073 | Where''s Muller? |
5073 | Where? |
5073 | Where? |
5073 | Where? |
5073 | Where? |
5073 | Which is true? 5073 Which means-- in this case?" |
5073 | Who are the other leaders? |
5073 | Who are these? |
5073 | Who blew the whistle? |
5073 | Who dropped it? |
5073 | Who enters the Red Lodge? |
5073 | Who is her physician? |
5073 | Who is in the next room? |
5073 | Who is it, mother? |
5073 | Who operates it? |
5073 | Who was that young man in the music room? |
5073 | Who wrote it? 5073 Who?" |
5073 | Who? |
5073 | Who? |
5073 | Why did n''t you say anything about the letter to him? |
5073 | Why did she need money so badly? |
5073 | Why do you suspect them? |
5073 | Why do you think it affects each so differently? |
5073 | Why should anyone want to steal tablets of old Mixtec inscriptions? |
5073 | Why that? |
5073 | Why, Miss-- er-- Miss-- my dear young lady-- what''s the matter? |
5073 | Why, since we should be the principal competitors to the foreign mines, could n''t this robbery have been due to the machinations of these schemers? 5073 Why?" |
5073 | Why? |
5073 | Will it never stop? 5073 Will the gentlemen drink a little sake?" |
5073 | Will you ask her if I may? |
5073 | Will you get it for me? 5073 With the money?" |
5073 | Would n''t that account for her fears? |
5073 | Would you like to relax your mind by a little excursion among the curio shops of the city? 5073 Would you like to run down there in the Streamline?" |
5073 | Would you mind waiting in this little dressing room? |
5073 | YOU commit a murder? |
5073 | Yes, I know,responded Mrs. Blake anxiously,"but is it true?" |
5073 | Yes, yes,he encouraged,"but who is the other woman?" |
5073 | Yes,I objected,"but how about those in the comb?" |
5073 | Yes,encouraged Craig,"what can I do for you?" |
5073 | Yes? |
5073 | Yes? |
5073 | Yes? |
5073 | You are acquainted with the latest treatment for lead poisoning by means of the electric bath? |
5073 | You are not coming aboard? |
5073 | You can use that? |
5073 | You did n''t know before that Antoinette Moulton, like many of her friends in the smart set, was a gambler-- and loser-- did you? |
5073 | You do n''t think she''s a dope fiend herself, do you? |
5073 | You do not know yourself of any reason why she should fear anything, do you? |
5073 | You drink the water from the tap? |
5073 | You have been Mrs. Edwards''physician for some time, I believe? |
5073 | You have been with her several days, though, have n''t you? |
5073 | You have had no word about your car? |
5073 | You have heard of the so- called''phantom bandit''of Bluffwood, have n''t you? |
5073 | You have heard of the thyroid gland in the neck? |
5073 | You have looked it up? |
5073 | You have n''t a wireless on the Nautilus, have you? |
5073 | You have n''t found out yet what it is, then? |
5073 | You have n''t heard of the Red Lodge? |
5073 | You have n''t heard, then? |
5073 | You have n''t told anyone? |
5073 | You have no idea, I suppose, of anything that was weighing on his mind? |
5073 | You have not been robbed yourself? |
5073 | You have not the combination? |
5073 | You have seen the safe in there? |
5073 | You heard nothing? |
5073 | You here? |
5073 | You know Burroughs Atherton on both lines of descent? |
5073 | You know him pretty well? |
5073 | You know him? |
5073 | You know, I suppose,added Denison,"that he is engaged to Felicie Woods, the daughter of Mrs. Courtney Woods?" |
5073 | You lost nothing? |
5073 | You mean, may the whole trouble lie with him? |
5073 | You remember the light? 5073 You say that Miss Verrall and her mother have gone back to the city?" |
5073 | You see that? |
5073 | You think Dr. Rae Wilson knows nothing of it yet? |
5073 | You think that the suspicions I had have been justified? |
5073 | You were blackmailed out of the money? |
5073 | You would recognize some of them if you saw them? |
5073 | You''re sure it is all right? |
5073 | You''re sure it is all right? |
5073 | You-- you do n''t think it is serious? |
5073 | You-- you wo n''t hurt Buster? |
5073 | Your brother is not at home? |
5073 | Your wife thinks it is Burroughs who is persecuting her? |
5073 | ''Ca n''t you do something?'' |
5073 | ''Can I trust you?'' |
5073 | About those words,"he continued,"what did you make of the list and the answers?" |
