Death of A Doxy
REX STOUT
Death of a Doxy
A NERO WOLFE MYSTERY
Introduction by Sandra West Prowell
BANTAM BOOKS
NEW YORK • TORONTO • LONDON • SYDNEY • AUCKLAND
DEATH OF A DOXY
A Bantam Crime Line Book / published by arrangement with
Viking Penguin
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Viking edition published August 1966
Bantam edition / August 1967
Bantam reissue edition / October 1995
Crime Line and the portrayal of a boxed "cl" are
trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1966 by Rex Stout.
Cover art copyright © 1995 by Tom Hallman.
Introduction copyright © 1995 by Sandra West Prowell.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: Bantam
Books.
ISBN 0-553-27606-9
Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada
Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of
Random House, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam
Books" and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540
Broadway, New York, New York 10036.
OPM 20 19 18 17
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
The world is much changed since
the first Nero Wolfe mystery was published in 1934. We recovered from the Great
Depression, fought a World War, eradicated polio, engaged in another, colder
war, invented rock music, and put a man on the moon. We became hip, struggled
to include the disenfranchised, marched for peace, and learned, painfully, that
we – and our leaders – sometimes had feet of clay. It is remarkable that for
four decades Rex Stout was able to craft and sustain his series in the midst of
this whirlwind of change, his readership growing each year. Even after Stout's
death in 1975 readers haunted bookstores in hopes of a continuation of the
chronicles of those inhabiting the old brownstone on West Thirty-fifth Street.
The appeal is broader than mere nostalgia. Stout's perception of human nature
(and, by extension, Wolfe's) is closer to the mark at times than all our pop
psychology. The plots are serpentine enough for the most cerebral reader. And
there is action when action is required, not gratuitous but, as Wolfe would
say, satisfactory.
Granted, some of Archie's expressions now seem a little
dated; no one refers to women as doxies anymore. (In fact, the lines between those
women and us have faded and all but disappeared.) If the series is to be
criticized at all, it seems most likely that it would, in our atmosphere of
political correctness, be accused of blatant sexism. Wolfe's attitude toward
women, after all, is quite clear. He is uncomfortable with them. He doesn't
trust them: "When [women] stick to the vocations for which they are best
adapted, such as chicanery, sophistry, self-advertisement, cajolery,
mystification, and incubation, they are sometimes superb creatures." Yet,
and this is fascinating, Wolfe's reaction to Julie Jaquette in Death of a
Doxy demonstrates anything but sexism.
Death of a Doxy is, on the one hand, classic Nero
Wolfe. Orrie Cather, occasional legman for the great detective, is in hot
water. Orrie is being held for the murder of Isabel Kerr, a showgirl he has
been seeing, and Wolfe, viewing it as a personal obligation, takes the case,
albeit reluctantly. The water is muddied by evidence that the woman was
attempting to blackmail Orrie with proof of their trysts. Additionally,
Isabel's sister, Stella Fleming, seems more interested in avoiding scandal than
in seeing her sister's killer brought to justice.
On the other hand, it is with Julie Jaquette, Isabel's best
friend, that we observe a rare phenomenon. At the conclusion of their initial
interview, Wolfe says, "I have the impression that your opinion of our
fellow beings and their qualities is somewhat similar to mine." And then
he does something almost unprecedented in the Stout oeuvre: "He got to his
feet. He almost never stands for comers or goers, male or female. And he
actually repeated it. 'I wish you well, madam.'" From Wolfe, this is more
than a compliment; it is a lavish tribute. Later, when Julie's life is
threatened and she takes refuge in the old brownstone, she spends two hours
with Wolfe in the plant rooms among the orchids. Need it be said that Stout is
subtle, that orchids have long been held as a symbol of sexuality, that the
image of Wolfe and Julie Jaquette in the hot, humid plant rooms for two hours
with all that rich dark soil and all those orchids is particularly evocative?
And when she comes down she is calling him Nero! Of course, nothing
happened, because later Julie complains to Wolfe, "You get on my nerves
because you haven't got any." Or did it happen on a purely subliminal
level, the kind of seduction, after all, to which Wolfe would be most
susceptible? And did he later rebuff her? This is not the misogynistic Nero
Wolfe we've come to know and love.
It is clear that what Nero Wolfe is afraid of concerning
women is in himself. Wolfe says in Over My Dead Body, "I used to be
idiotically romantic. I still am, but I've got it in hand." And later in
the same book, "I have skedaddled, physically, once in my life, from one
person, and that was a Montenegrin woman." In Too Many Cooks he
says, "Not like women? They are astounding and successful animals. For
reasons of convenience, I merely preserve an appearance of immunity which I
developed some years ago under the pressure of necessity." If Wolfe has
issues with members of the opposite sex, isn't he, in this regard at least,
little different from most of us? That he takes his fear to the extreme of an
aversion is merely consistent with his grandiose nature, and that he can state
the reasons for this aversion strongly and literately is not, de facto, sexism.
We, however, from our superior perspective of 1995 enlightenment, can recognize
his foolish position for what it is, for we ourselves are above it, right?
Speak up, I can't hear you!
In any event, if you've read Death of a Doxy before,
welcome back. If not, you're in for a treat. As Nero says, I wish you well.
– Sandra West Prowell
I stood and sent my eyes around.
It's just routine, when leaving a place where you aren't supposed to be, to
consider if and where you have touched things, but that time it went beyond
mere routine. I made certain. There were plenty of things in the room – fancy
chairs, a marble fireplace without a fire, a de luxe television console, a
coffee table in front of a big couch with a collection of magazines, and so
forth. Deciding I had touched nothing, I turned and stepped back into the
bedroom. Nearly everything there was too soft to take a fingerprint – the wall-to-wall
carpet, the pink coverlet on the king-size bed, the upholstered chairs, the
pink satin fronts on the three pieces of furniture. I crossed for another look
at the body of a woman on the floor a couple of feet from the bed, on its back
with the legs spread out and one arm bent. I hadn't had to touch it to check
that it was just a body or to see the big dent in the skull, but was there one
chance in a million that I had put fingers on the heavy marble ashtray lying
there? The butts and ashes that had been in it were scattered around, and it
was a good bet that it had made the dent in the skull. I shook my head; I
couldn't possibly have been such an ape.
I left. Of course I had to use my handkerchief on the
doorknob, inside and outside, and I used a knuckle on the button that summoned
the do-it-yourself elevator, and also, in the elevator, on the 1 button. I
dabbed the 4 button, which I had pushed coming in, with my handkerchief. There
was no one in the little lobby down below, and since I had been gloved when I
entered I didn't have to bother about the knobs of the outside door. As I
headed west, toward Lexington Avenue, I turned up my overcoat collar and put my
gloves on. It was the coldest day of the winter, with a gusty wind.
I don't try to do any hard thinking while I'm walking, you
bump into people, but anyway it didn't even call for guessing, let alone
thinking. What was needed was asking, and the person to ask lived on the second
floor of a walkup on 52nd Street between Eighth and Ninth Avenues. Since this
was 39th Street, thirteen short blocks up and four long blocks crosstown. My
watch said 4:36. Getting a taxi at that time of day is a career, and there was
no hurry. He was on a job. I walked.
It was one minute to five when I entered a phone booth in a
bar and grill on Eighth Avenue and dialed a number. When Fritz answered I asked
him to buzz the plant rooms, and after a wait a growl came: "Yes?"
"Me," I said. "I've run into a snag on this
personal errand and I don't know when I'll be back. Probably not in time for
dinner."
"Are you in trouble?"
"No."
"Can I reach you if a need arises?"
"No."
"Very well." He hung up.
He was being tolerant because I was on a personal errand,
none of his business. He hates to be bothered when he's up with the orchids,
and if the errand had been for him he would have said I should have told Fritz.
Outside again, half a block west, cold-faced but with the
blood going good, I entered a vestibule and pushed the button marked Cather.
After two more pushes there was still no click – as expected. It was too damn
cold to hang around, so I headed back for Eighth Avenue, with a notion about
five or six fingers of bourbon, but with me the time for bourbon is when I'm
going to let down, not when I have to pick up, so I went to a drugstore counter
instead and got coffee.
When the coffee was down I went to the booth and dialed a
number, hung up after ten rings with no answer, returned to the counter, and
bought a glass of milk. Another trip to the booth; still no answer, and I
ordered a corned beef on rye and coffee. There is never any rye bread in the kitchen
of the old brownstone on West 35th Street. It was twenty minutes past six, on
my fifth try at the phone, after the second piece of pumpkin pie and the fourth
cup of coffee, when a voice said hello.
"Orrie? Archie. You alone?"
"Sure, I'm always alone. Did you go?"
"Yeah. I –"
"What'd you get?"
"I'd rather show you. Expect me in two minutes."
"What the hell, I'll come –"
"I'm in the neighborhood. Two minutes." I hung up.
I didn't stop to put on my overcoat and gloves. Two minutes
of near-zero wind is a good test of your staying power. When I pushed the
button in the vestibule the click came quick, and when I entered and started up
the stairs Orrie called down from the top, "Hell, I could have come."
Once Nero Wolfe, showing off, said to me, "Vultus
est index animi," and I said, "That's not Greek," and he
said, "A Latin proverb. The face is the index of the mind." It
depends on whose face and whose mind. Across from you at the poker table, Saul
Panzer's face is an index of absolutely nothing. But you keep on trying, and I
was still at it on Orrie Cather's face after he showed me in and took my hat
and coat and we sat. I sat and eyed him until he demanded, "Can't you
place me?"
I said, "Vultus est index animi."
"Good," he said. "I've often wondered. What the
hell's eating you?"
"Just curiosity. Is it possible that you're playing
me?"
"For God's sake. Playing you how? For what?"
"I wish I knew." I crossed my legs. "Okay,
I'll report. I followed the script. I arrived at a quarter past four on the
dot, pushed the button several times, got no reaction as expected, used the key
you gave me, took the elevator to the fourth floor, used the other key, and
entered. No one in the living room, and I went to the bedroom. I don't say
someone was there, because properly speaking a corpse is not someone. It was on
the floor not far from the bed. I had never seen Isabel Kerr or a picture of
her, but I suppose it had been her. A pink thing with lace and pink slippers,
no stockings. A couple of –"
"You're saying she was dead?"
"Don't interrupt. A couple of inches over five feet,
hundred and ten pounds, well-designed oval face, blue eyes, lots of clover-blossom-honey
hair, small ears close –"
"By God. By God."
"Her?"
"Yes."
"Stop interrupting. Mr. Wolfe never does. I didn't have
to touch her to check. I mean it. There was a bruise on the forehead and
a big dent in the skull, two inches above and back of the left ear. On the
floor, three feet from her right shoulder, was a marble ashtray which looked
heavy enough to dent a thicker skull than hers probably was. There were purple
spots on an arm and a leg. Cadaveric lividities to you. Her forehead was good
and cold, and –"
"You said you didn't touch her."
"I touch with my fingers. I don't call applying a wrist
to a forehead or a leg touching. The leg was cold too. It had been a corpse for
at least five hours and probably more. The ashtray had been wiped. There were
butts and ashes on the carpet but no particles on the tray. I was in there a
total of about six minutes. The idea of staying to look for things didn't
appeal to me." I put a hand in a pocket and got something. "Here are
your keys."
He didn't see them. His jaw was clamped. He unclamped it to
say, "Playing you. For God's sake. Playing you."
"Naturally I'm curious."
He got up and went through a doorway. I tossed the keys onto
a table by a window and looked around. It was a good-sized room with three
windows, with furniture that would do all right for a bachelor who wasn't fussy.
The only light was from a pair of bulbs in a wall bracket, but there was a lamp
by an easy chair that wasn't turned on. Orrie came back with a bottle and two
glasses and offered me one, but I said no thanks, I had just dined. He put one
glass down and poured in the other, took a healthy gulp, made a face, and sat
down.
"Playing you," he said. "Nuts. Now you ask me
where I've been since eight o'clock this morning and can I prove it."
I shook my head. "Since I'm merely curious, that would
be stretching it. If I wanted to be nasty I would have opened up by barking at
you something like, 'Why did you leave the ashtray on the floor?' Of course we
do have to consider facts, such as the fact that I may be the only one besides
you who knows that her being dead pulls a thorn for you. A bad thorn in deep.
So of course I'm curious about one detail. Did you kill her?"
"No. My God, Archie. Am I a sap?"
"No. You're no mental giant, but you're not a sap. It
would be nice if you could sell me. After all, you pulled me in, you knew I was
going there today. It would be extra nice if you were covered."
"I'm not covered." He was staring at me but
possibly not seeing me. He took a mouthful of whiskey and swallowed it twice.
"As I told you, I'm on a job for Bascom. I was out at eight and picked up
a subject a little before nine and was on him all day. It was –"
"Single tail?"
"Yes. Just routine. From nine-nineteen until twelve-thirty-five
I was in the lobby of an office building."
"No company?"
"No."
"Then I'm still curious. You would be if we traded
spots, you know damn well you would, but that's all I am, just curious. Do you
want to ask me anything?"
"Yes, I do. You had gloves and keys, I don't mean mine.
You knew there might be something there. Why didn't you take a quick look?"
I grinned at him. "You don't mean that."
"The hell I don't."
I nodded. "Now and then you are a sap." I
stood up. "As you know, Orrie, and as I know, you think it would be fine
if you had my job. That's all right, there's nothing wrong with ambition. But
what if you had got too ambitious? What if you knew there was nothing
there to point to you? What if you had arranged for one man, me, to go there at
a quarter past four, and for another man, maybe a cop on an anonymous tip, to
arrive a few minutes later? It wouldn't have hooked me for murder, since the ME
would set the time, but I would have the keys on me, not only yours, and the
rubber gloves, and that would have been good for at least a couple of years. Of
course I didn't really believe it, but being the nervous type –"
"Balls." He was staying put, his head tilted back.
"What are you going to do?"
I looked at my wrist. "Dinner will be half over, and
anyway I ate. I'm going home and eat two helpings of crиme Gйnoise. You
crush eight homemade macaroons and soak them in half a cup of brandy. Put two
cups of rich milk, half a cup of sugar, and the finely cut rind of a small
orange into –"
"So clown it!" he yelled. "Are you going to
tell Wolfe?"
"I'd rather not."
"Are you?"
"As it stands now, no."
"Or Saul or Fred?"
"No. Nor Cramer nor J. Edgar Hoover." I went to
the couch for my hat and coat. "Don't do anything you wouldn't expect me
to do. You know what doctors call professional courtesy?"
"Yeah."
"I sincerely hope you won't need any."
I went.
The New York Times knows
how to put things. "It does not appear that Miss Kerr was employed
anywhere or engaged in any regular activity." You can't beat that, leaving
it wide open for all types of minds.
At the little table in the kitchen where I eat breakfast, with
the Times on the rack facing me, I poured Puerto Rico molasses on a
buckwheat cake and told Fritz, "It would be a good murder to work on.
Walking distance."
At the big table inspecting dried mushrooms, with an eye on
me to know when to start the next cake, he shook his head and said, "No
murder is good to work on. When it's a murder the doorbell scares me and I
never know if you'll come back alive."
I told him he was just blowing, I had yet to see him scared,
forked a bite of cake and molasses, and Creole sausage, and started the Times
piece again. I knew a lot more than it did, which suited me fine. The only
items that were news to me were that the body had been discovered by Isabel
Kerr's sister Stella, that Stella was the wife of Barry Fleming, who taught
mathematics at the Henry Hudson High School, that Stella had gone to the
apartment a little before seven o'clock Saturday evening – less than three
hours after I left – that tentatively Isabel had died between eight o'clock and
noon, that Stella wouldn't talk to reporters, and that the police and the
District Attorney's office had begun a thorough investigation. The picture of
Isabel had probably been dug up in the files of a theatrical agent; she had a
chorus-girl smile. The one of Stella had been snapped as a cop had escorted her
across the sidewalk.
So far, so good. But if the errand I had tackled for Orrie
had been on the level, if he hadn't been playing me, and I didn't really think
he had, there would be fur flying soon, and when I finished breakfast and went
into the office I turned the radio on. Ten-o'clock news, nothing. When Wolfe
came down from the plant rooms at eleven o'clock the radio was still on, and
when he had crossed to his desk and settled his bulk in the only chair that
holds it to suit him, he scowled at the radio and then at me and demanded,
"Is there an urgency?"
"Yes, sir," I said. "Will the Braves play in
Milwaukee or in Atlanta? Also it's Sunday, the day of rest."
