Lord John in New York
 EPISODE IX 

 THE BELL BUOY 

 

 TO A CERTAIN KING OF A CERTAIN CINEMA COMPANY WHO PUT  "LORD JOHN IN NEW YORK"  ON THE SCREEN 

 

 

 LORD JOHN IN NEW YORK 

 

 EPISODE I 

 THE KEY 

 "More letters and flowers for you, Lord John," said my nurse. 

 Not that I needed a nurse; and, above all things, I needed no more letters or flowers. The waste-paper basket was full. The room smelt like a perfume factory. The mantelpiece and all other receptacles having an army of occupation, vases and bowls were mobilising on the floor. This would, of course, not be tolerated in hospital; but I was off the sick list, recovering in a private convalescent home. I was fed up with being a wounded hero; the fragrance of too many flowers, and the kindness of too many ladies, was sapping and mining my brain power; consequently, I could invent no excuse for escape. 

 The nurse came in, put down the lilies, and gave me three letters. 

 My heart beat, for I was expecting a note from a woman to whom somehow or other I was almost engaged, and to whom I didn't in the least wish to be engaged. She would not have looked at me before the war, when I was only a younger brother of the Marquis of Haslemere—and the author of a successful detective story called The Key. Now, however; simply because I'd dropped a few bombs from a monoplane on to a Zeppelin hangar in Belgium, had been wounded in one arm and two legs, and through sheer instinct of 
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