5073 | And, Jameson-- you''ll tone down that part of it in the newspapers that Junior-- might read-- when he grows up?" |
5073 | And,"he would add with the tradesman''s idea of humor,"I guess he has enough to play a game of poker-- eh?" |
5073 | Annenberg?" |
5073 | Are n''t you all mine?'' |
5073 | Are you going to leave Armand?" |
5073 | As for Vaughn, was he trying to hide behind some technicality in medical ethics? |
5073 | As for accident, why should a person fall overboard from a large houseboat into a perfectly calm harbor? |
5073 | Atherton?" |
5073 | Atherton?" |
5073 | But by what? |
5073 | But how did he get in? |
5073 | But is there none left? |
5073 | But"--rman"--what did that mean? |
5073 | By the way, Pedersen, are you the only person aboard who can operate this?" |
5073 | By the way, as our interview may last a few minutes, would you mind sitting down? |
5073 | CHAPTER II THE ELECTRO- MAGNETIC GUN"What shall we do?" |
5073 | Ca n''t you-- can''t you find my necklace?" |
5073 | Can you DO something?" |
5073 | Can you come along?" |
5073 | Can you give us a line?" |
5073 | Can you help me?" |
5073 | Can you let me have a sample?" |
5073 | Can you tell me what number that was which just called?" |
5073 | Car or boat?" |
5073 | Could it be Herman-- Herman Schloss? |
5073 | Could it have been a light on the mast of a boat moving rapidly up the bay and perhaps nearer to us than we suspected? |
5073 | Could it have been a signal to some one on this side of the bay, a signal light in the woods?" |
5073 | Could it have been that she had really been bitten at some of the orgies by the serpent which they worshiped hideously hissing in its cage? |
5073 | Could we prevent it? |
5073 | Could you get us into the inner circle, Miss Lowe?" |
5073 | Did he know something else already, and did she know he knew? |
5073 | Did his discovery portend something diabolical, or was it purely a defect in nature which Dr. Crafts of the Eugenics Bureau had overlooked? |
5073 | Did she know something about the case, I wondered? |
5073 | Did they know about the letter, after all, I wondered? |
5073 | Did you know he was ill?" |
5073 | Did you notice Veronica Haversham''s yellowish whiteness, her down- drawn mouth, elevated eyebrows, and contracted eyes? |
5073 | Did you notice the size? |
5073 | Disappeared? |
5073 | Do n''t you see? |
5073 | Do n''t you understand? |
5073 | Do you know anything about it?" |
5073 | Do you want to show it to him?" |
5073 | Edwards?" |
5073 | Escaped?" |
5073 | Had Minturn, I wondered, known the name of the real criminal? |
5073 | Had Mrs. Moulton robbed the safe herself, or hired some one else to do it for her, and had that person gone back on her? |
5073 | Had he smoked it?" |
5073 | Had her desperate love for Hazleton produced a hallucination? |
5073 | Had the events of the past few days worked on her mind and driven her into temporary insanity? |
5073 | Had the murderer used the safest of poisons-- one that left no clue? |
5073 | Halsey Haughton suffering from cancer? |
5073 | Has Veda Blair been driven almost to death by her own fears only?" |
5073 | Have they done anything yet to the Baron?" |
5073 | Have you tested for the ordinary poisons?" |
5073 | Hazleton?" |
5073 | He had it as he went on:"Do we not brew within ourselves poisons which enter the circulation and pervade the system? |
5073 | He is in the gravest danger if he-- What? |
5073 | He left last night at midnight and is already here?" |
5073 | Hello-- what''s this?" |
5073 | Hollingsworth?" |
5073 | Hopf?" |
5073 | Hopf?" |
5073 | Hopf?" |
5073 | Hopf?" |
5073 | How about that?" |
5073 | How can it be done?" |
5073 | How could she ever be stopped? |
5073 | How did Minturn die? |
5073 | How did he look?" |
5073 | How did you know?" |
5073 | How far has it gone?" |
5073 | How was Fortescue discovered, Burke?" |
5073 | I asked airily, adding,"Is it a large house party you are getting up?" |
5073 | I believe it is rumored that your father suffered from lead poisoning?" |
5073 | I knew that if Hazleton with his infatuation of her were to learn---""And Mrs. Hazleton, has she been told?" |
5073 | I saw Kennedy check a motion of surprise and came to the rescue with the natural question:"His wife-- with a beard and mustache?" |
5073 | I''ll pick you up anywhere between this and the Bridge-- how about Columbus Circle in half an hour?" |
