Dmitri and the Milk-Drinkers. Michael Pearce
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Dmitri and the Milk-Drinkers - Michael Pearce страница 12

Название: Dmitri and the Milk-Drinkers

Автор: Michael Pearce

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

Серия:

isbn: 9780007483082

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Honour’s presence, but they won’t have bothered much for someone new like yourself. Let me have a word with them, Your Excellency,’ said Novikov, turning to Peter Ivanovich, ‘and I’ll soon sort this out.’

      ‘Do so; and don’t take too long about it, either. One can’t have people disappearing from the Court House. Really, one begins to feel quite nervous!’

      Novikov returned, beaming, before the lawyers had finished their lunch.

      ‘There you are, sir, what did I tell you? Sorted it out in no time! A simple mistake, sir, as you supposed.’

      He put a piece of paper on the table before Peter Ivanovich and smoothed it flat.

      ‘There you are, Your Excellency!’ He pointed with a stubby forefinger. ‘That’s what you want!’

      Peter Ivanovich adjusted his pince-nez.

      ‘Is it?’

      ‘I know, sir. You’re having difficulty. And not just you alone, sir. Everyone else. That’s how the misunderstanding arose. No one’s fault, sir, except for that fat clerk who’ll be feeling the toe of my boot up his fundament if he doesn’t take more pains next time.’

      Peter Ivanovich looked again.

      ‘I suppose you’re right,’ he said doubtfully.

      ‘Not convinced, Your Excellency?’ Novikov chuckled. ‘Well, that doesn’t surprise me. In fact, it’s what I told myself. An old fox like His Excellency will want something more than that, I said. And quite right, too! So I did a bit of nosing around and, as luck would have it, who should I come upon but young Stenka. Come in, lad!’ he called out into the corridor.

      A fresh-faced young soldier appeared hesitantly in the doorway.

      ‘Come in, lad. His Excellency won’t bite you. Now, you come in and tell His Excellency what you told me.’

      The young soldier cleared his throat nervously.

      ‘I was on the carts,’ he began.

      ‘That very afternoon,’ interjected Novikov.

      ‘Yes, right, that afternoon. The women’s cart, as it fell out. Well, I don’t mind that, I mean, you never know what you might see, and you’re not going to have any trouble, are you? I mean, not any real trouble. They say things, of course, you’ve got to put up with that, but I know how to handle that. I just say: “You bloody shut up or you’ll taste the butt of my gun!”’

      ‘The cart, lad, the cart,’ put in Novikov hastily.

      ‘Yes, right, the cart. Well, there weren’t many of them that afternoon, not women, I mean. Only a few for us. So I’ve got a bit of time, and I see this girl. A real Russian beauty, she is. Oh ho, I think, I’ll bet you’ve got a nice pair of apples, and I give her a pinch as she goes by. Well, she jumps about half a verst. “What’s your name my beauty?” I say. She doesn’t answer, so I go to the sergeant and I say: “See that one there? What’s her name?” “What do you want to know for?” he says. “A taste comes before a feast,” I say. “Well,” he says, “there’s not going to be much of a feast for you, my lad, because she’s going straight on to the main convoy and you’re going to be stopping here.” “Never mind that,” I say. “What’s her name?” He looks at his list. “Shumin,” he says. “Marfa Nikolaevna Shumin.”’

      ‘Shumin?’ said Peter Ivanovich. ‘You’re sure about that?’

      ‘Pretty sure, sir. But I’m dead sure about the “Marfa”. My own sister’s named Marfa, it’s a bit of a family name. “That’s a good omen,” I said to myself. “She’s almost one of the family, like.”’

      Novikov looked at Peter Ivanovich.

      ‘Satisfied, sir?’

      ‘There seems no doubt about it,’ Peter Ivanovich conceded.

      ‘That’s what I thought, sir, once I’d talked to Stenka. The name by itself, I said, won’t be enough to convince Peter Ivanovich. But a witness, an honest witness – well, that’s a different matter!’

      ‘Happy, now?’ said Peter Ivanovich, looking at Dmitri.

      ‘Not very.’ Something was troubling him. In what the guard had said. He dismissed it for the moment. ‘This was the convoy, was it?’ he said to Stenka. The soldier nodded. ‘That means she’s halfway to Siberia by now. How am I going to question her?’

      ‘Not very easily,’ said Peter Ivanovich. ‘Unless you care to go after her.’

      Novikov gave a great guffaw.

      ‘That’s a good one!’ he said, nudging Stenka. The soldier, not entirely understanding, but dutiful, joined in.

      Peter Ivanovich allowed himself a slight smile.

      ‘I’m afraid our young colleague is one for the psychological,’ he said.

      ‘Psychological, Your Excellency?’

      ‘It’s the latest fashion in the Law Schools. These days, Grigori Romanovich, we mustn’t just look at the facts, we must look at the motives behind the facts.’

      ‘It’s getting a bit deep for me, sir.’

      ‘Me, too. If a dog bites a man, why ask for its motive?’

      ‘Why, indeed, Your Excellency?’ said Novikov, guffawing again.

      ‘Not only motives,’ said Dmitri, ‘but circumstances.’

      It was coming to him now. Not just in what Stenka had said, but in what the women at the tannery had said.

      ‘Ah, circumstances!’ said Peter Ivanovich.

      ‘What circumstances are there, then, Dmitri Alexandrovich?’ said Novikov, mock innocently. ‘Finding out how it is that someone can’t read someone else’s writing?’

      He gave Peter Ivanovich a wink. The Presiding Judge responded with a thin little smile.

      ‘Finding out who was actually put on the convoy,’ said Dmitri. He turned to Stenka. ‘A real Russian beauty, you said?’

      ‘That’s right, Your Honour.’

      ‘Fair?’

      ‘As straw in summer.’

      ‘A Tatar?’

      ‘Tatar?’

      ‘Marfa Nikolaevna was Tatar.’

      ‘This girl was no Tatar,’ said Stenka uneasily.

      ‘What are you saying?’ said Peter Ivanovich sharply.

      ‘Not saying; wondering,’ said Dmitri. ‘Whether the right woman was put on the cart.’

      Whereas the woman put on the cart had been fair, almost silvery СКАЧАТЬ