The Teeth of the Tiger by Maurice Leblanc (e book reader android TXT) đ
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The fortunes of Don Luis Perenna seem set to only increase after the will of his friend, Cosmo Mornington, is read. Perenna stands to benefit by one million francs if he finds the true heir, and by one hundred million if they canât be found. But after both a detective and a potential recipient of the fortune die in the in the same way as Mornington, Perenna (alias ArsĂšne Lupin) must fight to prove his innocence and discover the real murderer.
The Teeth of the Tiger was published in this English translation in 1914, but wasnât available in the original French until its serialization in Le Journal in 1920. In the timeline of the series, The Teeth of the Tiger is set after the events of 813, and continues with the rebalancing of Lupin from a god-like genius to a fallible, albeit brilliant, man.
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- Author: Maurice Leblanc
Read book online «The Teeth of the Tiger by Maurice Leblanc (e book reader android TXT) đ». Author - Maurice Leblanc
âAnd whatâs more curious still,â he added, âis that the messenger who saw him leave this room saw him come in again almost at once and did not see him go out a second time.â
âPerhaps he only passed through here to go to you.â
âTo me, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet? I was in my room all the time.â
âThen itâs incomprehensible.â
âYesâ ââ ⊠unless we conclude that the messengerâs attention was distracted for a second, as VĂ©rot is neither here nor next door.â
âThat must be it. I expect heâs gone to get some air outside; and heâll be back at any moment. For that matter, I shanât want him to start with.â
The Prefect looked at his watch.
âTen past five. You might tell the messenger to show those gentlemen in.â ââ ⊠Wait, thoughâ ââ
M. Desmalions hesitated. In turning over the papers he had found VĂ©rotâs letter. It was a large, yellow, business envelope, with âCafĂ© du Pont-Neufâ printed at the top.
The secretary suggested:
âIn view of VĂ©rotâs absence, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, and of what he said, it might be as well for you to see whatâs in the letter first.â
M. Desmalions paused to reflect.
âPerhaps youâre right.â
And, making up his mind, he inserted a paper-knife into the envelope and cut it open. A cry escaped him.
âOh, I say, this is a little too much!â
âWhat is it, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet?â
âWhy, look here, a blankâ ââ ⊠sheet of paper! Thatâs all the envelope contains!â
âImpossible!â
âSee for yourselfâ âa plain sheet folded in four, with not a word on it.â
âBut VĂ©rot told me in so many words that he had said in that letter all that he knew about the case.â
âHe told you so, no doubt, but there you are! Upon my word, if I didnât know Inspector VĂ©rot, I should think he was trying to play a game with me.â
âItâs a piece of carelessness, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, at the worst.â
âNo doubt, a piece of carelessness, but Iâm surprised at him. It doesnât do to be careless when the lives of two people are at stake. For he must have told you that there is a double murder planned for tonight?â
âYes, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet, and under particularly alarming conditions; infernal was the word he used.â
M. Desmalions was walking up and down the room, with his hands behind his back. He stopped at a small table.
âWhatâs this little parcel addressed to me? âMonsieur le PrĂ©fet de Policeâ âto be opened in case of accident.âââ
âOh, yes,â said the secretary, âI was forgetting! Thatâs from Inspector VĂ©rot, too; something of importance, he said, and serving to complete and explain the contents of the letter.â
âWell,â said M. Desmalions, who could not help laughing, âthe letter certainly needs explaining; and, though thereâs no question of âaccident,â I may as well open the parcel.â
As he spoke, he cut the string and discovered, under the paper, a box, a little cardboard box, which might have come from a druggist, but which was soiled and spoiled by the use to which it had been put.
He raised the lid. Inside the box were a few layers of cotton wool, which were also rather dirty, and in between these layers was half a cake of chocolate.
âWhat the devil does this mean?â growled the Prefect in surprise.
He took the chocolate, looked at it, and at once perceived what was peculiar about this cake of chocolate, which was also undoubtedly the reason why Inspector VĂ©rot had kept it. Above and below, it bore the prints of teeth, very plainly marked, very plainly separated one from the other, penetrating to a depth of a tenth of an inch or so into the chocolate. Each possessed its individual shape and width, and each was divided from its neighbours by a different interval. The jaws which had started eating the cake of chocolate had dug into it the mark of four upper and five lower teeth.
M. Desmalions remained wrapped in thought and, with his head sunk on his chest, for some minutes resumed his walk up and down the room, muttering:
âThis is queerâ ââ ⊠Thereâs a riddle here to which I should like to know the answer. That sheet of paper, the marks of those teeth: what does it all mean?â
But he was not the man to waste much time over a mystery which was bound to be cleared up presently, as Inspector VĂ©rot must be either at the police office or somewhere just outside; and he said to his secretary:
âI canât keep those five gentlemen waiting any longer. Please have them shown in now. If Inspector VĂ©rot arrives while they are here, as he is sure to do, let me know at once. I want to see him as soon as he comes. Except for that, see that Iâm not disturbed on any pretext, wonât you?â
Two minutes later the messenger showed in MaĂźtre Lepertuis, a stout, red-faced man, with whiskers and spectacles, followed by Archibald Bright, the Secretary of Embassy, and Caceres, the Peruvian attachĂ©. M. Desmalions, who knew all three of them, chatted to them until he stepped forward to receive Major Comte dâAstrignac, the hero of La ChouĂŻa, who had been forced into premature retirement by his glorious wounds. The Prefect was complimenting him warmly on his gallant conduct in Morocco when the door opened once more.
âDon Luis Perenna, I believe?â said the Prefect, offering his hand to a man of middle height and rather slender build, wearing the military medal and the red ribbon of the Legion of Honour.
The newcomerâs face and expression, his way of holding himself, and his very youthful movements inclined one to look upon him as a man of forty, though there were wrinkles at the corners of the eyes and on the forehead, which perhaps pointed to a few years more. He bowed.
âYes, Monsieur le PrĂ©fet.â
âIs that you, Perenna?â cried Comte dâAstrignae. âSo you are still among the living?â
âYes, Major, and delighted to see you again.â
âPerenna alive! Why, we had lost all sight of you when I left Morocco! We thought you dead.â
âI was a prisoner, thatâs all.â
âA prisoner of the tribesmen; the
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