<h2 id="c18"><span class="small">CHAPTER XVIII</span> <br/>ALL RIGHT AT LAST</h2>
<p>It was just after I had given Alma that first kiss, and
had realized that she was not offended by my daring, that
Merry came to the house door, crying out, “Come, Miss
Alma, come quickly!” and with an agonized look, Alma
begged me to go at once, and she herself ran into the
house.</p>
<p>Then John Merivale came out and controlling his agitation
with an effort, he said, “If you please, sir, Miss
Remsen asks that you go home now. She cannot see you
again and she will send you some word later on.”</p>
<p>“Tell me what’s the trouble, Merivale,” I urged. “I am
a friend of Miss Alma, more than a friend, indeed.”</p>
<p>I looked at him squarely, as man to man, and he gazed
back at me, his face drawn with strong emotion of some
sort.</p>
<p>“If you want to help her, sir, you’ll just go quietly
away. You can do nothing here.”</p>
<p>So, there was nothing to do but to go, and I started off
down the garden path.</p>
<p>I looked back at the house as I stepped on the dock, but
I saw nobody at any window, nor any sign of anybody
about.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_261">[261]</div>
<p>It was all mysterious, terribly so, but I had the remembrance
of that moment when I had held Alma close
in my arms, and she had offered no resistance.</p>
<p>Surely, some day, the clouds would clear away and all
would be explained.</p>
<p>Slowly I rowed back to the Moore cottage and pondered
as I went.</p>
<p>When I reached Variable Winds, I found the family
and Detective March in full conclave.</p>
<p>Spread on a table before them lay a conglomerate collection
of small objects, among which I recognized a lot
of beads that I had seen Alma wear, a pretty finger ring
and several other odd bits of jewellery. Also, some scraps
of bright coloured silk, that I felt, intuitively, were bits of
the Tracy waistcoats. Also, a Totem Pole, broken into
three pieces.</p>
<p>I sat down with the others, and prepared to enter the
discussion.</p>
<p>“I want to know all about it,” I said. “All you know.
Don’t keep anything back with the idea of sparing my
feelings. I have not had a definite talk with Alma, but I
have reason to think she cares for me, and I am content
to bide my time. But, I propose to do all I can to save
her from what I feel sure is a mistaken suspicion of her
guilt in the Tracy matter.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” said March, looking at me gravely, “then
please understand that the evidence against Miss Remsen
is overwhelming. You know most of it, you have heard
nearly all the details of the case as they have come to
light. Now, try to realize that the cumulation of all these
facts is a mountain of proof that will be hard to move.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_262">[262]</div>
<p>“I have heard it stated,” I said, calmly, “that circumstantial
evidence, though seemingly convincing, must
never be taken as absolute proof.”</p>
<p>Keeley stared at me, as if amazed, but I stood my
ground.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to get a human witness before you can
declare a certainty.”</p>
<p>“True enough, Mr. Norris,” March agreed. “And we
have plenty of human evidence. Mr. Ames’s story of the
quarrel between Miss Remsen and her uncle, you have
heard. At that time Miss Remsen declared she would
do something desperate, if Sampson Tracy persisted in
his determination to tell Mrs. Dallas something that Alma
wanted kept secret. What could that be, save the fact of
her own defective health, or impaired mentality? She
said Mrs. Dallas already hated her, and, knowing that,
would hate her more. What other construction can possibly
be put on those words? Then, we have Jennie’s
story of Miss Remsen’s behaviour the night of Mr.
Tracy’s death. That girl would never invent a story so
wildly improbable as the tale of Miss Remsen jumping
from the window into the lake.”</p>
<p>“You’ll have to admit all March says is true, Gray,”
Keeley said to me, his fine face drawn with deepest concern.
“And also the stories Posy May has told us. They
bear the stamp of truth, and they are all human evidence,
not merely circumstantial. Now, I will tell you the conclusion
that I have been obliged to arrive at. And that
is, that Alma Remsen is indeed afflicted. Not with epilepsy
but with a far more serious malady. I mean dementia
praecox. This is a terrible statement to make, but I am
sure it is the only diagnosis that fits the case. As you
may or may not know, that condition may be in existence
yet remain unknown and unsuspected by those nearest
and dearest to the patient.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_263">[263]</div>
<p>“No!” I cried, recoiling from the thought of horrors
that this idea conjured up. “That lovely girl——”</p>
<p>“You know nothing about the disease, Gray,” Keeley
said, patiently. “I didn’t know much about it myself,
until I read it up, which I have just done. It has many
forms and phases, but there are some symptoms inseparable
from the conditions. For instance, and this is the
thing that impressed me from the very first. You remember
I said the watch in the water pitcher was the keynote.
