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The Secret Cipher


A Detective’s Story


Obix:— Nvvy ne hzgfiiozb mrtsg zg 127 Uriv hgivvg.                       Mvw. 

There it was, in italics, half way down the “personal” column of the Herald, conspicuous only for its most aggravating combination of letters and figures, the sole clue to the whereabouts of the game I had been after for over a week, scarcely resting, eating or sleeping in my anxiety to secure the reward offered in a heavy burglary case—and something else. 

That “something else.” Ah! my heart sank within me as I flung aside the enigmatical puzzle before me, and leaned back in my chair, and gave myself up to the gloomy reveries of the past. Edna Dayton—how I loved her! How fair and beautiful as a summer’s idyl had been the weeks in which I had met her, had loved her, and had been told that my affection was returned! How well I remember the bitter parting—a hopeless one, it seemed to me—when I learned my fate from her father’s lips, and passed down the brown stone steps of the Dayton mansion, wondering if the inclination of moneyed men toward stone residences was caused not by the existence of a similar hard material in that part of the human anatomy known as the heart. 

I was a poor man, he said, and the profession of a detective was a precarious one. His daughter loved me—he could not deny that—but she… Read More