"I thought you had an engagement."
"It's for one o'clock, and I may skip it. The lunch
will be all right, but then a man is going to read poetry."
"Whose poetry?"
"His."
"Pfui."
"Sure. I think Miss Rowan knew he was hungry and merely
wanted to feed him, but then he said he would do her and her friends a big
favor and she was stuck. He calls it an epithon because it's an epic and it
takes hours."
A corner of his mouth was up an eight of an inch. "Serves
you right."
"Yeah. What she did in the car that night was in the
line of duty, but you'll never forgive her. I may not go."
He flipped a hand. "You will." He went at his copy
of the Sunday Times. We get three, a total of twenty pounds – one for
him, one for me, and one for Fritz.
When the noon news still had nothing new about murder, I
decided it would be silly to sit around all afternoon rassling with the Times,
holding my breath for the radio every half-hour, and mounted the two flights to
my room. Having already shaved, I had only to change to a clean shirt and one
of my four best suits. Downstairs again, I looked in at the kitchen and the
office to say I was going. Outside, I headed for the garage on Tenth Avenue
where we keep the Heron which Wolfe owns and I drive. On Sundays it is often
possible to find a spot to put a car.
At twenty minutes past four I was in a big roomy chair in
the living room of Lily Rowan's penthouse on top of a building on 63rd Street,
leaning back with my eyes closed, trying to decide which one I would rather
have, Willie Mays or Sandy Koufax, on my team. The poet, a long-faced specimen
with whiskers, who didn't look hungry, but of course had recently had a good
meal, was still going strong, but I had stopped hearing him an hour back. It
was just a background noise. At a poke on my shoulder I opened my eyes, and Mimi,
the maid, was there. She moved her lips to say "Telephone" without
saying it. I pulled myself up and to my feet, went to a door at the corner of
the room and on through, crossed to the desk where Lily makes out checks for
causes which may be worthy, picked up the phone, and told it, "This is
Archie Goodwin."
Wolfe's voice said, "I presume you read about the
murder of a woman named Isabel Kerr."
I said yes.
"So did I. Mr. Parker is here. He received a telephone
call from Orrie Cather, asking him to come to the police station on Twentieth
Street, and he went. Orrie is in custody as a material witness. He gave Mr.
Parker some information, not much, and told him to consult you. Why?"
"Because. Parker's still there?"
"Yes."
"I'll be there in twenty minutes."
I hung up, went to the kitchen and told Mimi to tell Lily,
went to the foyer for my coat and hat, let myself out, and summoned the
elevator. The car was around the corner on Madison Avenue. When I was in it and
going, turning to head west, I told my mind it might as well go right on with
Willie Mays and Sandy Koufax. There was absolutely nothing else for it to do,
and wouldn't be until I had heard Parker. As I turned into the garage I decided
definitely for Willie Mays. Koufax's arm was too much of a gamble. So I felt I
had accomplished something as I walked to the old brownstone, mounted the
stoop, let myself in, ditched my coat and hat, and went to the office.
Nathaniel Parker, the lawyer Wolfe uses when he has to, was
in the red leather chair with a bottle of scotch, one of soda, a bowl of ice,
and a glass on the stand at his elbow. Wolfe was at his desk, with beer. Since
he skips his afternoon session in the plant rooms on Sundays, that is his
biggest beer day. I hadn't seen Parker for a couple of months, and he rose to
shake hands. I told Wolfe, "This is going to be worse than listening to
poetry," went to my desk, whirled my chair around, sat, and told Parker,
"If you're going to spring him I'd rather wait till I see him."
"It would be a long wait," Parker said. "I
think they'll keep him. The way they look and talk."
"A murder charge?"
"Not yet, but I think it soon will be. Perhaps
tomorrow."
Wolfe growled at me, "Did he kill that woman? Was that
your personal errand yesterday?"
"Let's keep it cool," I suggested. "If he
said to consult me, I have to know exactly how he said it." To Parker:
"If you don't mind?"
"Certainly." The lawyer took a sip and put the
glass down. "He didn't say much. He had refused to answer any questions,
any at all, until he saw me. Of course he knows the rules. But also he wouldn't
open up with me. He wouldn't even tell me if he had known the woman or had any
connection with her. He told me just three things. One, he hadn't killed her
and hadn't been near her or her apartment at any time yesterday. Two, where he had
been yesterday. Three, I should see you, and you should decide what to tell me.
When I left, it was understood that he would tell them of his whereabouts and
movements yesterday and stand mute on everything else, and that I would see him
tomorrow, after I had talked with you."
"You're acting for him?"
"I agreed to, yes. Provisionally until I had seen
you."
"It's up to me?"
"Yes. He said to tell you that he wants you to decide
how to handle it."
"That's just dandy. To be trusted like that, I do
appreciate it. Excuse me while I rub my nose." I rubbed it with a
fingertip, my eyes focused on the big globe over by the bookshelves but not
seeing it. It didn't take long because it was really quite simple; it was all
or nothing, and it didn't matter if Parker got it now or tomorrow.
I stood up. "I thought you played bridge on winter
Sundays."
"I do. The call from Cather intruded."
"Then I suggest that you go back and resume. I have
decided how to handle it. I'm going to report to Mr. Wolfe. I'd rather have him
glare at me while I'm telling him than while I'm telling you. I'll tell you
later, or he will, say tomorrow morning. If you prefer, you can wait in the
front room, but it will take a while."
Wolfe, his lips pressed so tight he didn't have any mouth,
reached for a bottle and poured beer. Parker looked at him, picked up his glass
and emptied it, put the glass down, rose, looked at me, and said, "You
might tell me one thing, to be regarded as a privileged communication, did he
kill her?"
"Even granting that I know," I said, "it
wouldn't be privileged. I'm not your client."
I headed for the hall, but out by the rack I stood and held
his coat for a couple of minutes while he exchanged words with Wolfe. Finally
he came, took his time getting his scarf adjusted, his overcoat buttoned, and
his gloves on, and pulled his shoulders in as a gust hit him when he crossed
the sill. When I re-entered the office Wolfe had opened his current book, Invitation
to an Inquest, by Walter and Miriam Schneir. That was childish. He was
rubbing it in that his Sunday-afternoon reading had been ruined, first by Orrie
and now by me. I said as I sat, "If you're in the middle of a chapter
there's no rush."
He made a noise, put the book down, and glared.
"Friday afternoon," I said, "day before
yesterday, Orrie phoned and asked me to meet him that evening. You may remember
that I wasn't here to help with the capon Souvaroff, which I regretted. I met
Orrie at seven o'clock at Giordano's, a restaurant on West Thirty-ninth Street.
I now –"
"Don't cram it," he snapped.
"I won't. I now report what he told me. He was up a
stump. He was going to marry a girl named Jill Hardy, an airline stewardess. He
showed me a picture of her. They had set a date early in May, when she would
have a vacation coming. But it had hit a snag. Another girl, by name Isabel
Kerr, was objecting. She had the idea of marrying Orrie herself, and also the
idea that he was, or would be, the father of the baby she expected to have in
about seven months. She intended to make an issue of it, in public if necessary.
She said she had in her possession, presumably in a locked drawer in her
apartment, or possibly stashed somewhere, certain objects she could use. One of
the objects was his private investigator's license, which she had lifted from
his pocket one night about a month ago. Also some pictures and letters, and
perhaps other items that Orrie didn't know about. The big point wasn't that she
could hook him, but that she could queer him with Jill Hardy."
Wolfe grunted. "She couldn't force him to marry her.
Why marry at all?"
"Sure. That's your slant, but it wasn't Orrie's. He
wanted the objects, and he was pretty sure they were in the apartment. He knew
she spent two or three afternoons a week at the movies, and nearly always
Saturday afternoons. He had keys. The idea was that I was to go there the next
day, Saturday, now yesterday, at a quarter past four, ring the bell, get no
response, go in and up, and look around. I didn't care for it much. Such a
chore for Saul or Fred, of course, but while I have nothing against Orrie, I
wouldn't borrow his socks. He pointed out that I wouldn't be out on a limb, no
matter what. If she was there and answered the bell I would bow out. Almost
certainly she wouldn't come before I left, but if she or anyone did I could
just be polite; I hadn't broken and entered, I had used keys which she had
given him."
"So you went," Wolfe growled.
"Don't rush me. I told him nothing doing unless I had
the whole picture. It took a while and a lot of questions, but I had to know if
Isabel Kerr was something hot, like the runaway daughter of an ambassador. No.
She had formerly been a showgirl, but three years ago had been rescued and
installed in the nest she was still occupying. The toughest detail to get was
the name of the rescuer. Orrie claimed he didn't know, but of course he did,
and I insisted. His name is Avery Ballou, president of the Federal Holding
Corporation. Apparently Isabel had some quality that he enjoyed, for he was
still paying the rent and the grocery bill and was paying her visits two or
three times a week, evenings. But she knew that kind of setup never lasts
forever, and anyway she wanted Orrie. They had met somewhere, that's irrelevant
and immaterial, about a year ago, and she had been – well, feeding him some of
Avery Ballou's groceries, and she had decided she had to have him for keeps. I
accepted that. Women don't fall for Orrie quite as fast and furious as he
thinks they do, but he is no baboon, and female eyes do sometimes fasten on
him."
"So you went."
"Yes. I am not dodging, but I mention that it seemed
advisable. While he is no Saul Panzer, for years he has come in very handy for
you – okay, for us. He has done a lot of pretty good chores and has never
skunked as far as we know. So I went, yesterday afternoon, with gloves and an
assortment of keys, arriving at exactly four-fifteen. There was no answer to my
ring, and I went in and up. It's one of those remodeled four-story houses, self-service
elevator, no doorman or hallman, and I wasn't seen. Since you have read the
piece in the Times, you know what I found. I didn't stay to use the
gloves or keys; I don't think Orrie rated that. Anyway, even if I found some
objects, granting they were there, it was a cinch they would find his prints,
since he had been there for hours only three days ago. So I left."
"Seen?"
"No. I phoned you not to expect me for dinner, and
–"
"That was at five o'clock."
Just like him. He never seems to notice but he knows. I
nodded. "Yeah. I had walked for nearly half an hour, to Orrie's address,
or near it. I waited around until he came, saw him in his apartment and told
him, and returned his keys. I asked him if he killed her, and he said no. He
was on a tailing job for Bascom all day but can't prove it. For the important
time, eight o'clock to noon, he's wide open. He wanted to know why I didn't stay
for a look. I poked him a little, not much, and came home and ate two helpings
of crиme Gйnoise. Of course I knew he would be tagged – if nothing else,
his prints. That was the urgency on the radio this morning."
"You should have told me."
"What good would it have done? It would only have
spoiled the day for you."
"So you went to hear a man read poetry."
I cocked my head. "Look," I said, "you might
as well forget me. You're sore and want a target, but I'm not it. Of course, if
you forget Orrie too, there is no target and you can go back to your
book."
He looked at the book, picked it up, and put it down again.
He picked up his glass, frowned at it because the head was gone, drank it
anyway, to the bottom, returned the glass to the tray, and pushed the tray
aside. "Orrie," he said. "Confound him. The question is, did he
kill her? If he did, the problem is Mr. Parker's and can be left to him. If he
didn't, we are –"
The phone rang, and I swiveled and got it. "Nero
Wolfe's resi –"
"Lon, Archie. I'm surprised you're there."
"Shouldn't I be?"
"Of course not. With your sidekick in the jug?"
"You're ahead of me. I spent the afternoon at a poetry
reading and just got here."
"You're saying you didn't know that Orrie Cather has
been pulled in on the Isabel Kerr murder?"
"Really?"
"Yep, really. If it would help to have something in
print, I'm always available. I don't expect you to show me Wolfe's hole card,
but if there's some little item …"
"Sure. Certainly. Of course. The minute I have
something hot, or even warm, I'll ring you. Right now I'm busy. I'm telling Mr.
Wolfe about a beautiful poem a man read."
"I'll bet you are. Just enough for a paragraph?"
"At the moment, no. Not on Sunday. Thanks for
calling."
I hung up, swiveled, and told Wolfe, "Lon Cohen
fishing, probably from home, since it's Sunday. An item in the Gazette tomorrow
will start: 'Orrie Cather, a private detective, trusted assistant of Nero
Wolfe, is being held as a material witness in connection with the murder of
Isabel Kerr. Mr. Cather, a free-lance operative, has been an important factor
in the spectacular success of many of Nero Wolfe's famous cases. Archie
Goodwin, who is merely Nero Wolfe's errand boy, told –'"
"Shut up!"
I hunched my shoulders and raised my hands, palms up.
He slapped his desk blotter so hard the bottle trembled, and
bellowed, "Did he kill her?"
I said firmly, "I pass."
"That won't do. When you were with him Friday evening
was he planning murder? When you saw him yesterday was he bearing guilt?"
"I still pass. As for Friday evening, he may not have
planned it. He may have gone there yesterday morning, no telling why, and flapped.
As for yesterday afternoon, what do you mean, bearing guilt? Murderers have sat
here in this room and looked you in the eye and answered your questions, and
when they left you were still guessing. Now I'm guessing. Of course you want a
verdict, but I haven't got it."
"You like to give odds. What are the odds?"
"For a bet, even money, and I'll take either end.
That's ignoring my personal preference. I would prefer it that he didn't. I
would rather not see a headline Nero Wolfe's assistant convicted of homicide
– and so would you. People who read only headlines might think it was me."
"You refuse to resolve it."
"I do."
"Then get Saul and Fred here as soon as possible."
At a quarter to ten Wolfe was
making a speech. Saul Panzer, five feet seven, 145 pounds, big nose and flat
ears, hair the color of rust but not rusty, was in the red leather chair with a
bottle of Montrachet 1958 on the stand and a glass with a stem in his hand.
Fred Durkin, five feet ten, 190 pounds, bald and burly, was on one of the
yellow chairs facing Wolfe's desk, with a bottle of Canadian and a pitcher of
water handy. He hadn't touched the water. I had no refreshment. Fritz had been
gone since early afternoon on his own affairs, and Wolfe and I had helped
ourselves around seven o'clock, concentrating mainly on a block of headcheese.
I have spent a total of at least ten hours watching Fritz make headcheese,
trying to find out why it is so much better than any other I have ever tasted,
including what my mother used to make out in Ohio, but finally I gave up. It
could be the way he holds the spoon when he skims.
Saul and Fred had been thoroughly briefed on the situation,
except for one item, the name of the man who had rescued Isabel Kerr from show
business. Orrie wouldn't have liked that, but he had told Parker that he wanted
me to decide how to handle it, and if they were going to vote they had to know
the facts. The name of the fairy godfather didn't matter. When they had asked a
few questions and had been answered, Wolfe started his speech.
"It is not merely a question," he said, "of
devising an effective defense. If Orrie killed that woman to prevent her from
interfering with his private plans, I am not obliged to thwart the agents of
justice and neither are you. Sympathy with misfortune, certainly, but not
contravention of Nemesis. Mr. Parker is a competent lawyer, and it can be left
to him. But if he didn't kill her I have an obligation I can't ignore. I am
constrained not only by his long association with me but also by my self-esteem.
You must know that I have no affection for him; he has frequently vexed me; he
has not the dignity of a man who has found his place and occupies it, as you
have, Fred; nor the integrity of one who knows his superiority but restricts it
to areas that are acceptable to him, as you have, Saul. But if he didn't kill
that woman, I intend to deliver him."
He turned a palm up. "The question is, did he? Having
no firm opinion of my own, and no basis for one, I asked Archie. I thought he
would at least have odds, one way or the other. He always has odds, but he
failed me. He said that for a bet it was even money. Archie? That was four
hours ago. Now?"
I shook my head. "I still pass. Damn it, go ahead and
start something and see what we get!"
"No. We would be committed and make mistakes. Fred. You
have known Orrie longer than I have. The situation has been fully described to
you. What do you say?"
"Jesus," Fred said.
"That doesn't help. He would merely tell him to go and
sin no more. Did he kill her?"
Fred put his glass down and shifted in his chair. He looked
at Saul, then at me, and back at Wolfe. "It's too tough," he said.
"Have I got it straight? If we decide he killed her you lay off and it's
up to Parker. If we decide he didn't, you try to prove it, and of course the
only way to prove it would be to find out who did and nail him. Is that
it?"
"Yes."
"Then I say he didn't."
"Is that your considered opinion?"
"To be honest, no. The only way I could be sure he
killed her would be if he confessed, and Orrie never would. But we know Orrie.
