The Teeth of the Tiger Maurice Leblanc (best novels of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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âMy dear Perenna, I ask you no questions. I donât want to know how much truth there is in all that is being written about you, or what your real name is. To me, you are Perenna of the Legion, and that is all I care about. Your past began in Morocco. As for the future, I know that, whatever happens and however great the temptation, your only aim will be to revenge Cosmo Mornington and protect his heirs. But thereâs one thing that worries me.â
âSpeak out, Major.â
âGive me your word that you wonât kill this man.â
âTwo months in bed, Major; will that suit you?â
âToo long. A fortnight.â
âDone.â
The two adversaries took up their positions. At the second encounter, the editor of the Echo de France fell, wounded in the chest.
âOh, thatâs too bad of you, Perenna!â growled the Comte dâAstrignac. âYou promised meâ ââ
âAnd Iâve kept my promise, Major.â
The doctors were examining the injured man. Presently one of them rose and said:
âItâs nothing. Three weeksâ rest, at most. Only a third of an inch more, and he would have been done for.â
âYes, but that third of an inch isnât there,â murmured Perenna.
Still followed by the detectivesâ motor cab, Don Luis returned to the Faubourg Saint-Germain; and it was then that an incident occurred which was to puzzle him greatly and throw a most extraordinary light on the article in the Echo de France.
In the courtyard of his house he saw two little puppies which belonged to the coachman and which were generally confined to the stables. They were playing with a twist of red string which kept catching on to things, to the railings of the steps, to the flower vases. In the end, the paper round which the string was wound, appeared. Don Luis happened to pass at that moment. His eyes noticed marks of writing on the paper, and he mechanically picked it up and unfolded it.
He gave a start. He had at once recognized the opening lines of the article printed in the Echo de France. And the whole article was there, written in ink, on ruled paper, with erasures, and with sentences added, struck out, and begun anew.
He called the coachman and asked him:
âWhere does this ball of string come from?â
âThe string, sir? Why, from the harness-room, I think. It must have been that little she-devil of a Mirza whoâ ââ
âAnd when did you wind the string round the paper?â
âYesterday evening, Monsieur.â
âYesterday evening. I see. And where is the paper from?â
âUpon my word, Monsieur, I canât say. I wanted something to wind my string on. I picked this bit up behind the coach-house where they fling all the rubbish of the house to be taken into the street at night.â
Don Luis pursued his investigations. He questioned or asked Mlle. Levasseur to question the other servants. He discovered nothing; but one fact remained: the article in the Echo de France had been written, as the rough draft which he had picked up proved, by somebody who lived in the house or who was in touch with one of the people in the house.
The enemy was inside the fortress.
But what enemy? And what did he want? Merely Perennaâs arrest?
All the remainder of the afternoon Don Luis continued anxious, annoyed by the mystery that surrounded him, incensed at his own inaction, and especially at that threatened arrest, which certainly caused him no uneasiness, but which hampered his movements.
Accordingly, when he was told at about ten oâclock that a man who gave the name of Alexandre insisted on seeing him, he had the man shown in; and when he found himself face to face with Mazeroux, but Mazeroux disguised beyond recognition and huddled in an old cloak, he flung himself on him as on a prey, hustling and shaking him.
âSo itâs you, at last?â he cried. âWell, what did I tell you? You canât make head or tail of things at the police office and youâve come for me! Confess it, you numskull! Youâve come to fetch me! Oh, how funny it all is! Gad, I knew that you would never have the cheek to arrest me, and that the Prefect of Police would manage to calm the untimely ardour of that confounded Weber! To begin with, one doesnât arrest a man whom one has need of. Come, out with it! Lord, how stupid you look! Why donât you answer? How far have you got at the office? Quick, speak! Iâll settle the thing in five seconds. Just tell me about your inquiry in two words, and Iâll finish it for you in the twinkling of a bedpost, in two minutes by my watch. Well, you were sayingâ ââ
âBut, Chief,â spluttered Mazeroux, utterly nonplussed.
âWhat! Must I drag the words out of you? Come on! Iâll make a start. It has to do with the man with the ebony walking-stick, hasnât it? The one we saw at the CafĂ© du Pont-Neuf on the day when Inspector VĂ©rot was murdered?â
âYes, it has.â
âHave you found his traces?â
âYes.â
âWell, come along, find your tongue!â
âItâs like this, Chief. Someone else noticed him besides the waiter. There was another customer in the cafĂ©; and this other customer, whom I ended by discovering, went out at the same time as our man and heard him ask somebody in the street which was the nearest underground station for Neuilly.â
âCapital, that. And, in Neuilly, by asking questions on every side, you ferreted him out?â
âAnd even learnt his name, Chief: Hubert Lautier, of the Avenue du Roule. Only he decamped from there six months ago, leaving his furniture behind him and taking nothing but two trunks.â
âWhat about the post-office?â
âWe have been to the post-office. One of the clerks recognized the description which we supplied. Our man calls once every eight or ten days to fetch his mail, which never amounts to much: just one or two letters. He has not been there for some time.â
âIs
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