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Sant of the Secret Service

William Le Queux

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .I saw Madame Gabrielle leave for the station in the hotel omnibus, the “Italian” following in a cab. So anxious was he to make sure she had gone that, as I heard afterwards, he actually followed her to the train, and did not leave the station until after it had started. Probably his suspicions were lulled by the pretty little Frenchwoman thus leaving the field apparently clear for him; but, be that as it may, he later walked straight into our trap.

Chapter Three. Berlin’s Secret Code.

Towards sundown I wandered along the coast road for some three miles, until I caught sight of a great crooked tree, which stood remote from the road at the head of a narrow cleft, through which a steep track descended to the beach. I had very little doubt, when I had thoroughly examined the place, that it was an ideal spot for the Hun purposes. The pebbly beach sloped steeply into the water; it was evident that deep water c. . . Read More

Community Reviews

The book is quite dry and at time definitely left me with a distinct sense of Hemingway in my mouth. As a look into the mind of a WWI writer it is useful but not a book to have high expectations of.

There's much in this that wouldn't stand up today. Important discoveries are made offstage, new characters pop up out of nowhere, and one plotline lasts for several chapters before ending and being replaced with a new story, so it sits uncomfortably between short story collection and novel. It's an