Classic Tales of Mystery by Editors of Canterbury Classics
Author:Editors of Canterbury Classics
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Canterbury Classics
It was its comparative proximity to Milford Hill that induced Lord Peter to lunch at the Minster Hotel rather than at the White Hart or some other more picturesquely situated hostel. It was not a lunch calculated to cheer his mind; as in all Cathedral cities, the atmosphere of the Close pervades every nook and corner of Salisbury, and no food in that city but seems faintly flavoured with prayer-books. As he sat sadly consuming that impassive pale substance known to the English as âcheeseâ unqualified (for there are cheeses which go openly by their names, as Stilton, Camembert, Gruyère, Wensleydale or Gorgonzola, but âcheeseâ is cheese and everywhere the same), he inquired of the waiter the whereabouts of Mr. Crimpleshamâs office.
The waiter directed him to a house rather further up the street on the opposite side, adding: âBut anybodyâll tell you, sir; Mr. Crimpleshamâs very well known hereabouts.â
âHeâs a good solicitor, I suppose?â said Lord Peter.
âOh, yes, sir,â said the waiter, âyou couldnât do better than trust to Mr. Crimplesham, sir. Thereâs folk say heâs old-fashioned, but Iâd rather have my little bits of business done by Mr. Crimplesham than by one of these fly-away young men. Not but what Mr. Crimpleshamâll be retiring soon, sir, I donât doubt, for he must be close on eighty, sir, if heâs a day, but then thereâs young Mr. Wicks to carry on the business, and heâs a very nice, steady-like young gentleman.â
âIs Mr. Crimplesham really as old as that?â said Lord Peter. âDear me! He must be very active for his years. A friend of mine was doing business with him in town last week.â
âWonderful active, sir,â agreed the waiter, âand with his game leg, too, youâd be surprised. But there, sir, I often think when a manâs once past a certain age, the older he grows the tougher he gets, and women the same or more so.â
âVery likely,â said Lord Peter, calling up and dismissing the mental picture of a gentleman of eighty with a game leg carrying a dead body over the roof of a Battersea flat at midnight. ââHeâs tough, sir, tough, is old Joey Bagstock, tough and devilish sly,ââ he added, thoughtlessly.
âIndeed, sir?â said the waiter. âI couldnât say, Iâm sure.â
âI beg your pardon,â said Lord Peter; âI was quoting poetry. Very silly of me. I got the habit at my motherâs knee and I canât break myself of it.â
âNo, sir,â said the waiter, pocketing a liberal tip. âThank you very much, sir. Youâll find the house easy. Just afore you come to Penny-farthing Street, sir, about two turnings off, on the righthand side opposite.â
âAfraid that disposes of Crimplesham-X,â said Lord Peter. âIâm rather sorry; he was a fine sinister figure as I had pictured him. Still, his may yet be the brain behind the handsâthe aged spider sitting invisible in the centre of the vibrating web, you know, Bunter.â
âYes, my lord,â said Bunter. They were walking up the street together.
âThere is the office over the way,â pursued Lord Peter.
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