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Red aces : $b Being three cases of Mr. Reeder
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
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- 409 KB
Description
"Red aces: Being three cases of Mr. Reeder" by Edgar Wallace presents a series of detective stories centered on the character of J.G. Reeder, a police official in early 20th-century London. The collection features three distinct cases involving complex crimes rooted in financial deception, murder, and personal motives. The first case involves a reclusive man's mysterious death, cryptic clues involving playing cards, and complicated relationships among a bank clerk, a woman named Margot Lynn, and a clubman named Rufus Machfield. The narrative begins with a snowy, ominous scene that sets a tone of suspense linked to romantic jealousy and suspicion, highlighting Reeder’s methodical approach to unraveling the crime.
Set within the context of British detective fiction of the early 1900s, the stories reflect the period's focus on logical deduction and meticulous investigation. Wallace’s work exemplifies the genre’s emphasis on clever plotting and character-driven mysteries, often involving themes of greed, betrayal, and social intrigue, characteristic of the era's crime literature.
Set within the context of British detective fiction of the early 1900s, the stories reflect the period's focus on logical deduction and meticulous investigation. Wallace’s work exemplifies the genre’s emphasis on clever plotting and character-driven mysteries, often involving themes of greed, betrayal, and social intrigue, characteristic of the era's crime literature.
From the opening pages
When a young man is very much in love with a most attractive girl he is apt to endow her with qualities and virtues which no human being has ever possessed. Yet at rare and painful intervals there enter into his soul certain wild suspicions, and in these moments he is inclined to regard the possibility that she may be guilty of the basest treachery and double dealing. Everybody knew that Kenneth McKay was desperately in love. They knew it at the bank where he spent his days in counting other people’s money, and a considerable amount of his lunch hour writing impassioned and ill-spelt letters to Margot Lynn. His taciturn father, brooding over his vanished fortune in his gaunt riverside house at Marlow, may have employed the few moments he gave to the consideration of other people’s troubles in consideration of his son’s new interest. Probably he did not, for George McKay was entirely self-centred and had little thought but for the folly which had dissipated the money he had accumulated with such care, and the development of fantastical schemes for its recovery. All day long, summer and winter, he sat in his study, a pack of cards before him, working out averages and what he called “inherent probabilities,” or at a small roulette wheel, where, alternately, he spun and recorded the winning numbers. Kenneth went over to Beaconsfield every morning on his noisy motor-bicycle and came back every night, sometimes very late, because Margot lived in London. She had a small flat where she could not receive him, but they dined together at the cheaper restaurants and sometimes saw a play. Kenneth was a member of an inexpensive London club which sheltered at least one sympathetic soul. Except Mr. Rufus Machfield, the confident in question, he had no friends. “And let me advise you not to make any here,” said Rufus. He was a military-looking man of forty-five, and most people found him rather a bore, for the views which he expressed so vehemently, on all subjects from politics to religion, which are the opposite ends of the ethical pole, he had acquired that morning from the leading article of his favourite daily. Yet he was a genial person and a likeable man. He had a luxurious flat in Park Lane, a French valet, a couple of hacks which he rode in the park, and no useful occupation.
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