5073 | If the story had been told to Hazleton, what might he not have already done? |
5073 | In other words, does she, did she, ever love him? |
5073 | Inside was a beautiful little"Peke,"and it was easy to see that Buster was indeed ill."Who is your doctor?" |
5073 | Is he really free from the-- er-- stigmata, I suppose you call them, of insanity?" |
5073 | Is he?" |
5073 | Is n''t it possible that it might hit some one somewhere who was susceptible?" |
5073 | Is that all right?" |
5073 | Is there a road over there, above the Carter house?" |
5073 | Is-- is it true-- what this man-- says? |
5073 | It must be a boy-- and an ATHERTON?" |
5073 | Kennedy did not dwell on the contradiction, but added,"And the crowd?" |
5073 | Klemm''s Sanitarium? |
5073 | May I trouble you to place your fingers on this paper-- so?" |
5073 | May I?" |
5073 | Might I ask exactly what it is you fear in your dreams?" |
5073 | Might he not be playing a game with the combination in which he had protected himself so that he would win, no matter what happened? |
5073 | Might not some trusted employee return to the office, open it, give the proper signals and loot the safe?" |
5073 | Might not that explain the lack of finger prints also?" |
5073 | Might not this be, instead of cancer, a radium burn? |
5073 | Might we see Mr. Haughton for a moment? |
5073 | Moulton?" |
5073 | Northrop?" |
5073 | Now if-- say Hazleton-- should call-- will you listen in on that vocaphone for me?" |
5073 | Now, is it overfunction of the glands, hyper- secretion-- or is it something else?" |
5073 | Or had the blackmailing gang of automobile thieves, failing in extorting money by their original plan, seized her? |
5073 | Or were there other marks on his body which we could not see? |
5073 | Our knowledge seems new, but is it? |
5073 | Perhaps, why certainly, you must know him-- Annenberg, an instructor in economics now at the University?" |
5073 | Really?" |
5073 | See those shoe- prints up to this point? |
5073 | She knows her I presume?" |
5073 | She may at this moment be anchored off some exclusive yacht club, flying the respectable burgee of the club-- who knows?" |
5073 | Slowly, a strange mephitic vapor seemed to exhale into the room-- or was it my heightened imagination? |
5073 | That is the case you''re going to write up, is n''t it?" |
5073 | That''s enough, is n''t it?" |
5073 | The question is, to my mind, who is this fence?" |
5073 | There are a certain number of isolated ladies and gentlemen-- dissociated ions--""Who do n''t know these new dances?" |
5073 | They must be turned into currency-- or what''s the use of robbery? |
5073 | Vaughn?" |
5073 | Walter, attend to that, will you? |
5073 | Was Muller the"fence"we were seeking, or only a tool for the"fence"higher up? |
5073 | Was each concealing something? |
5073 | Was each in doubt about just how much the other knew? |
5073 | Was each suspicious of the other? |
5073 | Was he alone? |
5073 | Was he dead when he was discovered?" |
5073 | Was he, too, overcome? |
5073 | Was it Mrs. Langhorne who had been the disturbing influence, whose power she feared, over herself and over her husband? |
5073 | Was it an atavistic joy in the horrible or was it merely a blasphemous curiosity? |
5073 | Was it hypnotism? |
5073 | Was it in its worship of the root of all evil that it had fallen? |
5073 | Was it not a recognition of his hypnotic power? |
5073 | Was it the product of her drug- disordered brain? |
5073 | Was she insane? |
5073 | Was she really to be the Lady Madeline in this fall of the House of Atherton? |
5073 | Was she talking of the blackmailer, Dr. Hopf? |
5073 | Was that her philosophy of life? |
5073 | Was that the interpretation of the almost hypnotized look on Blair''s face? |
5073 | Was the criminal higher up to escape because one of his tools had been cornered and had taken the easiest way to get out? |
5073 | Was the mark hidden by the bandage about Haughton''s neck the brand of the stolen tubes? |
5073 | Was there in it, I wondered, an element of fear lest if she refused to talk suspicion might grow even greater? |
5073 | Was there such a cult here in my own city? |
5073 | Was there, I asked myself, sufficient reason for suicide? |
5073 | Was there, indeed, no test? |
5073 | We were to see him to- night-- a quiet dinner, after an automobile ride up the Hudson--""Both of you?" |
