The Grell Mystery, by Frank 
Froest 
 
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Title: The Grell Mystery 
Author: Frank Froest 
Release Date: July 30, 2007 [EBook #22173] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
GRELL MYSTERY *** 
 
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THE GRELL MYSTERY 
BY FRANK FROEST
[Illustration: Publisher's logo] 
NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS 
COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY FRANK FROEST 
COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY EDWARD J. CLODE 
 
THE GRELL MYSTERY 
CHAPTER I 
Outside the St. Jermyn's Club the rain pelted pitilessly upon deserted 
pavements. Mr. Robert Grell leaned his arms on the table and stared 
steadily out through the steaming window-panes for a second. His 
shoulders lifted in a shrug that was almost a shiver. 
"It's a deuce of a night," he exclaimed with conviction. 
There was a faint trace of accent in his voice--an almost imperceptible 
drawl, such as might remain in the speech of an American who had 
travelled widely and rubbed shoulders with all sorts and conditions of 
men. 
His companion lifted his eyebrows whimsically and nipped the end 
from a cigar. 
"It is," he agreed. "But the way you put it is more like plain Bob Grell 
of the old days than the polished Mr. Robert Grell, social idol, 
millionaire and diplomat, and winner of the greatest matrimonial prize 
in London." 
Grell tugged at his drooping iron-grey moustache. "That's all right," he 
said. "This is not a meeting of the Royal Society. Here, in my own club, 
I claim the right of every free-born citizen to condemn the weather--or 
anything else--in any language I choose. Great Scott, Fairfield! You 
don't expect me to wear my mantle all the time. I should explode if I
didn't have a safety valve." 
Sir Ralph Fairfield nodded. He understood. For years the two had been 
close friends, and in certain phases of temperament they were much 
alike. Both had tasted deeply of the sweets and hardships of life. Both 
had known the fierce wander-lust that drives men into strange places to 
suffer hunger, thirst, hardship and death itself for the sheer love of the 
game, and both had achieved something more than national fame. 
Fairfield as a fertile writer on ethnography and travel; and Grell equally 
as a daring explorer, and as a man who had made his mark in the 
politics and finance of the United States. More than once he had been 
employed on delicate diplomatic missions for his Government, and 
always he had succeeded. Great things were within his reach when he 
had suddenly announced his intention of giving up business, politics 
and travel to settle in England and lead the life of a gentleman of 
leisure. He had bought a thousand acres in Sussex, and rented a town 
house in Grosvenor Gardens. 
Then he had met Lady Eileen Meredith, daughter of the Duke of 
Burghley. Like others, he had fallen a victim to her grey eyes. The 
piquant beauty, the supple grace, the intangible charm of the girl had 
aroused his desire. A man who always achieved his ends, he set himself 
to woo and win her with fierce impetuosity. He had won. Now he was 
spending his last night of bachelordom at his club. 
A man of about forty-five, he carried himself well and the evening 
dress he wore showed his upright muscular figure to advantage. Every 
movement he made had a swift grace that reminded one irresistibly of a 
tiger, with its suggestion of reserve force. His close-cropped hair and a 
drooping moustache were prematurely grey. He had a trick of looking 
at one through half-closed eyelids that gave the totally erroneous 
impression that he was half asleep. The face was square, the chin 
dogged, the lips, half-hidden by the moustache, thin and tightly pressed 
together. He was the type of man who emerges victor in any contest, 
whether of wits or muscle. Plain and direct when it suited his purpose; 
subtle master of intrigue when subtlety was needed. 
A nervous gust of wind flung the rain fiercely against the window. Sir
Ralph Fairfield uncrossed his knees with care for the scrupulous crease 
in his trousers. 
"You're a great man, Bob," he said slowly. "You take it quite as a 
matter of course that you should win the prettiest girl in the three 
kingdoms." His voice became meditative. "I wonder how married life 
will suit you. You know, you're not altogether the type of a man one 
associates with the domestic hearthstone."    
    
		
	
	
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