but once you’d given Dyson a smell of the scent, he’d follow you to the kill! Only it so happened that I was around too, and I was given the preference… While Sir Daynes was sidetracked by Johnson, you carefully kept me pointing in the right direction.’

Gently stopped opposite the gasping nobleman.

‘And that’s that, my lord — everything I should know!’

‘Take me!’ exclaimed Somerhayes, twisting round with outstretched hands. ‘I want you to make the arrest — I want you to do it — personally!’

Gently stood looking at him for a long, pitiless moment. Then he slowly shook his head.

‘No,’ he said. ‘It’s too fantastic… It’s psychologically impossible!’

‘You must arrest me — I demand it!’

Somerhayes was still holding out his hands. And Gently was still shaking his head with obstinate decision.

‘I knew you were to be the man — I appeal to you to do it!’

‘I may be the man’ — Gently shrugged — ‘but you’re not the man… there’s the contradiction!’

‘Mr Gently, you have grasped the whole case. As a magistrate, I adjure you to do your duty!’

‘I am trying to grasp it, my lord, and I shall certainly do my duty. But I repeat… you are not the man to commit a crime like this. You are a man to die — yes! But you are not a man to kill. Your whole record makes nonsense of the account I have just drawn up.’

‘How dare you make such a judgement!’

‘I dare, from the facts you have given me.’

‘In so many words, Mr Gently, I hereby confess to the murder of Lieutenant Earle!’

‘I’m sorry, my lord, but your character prevents me from accepting your word in the matter.’

Somerhayes’s hands fell to his sides, and he seemed to shrink back insensibly from the sudden, dramatic pose he had assumed. In the dim light it was impossible to distinguish the expression of his features or his eyes. He was merely a black-etched shape against the impoverished illumination below.

‘Mr Gently, I beseech you’ — his voice had sunk again to its lowest tone — ‘I beseech you to think well what you are doing before you take an irrevocable step. I can count on your understanding. I can count on yours alone. Do not press too far for the ultimate fact, when it may not be in the service of the ultimate truth. Consider, Mr Gently — I beseech you to consider!’

‘Mmn.’ Gently stood planted like a brooding statue.

‘Think again what manner of man I am. Be fearless, be favourless in your summing-up. You know I see myself truly. I am a spiritual man of straw, a decadent, an anachronism, one without value. My only good is to die well, my only excuse to have served an ideal. Before you interrupt what is wholly the course of justice, think — think!’

Gently nodded from his shadowy silence.

‘If men have purpose, and I believe they have, then the worthless have value when they accept the dispositions of providence. And this disposition is mine. By this I fulfil what would appear a useless destiny. Have you the right to withhold your assistance from me at this moment, or to tamper with a disposal bearing the stamp of higher purpose? I say you have not, Mr Gently, and I insist that you acknowledge it!’

Gently hunched his shapeless shoulders, looked away, and looked back again.

‘You can die, my lord,’ he said, ‘but you can’t kill. That’s all I acknowledge just now! And if you didn’t kill Lieutenant Earle, then you are proposing to die for another — and who else can that other be but Leslie Edward Brass?’

‘No!’ cried Somerhayes. ‘Be reasonable, Mr Gently!’

‘Brass,’ repeated Gently, his voice beginning to rise. ‘I say again — who else, my lord? Who else but the man you would turn into an idol? You have sacrificed your career to him — your money — your cousin’s love. And now you want to make the great sacrifice — don’t you? — to lay down your life!’

‘I am nothing!’ exclaimed Somerhayes. ‘Remember — I am nothing.’

‘On the contrary,’ snapped Gently. ‘You are the most profound egotist I have ever had to deal with!’

The nobleman reeled as though he had been struck in the face. The half-light below, catching him in profile, showed the white of his eye in a shocked dilation.

‘You shouldn’t have said that!’ he stammered. ‘Mr Gently, you shouldn’t have said it!’

‘No, I shouldn’t — should I?’ demanded Gently. ‘It wasn’t in the compact! My business was to stop short where you were still a heroic figure. Unfortunately I am not a hero-worshipper, my lord. You mistook your man when you cast me for the part. In the course of a long connection with the criminal character, I’ve been driven to the conclusion that the biggest heroes are the greatest criminals — they are psychopaths, my lord, people who have failed, like you, to reach a working compromise with life.’

Somerhayes caught hold of the balustrade and hung to it, gasping. ‘You are killing me!’ he cried. ‘Every word is like a dagger!’

‘The truth won’t kill!’ Gently pressed on mercilessly. ‘You’re going to face it this time, unlike all the other occasions, when you only played at facing it. Because you never have faced it yet, have you? From Jepson down to the House of Lords and Janice it’s been one long retreat — a retreat to preserve the myth — a retreat to keep intact the vision of Lord Somerhayes the Great. This is what I’ve come to understand. This is where the focus starts getting sharp. You care nothing for your cousin. You care nothing for society. To keep the myth unblemished you would sacrifice the love of the one and bequeath the other a killer — and step on the scaffold in an intoxication of self-love and imaginary grandeur. Where is the hero here, my lord? Where is the nobility I have been summoned to admire? All I can see is a gigantic selfishness, and an egotism so voracious that only tragedy can glut it!’

‘I have served art!’ cried Somerhayes. ‘Give me that at least — creation absolves the greatest of crimes!’

‘You serve yourself,’ retorted Gently. ‘You have never served anything else. And as for crime, it has no absolution but punishment.’

‘Personally,’ said a third voice behind them, ‘I prefer his lordship’s version, Inspector!’ And Leslie Brass stepped suddenly out of the unlit saloon.

‘Keep your voices down, children… I’m getting to be somewhat de trop around here.’

Brass had a gun in his hand, a small automatic that Gently recognized as a. 22 Unique of French manufacture.

‘I don’t want to raise my bag unnecessarily, but you see how I’m placed, my chickens. As I take it, his lordship is just about to rat on me — you used the right weapon, Inspector. Flattery would have got you nowhere!’

Gently shrugged expressionlessly. ‘I was wondering when you’d come out…’

‘Of course you were, my son.’ Brass waved the gun deprecatingly. ‘It’s your business to notice things, isn’t it? If X was listening in on two consecutive occasions, the odds are pretty bright that he would be there the third time. And here he is, toying with his lordship’s gun… What does that suggest to the trained police mind?’

‘You’d never get away with it.’

‘I might, you know, all things considered.’

‘At the moment, Brass, you could get off with manslaughter… It’ll be a different tale if you fool around with that thing.’

‘You visualize the whole plot I take it, my maestro?’

‘You’re thinking you could shoot the pair of us and leave the gun in his lordship’s hand.’

‘Distinctly workable, y’know.’

‘The police aren’t fools.’

‘But they’re thinking along certain lines, Inspector. They would rush to jump at the wrong conclusion. What could be more natural than for his lordship, being taxed, to draw his gun and shoot you — and then to put an end to things? There’s only my conscience really to worry about… and it’s a pretty elastic article. The first job is the worst, sonny. After that it gets to be routine.’

Gently grunted and turned to Somerhayes. ‘You see?’ he said. ‘You see what you’re protecting? This is crime, not creation. Art doesn’t kill, but greed does.’

Вы читаете Landed Gently
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату