Whose Body? Dorothy L. Sayers (english books to improve english txt) đ
- Author: Dorothy L. Sayers
Book online «Whose Body? Dorothy L. Sayers (english books to improve english txt) đ». Author Dorothy L. Sayers
âOdd sort of fish, your employer, isnât he?â said the valet, carelessly.
âVery singular, indeed,â said Mr. Bunter. âNow, my dear,â he added, ingratiatingly, to the kitchen-maid, âI wonder if youâd just pour a little of this grey powder over the edge of the bottle while Iâm holding itâ âand the same with this bootâ âhere, at the topâ âthank you, Missâ âwhat is your name? Price? Oh, but youâve got another name besides Price, havenât you? Mabel, eh? Thatâs a name Iâm uncommonly partial toâ âthatâs very nicely done, youâve a steady hand, Miss Mabelâ âsee that? Thatâs the finger marksâ âthree there, and two here, and smudged over in both places. No, donât you touch âem, my dear, or youâll rub the bloom off. Weâll stand âem up here till theyâre ready to have their portraits taken. Now then, letâs take the hairbrush next. Perhaps, Mrs. Pemming, youâd like to lift him up very carefully by the bristles.â
âBy the bristles, Mr. Bunter?â
âIf you please, Mrs. Pemmingâ âand lay him here. Now, Miss Mabel, another little exhibition of your skill, if you please. Noâ âweâll try lampblack this time. Perfect. Couldnât have done it better myself. Ah! thereâs a beautiful set. No smudges this time. Thatâll interest his lordship. Now the little bookâ âno, Iâll pick that up myselfâ âwith these gloves, you see, and by the edgesâ âIâm a careful criminal, Mrs. Pemming, I donât want to leave any traces. Dust the cover all over, Miss Mabel; now this sideâ âthatâs the way to do it. Lots of prints and no smudges. All according to plan. Oh, please, Mr. Graves, you mustnât touch itâ âitâs as much as my place is worth to have it touched.â
âDâyou have to do much of this sort of thing?â inquired Mr. Graves, from a superior standpoint.
âAny amount,â replied Mr. Bunter, with a groan calculated to appeal to Mr. Gravesâs heart and unlock his confidence. âIf youâd kindly hold one end of this bit of linoleum, Mrs. Pemming, Iâll hold up this end while Miss Mabel operates. Yes, Mr. Graves, itâs a hard life, valeting by day and developing by nightâ âmorning tea at any time from 6:30 to 11, and criminal investigation at all hours. Itâs wonderful, the ideas these rich men with nothing to do get into their heads.â
âI wonder you stand it,â said Mr. Graves. âNow thereâs none of that here. A quiet, orderly, domestic life, Mr. Bunter, has much to be said for it. Meals at regular hours; decent, respectable families to dinnerâ ânone of your painted womenâ âand no valeting at night, thereâs much to be said for it. I donât hold with Hebrews as a rule, Mr. Bunter, and of course I understand that you may find it to your advantage to be in a titled family, but thereâs less thought of that these days, and I will say, for a self-made man, no one could call Sir Reuben vulgar, and my lady at any rate is countyâ âMiss Ford, she was, one of the Hampshire Fords, and both of them always most considerate.â
âI agree with you, Mr. Gravesâ âhis lordship and me have never held with being narrow-mindedâ âwhy, yes, my dear, of course itâs a footmark, this is the washstand linoleum. A good Jew can be a good man, thatâs what Iâve always said. And regular hours and considerate habits have a great deal to recommend them. Very simple in his tastes, now, Sir Reuben, isnât he? for such a rich man, I mean.â
âVery simple indeed,â said the cook; âthe meals he and her ladyship have when theyâre by themselves with Miss Rachelâ âwell, there nowâ âif it wasnât for the dinners, which is always good when thereâs company, Iâd be wastinâ my talents and education here, if you understand me, Mr. Bunter.â
Mr. Bunter added the handle of the umbrella to his collection, and began to pin a sheet across the window, aided by the housemaid.
âAdmirable,â said he. âNow, if I might have this blanket on the table and another on a towel-horse or something of that kind by way of a backgroundâ âyouâre very kind, Mrs. Pemming.â ââ ⊠Ah! I wish his lordship never wanted valeting at night. Manyâs the time Iâve sat up till three and four, and up again to call him early to go off Sherlocking at the other end of the country. And the mud he gets on his clothes and his boots!â
âIâm sure itâs a shame, Mr. Bunter,â said Mrs. Pemming, warmly. âLow, I calls it. In my opinion, police-work ainât no fit occupation for a gentleman, let alone a lordship.â
âEverything made so difficult, too,â said Mr. Bunter nobly sacrificing his employerâs character and his own feelings in a good cause; âboots chucked into a corner, clothes hung up on the floor, as they sayâ ââ
âThatâs often the case with these men as are born with a silver spoon in their mouths,â said Mr. Graves. âNow, Sir Reuben, heâs never lost his good old-fashioned habits. Clothes folded up neat, boots put out in his dressing-room, so as a man could get them in the morning, everything made easy.â
âHe forgot them the night before last, though.â
âThe clothes, not the boots. Always thoughtful for others, is Sir Reuben. Ah! I hope nothingâs happened to him.â
âIndeed, no, poor gentleman,â chimed in the cook, âand as for what theyâre sayinâ, that heâd âave gone out surrepshous-like to do something he didnât ought, well, Iâd never believe it of him, Mr. Bunter, not if I was to take my dying oath upon it.â
âAh!â said Mr. Bunter, adjusting his arc-lamps and connecting them with the nearest electric light, âand thatâs more than most of
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