[The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson]@TWC D-Link book
The Loudwater Mystery

CHAPTER V
11/28

Mr.
Manley set about it with the firmness of a man preparing himself against a strenuous day.

The frown with which Elizabeth Twitcher's suggestion had puckered his brow faded from it slowly, as the excellence of the chop he was eating soothed him.

Holloway waited on him, and Mr.Manley asked him whether any of the servants had heard anything suspicious in the night.
Holloway assured him that none of them had.
Mr.Manley had just helped himself a second time to eggs and bacon when Wilkins brought in Robert Black, the village constable.

Mr.Manley had seen him in the village often enough, a portly, grave man, who regarded his position and work with the proper official seriousness.

Mr.Manley told him that he had locked the door of the smoking-room and of the library, in order that the scene of the crime might be left undisturbed for examination by the Low Wycombe police.


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