When Holt encounters Lessingham, he is to say "the Beetle," which would hinder him. The Beetle plans to send Holt to the home of Paul Lessingham, a member of the House of Commons, to steal the letters from the drawer in his desk. After that, the Beetle forces a kiss on Holt, which weakens him. Then the Beetle forces Holt to take off his clothes and put on new ones in exchange for food and shelter. The Beetle takes control of Holt's mind through mesmerism, allowing him to take human form, and then accuses Holt of being a thief and promises to treat him like one. There he finds shelter and meets a monstrous figure, the mysterious Beetle. Denied food and water at a workhouse, he continues to walk in the dark through the rain until he comes upon an abandoned, dilapidated house with an open window. The novel begins by retelling an account of Robert Holt, a clerk who has been searching for a job all day. The Beetle is told from the point of view of four narrators: Robert Holt, Sydney Atherton, Marjorie Lindon, and Augustus Champnell.
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