Nick Carter Stories No. 141, May 22, 1915: The duplicate night by Nicholas Carter et al.
Pulled from the pages of a 1915 dime magazine, 'The Duplicate Night' throws legendary detective Nick Carter into one of his strangest cases yet. When a wealthy art collector named Mr. Van Rensselaer discovers his most prized painting missing, he calls Carter in a panic. The study was locked, the windows secure, and the only guard was his faithful dog—who didn't make a sound. The scene is a classic locked-room puzzle.
The Story
The mystery deepens when Carter examines the empty frame. The painting isn't just gone; it's been replaced. A near-perfect copy now hangs in its spot. This isn't a simple robbery. It's a brazen act of artistry and theft combined. Carter's investigation leads him into the shadowy world of high-stakes art dealing, where he encounters a gallery owner with suspicious connections and rumors of a master forger known only by his reputation. The trail involves secret compartments, a suspiciously quiet night watchman, and the realization that the thief needed not just skill, but intimate knowledge of the house and its routines. The solution hinges on a clever deception that plays on perception and a criminal who understood that sometimes, the best way to hide something is to leave something almost identical in its place.
Why You Should Read It
Reading this is like watching the blueprint for a century of detective fiction. Nick Carter is all action and deduction—no brooding, just relentless problem-solving. The charm isn't in complex character development, but in the sheer ingenuity of the plot. You can feel the urgency of the weekly serial, designed to hook readers and deliver a satisfying 'aha!' moment by the end. It's fascinating to see the tropes we know today—the locked room, the clever substitution, the dog that didn't bark—in their raw, early form. The story is a direct line to what entertained people over a hundred years ago: a clear puzzle, a brilliant hero, and a clever villain.
Final Verdict
This one's for the curious reader and the detective fiction fan who wants to explore the roots of the genre. It's perfect for a lazy afternoon, a commute, or anyone who enjoys a short, smart mystery that doesn't overstay its welcome. Don't go in expecting deep prose or modern sensibilities. Go in for the fun of a classic brain-teaser, a snapshot of pre-war popular culture, and the simple pleasure of watching a master detective at work. Think of it as a historical artifact that's still genuinely entertaining.
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