He has always done whatever he felt like with women, and they let him. I mean
they couldn't help it. But now apparently it's hit him and he wants to get
hitched. So if this Isabel Kerr got in his way, really blocked him … well, I
don't know. I mean I think I really do know. But you called us in to help you
decide, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Then I say no. He didn't."
Wolfe didn't even frown at him. Such a contribution from me
would have got what I deserved, but he knows how Fred's mind works, and he had
asked for it. He merely said, "That is hardly decisive," and turned
his head. "Saul?"
"No," Saul said. "To put it the way Archie
would, one will get you twenty that he didn't kill her."
"Indeed." Wolfe was surprised. "An opinion,
or a gesture?"
"Call it a conclusion. Make it fifty to one. I'm not
saying I'm superior to Archie. Since he knows everything I know, you may wonder
why he didn't settle it, but that's obvious. He couldn't see it because he's
involved personally. He's not conceited enough."
"Pfui. This is flummery."
"No, sir. I'll spell it out. First, say Orrie planned
it. When he was with Archie, Friday evening, he intended to go there in the
morning and kill her, and when Archie went in the afternoon, with gloves and
keys, he would either find the body or, if someone had beat him to it, he would
find police cars outside and a flock of cops inside. That's absolutely
impossible. I don't know if you know it, but Orrie regards Archie as the
smartest and quickest performer around. There's not the slightest chance that he
would deliberately arrange to sit facing him and frame that kind of a deal.
Anyway, why? If he was going to kill her, why such a flimflam with
Archie?"
"All right, cross it off," I said. "I already
had. Friday evening he wasn't even intending to see her, let alone kill her.
But what if he decided to go, no matter why, Saturday morning? And she stung
him."
Saul nodded. "And he killed her. Okay. Whether he stays
to frisk the place for the objects he wants, or he doesn't, he goes back to his
tailing job. He has a tough decision to make, whether to ring you and tell you
not to go, with some kind of a reason. I admit he might not be able to cook up
a good enough reason and he might decide it was too risky, it would be better
to let you go. But now here's the point, the big point. You know him, and so do
I. We know exactly how his mind works. You heard me ask Mr. Wolfe if there were
any phone calls for you yesterday afternoon between four-thirty and six-thirty,
and he said no. That's what settles it."
"Good. Wonderful."
"It's perfectly simple. You didn't see it because you
were personally involved. Here's Orrie on his tailing job with the murder
behind him. He decides not to call you off. He knows that when you go there and
find the body you'll wonder about him. He knows that you think he'll be holding
his breath, waiting to hear what objects you found and got. He knows that if he
hadn't gone there and killed her, if she was still alive as far as he knew, he
would be damned anxious to learn how you had made out, say from five-thirty on,
and he would have called you. Therefore he would call you. But he
didn't. That's the point."
"Back up," I said. "You can't have it both
ways. If he didn't kill her, why didn't he call?"
"He would have, probably soon after he got home, but
you rang him first. If he had killed her he wouldn't have waited until he got
home. As you know, his worst fault is that he pushes. He knew that the natural
thing would be for him to call, and, pushing it, if he had killed her, he would
probably have called around five o'clock. Certainly by five-thirty. Damn it,
he's not some stranger we can only guess about; we know him like a book."
He turned to Wolfe. "Since you and Archie are passing
and Fred is yes and no, my vote tips it. If you buy that and take it on, and
want to use me, it will be on me, including expenses. I have no more affection
for Orrie than you have, but of course I would want to back up my vote."
"Me too," Fred blurted. "I voted no."
That was quite an offer. Saul, who asks ten dollars an hour
and gets it, could afford it, but Fred doesn't rate that high and he has a wife
and four children.
Wolfe's eyes came to me, and I met them. "The trouble
is," I said, "I'm personally involved. It depends partly on how smart
and quick Orrie thinks I am, and that cramps me. But it also depends on how
smart I think Saul is, and I would hate to embarrass him either way. I'll
switch and vote no, but I'm not giving any twenty to one."
He drew in a bushel of air through his nose, held it three
seconds, and let it out through his open mouth. He screwed his head around to
look at the wall clock, curled his fingers over the ends of the chair arms, and
said, "Grrrhhhh." It was hard to take. A month of the new year had
passed with no new business, and he was going to have to work for nothing.
He looked at Saul. "When can you start?"
"Now," Saul said.
"You, Fred?"
"Tuesday," Fred said. "I'm on a little job,
but I can clean it up tomorrow."
Wolfe grunted. "You know the situation. We have
nothing. We have never had less. We don't even know what objects the police
found, if any, involving Orrie. On that Mr. Parker may help. Archie. Are they
infesting that neighborhood?"
"Certainly. Of course they're concentrating on Orrie,
trying to find someone who saw him yesterday morning. For a case, they need to
get him there."
He turned to Saul. "We'll have to begin with banality.
Who are the other tenants of the building? Who was seen entering or leaving
yesterday morning? Did anyone see Archie enter or leave yesterday afternoon?
That might become an issue. You will start on that tomorrow, and Fred will join
you on Tuesday, but you will call twice a day to ask if something better has
been suggested." He turned to me. "You will see someone. Who?"
I took five seconds. "Jill Hardy, if she's available.
She may be in Rome. Or Tokyo."
"In that case, the sister? Mrs. Fleming?"
"Maybe, but I like Jill Hardy better. Do you want
her?"
He made a face. "Only if you think I must." He
pushed his chair back and pried himself up. "Confound it, I'm going to
bed. I appreciate your offer, Saul, and yours, Fred, but this undertaking is
mine. Your usual rates and, of course, expenses. Good night."
He headed for the door.
As I sat in the kitchen at ten
minutes past eight Monday morning, having brioches, grilled ham, and grape
thyme jelly, my mind was hopping around.
First, why was Fritz so damn stubborn about the jelly? Why
wouldn't he try it, just once, with half as much sugar and twice as much sauterne?
I had been at him for years.
Second, why were journalists so damn lazy? If the Times
felt it had to decorate the follow-up on the murder with a picture, surely they
could have scared up one of Orrie, but they had the nerve to run that eight-year-old
shot of Nero Wolfe. He ought to sue them for invasion of privacy. He hadn't
been pinched. As far as they knew he wasn't in it at all. Of course it might
not be laziness; maybe they were still sore about a letter he had once written
the food editor.
Third, should I buzz him, or go up, before leaving? Fritz
had had no word for me when he came down from taking up his breakfast tray, so
apparently I was to proceed as instructed, but it wouldn't hurt to check.
Fourth, where was Jill Hardy? Orrie had told me she was with
Pan Am, but it would take more than a phone call to get her address out of
them. I had tried the phone books of all five boroughs last night; no Jill
Hardy. Parker could get it when he saw Orrie, but that would mean waiting. I
would be ready to go when I finished the second cup of coffee, and the sooner I
–
The phone rang. Fritz started to come; he agrees with Wolfe
that nothing and no one should be allowed to interrupt a meal; but I reached
and got it. "Nero Wolfe's office, Archie Goodwin speaking."
"Oh! I – This is Archie Goodwin?"
"Right."
"The Archie Goodwin who works for Nero Wolfe?"
"I must be, since you called Nero Wolfe's number."
"Of course. My name is Jill Hardy. You probably – you
may have heard it." Her voice was what Lily Rowan calls mezzotinto, good
and full but with sharp edges.
"Yes, I believe I have."
"From Orrie Cather."
"Right."
"Then you know who I am. I'm calling – I have just seen
the morning paper. Is it true about Orrie? He has been arrested?"
"You can call it that, yes. He is being held as a
material witness. That means that the police think he knows things he hasn't
told them, and they want him to."
"About a murder?"
"Apparently."
"They must be crazy!"
"That's quite possible. Are you at home, Miss
Hardy?"
"Yes, at my apartment. Do you know –"
"Hold it, please. Since you say you just saw it in the
paper, I assume the police haven't paid you a call yet. But they will. At
least, they may. I need to ask a question. I sort of gathered from things Orrie
said that you and he are planning to get married. I might have misunderstood…"
"You didn't. We're going to be married in May."
"Is it known? Have you told people?"
"I have told a few people – friends. I'm going to go on
working for a while, and an airline stewardess is not allowed –"
"I know. But if Orrie has told his friends, and he told
me, you'll have callers before long. If you want to have –"
"I want to know why he was arrested! I want to know – was
he working for Nero Wolfe?"
"No. He hasn't been on a job for Mr. Wolfe for more
than two months. If you –"
"Why should I have callers?"
"I'd rather not tell you on the phone. It's
complicated. If you want to know about it before the police come to ask
questions, why don't you come and ask me questions? Nero Wolfe's office, Nine-thirty-eight
West Thirty-fifth Street. I'll be –"
"I can't. I'm due for a Rio flight at ten-thirty."
"Then I'll come and pick you up and we can talk on the
way to the airport. I'm a good driver. What's the address?"
"I don't think –" Silence. "What if Orrie
–" More silence. "I'll see." She hung up.
I had room for another brioche and slice of ham, and I
didn't dawdle. It might take her only a couple of minutes. When Fritz brought
coffee I told him that when you wanted to see someone and didn't know where she
was all you had to do was send out waves, and he asked if we had a client.
"Yes and no," I said. "A job for someone,
yes. A customer who can be properly billed, no. You heard me mention Orrie's
name, so you might as well know that he's in a hole and we're going to pull him
out. How do you say in French 'the brotherhood of man'?"
"There is no such thing in French. So that's what your
personal errand was Saturday. I'm glad it's Orrie instead of Saul or Fred, but
all the same –"
The phone rang. I got it. "Nero Wolfe's office –"
"Jill Hardy again, Mr. Goodwin. I've fixed it. I'll be
there in about an hour."
"Good for you. Do you mind giving me your address and
phone number? Just to have."
She didn't mind. The address was 217 Nutmeg Street, in the
Village. When I had finished the coffee and went to the office, I wrote it on a
slip of paper, and the phone number, and considered a problem: should it go in
Orrie's folder? Deciding against it, I got out a new folder and marked it Cather,
Orrie, client. In ten minutes Wolfe would be taking the elevator for his
morning session, nine to eleven, with the orchids, and I buzzed his room on the
house phone. He took his time to answer.
"Yes?"
"Good morning. I thought you would want to know that
it's possible that Jill Hardy will still be here when you come down. She'll
arrive in about an hour, probably less."
"You have already found her?"
"Oh, sure. It's easy when you know how."
"Swagger," he said, and hung up.
As I dusted desks and chairs, removed yesterday's sheets
from the desk calendars, changed the water in the vase on Wolfe's desk, and
opened the mail, I decided that Jill Hardy would be tall and stiff with quick,
sharp eyes, the sergeant type, but the corners of her eyes would slant up a
little because some Oriental had got mixed in somewhere along the line. It
would have taken something unusual like that to hook Orrie so hard, but there
was another reason why she had to be like that. Since we had ruled Orrie out,
the sooner we found a replacement for him the better, and of course Jill Hardy
was a candidate, and it would simplify it if she looked the part.
Damn it, she didn't. When the doorbell rang a little after
nine-thirty and I went to the hall and to the front door, what I saw through
the one-way glass was a size twelve black leather coat with a fur collar, and a
little oval face, pink from the cold, with big gray-blue eyes, under a fur-and-leather
pancake. When I had opened up and she was inside and the coat was off, she
looked even smaller in the well-fitted dark blue suit. She must have just
barely hit the minimum height for her job. In the office, I had one of the
yellow chairs in place for her. The red leather chair is too far away from my
desk.
"I've calmed down a little," she said as she sat.
"You look a little like Orrie. The same size."
That didn't strike me as an ideal opening for a friendly
conversation. I do not look like Orrie. He's handsome and I'm not. My face
needs more nose, but I quit worrying about it when I was twelve. I turned the
other cheek. "I'm not surprised," I said, "that Orrie decided to
merge. Seeing you. I'll congratulate him again when I see him."
She ignored the oil. "When will you see him?"
"I'm not sure. Possibly this afternoon."
"I want to see him, but I don't know how. What do I
do?"
"I wouldn't try to rush it if I were you. He might get
bailed out. He has a good lawyer. When did you see him last?"
"Why did they arrest him?" she demanded.
"What could he know about a murder? You say he wasn't working for
Nero Wolfe?"
"Yes. He wasn't. I don't know, Miss Hardy, if I can
tell you much of anything you don't already know, since you've read the paper.
I suppose that woman, Isabel Kerr, was involved in some case he was working on,
but that's just a guess. Another guess is that he was in her apartment
recently, and they found his fingerprints there, and that's why they've got
him. You probably know that private detectives sometimes get into a place and
make a search, but if it had been that, Orrie wouldn't have left any prints
because he would have had gloves on. Of course he might not have been there on
business, it might have been just – social. Do you know if he knew Miss
Kerr?"
"No." She was frowning.
"He has never mentioned her name?"
"No."
"When did you see him last?"
She was tops at ignoring questions. She was still frowning.
"You said you'd rather not tell me on the phone why I would have callers,
but you're not telling me anything, it seems to me. You're Orrie's close
friend, but you don't seem to know much. Why would I have callers? You mean the
police?"
I decided I wasn't going to get anywhere walking on eggs.
"I don't want to jolt you," I said, "but I think you ought to
know the situation."
"So do I. That's exactly what I think."
"Fine. When a man is arrested he has a right to call a
lawyer. Orrie called Nathaniel Parker, and Parker went and saw him, and then he
came here and talked with Mr. Wolfe and me. Orrie knew he was going to. They
don't hold a man without bail merely because they think he knows things.
They're holding him because they think he killed Isabel Kerr. They don't just
think he knows something about a murder, they think he did it."
Her eyes were wide, staring. "I don't believe it."
"If you don't believe he did it, neither do I. If you
don't believe they think he did, ask them. Or his lawyer. Because Mr. Wolfe
doesn't think he did, he intends to do something about it, like for instance
finding out who did. I haven't answered your question, why you should expect
callers. Because as soon as the cops find out that Orrie is going to marry you,
which won't take them long, they will want to ask you things. Like what I
asked, do you know if he knew Isabel Kerr, and like what you haven't answered,
when did you see him last? I only asked it twice, but they'll bear down.
They'll also want to know where and how you spent Saturday morning; that's the
kind of minds they have. They will wonder if you were there with him, and maybe
even held her while he got the ashtray. It's also the kind of mind I have.
Since I think he didn't kill her I have to consider who did, and it might have
been you. Where were you Saturday morning?"
Her jaw was working. "I thought you were a friend
of Orrie's," she said. "You wouldn't talk like that if he was
here."
"Yes, I would, and he would understand. He wouldn't
like it, but he would understand." I leaned to her, elbows on knees.
"Listen, Miss Hardy. I like your looks and I like your voice. You have
very nice hands. You say you had never heard of Isabel Kerr, and I have no
evidence that you had, so apparently you're out, but I would really appreciate
it if you would tell me when you saw Orrie last and where you were Saturday
morning."
"Why do they think he killed her?" she
demanded. "Why would he kill her?"
"I don't know. I may have an idea later, possibly this
afternoon if I see him, from the questions they have asked him. They probably
think they have some line on motive, but not necessarily."
"How could he have a motive?"
"You'll have to ask them, not me, because I think
they're off. It's supposed to be possible to convict a man of murder without
proving motive, but juries don't like the idea."
"Juries? You mean they will – there'll be a trial?"
"I sincerely hope not."
Her eyes were fastened on me. "I believe you really
mean that."
"I really do."
"Saturday morning I was at home in bed, until after
noon. I had been on a flight from Caracas that was due at midnight, but we
weren't down until after two o'clock. I saw Orrie that evening. I had dinner
with him at a restaurant. I have to answer so many questions in the air that
when I'm on the ground I don't listen to them." She pulled her feet back,
stood up, and took a step. "Get up and put your arms around me."
It was an order, and I obeyed. She didn't lift her arms so
we could lock, but when I had her enclosed she gripped my jacket with both
hands near my backbone and hid her face on my chest. The dark blue suit felt
like wool, but nowadays you never know. I didn't squeeze, just held her nice
and firm, trying to decide whether she knew she was in trouble and wanted to
enlist me, or she was getting started on me in case Orrie got permanently
eliminated, or it was just a habit she had. She hadn't used any perfume, or
very little, and she smelled fine. There's no telling how long it would have
lasted if it hadn't been for the doorbell. It rang.
I unwound my arms, politely, crossed to the hall and took a
look, stepped back in, and told her, "It's a cop, one I happen to know.