Well, I had a vague idea, and my recent study has
corroborated it, that victims of this dread disease almost
invariably throw a watch into a jar or pail of water if
they get a chance. That is a common peculiarity, and all
the queer work around Tracy’s deathbed points unmistakably
to a mind disordered by dementia praecox and
nothing else. Epilepsy won’t do. That is a different disease.
But the feather duster, the flowers, the waistcoat business,
the Totem Pole, and more than all, the fatal nail,
all indicate the same thing. Now, this disease has the
strange quality of becoming evident at times, and then
disappearing so utterly that no one would suspect its presence
in the person affected. March and I have concluded
that Alma Remsen is a victim of this horrible curse and
that her actions are in no way of her own volition during
the attacks of the dementia.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_264">[264]</div>
<p>“I can’t believe it,” I said, after a straight glance into
Keeley’s sympathetic eyes, “but I suppose I must take your
word for it. However, it makes no difference in my love
and loyalty to Alma, but I want to get at the truth.
Now if it is true, her doctor must know about it. And
I can’t think Doctor Rogers would have gone off and left
her if there was danger of attacks of such a sort.”</p>
<p>“That’s the way it seemed to me,” Keeley said. “Now,
listen, Gray, and we’ll tell you all. We have tried to think
Alma is shielding somebody, somebody maybe that is a
victim of dementia praecox. We thought of the two Merivales
and we considered their daughter, Dora. Any of the
three are possible, you see. Then, owing to some things
March noticed when making his search at Whistling
Reeds, we had a new suspicion. He observed two breakfast
trays, in the pantry cupboard, that had the general
effect of being in frequent use and the dining table was
used for two. He observed a can of cocoa, though he had
been told that Miss Remsen had always coffee for her
breakfast. He thought the guest room showed signs of
being in use when there was no acknowledged company
there. Indeed, he brought that lot of stuff on the table from
the guest room waste basket. As you see, there are bits of
jewellery and a lot of beads and such odds and ends. Those
are the things a demented person throws away. Also, there
are bits of the waistcoats that have been so much talked
about. Well, we came to the conclusion that there was
another inmate of that house beside Alma Remsen. Some
relative or friend she was shielding, or perhaps the nurse
or her daughter. Again, it might be a man, say, an unacknowledged
brother or cousin, whose very existence had
been kept secret. Anyway, there was a very decided
mystery to be unravelled at Whistling Reeds. But then,
Posy May’s stories and Jennie’s, too, brought it all back
to Alma herself, and while we hated to do it we had to
find out. And the surest way was through Doctor Rogers.
So I telegraphed him at a dozen or more different places
where he might possibly be found, and one of them hit
its mark.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_265">[265]</div>
<p>Keeley drew a telegram from his pocket and passed it
over to me. It sounded cryptic, for it ran thus:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>YES A R VICTIM OF D P RECORDS IN MY SAFE LINCOLN
HOLDS KEY.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“And so,” March said, rising, “we are just going over
to the office of Doctor Rogers to investigate the matter.
