| |
Произведения англоязычных авторов в оригинале | THE
ADVENTURE OF THE MISSING THREE-QUARTER |
SHERLOCK
HOLMES
THE
ADVENTURE OF THE MISSING THREE-QUARTER
by Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle
THE
ADVENTURE OF THE MISSING THREE-QUARTER -
We were fairly accustomed to receive weird telegrams at Baker Street, but I have a particular
recollection of one which reached us on a gloomy February morning, some seven
or eight years ago, and gave Mr. Sherlock Holmes a puzzled quarter of an hour.
It was addressed to him, and ran thus: -
Please
await me. Terrible misfortune. Right
wing three-quarter missing, indispensable to-morrow.
OVERTON.
-
"Strand
postmark, and dispatched ten thirty-six," said Holmes, reading it over and over. "Mr. Overton was evidently considerably
excited when he sent it, and somewhat incoherent in consequence. Well, well, he
will be here, I daresay, by the time I have looked through the Times, and then
we shall know all about it. Even the most insignificant problem would be
welcome in these stagnant days."
Things had
indeed been very slow with us, and I had learned to dread such periods of
inaction, for I knew by experience that my companion's brain was so abnormally
active that it was dangerous to leave it without material upon which to work.
For years I had gradually weaned him from that drug
mania which had threatened once to check his remarkable career. Now I knew that under ordinary conditions he no longer craved for
this artificial stimulus, but I was well aware that the fiend was not dead but
sleeping, and I have known that the sleep was a light one and the waking near
when in periods of idleness I have seen the drawn look upon Holmes's ascetic
face, and the brooding of his deep-set and inscrutable eyes. Therefore I blessed this Mr. Overton whoever he might be,
since he had come with his enigmatic message to break that dangerous calm which
brought more peril to my friend than all the storms of his tempestuous life.
As we had expected, the telegram was soon followed by its sender, and
the card of Mr. Cyril Overton, Trinity College, Cambridge, announced the
arrival of an enormous young man, sixteen stone of solid bone and muscle, who
spanned the doorway with his broad shoulders, and looked from one of us to the
other with a comely face which was haggard with anxiety.
"Mr.
Sherlock Holmes?"
My
companion bowed.
"I've
been down to Scotland Yard, Mr. Holmes. I saw Inspector Stanley Hopkins. He
advised me to come to you. He said the case, so far as he could see, was more
in your line than in that of the regular police."
"Pray
sit down and tell me what is the matter."
|
Остальные страницы THE
ADVENTURE OF THE MISSING THREE-QUARTER: |
|
|