Whose Body? Dorothy L. Sayers (english books to improve english txt) đ
- Author: Dorothy L. Sayers
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âWell,â said the detective, ânot very muchâ âI was puzzledâ âfrankly. I should say he had been a rich man, but self-made, and that his good fortune had come to him fairly recently.â
âAh, you noticed the calluses on the handsâ âI thought you wouldnât miss that.â
âBoth his feet were badly blisteredâ âhe had been wearing tight shoes.â
âWalking a long way in them, too,â said Lord Peter, âto get such blisters as that. Didnât that strike you as odd, in a person evidently well off?â
âWell, I donât know. The blisters were two or three days old. He might have got stuck in the suburbs one night, perhapsâ âlast train gone and no taxiâ âand had to walk home.â
âPossibly.â
âThere were some little red marks all over his back and one leg I couldnât quite account for.â
âI saw them.â
âWhat did you make of them?â
âIâll tell you afterwards. Go on.â
âHe was very long-sightedâ âoddly long-sighted for a man in the prime of life; the glasses were like a very old manâs. By the way, they had a very beautiful and remarkable chain of flat links chased with a pattern. It struck me he might be traced through it.â
âIâve just put an advertisement in the Times about it,â said Lord Peter. âGo on.â
âHe had had the glasses some timeâ âthey had been mended twice.â
âBeautiful, Parker, beautiful. Did you realize the importance of that?â
âNot specially, Iâm afraidâ âwhy?â
âNever mindâ âgo on.â
âHe was probably a sullen, ill-tempered manâ âhis nails were filed down to the quick as though he habitually bit them, and his fingers were bitten as well. He smoked quantities of cigarettes without a holder. He was particular about his personal appearance.â
âDid you examine the room at all? I didnât get a chance.â
âI couldnât find much in the way of footprints. Sugg & Co. had tramped all over the place, to say nothing of little Thipps and the maid, but I noticed a very indefinite patch just behind the head of the bath, as though something damp might have stood there. You could hardly call it a print.â
âIt rained hard all last night, of course.â
âYes; did you notice that the soot on the windowsill was vaguely marked?â
âI did,â said Wimsey, âand I examined it hard with this little fellow, but I could make nothing of it except that something or other had rested on the sill.â He drew out his monocle and handed it to Parker.
âMy word, thatâs a powerful lens.â
âIt is,â said Wimsey, âand jolly useful when you want to take a good squint at somethinâ and look like a bally fool all the time. Only it donât do to wear it permanentlyâ âif people see you full-face they say: âDear me! how weak the sight of that eye must be!â Still, itâs useful.â
âSugg and I explored the ground at the back of the building,â went on Parker, âbut there wasnât a trace.â
âThatâs interestinâ. Did you try the roof?â
âNo.â
âWeâll go over it tomorrow. The gutterâs only a couple of feet off the top of the window. I measured it with my stickâ âthe gentleman-scoutâs vade-mecum, I call itâ âitâs marked off in inches. Uncommonly handy companion at times. Thereâs a sword inside and a compass in the head. Got it made specially. Anything more?â
âAfraid not. Letâs hear your version, Wimsey.â
âWell, I think youâve got most of the points. There are just one or two little contradictions. For instance, hereâs a man wears expensive gold-rimmed pince-nez and has had them long enough to be mended twice. Yet his teeth are not merely discoloured, but badly decayed and look as if heâd never cleaned them in his life. There are four molars missing on one side and three on the other and one front tooth broken right across. Heâs a man careful of his personal appearance, as witness his hair and his hands. What do you say to that?â
âOh, these self-made men of low origin donât think much about teeth, and are terrified of dentists.â
âTrue; but one of the molars has a broken edge so rough that it had made a sore place on the tongue. Nothingâs more painful. Dâyou mean to tell me a man would put up with that if he could afford to get the tooth filed?â
âWell, people are queer. Iâve known servants endure agonies rather than step over a dentistâs doormat. How did you see that, Wimsey?â
âHad a look inside; electric torch,â said Lord Peter. âHandy little gadget. Looks like a matchbox. Wellâ âI daresay itâs all right, but I just draw your attention to it. Second point: Gentleman with hair smellinâ of Parma violet and manicured hands and all the rest of it, never washes the inside of his ears. Full of wax. Nasty.â
âYouâve got me there, Wimsey; I never noticed it. Stillâ âold bad habits die hard.â
âRight oh! Put it down at that. Third point: Gentleman with the manicure and the brilliantine and all the rest of it suffers from fleas.â
âBy Jove, youâre right! Flea-bites. It never occurred to me.â
âNo doubt about it, old son. The marks were faint and old, but unmistakable.â
âOf course, now you mention it. Still, that might happen to anybody. I loosed a whopper in the best hotel in Lincoln the week before last. I hope it bit the next occupier!â
âOh, all these things might happen to anybodyâ âseparately. Fourth point: Gentleman who uses Parma violet for his hair, etc., etc., washes his body in strong carbolic soapâ âso strong that the smell hangs about twenty-four hours later.â
âCarbolic to get rid of the fleas.â
âI will say for you, Parker, youâve an answer for everything. Fifth point: Carefully got-up gentleman, with manicured, though masticated, fingernails, has filthy black toenails which look as if they hadnât been cut for years.â
âAll of a piece with habits as indicated.â
âYes, I know, but such habits! Now, sixth and last point: This gentleman with the intermittently gentlemanly habits arrives in the middle of a pouring wet night, and apparently through the window, when he has already been twenty-four hours dead, and
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