THE THE MYSTERY STORIES OF J. S. FLETCHER “Mr. Fletcher is a master of plot, and he never goes beyond the bounds of reason in its procedure and development. He, moreover, can write the English language as a vital means to the end both of narrative and description, and he never fails to show that he is its master. It is therefore a pleasure to read his stories, not merely for their entertaining qualities, but also for the agreeable appeal of their manner and their style.” —Boston Evening Transcript THE MIDDLE TEMPLE MURDER [1918] NEW YORK: ALFRED • A • KNOPF THE |
I | Two Wanderers Return | |
II | The Butler's Pantry | |
III | Grey Dawn | |
IV | Markenmore Hollow | |
V | Denounced | |
VI | The Coroner Sits | |
VII | Mrs. Braxfield Supports | |
VIII | The Incriminating Letter | |
IX | The Midnight Meeting | |
X | The Ring and the Pipe | |
XI | First Steps | |
XII | The Dower House | |
XIII | William Pegge | |
XIV | Gone | |
XV | Was It Robbery? | |
XVI | Family Matters | |
XVII | Too Late | |
XVIII | Deep Lane | |
XIX | Under Pressure | |
XX | Village Gossip | |
XXI | Arrest | |
XXII | Mrs. Braxfield's Move | |
XXIII | The Professorial Theory | |
XXIV | The Man Who Could Guess | |
XXV | The Devil's Grip |
CHAPTER I