"Mortimer, John - Rumpole A La Carte" - читать интересную книгу автора (Mortimer John)'Oh, yes.' At last the penny dropped. 'Of course I was! I do remember now. Naturally. And I did it all to help Philly. To help my wife. Is that what you mean?' He ended up looking at me anxiously.
'Exactly.' 'Thank you, Mr Rumpole. Thank you very much.' ErskineBrown's gratitude was pathetic. But the Judge couldn't wait to get on to the exciting bits. 'Mr Rumpole,' he boomed mournfully, 'when are we coming to the mouse?' 'Oh, yes. I'm grateful to your Lordship for reminding me. Well. What sort of animal was it?' 'Oh, a very small mouse indeed.' Claude was now desper, ( ately anxious to help me.'Hardly noticeable.' 'A very small mouse and hardly noticeable,' Graves repeated as he wrote it down and then raised his eyebrows, as though, when it came to mice, smallness was no excuse. 30 'And the first you saw of it was when it emerged from under silver dish-cover? You couldn't swear it got there in the kitchen?' 'Ko I couldn't.' Erskine-Brown was still eager to cooperate. 'Or if it was inserted in the dining-room by someone with access to the serving-table?' 'Oh, no, Mr Rumpole. You're perfectly right. Of course it might have been!' The witness's cooperation was almost embarrassing, so the Judge chipped in with 'I take it you're not suggesting that this creature appeared from a dish of duck breasts by some sort of miracle, are you, Mr Rumpole?' 'Not a miracle, my Lord. Perhaps a trick.' 'Isn't Mr Ballard perfectly right?' Graves, as was his wont, had joined the prosecution team. 'For the purposes of this offence it doesn't matter how it got there. A properly run restaurant should not serve up a mouse for dinner! The thing speaks for itself.' 'A talking mouse, my Lord? What an interesting conception!' I got a loud laugh from my client and even the Jury joined in with a few friendly titters. I also got, of course, a stem rebuke from the Bench. 'Mr Rumpole!', his Lordship's seriousness was particularly deadly, 'this is not a place of entertainment! You would do well to remember that this is a most serious case from your client's point of view. And I'm sure the Jury will wish to give it the most weighty consideration. We will continue with it after luncheon. Shall we say, five past two, Members of the Jury?' Mr Bernard and I went down to the pub, and after a light snack of shepherd's pie, washed down with a pint or two of Guinness, we hurried back into the Palais de Justice and there I found what I had hoped for. Mary Skelton was sitting quietly outside the Court, waiting for the proceedings to resume. I lit a small cigar and took a seat with my instructing licitor not far away from the girl. I raised my voice a little d, 'You know what's always struck me about this case, Bernard? There's no evidence of droppings or signs of e in the kitchen. So someone put the mouse under the 3i cover deliberately. Someone who wanted to ruin La Maison's business.' 'Mrs O'Higgins?' Bernard suggested. 'Certainly not! She'd want the place to be as prosperous as possible because she owned half of it. The guilty party is someone who wanted Simone to get nothing but half a failed eatery with a ruined reputation. So what did this someone do?' 'You tell me, Mr Rumpole.' Mr Bernard was an excellent straight man. 'Oh, broke a lot of little rules. Took away the nailbrushes and the lids of the tidy-bins. But a sensation was needed, something that'd hit the headlines. Luckily this someone knew a waiter who had a talent for sleight of hand and a spare-time job producing livestock out of hats.' 'Gaston Leblanc?' Bernard was with me. 'Exactly! He got the animal under the lid and gave it to Alphonse to present to the unfortunate Miss Tricia Benbow. Consequence: ruin for the restaurant and a rotten investment for the vengeful Simone. No doubt someone paid Gaston well to do it.' I was silent then. I didn't look at the waiting girl, but I was sure she was looking at me. And then Bernard asked, 'Just who are we talking about, Mr Rumpole?' 'Well, now. Who had the best possible reason for hating Simone, and wanting her to get away with as little as possible?' 'Who?' 'Who but our client?' I told him. 'The great maitre de cuisine, Jean-Pierre O'Higgins himself.' 'No!' I had never heard Mary Skelton speaking before. Her voice was clear and determined, with a slight North Country accent. 'Excuse me.' I turned to look at her as she stood up and came over to us. 