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       Cleveland Moffett

      Through the Wall

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4613-7

      Table of Contents

       Chapter I. A Blood-Red Sky

       Chapter II. Coquenil's Greatest Case

       Chapter III. Private Room Number Six

       Chapter IV. "In the Name of the Law"

       Chapter V. Coquenil Gets in the Game

       Chapter VI. The Weapon

       Chapter VII. The Footprints

       Chapter VIII. Through the Wall

       Chapter IX. Coquenil Marks His Man

       Chapter X. Gibelin Scores a Point

       Chapter XI. The Towers of Notre-dame

       Chapter XII. By Special Order

       Chapter XIII. Lloyd and Alice

       Chapter XIV. The Woman in the Case

       Chapter XV. Pussy Wilmott's Confession

       Chapter XVI. The Third Pair of Boots

       Chapter XVII. "From Higher Up"

       Chapter XVIII. A Long Little Finger

       Chapter XIX. Touching a Yellow Tooth

       Chapter XX. The Memory of a Dog

       Chapter XXI. The Wood Carver

       Chapter XXII. At the Hairdresser's

       Chapter XXIII. Groener at Bay

       Chapter XXIV. Thirty Important Words

       Chapter XXV. The Moving Picture

       Chapter XXVI. Coquenil's Mother

       Chapter XXVII. The Diary

       Chapter XXVIII. A Great Criminal

       Chapter XXIX. The Lost Dolly

       Chapter XXX. Mrs. Lloyd Kittredge

      TO

       MY WIFE

       AND OUR DELIGHTFUL PARIS HOME IN THE

       VILLA MONTMORENCY, WHERE THIS

       BOOK WAS WRITTEN

      C. M.

      Chapter I.

       A Blood-Red Sky

       Table of Contents

      It is worthy of note that the most remarkable criminal case in which the famous French detective, Paul Coquenil, was ever engaged, a case of more baffling mystery than the Palais Royal diamond robbery and of far greater peril to him than the Marseilles trunk drama—in short, a case that ranks with the most important ones of modern police history—would never have been undertaken by Coquenil (and in that event might never have been solved) but for the extraordinary faith this man had in certain strange intuitions or forms of half knowledge that came to him at critical moments of his life, bringing marvelous guidance. Who but one possessed of such faith would have given up fortune, high position, the reward of a whole career, simply because a girl whom he did not know spoke some chance words that neither he nor she understood. Yet that is exactly what Coquenil did.

      It was late in the afternoon of a hot July day, the hottest day Paris had known that year (1907) and M. Coquenil, followed by a splendid white-and-brown shepherd dog, was walking down the Rue de la Cité, past the somber mass of the city hospital. Before reaching the Place Notre-Dame he stopped twice, once at a flower market that offered the grateful shade of its gnarled polenia trees just beyond the Conciergerie prison, and once under the heavy archway of the Prefecture de Police. At the flower market he bought a white carnation from a woman in green apron and wooden shoes, who looked in awe at his pale, grave face, and thrilled when he gave her a smile and friendly word. She wondered if it was true, as people said, that M. Coquenil always wore glasses with a slightly bluish tint so that no one could see his eyes.

      The detective walked on, busy with pleasant thoughts. This was the hour of his triumph and justification, this made up for the cruel blow that had fallen two years before and resulted, no one understood why, in his leaving the Paris detective force at the very moment of his glory, when the whole city was praising him for the St. Germain investigation. Beau Cocono! That was the name they had given him; he could hear the night crowds shouting it in a silly couplet:

      Il nous faut-o

       Beau Cocono-o!

      And then what a change within a week! What bitterness and humiliation! M. Paul Coquenil, after scores of brilliant successes, had withdrawn from the police force for personal reasons, said the newspapers. His health was affected, some declared; he had laid by a tidy fortune and wished to enjoy it, thought others; but many shook their heads mysteriously and whispered that there was something

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