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The House Without a Key. Earl Derr BiggersЧитать онлайн книгу.

The House Without a Key - Earl Derr Biggers


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      The House Without a Key

      by Earl Derr Biggers

      ©2021 Wilder Publications, Inc.

      © Can Stock Photo / prometeus

      The House Without A Key is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, locales or institutions is entirely coincidental.

      All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission except for brief quotations for review purposes only.

      Hardcover ISBN 13: 978-1-5154-4836-5

      Trade Paperback ISBN 13: 978-1-5154-4837-2

      E-book ISBN 13: 978-1-5154-4838-9

      Table of Contents

       Kona Weather

       The High Hat

       Midnight On Russian Hill

       A Friend Of Tim’s

       The Blood Of The Winterslips

       Beyond The Bamboo Curtain

       Enter Charlie Chan

       Steamer Day

       At The Reef And Palm

       A Newspaper Ripped In Anger

       The Tree Of Jewels

       Tom Brade The Blackbirder

       The Luggage In Room Nineteen

       What Kaohla Carried

       The Man From India

       The Return Of Captain Cope

       Night Life In Honolulu

       A Cable From The Mainland

       “Good-By, Pete!”

       The Story Of Lau Ho

       The Stone Walls Crumble

       The Light Streams Through

       Moonlight At The Crossroads

       Miss Minerva Winterslip was a Bostonian in good standing, and long past the romantic age. Yet beauty thrilled her still, even the semi-barbaric beauty of a Pacific island. As she walked slowly along the beach she felt the little catch in her throat that sometimes she had known in Symphony Hall, Boston, when her favorite orchestra rose to some new and unexpected height of loveliness.

      It was the hour at which she liked Waikiki best, the hour just preceding dinner and the quick tropic darkness. The shadows cast by the tall cocoanut palms lengthened and deepened, the light of the falling sun flamed on Diamond Head and tinted with gold the rollers sweeping in from the coral reef. A few late swimmers, reluctant to depart, dotted those waters whose touch is like the caress of a lover. On the springboard of the nearest float a slim brown girl poised for one delectable instant. What a figure! Miss Minerva, well over fifty herself, felt a mild twinge of envy—youth, youth like an arrow, straight and sure and flying. Like an arrow the slender figure rose, then fell; the perfect dive, silent and clean.

      Miss Minerva glanced at the face of the man who walked beside her. But Amos Winterslip was oblivious to beauty; he had made that the first rule of his life. Born in the Islands, he had never known the mainland beyond San Francisco. Yet there could be no doubt about it, he was the New England conscience personified—the New England conscience in a white duck suit.

      “Better turn back, Amos,” suggested Miss Minerva. “Your dinner’s waiting. Thank you so much.”

      “I’ll walk as far as the fence,” he said. “When you get tired of Dan and his carryings-on, come to us again. We’ll be glad to have you.”

      “That’s kind of you,” she answered, in her sharp crisp way. “But I really must go home. Grace is worried about me. Of course, she can’t understand. And my conduct is scandalous, I admit. I came over to Honolulu for six weeks, and I’ve been wandering about these islands for ten months.”

      “As long as that?”

      She nodded. “I can’t explain it. Every day I make a solemn vow I’ll start packing my trunks—to-morrow.”

      “And to-morrow never comes,” said Amos. “You’ve been taken in by the tropics. Some people are.”

      “Weak people, I presume you mean,” snapped Miss Minerva. “Well, I’ve never been weak. Ask anybody on Beacon Street.”

      He smiled wanly. “It’s a strain in the Winterslips,” he said. “Supposed to be Puritans, but always sort of yearning toward the lazy latitudes.”

      “I know,” answered Miss Minerva, her eyes on that exotic shore line. “It’s what sent so many of them adventuring out of Salem harbor. Those who stayed behind felt that the travelers were seeing things no Winterslip should look at. But they envied them just the same—or maybe for that very reason.” She nodded. “A sort of gypsy strain. It’s what sent your father over here to set up as a whaler, and got you born so far from home. You know you don’t belong here, Amos. You should be living in Milton or Roxbury, carrying a little green bag and popping into a Boston office every morning.”

      “I’ve often thought it,” he admitted. “And who knows—I might have made something of my life—”

      They had come to a barbed-wire fence, an unaccustomed barrier on that friendly shore. It extended well down on to the beach; a wave rushed up and lapped the final post, then receded.

      Miss Minerva smiled. “Well, this is where Amos leaves off and Dan begins,” she said. “I’ll watch my chance and run around the end. Lucky you couldn’t build it so it moved with the tide.”

      “You’ll find your luggage in your room at Dan’s, I guess,” Amos told her. “Remember what I said about—” He broke off suddenly.


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