The last peace Sunday London was to know in many weary months went by,

a tense and anxious day. Early on Monday the fifth letter from the young

man of the Agony Column arrived, and when the girl from Texas read it

she knew that under no circumstances could she leave London now.

It ran: DEAR LADY FROM HOME: I call you that because the word home has for me,

this hot afternoon in London, about the sweetest sound word ever had. I

can see, when I close my eyes, Broadway at midday; Fifth Avenue, gay and

colorful, even with all the best people away; Washington Square, cool

under the trees, lovely and desirable despite the presence everywhere of

alien neighbors from the district to the South. I long for home with an

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ardent longing; never was London so cruel, so hopeless, so drab, in my

eyes. For, as I write this, a constable sits at my elbow, and he and

I are shortly to start for Scotland Yard. I have been arrested as a

suspect in the case of Captain Fraser-Freer's murder!

I predicted last night that this was to be a red-letter day in the

history of that case, and I also saw myself an unwilling actor in the

drama. But little did I suspect the series of astonishing events that

was to come with the morning; little did I dream that the net I have

been dreading would to-day engulf me. I can scarcely blame Inspector

Bray for holding me; what I can not understand is why Colonel Hughes-But you want, of course, the whole story from the beginning; and I shall

give it to you. At eleven o'clock this morning a constable called on

me at my rooms and informed me that I was wanted at once by the Chief

Inspector at the Yard.

We climbed--the constable and I--a narrow stone stairway somewhere at

the back of New Scotland Yard, and so came to the inspector's room.

Bray was waiting for us, smiling and confident. I remember--silly as the

detail is--that he wore in his buttonhole a white rose. His manner of

greeting me was more genial than usual. He began by informing me that

the police had apprehended the man who, they believed, was guilty of the

captain's murder.

"There is one detail to be cleared up," he said. "You told me the other

night that it was shortly after seven o'clock when you heard the sounds

of struggle in the room above you. You were somewhat excited at the

time, and under similar circumstances men have been known to make

mistakes. Have you considered the matter since? Is it not possible that

you were in error in regard to the hour?"




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