Since you're in no hurry to meet him, you will please duck." I had crossed
to the door to the front room and opened it. "In here. You don't have to
hold your breath, it's soundproofed. You can even sneeze."
Generally speaking, airline stewardesses know how to react.
Without a word she picked up her handbag, which had dropped to the floor when
she gripped my jacket, moved to the door I was holding, and on through. As I
shut the door the doorbell rang again. I broke no records getting to the hall
and the front; and if Inspector Cramer noticed the black leather coat on the
rack, let him. It was me he wanted to see, since he knew Wolfe was never
available until eleven, and one more question to refuse to answer wouldn't
matter. I opened the door, said, "Sorry, I was busy yawning," and
gave him room. His big round face was redder than usual from the cold. There
have been times when he refused help with his coat because he wanted to get his
eyes on me and keep them there, but now he let me behind him to take it, and he
led the way to the office. He hadn't noticed the black leather coat, but he did
notice the yellow chair near my desk, and as he lowered his broad rump onto the
red leather one he asked, "Company?"
I nodded. "Come and gone. Have you turned Orrie loose
yet?"
"No. Not yet and not soon. Unless you can give me a
damn good reason. Can you?"
"Sure. He's clean."
"Go right ahead."
"Parker came here after seeing him yesterday and told
us that Orrie had told him he was innocent. We have seen a lot of Orrie and we
know he's not a liar. So Mr. Wolfe is going to look into it. Of course that's
what you came for, to ask if he's going to horn in. He is."
"I don't have to ask that. I came to get
information." He got better arranged in the chair. "When did you see
Cather last?"
I shook my head. "No comment."
"Has he ever spoken to you about Isabel Kerr?"
"Pass."
"Has he ever spoken to you about Jill Hardy?"
"No comment."
"You can't get away with it, Goodwin. If a man is
charged he can clam up, but you're not charged. But, by God, you can be charged."
"I feel another yawn coming," I said. "Do we
have to go through it again? I don't say I will answer no questions at all
about Orrie Cather. If you ask me where he buys his shoes or when did Mr. Wolfe
last use him on a job, I'll tell you, even in writing. But the kind of
questions you're loaded with, no. Certainly, if you pin a murder on him and
make it stick, and if you can prove that I had information that you could have
used, you can tag me for obstructing justice and I'll be sunk. But if it turns
out that instead of obstructing justice I'm doing it as a favor by helping Mr.
Wolfe find out who did kill Isabel Kerr, he and I ought to get a ticker-tape
parade, but we won't insist on it."
He opened his tight lips to say, "You've crawled out on
that limb before."
"Yeah. I said do we have to go through it again."
I glanced at my wrist. "Mr. Wolfe will be down in twenty minutes, if you
think you can scare him better than me."
He started tapping the floor with the toe of his heavy shoe,
focusing on Wolfe's empty chair. That wasn't very satisfactory, since it made
no sound on the thick rug, not like the linoleum in his office. He was looking
at the chair instead of me because it wasn't my stand that was eating him. He
had the answer to one question, where did Wolfe stand, and now the point was,
why? Did we really have something, and, if so, what?
"It occurs to me," I said, "that we might
make a deal. It would have to be okayed by Mr. Wolfe, but I'm sure he would.
We'll make an affidavit, the last sentence of which will say that it includes
everything we know, and everything Orrie has said and done to our knowledge,
that could possibly have any bearing on the murder, and we'll trade it for a
look at your file. The whole file. It would be a bargain for both of us.
You would know exactly what we've got, and we would know why you're risking
holding him without bail. Fair enough?"
"Balls," Cramer said. He stood up. "One thing
I came for, to tell Wolfe something, but you can tell him. Tell him that it's
too bad I can't show him Isabel Kerr's diary. If he read it he would change his
mind about horning in. And a tip for you. When you decide to kill someone make
damn sure he isn't keeping a diary. Or she." He turned and marched out.
I stayed put. It would have been a shame to spoil such a
good exit line. When I heard the front door open and close I went to the hall
for a look, to see that he had been outside when he shut it, then stepped back
into the office and considered a matter. Should Jill Hardy be there in the red
leather chair when Wolfe came down? If I left her in the front room and
reported, almost certainly he would refuse to see her, and of course he should.
It would be eleven o'clock in three minutes. I decided to bring her in, went
and opened the door and crossed the sill, and looked around at an empty room.
She had exited without a line, by the door to the hall. I went and looked at
the rack; her coat was gone. The house phone buzzed in the office, and I went
and got it. It was Wolfe, in the plant rooms, wanting to know if she had gone,
and I told him yes, and in a minute the sound came of the elevator grumbling
its way down. He entered, in his hand the daily orchids for his desk – a
panicle of Odonto-glossum hellemense, which, according to the records I
keep, is a cross of harvengtense and crispum. A stunner if you feel like
orchids, which I didn't just then. I sat and simmered as he put them in the
vase, got settled in his chair, and glanced through the mail. When he finished
with a letter from a man upstate who sends deer meat, the only important item,
I said, rather loud, "Miss Kerr kept a diary."
He put the letter down, looked up, regarded me for half a
minute, and asked, "How did you pry it out of him?"
"Out of who?"
"Mr. Cramer, of course."
I stared. "To see the street from up there you have to
stick your head way out."
"I never have. But he would certainly come, and soon,
and who else could supply such a particular? How did you pry it out of
him?"
"All right, I'll report." I did so, starting with
Jill Hardy. Sometimes, reporting a conversation, it's essential to give it
verbatim, but even when it isn't I do it anyway because that's how I have
trained and it's easier. As usual, he leaned back with his eyes closed. I went
right on through, from Jill Hardy on to Cramer, since there had been no break,
just a change of cast. When I finished he opened his eyes halfway, closed them
again, and muttered, "Nothing."
"Right," I agreed. "As for her, if she's a liar
she's pretty good. Orrie certainly thinks she knows nothing about Isabel Kerr,
and if she does it would take a lot of digging to prove it. If she doesn't
she's crossed off completely and is absolutely useless. As for Cramer, he
probably has got a diary, but so what, we knew he had something hot, and I
doubt if it says at the end, 'He is reaching for the ashtray and is going to
hit me with it,' which is the point. Cramer may have needed a diary to tell him
that it would be handy for Orrie if she died, but we don't, we already knew it.
What we need is somebody else it is handy for. It is for Jill Hardy, in a way,
but I doubt if she knew it. As you say, nothing."
He opened his eyes. "You think Orrie killed her."
"No. I have looked over Saul's point, from all angles,
and I like it. At the very least it packs a reasonable doubt, which is enough
for a jury, so it will do for me. Anyhow, we're now on record. With Cramer. If
it turns out that Orrie did it I'll never forgive him. I'll cop his girl. She already
thinks I look like him."
He grunted. "Now what? Who?"
"I suppose the sister. Or Avery Ballou."
"We would have to discuss Mr. Ballou. The sister
first." He straightened up and reached for Invitation to an Inquest.
There was a Barry Fleming in the
Bronx phone book – address, 2938 Humboldt Avenue. Of course I didn't dial the
number. According to the Times, she wasn't talking to reporters, and
naturally she would think I was trying a dodge. I consulted the Bronx street
guide to locate Humboldt Avenue, then grinned to myself as my hand went
automatically to a pocket for my keyfold. Because of a regrettable occurrence
some years back, I had made it a hard and fast rule never to go on an errand
connected with a murder without a gun, and the rules you make yourself are the
hardest to break, but there's a limit. Sororicide is by no means unheard of,
but to suppose that Stella Fleming might have killed her sister, and therefore
anyone who got in her reach should be ready to shoot, would be overdoing it, at
least until I had a look at her. I returned the keyfold to my pocket, told
Wolfe not to expect me for lunch, and left. After descending the stoop to the
sidewalk I turned up my collar, even for the short stretch around the corner to
the garage. Instead of a January thaw we were having a good long freeze, and
the wind was doing its best to help.
It was twenty past twelve when I left the Heron in a parking
lot and walked a block and a half to Number 2938, which was a regulation ten-story
brick hive, to be found in all five boroughs, but especially the Bronx. Of
course it might not be the right Barry Fleming, but I would soon find out. The
tiled floor of the lobby had a rubber runner, no rugs. There was no doorman,
but the elevator man was there, a pasty-faced bozo in a uniform that was past
due for the cleaner and presser, leaning against the wall. I advanced and said,
"Fleming, please."
He shook his head and said, "There's nobody
there."
"I know," I said, "that Mrs. Fleming isn't
receiving any strangers, but I'm not a newspaperman. I want to discuss a
personal matter with her, and I'm sure she would want to." In his case,
the face was the index of the mind. He wasn't impressed and wasn't going
to be. The only question was how much. I removed my gloves, got out my case and
extracted a card, got out my wallet and extracted a finif, and said, "On
the level. Do you want to see my license? Take me up, and if she doesn't let me
in I'll double this."
He took the card and looked it over, took the bill and stuck
it in a pocket, and said, "On the level, there's nobody there. She went
out around ten o'clock."
He deserved a good poke, but it wouldn't have been tactful.
I merely asked, "Do you know where she went?"
He shook his head. "No idea."
"Do you know when she'll be back?"
"No, I don't."
I gave him a friendly smile. "That's not fifty cents' worth,
let alone five bucks'." I got my wallet again and took out a ten.
"What floor is she on?"
"Seven. Seven D."
"I need to see her, and she needs to see me. Take me
up, and I'll wait there. You have my card. If you want to, get an inkpad and
take my fingerprints."
He surprised me. He had a heart in him somewhere. He
actually said, "She might be gone all day, and there's no place to
sit."
"There's always the floor."
He gave me his eyes, looked straight at me for the first
time. "No funny business, mister. The doors have got pretty good
locks."
"I don't know anything about locks. There's nothing
there for me until she comes." I went to the elevator and pressed my
fingertips, all ten, against the metal frame, at eye level. "There. You've
got me." I offered the sawbuck. He took it, followed me into the elevator,
shut the door, and pushed the handle.
There are a lot of interesting things to do while you're
waiting in an upper hall of an apartment house for four hours and twenty
minutes. You can count spots and decide which has more, the left wall or the
right wall. You can try to sort out smells and decide how many different
flavors there are in the overall effect. You can listen to the wails coming
through the door of 7B and decide whether the little lamb is male or female and
how old it is, and what steps you would take if you were inside. When people
arrive or leave you can look straight at them and notice which ones look back
and which ones pretend they haven't seen you. When a hefty, broad-shouldered
woman turns after inserting a key into the lock of 7C and asks, "Are you
waiting for someone?" you can say pleasantly and distinctly,
"Yes," and see how she reacts. On the whole, it was time well spent.
My one regret was that I hadn't brought along a chocolate bar, five or six
bananas, and a quart of milk.
I admit I frequently glanced at my watch. It was ten minutes
to five when the elevator door opened and a man emerged. When he kept coming
down the hall I assumed he was headed for E or F, but he stopped to face me and
spoke.
"I understand you're waiting for my wife."
Of course I had to concede it. "Yes, sir, I am, if
you're Barry Fleming."
"She won't see you. You're wasting your time. She won't
see anybody."
I nodded. "I know, but I think she'll see me if she
lets me explain why."
I sent a hand to my pocket for the case, but before I had a
card out he said, "I know who you are. I should say, I have seen the card
you gave the elevator man. Are you Archie Goodwin?"
"I am. In person. Look, Mr. Fleming, why not leave it
to her? When she comes I'll tell her what I want to talk about, and it will be
up to her. I won't insist, I'll just ask her."
"What do you want to talk about?"
I would have preferred to tell her, but a husband is a
husband. "About a man," I said. "His name is Orrie Cather, and
the police think he killed Isabel Kerr. He has worked off and on for Nero
Wolfe, and Mr. Wolfe and I know him very well, and we don't think he did. You
know I work for Nero Wolfe?"
"Of course."
"We are looking into it a little, and I would like very
much to ask your wife if she can supply any information that might help.
Naturally she wants the murderer of her sister caught and punished, but she
wouldn't want it to be Orrie Cather if he's innocent. You wouldn't, would
you?"
"Of course not." He was puckering his lips and
frowning at me. He was about my height, narrow-shouldered and narrow-hipped,
with a long face that showed the cheekbones. He went on, "I wouldn't want
an innocent man punished for anything, certainly not for murder. But I doubt
very much if my wife can give you any information that would help. She's not – she's
taking it pretty hard."
"Sure. Believe me, I don't want to make it any harder
for her."
"Well – where's your coat?"
"There." I pointed to it, on the floor by the
wall.
"Get it. There's no sense in waiting out here." With
a key ring in his hand, he went to the door of 7D. When I came with my coat he
was holding the door open and I entered. The foyer was about the size of a pool
table. He hung my coat in the closet before he took his off, and as he was
hanging his up the door opened and a woman entered. At the sight of me she
gawked a second, then whirled to him.
"Barry! You let him in?"
From her tone I knew then and there that I had had a break,
him coming first.
"Now, dear." He put an arm across her shoulders
and kissed her on the cheek. "He only wants some information, if we have
any. He thinks –"
"We have no information for anybody! You know
that!"
I spoke up. "But you must have a preference, Mrs.
Fleming. If an innocent man is convicted of murdering your sister, the trouble
is that the guilty man goes free. Do you want that?"
She focused up at me. Up, because she wasn't more than an
inch over five feet. "It's none of your business what I want," she
said, and meant it.
"No," I said, "but it's your business.
I'm not a newshound trying to get a headline, I'm a private detective trying to
dig up some facts. I already have some. I know why you won't see reporters, why
you have no information for anybody. Because your sister was a doxy, and you
–"
"My sister was a what?"
"D,O,X,Y, doxy. I happen to like that better than
concubine or paramour or mistress. I don't –"
I stopped because I had to, to protect my face. When a woman
flies at you to claw, what you do depends on the woman. If she has real tiger
in her you may even have to plug her, but with Stella Fleming, with her short
reach, all I had to do was stiff-arm her, with my palm flat on her mouth. Then
the husband got her shoulders from behind and pulled her back and told me,
"You'd better go."
I was inclined to agree, but it was just as well that Wolfe
couldn't read my mind by short-wave because he thinks I understand women. She
turned and drummed on his chest with her fists and squeaked, "I don't want
him to go," and then calmly, no hurry, started to shed her coat. When he
had it she told me, "Come on inside," perfectly polite, and headed
through an archway. When he had the closet door shut he motioned me on, and I
moved.
She had turned on lights and gone to a couch and sat and was
biting her lip. I hadn't really seen her, too busy, and as I crossed to a
nearby chair I noted that she resembled her sister not at all, with her brown
hair and brown eyes and round filled-out face. As I approached she demanded,
"Why did you say that?"
"To jar you." I sat. "I had to. Either that
or –"
"I mean why do you lie like that about my sister?"
I shook my head. "That line is wasted with me, Mrs.
Fleming. We both know it's not a lie, so skip it. It's not important, not to
me. I only said it to –"
"Did you know my sister?"
"No. I had never heard of her until yesterday."
"Then how could you know …"
I gave her three seconds, but she let it hang. I flipped a
hand. "It's obvious. A showgirl leaves –"
"She was an actress."
"Okay. An actress leaves the theater, takes a three-hundred-dollar
apartment, has no job, eats well, dresses well, has a car, uses thirty-dollar
perfume. Who wouldn't know? Who doesn't know? That's not important, not now.
What's –"
"It is to me. It's the most important thing in the
world."
"Now, dear," Fleming said. He was beside her on
the couch.
"Well," I said, "if it's that important to
you, that's what you want to talk about. Go ahead."
"She was twenty-eight years old. I'm thirty-one. She
was only twenty-five when she … stopped work. She was six and I was nine when
our mother died, and she was twelve and I was fifteen when our father died.
That's why it's so important."
I nodded. "Certainly."
"You're not a newspaper reporter. William told me your
name, but I don't remember."
"William's the elevator man," Fleming said.
To him: "Thank you." To her: "My name is
Archie Goodwin. I'm a private detective, I work for Nero Wolfe, and I came
–"
"You're a detective."
"Yes."
"Then you know about things. You said I wouldn't want
the man that killed my sister to go free, and no, I wouldn't, but if he's
arrested and there's a trial, no one is going to say about my sister what you
said about her. If anyone said that at the trial it would be in the newspapers.
If anyone is going to say that there mustn't be any trial. Even if he goes
free. So you didn't know what I want."
