The Pit-Prop Syndicate by Freeman Wills Crofts (readict books TXT) ๐
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The Pit-Prop Syndicate is a story from the beginning of the golden age of crime fiction. Seymour Merriman, a British wine merchant on business in France, happens upon a syndicate manufacturing pit-propsโbeams used to prop up mine tunnelsโbut his eye is caught by one odd detail: their lorryโs numberplate mysteriously changes. With the help of his friend Hilliard from the Excise department they dig deeper and uncover a dangerous conspiracy.
Freeman Wills Crofts was a civil engineer, turned author of crime fiction. Though somewhat forgotten today, his style was widely appreciated at the time, and still finds fans of those who like a puzzle where all the loose ends are tied up. During his career he wrote over thirty crime novels; The Pit-Prop Syndicate, published in 1922, was his third.
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- Author: Freeman Wills Crofts
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But after a week of depression and self-pity his natural good sense reasserted itself, and he began seriously to consider his position. He honestly believed that Madeleineโs happiness could best be brought about by the fulfilment of his own, in other words by their marriage. He appreciated the motives which had caused her to refuse him, but he hoped that by his continued persuasion he might be able, as he put it to himself, to talk her round. Her very flight from him, for such he believed her absence to be, seemed to indicate that she herself was doubtful of her power to hold out against him, and to this extent he drew comfort from his immediate difficulty.
He concluded before trying any new plan to call once again at the clearing, in the hope that Mr. Coburn at least might have returned. The next afternoon, therefore, saw him driving out along the now familiar road. It was still hot, with the heavy enervating heat of air held stagnant by the trees. The freshness of early summer had gone, and there was a hint of approaching autumn in the darker greenery of the firs, and the overmaturity of such shrubs and wild flowers as could find along the edge of the road a precarious roothold on the patches of ground not covered by pine needles. Merriman gazed unceasingly ahead at the straight white ribbon of the road, as he pondered the problem of what he should do if once again he should be disappointed in his quest. Madeleine could not, he thought, remain indefinitely away. Mr. Coburn at all events would have to return to his work, and it would be a strange thing if he could not obtain from the father some indication of his daughterโs whereabouts.
But his call at the managerโs house was as fruitless on this occasion as on those preceding. The woman from whom he had received the note opened the door and repeated her former statement. Mr. and Miss Coburn were still from home.
Merriman turned away disconsolately, and walked slowly back across the clearing and down the lane. Though he told himself he had expected nothing from the visit, he was nevertheless bitterly disappointed with its result. And worse than his disappointment was his inability to see his next step, or even to think of any scheme which might lead him to the object of his hopes.
He trudged on down the lane, his head sunk and his brows knitted, only half conscious of his surroundings. Looking up listlessly as he rounded a bend, he stopped suddenly as if turned to stone, while his heart first stood still, then began thumping wildly as if to choke him. A few yards away and coming to meet him was Madeleine!
She caught sight of him at the same instant and stopped with a low cry, while an expression of dread came over her face. So for an appreciable time they stood looking at one another, then Merriman, regaining the power of motion, sprang forward and seized her hands.
โMadeleine! Madeleine!โ he cried brokenly. โMy own one! My beloved!โ He almost sobbed as he attempted to strain her to his heart.
But she wrenched herself from him.
โNo, no!โ she gasped. โYou must not! I told you. It cannot be.โ
He pleaded with her, fiercely, passionately, and at last despairingly. But he could not move her. Always she repeated that it could not be.
โAt least tell me this,โ he begged at last. โWould you marry me if this syndicate did not exist; I mean if Mr. Coburn was not mixed up with it?โ
At first she would not answer, but presently, overcome by his persistence, she burst once again into tears and admitted that her fear of disgrace arising through discovery of the syndicateโs activities was her only reason for refusal.
โThen,โ said Merriman resolutely, โI will go back with you now and see Mr. Coburn, and we will talk over what is to be done.โ
At this her eyes dilated with terror.
โNo, no!โ she cried again. โHe would be in danger. He would try something that might offend the others, and his life might not be safe. I tell you I donโt trust Captain Beamish and Mr. Bulla. I donโt think they would stop at anything to keep their secret. He is trying to get out of it, and he must not be hurried. He will do what he can.โ
โBut, my dearest,โ Merriman remonstrated, โit could do no harm, to talk the matter over with him. That would commit him to nothing.โ
But she would not hear of it.
โIf he thought my happiness depended on it,โ she declared, โhe would break with them at all costs. I could not risk it. You must go away. Oh, my dear, you must go. Go, go!โ she entreated almost hysterically, โit will be best for us both.โ
Merriman, though beside himself with suffering, felt he could no longer disregard her.
โI shall go,โ he answered sadly, โsince you require it, but I will never give you up. Not until one of us is dead or you marry someone elseโ โI will never give you up. Oh, Madeleine, have pity and give me some hope; something to keep me alive till this trouble is over.โ
She was beginning to reply when she stopped suddenly and stood listening.
โThe lorry!โ she cried. โGo! Go!โ Then pointing wildly in the direction of the road, she turned and fled rapidly back towards the clearing.
Merriman gazed after her until she passed round a corner of the lane and was lost to sight among the trees. Then, with a weight of hopeless despair on his heart, he began to walk towards the road. The lorry, driven by Henri, passed him at the next bend, and Henri, though he saluted with a show of respect, smiled
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