"A. C. Doyle - The Disintegration Machine" - читать интересную книгу автора (Doyle Arthur Conan)

The Disintegration Machine and Other Stories
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The Disintegration Machine and Other Stories



Table of Contents
The Disintegration Machine and Other Stories...............................................................................................1
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle...........................................................................................................................1




i
The Disintegration Machine and Other Stories
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
THE DISINTEGRATION MACHINE

тАв The Disintegration Machine
тАв The Horror of the Heights
тАв When the World Screamed

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PROFESSOR CHALLENGER was in the worst possible humour. As I stood at the door of his study, my
hand upon the handle and my foot upon the mat, I heard a monologue which ran like this, the words booming
and reverberating through the house:

'Yes, I say it is the second wrong call. The second in one morning. Do you imagine that a man of science is to
be distracted from essential work by the constant interference of some idiot at the end of a wire? I will not
have it. Send this instant for the manager. Oh! you are the manager. Well, why don't you manage? Yes, you
certainly manage to distract me from work the importance of which your mind is incapable of understanding.
I want the superintendent. He is away? So I should imagine. I will carry you to the law courts if this occurs
again. Crowing cocks have been adjudicated upon. I myself have obtained a judgement. If crowing cocks,
why not jangling bells? The case is clear. A written apology. Very good. I will consider it. Good morning.'

It was at this point that I ventured to make my entrance. It was certainly an unfortunate moment. I confronted
him as he turned from the telephone тИТтИТ a lion in its wrath. His huge black beard was bristling, his great chest
was heaving with indignation, and his arrogant grey eyes swept me up and down as the backwash of his anger
fell upon me.

'Infernal, idle, overpaid rascals!' he boomed. 'I could hear them laughing while I was making my just
complaint. There is a conspiracy to annoy me. And now, young Malone, you arrive to complete a disastrous
morning. Are you here, may I ask, on your own account, or has your rag commissioned you to obtain an
interview? As a friend you are privileged тИТтИТ as a journalist you are outside the pale.'

I was hunting in my pocket for McArdle's letter when suddenly some new grievance came to his memory.
His great hairy hands fumbled about among the papers upon his desk and finally extracted a press cutting.