Number Nineteen: Ben’s Last Case. J. Farjeon Jefferson
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Название: Number Nineteen: Ben’s Last Case

Автор: J. Farjeon Jefferson

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

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isbn: 9780008156077

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СКАЧАТЬ for I had not the nerve to take it out—horrible, horrible!—the police will naturally examine the handle, and they will find your fingerprints upon it.’

      ‘Wot’s that?’ gasped Ben.

      ‘You really ought to have wiped them off,’ said Mr Smith, sadly. ‘You can be quite sure that, if I had done the deed, I would have wiped mine off! You might like to make a note of that. Oh, no! Oh, no! I would never have left mine on!’

      ‘But mine carn’t be on!’ cried Ben, desperately.

      ‘Not so loud, not so loud!’ admonished Mr Smith. ‘I assure you, Mr Jones, your fingerprints are on that knife. You may deny it till you are blue in the face. It will make no difference. The fingerprints are there.’

      ‘Owjer know?’

      ‘A needless question, surely? I was present at the tragedy. I saw the deed, and I know you did not wipe the knife-handle after using it.’

      Ben shut his eyes hard to think. It was easier in the dark, without Mr Smith’s face before him. First the photograph—and now the fingerprints. Clearly Mr Smith had not left his own prints on the knife; he had told Ben to make a note of this, and he was far too wily a customer to commit such a cardinal blunder. But he had not merely wiped his fingerprints off, he had apparently stamped Ben’s on! While he was unconscious! He’d worked the whole thing out from the word go …

      ‘Are you asleep?’ came Mr Smith’s voice.

      If only he had been! Apprehensively and slowly, Ben opened his eyes.

      ‘So you see,’ went on Mr Smith smoothly, as though there had been no interruption, ‘you are in a bit of a hole, are you not?’

      ‘S’pose I am?’ answered Ben.

      ‘There is no suppose about it. You are. And you will be in a worse hole if, in addition to the fingerprints, I am unable to prevent that photograph from appearing in all the newspapers—a photograph of a murdered man on one end of a seat with another man wanted for enquiries at the other. You say you never saw the murdered man before today?’

      ‘Never in me life,’ replied Ben.

      He knew this was a frame-up, but would it be wise to let Mr Smith know he knew? Perhaps he’d better lie doggo for a bit—stop makin’ a fuss like—and act as though he thought Mr Smith were really trying to help him, until he found out where it was all leading?

      ‘Then why did you kill him?’

      Still wavering as to his best policy, and with his mind beginning to rocket again, Ben could not answer that one and remained silent. He was stunned by the cool audacity of Mr Smith, who now bent forward and continued, almost confidentially.

      ‘Do you know, I’ve got a theory about this murder of yours, and you need not tell me whether I am right or wrong. As a matter of fact, it was because of my idea that I brought you along here instead of handing you over to the police, as of course I ought to have done. Oh, don’t make any mistake, I am taking a big risk myself in acting like this—but let that go. I like to help people in trouble—if they’re worth it, of course—and the reason I’m helping you is because I feel sure yours wasn’t a premeditated murder.’

      ‘Pre ’oo?’ blinked Ben.

      ‘You didn’t set out to murder this poor fellow,’ explained Mr Smith, ‘as—for instance—I might have done if I had been the culprit. You were ill, perhaps. Or hungry. I don’t know—don’t ask me! But all at once everything got on top of you, eh? You had a brain-storm. As a matter of fact, Mr Jones, that’s just what it looked like to me! A brain-storm. And you jumped upon your poor victim with that knife, perhaps hardly knowing you did it—why, you even thought I did it, which proves the brain-storm, doesn’t it—and then—I suppose you know this?—you had a complete black-out! Well, as my car was handy, for I’d only left it a minute or two before to have a tiny stroll, I acted upon a sudden impulse and bundled you off while the going was good. Of course, there’ll be a big hue and cry for you later, if it hasn’t already started. You’d never have left those fingerprints on the knife if you’d been normal. They’ll damn you, I’m afraid. But you’re safe here, for the time being, so now what we’ve got to decide is what I’m going to do with you.’ He displayed his teeth in another of his unpleasant smiles. ‘Have you any idea?’

      Guardedly Ben responded,

      ‘’Ave you?’

      ‘As a matter of fact I have, but first let me ask you a question or two. A lot will depend on your answers. Let us hope for your sake they will be satisfactory.’

      ‘S’pose they ain’t?’

      ‘That will be just too bad. Now, then. Is anybody likely to trail you here? Apart, of course, from the police?’

      ‘’Owjer mean?’

      ‘I speak the King’s English. Have you any people who will wonder why you haven’t gone home tonight?’

      ‘Oh, I see.’

      ‘Well, have you?’

      ‘No one never worries abart me, and if they did, ’ow’d they find me? I dunno where I am meself!’

      ‘Where do you live?’

      ‘Where I ’appen to be.’

      ‘Try again. What’s your address?’

      ‘Nothink doin’, guv’nor! I knows that one!’

      ‘What one?’

      ‘I seen it done. Yer gits a bloke away wot’s wanted, and then yer gits a messidge to ’is wife or ’is muvver that yer’ll give ’im up unless they sends yer a pony.’

      ‘You know, you’re smarter than you look,’ said Mr Smith, admiringly. ‘If I weren’t straight I’d begin to watch my step. Will it ease you if I promise not to communicate with your wife or mother?’

      ‘Yer couldn’t, ’cos I ain’t got ’em,’ answered Ben.

      ‘I am full of patience. Who have you got?’

      ‘I told yer. Nobody.’

      ‘Where did you sleep last night?’

      ‘In a bus.’

      ‘But when you got out of the bus?’

      ‘I’d ’ad it by then, it was mornin’.’

      ‘Tell me, Mr Jones. Does all this mean you haven’t got any address?’

      ‘That’s right. Two and two’s four. And if that ain’t a satisfact’ry answer, I’ve ’ad it.’

      ‘It is an exceedingly satisfactory answer,’ Mr Smith assured him. ‘If you have no home and no family you should be free to accept the position I’m thinking of offering you.’

      ‘Oh! A persishun?’

      ‘That is what I said.’

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