Arsène Lupin Versus Herlock Sholmes
  • 110
  • 0
  • 9
  • Read 110
  • 0
  • Part 9
Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A fog-choked Paris bleeds into shadowed alleys where a gentleman thief dances with impossible grace. Leblanc doesn’t offer deduction, but a creeping dread as Lupin, a phantom born of smoke and audacity, systematically dismantles the rigid order of Herlock Sholmes’s logic. The air hangs thick with the scent of coal smoke and jasmine, a deceptive sweetness masking the steel traps set for both predator and prey. This isn’t a clash of intellects, but a haunting game played within the decaying grandeur of a city breathing its last. Each chapter unravels like a tightening noose, the reader complicit in the escalating stakes. The narrative doesn’t illuminate, it *obscures*, mirroring Lupin’s own art—a vanishing act performed not with illusion, but with the very fabric of reality. A suffocating elegance permeates the prose, where every stolen glance, every whispered confidence, feels poised on the edge of a precipice. The novel isn’t about *solving* a mystery, but about being lost within one, drowning in the velvet darkness where the boundaries between hunter and hunted dissolve into a single, echoing breath. It's a labyrinth built of obsession, where Sholmes’s icy detachment is met with a seductive, volatile darkness—a darkness that clings to the skin long after the final page is turned.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
More like this
40 Part
A fog-choked New York winter yields not just snow, but a corpse—a wealthy lawyer found shot dead in his locked study, a single playing card, the queen of spades, resting upon his breast. The chill seeps into the grand brownstone of Leavenworth, a house steeped in secrets and shadowed by a family fractured by greed. A web of suspicion tightens around a cast of unsettlingly polite, yet subtly desperate characters: a grieving, yet strangely composed widow; a nephew burdened by debt and ambition; a stoic, watchful butler whose silence feels like a confession. The investigation unfolds not with brute force, but with a meticulous unraveling of domestic rituals, overheard whispers, and the delicate, deceptive language of inheritance. Every polished surface reflects a hidden motive, every shadowed corner a potential crime. The reader is drawn into a claustrophobic dance of deduction, guided by a shrewd, observant narrator who understands that the most damning evidence is often found not in what is said, but in what is *not*. The air hangs heavy with the scent of lilies and regret, the rhythmic tick of grandfather clocks marking the slow decay of trust. As the snow falls and the city darkens, the true horror isn’t the act of murder itself, but the insidious rot of family obligation and the chilling realization that even the most respectable facades conceal a darkness capable of swallowing a man whole. The Leavenworth Case is a study in how easily a life, and a fortune, can be extinguished within the suffocating elegance of a gilded age.
38 Part
A creeping dread clings to the brownstone steps of Brooklyn Heights, thick as the November fog. Cole’s narrative unfolds not as a whodunit, but as a slow bleed of rot into the very foundations of respectability. Each murder—precise, ritualistic, and echoing with the hollow resonance of forgotten things—unearths not clues, but layers of shadowed history within the borough’s brick and iron. The investigation itself becomes a descent into a labyrinth of decaying mansions and gaslit alleys, haunted by the whispers of the dead and the suffocating weight of secrets. The air tastes of brine and old money, tainted by the metallic tang of blood. Rain slicks the cobblestones, reflecting the lamplight in fractured, spectral shapes. Witnesses are not forthcoming with answers, but with averted eyes and mumbled prayers. A suffocating sense of inevitability pervades, as if the killings are not aberrations but the inevitable culmination of a dark covenant made long ago, woven into the very fabric of the city’s ambition. The detective, haunted by visions of his own failures, walks a tightrope between sanity and the abyss, mirroring the city’s descent into a feverish, melancholic dream. Each discovered body is less a crime scene, and more a morbid tableau—a perverse echo of a past tragedy. The narrative doesn’t reveal answers, but exposes the raw, vulnerable nerve of a city built on the bones of its own ghosts, a place where the darkness doesn’t just fall, but *breathes*.
30 Part
A creeping fog clings to the village of King’s Abbots, mirroring the suffocating secrets held within its shadowed lanes. The late Roger Ackroyd, a man of standing, lies dispatched with a silver dagger in his study – a room thick with the scent of old money and unspoken dread. But the true horror isn’t the act itself, but the confession whispered to a bewildered Dr. Sheppard, a man now bound by a pact of silence, a complicity that chills him to the bone. The house itself breathes with a stifled history, each antique object a witness to the decaying morality of its inhabitants. Whispers follow Sheppard through the darkened hallways, hints of illicit affairs, concealed debts, and the simmering resentments of a household poised on the brink of collapse. Every face observed through the leaded windows is a mask concealing a hidden motive. The investigation is a descent into a labyrinth of deception, where the truth is buried beneath layers of polite society and the weight of unconfessed sins. A sense of decay permeates every interaction, a sense that the very foundations of this idyllic village are riddled with rot. The reader is drawn into the suffocating grip of a narrative where every conversation feels like a carefully constructed lie, and the final revelation will leave a lingering chill long after the last page is turned. The darkness doesn’t come from the crime, but from the monstrous humanity that orchestrated it.
37 Part
A suffocating fog clings to the opulent, yet decaying, mansions of post-war New York, mirroring the secrets festering within the Greene family. Within the suffocatingly ornate parlor, a labyrinth of shadowed furniture and dust-motes dancing in weak lamplight, lies the cold, rigid form of the millionaire, Simon Greene. The air itself tastes of old money, bitter regret, and the metallic tang of recent violence. Every polished surface reflects a fractured glimpse of the household—a brittle matriarch draped in mourning silks, a volatile son haunted by gambling debts, a niece with eyes like chipped emeralds, and a devoted secretary who whispers too softly to be believed. The investigation unravels not as a hunt for a killer, but as an excavation of a family’s rot. Each room breathes with suppressed resentments, each object—a misplaced letter, a chipped porcelain doll, a forgotten scent—becomes a morbid clue in a danse macabre of deceit. The narrative clings to the shadows like a creeping vine, thickening with the weight of unspoken accusations and the suffocating pressure of societal expectations. A relentless, almost clinical unraveling of alibis occurs, but the true horror isn't the method of murder, but the chilling realization that every member of this gilded cage possessed both motive and opportunity, their lives woven into a tapestry of suffocating desperation. The Greene house itself is a silent witness, its very architecture seeming to conspire to keep its secrets buried beneath layers of privilege and decay.