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
âI do wish youâd keep out of the police courts,â grumbled the Duke. âIt makes it so dashed awkward for me, havinâ a brother makinâ himself conspicuous.â
âSorry, Gerald,â said the other; âI know Iâm a beastly blot on the âscutcheon.â
âWhy canât you marry and settle down and live quietly, doinâ something useful?â said the Duke, unappeased.
âBecause that was a washout as you perfectly well know,â said Peter; âbesides,â he added cheerfully, âIâm beinâ no end useful. You may come to want me yourself, you never know. When anybody comes blackmailinâ you, Gerald, or your first deserted wife turns up unexpectedly from the West Indies, youâll realize the pull of havinâ a private detective in the family. âDelicate private business arranged with tact and discretion. Investigations undertaken. Divorce evidence a specialty. Every guarantee!â Come, now.â
âAss!â said Lord Denver, throwing the newspaper violently into his armchair. âWhen do you want the car?â
âAlmost at once. I say, Jerry, Iâm taking Mother up with me.â
âWhy should she be mixed up in it?â
âWell, I want her help.â
âI call it most unsuitable,â said the Duke.
The Dowager Duchess, however, made no objection.
âI used to know her quite well,â she said, âwhen she was Christine Ford. Why, dear?â
âBecause,â said Lord Peter, âthereâs a terrible piece of news to be broken to her about her husband.â
âIs he dead, dear?â
âYes; and she will have to come and identify him.â
âPoor Christine.â
âUnder very revolting circumstances, Mother.â
âIâll come with you, dear.â
âThank you, Mother, youâre a brick. Dâyou mind gettinâ your things on straight away and cominâ up with me? Iâll tell you about it in the car.â
XMr. Parker, a faithful though doubting Thomas, had duly secured his medical student: a large young man like an overgrown puppy, with innocent eyes and a freckled face. He sat on the Chesterfield before Lord Peterâs library fire, bewildered in equal measure by his errand, his surroundings and the drink which he was absorbing. His palate, though untutored, was naturally a good one, and he realized that even to call this liquid a drinkâ âthe term ordinarily used by him to designate cheap whisky, postwar beer or a dubious glass of claret in a Soho restaurantâ âwas a sacrilege; this was something outside normal experience: a genie in a bottle.
The man called Parker, whom he had happened to run across the evening before in the public-house at the corner of Prince of Wales Road, seemed to be a good sort. He had insisted on bringing him round to see this friend of his, who lived splendidly in Piccadilly. Parker was quite understandable; he put him down as a government servant, or perhaps something in the City. The friend was embarrassing; he was a lord, to begin with, and his clothes were a kind of rebuke to the world at large. He talked the most fatuous nonsense, certainly, but in a disconcerting way. He didnât dig into a joke and get all the fun out of it; he made it in passing, so to speak, and skipped away to something else before your retort was ready. He had a truly terrible manservantâ âthe sort you read about in booksâ âwho froze the marrow in your bones with silent criticism. Parker appeared to bear up under the strain, and this made you think more highly of Parker; he must be more habituated to the surroundings of the great than you would think to look at him. You wondered what the carpet had cost on which Parker was carelessly spilling cigar ash; your father was an upholstererâ âMr. Piggott, of Piggott & Piggott, Liverpoolâ âand you knew enough about carpets to know that you couldnât even guess at the price of this one. When you moved your head on the bulging silk cushion in the corner of the sofa, it made you wish you shaved more often and more carefully. The sofa was a monsterâ âbut even so, it hardly seemed big enough to contain you. This Lord Peter was not very tallâ âin fact, he was rather a small man, but he didnât look undersized. He looked right; he made you feel that to be six-foot-three was rather vulgarly assertive; you felt like Motherâs new drawing-room curtainsâ âall over great big blobs. But everybody was very decent to you, and nobody said anything you couldnât understand, or sneered at you. There were some frightfully deep-looking books on the shelves all round, and you had looked into a great folio Dante which was lying on the table, but your hosts were talking quite ordinarily and rationally about the sort of books you read yourselfâ âclinking good love stories and detective stories. You had read a lot of those, and could give an opinion, and they listened to what you had to say, though Lord Peter had a funny way of talking about books, too, as if the author had confided in him beforehand, and told him how the story was put together, and which bit was written first. It reminded you of the way old Freke took a body to pieces.
âThing I object to in detective stories,â said Mr. Piggott, âis the way fellows remember every bloominâ thing thatâs happened to âem within the last six months. Theyâre always ready with their time of day and was it raininâ or not, and what were they doinâ on such anâ such a day. Reel it all off like a page of poetry. But one ainât like that in real life, dâyou think so, Lord Peter?â Lord Peter smiled, and young Piggott, instantly embarrassed, appealed to his earlier acquaintance. âYou know what I mean, Parker. Come now. One dayâs so like another, Iâm sure I couldnât rememberâ âwell, I might remember yesterday, pârâaps, but I couldnât be certain about what I was doinâ last week if I was to be shot for it.â
âNo,â said Parker, âand evidence given in police statements sounds just as
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