Название: Inspector Alleyn 3-Book Collection 10: Last Ditch, Black As He’s Painted, Grave Mistake
Автор: Ngaio Marsh
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Классическая проза
isbn: 9780007531448
isbn:
Mr Samuel Whipplestone | Foreign Office (retired) | |
Lucy Lockett | A cat | |
The Ambassador in London for Ng’ombwana | ||
A Lady | ||
A Young Gentleman | Of Messrs Able & Virtue | |
A Youth | Land & Estate Agents | |
Chubb | House Servant | |
Mrs Chubb | His wife | |
A Veterinary Surgeon | ||
Mr Sheridan | No.1a Capricorn Walk (basement flat) | |
His Excellency | The Boomer, President of Ng’ombwana | |
Bartholomew Opala, CBE | ||
An ADC | ||
Mr and Mrs Pirelli | Of the Napoli, shop-keepers | |
Colonel Cockburn-Montfort | Late of the Ng’ombwanan Army (retired) | |
Mrs Cockburn-Montfort | His wife | |
Kenneth Sanskrit | Late of Ng’ombwana. Merchant | |
Xenoclea Sanskrit | His sister. Of the Piggie Pottery, Capricorn Mews, SW3 | |
A mlinzi | Spear Carrier to The Boomer | |
Sir George Alleyn, KCMG, etc. etc. | ||
Superintendent Roderick Alleyn | CID | |
Troy Alleyn | Painter. His wife | |
Inspector Fox | CID | |
Superintendent Gibson | Special Branch, CID | |
Jacks | A talented sergeant | |
Detective-Sergeant Bailey | A finger-print expert | |
Detective-Sergeant Thompson | A photographer | |
Sundry police, Ng’ombwanan servants and frequenters of the Capricorns, SW3 |
The year was at the spring and the day at the morn and God may have been in his Heaven but as far as Mr Samuel Whipplestone was concerned the evidence was negligible. He was, in a dull, muddled sort of way, miserable. He had become possessed, with valedictory accompaniments, of two solid silver Georgian gravy-boats. He had taken his leave of Her Majesty’s Foreign Service in the manner to which his colleagues were accustomed. He had even prepared himself for the non-necessity of getting up at 7.30, bathing, shaving, breakfasting at 8.00 – but there is no need to prolong the Podsnappian recital. In a word he had fancied himself tuned in to retirement and now realized that he was in no such condition. He was a man without propulsion. He had no object in life. He was finished.
By ten o’clock he found himself unable to endure the complacent familiarity of his ‘service’ flat. It was in fact at that hour being ‘serviced’, a ritual which normally he avoided and now hindered by his presence.
He was astounded to find that for twenty years he had inhabited dull, oppressive, dark and uncomely premises. Deeply shaken by this abrupt discovery, he went out into the London spring.
A ten-minute walk across the Park hardly raised his spirits. He avoided the great water-shed of traffic under the quadriga, saw some inappropriately attired equestrians, passed a concourse of scarlet and yellow tulips, left the Park under the expanded nostrils of Epstein’s liberated elementals and made his way into Baronsgate.
As he entered that flowing cacophony of changing gears and revving engines, it occurred to him that he himself must now get into bottom gear and stay there, until he was parked in some subfuse lay-by to await – and here the simile became insufferable – a final to wing-off. His predicament was none the better for being commonplace. He walked for a quarter of an hour.
From Baronsgate the western entry into the Capricorns is by an arched passage too low overhead to admit any but pedestrian traffic. It leads into Capricorn Mews and, further along at right angles to the Mews, Capricorn Place. He had passed by it over and over again and would have done so now if it hadn’t been for a small, thin cat.
This animal flashed out from under the traffic and shot past him into the passageway. It disappeared at the far end. He heard a scream of tyres and of a living creature.
This sort of thing upset Mr Whipplestone. He disliked this sort of thing intensely. He would have greatly preferred to remove himself as quickly as possible from the scene and put it out of his mind. What he did, however, was to hurry through the passageway into Capricorn Mews.
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