You may go or not, as you wish.”</p>
<p>“Don’t go, Gray,” Lora said, gently. “It is not necessary
and will only cause you suffering. Keeley will tell
you all when he comes back. You stay here with me.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Lora, dear,” I said, “but I must go. I
must know every development as it takes place. I’m a
little dazed with this news from the doctor, but I can’t
help feeling there’s a mistake somewhere. It can’t be
that Alma——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_266">[266]</div>
<p>I stopped suddenly, for I remembered seeing her on
the lake that night, and hearing her say afterward that
she never went on the lake in the evening. Then, when she
had these attacks, she acted without knowledge of what
she was doing. If she had, under these conditions, killed
her uncle, she was of course in no way responsible, and
would not be held so.</p>
<p>Maud and Lora looked sorrowfully after us, and we
three went down the path to the drive and got into
Keeley’s car.</p>
<p>At Doctor Rogers’s office we found his assistant in
charge. He had but a few of the doctor’s cases to look
after and these were the simpler ones. Serious matters
had been placed in the hands of more skilled practitioners,
and some few important ones, we were told,
were given over to specialists.</p>
<p>March showed him the telegram and asked what it
meant.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Doctor Greenway, a pleasant-faced young
man, “I guess I can help you out on that. My orders are to
meet the wishes of any one bringing a telegram couched in
that language. As you have doubtless deduced,” he smiled
at the detective, “it means the key to the safe is hidden——”</p>
<p>“Behind Lincoln’s picture,” cried Kee, before March
could speak.</p>
<p>“Yes,” smiled the young man, his eyes following ours
to the large engraving of Lincoln on the wall.</p>
<p>He stepped up on a chair, turned the frame from the
wall a little, and from an envelope pasted on the back of
the picture he extracted a paper.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_267">[267]</div>
<p>“This is the combination,” he explained, “which is
what he means by key.”</p>
<p>Following the message on the paper, he twirled the
dials, and soon opened the safe.</p>
<p>“I will leave you to your investigations,” he said. “This
must be an important matter, or Doctor Rogers wouldn’t
have sent that information. Those are his case books, I
leave them in your charge. When you are finished with
them I will return and close the safe again. I shall be in
the next room.”</p>
<p>He went out and closed the door, and we looked into the
safe, wondering what secret it would divulge.</p>
<p>So well was everything labelled and indexed that we
had no trouble at all in finding the pages marked Remsen.</p>
<p>Keeley and March did the research work, I sitting idly
by, but alert to learn their findings.</p>
<p>In a moment, I saw the utmost surprise and excitement
manifest on their faces. They read from the same page,
silently, eagerly, and then Keeley lifted his head, and
with a look of pure joy on his face cried out:</p>
<p>“Take heart, Gray, Alma is all right!”</p>
<p>My heart almost stopped beating. I couldn’t speak, but
my whole soul seemed to go out in a great prayer of
gratitude that swallowed up all other emotion. I did not
hasten them or beg for further disclosures; I knew they
would come in good time.</p>
<p>At last they gave over reading and turned to look at
one another with nods of understanding.</p>
<p>Then Keeley turned to me, and said, concisely:</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_268">[268]</div>
<p>“Gray, the dementia praecox patient is not Alma, but
her sister—her twin sister, Alda. This twin did not die
as a child, but lived, afflicted with this terrible disease.
The mother of the little girl was so overcome with grief
and shame, that she pretended the child had died, and had
the little grave made to give credence to the story.”</p>
<p>“Alda?” I said, dully, not quite taking it in. “That isn’t
a name——”</p>
<p>“It is the name of Alma’s twin, anyway,” March said,
grasping me by the shoulder, none too gently. “Wake up,
man, you have something to live for now! Listen to me.
Alma’s twin sister is in the house at Whistling Reeds, and
has been there all the time. While their mother was alive
she kept the girls at Pleasure Dome, Alma openly and
Alda secretly. No one knew of the sister’s existence except
the three Merivales and Griscom and Mrs. Fenn.</p>
<p>“They were bound to secrecy by Sampson Tracy, and
he knew how to command obedience. Of course, Tracy and
Alma knew all. Then, when Alma’s mother died, she left
Alda as a sacred trust, and Alma has devoted her life to
the afflicted twin. You see, Alda is normal and sane the
greater part of the time. But she cannot be allowed to
know people for there is no telling when the spasms will
come on. And when they do there is no treatment necessary
save to control and soothe her. The Merivales, with
Alma, look after that, and much of the time the two girls
are together.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_269">[269]</div>
<p>“Now, you see the truth of March’s deductions that
there was another inmate of the Whistling Reeds’ house,”
Keeley said. “Where they keep her, I don’t know,
but——”</p>
<p>“Let’s go right over there,” March suggested. “It’s only
fair to end Miss Alma’s misery and suspense as soon as
possible.”</p>
<p>Still dazed and wondering, I watched the others recall
Doctor Greenway and give him back the paper he had
produced, and then we went away—back to Keeley’s
place, and into a boat and over to Whistling Reeds with
all possible speed.</p>
<p>The glum boatmaster greeted us surlily, as usual, but
March paid no attention and made straight for the house.</p>
<p>His ring was answered by Merry herself, and she
looked very perturbed and anxious.</p>
<p>“I’m glad you’ve come, gentlemen,” she said. “We are
in great trouble.”</p>
<p>It was then that I took the helm. As Alma’s fiancé, for
I so considered myself, it was my right and my duty to
take matters in charge.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Merivale,” I said, simply, “we know all about
Miss Alda.”</p>
<p>She staggered back a step and then a look of relief
passed over her strong, gaunt face.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” she said, apparently accustomed to accept
the word of her superiors. “Then you can advise us, sir.
