The Crime of the French Café and Other Stories
 The Crime of the French Café

 Nick Carter's Ghost Story

 The Mystery of St. Agnes' Hospital

 

 THE CRIME OF THE FRENCH CAFE 

 

 CHAPTER I. 

 PRIVATE DINING-ROOM "B." 

 There is a well-known French restaurant in the "Tenderloin" district which provides its patrons with small but elegantly appointed private dining-rooms. 

 The restaurant occupies a corner house; and, though its reputation is not strictly first-class in some respects, its cook is an artist, and its wine cellar as good as the best. 

 It has two entrances, and the one on the side street is not well lighted at night. 

 At half-past seven o'clock one evening Nick Carter was standing about fifty yards from this side door. 

 The detective had shadowed a man to a house on the side street, and was waiting for him to come out. 

 The case was a robbery of no great importance, but Nick had taken it to oblige a personal friend, who wished to have the business managed quietly. This affair would not be worth mentioning, except that it led Nick to one of the most peculiar and interesting criminal puzzles that he had ever come across in all his varied experience. 

 While Nick waited for his man he saw a closed carriage stop before the side door of the restaurant. 

 Almost immediately a waiter, bare-headed and wearing his white apron, came hurriedly out of the side door and got into the carriage, which instantly moved away at a rapid rate. 

 This incident struck Nick as being very peculiar. The waiter had acted like a man who was running away. 

 As he crossed the sidewalk he glanced 
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