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
âCan I do anything?â asked Lord Peter.
âOh, no, thanksâ âvery decent of you, but itâll pan out all right in time.â
âThis isnât a bad salmis,â said Lord Peter.
âIâve eaten worse,â admitted his friend.
âWhat about those Argentines?â inquired Lord Peter. âHere, waiter, thereâs a bit of cork in my glass.â
âCork?â cried the Honourable Freddy, with something approaching animation; âyouâll hear about this, waiter. Itâs an amazing thing a fellow whoâs paid to do the job canât manage to take a cork out of a bottle. What you say? Argentines? Gone all to hell. Old Levy bunkinâ off like thatâs knocked the bottom out of the market.â
âYou donât say so,â said Lord Peter. âWhat dâyou suppose has happened to the old man?â
âCursed if I know,â said the Honourable Freddy; âknocked on the head by the bears, I should think.â
âPârâaps heâs gone off on his own,â suggested Lord Peter. âDouble life, you know. Giddy old blighters, some of these City men.â
âOh, no,â said the Honourable Freddy, faintly roused; âno, hang it all, Wimsey, I wouldnât care to say that. Heâs a decent old domestic bird, and his daughterâs a charminâ girl. Besides, heâs straight enoughâ âheâd do you down fast enough, but he wouldnât let you down. Old Anderson is badly cut up about it.â
âWhoâs Anderson?â
âChap with property out there. He belongs here. He was goinâ to meet Levy on Tuesday. Heâs afraid those railway people will get in now, and then itâll be all U.P.â
âWhoâs runninâ the railway people over here?â inquired Lord Peter.
âYankee blighter, John P. Milligan. Heâs got an option, or says he has. You canât trust these brutes.â
âCanât Anderson hold on?â
âAnderson isnât Levy. Hasnât got the shekels. Besides, heâs only one. Levy covers the groundâ âhe could boycott Milliganâs beastly railway if he liked. Thatâs where heâs got the pull, you see.â
âBâlieve I met the Milligan man somewhere,â said Lord Peter, thoughtfully. âAinât he a hulking brute with black hair and a beard?â
âYouâre thinkinâ of somebody else,â said the Honourable Freddy. âMilligan donât stand any higher than I do, unless you call five-feet-ten hulkingâ âand heâs bald, anyway.â
Lord Peter considered this over the Gorgonzola. Then he said: âDidnât know Levy had a charminâ daughter.â
âOh, yes,â said the Honourable Freddy, with an elaborate detachment. âMet her and Mamma last year abroad. Thatâs how I got to know the old man. Heâs been very decent. Let me into this Argentine business on the ground floor, donât you know?â
âWell,â said Lord Peter, âyou might do worse. Moneyâs money, ainât it? And Lady Levy is quite a redeeminâ point. At least, my mother knew her people.â
âOh, sheâs all right,â said the Honourable Freddy, âand the old manâs nothing to be ashamed of nowadays. Heâs self-made, of course, but he donât pretend to be anything else. No side. Toddles off to business on a 96 bus every morning. âCanât make up my mind to taxis, my boy,â he says. âI had to look at every halfpenny when I was a young man, and I canât get out of the way of it now.â Though, if heâs takinâ his family out, nothingâs too good. Rachelâ âthatâs the girlâ âalways laughs at the old manâs little economies.â
âI suppose theyâve sent for Lady Levy,â said Lord Peter.
âI suppose so,â agreed the other. âIâd better pop round and express sympathy or somethinâ, what? Wouldnât look well not to, dâyou think? But itâs deuced awkward. What am I to say?â
âI donât think it matters much what you say,â said Lord Peter, helpfully. âI should ask if you can do anything.â
âThanks,â said the lover, âI will. Energetic young man. Count on me. Always at your service. Ring me up any time of the day or night. Thatâs the line to take, donât you think?â
âThatâs the idea,â said Lord Peter.
Mr. John P. Milligan, the London representative of the great Milligan railroad and shipping company, was dictating code cables to his secretary in an office in Lombard Street, when a card was brought up to him, bearing the simple legend:
Lord Peter Wimsey
Marlborough Club
Mr. Milligan was annoyed at the interruption, but, like many of his nation, if he had a weak point, it was the British aristocracy. He postponed for a few minutes the elimination from the map of a modest but promising farm, and directed that the visitor should be shown up.
âGood afternoon,â said that nobleman, ambling genially in, âitâs most uncommonly good of you to let me come round wastinâ your time like this. Iâll try not to be too long about it, though Iâm not awfully good at cominâ to the point. My brother never would let me stand for the county, yâknowâ âsaid I wandered on so nobodyâd know what I was talkinâ about.â
âPleased to meet you, Lord Wimsey,â said Mr. Milligan. âWonât you take a seat?â
âThanks,â said Lord Peter, âbut Iâm not a peer, you knowâ âthatâs my brother Denver. My nameâs Peter. Itâs a silly name, I always think, so old-world and full of homely virtue and that sort of thing, but my godfathers and godmothers in my baptism are responsible for that, I suppose, officiallyâ âwhich is rather hard on them, you know, as they didnât actually choose it. But we always have a Peter, after the third duke, who betrayed five kings somewhere about the Wars of the Roses, though come to think of it, it ainât anything to be proud of. Still, one has to make the best of it.â
Mr. Milligan, thus ingeniously placed at that disadvantage which attends ignorance, manoeuvred for position, and offered his interrupter a Corona Corona.
âThanks, awfully,â said Lord Peter, âthough you really mustnât tempt me to stay here burblinâ all afternoon. By Jove, Mr. Milligan, if you offer people such comfortable chairs and cigars like these, I wonder they donât come anâ live in your office.â He added mentally: âI wish to goodness I could get those long-toed boots off you. Howâs a man to know the size of your feet? And a head like a potato. Itâs enough to make one swear.â
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