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The Master Criminal

Livre numérique


A collection of 12 stories published serially in The Ludgate, London, Jun 1897 to May 1898, in which the criminal mastermind, Felix Gryde, conducts his nefarious criminal work -- theft, kidnapping, ransom, assassination, fraud -- and he never gets caught. The author's introduction:

"The history of famous detectives, imaginary and otherwise, has frequently been written, but the history of a famous criminal—never.

"This is a bold statement, but a true one all the same. The most notorious of rascals know that sooner or later they will be found out, and therefore they plan their lives accordingly. But they are always found out in the end. And yet there must be many colossal rascals who have lived and died apparently in the odour of sanctity. Such a character would be quite new to fiction, and herein I propose to attempt the history of the Sherlock Holmes of malefactors.

"Given a rascal with the intellect of the famous creation in question, and detection would be reduced to a vanishing point. It is the intention of the writer to set down here some of the wonderful adventures that befell Felix Gryde in the course of his remarkable career."

The

Head Of The Caesars (excerpt)

The history of famous detectives, imaginary and

otherwise, has frequently been written, but the history of a famous

criminal—never.

This is a bold statement, but a true one all the

same. The most notorious of rascals know that sooner or later they

will be found out, and therefore they plan their lives accordingly.

But they are always found out in the end. And yet there must be many

colossal rascals who have lived and died apparently in the odour of

sanctity. Such a character would be quite new to fiction, and herein

I propose to attempt the history of the Sherlock Holmes of

malefactors.

Given a rascal with the intellect of the famous

creation in question, and detection would be reduced to a vanishing

point. It is the intention of the writer to set down here some of the

wonderful adventures that befell Felix Gryde in the course of his

remarkable career.

* * * * *

EVERY schoolboy knows the history of the rise and

progress of the Kingdom of Lystria. Forty years ago a clutch of small

independent states in South-Eastern Europe, the lapse of less than

half a century had produced one of the most powerful combinations on

the face of the universe. As everybody also knows, this result was

produced by the genius of a quartette who in their time made more

history than falls to the lot of the most stormy century. For years

they kept the makers of atlases busy keeping pace with the virile

growth of Lystria.

But time brings everything in due course; the aged

makers of Empire laid aside the pen and the sword, and death came at

length to the greatest of the four, even unto Rudolph Caesar, whom

men called Emperor of Lystria. Wires, red-hot with the burden of the

message, flashed the news to the four corners of the earth; column

after column of glowing obituary were thrown together by perspiring

"comps"; Caesar's virtues were trumpeted far and wide. It

was the last sensation he was like to make.

Meanwhile Mantua, the capital of Lystria, had

arranged for a month of extravagant funeral pomp and circumstance

fitting the occasion. The papers teemed with the sombre details. The

laying in state—a matter of eight days— was to be a kind of

glorified Lyceum stage effect. The cold Caesarian clay was to be

given over to no vile earthworm, but had been embalmed without delay.

All this pageant Felix Gryde had read of in the

seclusion of his London lodgings, in Barton Street. The florid

extravagance of the Telegraph awoke in him a vein of

poetic heroism—daring with something Homeric in it. The slight,

quiet-looking man with the pale features and mild blue eyes did not

look unlike the popular conception of a minor poet, save for the fact

that Gryde was clean of garb and kept his hair cut.

A smile trembled about the corners of his

sensitive mouth.

"Here is a chance," he murmured, "for

a really clever soldier of fortune like myself to distinguish

himself. I can see in this the elements of the most remarkable and

daring crime in the history of matters predatory. Here is a handful

of glorified dust guarded night and day by the flower of an army. The

stage is brilliantly lighted, passionate pilgrims are constantly

coming and going. What a thing it would be to steal that body and

hold it up to the ransom of a nation."...

Frederick Merrick White (1859–1935) wrote a number of novels and short stories under the name "Fred M. White" including the six 'Doom of London' science-fiction stories, in which various catastrophes beset London. These include The Four Days' Night (1903), in which London is beset by a massive killer smog; The Dust of Death (1903), in which diphtheria infects the city, spreading from refuse tips and sewers; and The Four White Days (1903), in which a sudden and deep winter paralyses the city under snow and ice. These six stories all first appeared in Pearson's Magazine, and were illustrated by Warwick Goble. He was also a pioneer of the spy story, and in 2003, his series The Romance of the Secret Service Fund (written in 1899) was edited by Douglas G. Greene and published by Battered Silicon Dispatch Box.



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