The Cask by Freeman Wills Crofts (feel good novels .txt) ๐

Description
During the unloading of an Insular and Continental Steam Navigation Company ship arrived from Rouen, the Bullfinch, a cask falls, splits, and reveals its unexpected contents. As the dockworkers try to work out what to do, Mr. Lรฉon Felix arrives and claims the cask as his own. His actions set into motion a complicated trail for the detectives of Londonโs Scotland Yard and Parisโs Sรปretรฉ to follow to the end.
Freeman Wills Crofts was one of many authors writing crime fiction in Britain in the 1920s and 30s, and was a contemporary and acquaintance of both Agatha Christie and Raymond Chandler. The Cask, his first novel, was written during leave from his job as a railway engineer, but its reception was good enough to set Crofts on the course of a further thirty crime novels over his career as an author.
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- Author: Freeman Wills Crofts
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Several steamers were lying in the basin. Immediately behind, with her high bluff bows showing over the Bullfinchโs counter, was the Thrush, his Companyโs largest vessel, due to sail that afternoon for Corunna and Vigo. In the berth in front lay a Clyde Shipping Companyโs boat bound for Belfast and Glasgow and also due out that afternoon, the smoke from her black funnel circling lazily up into the clear sky. Opposite was the Arcturus, belonging to the I. and C.โs rivals, Messrs. Babcock and Millman, and commanded by โBlack Mac,โ so called to distinguish him from the Captain MโTavish of differently coloured hair, โRed Mac,โ who was master of the same Companyโs Sirius. To Broughton these boats represented links with the mysterious, far-off world of romance, and he never saw one put to sea without longing to go with her to Copenhagen, Bordeaux, Lisbon, Spezzia, or to whatever other delightful-sounding place she was bound.
The fore-hatch being open, Broughton climbed down into the hold armed with his notebook, and the unloading of the casks began. They were swung out in lots of four fastened together by rope slings. As each lot was dealt with, the clerk noted the contents in his book, from which he would afterwards check the invoices.
The work progressed rapidly, the men straining and pushing to get the heavy barrels in place for the slings. Gradually the space under and around the hatch was cleared, the casks then having to be rolled forward from the farther parts of the hold.
A quartet of casks had just been hoisted and Broughton was turning to examine the next lot when he heard a sudden shout of โLook out, there! Look out!โ and felt himself seized roughly and pulled backwards. He swung round and was in time to see the four casks turning over out of the sling and falling heavily to the floor of the hold. Fortunately they had only been lifted some four or five feet, but they were heavy things and came down solidly. The two under were damaged slightly and the wine began to ooze out between the staves. The others had had their fall broken and neither seemed the worse. The men had all jumped clear and no one was hurt.
โUpend those casks, boys,โ called the foreman, when the damage had been briefly examined, โand letโs save the wine.โ
The leaking casks were turned damaged end up and lifted aside for temporary repairs. The third barrel was found to be uninjured, but when they came to the fourth it was seen that it had not entirely escaped.
This fourth cask was different in appearance from the rest, and Broughton had noted it as not belonging to Messrs. Norton and Banksโ consignment. It was more strongly made and better finished, and was stained a light oak colour and varnished. Evidently, also, it did not contain wine, for what had called their attention to its injury was a little heap of sawdust which had escaped from a crack at the end of one of the staves.
โStrange looking cask this. Did you ever see one like it before?โ said Broughton to the I. and C. foreman who had pulled him back, a man named Harkness. He was a tall, strongly built man with prominent cheekbones, a square chin and a sandy moustache. Broughton had known him for some time and had a high opinion of his intelligence and ability.
โNever saw nothinโ like it,โ returned Harkness. โI tell you, sir, that there cask โas been made to stand some knocking about.โ
โLooks like it. Letโs get it rolled back out of the way and turned up, so as to see the damage.โ
Harkness seized the cask and with some difficulty rolled it close to the shipโs side out of the way of the unloading, but when he tried to upend it he found it too heavy to lift.
โThereโs something more than sawdust in there,โ he said. โItโs the โeaviest cask ever I struck. I guess it was its weight shifted the other casks in the sling and spilled the lot.โ
He called over another man and they turned the cask damaged end up. Broughton stepped over to the charge hand and asked him to check the tally for a few seconds while he examined the injury.
As he was returning across the half-dozen yards to join the foreman, his eye fell on the little heap of sawdust that had fallen out of the crack, and the glitter of some bright object showing through it caught his attention. He stooped and picked it up. His amazement as he looked at it may be imagined, for it was a sovereign!
He glanced quickly round. Only Harkness of all the men present had seen it.
โTurn the โeap over, sir,โ said the foreman, evidently as surprised as the younger man, โsee if there are any more.โ
Broughton sifted the sawdust through his fingers, and his astonishment was not lessened when he discovered two others hidden in the little pile.
He gazed at the three gold coins lying in his palm. As he did so Harkness gave a smothered exclamation and, stooping rapidly, picked something out from between two of the boards of the holdโs bottom.
โAnother, by gum!โ cried the foreman in low tones, โand another!โ He bent down again and lifted a second object from behind where the cask was standing. โBlest if it ainโt a blooming gold mine weโve struck.โ
Broughton put the five sovereigns in his pocket, as he and Harkness unostentatiously scrutinised the deck. They searched carefully, but found no other coins.
โDid you drop them when I dragged you back?โ asked Harkness.
โI? No, I wish I had, but I had no gold about me.โ
โSome of the other chaps must โave then. Maybe Peters or Wilson. Both jumped just at this
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