That made the second woman in one day who didn't want a
trial, though for a different reason. "I do now," I told her,
"and from your standpoint there's no argument. I even agree with you, at
least part way. You don't want a trial even if they get the right man. What I
don't want is a trial of the wrong man, and that's what is going to happen
unless someone stops it. Of course you read the papers."
"I read all of them."
"Naturally. Then you know they are holding a man named
Orrie Cather and that he has worked for Nero Wolfe. Had you ever heard or seen
that name before? Orrie Cather?"
"No."
"Are you sure? Didn't your sister ever mention
him?"
"No. I'm sure she didn't."
"Mr. Wolfe and I know him very well. We do not believe
he killed your sister. I don't say we know all about him. He may have
had, he may have, some – uh – connections that we don't know about. I will even
concede that he may have been the one who was paying the rent for your sister's
apartment, and her other – You're shaking your head."
"She didn't shake her head," Fleming said.
"Sorry, I thought you did. Anyway, whether he was
paying the rent or not, we do not believe he killed her, and that's why Mr.
Wolfe sent me to see you. If they bring him to trial – you know what will
happen. Everything they have found out about your sister will be on record. As
you know, a jury is supposed to acquit a man if there's a reasonable doubt. We
want to establish a reasonable doubt for the police so it won't get in a
courtroom for a jury, and we thought you might help. You saw your sister fairly
often, didn't you?"
"That's pretty clever," Fleming said. "But I
must remind you that for my wife a trial of the right man might be just as bad
as a trial of the wrong man. I don't agree with her, not at all, but Isabel was
her sister."
"No," I said, "I'm not being clever. All we
need is a reasonable doubt. For instance, what if we can show the police that
there's another man, or woman, who had a good motive? Or what if they learn
that Isabel told someone – it could be your wife – that someone had threatened
to kill her? If and if and if. For our purpose, Mr. Wolfe's and mine, it
doesn't have to be strong enough to charge him and try him, just the doubt. But
even if they nailed him, his trial might not be as bad, for your wife, as Orrie
Cather's trial is sure to be. We know something about the line they think they
have on Orrie."
"What is it?"
"I can't tell you that. We got it in confidence."
He was squinting at me. "You know, Mr. Goodwin, I'm a
mathematics teacher and I like problems. Since this is so close to us, though
it's closer to my wife than to me, it isn't just a problem, but still my
mind has the habit." He put a hand on his wife's knee. "You won't
mind, dear, if I admit I would like to help with this problem. But I won't. I
know how you feel. You do exactly what you want to do."
"Fair enough," I told him. And to her: "You
saw your sister often, didn't you?"
She had put her hand on top of his. "Yes," she
said.
"Once or twice a week?"
"Yes. Nearly always we had dinner together on Saturday
and went to a show or a movie. My husband plays chess Saturday evenings."
"According to the newspaper, when you went there day
before yesterday you got no answer to your ring and the superintendent let you
in. Is that correct?"
"Yes."
"That was an important moment, when you entered the
bedroom. I don't want to jar you again, Mrs. Fleming, I truly don't, but it's
important. What was your first thought when you saw your sister's dead body
there on the floor?"
"I didn't – it wasn't a thought."
"First there was the shock, of course. But when you saw
the – when you realized she had been murdered, it would have been natural to
have the thought He killed her or She killed her, something like
that. That's why it's important; a first thought like that is often right. Who
was the he or the she?"
"There wasn't any he or she. I didn't have any such
thought."
"Are you sure? At a time like that your mind jerks
around."
"I know it does, but I didn't have a thought such as
that then or any other time, that he killed her or she killed
her. I couldn't even try to guess who killed her. All I know is there mustn't
be a trial."
"There will be a trial, of Orrie Cather, unless we can
find a way to stop it. Did your sister ever show you her diary?"
She frowned. "She didn't keep a diary."
"Yes, she did. The police have it. But since –"
"What does it say?"
"I don't know. I haven't seen it. Since –"
"She shouldn't have done that. That makes it worse. She
didn't tell me. She must have kept it in that drawer she kept locked. Don't I
have a right to it? Can't I make them give it to me?"
"Not now. You can later. If there's a trial it will be
evidence. It's called an exhibit. Since you never saw it, we'll have to skip
it. It looks pretty hopeless, because I don't know of anyone but you who can
give me any information. Of course a good prospect would be the man who paid
the rent for the apartment, and the car and the perfume and so on, but I don't
know who he is. Do you?"
"No."
"That surprises me. I thought you would. You were close
with your sister, weren't you?"
"Certainly I was."
"Then you must know who else was. Since you say you
couldn't even try to guess who killed her, I'm not asking that, just who knew
her well. Of course you have told the police."
"No, I haven't."
I raised a brow. "Are you refusing to talk to them too?"
"No, but I couldn't tell them much because I don't
know. It was …" She stopped, shook her head, and turned to her husband.
"You tell him, Barry."
He squeezed her hand. "You could almost say," he
said, "that Isabel lived two lives. One of them was with my wife, her
sister, and to a much less extent me. The other one was with her – well, call
it her circle. My wife and I know very little about it, but we sort of
understood that her friends were mostly from the world of the theater. You will
realize that in the circumstances my wife preferred not to associate with
them."
"It wasn't what I preferred," she corrected.
"It was what was."
That helped a lot, another whole circle, but I might have
expected it. "All right," I told her, "you can't give me names
you don't know. Isn't there anyone, anyone at all, that you know and she
knew?"
She shook her head. "Nobody."
"Dr. Gamm," Fleming said.
"Oh, of course," she said.
"Her doctor?" I asked.
Fleming nodded. "Ours too. An internist. He's – you
might say – a friend of mine. He plays chess. When Isabel had a bad case of
bronchitis a couple of years ago I –"
"Nearly three years ago," she said.
"Was it? I recommended him. He's a widower with two
children. We have had him and Isabel here two or three evenings for bridge, but
she wasn't very good at it."
"She was terrible," Stella Fleming said.
"No card sense," Fleming said. "His name is
Theodore Gamm with two Ms. His office is on Seventy-eighth Street in
Manhattan."
Presumably he was helping with the problem, and I fully
appreciated it; at least, by gum, I had one name and address. I got my notebook
out and wrote it down to show that I was on the ball.
"He can't tell you anything," she said, perfectly
calm, but suddenly she was on her feet, trembling, her hands tight fists, her
eyes hot. "Nobody can! They won't, they won't! Get out! Get out!"
Fleming, up too, had an arm across her shoulders, but she
didn't know it. If I had sat tight she would probably have soon got organized
again, but I hadn't had a bite since breakfast. I nodded at Fleming, and he
nodded back, and I went to the foyer for my hat and coat and let myself out. As
I entered the elevator, William said, "So you got in, huh?" and I
said, "Thanks to you, pal, telling both of them I was there." Outside
it was even colder, but the Heron started like an angel, as it damn well
should, and I headed for the Grand Concourse.
When I entered the office, a little after half past six,
Wolfe was at his desk, scowling at a document two inches thick – part of the
transcript of the Rosenberg trial, which he had sent for after reading the
first three chapters of Invitation to an Inquest. My desk was clean, no
memos or messages about phone calls. I yanked a sheet from my pocket notebook
and sat studying it until Wolfe cleared his throat, whereupon I rose and handed
it to him.
"There," I said. "The name and address of the
doctor who treated Isabel Kerr when she had bronchitis nearly three years
ago."
He grunted. "And?"
"You'll appreciate it more if I lead up to it. I spent
an hour with Mr. and Mrs. Barry Fleming. Now or after dinner?"
He looked at the clock. Thirty-five minutes to anchovy
fritters. "Is it urgent?"
"Hell, no."
"Then it can wait. Saul called twice. Nothing. Fred
will join him in the morning. I rang Mr. Parker, and he came after lunch and I
described the situation, everything relevant except the name of Avery Ballou.
He telephoned later. He had seen Orrie, and he has arranged for you to see him
in the morning at ten o'clock. He thinks it advisable."
"Has Orrie been charged? Homicide?"
"No."
"But no bail?"
"No. Mr. Parker doesn't wish to press it." He
glanced at the sheet I had handed him. "What's this? Did this man kill
her?"
"No, he cured her. I'm very proud of it. It's the
crop."
"Pfui." He dropped it and resumed with the
transcript.
Business is taboo at the dinner table, but crime and
criminals aren't, and the Rosenberg case hogged the conversation all through
the anchovy fritters, partridge in casserole with no olives in the sauce,
cucumber mousse, and Creole curds and cream. Of course it was academic, since
the Rosenbergs had been dead for years, but the young princes had been dead for
five centuries, and Wolfe had once spent a week investigating that case, after
which he removed More's Utopia from his bookshelves because More had
framed Richard III.
He let up only when we were back in the office and had
finished with coffee. He pushed the tray aside and asked if it had to be
verbatim, and I said yes and proceeded. When I told about the deal with William
he pursed his lips, not objecting, merely reacting to the fact that the fifteen
bucks was down the drain, since we couldn't expect to bill Orrie. Then he
leaned back and closed his eyes and quit reacting, as usual, until I had
finished.
He opened his eyes and demanded, "You had no lunch?
None at all?"
I shook my head. "If I had gone out it might have cost
a C to get back up. William is a mooch."
He straightened up. "Never do that."
"It's good for me. I was nine ounces overweight. Do you
comment or do I?"
"You."
I took a minute. "First, did Stella kill her sister?
Two to one she didn't. She –"
"Only two?"
"That's the best I'll give. The most important thing in
the world, she said. If it's still that important when she's dead, what was it
when she was alive? She left the rails twice in my presence. She just can't
stand it. If she went there Saturday morning and – do I need to spell it?"
"No. Why two to one? Why not even or less?"
"Because, on the record, a woman kills her sister only
if she hates her or is afraid of her. Stella didn't. She loved her and wanted to
– well, save her. Make it three to one. Anyway, even if she did it, she's
hopeless. Try and prove it. Even if we got enough to satisfy us, Cramer and the
DA would never buy it, let alone a jury. So forget her. As for him, no bet. He
could have had an elegant motive, anybody could, but as of now the only one
visible is that he killed her to stop his wife worrying about her, which is a
little farfetched. One thing, though, why did he let me in?"
"So she wouldn't encounter you in the hall."
"Possibly, but he could have ordered me out and called
a cop if he had to. It's just a comment; maybe it was because he likes
problems, or maybe he thought it would be good for her. More than a comment, a
conclusion: if they're out, they have no idea who is in. She said she couldn't
even try to guess, and I believe her. She's no good at covering. When I pulled
an obvious little dodge, saying that it might have been Orrie who was paying
the rent, it wasn't only her expression, she actually shook her head. Later she
said she didn't know who, but she does. What the hell, so do we."
"If Orrie was candid."
"He was. He had the lid off. For comments, I have saved
the best for the last. Isabel's other life. The circle."
He grunted. "Yes."
"Yes what?"
"That expands it. That was to be expected, as soon as
you learned that her relations with her sister were restricted. A woman who
eats by sufferance, without a contract, would of course prefer not to eat
alone. You laugh?"
"I do. Most men wouldn't put it all on eating. All
right, so we have a circle too – as expected. Dozens, maybe hundreds.
Godalmighty. I suggest again that we consider Avery Ballou."
"I am considering him. I wanted first – no matter.
We'll discuss it in the morning after you see Orrie." He reached for the
transcript.
Where you go to see a man in
custody in Manhattan depends partly on why he's there. It can be a precinct
station, a room in the City Prison, a room in the District Attorney's office,
or the paddock. I don't know how many cops call it the paddock, but Sergeant
Purley Stebbins does. It is a bare, smelly room about twelve yards long, split
along the center by a steel grill which extends from the middle of a wide
wooden counter up to the ceiling, and there are a dozen or so wooden chairs
strung along each side of the counter, the same kind of chairs for the visitors
and visitees. Democracy.
Seated on one of the chairs on the visitors' side at ten
minutes past ten Tuesday morning, I was not chipper. I had supposed I would see
Orrie in a room at the DA's office until Parker had phoned to say it would be
the City Prison, and then I had taken it for granted it would be in a room. But
I had been escorted to the paddock, and there I was, with four other visitors
spread along the line, the nearest one, a middle-aged fat woman with red eyes,
only seven feet away. I would have liked to think they were merely showing what
they thought of Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, but I didn't. They had decided
that Orrie Cather was a murderer, though they hadn't charged him yet, and were
taking no chances. Try to make them eat it.
A door opened in the back wall, the other side of the grill
and counter, and Orrie entered, cuffed, with a dick right behind. The dick
steered him to a chair opposite me, watched him sit, said, "Fifteen
minutes," and went back to the wall, where another dick was standing. My
eyes and Orrie's met as well as they could through the grill. The rims of his
were puffy. He had once admitted to me that he brushed his hair ten minutes
every morning, but he hadn't that morning.
"It could be bugged," I said.
"I don't think so," he said. His cuffed hands were
on the counter. "Too risky. Too big a stink."
"Well, all we can do is keep it low. Parker has told
you that Mr. Wolfe and Saul and Fred and I have decided that you didn't kill
her and we're on it."
"Yeah, I knew he'd have to. I'm not his Archie Goodwin,
but even me he'd have to."
"I prefer to regard myself as my Archie Goodwin, but we
won't go into that now. I have a couple of questions, but Parker says you
wanted to see me. Well?"
"I want you to do me a favor, Archie, a big favor. I
want you to see Jill Hardy and tell her –"
"I've already seen her. She came to the office
yesterday morning, don't interrupt, and we had a talk. I didn't know how much
you had told her about Isabel Kerr, so I –"
"I have never told her anything about Isabel Kerr. She
didn't know there was an Isabel Kerr. Goddammit, what did you tell
her?"
"Same as you, nothing. Of course that's the favor you
were going to ask, and it's already done. I told her that the cops thought you
killed her, and we thought you didn't, and we were going to investigate, and we
knew nothing about Isabel Kerr. Now I have –"
"You're wonderful, Archie. Wonderful."
"Put it in writing and I'll frame it. I have questions,
and we haven't much time. Have you opened up at all?"
"No. I'm a dummy."
"Stay that way. As you know, Parker agrees. What have
they got? We know they got your license and the other objects, since you didn't
get them and I didn't, and your prints, and her diary, but is that –"
"Her diary?"
"Yeah. You didn't know she kept one?"
"My God, no."
"She did, and they have it, so Cramer says. He didn't
say what's in it. Probably you are, but we want your opinion on another point:
would she put his name in it? The name I had to pry out of you."
"Oh." He looked at it a few seconds. "I see.
That might be a point. I don't think she would. Of course she had the diary
stashed, but even so I'm pretty sure she wouldn't. She was too cagey. It's more
than just an opinion. I say no."
I looked at my wrist. Six minutes to go. "Now the
question. How many people knew about you and her?"
"Nobody."
"Nuts. You can't know that."
"As far as I know, nobody. You've heard me blow,
Archie, but you never heard me blow about her. After just a few times with her
she scared me. I had had women cotton to me before, but she was hipped. I liked
her all right, she was good all right, but she was hipped. After we got started
we were never together anywhere except her place. She wanted it that way, and
that suited me. But I completely misjudged her. I told her about meeting Jill,
you know, just that I had met an airline stewardess, and then like a damn fool
I thought I could ease her along to the idea that since I wasn't her only
contact she couldn't expect to be my only contact. Then I got hipped,
for the first time in my life. On Jill. And she – I've told you how she took
it. She was absolutely going to marry me herself, for God's sake. I told her my
income was about half of what he was spending on that setup, and she said just
a room and bath would do us even after the baby came. That kind of crap. I
don't for a minute believe there was going to be a baby, and even if there was,
whose would it be? I'm answering your question. I told nobody about her, and I
doubt if she told anyone about me."
"But she told you about other people, didn't she?"
"Some, yes. You know, just talk, sure."
"Which one of them killed her? Who had a reason to?"
He nodded. "Naturally I've thought about it. If she
ever said a single damn thing about anyone that might give a hint I can't dig
it up. I realize that there's only one way you can spring me, and God knows I
wish I could give you a steer, but I swear I can't. Sure, she told me about
people, men who made passes at her, women she liked and some she didn't like,
but I have gone over it and over it and came up with nothing. I know you have
to start somewhere, and that's the other thing, besides Jill, I wanted to tell
you. The woman she liked best, and saw the most of, is a night-club singer
named Julie Jaquette. Her real name is Amy Jackson. She was at the Ten Little
Indians week before last and may still be there. She would probably be the best
bet. Have you got anything yet? Anything at all?"
"No. Did you ever meet the sister, Stella
Fleming?"
