登陆注册
19624200000026

第26章 THE LAST LAUGH(6)

Raffles looked up at me with a curiously open eye, an eye that I never saw when he was not in earnest. I fancied he did not like my last expression but one. After all, it was no laughing matter to him.

"But are they?" said he. "I'm not so sure."

"You said they were!"

"I said they should be."

"Didn't you hear them go?"

"I heard nothing but the clock all night. It was like Big Ben striking at the last--striking nine to the fellow on the drop."

And in that open eye I saw at last a deep glimmer of the ordeal through which he had passed.

"But, my dear old Raffles, if they're still on the premises--"

The thought was too thrilling for a finished sentence.

"I hope they are," he said grimly, going to the door. "There's a gas on! Was that burning when you came in?"

Now that I thought of it, yes, it had been.

"And there's a frightfully foul smell," I added, as I followed Raffles down the stairs. He turned to me gravely with his hand upon the front-room door, and at the same moment I saw a coat with an astrakhan collar hanging on the pegs.

"They are in here, Bunny," he said, and turned the handle.

The door would only open a few inches. But a detestable odor came out, with a broad bar of yellow gaslight. Raffles put his handkerchief to his nose. I followed his example, signing to our ally to do the same, and in another minute we had all three squeezed into the room.

The man with the yellow boots was lying against the door, the Count's great carcass sprawled upon the table, and at a glance it was evident that both men had been dead some hours. The old Camorrist had the stem of a liqueur-glass between his swollen blue fingers, one of which had been cut in the breakage, and the livid flesh was also brown with the last blood that it would ever shed. His face was on the table, the huge moustache projecting from under either leaden cheek, yet looking itself strangely alive. Broken bread and scraps of frozen macaroni lay upon the cloth and at the bottom of two soup-plates and a tureen; the macaroni had a tinge of tomato; and there was a crimson dram left in the tumblers, with an empty fiasco to show whence it came. But near the great gray head upon the table another liqueur-glass stood, unbroken, and still full of some white and stinking liquid; and near that a tiny silver flash, which made me recoil from Raffles as I had not from the dead; for I knew it to be his.

"Come out of this poisonous air," he said sternly, "and I will tell you how it has happened."

So we all three gathered together in the hall. But it was Raffles who stood nearest the street-door, his back to it, his eyes upon us two. And though it was to me only that he spoke at first, he would pause from point to point, and translate into Italian for the benefit of the one-eyed alien to whom he owed his life.

"You probably don't even know the name, Bunny," he began, "of the deadliest poison yet known to science. It is cyanide of cacodyl, and I have carried that small flask of it about with me for months. Where I got it matters nothing; the whole point is that a mere sniff reduces flesh to clay. I have never had any opinion of suicide, as you know, but I always felt it worth while to be forearmed against the very worst. Well, a bottle of this stuff is calculated to stiffen an ordinary roomful of ordinary people within five minutes; and I remembered my flask when they had me as good as crucified in the small hours of this morning. I asked them to take it out of my pocket. I begged them to give me a drink before they left me. And what do you suppose they did?"

I thought of many things but suggested none, while Raffles turned this much of his statement into sufficiently fluent Italian. But when he faced me again his face was still flaming.

"That beast Corbucci!" said he--"how can I pity him? He took the flask; he would give me none; he flicked me in the face instead.

My idea was that he, at least, should go with me--to sell my life as dearly as that--and a sniff would have settled us both.

But no, he must tantalize and torment me; he thought it brandy; he must take it downstairs to drink to my destruction! Can you have any pity for a hound like that?"

"Let us go," I at last said, hoarsely, as Raffles finished speaking in Italian, and his second listener stood open-mouthed.

"We will go," said Raffles, "and we will chance being seen; if the worst comes to the worst this good chap will prove that I have been tied up since one o'clock this morning, and the medical evidence will decide how long those dogs have been dead."

But the worst did not come to the worst, more power to my unforgotten friend the cabman, who never came forward to say what manner of men he had driven to Bloomsbury Square at top speed on the very day upon which the tragedy was discovered there, or whence he had driven them. To be sure, they had not behaved like murderers, whereas the evidence at the inquest all went to show that the defunct Corbucci was little better. His reputation, which transpired with his identity, was that of a libertine and a renegade, while the infernal apparatus upstairs revealed the fiendish arts of the anarchist to boot. The inquiry resulted eventually in an open verdict, and was chiefly instrumental in killing such compassion as is usually felt for the dead who die in their sins.

But Raffles would not have passed this title for this tale.

同类推荐
  • 太虛心淵篇

    太虛心淵篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 返生香

    返生香

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 恢国篇

    恢国篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 绿珠传

    绿珠传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说乐想经

    佛说乐想经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 破谋

    破谋

    一场意外,分不清是好是坏,一场纠结,分不清谁对谁错。隐瞒的阴谋,是神的玩笑,还是纪元的征兆。懒得去想,只为怀中的佳人,死也要拼出个未来,跟你一起去看看最终的朝阳,那缓缓升起的希望。读者群:213449971亲爱的读者,作者节操以欠费,请先交节操,继续阅读。
  • 帝国重启

    帝国重启

    三流学渣穿越清末,重铸中央帝国,再现泱泱华夏!
  • 红颜孽缘鸳鸯锦:弃妃不争宠

    红颜孽缘鸳鸯锦:弃妃不争宠

    穿越就穿越,居然代替别人嫁给王爷。可是。。。王爷居然已经有了十五个老婆!!乖乖……好吧,只要有我的吃喝就成,管他什么王爷不王爷。可是命运似乎不那么安分,这些个女人总要唱几出不平常的曲调。。。于是阴谋慢慢袭来,日子越来越复杂了。。。
  • 带着娃儿跑

    带着娃儿跑

    她,出生于重男轻女的商人之家。她的出生就注定了命运的悲剧。他,狂傲且不可一世,坐拥亿万资产,对爱情却哼之以鼻。当一枚冰冷的戒指戴入我的手指,我才知道在不知不觉中一切已成了事实。从此,我的人生也发生了翻天覆地的变化。
  • 名医

    名医

    救人?这个可以有!杀人?这个也可以有!结婚?这个不能有。于是,燕慕容逃婚了。一个年轻的中医,带着老头子的理想,宁可逃婚,也要让中医扬名。一针在手,可以救人!一针在手,也可以杀人!杀人与救人,本就在一念之间!
  • 明医指掌

    明医指掌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 冷漠王爷的狂傲弃妃

    冷漠王爷的狂傲弃妃

    “什么,你也是从21世纪穿越过来的?你来多久了?”安娉婷兴奋的问着所谓的静贵妃。“我来了也有一两年了。你呢?”静贵妃问。唉,这让她怎么开口说呢?安娉婷纠结。两个男子看着眼前的女子,一阵迷茫。
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 雕明

    雕明

    眼看万贵妃就要病死,成化皇帝就要病死,弘治皇帝就要登基,太平盛世就要到来,陈林觉得机会来了。他要让老爹飞黄腾达,要让岳父青云直上,自己也要大捞特捞政治资本……
  • 狂仙列传

    狂仙列传

    心中怨念不去,道心不得通达,如何能修成真仙?仙神者,当纵横天地之间,不为世间凡俗规则所限;但若无真心真德,当迷失自我,成为只知杀戮的魔物,陨落却也是必然!