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Three to See the King

Three to See the King

Titel: Three to See the King Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Magnus Mills
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walls of my own tin dwelling all those miles away. For some reason this caused a surge of guilt to rise up inside me, and I had to struggle for several moments to overcome it.
    ‘Shall we go in?’ I suggested.
    The first thing I noticed when we entered was that the inside was a precise replica of Simon’s house. There was a table in the kitchen, with four or five chairs placed around it, and in the corner a stove glowed brightly. Even the chimney went out through the roof exactly where Simon’s did. On top of the stove was a pot of coffee.
    ‘Ah, good,’ said Jane. ‘Alison must be back.’
    ‘Who’s Alison?’ I asked.
    Some feet could be heard on the stairs, and a few seconds later a woman appeared. I knew her immediately. She was one of the three I’d encountered when I went to collect the basket from Simon’s old place.
    ‘Oh, it’s you,’ she said when she saw me. ‘I heard you might be coming.’
    ‘Have you two met each other before then?’ asked Jane.
    ‘Just once,’ came the reply.
    I remembered this Alison being quite unfriendly on the occasion of our first meeting. Hostile even. Something told me that she was a permanent resident here, and all at once I realized I wouldn’t be spending the night alone with Jane. For her part, she appeared totally oblivious to the cool manner in which Alison was regarding me from the stairway.
    ‘He’s come to see our house of tin,’ she explained.
    ‘Has he?’ said Alison. ‘How nice for us.’
    ‘I can go back to Simon’s if you like,’ I said.
    ‘No, it’s alright,’ she replied, in a resigned tone. ‘Now you’re here you might as well make yourself at home.’
    It turned out that Jane really had invited me back just to talk about tin houses. For the next hour she quizzed me with such questions as when was the best time to open or close the shutters, and what strength of wind would make the walls creak and groan. As we talked I got the strong impression that she already knew most of the answers, but that she was keen to embrace the subject even further. Oddly enough, though, the more she enthused about it the less interested I became. As a matter of fact I found her eagerness quite exhausting, and was consequently relieved when at last Alison intervened.
    ‘Don’t you think that’s enough for one night?’ she said. ‘Our guest must be getting tired.’
    ‘Oh, I do apologize!’ Jane exclaimed, jumping to her feet. ‘You must think me very rude.’
    ‘No, no,’ I replied. ‘I’ve found the whole evening most fascinating.’
    She then began rushing round preparing somewhere for me to sleep. This hadn’t been exactly what I’d envisaged when accepting her invitation, but I was now so tired that I no longer cared. Ten minutes later I was installed in a camp-bed on the ground floor, and the women had made their way upstairs. In many respects it was just like being in my own house on one of those rare nights when, for undisclosed reasons, Mary Petrie would banish me from the upper storey. I thought of her as I lay listening to muted footsteps moving around on the floor above, and then I dozed off to sleep.
    Sometime in the dead of night I was woken by the sound of the door opening and people coming in. They weren’t noisy or intrusive, and had soon dispersed to various parts of the house, except for one who remained downstairs. I heard bedding being unrolled in the darkness, so I thought it might be polite to let him or her know that I was there. Whoever it was seemed to be fumbling around quite a lot, as if unacquainted with the layout of the place, and this provided my opportunity to speak.
    ‘Do you need help with that?’ I asked quietly.
    The other person gasped with surprise, then answered, ‘No, I’m fine thanks.’
    ‘Is that Patrick Pybus?’
    ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Is that you I met on the way here?’
    ‘Yes it is. How did you get on this evening?’
    ‘Very well indeed, thanks. I appear to have landed right on my feet. I’ve already come across two of your friends, Steve Treacle and Philip Sibling, and they arranged for me to stay here tonight.’ He lowered his voice. ‘The girls are all very friendly aren’t they?’
    ‘Most of the time, yes,’ I said. ‘What are Steve and Philip up to?’
    ‘They’ve been helping Michael Hawkins with the canyon. I’m going to see it tomorrow. Have you met him yet?’
    ‘No, I haven’t had the pleasure.’
    ‘Nor me, but I’m really looking forward to it. They say

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