"No. Isabel talked about her. She said that when we
were married not only would she be happy, her sister would be too. I was
supposed to get a kick out of that, making two women happy at once."
"You should have. Did she ever mention –" I
stopped because we were about to be interrupted. The dick was coming. He
touched Orrie on the shoulder, which was unnecessary, and said time was up. I
raised my voice. "What's your name?"
He looked down his nose at me. "My name?"
"Yes. Your personal name."
"My name is William Flanagan."
"Another William." I rose. "I'm going to
report you for brutality. Mr. Cather is merely detained as a material witness.
You didn't have to grab his shoulder." I turned and headed for the door,
and the dick who had brought me in joined me as I reached for the knob.
William Flanagan hadn't stopped anything important; I had
only been going to ask if Isabel had ever mentioned Dr. Gamm.
In the taxi, going uptown, I touched bottom. I had hoped to
get some little lead out of Orrie, at least a glimmer, but as we turned west at
35th Street I realized that I was going over how he had looked and what he had
said for indications about him, which was plain silly, since he was supposed to
be definitely out. Of course the trouble was that the only way to get something
out of your mind is to get something else in. The idea that Orrie might have
conked Isabel Kerr with that ashtray had popped into my head as soon as I saw
the dent in her skull, and it was going to stay there, no matter what, until I
had an X or Y to substitute for Orrie; and after three days and nights there
was still no X or Y anything like good enough. If you say, even so, I shouldn't
have been considering Orrie because we had barred him, you're perfectly right
but you don't know much.
To show how I was taking it, when I entered the office I did
not open the top left drawer of my desk to get the pad on which I enter items for
my weekly expense account. The $3.75 cab fare would be on me. Wolfe had told us
the undertaking was his, but until we brought him something he would have
nothing to undertake, and he had no corner in self-esteem. Since it was only a
couple of minutes past eleven, he had just come down from the plant rooms and
was taking a look at the mail. When he found there was nothing interesting, no
checks and no lists from orchid collectors, he pushed it aside and said good
morning. I said it wasn't, and to prove it gave him a verbatim report of my
talk with Orrie, ending with the comment that he had better take on the next
one himself, since I had got nowhere with the three I had tackled, Jill Hardy
and the Flemings.
"Anyway," I said, "it's a man. I admit that
Julie Jaquette would probably be too much for you, but she can wait until you
have had a go at Avery Ballou."
He frowned. "Dr. Gamm."
I frowned back. "You can't put it off forever. As you
know, I agree with you on jobs like divorce evidence, they're too grubby. Any
job is apt to be if the main point is who has been, or is, or will be, sleeping
with whom. But while it's true that Ballou was probably not paying her rent so
he could read poetry to her, that presumably sex was a factor, that's not the
main point and you can ignore it. You can pretend that he might have killed her
because she snickered when he pronounced a word wrong."
His lips were tight. He breathed three times before he said,
"Very well. Bring him."
I nodded. "Okay, but I don't know when or how. I looked
him up a little last night. He is not only president of the Federal Holding
Corporation, he's also a director of nine other big outfits. He has a house on
Sixty-seventh Street, one at Rhinebeck, and one at Palm Beach. He's fifty-six years
old. He has one married son and two married daughters. I would have to call the
bank to learn the size of his stack, and we don't want to advertise that you
have any curiosity about him, but it –"
"I said bring him."
"I heard you. I am explaining that it wouldn't be
advisable to tell the receptionist at his office, and the underling she would
pass me to, that a private detective named Nero Wolfe wants to consult him
about a matter that is too confidential for any ears but his. Phoning would be
even worse. Therefore I must arrange something, and Julie Jaquette will have to
be postponed."
He grunted. "Any word from Saul?"
"He phoned at nine o'clock. Fred was with him and they
were proceeding. He'll call around one."
"Pfui. A prodigy on a treadmill. Take him off. Give him
Miss Jaquette. He will get names from her, and Fred will help with them."
He reached for the mail. "Your notebook. This letter from that ass in
Paris will have to be answered."
At four o'clock that afternoon I
stood in the marble lobby of a forty-story financial castle in Wall Street,
across from the row of elevators that were marked "32-40." I was
equipped. In my head was a picture of Avery Ballou, acquired from a back number
of Fortune magazine at the New York Public Library, and in my pocket was
a card. It was like the card I had given William the elevator man – my name in
the middle and Nero Wolfe's name and address and phone number in smaller type
at the bottom – but I had added something. Typewritten below my name was the
information: "There was a diary in the pink bedroom and the police have
it." It filled the space neatly.
I may have been overdoing it. It was conceivable that not
only Ballou's wife and family, but also some of his friends, and even some of
the Federal Holding Corporation personnel, knew how he had spent some of his
evenings. But it was likely that they didn't. Some of the adjectives about him
in Fortune were "astute," "aloof,"
"conventional," and "scrupulous." I don't swallow printed
adjectives whole, but if that batch was only half right it was going to be
ticklish.
So I spent a hundred minutes down in the lobby instead of
going up to the thirty-fourth floor. Anyhow it was better than the upstairs
hall at 2938 Humboldt Avenue, especially from five o'clock on, when every
elevator unloaded a flock of wrens, a pleasing sight. I know that the wrens who
lay eggs don't flock, but if they used elevators instead of wings they would
have to.
I had looked at my watch at 5:38, and it was two minutes
later that Avery Ballou showed. Of those who had been with him in the elevator,
one man stayed with him as they went down the lobby, talking. I followed, six
steps back, hoping they would separate, and they did, out on the sidewalk. The
man went toward Broadway, and Ballou just stood there. I approached, faced him,
offered the card, and said, "This will interest you, Mr. Ballou. Is there
enough light?"
For a second I thought he was going to snub it, and so did
he, but he looked at my face, the manly honest face that had launched a
thousand cards, took it, tilted it for better light, and focused on it. I had
plenty of time to size him up. His dark gray coat had set him back three Cs,
possibly four, and his dark gray hat around forty bucks. His head was the right
size for his big solid frame, and his face was a little seamy but had no sag.
It still didn't say when he finished with the card, stuck it in his pocket, and
looked at me.
"Interest me?" he asked.
I nodded. "Of course this is no place to discuss it.
The best place for that is Nero Wolfe's office. He knows even more than the
police do about that pink bedroom and about the man they're holding, and about
you. The best time would be now. That's really all I have to say, I'm just the
messenger boy. But you have to admit it was considerate of me not to go up to
the thirty-fourth floor and give somebody that card to take in."
He turned his head, clear around – to see if there was a cop
handy? No. A Rolls-Royce town car had pulled up and stopped, and the uniformed
chauffeur was getting out. Ballou turned back to me and asked, "Where is
it?"
"West Thirty-fifth Street. Nine-thirty-eight."
"Have you a car?"
"Not here."
"If you ride with me you'll keep your mouth shut."
"Right. I've said my piece."
He stepped to the Rolls and got in, and I followed, and the
driver shut the door and got in behind the wheel. As we moved, Ballou told him
we would make a stop and gave him the address. As we stopped for a light at the
corner I was thinking that it was the first time I had ever delivered a murder
suspect to the old brownstone in his own Rolls-Royce. The rest of the way,
since we were not speaking, I concentrated on how it handled, and decided it
was a little smoother than the Heron but not quite as fast on the take.
It was after six when we got there, so Wolfe would be down.
While I am not as childish as he is about showing off, I like to do things
right, so after attending to Ballou's hat and coat, and mine, in the hall, I
went to the office door, stepped in, announced, "Mr. Ballou," and
moved aside. He entered, stopped, glanced around, and asked, "Is this room
bugged?"
"Confound it," Wolfe said, "it will soon be
impossible to converse anywhere about anything. I can give you my word of honor
that what we say will not be recorded, and do, but though I know what my word
is worth, you don't." He pointed to the vase. "The microphone could
even be in there, but it isn't."
Ballou had taken the card from his overcoat pocket and had
it in his hand. He showed it. "What is this about a pink bedroom and a
diary?"
Wolfe turned a hand over. "That's obvious. A device to
get you here. But not bogus, factual. The bedroom is pink, as you know, since
you have spent many hours in it; and Miss Kerr did keep a diary; and the police
have it." He motioned at the red leather chair. "Please be seated;
eyes are better at a level."
"I have never spent an hour in a pink bedroom."
"Then why are you here?"
"Because I know something of your reputation. I know
you are capable of elaborate maneuvers, and apparently you intended to involve
me in one. I wanted to tell you, don't try it."
Wolfe shook his head. "No good, Mr. Ballou. The
question is not whether I know of your association, over a three-year period,
with Miss Kerr, nor is it what evidence I have at hand to support my knowledge.
The question is, can public disclosure of it be prevented, and if so, how? That
is the question for you. For me the question is, did you kill that woman? If
you did, I'm going to establish it and you're doomed. If you didn't, I have no
desire to expose your association with her, and it may never transpire. It is
not overweening to say that that issue depends chiefly on how candid you are
with me."
Ballou turned his head as I crossed behind him to my desk.
He regarded me as I sat, looked at Wolfe, moved to the red leather chair, got
himself comfortably seated, taking his time, and told Wolfe, "I'm
listening."
Wolfe swiveled to have him straight front. "Some of
this may be news to you, but some may not. You know, of course, that a man
named Orrie Cather is in custody as a material witness, but he will be charged
with homicide at any moment. I have assumed, on sufficient ground, that he is
innocent. Mr. Cather has worked for me, on occasion, for years, and I am under
an incumbency. If I am to satisfy it I must now violate a confidence. Mr.
Cather had been on intimate terms with Miss Kerr for about a year. He visited
her frequently at her apartment with the pink bedroom, at times when she knew
you would not come, and there were traces there of his presence and the
intimacy, not visible to you but discoverable by a search. The police found
them, and that's why they have him. Do you wish to comment?"
"I'm listening." From Ballou's face you might have
thought he was merely hearing a proposition to hold something.
"Miss Kerr told Mr. Cather many things about you, her
provider, but naturally did not tell you about him, her Strephon. Apparently
she also put him in her diary, but not you. If you were there, you would have
been visited before now by a policeman or the District Attorney. Have you
been?"
"I'm listening."
"That won't do. I need to know, and it doesn't commit
you. Has anyone called on you?"
"No."
"Have you had any indication whatever that your name
might be a factor in the murder of Isabel Kerr?"
"No."
"Then it isn't in the diary. I know only one thing
about the diary, that the police found it in Miss Kerr's apartment. A
policeman, an inspector, told Mr. Goodwin that they had it. I know nothing of
its contents except, now, that it doesn't name you, and that's fortunate. It's
probable that the District Attorney will not charge Mr. Cather with murder
until he learns who was paying for that apartment; that would be dictated by
prudence. You hope he never learns, and I would be just as well
satisfied."
Wolfe cocked his head. "That's the point, Mr. Ballou.
If Mr. Cather is brought to trial, you're in for it. He will take the stand, he
will speak, and he will certainly name you; and the dogs will be loose. There
may be a chance, even a good one, that if the murderer in fact is exposed and
tried, and convicted, your name will never be divulged; but if Mr. Cather is
tried, it will inevitably be divulged. Assuming his innocence as I do, I don't
want him to be tried, and neither do you, now that I have described the
situation. We have a common interest, and I expect you to help me pursue it – to
identify the man who killed Isabel Kerr. If you refuse, I shall of course
assume that you killed her, and if you didn't I would waste much valuable time,
and that would be a pity. Have I made it clear?"
Ballou's face looked seamier, but that was all; there was
still no sag. He took a deep breath, rubbed his brow with a palm, and said,
"Could I have a drink?" I rose and said certainly, name it, because
that was quicker than ringing for Fritz, and he said gin on the rocks with lemon
peel, and I went to the kitchen. Fritz shaved slivers of lemon peel while I got
the gin and a glass and a bowl of ice cubes. When I re-entered the office the
red leather chair was empty; Ballou was over by the globe, slowly twirling it
with a fingertip. As I put the tray on the stand he came, sat, put one ice cube
in the glass, poured gin, twisted two pieces of lemon peel and dropped them in,
and stirred.
When I was back in my chair he was still stirring. Finally
he picked up the glass, took two medium sips, and put it down.
"Yes," he said. "You have made it
clear."
Wolfe opened his eyes and grunted.
"Obviously," Ballou said, "I'm in a trap. I
can't check a single thing you have said. I did want a drink, I always have one
as soon as I get home, but what I had to have was a little time to consider. I
have decided that the probability is that the facts are as you have given them,
partly because I don't see what you could possibly expect to gain by inventing
them. The only alternative is to walk out, and I can't risk it. I have a
question: when did Miss Kerr – when did that man, Cather, first learn my
name?"
Wolfe turned. "Do we know, Archie?"
"No, sir." To Ballou: "I can find out, if
it's important."
"Could it have been as long as four months ago?"
"Certainly."
"I would like to know. It may not be important now, but
I would like to know." He got the glass and took a sip. "I have
nothing to say to your guess that I killed Miss Kerr except that I didn't.
Would a man in my position, of my standing – No, that wouldn't impress you. To
me the idea is simply fantastic. You say you expect me to help you identify the
man who killed her. If Cather didn't, and if the facts are as you say, I
certainly want to, but how?"
"First you," Wolfe said. "Where were you
Saturday morning?"
"I was at home all morning and until about three
o'clock. We had guests for lunch."
"If pressed, could you account for every half-hour from
eight o'clock to noon?"
"I think so. There were phone calls."
"Could your wife?"
"Why the devil should she?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Don't start that. You have held
your poise admirably; don't spoil it. I don't drag your wife in, circumstances
do. Did she know of your association with Miss Kerr?"
"No."
"How sure are you?"
"Completely. I have taken great precautions."
Wolfe frowned. "You see how difficult it is. It may be
highly desirable for Mr. Goodwin or me to see your wife, but with what excuse,
without involving you? It must be managed somehow, and Mr. Goodwin –"
"It will not be managed! You will not see
my wife!"
"Your poise. As you said, you're in a trap; don't
thrash about. If it wasn't you or your wife, who was it? I must have a fact, a
hint, a name. You spent many intimate hours with her. You may have to spend
hours with me. She told you of places she went and people she knew. Tell
me."
A muscle on Ballou's neck was twitching. "I insist, I insist,
that my wife is not to be disturbed. You expect to be paid, naturally. I never
'thrash about.' How much?"
Wolfe nodded. "Naturally for you. Men with money always
assume there is no other medium of exchange. I am engaged on behalf of Mr.
Cather, and you can't hire me or pay me. I am coercing you, certainly, but only
to get information. We shall disturb your wife only if it is requisite. From
you I want all the facts, all –"
The phone rang. I turned and got it. "Nero Wolfe's
–"
"Saul, Archie. I'm –"
"Hold it." I put it down and moved, to the hall
and on to the kitchen, and took the phone.
"We have company. Okay, shoot."
"You're going to have more company. I'm licked. I have
met my match. Julie Jaquette. I would give a week's pay to know if you could
have handled her. The trouble is partly that Nero Wolfe's a celebrity, so she
says, but mostly it's the orchids. If he will show her his orchids she'll tell
him all about Isabel Kerr. She won't tell me a damn thing. Nothing."
"Well, well. It might have taken me a whole ten
minutes."
"Go soak it. I said a week's pay. She –"
"Where are you?"
"A booth on Christopher Street. The one at the Ten
Little Indians had a line waiting. She's working. She'll be off until eight and
then from nine-ten to ten-fifteen."
"Then it's simple. Bring her at nine-ten."
"Like hell it's simple." It clicked and he was
gone.
I don't expect you to believe me when I report the first
words I heard as I re-entered the office, but you have a right to know why we
got about as little from Avery Ballou as Saul had got from Julie Jaquette. The
words, uttered by Ballou, were, "Rudyard Kipling." As I crossed to my
desk my head kept turning to have my eyes on him. As I sat, Wolfe asked him,
"The poems?"
"Mostly the poems," Ballou said, "but some of
the stories too. And Robert Service and Jack London. A little of some others,
but of those three, Kipling and Service and London, I had complete sets there,
bound in leather. There's something I have wanted to ask about, but haven't,
and you would know. Can they get my fingerprints from those bindings? The
leather isn't smooth, it's rippled."
Wolfe's head turned. "Archie?"
"Probably not," I told Ballou, "from rippled
leather, but your prints must be on other surfaces there. Are they on file
anywhere?"
"I don't know. I simply don't know."
Wolfe's shoulders went up a quarter of an inch and down.
"Then on that you can only abide. But this isn't easy to believe, Mr.