5073 | Were they merely good actors? |
5073 | Were those letters that were stolen from you the only ones you had in the safe?" |
5073 | What are you going to do to protect the safe to- night?" |
5073 | What can a rich society woman have to do with a place like that or a man like Schloss?" |
5073 | What did it mean? |
5073 | What did it mean? |
5073 | What did she mean? |
5073 | What did you find, Doctor?" |
5073 | What did you mean by Jermyn?" |
5073 | What do they really think of it in New York?" |
5073 | What do you make of it?" |
5073 | What do you think of it?" |
5073 | What had been done with the plans? |
5073 | What happened?" |
5073 | What happens to the dissociated ions?" |
5073 | What have you found out by studying Buster?" |
5073 | What if she died? |
5073 | What is it like?" |
5073 | What is the matter?" |
5073 | What terrible power was it? |
5073 | What to do? |
5073 | What was cleverer, you said to yourself, than to seem to be robbed of what you never had, to blame it on a bitter rival who never existed? |
5073 | What was he doing? |
5073 | What was it she saw? |
5073 | What was it that held me? |
5073 | What was it? |
5073 | What was the first question you asked me? |
5073 | What was this fearsome, cruel belief, this modern witchcraft that could unnerve a rich and educated woman? |
5073 | What was this, I asked myself breathlessly-- a new transcendental toxicology? |
5073 | What was to be done? |
5073 | What were the possibilities of blackmail in the right sort of evidence? |
5073 | What''s Kennedy doing-- anything?" |
5073 | What''s the effect?" |
5073 | What''s the matter?" |
5073 | What-- gone? |
5073 | Where are the gold and silver of the conquistadores? |
5073 | Where are you sending the boys-- to the Longacre?" |
5073 | Which would win-- the old fascination of the occult or the new power of science? |
5073 | Who could it be? |
5073 | Who could it have been who bore the tell- tale burn? |
5073 | Who received it?" |
5073 | Who was it? |
5073 | Who was it? |
5073 | Who was the mysterious Mexican woman, who the shaggy Russian? |
5073 | Who was the person, the only one who could have done it? |
5073 | Who was this Stein? |
5073 | Whose? |
5073 | Why do you ask?" |
5073 | Why does he not die?'' |
5073 | Why, Monsieur?" |
5073 | Why-- didn''t you-- get away-- while there was time-- after you warned me?" |
5073 | Why-- what''s the matter? |
5073 | Why?" |
5073 | Will no one stop it? |
5073 | Will you promise not to stay long? |
5073 | Will you see that Buster is sent up to my laboratory immediately?" |
5073 | Would Craig leave him in there, perhaps to die? |
5073 | Would it succeed? |
5073 | Would she stop at anything if she feared the loss of her favorite drug? |
5073 | Would the mere accusation be enough to dissociate the truth from, that brain or would Kennedy have to resort to other means? |
5073 | Would those people who seem to be trying to extend their new company all over the world stop at anything in order to cripple us at the start?" |
5073 | Would you like to remain here? |
5073 | Yes? |
5073 | Yes? |
5073 | Yet how were we to get to him? |
5073 | Yet what could we do, marooned on the other side of the bay? |
5073 | Yet what possible object could she have had in putting the Streamline out of commission? |
5073 | You are from the company?" |
5073 | You can trust Armand?" |
5073 | You do n''t know anything more about the robbery?" |
5073 | You do n''t mind going over and then back?" |
5073 | You have n''t taken that up yet?" |
5073 | You have read of the case?" |
5073 | You know Miss Haversham, Veronica Haversham?" |
5073 | You know the place?" |
5073 | You know who is backing it?" |
5073 | You mean his wife?" |
5073 | You mean one which he must bear on himself?" |
5073 | You say her face was hidden?" |
5073 | You see those weak and wobbly rays that seem to fall to one side? |
5073 | You see what I am driving at? |
5073 | You understand what I am up against?" |
5073 | asked Kennedy, looking up from a test tube which he had been examining, with an air for all the world expressive of"Why so hot, little man?" |
5073 | asked Kennedy,"the''will of the Lodge''?" |
5073 | she repeated, then smiling to herself as people will when they are leaving the borderline of anesthesia, she repeated the name,"Hopf?" |