Through the Wall eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 405 pages of information about Through the Wall.

Through the Wall eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 405 pages of information about Through the Wall.

“For what?”

Mrs. Wilmott bit her red lips and then with some dignity replied that she did not see what bearing her purpose had on the case since it had not been accomplished.

“Why wasn’t it accomplished?” he asked.

“Because the man was shot.”

“Who shot him?”

“I don’t know.”

“You have no idea?”

“No idea.”

“But you were present in the room?”

“Ye-es.”

“You heard the shot?  You saw Martinez fall?”

“Yes, but——­”

“Well?”

Now her agitation, increased, she seemed about to make some statement, but checked herself and simply insisted that she knew nothing about the shooting.  No one had entered the room except herself and Martinez and the waiter who served them.  They had finished the soup; Martinez had left his seat for a moment; he was standing near her when—­when the shot was fired and he fell to the floor.  She had no idea where the shot came from or who fired it.  She was frightened and hurried away from the hotel.  That was all.

Coquenil smiled indulgently.  “What did you do with the auger?” he asked.

“The auger?” she gasped.

“Yes, it was seen by the cab driver you took when you slipped out of the hotel in the telephone girl’s rain coat.”

“You know that?”

He nodded and went on:  “This cab driver remembers that you had something under your arm wrapped in a newspaper.  Was that the auger?”

“Yes,” she answered weakly.

“And you threw it into the Seine as you crossed the Concorde bridge?”

She stared at him in genuine admiration:  “My God, you’re the cleverest man I ever met!”

M. Paul bowed politely, and glancing at a well-spread tea table, he said:  “Mrs. Wilmott, if you think so well of me, perhaps you won’t mind giving me a cup of tea.  The fact is, I have been so busy with this case I forgot to eat and I—­I feel a little faint.”  He pressed a hand against his forehead and Pussy saw that he was very white.

“You poor man!” she cried in concern.  “Why didn’t you tell me sooner?  I’ll fix it myself.  There!  Take some of these toasted muffins.  What an extraordinary life you must lead!  I can almost forgive you for being so outrageous because you’re so—­so interesting.”  She let her siren eyes shine on him in a way that had wrought the discomfiture of many a man.

M. Paul smiled.  “I can return the compliment by saying that it isn’t every lady who could throw a clumsy thing like an auger from a moving cab over a wide roadway and a stone wall and land it in a river.  I suppose you threw it over on the right-hand side?”

“Yes.”

“How far across the bridge had you got when you threw it?  This may help the divers.”

She thought a moment.  “We were a little more than halfway across, I should say.”

“Thanks.  Now who bought this auger?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Through the Wall from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.