Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
William Monk 19 - Blind Justice

William Monk 19 - Blind Justice

Titel: William Monk 19 - Blind Justice Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Perry
Vom Netzwerk:
conviction in his voice. “Nowlet’s find out how he got in. He wouldn’t have had a key, and he certainly wouldn’t have rung the doorbell at three in the morning.”
    “How do you know he wouldn’t have a key?” she said, then saw the look in his eyes. “Oh—of course. If he had a key he wouldn’t be asking the police for permission to get in. He’d have been back ages ago to dismantle that contraption. In that case, why hasn’t he just broken in?”
    “He’d be seen in the daytime,” Monk answered. “This place has some very curious neighbors now, whatever they were before. I saw one of them watching us when we came in. If we’d picked the lock instead of having a key, I’ll wager either they’d have been around here finding out who we were or they’d have sent for the police. At this time of the day it wouldn’t have taken them long to get here.”
    “At night?” she persisted, smiling herself now.
    “I can’t think of anything but the risk of getting caught. A silly chance to take, if he can come in here openly with a perfectly believable excuse.”
    “What if the police had sent somebody with him?” Hester wasn’t going to give up so easily. “He couldn’t go up to the gun, or they’d have seen him.”
    “He could have come into the study and gone up without anyone knowing. I doubt someone would’ve escorted him the whole way.”
    She raised her eyebrows. “And carried down the gun and that contraption off the table?”
    “No need. Just hide them in one of the boxes up in the attic,” he replied. “It would take only moments. Actually, even if anyone knew he had gone up to the attic, so long as they didn’t go up before he’d hidden it, it still wouldn’t matter.”
    “Right, I believe you,” she mimicked his line exactly, with a wide smile.
    “So—back to the question of how he got in that night when he killed Taft and his family,” he went on.
    “A window?” she suggested. “One of the side or back doors, maybe?”
    Together they went around every door and window in the house.The doors were all fast and showed no signs of having been picked or otherwise tampered with, but one larder window had scratches that indicated a very carefully and quite skillfully picked catch, probably with a long narrow-bladed knife.
    “I’ll find you a hansom,” he told her as they closed the door and walked out onto the sunlit street. “I need to talk to the police surgeon again, then I’ll go to speak to Dillon Warne. I don’t know when I’ll be home, but if I’m late, you and Scuff have supper without me. I can’t afford to wait with this.”
    “I know,” she agreed. “And I’ll find my own cab.”
    “No. I’ll take you …”
    “William! I can find a hansom cab for myself! Go and see the police surgeon.”
    He touched her cheek with a quick gesture, smiled back at her, then turned and walked away rapidly.
    She walked in the sun toward the main road and hailed the first passing hansom cab, then settled down for the long ride home.
    M ONK DID NOT HAVE to wait long for the police surgeon. The man came in, glad to be interrupted in his paperwork. He looked interested as soon as Monk told him which case he was referring to.
    “What did you find?” the surgeon asked, waving at a hard-backed leather-seated chair as an invitation for Monk to sit down. He leaned against the table piled with papers and cocked his head slightly to one side, his eyes sharp.
    “When you found the bodies of the Taft family, what was your estimate as to time of Abel’s death?” Monk inquired.
    The surgeon pursed his lips. “Not a great deal of skill needed. The shot was heard and reported by neighbors, on both sides, actually. Just after five in the morning.”
    Monk nodded. “I read that. But could it have been earlier, medically speaking?”
    The surgeon frowned. “What are you getting at? He killed himself with the gun that was found at the scene, and the shot was heard at just after five.”
    “Yes, but is there anything to prove that the gun at the scene was the same one that fired the shot that the neighbors heard?” Monk asked.
    The surgeon narrowed his eyes and his body stiffened. “I presume you have more to do with your time than play silly games. What the devil are you driving at?”
    “From the medical evidence,” Monk said patiently. “Could he actually have died as early as … say, three o’clock—never mind the shot?”
    “Yes,” the surgeon agreed cautiously.

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher