The Mischief Maker by Oppenheim, E. Phillips (Edward Phillips), 1866-1946
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A word from our supporters: File extension TAR | E-text prepared by Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders THE MISCHIEF-MAKER BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM AUTHOR OF "THE LIGHTED WAY," "THE TEMPTING OF TAVERNAKE," "HAVOC," ETC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY HANSON BOOTH 1913 CONTENTS BOOK ONE CHAPTER I SYMPATHY AND SELFISHNESS II AN INDISCREET LETTER III A RUINED CAREER IV A BUNCH OF VIOLETS V A SENTIMENTAL EPISODE VI AT THE CAFE L'ATHENEE VII COFFEE FOR THREE VIII IN PARIS IX MADAME CHRISTOPHOR X BETTER ACQUAINTANCE XI THE TOYMAKER FROM LEIPZIG XII AT THE RAT MORT XIII POLITICS AND PATRIOTISM XIV THE MORNING AFTER XV BEHIND CLOSED DOORS XVI "HAVE YOU EVER LOVED?" XVII KENDRICKS IS HOST XVIII A MEETING OF SOCIALISTS XIX AN OFFER XX FALKENBERG ACTS BOOK TWO CHAPTER I THE FLIGHT OF LADY ANNE II "TO OUR NEW SELVES" III WORK FOR JULIEN IV A STARTLING DISCLOSURE V THE FIRST ARTICLE VI FALKENBERG FAILS VII LADY ANNE DECLINES VIII A DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE IX FOOLHARDY JULIEN X THE SECOND ATTEMPT XI BY THE PRINCE'S ORDERS XII DISTRESSING NEWS XIII ESTERMEN'S DEATH WARRANT XIV SANCTUARY XV NEARING A CRISIS XVI FALKENBERG'S LAST REPORT XVII DEFEAT FOR FALKENBERG XVIII THE ONE WAY OUT XIX ALL ENDS WELL ILLUSTRATIONS "Really," he said, "I thought better of Herr Freudenberg" "At least," she reminded him, "you are going to see Madame Christophor?" "Splendid!" he muttered, rising to his feet. "If only I can do it!" "Let me present to you Monsieur Bourgan of the French Detective Service" BOOK ONE CHAPTER I SYMPATHY AND SELFISHNESS The girl who was dying lay in an invalid chair piled up with cushions in a sheltered corner of the lawn. The woman who had come to visit her had deliberately turned away her head with a murmured word about the sunshine and the field of buttercups. Behind them was the little sanitarium, a gray stone villa built in the style of a chateau, overgrown with creepers, and with terraced lawns stretching down to the sunny corner to which the girl had been carried earlier in the day. There were flowers everywhere--beds of hyacinths, and borders of purple and yellow crocuses. A lilac tree was bursting into blossom, the breeze was soft and full of life. Below, beyond the yellow-starred field of which the woman had spoken, flowed the Seine, and in the distance one could see the outskirts of Paris. "The doctor says I am better," the girl whispered plaintively. "This morning he was quite cheerful. I suppose he knows, but it is strange that I should feel so weak--weaker even day by day. And my cough--it tears me to pieces all the time." The woman who was bending over her gulped something down in her throat and turned her head. Although older than the invalid whom she had come to visit, she was young and very beautiful. Her cheeks were a trifle pale, but even without the tears her eyes were almost the color of violets. "The doctor must know, dear Lucie," she declared. "Our own feelings so often mean nothing at all." The girl moved a little uneasily in her chair. She, also, had once been pretty. Her hair was still an exquisite shade of red-gold, but her cheeks were thin and pinched, her complexion had gone, her clothes fell about her. She seemed somehow shapeless. "Yes," she agreed, "the doctor knows--he must know. I see it in his manner every time he comes to visit me. In his heart," she added, dropping her voice, "he must know that I am going to die." Her eyes seemed to have stiffened in their sockets, to have become dilated. Her lips trembled, but her eyes remained steadfast. |



