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       Maurice Leblanc

      The Hollow Needle; Further adventures of Arsene Lupin

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664651051

       ILLUSTRATIONS

       THE HOLLOW NEEDLE

       CHAPTER ONE

       THE SHOT

       CHAPTER TWO

       ISIDORE BEAUTRELET, SIXTH-FORM SCHOOLBOY

       CHAPTER THREE

       THE CORPSE

       CHAPTER FOUR

       FACE TO FACE

       CHAPTER FIVE

       ON THE TRACK

       CHAPTER SIX

       AN HISTORIC SECRET

       CHAPTER SEVEN

       THE TREATISE OF THE NEEDLE

       CHAPTER EIGHT

       FROM CAESAR TO LUPIN

       CHAPTER NINE

       OPEN, SESAME!

       CHAPTER TEN

       THE TREASURES OF THE KINGS OF FRANCE

       Table of Contents

      Valmeras loved Raymonde's melancholy charm

      She put the gun to her shoulder, calmly took aim and fired

      Two huge letters, each perhaps a foot long, appeared cut in relief in the granite of the floor

      "We're going now. What do you think of my cockle-shell, Beautrelet?"

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Raymonde listened. The noise was repeated twice over, clearly enough to be distinguished from the medley of vague sounds that formed the great silence of the night and yet too faintly to enable her to tell whether it was near or far, within the walls of the big country-house, or outside, among the murky recesses of the park.

      She rose softly. Her window was half open: she flung it back wide. The moonlight lay over a peaceful landscape of lawns and thickets, against which the straggling ruins of the old abbey stood out in tragic outlines, truncated columns, mutilated arches, fragments of porches and shreds of flying buttresses. A light breeze hovered over the face of things, gliding noiselessly through the bare motionless branches of the trees, but shaking the tiny budding leaves of the shrubs.

      And, suddenly, she heard the same sound again. It was on the left and on the floor below her, in the living rooms, therefore, that occupied the left wing of the house. Brave and plucky though she was, the girl felt afraid. She slipped on her dressing gown and took the matches.

      "Raymonde—Raymonde!"

      A voice as low as a breath was calling to her from the next room, the door of which had not been closed. She was feeling her way there, when Suzanne, her cousin, came out of the room and fell into her arms:

      "Raymonde—is that you? Did you hear—?"

      "Yes. So you're not asleep?"

      "I suppose the dog woke me—some time ago. But he's not barking now. What time is it?"

      "About four."

      "Listen! Surely, some one's walking in the drawing room!"

      "There's no danger, your father is down there, Suzanne."

      "But there is danger for him. His room is next to the boudoir."

      "M. Daval is there too—"

      "At the other end of the house. He could never hear."

      They hesitated, not knowing what course to decide upon. Should they call out? Cry for help? They dared not; they were frightened of the sound of their own voices. But Suzanne, who had gone to the window, suppressed a scream:

      "Look!—A man!—Near the fountain!"

      A man was walking away at a rapid pace. He carried under his arm a fairly large load, the nature of which they were unable to distinguish: it knocked against his leg and impeded his progress. They saw him pass near the old chapel and turn toward a little door in the wall. The door must have been open, for the man disappeared suddenly from view and they failed to hear the usual grating of the hinges.

      "He came from the drawing room," whispered Suzanne.

      "No, the stairs and the hall would have brought him out more to the left—Unless—"

      The same idea struck them both. They leant out. Below them, a ladder stood against the front of the house, resting on the first floor. A glimmer lit up the stone balcony. And another man, who was also carrying something, bestrode the baluster, slid down the ladder

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