Through the Wall by Cleveland Moffett
page 24 of 459 (05%)
page 24 of 459 (05%)
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"There'll be bigger news soon. Oh, run across to the church and tell
Bonneton that he needn't come either." "I knew it, I knew it," chuckled Papa Tignol, as he trotted off. "There's something doing!" [Illustration: "'I want you,' he said in a low voice."] With this much arranged, Coquenil, after paying for his friend's absinthe, strolled over to a cab stand near the statue of Henri IV and selected a horse that could not possibly make more than four miles an hour. Behind this deliberate animal he seated himself, and giving the driver his address, he charged him gravely not to go too fast, and settled back against the cushions to comfortable meditations. "There is no better way to think out a tough problem," he used to insist, "than to take a very long drive in a very slow cab." It may have been that this horse was not slow enough, for forty minutes later Coquenil's frown was still unrelaxed when they drew up at the Villa Montmorency, really a collection of villas, some dozens of them, in a private park near the Bois de Boulogne, each villa a garden within a garden, and the whole surrounded by a great stone wall that shuts out noises and intrusions. They entered by a massive iron gateway on the Rue Poussin and moved slowly up the ascending Avenue des Tilleuls, past lawns and trees and vine-covered walls, leaving behind the rush and glare of the city and entering a peaceful region of flowers and verdure where Coquenil lived. The detective occupied a wing of the original Montmorency chateau, a habitation of ten spacious rooms, more than enough for himself and his |
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