'No, it's not true. Jean-Pierre knew nothing about it. It was my idea entirely. Why did she deserve to get anything out of us?' I stood up, looked at my watch, and put on the wig that had f' been resting on the seat beside me. 'Well, back to Court. Mr Bernard, take a statement from the lady, why don't you? We'll call her as a witness.' '.'-; 32 Whilst these events were going on down the Bailey, another kind of drama was being enacted in Froxbury Mansions. She Who Must Be Obeyed had returned from her trip with cousin Everard, put on the kettle and surveyed the general disorder left by my surprise party with deep disapproval. In the sittingroom she fanned away the bar-room smell, drew the curtains, opened the windows and clicked her tongue at the sight of half-empty glasses and lipstick-stained fag ends. Then she noticed something white nestling under the sofa, pulled it out and saw that it was a Young Radical Lawyers sweatshirt, redolent of Mizz Liz Probert's understated yet feminine perfume. Later in the day, when I was still on my hind legs performing before Mr Justice Graves and the Jury, Liz Probert called at the mansion flat to collect the missing garment. Hilda had met Liz at occasional Chambers parties but when she opened the door she was, I'm sure, stony-faced, and remained so as she led Mizz Probert into the sitting-room and restored to her the sweatshirt which the Young Radical Lawyer admitted she had taken off and left behind the night before. I have done my best to reconstruct the following dialogue, from the accounts given to me by the principal performers. I can't vouch for its total accuracy, but this is the gist, the meat you understand. It began when Liz explained she had taken the sweatshirt off because she was dancing and it was quite hot. 'You were dancing with Rumpole?' Hilda was outraged. 'I knew he was up to something. As soon as my back was turned. I heard all that going on when I telephoned. Rocking and rolling all over the place. At his age!' 'Mrs Rumpole. Hilda...' Liz began to protest but only I provoked a brisk 'Oh, please. Don't you Hilda me! Young Hadical Lawyers, I suppose that means you're free and easy th other people's husbands!' At which point I regret to report that Liz Probert could scarcely contain her laughter and asked, 'You don't think I fancy Rumpole, do you?' don't know why not.' Hilda has her moments of loyalty. Rumpole's a "character". Some people like that sort of thing.' Hilda. Look, please listen,' and Liz began to explain. 'Dave 33 Inchcape and I and a w lot o, us came to give Rumpole a party. To cheer him up, Because h, was lonely. He was missing youso terribly.',.,,. ,, 'He was what?' She who Must could scarcely believe her ears Liz told me. 'Miss-iS Y011'' le young radical repeated. 'I saw him at breakfast. e looked so sad. "She's left me," he said, "and gone off witt-i cous1 Everard."' 'Rumpole said that?' HUda no ionger sounded displeased. 'And he seemed absoY broksem-hearted. He saw nothing ahead I'm sure, but a lY old ge stretching out in front of him Anyone could tell how mu(* "e cared about you. Dave noticed it as well. Please can 1 have my shirt back now?' 'Of course ' Hilda w8 now, acing the girl as though she were the prodigal grand*01111'1 or we such thing. 'But, Liz...' What, Hilda?' Wouldn't you like n to P111 '-1 through the wash for you before you take it home:? Back in the Ludgate Ci Ye'-dic-t factory, Mary Skelton gave evidence along the lines 1 have already indicated and the time came for me to make xY final sp"eech. As I reached the last stretch I felt I was malsg some Progress. No one in the jurybox was asleep, or suff1'111 fron~ terminal bronchitis, and a fevfofthem looked dis-t "ict sympathetic. The same couldn't besaid, however, of the scorpion orz the Bench. Ladies and gentleme of the Jury.' I gave it to them straight. 'Miss Mary Skelton, th cashier, was in love. She was in love." with her boss, that larger-than-life cook and "character", " Jean-Pierre O'Higgins. PPie do m-any strange things for love. They commit suicide o-r leave home or pine away sometimes. It was for love that Mii Skelton caused a mouse to be served up in La Maisc Jean-Pierre, after she had paid the station waiter liberally for Performing the trick. She it was t who wanted to ruin the? business, so that my client's vengeful " wife should get absolute "othinS out of it.' i 'Mr Rumpole'' His Jdship was unable to contain his fury. 'And my client knew nothlng whatever of this dire plot. He was entirely innocent.' 