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Freeman, R. Austin (Richard Austin), 1862-1943

"The Vanishing Man"

Then Mr. Hurst said he thought Mr. Bellingham must
have got tired of waiting and gone away; but I told him I was quite sure
he hadn't, because I had been watching all the time. Then he asked me if
Mr. Bellingham was alone or whether his daughter was with him, and I
said that it wasn't that Mr. Bellingham at all, but Mr. John Bellingham,
and then he was more surprised than ever. I said we had better search
the house to make sure whether he was there or not, and Mr. Hurst said
he would come with me; so we went all over the house and looked in all
the rooms, but there was not a sign of Mr. Bellingham in any of them.
Then Mr. Hurst got very nervous and upset, and when he had just snatched
a little dinner he ran off to catch the six-thirty train up to town."
"You say that Mr. Bellingham could not have left the house because you
were watching all the time. Where were you while you were watching?"
"I was in the kitchen. I could see the front gate from the kitchen
window."
"You say that you laid the table for two.


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