The Teeth of the Tiger Maurice Leblanc (best novels of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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There was a fresh silence; and Don Luis added:
âPoor Cosmo! That incident gave him an unshakable confidence in my little detective talents. He was always saying, âPerenna, if I die murderedââ âhe had a fixed notion in his head that he would meet with a violent deathâ ââif I die murdered, swear that you will pursue the culprit.âââ
âHis presentiment was not justified,â said the Prefect of Police. âCosmo Mornington was not murdered.â
âThatâs where you make a mistake, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet,â said Don Luis.
M. Desmalions gave a start.
âWhat! Whatâs that? Cosmo Morningtonâ â?â
âI say that Cosmo Mornington did not die, as you think, of a carelessly administered injection, but that he died, as he feared he would, by foul play.â
âBut, Monsieur, your assertion is based on no evidence whatever!â
âIt is based on fact, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet.â
âWere you there? Do you know anything?â
âI was not there. A month ago I was still with the colours. I even admit that, when I arrived in Paris, not having seen the newspapers regularly, I did not know of Cosmoâs death. In fact, I learned it from you just now, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet.â
âIn that case, Monsieur, you cannot know more about it than I do, and you must accept the verdict of the doctor.â
âI am sorry, but his verdict fails to satisfy me.â
âBut look here, Monsieur, what prompts you to make the accusation? Have you any evidence?â
âYes.â
âWhat evidence?â
âYour own words, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet.â
âMy own words? What do you mean?â
âI will tell you, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet. You began by saying that Cosmo Mornington had taken up medicine and practised it with great skill; next, you said that he had given himself an injection which, carelessly administered, set up inflammation and caused his death within a few hours.â
âYes.â
âWell, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, I maintain that a man who practises medicine with great skill and who is accustomed to treating sick people, as Cosmo Mornington was, is incapable of giving himself a hypodermic injection without first taking every necessary antiseptic precaution. I have seen Cosmo at work, and I know how he set about things.â
âWell?â
âWell, the doctor just wrote a certificate as any doctor will when there is no sort of clue to arouse his suspicions.â
âSo your opinion isâ ââ
âMaĂźtre Lepertuis,â asked Perenna, turning to the solicitor, âdid you notice nothing unusual when you were summoned to Mr. Morningtonâs deathbed?â
âNo, nothing. Mr. Mornington was in a state of coma.â
âItâs a strange thing in itself,â observed Don Luis, âthat an injection, however badly administered, should produce such rapid results. Were there no signs of suffering?â
âNoâ ââ ⊠or rather, yes.â ââ ⊠Yes, I remember the face showed brown patches which I did not see on the occasion of my first visit.â
âBrown patches? That confirms my supposition Cosmo Mornington was poisoned.â
âBut how?â exclaimed the Prefect.
âBy some substance introduced into one of the phials of glycero-phosphate, or into the syringe which the sick man employed.â
âBut the doctor?â M. Desmalions objected.
âMaĂźtre Lepertuis,â Perenna continued, âdid you call the doctorâs attention to those brown patches?â
âYes, but he attached no importance to them.â
âWas it his ordinary medical adviser?â
âNo, his ordinary medical adviser, Doctor Pujol, who happens to be a friend of mine and who had recommended me to him as a solicitor, was ill. The doctor whom I saw at his deathbed must have been a local practitioner.â
âI have his name and address here,â said the Prefect of Police, who had turned up the certificate. âDoctor Bellavoine, 14 Rue dâAstorg.â
âHave you a medical directory, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet?â
M. Desmalions opened a directory and turned over the pages. Presently he declared:
âThere is no Doctor Bellavoine; and there is no doctor living at 14 Rue dâAstorg.â
II A Man DeadThe declaration was followed by a silence of some length. The Secretary of the American Embassy and the Peruvian attachĂ© had followed the conversation with eager interest. Major dâAstrignac nodded his head with an air of approval. To his mind, Perenna could not be mistaken.
The Prefect of Police confessed:
âCertainly, certainlyâ ââ ⊠we have a number of circumstances hereâ ââ ⊠that are fairly ambiguous.â ââ ⊠Those brown patches; that doctor.â ââ ⊠Itâs a case that wants looking into.â And, questioning Don Luis Perenna as though in spite of himself, he asked, âNo doubt, in your opinion, there is a possible connection between the murderâ ââ ⊠and Mr. Morningtonâs will?â
âThat, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, I cannot tell. If there is, we should have to suppose that the contents of the will were known. Do you think they can have leaked out, MaĂźtre Lepertuis?â
âI donât think so, for Mr. Mornington seemed to behave with great caution.â
âAnd thereâs no question, is there, of any indiscretion committed in your office?â
âBy whom? No one handled the will except myself; and I alone have the key of the safe in which I put away documents of that importance every evening.â
âThe safe has not been broken into? There has been no burglary at your office?â
âNo.â
âYou saw Cosmo Mornington in the morning?â
âYes, on a Friday morning.â
âWhat did you do with the will until the evening, until you locked it away up your safe?â
âI probably put it in the drawer of my desk.â
âAnd the drawer was not forced?â
MaĂźtre Lepertuis seemed taken aback and made no reply.
âWell?â asked Perenna.
âWell, yes, I rememberâ ââ ⊠there was something that dayâ ââ ⊠that same Friday.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes. When I came in from lunch I noticed that the drawer was not locked, although I had locked it beyond the least doubt. At the time I attached comparatively little importance to the incident. Today, I understand, I understandâ ââ
Thus, little by little, were all the suppositions conceived by Don Luis verified: suppositions resting, it is true, upon just one or two clues, but yet containing an amount of intuition, of divination, that was really surprising in a man who had been present at none of the events between which he traced the connection so skilfully.
âWe will lose no time, Monsieur,â said the Prefect of Police, âin checking your statements, which you will confess to be a little venturesome, by the more positive evidence of one of my
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