Editing The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Murder, Vivisection, Conspiracy
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone.
Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
Following the interview with Katie Flynn that appeared in the Evening Times, we were approached by a gentleman claiming to be the Boyar Rulianoff, adoptive father of the current Tsarina. He promised us riches, fame, all the kingdoms of the world if we could deliver Parkhurst's notes to him. He claimed to represent the Tsarina's wishes, and that her scientists had only the good of the world at heart. We demurred--at this point we knew nothing of Gregory Parkhurst, his notes, or the rare condition he called the necrophage. Remember me, urged the Boyar, but disappeared following the success of the Macomb County raid. What connection, if any, did he have with Macomb County? With the Tsarina? With his fellow countrymen doing dark work in a Kansas burrow? Questions abound, and no seems well equipped to supply answers -- not Chief Hart, not the Boyar, not even the stalwart Evening Times -- but answers must come, and soon. | Following the interview with Katie Flynn that appeared in the Evening Times, we were approached by a gentleman claiming to be the Boyar Rulianoff, adoptive father of the current Tsarina. He promised us riches, fame, all the kingdoms of the world if we could deliver Parkhurst's notes to him. He claimed to represent the Tsarina's wishes, and that her scientists had only the good of the world at heart. We demurred--at this point we knew nothing of Gregory Parkhurst, his notes, or the rare condition he called the necrophage. Remember me, urged the Boyar, but disappeared following the success of the Macomb County raid. What connection, if any, did he have with Macomb County? With the Tsarina? With his fellow countrymen doing dark work in a Kansas burrow? Questions abound, and no seems well equipped to supply answers -- not Chief Hart, not the Boyar, not even the stalwart Evening Times -- but answers must come, and soon. | ||
− | ''Published | + | ''Published August 21, 1932'' |
− | [[category: Detroit Evening Times| | + | [[category: Detroit Evening Times|August211932]] |
− | [[category:Documents| | + | [[category:Documents|August211932]] |