The Teeth of the Tiger Maurice Leblanc (best novels of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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Then Don Luis flung himself on a bench in a waiting room and remained there for two hours, pretending to read the newspapers. But his eyes wandered and his mind was haunted by the agonizing question that once more forced itself upon him: was Florence guilty or not?
It was five oâclock exactly when Major Comte dâAstrignac, MaĂźtre Lepertuis, and the secretary of the American Embassy were shown into M. Desmalionsâs office. At the same moment someone entered the messengersâ room and handed in his card.
The messenger on duty glanced at the pasteboard, turned his head quickly toward a group of men talking in a corner, and then asked the newcomer:
âHave you an appointment, sir?â
âItâs not necessary. Just say that Iâm here: Don Luis Perenna.â
A kind of electric shock ran through the little group in the corner; and one of the persons forming it came forward. It was Weber, the deputy chief detective.
The two men looked each other straight in the eyes. Don Luis smiled amiably. Weber was livid; he shook in every limb and was plainly striving to contain himself.
Near him stood a couple of journalists and four detectives.
âBy Jove! the beggars are there for me!â thought Don Luis. âBut their confusion shows that they did not believe that I should have the cheek to come. Are they going to arrest me?â
Weber did not move, but in the end his face expressed a certain satisfaction as though he were saying:
âIâve got you this time, my fine fellow, and you shanât escape me.â
The office messenger returned and, without a word, led the way for Don Luis. Perenna passed in front of Weber with the politest of bows, bestowed a friendly little nod on the detectives, and entered.
The Comte dâAstrignac hurried up to him at once, with hands outstretched, thus showing that all the tittle-tattle in no way affected the esteem in which he continued to hold Private Perenna of the Foreign Legion. But the Prefect of Police maintained an attitude of reserve which was very significant. He went on turning over the papers which he was examining and conversed in a low voice with the solicitor and the American Secretary of Embassy.
Don Luis thought to himself:
âMy dear Lupin, thereâs someone going to leave this room with the bracelets on his wrists. If itâs not the real culprit, itâll be you, my poor old chap.â
And he remembered the early part of the case, when he was in the workroom at Fauvilleâs house, before the magistrates, and had either to deliver the criminal to justice or to incur the penalty of immediate arrest. In the same way, from the start to the finish of the struggle, he had been obliged, while fighting the invisible enemy, to expose himself to the attacks of the law with no means of defending himself except by indispensable victories.
Harassed by constant onslaughts, never out of danger, he had successively hurried to their deaths Marie Fauville and Gaston Sauverand, two innocent people sacrificed to the cruel laws of war. Was he at last about to fight the real enemy, or would he himself succumb at the decisive moment?
He rubbed his hands with such a cheerful gesture that M. Desmalions could not help looking at him. Don Luis wore the radiant air of a man who is experiencing a pure joy and who is preparing to taste others even greater.
The Prefect of Police remained silent for a moment, as though asking himself what that devil of a fellow could be so pleased with; then he fumbled through his papers once more and, in the end, said:
âWe have met again, gentlemen, as we did two months ago, to come to a definite conclusion about the Mornington inheritance. Señor Caceres, the attachĂ© of the Peruvian legation, will not be here. I have received a telegram from Italy to tell me that Señor Caceres is seriously ill. However, his presence was not indispensable. There is no one lacking, thereforeâ âexcept those, alas, whose claims this meeting would gladly have sanctioned, that is to say, Cosmo Morningtonâs heirs.â
âThere is one other person absent, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet.â M. Desmalions looked up. The speaker was Don Luis. The Prefect hesitated and then decided to ask him to explain.
âWhom do you mean? What person?â
âThe murderer of the Mornington heirs.â
This time again Don Luis compelled attention and, in spite of the resistance which he encountered, obliged the others to take notice of his presence and to yield to his ascendancy. Whatever happened, they had to listen to him. Whatever happened, they had to discuss with him things which seemed incredible, but which were possible because he put them into words.
âMonsieur le PrĂ©fet,â he asked, âwill you allow me to set forth the facts of the matter as it now stands? They will form a natural sequel and conclusion of the interview which we had after the explosion on the Boulevard Suchet.â
M. Desmalionsâs silence gave Don Luis leave to speak. He at once continued:
âIt will not take long, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet. It will not take long for two reasons: first, because M. Fauvilleâs confessions remain at our disposal and we know definitely the monstrous part which he played; and, secondly, because, after all, the truth, however complicated it may seem, is really very simple.
âIt all lies in the objection which you, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, made to me on leaving the wrecked house on the Boulevard Suchet: âHow is it,â you asked, âthat the Mornington inheritance is not once mentioned in Hippolyte Fauvilleâs confession?â It all lies in that, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet. Hippolyte Fauville did not say a word about the inheritance; and the reason evidently is that he did not know of it.
âAnd the reason why Gaston Sauverand was able to tell me his whole sensational story without making the least allusion to the inheritance was that the inheritance played no sort of part in Gaston Sauverandâs story. He, too, knew nothing of it before those events, any more than Marie Fauville did, or Florence Levasseur. There is
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