Swirling Waters, by Max 
Rittenberg 
 
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Title: Swirling Waters 
Author: Max Rittenberg 
Release Date: July 8, 2006 [EBook #18789] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SWIRLING 
WATERS *** 
 
Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
SWIRLING WATERS 
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
THE MIND-READER, BEING SOME PAGES FROM THE LIFE OF 
DR XAVIER WYCHERLEY, PSYCHOLOGIST AND MENTAL 
HEALER. 
THE COCKATOO. 
 
SWIRLING WATERS 
BY 
MAX RITTENBERG 
AUTHOR OF "THE MIND-READER," "THE COCKATOO," ETC. 
SECOND EDITION 
METHUEN & CO. LTD. 36 ESSEX STREET W.C. LONDON 
 
First Published July 3rd 1913 Second Edition August 1913 
 
TO 
MY DEAR MOTHER 
WHOSE ADVICE AND CRITICISM HAVE HELPED SO 
GREATLY IN MY WORK, AND ESPECIALLY IN THE MAKING 
OF THIS BOOK; WHOSE COMPANIONSHIP HAS BEEN A 
CONSTANT INSPIRATION TO ME 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAP. PAGE
I. The Whirlpool 1 
II. A £5,000,000 Deal 7 
III. Shadowed 17 
IV. On the Scent of a Mystery 19 
V. The First Move in the Game 29 
VI. The Beginning of a New Life 42 
VII. A Seat by the Arena 50 
VIII. Who and where is Rivière? 61 
IX. At Monte Carlo 69 
X. Larssen turns another Corner 73 
XI. A Letter From Rivière 83 
XII. The Second Meeting 87 
XIII. At the Maison Carrée 100 
XIV. By the Druids' Tower 107 
XV. Waiting the Verdict 111 
XVI. Only Pity! 123 
XVII. Rivière is Called Back 127 
XVIII. Not Wanted! 138 
XIX. A Throne-Room 148 
XX. Beaten to Earth 153
XXI. The Bolted Door 171 
XXII. The Chameleon Mind 184 
XXIII. Larssen's Man Once Again 197 
XXIV. Confession 205 
XXV. White Lilac 216 
XXVI. A Challenge 221 
XXVII. Women's Weapons 225 
XXVIII. The Counter-Move 235 
XXIX. The Parting 247 
XXX. Heir to a Throne 254 
XXXI. The Reins had Slipped 264 
XXXII. The New Scheme 273 
XXXIII. Larssen's Appeal 278 
XXXIV. On Board the "Starlight" 285 
XXXV. Intervention 297 
XXXVI. Finality 304 
Epilogue 311 
 
SWIRLING WATERS 
CHAPTER I
THE WHIRLPOOL 
On the crucial night of his career, 14 March, 191-, Clifford Matheson, 
financier, was speeding in a taxi-cab to the Gare de Lyon. 
He was a clean-limbed man of thirty-seven. There was usually a look of 
masterfulness in the firm lines of his face, the straight, direct glance, 
the stiff, close-cut moustache. But to-night his eyes were tired, very 
tired. He leant back in a corner of the cab with drooping shoulders as 
though utterly world-weary. 
At the station his wife and father-in-law were looking impatiently for 
his arrival. They stood at the door of their wagon-lit in the Côte d'Azur 
Rapide, searching the crowded platform for him. It was now ten to 
eight, and the express was timed to pull out of the Gare de Lyon at 
eight o'clock sharp. 
"Late again!" growled Sir Francis Letchmere. "Clifford makes a deuced 
casual sort of husband. Bad form, you know!" 
Good form and bad form were the foot-rules by which he measured 
mankind. 
Olive bit her lip. It galled her pride that Clifford should not be early on 
the platform to see to her comforts. The attentions of her father and 
maid did not satisfy her; she wanted Clifford to be there to fetch and 
carry for her. 
Pride was the keynote of her character. It was pride and not love that 
had decided her, five years before, to marry the financier. She had 
admired the way in which he had slashed out for himself his place in 
the world of London and Paris finance, from his humble beginning as a 
clerk in a Montreal broker's office. It ministered to her pride to be the 
wife of a man who had plucked success from the whirlpool of life. As 
to the methods by which he had amassed his money, with these she was 
not concerned. She knew, of course, that there were many who had 
bitter things to say about his methods.
"Probably it's his brother who's delayed him," said Olive, looking for 
an explanation which would salve her amour propre. "They both seem 
to be crazy over their rubbishy scientific experiments." 
"Who's this brother?" 
"I know scarcely anything about him. His name's Rivière--he's a 
half-brother. He turns up unexpectedly from the wilds of Canada, and 
lives like a hermit, so Clifford tells me, in some tumbledown villa 
outside Paris." 
"What's he like?" 
"I've never seen him." 
"What's the scientific experiment?" 
"Clifford told me something about it, but I forgot. I wasn't interested in 
the    
    
		
	
	
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