Ballou, that you spent ten hours or more a week there, five hundred hours a
year for three years, and Miss Kerr never spoke of how she spent the other – let's
see – nearly twenty-five thousand hours. The places she went, the people she
saw."
"I have told you," Ballou said, "under
coercion. Except for physical intimacy there was no sharing of experience. But
I did not read those poems and stories just to hear myself. I did not impose
them on her. She understood them and enjoyed them, and we discussed them. You
realize that I am not enjoying this. This is the first time in my life
that I have wanted to tell a man to go to hell and can't."
"I still find it hard to believe. Did she never speak
of her sister?"
"Yes. Speak of her, yes, but casually and rarely."
"You didn't know that her sister strongly disapproved
of her association with you?"
"No. I don't know it now."
"She did and does. Did Miss Kerr ever mention this
name: Julie Jaquette?"
"I don't think so. If she did it was only casual and I
don't remember it."
"Remarkable. You were with her, close, frequently, for
a period of three years. I wanted and expected names, and you have supplied
three: Jack London, Robert Service, and Rudyard Kipling." Wolfe pushed his
chair back. "A question: why did you want to know when Mr. Cather first
learned your name?"
"Oh … I was curious."
"You said it may not be important now. When would it
have been important, and why?"
"I meant important to me, not to you, not for what you
are trying to do. What are you going to do? You say I can't hire you or
pay you, but why not? There's no conflict between Cather's interest and mine,
as you tell it. Ten thousand now as a retainer? Twenty thousand?"
"No." Wolfe rose. "I'm committed." He
walked out.
At a quarter past nine we were
back in the office and Fritz had taken the coffee things out; so, though I
didn't know it yet, the stage was set for one of the most impressive floor
shows the old brownstone has ever seen. After letting Ballou out I had gone to
the kitchen and told Wolfe about Saul's phone call. Of course he would have
enjoyed the onion soup and Kentucky burgoo more if I had waited, but it would
have created an atmosphere if I had sprung it on him with the coffee. The
question was which could stand it best, appetite or digestion, and it takes a
lot to make a serious dent in his appetite.
It is true that digestion was getting it too. He had drunk
more coffee than usual, emptying the pot, and now that it was gone, and I was
there – I'm usually out on Tuesday evenings – he was making a stab at
continuing the dinner conversation, which had been mostly about Viet Nam, but
just then he wasn't really interested in Viet Nam. He was going to tackle not
only a woman, which was bad enough, but also a night-club singer, which was
preposterous. A hell of a way to spend an evening. When the doorbell rang he
glared at me, though he should have saved it for Saul, and I told him so as I
got up to go.
Even through the one-way glass, as I approached the door,
she took the eye. She was two inches taller than Saul, and if the coat was real
sable it must have taken at least a hundred sables. As she entered she gave me
a dazzling three-inch smile, and another one when I turned after hanging her
coat up. Saul was trying not to grin. She took my arm and asked, "Where is
he, Archie?" in a rich cuddly voice, and she kept the arm down the hall
and into the office, but then she broke away, danced to the middle of the room
and faced Wolfe's desk, let her handbag fall to the floor, and burst into song:
"Big man, go-go,
Big man, go big,
Talk big, act big,
Lo-o-o-o-o-o-ove big!
Go-go-go-go-go-go,
Big man, big man,
Be big, do big,
Lo-o-o-o-o-o-ove big,
Go!"
She extended two long, bare, well-shaped arms to him and
said, "Now the orchids. Show me!"
It was impressive. So, I admit, was Wolfe. He was
giving her exactly the same scowl I have often seen him give a crossword puzzle
that had him stumped. He switched the scowl to me and demanded, "Did you
suggest this?"
"No," she said. "Nobody ever suggests
anything to me; they don't have to. Now the orchids, big man. Go!"
"Miss Jackson," he said.
"Not here," she said. "I'm Julie
Jaquette."
"Not here," he said. "It's conceivable that
long ago, in different circumstances, I might have appreciated your
performance, but not here and –"
"It's not a performance, man, it's me."
"I don't believe it. The creature who pranced in here
and mouthed that doggerel couldn't possibly eat or sleep or read or write – or
love. Are you capable of love?"
"Ha! Am I!"
Wolfe nodded. "You see? One minute ago you would have
said, 'Am I, man.' We're making progress. As for your wish to see my orchids,
that can easily be gratified. Either Mr. Panzer or Mr. Goodwin can take you to
them at a suitable hour, perhaps tomorrow. Now we have other business, and
little time. Do you want the man who killed Isabel Kerr to be exposed and
punished?"
"Yes, damn him, I do. I do, man."
Wolfe made a face. "Don't revert. I too want him
exposed, because that's the only feasible way to get a man who is in custody
released. Orrie Cather. Miss Kerr may have told you of him."
She stared down at him from her five feet nine. "Are
you sick?" she demanded.
"No. I am sour, but I'm not sick. If you think Mr. Cather
killed her, you're wrong, he didn't, and I'm going to find out who did. Did
you?"
Saul and I were standing between her and the door. She
turned to us and said distinctly, "You rat."
"Not guilty," Saul said. "You made it plain
right away that you thought he killed her. You also made it plain –"
"You said Nero Wolfe wanted me to help nail him."
"I did not. I merely said he wanted you to help. You
also made it plain that you would tell me nothing."
She glanced around, went to my chair at my desk, sat, and eyed
Wolfe. It would have been quite a lifting job for both of us, so I went to the
red leather chair and Saul moved up one of the yellow ones.
"So you think you're going to bounce him," she
said. "Because he works for you. Nuts. Tell me how."
Wolfe shook his head. "I can't. I don't know.
Manifestly you are satisfied that he's guilty, and of course you have told the
police why, but it hasn't fully satisfied them. He is being held only as a
material witness. If you care to, try to satisfy me. Why are you so sure?"
"Damn it, I warned her," she said.
"You warned her that Mr. Cather would kill her?"
"No, but I warned her there was no telling what he
would do. I suppose you know he wanted to marry another girl?"
"Yes."
"So it was an ungodly mess, the kind people get into
when a screw gets loose. They had a perfect setup, the damn fools. Whoever was
paying her bills, she never told me who it was, he had a place with her in it
whenever he needed a change, and you couldn't beat that. She had the place to herself
most of the time, and she had a man who did her good, and you couldn't beat that.
He had a woman who suited him, ready for him nearly any time, for nothing, and
you couldn't beat that. A perfect setup. But she decides she has got to
marry him, and he decides he has got to marry some other dame, and even she
has got a good job – an airline stewardess. You know that?"
"Yes."
"So she could stay loose too if she had any brains.
None of them had any brains. I warned Isabel she had better deal him out, he
had the sweat up and might do anything, but she wouldn't listen. She put the
sting on him, and he killed her. When people's brains quit working, just go
somewhere else. But he killed her, and now he'll have to go somewhere
else."
"You have told the police all this?"
"I sure have."
"What if he didn't kill her?"
"Nuts."
Wolfe regarded her. Since his eyes were used to seeing me
when they aimed at that chair, he had to adjust. "Do you ever
gamble?" he asked her. "Do you like to bet?"
"That's a silly question. Who doesn't?"
"Good. Saul, what odds will you give Miss Jackson that
Orrie Cather didn't kill Isabel Kerr?"
Saul didn't hesitate. "Ten to one." He got his
wallet from a pocket and took bills out. "A hundred to ten."
"She may not have it. Will you –"
"I always have it." She opened her bag, which she
had put on my desk after picking it up from the floor, where she had dropped it
while performing. "But who settles it?"
"The District Attorney," Saul said. "A
hundred to ten that he isn't even tried. All right for Archie Goodwin to hold
it?"
"No. Nero Wolfe." She got up and handed Wolfe a
bill, and Saul went with his. Wolfe checked Saul's, five twenties, opened a
drawer, and dropped them in. She went back to my chair, put her bag on my desk,
and told Wolfe, "Now tell me why I have just lost ten bucks."
He shook his head. "That must await the event. I merely
wished to demonstrate that we are acting on a conclusion, not a conjecture. Do
you have animus for Mr. Cather?"
"What's animus?"
"Hostility. Hatred."
"Of course not. I don't hate anybody."
"If he didn't kill Miss Kerr, are you willing to lose
that ten dollars?"
"Why not? It's a bet."
"Then if someone else killed her you would rather have
him justly punished than Mr. Cather wrongfully punished?"
"Certainly."
"Again, good. You and Miss Kerr were close friends.
Except for the name of the man who was paying her bills, she confided in you.
What kind of woman was she? That question is not at random; I need to know.
What was she like?"
"She was a duck. She was a damn fine woman until she
flapped about that square. She knew the game and she knew the score. She always
had her dignity, all the way. She had a good big heart, but she never let it bleed.
I'd rather not have any heart than have it bleeding around everywhere. One
reason we were so close was that we both knew exactly what men are for and what
they're not for – until that Cather baboon popped up."
"You know him?"
"No. I've never seen him and I don't want to."
Wolfe looked at the clock. "You must be back at a
quarter past ten?"
"At ten past ten. I have to change."
"Then we haven't much time. I ask you to accept a
hypothesis. Suppose you knew positively, no matter how, that he did not kill
her. Then who did? Whom would you suspect?"
"That's easy. The lobster, of course."
"What? Lobster?"
"Excuse me. The man who was keeping her."
"You don't even know his name."
"So what? He was shelling out around twenty grand a
year. Maybe it was stripping him. Maybe he was hooking it. He found out about
that Cather, and he killed her. That's ABC."
"Very well, I'll consider it. But extend the
hypothesis. Eliminate him too. Who then? Didn't you and Miss Kerr have many
mutual friends?"
"Yes. If you want to call them friends to be polite.
Sure we did."
"Suppose it was one of them. Which one?"
She pronounced a word which she should have kept to herself,
since there was a lady present.
"Meaning?" Wolfe asked.
"Meaning I know them. You don't kill someone unless you
have a reason, and even if you have a reason you've got to have the guts. They
don't fit."
"Not one?"
"No."
"Will you give Mr. Goodwin or Mr. Panzer some of their
names while he is showing you the orchids?"
"He can't show me the orchids. I have to be
going."
"Perhaps tomorrow morning."
"He'd have to bring them to me in bed. Spread them all
over me. I'd like that, but he wouldn't. In bed in the morning I'm no
treat."
"Then the afternoon. Have you ever met a Dr.
Gamm?"
"Teddy?" She laughed. "Yes, I know Teddy. I
guess he's a pretty good doctor, but as a man you can have him. He got the idea
he was going to make Isabel, and that was an idea. God knows what he'll
do for an idea now."
"That one didn't work?"
"Certainly not."
"Have you ever met Miss Kerr's sister? Mrs.
Fleming?"
She nodded. "That beetle. Now there's an idea.
It's not funny, either. I honestly believe she thought Isabel would be better
off dead. All right, if it wasn't Cather and it wasn't the lobster, it was
her." She looked at the wall clock. "I've got to go." She left
my chair. "Come along. Why not? You can have a front table and I'll spot
you. I'll announce you big. I'll tell the suckers that Nero Wolfe in person is
here and will take a bow. You can bow sitting down if you want to, they'll
stand on their chairs to see you. It will be a feather in my bra. Come along.
The beer will be on the house."
Wolfe's head was tilted back to squint up at her. "I
decline your invitation, Miss Jackson," he said, "but I wish you
well. I have the impression that your opinion of our fellow beings and their
qualities is somewhat similar to mine." He got to his feet. He almost
never stands for comers or goers, male or female. And he actually repeated it.
"I wish you well, madam."
"Big man," she said. She turned. "You come,
Archie. That Panzer's a rat."
Forty-seven hours later, at nine
o'clock Thursday evening, Wolfe put his coffee cup down and said, "Four
days and nights of nothingness." I put my cup down and said, "No
argument." Actually there could have been one. There had been plenty of
nothingness in results, but not in efforts. Somewhere in the nine notebooks
here on my table – I write these reports on my own machine up in my room, not
in the office – are the names of four males and six females, supplied by
Jaquette-Jackson when she came to look at the orchids Wednesday afternoon, who
had been seen by Saul and Fred. For something to bite on, hopeless. Of course
anything is possible. It was possible that one of the women had thought that
Isabel had pinched her lipstick and had gone to get it and got mad and bopped
her, or that one of the men hated Rudyard Kipling and couldn't stand a woman
who had him bound in leather, but you need something better than ten billion
possibles to get your teeth into. Any little piece of straw will do, but you
have to have something.
For instance, statistics. There are two kinds of statistics,
the kind you look up and the kind you make up.
I admit this is the second kind: out of every thousand
murders committed by amateurs, eighty-three are a woman killing another woman
because she has taken her husband, or part of him. Therefore, from the
statistical point of view, on the list of names we had collected the only one
with a worthy known motive was Mrs. Avery Ballou, and that automatically gave
her top billing. The difficulty was the approach. If I went and asked her if
she had known that her husband had for three years been reading Kipling's poems
to the woman who had been murdered last week, Ballou would never speak to us
again, and we might need him for something. So after breakfast Wednesday
morning I rang Lily Rowan and asked her if she had ever met Mrs. Avery Ballou,
and she said no, and from the little she knew about her she didn't particularly
care to.
"Then I won't insist," I said. "But I need to
find out if I want to meet her. This is strictly private. I don't need a
detailed rйsumй, just a sketch, especially what her main interests are. For
instance, if she collects autographs of famous private detectives, that would
be perfect."
"She can't be that sappy."
I said she might do worse and it was a rush order, and an
hour later she called me back. She had more than I needed, and I'll omit most
of it. Mrs. Ballou had been Minerva Chadwick of the steel and railroad
Chadwicks. She had married Ballou in 1936. Their son and two daughters were
married. Her friends called her Minna. She never gave big parties but liked to
have a few friends in for dinner. She was an Episcopalian but seldom went to
church. She didn't like Paris much and she hated Florida. She liked horses and
had four Arabians, but her special interest was Irish wolfhounds, and she had
either twelve or fourteen…
I have wasted my space and your time, since obviously it was
Irish wolfhounds. About all I knew about them was that they are big, so I
called a man I know who knows dogs and got a few facts, and then rang the
listed number of the Ballou house on 67th Street. When a voice like a butler
said, "Mrs. Ballou's residence," I told him my name was Archibald
Goodwin and I would like to make an appointment with Mrs. Ballou to ask her
advice about an Irish wolfhound. He said she was not then available and he
would give her the message, and I gave him my phone number. Toward noon a call
came, a businesslike female voice who said she was Miss Corcoran, Mrs. Ballou's
secretary, and what kind of advice did I want about an Irish wolfhound. I told
her I was thinking of buying one, and I didn't know which of the commercial
kennels had the best ones, and a friend had told me that Mrs. Ballou knew more
about it than anyone else in the country; and she said if I came at five
o'clock Mrs. Ballou would see me. That was okay, since Jackson-Jaquette was due
at two-thirty to look at orchids.
You probably have no strong desire to spend another couple
of hours with either Julie Jaquette or Miss Jackson, and I have already
reported on the ten names I got from her, so I'll skip it and give you the
pleasure of meeting Minna Ballou. The setting and supporting cast were fully up
to expectations: the butler who let me in, with keen, careful eyes that sized
me up in two seconds; the mat that protected the first six feet of the rug in
the reception hall, bigger than the 14-by-26 Keraghan in Wolfe's office; the
uniformed maid who turned her nose up as she took my hat and coat; the wide
marble stairs; the elevator with red lacquered panels; the middle-aged gray-haired
gray-eyed Miss Corcoran, who was there when I stepped out on the fourth floor;
the room she took me to, with a desk and typewriter and cabinets to the left,
and a couch and soft chairs and a coffee table to the right. Pictures of dogs
and horses were spotted around, but my glance caught no picture of Avery Ballou.
His wife was stretched out on the couch, on her back, with what I would call a
faded red bathrobe reaching down nearly to her ankles. As we entered she turned
her head and said, "I hoped you wouldn't come. I'm tired." She
pointed to a chair near the foot of the couch. "Sit there."
I obeyed the order and was facing her. She had thin lips and
a thin nose, and a twist of her dyed brown hair straggled down her forehead.
She was barefooted and her toes bulged. I smiled at her cordially.
"Aren't you going to say anything?" she demanded.
"If you're not too tired," I said, "I suppose
Miss Corcoran told you what I said on the phone. Actually it's a friend of mine
who wants to get an Irish wolfhound. She has a place up in Westchester. I live
in town, and I guess a city apartment is no place for an Irish wolfhound."