Miss Alda is took very bad.”</p>
<p>“Do you want a doctor?” asked March, hurriedly.</p>
<p>“No, sir, a doctor can do nothing—nothing at all.”</p>
<p>“What can we do?” Keeley asked, eagerly.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_270">[270]</div>
<p>“I don’t know yet—perhaps if you’d just wait down
here, till I see how she is now——”</p>
<p>“Merry,” called a man’s voice from upstairs, and she
hurried away.</p>
<p>I recognized the tones of John Merivale and I did not
offer to go upstairs with the nurse, knowing she would
call us, if necessary.</p>
<p>I longed to be with Alma, to comfort and care for her,
but I could not intrude uninvited.</p>
<p>But after we had waited perhaps a half hour, Alma
came downstairs and out to the porch where we sat.</p>
<p>She was composed, but with a new sadness in her eyes
and a new droop to her lovely lips.</p>
<p>“I will tell you all,” she said, quietly, as she sat down,
opposite to the three of us. “Since you know of my sister’s
existence, there is no more occasion for secrecy.”</p>
<p>“Take it easy, Miss Remsen,” said March, with well-meant
kindness, and Keeley rose, and then went and sat
beside her.</p>
<p>I had an instant’s flash of jealousy, then realized it was
better so. This ordeal had to be gone through with, and
were I near her, I should have been unable to resist the
impulse to clasp her in my arms in spite of the others’
presence.</p>
<p>Kee seemed to give her courage by his sympathy, and
she began her story.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_271">[271]</div>
<p>“I am so alone,” she prefaced it, “that I must tell it
all in my own way. It is a strange story, but here are the
facts. When my sister and I had scarlet fever, she did not
die, but she at that time began to show symptoms of
dementia praecox. My mother learned this, and knew the
inevitable progress and end of the malady. So she declared
that her little girl was dead to her and dead to the world,
and should remain so, apparently. She therefore, with the
knowledge and permission of Uncle Sampson, pretended
that the child had died, and ever after kept her hidden
from all but the few servants who knew about it. Uncle
Sampson was very kind; I learned later that he thought
my mother demented also and that’s why he humoured
her so. But she was not, Doctor Rogers will tell you that.
The years went by, and while my mother made a pretense
of sorrowing for her dead child and often visited the little
grave, she had great solace in taking care of my twin,
Alda, and doing everything to make her life happy and
pleasant. At Pleasure Dome, the grounds and house are so
enormous it was not difficult to keep up the pretence and
all went well until my mother died. As she left Alda to
me, with an injunction to guard her as my life, I have
tried to do all I could to obey her wishes. And I managed
beautifully until Uncle Sampson wanted to marry and
bring a wife home. There was only one thing to do, so we
did it. I moved over to this secluded spot, and lived here,
keeping Alda’s existence still a secret. The trouble came
when Uncle Sampson determined to tell Mrs. Dallas about
Alda. Uncle thought it dishonourable not to tell her, and
I feared if she knew it, the secret would be a secret no
longer. Uncle and I quarrelled about this, the last time I
ever saw him.”</p>
<p>Emotion almost overcame Alma at this point, but she
bravely controlled herself and went on.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_272">[272]</div>
<p>“I told Merry about the quarrel, and Alda chanced to
overhear me. You must realize that when she is not in the
attacks of dementia she is as sane as you or I. But she got
it into her head that Uncle Sampson had offended or
injured me, and she resolved, I’ve learned from her since,
that she would avenge that insult. Never before had she
been inclined to homicidal mania, never did we think of
her as becoming menacing or dangerous—Doctor Rogers
would not have left her except that he thought she would
go right along as she has been for years. A fit of fierce
anger now and then, or a mad tempest of rage and foolish
actions, always followed by a period of exhaustion and
many days of languor. But this time, the disease took a
new turn, and Alda went over to Pleasure Dome, taking
my key to let herself in. Like all unbalanced brains, hers
has a crafty slyness and she is very cunning when she
wishes to be. She, I know now, for she has told me, read
a story about a man who was killed by a nail driven in his
head. Her poor, distorted mind chose to imitate that act,
