BRITISH MYSTERIES - Fergus Hume Collection: 21 Thriller Novels in One Volume. Fergus Hume. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Fergus Hume
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9788075831620
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beneath their weight, and found Mother Guttersnipe lying on the bed in the corner. The elfish black-haired child was playing cards with a slatternly-looking girl at a deal table by the faint light of a tallow candle.

      They both sprang to their feet as the strangers entered, and the elfish child pushed a broken chair in a sullen manner towards Mr. Calton, while the other girl shuffled into a far corner of the room, and crouched down there like a dog. The noise of their entry awoke the hag from an uneasy slumber into which she had fallen. Sitting up in bed, she huddled the clothes round her. She presented such a gruesome spectacle that involuntarily Calton recoiled. Her white hair was unbound, and hung in tangled masses over her shoulders in snowy profusion. Her face, parched and wrinkled, with the hooked nose, and beady black eyes, like those of a mouse, was poked forward, and her skinny arms, bare to the shoulder, were waving wildly about as she grasped at the bedclothes with her claw-like hands. The square bottle and the broken cup lay beside her, and filling herself a dram, she lapped it up greedily.

      The irritant brought on a paroxysm of coughing which lasted until the elfish child shook her well, and took the cup from her.

      “Greedy old beast,” muttered this amiable infant, peering into the cup, “ye’d drink the Yarrer dry, I b’lieve.”

      “Yah!” muttered the old woman feebly. “Who’s they, Lizer?” she said, shading her eyes with one trembling hand, while she looked at Calton and the detective.

      “The perlice cove an’ the swell,” said Lizer, suddenly. “Come to see yer turn up your toes.”

      “I ain’t dead yet, ye whelp,” snarled the hag with sudden energy; “an’ if I gits up I’ll turn up yer toes, cuss ye.”

      Lizer gave a shrill laugh of disdain, and Kilsip stepped forward.

      “None of this,” he said, sharply, taking Lizer by one thin shoulder, and pushing her over to where the other girl was crouching; “stop there till I tell you to move.”

      Lizer tossed back her tangled black hair, and was about to make some impudent reply, when the other girl, who was older and wiser, put out her hand, and pulled her down beside her.

      Meanwhile, Calton was addressing himself to the old woman in the corner.

      “You wanted to see me?” he said gently, for, notwithstanding his repugnance to her, she was, after all, a woman, and dying.

      “Yes, cuss ye,” croaked Mother Guttersnipe, lying down, and pulling the greasy bedclothes up to her neck. “You ain’t a parson?” with sudden suspicion.

      “No, I am a lawyer.”

      “I ain’t a-goin’ to have the cussed parsons a-prowlin’ round ‘ere,” growled the old woman, viciously. “I ain’t a-goin’ to die yet, cuss ye; I’m goin’ to get well an’ strong, an’ ‘ave a good time of it.”

      “I’m afraid you won’t recover,” said Calton, gently. “You had better let me send for a doctor.”

      “No, I shan’t,” retorted the hag, aiming a blow at him with all her feeble strength. “I ain’t a-goin’ to have my inside spil’d with salts and senner. I don’t want neither parsons nor doctors, I don’t. I wouldn’t ‘ave a lawyer, only I’m a-thinkin’ of makin’ my will, I am.”

      “Mind I gits the watch,” yelled Lizer, from the corner. “If you gives it to Sal I’ll tear her eyes out.”

      “Silence!” said Kilsip, sharply, and, with a muttered curse, Lizer sat back in her corner.

      “Sharper than a serpent’s tooth, she are,” whined the old woman, when quiet was once more restored. “That young devil ‘ave fed at my ‘ome, an’ now she turns, cuss her.”

      “Well—well,” said Calton, rather impatiently, “what is it you wanted to see me about?”

      “Don’t be in such a ‘urry,” said the hag, with a scowl, “or I’m blamed if I tell you anything, s’elp me.”

      She was evidently growing very weak, so Calton turned to Kilsip and told him in a whisper to get a doctor. The detective scribbled a note on some paper, and, giving it to Lizer, ordered her to take it. At this, the other girl arose, and, putting her arm in that of the child’s, they left together.

      “Them two young ‘usseys gone?” said Mother Guttersnipe. “Right you are, for I don’t want what I’ve got to tell to git into the noospaper, I don’t.”

      “And what is it?” asked Calton, bending forward.

      The old woman took another drink of gin, and it seemed to put life into her, for she sat up in the bed, and commenced to talk rapidly, as though she were afraid of dying before her secret was told.

      “You’ve been ‘ere afore?” she said, pointing one skinny finger at Calton, “and you wanted to find out all about ‘er; but you didn’t. She wouldn’t let me tell, for she was always a proud jade, a-flouncin’ round while ‘er pore mother was a-starvin’.”

      “Her mother! Are you Rosanna Moore’s mother?” cried Calton, considerably astonished.

      “May I die if I ain’t,” croaked the hag. “‘Er pore father died of drink, cuss ‘im, an’ I’m a-follerin’ ‘im to the same place in the same way. You weren’t about town in the old days, or you’d a-bin after her, cuss ye.”

      “After Rosanna?”

      “The werry girl,” answered Mother Guttersnipe. “She were on the stage, she were, an’ my eye, what a swell she were, with all the coves a-dyin’ for ‘er, an’ she dancin’ over their black ‘earts, cuss ‘em; but she was allays good to me till ‘e came.”

      “Who came?”

      “‘E!” yelled the old woman, raising herself on her arm, her eyes sparkling with vindictive fury. “‘E, a-comin’ round with di’monds and gold, and a-ruinin’ my pore girl; an’ how ‘e’s ‘eld ‘is bloomin’ ‘ead up all these years as if he were a saint, cuss ‘im—cuss ‘im.”

      “Whom does she mean?” whispered Calton to Kilsip.

      “Mean!” screamed Mother Guttersnipe, whose sharp ears had caught the muttered question. “Why, Mark Frettlby!”

      “Good God!” Calton rose up in his astonishment, and even Kilsip’s inscrutable countenance displayed some surprise.

      “Aye, ‘e were a swell in them days,” pursued Mother Guttersnipe, “and ‘e comes a-philanderin’ round my gal, cuss ‘im, an’ ruins ‘er, and leaves ‘er an’ the child to starve, like a black-‘earted villain as ‘e were.”

      “The child! Her name?”

      “Bah,” retorted the hag, with scorn, “as if you didn’t know my gran’daughter Sal.”

      “Sal, Mark Frettlby’s child?”

      “Yes, an’ as pretty a girl as the other, tho’ she ‘appened to be born on the wrong side of the ‘edge. Oh, I’ve seen ‘er a-sweepin’ along in ‘er silks an’ satins as tho’ we were dirt—an’ Sal ‘er ‘alf sister—cuss ‘er.”

      Exhausted by the efforts she had made, the old woman sank back in her bed, while Calton sat dazed, thinking over the astounding revelation that had just been made. That Rosanna Moore should turn out to be Mark Frettlby’s mistress he hardly wondered at; after all, the millionaire was but a man, and in his young days had been no better and no worse than the rest of his friends. Rosanna Moore was pretty, and was evidently one of those women who—rakes at heart—prefer the untrammelled freedom of being a mistress, to the sedate bondage of a wife. In questions of morality, so many people live in glass houses, that there are few nowadays who can afford to throw stones. Calton did not think any the worse of Frettlby for his youthful follies. But what did surprise him was that Frettlby should