1 dldn l ant to let Graves interrupt 34 v flow but he came in at increased volume, 'Mr Rumpole! If 1X1-estaurant serves unhygienic food, the proprietor is guilty. In law it doesn't matter in the least how it got there. Ignorance by nur client is no excuse. I presume you have some rudimentary Lowledge of the law, Mr Rumpole?' I wasn't going to tangle with Graves on legal matters. Instead I confined my remarks to the more reasonable Jury, ignoring the Judge. 'You're not concerned with the law. Members of the Jury,' I told them, 'you are concerned with justice!' 'That is a quite outrageous thing to say! On the admitted facts of this case, Mr O'Higgins is clearly guilty!' His Honour Judge Graves had decided but the honest twelve would have to return the verdict and I spoke to them. 'A British judge has no power to direct a British jury to find a defendant guilty! I know that much at least.' 'I shall tell the Jury that he is guilty in law, I warn you.' Graves's warning was in vain. I carried on regardless. 'His Lordship may tell you that to his heart's content. As a great Lord Chief Justice of England, a judge superior in rank to any in this Court, once said, "It is the duty of the Judge to tell you as a jury what to do, but you have the power to do exactly as you like." And what you do; Members of the Jury, is a matter entirely between God and your own consciences. Can you really find it in your consciences to condemn a man to ruin for a crime he didn't commit?' I looked straight at them. 'Can any of you? Can you?' I gripped the desk in front of me, apparently exhausted. 'You are the only judges of the facts in Ais case. Members of the Jury. My task is done. The future career of Jean-Pierre O'Higgins is in your hands, and in your handskme.' And then I sat down, clearly deeply moved. At last it was over. As we came out of the doors of the Court, Jean-Pierre O'Higgins embraced me in a bear hug and was, I greatly feared, about to kiss me on both cheeks. Ballard gave e a look of pale disapproval. Clearly he thought I had broken cfa r rules by asking the Jy to "Q1 the Judge. Then a eerful and rejuvenated Claude came bouncing up bleating, "mpole, you were brilliant!' 35 'Oh yes,' I told him. 'I've still got a win or two in me yet.' 'Brilliant to get me off. All that nonsense about a brief for Philly.' 'Not nonsense, Leonard. I mean, Claude. I telephoned the fair Tricia and she's sending your wife the Balham MiniCab Murder. Are you suggesting that Rumpole would deceive the Court?' 'Oh', he was interested to know, 'am I getting a brief too?' 'She said nothing of that.' 'All the same, Rumpole', he concealed his disappointment, 'thank you very much for getting me out of a scrape.' 'Say no more. My life is devoted to helping the criminal classes.' As I left him and went upstairs to slip out of the fancy dress, I had one more task to perform. I walked past my locker and went on into the silks' dressing-room, where a very old Q.C. was seated in the shadows snoozing over the Daily Telegraph. I had seen Ballard downstairs, discussing the hopelessness of an appeal with his solicitor, and it was the work of a minute to find his locker, feel in his jacket pocket and haul a large purse out of it. Making sure that the sleeping silk hadn't spotted me, I opened the purse, slipped in the nail-brush I had rescued from Uncle Tom's tin of golf balls, restored it to the pocket and made my escape undetected. I was ambling back up Fleet Street when I heard the brisk step of Ballard behind me. He drew up alongside and returned to his favourite topic. 'There's nothing for it, Rumpole,' he said, 'I shall chain the next one up.' 'The next what?' 'The next nailbrush.' 'Isn't that a bit extreme?' 'If fellows, and ladies, in Chambers can't be trusted,' Ballard said severely, 'I am left with absolutely no alternative. I hate to have to do it, but Henry is being sent out for a chain tomorrow. We had reached the newspaper stand at the entrance to the * Temple and I loitered there. 'Lend us 20p for the Evening Standard, Bollard. There might be another restaurant in trouble.' b: ' '' 36 '' 'Why are you never provided with money?' Ballard thought it typical of my fecklessness. 'Oh, all right.' And then he put his hand in his pocket and pulled out the purse. Opening it, he was amazed to find his ten pees nestling under an ancient nailbrush. 'Our old nail-brush!' The reunion was quaintly moving. |
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