[The Daffodil Mystery by Edgar Wallace]@TWC D-Link bookThe Daffodil Mystery CHAPTER XXXIV 1/8
THE ARREST Tarling stooped down and released the cords which bound Milburgh to the couch.
The stout man was white and shaking, and had to be lifted into a sitting position.
He sat there on the edge of the bed, his face in his hands, for five minutes, and the two men watched him curiously.
Tarling had made a careful examination of the cuts on his chest, and was relieved to discover that Ling Chu--he did not doubt that the Chinaman was responsible for Milburgh's plight--had not yet employed that terrible torture which had so often brought Chinese criminals to the verge of madness. Whiteside picked up the clothes which Ling Chu had so systematically stripped from the man's body, and placed them on the bed by Milburgh's side.
Then Tarling beckoned the other into the outer room. "What does it all mean ?" asked Whiteside. "It means," said Tarling grimly, "that my friend, Ling Chu, has been trying to discover the murderer of Thornton Lyne by methods peculiarly Chinese.
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