Dmitri and the Milk-Drinkers. Michael Pearce
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Название: Dmitri and the Milk-Drinkers

Автор: Michael Pearce

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

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isbn: 9780007483082

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СКАЧАТЬ to the general question of what form the education of women should take when Pavel Milusovich’s sister, Sonya, interrupted. The conversation was taking place in the family’s drawing room. She said that education was nothing to do with it. She had not been to university, she pointed out, but surely no one would deny that she had twice the brains of her brother. This was all too evidently true, and the argument stalled for a moment or two. Why, demanded Sonya, should she be excluded from the meetings of the group?

      ‘You’re not being excluded,’ said Igor Stepanovich. ‘It’s just that you wouldn’t be happy if you came.’

      ‘How do you know?’ asked Sonya.

      ‘You’d be on your own,’ said Igor.

      ‘So?’ said Sonya.

      Igor couldn’t immediately think of a reply. Another of the group, Gregor Yusupovich, said that it wouldn’t look good. Other people were not as liberated as they were and if she was the one woman in a group of men it would prejudice her chances of marriage. Sonya said that, on the contrary, she thought it would improve them.

      ‘Anyway,’ she said, ‘why does there just have to be one?’

      ‘We’re back to where we started,’ said Igor. ‘You’d be all right,’ he conceded, ‘but the truth is there aren’t any other – ’

      ‘How about Vera?’ said Sonya.

      ‘Vera Samsonova?’

      ‘You can’t say she’s not educated. She studied at St Petersburg. And she passed her exams first time!’ added Sonya maliciously.

      ‘Yes, but would she come?’ asked Igor, affecting nonchalance. ‘She’s always seemed to me – ’

      ‘I’ll ask her,’ said Sonya.

      And had.

      She would be there this evening. Dmitri had no great hopes. He had seen her from a distance. Tall. And thin. Flat as a board. Straight up, straight down. Front and back. Bright, no doubt. No one who had taken the Advanced Women’s Courses in the Faculty of Natural History could be a fool. They had been about the only route by which women could qualify to be a medical doctor. You had had to be pretty bright to get in, and very bright to stay on, because the professors had deliberately made it hard to. There had been a lot of hostility towards the course, not just from the medical profession but from the university. And from the Government. They’d taken the first chance they could to close the courses down, a casualty, like so many others, of the backlash against reform following the assassination of Tsar Alexander.

      He had met some of the women once, although the course itself had been closed by the time he got there. Very determined, the women had seemed. In fact, that was the trouble. Too determined. They seemed to go through life with clenched teeth.

      From what he’d heard, Vera Samsonova was a bit like that. Spiky. No soft edges. All the same, he had been mildly intrigued at the prospect of meeting her.

      And now, just as he was putting on his hat and coat, this bloody fool of a judge wanted to see him!

      ‘There are things’, said the senior judge severely, ‘that a young lady of good family should not see. And the Court House yard is one of them!’

      ‘She wanted to see it!’ protested Dmitri. ‘She was going there anyway.’

      ‘Could you not have diverted her?’

      ‘I tried, but she insisted.’

      ‘You should have tried harder.’

      ‘She wanted a breath of air!’

      ‘But why go to the back yard for it? Why couldn’t you take her out the front? The park … the flowers …’

      ‘There aren’t any flowers yet. They’ve only just cleared the snow away.’

      ‘The air is wholesome at least,’ said the judge, irritated, ‘and you couldn’t say that was true of the yard.’

      ‘She wanted to go there!’

      ‘I find that hard to believe. Would any respectable young woman want to go there, knowing what she might see? No,’ said the judge warmly, ‘what she wanted was just a place where she could get some fresh air. You chose to take her to the back yard and therefore it is in considerable measure your fault.’

      ‘Fault! She asked me to show her the way and I showed her!’

      ‘She placed herself under your protection.’

      ‘Nonsense! All she did was ask – ’

      ‘A young woman?’ said the judge incredulously. ‘Distressed? Sees what she takes to be a respectable young man? An official of the Court, no less? Asks – quite properly – for assistance? If that is not placing herself under your protection, I’d like to know what is!’

      Dmitri counted to five before replying and then, as that did not seem to be working, to ten.

      ‘I could quite reasonably have restricted myself to pointing out the way,’ he said at last. ‘In fact, I chose – ’

      ‘Ah!’ said the judge triumphantly. ‘Chose!’

      ‘To walk along the corridor with her. No question of legal responsibility arises.’

      ‘Her father,’ said the judge grimly, ‘is a friend of the Governor. He moves in high circles in St Petersburg. An intimate of Prince Dolgorukov. Through him he has access to the Tsar. And you think no question of responsibility will arise?’

      Oh ho, thought Dmitri. So that’s the way the wind’s blowing!

      ‘I refuse to admit any personal responsibility in the matter,’ he said quickly.

      ‘Much good that will do you!’ said the judge cuttingly. ‘Much good,’ he added gloomily, ‘it will do any of us.’

      ‘Oh, come sir!’ said Dmitri. ‘Things are not as bad as all that! There is probably some quite simple explanation for the girl’s disappearance. Met a friend, perhaps, and gone off for a walk – ’

      ‘In the dark?’ asked the judge, looking out of the window. ‘She’d have been back by now. No,’ he said, shaking his head, ‘we’ve tried all that. Checked on her friends, the shops, her hairdresser – ’

      ‘A friend she wishes to keep secret, perhaps?’

      ‘A male friend, you mean?’

      ‘Well – ’

      ‘No question of that. Her parents are adamant.’

      ‘They would be,’ said Dmitri.

      The judge looked at him.

      ‘You think it’s a possibility?’

      ‘A far likelier possibility than that it’s anything to do with the back yard.’

      ‘You СКАЧАТЬ