The Golden Triangle Maurice Leblanc (smart books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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âCome,â he said, âdonât upset yourself. The positionâs not as bad as you think.â
âCoralie jumped out of the window to escape that man,â Patrice muttered.
âYour Coralie is alive,â said Don Luis, shrugging his shoulders. âIn SimĂ©onâs hands, but alive.â
âWhy, what do you know about it? Anyway, if sheâs in that monsterâs hands, might she not as well be dead? Doesnât it mean all the horrors of death? Whereâs the difference?â
âIt means a danger of death, but it means life if we come in time; and we shall.â
âHave you a clue?â
âDo you imagine that I have sat twiddling my thumbs and that an old hand like myself hasnât had time in half an hour to unravel the mysteries which this cabin presents?â
âThen letâs go,â cried Patrice, already eager for the fray. âLetâs have at the enemy.â
âNot yet,â said Don Luis, who was still hunting around him. âListen to me. Iâll tell you what I know, captain, and Iâll tell it you straight out, without trying to dazzle you by a parade of reasoning and without even telling you of the tiny trifles that serve me as proofs. The bare facts, thatâs all. Well, thenâ ââ âŠâ
âYes?â
âLittle Mother Coralie kept the appointment at nine oâclock. SimĂ©on was there with his female accomplice. Between them they bound and gagged her and brought her here. Observe that, in their eyes, it was a safe spot for the job, because they knew for certain that you and I had not discovered the trap. Nevertheless, we may assume that it was a provisional base of operations, adopted for part of the night only, and that SimĂ©on reckoned on leaving Little Mother Coralie in the hands of his accomplice and setting out in search of a definite place of confinement, a permanent prison. But luckilyâ âand Iâm rather proud of thisâ âYa-Bon was on the spot. Ya-Bon was watching on his bench, in the dark. He must have seen them cross the embankment and no doubt recognized SimĂ©onâs walk in the distance. Weâll take it that he gave chase at once, jumped on to the deck of the barge and arrived here at the same time as the enemy, before they had time to lock themselves in. Four people in this narrow space, in pitch darkness, must have meant a frightful upheaval. I know my Ya-Bon. Heâs terrible at such times. Unfortunately, it was not SimĂ©on whom he caught by the neck with that merciless hand of his, butâ ââ ⊠the woman. SimĂ©on took advantage of this. He had not let go of Little Mother Coralie. He picked her up in his arms and went up the companionway, flung her on the deck and then came back to lock the door on the two as they struggled.â
âDo you think so? Do you think it was Ya-Bon and not SimĂ©on who killed the woman?â
âIâm sure of it. If there were no other proof, there is this particular fracture of the windpipe, which is Ya-Bonâs special mark. What I do not understand is why, when he had settled his adversary, Ya-Bon didnât break down the door with a push of his shoulder and go after SimĂ©on. I presume that he was wounded and that he had not the strength to make the necessary effort. I presume also that the woman did not die at once and that she spoke, saying things against SimĂ©on, who had abandoned her instead of defending her. This much is certain, that Ya-Bon broke the windowpanesâ ââ âŠâ
âTo jump into the Seine, wounded as he was, with his one arm?â said Patrice.
âNot at all. Thereâs a ledge running along the window. He could set his feet on it and get off that way.â
âVery well. But he was quite ten or twenty minutes behind SimĂ©on?â
âThat didnât matter, if the woman had time, before dying, to tell him where SimĂ©on was taking refuge.â
âHow can we get to know?â
âIâve been trying to find out all the time that weâve been chattingâ ââ ⊠and Iâve just discovered the way.â
âHere?â
âThis minute; and I expected no less from Ya-Bon. The woman told him of a place in the cabinâ âlook, that open drawer, probablyâ âin which there was a visiting-card with an address on it. Ya-Bon took it and, in order to let me know, pinned the card to the curtain over there. I had seen it already; but it was only this moment that I noticed the pin that fixed it, a gold pin with which I myself fastened the Morocco Cross to Ya-Bonâs breast.â
âWhat is the address?â
âAmĂ©dĂ©e Vacherot, 18, Rue Guimard. The Rue Guimard is close to this, which makes me quite sure of the road they took.â
The two men at once went away, leaving the womanâs dead body behind. As Don Luis said, the police must make what they could of it.
As they crossed Berthouâs Wharf they glanced at the recess and Don Luis remarked:
âThereâs a ladder missing. We must remember that detail. SimĂ©on has been in there. Heâs beginning to make blunders too.â
The car took them to the Rue Guimard, a small street in Passy. No. 18 was a large house let out in flats, of fairly ancient construction. It was two oâclock in the morning when they rang.
A long time elapsed before the door opened; and, as they passed through the carriage-entrance, the porter put his head out of his lodge:
âWhoâs there?â he asked.
âWe want to see M. AmĂ©dĂ©e Vacherot on urgent business.â
âThatâs myself.â
âYou?â
âYes, I, the porter. But by what rightâ ââ âŠâ?â
âOrders of the prefect of police,â said Don Luis, displaying a badge.
They entered the lodge. Amédée Vacherot was a little, respectable-looking old man, with white whiskers. He might have been a beadle.
âAnswer my questions plainly,â Don Luis ordered, in a rough voice, âand donât try to prevaricate. We are looking for a man called SimĂ©on Diodokis.â
The porter took fright at once:
âTo do him harm?â he exclaimed. âIf itâs to do him harm, itâs no use asking me any questions. I would rather die by slow tortures than injure that kind M. SimĂ©on.â
Don Luis
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