The Conjure-Man Dies: A Harlem Mystery. Rudolph Fisher
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Название: The Conjure-Man Dies: A Harlem Mystery

Автор: Rudolph Fisher

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия: Detective Club Crime Classics

isbn: 9780008216467

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ pocket and produced a large and flagrant affair apparently designed for appearance rather than for service; a veritable flag, crossed in one direction by a bright orange band and in another, at right angles to the first, by a virulent green one. ‘My special kind,’ he said; ‘always buy these. Man has to have a little colour in his clothes, y’see?’

      ‘Yes, I see. Got any others?’

      ‘’Nother one like this—but it’s dirty.’ He produced the mate, crumpled and matted, out of another pocket.

      ‘O.K. Put ’em away. See anybody here tonight with a coloured handkerchief of any kind?’

      ‘No suh—not that I remember.’

      ‘All right. Now tell me this. Did you notice the decorations on the walls in the front room when you first arrived?’

      ‘Couldn’t help noticin’ them things—’nough to scare anybody dizzy.’

      ‘What did you see?’

      ‘You mean them false-faces and knives and swords and things?’

      ‘Yes. Did you notice anything in particular on the mantelpiece?’

      ‘Yea. I went over and looked at it soon as I come in. What I remember most was a pair o’ clubs. One was on one end o’ the mantelpiece, and the other was on the other. Look like they was made out o’ bones.’

      ‘You are sure there were two of them?’

      ‘Sho’ they was two. One on—’

      ‘Did you touch them?’

      ‘No suh—couldn’t pay me to touch none o’ them things—might ’a’ been conjured.’

      ‘Did you see anyone touch them?’

      ‘No, suh.’

      ‘You saw no one remove one of them?’

      ‘No, suh.’

      ‘So far as you know they are still there?’

      ‘Yes, suh.’

      ‘Who was in that room, besides yourself, when you first saw the two clubs?’

      ‘Everybody. That was befo’ the flunky’d come in to get the railroad man.’

      ‘I see. Now these two women—how soon after you got there did they come in?’

      ‘’Bout ten minutes or so.’

      ‘Did either of them leave the room while you were there?’

      ‘No, suh.’

      ‘And the first man—Easley Jones, the railroad porter—he had come into this room before the women arrived?’

      ‘Yes, suh. He was the first one here, I guess.’

      ‘After he went in to Frimbo, did he come back into the waiting-room?’

      ‘No, suh. Reckon he left by this side door here into the hall.’

      ‘Did either of the other two return to the waiting-room?’

      ‘No, suh. Guess they all left the same way. Only one that came back was Jinx, when he called me.’

      ‘And at that time, you and the women were the only people left in the waiting-room?’

      ‘Yes, suh.’

      ‘Very good. Could you identify those three men?’

      ‘’Deed I could. I could even find ’em if you said so.’

      ‘Perhaps I will. For the present you go back to the front room. Don’t try anything funny—the house is lousy with policemen.’

      ‘Lousy is right,’ muttered Bubber.

      ‘What’s that?’

      ‘I ain’t opened my mouth, mistuh. But listen, you don’t think I done it sho’ ’nough do you?’

      ‘That will depend entirely on whether the women corroborate your statement.’

      ‘Well, whatever that is, I sho’ hope they do it.’

       CHAPTER VII

      ‘BRADY, ask the lady who arrived first to come in,’ said Dart, adding in a low aside to the physician, ‘if her story checks with Brown’s on the point of his staying in that room, I think I can use him for something. He couldn’t have taken that club out without leaving the room.’

      ‘He tells a straight story,’ agreed Dr Archer. ‘Too scared to lie. But isn’t it too soon to let anybody out?’

      ‘I don’t mean to let him go. But I can send him with a couple o’ cops to identify the other men who were here and bring them back, without being afraid he’ll start anything.’

      ‘Why not go with him and question them where you find ’em?’

      ‘It’s easier to have ’em all in one place if possible—saves everybody’s time. Can’t always do it of course. Here comes the lady—your friend.’

      ‘Be nice to her—she’s the real thing. I’ve known her for years.’

      ‘O. K.’

      Uncertainly, the young woman entered, the beam of light revealing clearly her unusually attractive appearance. With undisguised bewilderment on her pretty face, but with no sign of fear, she took the visitors’ chair.

      ‘Don’t be afraid, Mrs Crouch. I want you to answer, as accurately as you can, a few questions which may help determine who killed Frimbo.’

      ‘I’ll be glad to,’ she said in a low, matter-of-fact tone.

      ‘What time did you arrive here tonight?’

      ‘Shortly after ten-thirty.’

      ‘You’re sure of the time?’

      ‘I was at the Lenox. The feature picture goes on for the last time at ten-thirty. I had seen it already, and when it came on again I left. It is no more than four or five minutes’ walk from there here.’

      ‘Good. You came directly to Frimbo’s waiting-room?’

      ‘No. I stopped downstairs to see if my husband was there.’

      ‘Your husband? Oh—Mr Crouch, the undertaker, is your husband?’

      ‘Yes. But he was out.’

      ‘Does he usually go out and leave his place СКАЧАТЬ