and she took with her a nail and a mallet. She did kill
Uncle Sampson, as he slept, she put all those strange things
round about him, she threw his watch in the water pitcher—she
is always throwing things away—and then she took
the waistcoats, which she coveted, for her fancy work, the
Totem Pole, which she admired, and finding his door
locked—she had locked it herself—she stepped up on the
window sill and dived into the lake. She is a perfect
mermaid in the water; she can dive anywhere and swim
for any length of time and under any conditions.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_273">[273]</div>
<p>“She had thrown out the waistcoats first?” asked
March.</p>
<p>“Had she? I daresay. She was a little lame just then,
having twisted her ankle a bit, but she swam to her canoe,
got in it and paddled home in safety.”</p>
<p>“You didn’t miss her while she was absent?” Keeley
inquired, interestedly.</p>
<p>“No, indeed. She hadn’t been out at night lately, though
at one time she did have the habit. She usually occupies
the guest room, but when I have friends staying here, we
keep her in a room in the third story. It is a pleasant room,
but soundproof and securely barred. She was there during
the funeral.”</p>
<p>“Then you knew nothing of the tragedy until next
day?”</p>
<p>“Nothing. And even then, when Mrs. Fenn called up
and told me, I didn’t think of Alda. I supposed it was
heart failure or apoplexy. But when I learned of the nail
I suspected the truth, and later, Alda told me all. She has
no regret—I mean, her sense of right and wrong is so
clouded now that she cannot think clearly. Her mentality
has dwindled rapidly of late, and even now—she is sleeping
after a sedative—I think she will not recover her mind
to the extent of sanity she has shown of late. I’m not sure
I am telling you this so you can understand it, but I am so
stunned, so dazed to think the time has come to tell it,
that I want only to tell it truthfully and all at once, I don’t
want to have to go over it again——”</p>
<p>Merivale appeared in the doorway.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_274">[274]</div>
<p>“Miss Alma,” she said, gravely, and in solemn tone,
“Miss Alda is going.”</p>
<p>Alma rose, not hastily, but with a sweet dignity, and
turning to me, said: “Come with me, Gray.”</p>
<p>It was like a chrism; I felt sanctified to be chosen to
stand at her side in this supreme moment.</p>
<p>The others followed us, but I did not know it then.</p>
<p>Alma and I went up the stairs together and she turned
toward the guest room.</p>
<p>There on the bed lay the counterpart of my own darling.
I knew now that it was Alda whom I had seen that night
in the canoe; it was Alda whom Posy May and her
friends had seen in tantrums with the nurse, it was Alda
who—poor demented, irresponsible child—had killed
Sampson Tracy, in blind imitation of the story she had
read about the nail.</p>
<p>She was beautiful, even as Alma was beautiful, but the
light in her eyes was not the light of reason, rather the
weird light of visions seen by a deficient mentality. But
even as we looked, the restless eyes closed, the restless
body subsided into stillness, and a coma set in, from which
Alda Remsen never awakened.</p>
<p>We sent for a doctor, but there was nothing to be done,
and though she lingered for two days, the spirit was at
last set free, Alda was released, and Alma’s long and
ghastly term of servitude was over.</p>
<p>It has ever since been my pleasure and duty to bring
only sunshine into that life that knew no real sunshine
for many long years.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_275">[275]</div>
<p>Alma felt she never wanted to see Pleasure Dome again,
so the place was sold and we travelled in many lands, returning
at last to found a home far removed from any
memories of painful association.</p>
<p>The Moores are still our dearest friends, and the Merivales
our staunch henchmen and caretakers; while Alma
and I, sufficient to one another, take for our motto:
“All for Love, and the World Well Lost!”</p>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">THE END</span></p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_276">[276]</div>
<p class="tb"><i>The greatest pleasure in life is
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<p><i>In buying the books bearing the
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<br/><b>Big Timber.</b> Bertrand W. Sinclair.
<br/><b>Bill—The Sheik.</b> A. M. Williamson.
<br/><b>Black Abbot, The.</b> Edgar Wallace.
<br/><b>Black Bartlemy’s Treasure.</b> Jeffery Farnol.
<br/><b>Black Buttes.</b> Clarence E. Mulford.
<br/><b>Black Flemings, The.</b> Kathleen Norris.
<br/><b>Black Oxen.</b> Gertrude Atherton.
<br/><b>Blatchington Tangle, The.</b> G. D. H. & Margaret Cole.
<br/><b>Blue Car Mystery, The.</b> Natalie Sumner Lincoln.
<br/><b>Blue Castle, The.</b> L. M. Montgomery.
<br/><b>Blue Hand.</b> Edgar Wallace.
<br/><b>Blue Jay, The.</b> Max Brand.
<br/><b>Bob, Son of Battle.</b> Alfred Ollivant.
<br/><b>Box With Broken Seals.</b> E. Phillips Oppenheim.
<br/><b>Brass.</b> Charles G. Norris.
<br/><b>Bread.</b> Charles G. Norris.
<br/><b>Breaking Point, The.</b> Mary Roberts Rinehart.
<br/><b>Bright Shawl, The.</b> Joseph Hergesheimer.
<br/><b>Bring Me His Ears.</b> Clarence E. Mulford.
<br/><b>Broad Highway, The.</b> Jeffery Farnol.
<br/><b>Broken Waters.</b> Frank L. Packard.
<br/><b>Bronze Hand, The.</b> Carolyn Wells.
<br/><b>Brood of the Witch Queen.</b> Sax Rohmer.
<br/><b>Brown Study, The.</b> Grace S. Richmond.
<br/><b>Buck Peters, Ranchman.</b> Clarence E. Mulford.
<br/><b>Bush Rancher, The.</b> Harold Bindloss.
<br/><b>Buster, The.</b> William Patterson White.
<br/><b>Butterfly.</b> Kathleen Norris.
<br/><b>Cabbages and Kings.</b> O. Henry.
<br/><b>Callahans and the Murphys.</b> Kathleen Norris.
<br/><b>Calling of Dan Matthews.</b> Harold Bell Wright.
<br/><b>Cape Cod Stories.</b> Joseph C. Lincoln.
<br/><b>Cap’n Dan’s Daughter.</b> Joseph C. Lincoln.
<br/><b>Cap’n Eri.</b> Joseph C. Lincoln.
<br/><b>Cap’n Warren’s Wards.</b> Joseph C. Lincoln.
<br/><b>Cardigan.</b> Robert W. Chambers.
<br/><b>Carnac’s Folly.</b> Sir Gilbert Parker.
<br/><b>Case and the Girl, The.</b> Randall Parrish.
<br/><b>Case Book of Sherlock Holmes, The.</b> A. Conan Doyle.
<br/><b>Cat’s Eye, The.</b> R. Austin Freeman.
<br/><b>Celestial City, The.</b> Baroness Orczy.
<br/><b>Certain People of Importance.</b> Kathleen Norris.
<br/><b>Cherry Square.</b> Grace S. Richmond.
<br/><b>Child of the North.</b> Ridgwell Cullum.
<br/><b>Child of the Wild.</b> Edison Marshall.
<br/><b>Club of Masks, The.</b> Allen Upward.
<br/><b>Cinema Murder, The.</b> E. Phillips Oppenheim.
<br/><b>Clouded Pearl, The.</b> Berta Ruck.
<br/><b>Clue of the New Pin, The.</b> Edgar Wallace.
<br/><b>Coming of Cassidy, The.</b> Clarence E. Mulford.
<br/><b>Coming of Cosgrove, The.</b> Laurie Y. Erskine.
<br/><b>Comrades of Peril.</b> Randall Parrish.
<br/><b>Conflict.</b> Clarence Budington Kelland.
<br/><b>Conquest of Canaan, The.</b> Booth Tarkington.
<br/><b>Constant Nymph, The.</b> Margaret Kennedy.
<br/><b>Contraband.</b> Clarence Budington Kelland.
<br/><b>Corsican Justice.</b> J. G. Sarasin.
<br/><b>Cottonwood Gulch.</b> Clarence E. Mulford.
<br/><b>Court of Inquiry, A.</b> Grace S. Richmond.
<h2><span class="small">Transcriber’s Notes</span></h2>
<ul><li>Copyright notice provided as in the original—this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.</li>
<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li></ul>
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