"It certainly isn't."
"Somebody told her she should get one from
Ireland."
"Who told her that?"
"I don't know."
"Whoever it was, he's a fool. Commercial breeders in
Ireland have very inferior stock. The best wolfhound breeder in the world is
Florence Nagle in England, but she's not commercial, and she's very particular
whom she sells to. All good breeders are. Of course I'm not commercial either,
I sell only as a very special favor. I love wolfhounds and they love me. When
I'm there, eight of them sleep in my bedroom."
I smiled nicely. "Does your husband like that?"
"I doubt if he even knows it. He wouldn't know a
wolfhound from an ostrich. What's your friend's name?"
"Lily Rowan. Her place is near Katonah."
"Why does she want a wolfhound?"
"Well, partly for protection. There are no close
neighbors."
"That reason's not good enough. You have to love them.
You have to like it when a tail knocks over a vase or a lamp. Does she know
that a good male weighs up to a hundred and thirty pounds, and when he rears up
he's six feet six? Does she know that when he leaps at you because he loves
you, you go down? Does she know that he has to run three miles a day and you
have to tailgate him behind a station wagon? Tell her to get just a dog, a
Great Dane or a Doberman."
I shook my head. "I don't think that's very smart, Mrs.
Ballou."
"I do. Why not?"
"Because you ought to realize that Miss Rowan is all
set to love an Irish wolfhound. Look at the trouble she's taking. She finds out
about kennels, but that doesn't satisfy her, and she hears that the person who
knows most about it is you, and she gets me to try to see you, because she
thinks a man would stand a better chance with you than another woman. I told
her she could do it herself by seeing your husband, but she didn't know if he
was interested in wolfhounds. Apparently he isn't."
She closed her eyes and opened them again. "My husband
is interested in absolutely nothing but finance and what he calls the structure
of economics. What's the name of that Englishwoman who writes books about
it?"
"Barbara Ward."
She nodded. "She might interest him, but no other woman
would. What's your friend's name?"
"Lily Rowan."
"Yes. I'm tired. You seem to have some sense. Do you
think a wolfhound would be happy with her?"
"I do, or I wouldn't be here."
"Does she want a male or a bitch?"
"I was told to ask you. Which would you advise?"
"It depends. I would have to know … she lives in the
country?"
"Not in the winter. She has an apartment in town."
I didn't add that her penthouse was about four hundred yards from where I was
sitting.
"I would have to see her." She turned her head.
"Celia, have you got that name? Lucy Rowan?"
Miss Corcoran, at the desk, said yes, she had it, and Mrs.
Ballou returned to me. "Tell her to call Miss Corcoran. That's what she
should have done instead of bothering you. I didn't get your name … it doesn't
matter." She shut her eyes.
I arose and stood, thinking it would be better manners to
thank her with her eyes open, but they didn't open, so I said thank you, and
she said with her eyes shut, "I thought you had gone." If I had been
an Irish wolfhound I would have wagged my tail as I left the room and knocked
something over. Miss Corcoran, who accompanied me to the elevator to see that I
entered it, told me that between ten and eleven in the morning would be the
best time for Miss Rowan to phone.
I hadn't had a decent walk since Saturday, it wasn't five-thirty
yet, and I might as well save taxi fare. But first there was a phone call to
make, so I went to Madison Avenue, found a booth, got Lily Rowan, explained the
situation, and said that she had better ring Miss Corcoran in the morning and
tell her she had decided to get a dachshund instead. What she said was
irrelevant and personal. Outside again, I turned my collar up and put gloves
on. Winter was going all out.
If you have the impression that the help was doing all the
work, Saul and Fred after the ten names I had got from Julie Jaquette and me
cornering a jealous wife, no indeed. When I entered the office at a quarter
past six there was Wolfe at his desk with a book, and I saw at a glance that it
wasn't Invitation to an Inquest. It was The Jungle Book by
Rudyard Kipling, so I tiptoed across to my desk, not to disturb him. When he
finished a paragraph and looked up I asked, "Wouldn't you get the feel
better if you read aloud? Pretend I'm her."
He ignored it and demanded, "Have you done any
better?"
"No, sir. Unless we want an Irish wolfhound for
stalking. Mrs. Ballou is scratched. Even if someone had told her all about it,
full details, she couldn't have gone there and settled Isabel Kerr because (a)
she would have been too tired, and (b) she would have forgotten the name and
address. Of course Miss Jackson has broadened your understanding of women, and
you may not agree."
I reported. It was so brief that he hadn't much more than
got comfortably arranged, leaning back with his eyes closed, when I reached the
end, the phone call to Lily Rowan.
"There is one difference between you and her," I
said. "You shut your eyes to concentrate on what I'm saying, and she shuts
hers to hope I'm not there. She didn't even notice that I dragged her husband
in by the heels, twice. I swear I could have told her all about Isabel Kerr and
the pink bedroom, and when he came home from work she wouldn't have bothered to
mention it to him."
He grunted and opened his eyes. "How could eight dogs
that size possibly spend the night in her bedroom?" he demanded.
I nodded. "That worried me too. If you figure an
average of two square yards to a dog, and maybe more if –"
The doorbell rang, and I went. It was a man in a heavy brown
tweed overcoat and a smooth dark blue narrow-rimmed hat, which was ridiculous,
and I guessed it was one of the bozos Saul or Fred had flushed. But when I
opened the door he said, "I am Dr. Gamm. Theodore Gamm, M.D. Are you the
man who called on Mr. and Mrs. Fleming Monday afternoon?" I told him yes,
and he said, "I insist on seeing Nero Wolfe," and would have walked
right through me if I hadn't sidestepped.
Of course that isn't the way to do it. You merely say
something first and then you insist. He wasn't even built for it, after
he peeled his coat off. He was round all over, round-shouldered and round-hipped
and round-faced, and the bald top of his head was barely up to my chin. I put
him in the front room, took the long route to the office, by the hall, and told
Wolfe that Dr. Theodore Gamm insisted on asking him why he had sent me to see
Mr. and Mrs. Fleming. He looked at the clock and growled, "Dinner in half
an hour." I said that Mrs. Ballou had taken me only ten minutes, went and
opened the connecting door, and brought him in. As I motioned him to the red
leather chair Wolfe said something about twenty minutes. That chair is deep,
and when he found that his feet weren't on the floor he slid forward, pinned
his eyes on Wolfe, and said, "You're grossly overweight."
Wolfe nodded. "Seventy pounds. Perhaps eighty. Death
will see to that. Does it concern you?"
"Yes, it does." He curled his pudgy hands over the
ends of the chair arms. "Any conflict with natural health is an
impertinence, and I resent it." His voice was bigger than he was. "It
is my concern for health that brought me here – the health of one of my
patients, Mrs. Barry Fleming. You sent a man – that man" – his eyes darted
to me and back to Wolfe – "to torment her. She was already in a state of
strain, and now she threatens to collapse. Can you justify it?"
"Easily." Wolfe's brows were up. "Both the
intention and the deed, but it's the deed you challenge. Mrs. Fleming's state
of strain was partly from the shock of her sister's death, but mostly from the
fear that her way of life would be exposed. Mr. Goodwin rendered her a service
by making it clear that the exposure is inevitable unless certain steps are
taken. That should propel her not to collapse, but to action, if she is –"
"What kind of action?"
"The only kind that could be effective. Did she tell
you all that Mr. Goodwin said?"
"Her husband did. That if the man they have arrested,
Orrie Cather, is tried, everything about Isabel will come out. That Cather is
innocent, and the only hope is to get enough evidence to make them release him.
You call that a service, to tell her that?"
"If it's valid, yes. It's obvious. Do you question
it?"
"Yes. I think it was a cheap trick. Why do you say
Cather is innocent? Can you prove it?"
"No, but I intend to."
"I don't believe it. I think you're merely trying to
raise enough dust to make it hard to convict him. There is no reason why you
should want to do Mrs. Fleming a service, but if you did want to you could. You
could persuade Cather and his lawyer to make it unnecessary for certain facts
to be brought out at his trial. I know you won't, but you could."
"You would like me to?"
"Certainly. For Mrs. Fleming that – it might save her
life."
"But you know I won't?"
"Yes."
"Then why did you bother to come?"
"She asked me to. They both did. They think it was just
a trick, your sending him with that hogwash, and so do I. Why do you say Cather
is innocent?"
Wolfe squinted at him. "You should arrange your mind
better, Doctor. As Mr. Goodwin explained to Mrs. Fleming, it will serve her
interest if Mr. Cather is innocent, but you don't like that. You contend. Is it
possible that you are less concerned about your patient's health than about
your own? Did you kill Isabel Kerr?"
Gamm goggled. "Why, you –" He swallowed.
"Damn your impertinence!"
"Naturally you damn it. But since I have assumed that
Mr. Cather did not kill her, for reasons I prefer not to disclose, I need to
know who did. As a man whose repeated advances to her were spurned, you are
eligible. Persistent mortification can become insupportable. It's a question of
character and temperament, and I know nothing of yours; I would have to consult
people who know you well – for instance, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming. But I can
collect facts. Where were you last Saturday morning from eight o'clock to noon?
If you can establish –"
He stopped because his audience was going. Dr. Gamm didn't
have the figure or the style for an impressive exit, it was more like a waddle,
but it got him to the door and on through. I took my time rising and crossing
to the hall, and got there just as he was opening the front door. When he was
out and the door closed I went back in, raised my arms for a good stretch and
an uncovered yawn, and said, "Another one down. He wouldn't have walked
out, he wouldn't have dared, until he found out if you have anything and how
much. Or tried to."
Wolfe's lips were tight. He loosened them to say, "He's
either a murderer or a jackass."
"Then he's a jackass. It seems to me –"
The phone rang and I went and got it. It was Saul, reporting
on a couple of names. I told him we could match him and wished him better luck
tomorrow.
He didn't have it, and neither did we. Thursday was even
emptier than Wednesday, though I tried hard because Wolfe had paid me a
compliment. Partly he was merely desperate, but the fact remains that Wednesday
evening he told me to go and give the neighborhood a play. It was the first
time he had ever sent me on something that Saul had already covered, and I
admit it would have been highly satisfactory to get a break – for example, a
janitor across the street who had seen a stranger enter that building Saturday
morning, a stranger who could have been Dr. Gamm or Stella Fleming or Barry
Fleming or Julie Jaquette, or even Avery or Minna Ballou. Or even just a
stranger, to try to find. What the hell, there are only twelve million people
in the metropolitan area. Actually it was a farce without a laugh. Not only had
Saul and Fred seen everyone, but also the cops had worked it hard, trying to
find somebody who could put Orrie Cather there. During the long day I spoke
with more than forty people, all ages and sizes and colors, and they had
already been spoken to so often that they had their answers down pat. At six-thirty
I called it a week and went home to dinner. The only thing that had happened
there was that Parker had called to say that he had seen Orrie again, and had
talked with an assistant district attorney, and he still thought it was
inadvisable to start action to get him out on bail.
So back in the office after dinner Wolfe put his coffee cup
down and said, "Four days and nights of nothingness," and I put mine
down and said, "No argument."
"Confound it," Wolfe said, "ask
questions."
"If there were any good ones," I said, "you
would ask them yourself. All right, Jill Hardy. Why did she want my arms around
her? Because she had killed Isabel Kerr and was going to confess and wanted to
soften me up but Cramer interrupted?"
"I don't want chaff. I want a question."
"So do I. Stella Fleming. She is subject to fits, for
instance going for me with claws. But if she had one Saturday morning and killed
her sister, would she have gone back that evening and got the superintendent to
let her in so she could discover the body? I don't believe it. A thousand to
one."
"Negative," he muttered. "Something
positive."
"Try this. Barry Fleming. Why did he invite me in,
knowing how his wife was? Because I had told him we were going to clear Orrie,
and he wanted to find out if we knew or suspected that he had killed
Isabel. That's positive."
"But vain without a motive."
"Oh, if you want motive. Mrs. Ballou. Her chat with me
was a production. She's really a hellcat and nuts about her husband. Boiling
with jealousy. Only in that case I'm a sap and you'll have to fire me."
"I'll consider it. Mr. Ballou."
I shook my head. "Your turn. You had him."
"I reject him, provisionally. Cracking that woman's
skull with an ashtray was an act of passion, not within his compass. There is a
question: why would he like to know when Orrie first heard his name? Why is it
not important now but still he would like to know?"
I shook my head again. "We'd better skip that. Probably
curiosity as to whether it coincided with a change he noticed in the way she
reacted to Kipling and Service and London. That wouldn't interest you. I agree
on his compass. All right, Miss Jackson. She's yours too, you wished her
well."
"No. Yours."
"Thank you. There is nothing she couldn't and wouldn't
do if it appealed to her. But if she had any reason for wanting Isabel dead I
would have to see it in color, with sound. Talking with ten of their mutual
friends, Saul or Fred would surely have got a hint, especially Saul. And they
didn't. Anyway, she's crossed off since you wished her well. So we're down to
Dr. Gamm."
"Pfui."
"I agree. We're down to nothing. You told us Sunday
evening that we have never had less, and you can say it again. Not a sign of a
crack anywhere. I was thinking during dinner, while you were commenting on what
they intend to do to Ellis Island, that maybe you should make a deal with
Cramer. I mean it. His scientists didn't miss an inch of that apartment, and
there's a chance that whoever killed her left his prints somewhere, at least
one. They latched on to Orrie so fast that they have probably filed other
possibilities. Offer to trade Cramer all we have for all the prints they got.
With your word of honor, which he knows is good. It wouldn't sink Orrie any
deeper, and it just might give us a lead. As it stands, there isn't one single
damn item on the program for tomorrow."
His jaw was set. "No," he said.
"No what? If you prefer –"
The doorbell rang. I went, took a look, stuck my head back
in, and said, "Mr. Ballou. He doesn't look jaunty."
If Avery Ballou had somehow
dropped all his stack, and had been kicked out of his job as president of the
Federal Holding Corporation, he wouldn't have starved. I have never seen a
neater job of wrapping and taping than he had done on the little package he put
on Wolfe's desk before he sat down. Any shipping room in town would have
grabbed him. I am assuming that he had done it himself on account of what was
in it, but I admit it might have been packaged at the bank. The seams in his
face were deeper than ever, and he looked as tired as his wife had felt.
Seated, he lowered his head and rubbed his brow with a palm, slowly back and
forth. On Tuesday that had been followed by a request for a drink, but now
apparently he was beyond that. He raised his head, pulled his shoulders up,
looked at Wolfe, and said, "You said I couldn't hire you or pay you."
"And told you why," Wolfe said.
"I know. But the situation is – I want you to
reconsider it." He turned to me. "You said you could find out when
that man Cather learned my name. Have you?"
I shook my head. "You said it isn't important
now."
"You also said it could have been as long as four
months ago."
"Right. I said 'certainly.' Or eight months, or
ten."
"Four is enough." He returned to Wolfe. "I
know you have had a wide experience, but you may not realize the absolute
necessity of good repute for a man of my standing. Byron wrote 'The glory and
the nothing of a name,' but he was a poet. A poet can take liberties that are
fatal to a man like me. As I think I told you, I took great precautions when I
visited Miss Kerr. No one who ever saw me enter or leave that building could
possibly have recognized me. I had full reliance on her discretion; I was more
than liberal with her, financially. I was completely certain that nobody
whatever knew of my … diversion."
He stopped, apparently inviting comment. Wolfe obliged.
"You should know that your only safe secrets are those you have yourself
forgotten."
He nodded. "I now suspect that there are many things I
should know that I don't know. My reliance on Miss Kerr was misplaced. I was a
fool. I should have known that she might … form an attachment. I assume she
did, with Cather? She became attached to him?"
Wolfe turned to me. "Archie?"
"She burned," I told Ballou. "She wanted to
marry him."
"I see. I was a fool. But that explains why she told
him my name, and that's important. She was discreet, but of course with
him there was no discretion. Doesn't that follow?"
He wanted an answer, and Wolfe supplied it. "Yes."
"Then he knew my name, but no one else did. Then he's a
scoundrel and a blackmailer. I have been paying him a thousand dollars a month
for four months. Almost certainly he is also a murderer. He killed her. I don't
know why he killed her, but he's a scoundrel."
Wolfe's eyes came to me, and I met them. I put one brow up.
His eyes went back to Ballou. "Why the devil," he demanded,
"didn't you tell me this before? Two days ago."
"I didn't see it then. Not as I do now, after
considering it. You had given me a bad jolt. And you had said that Cather
didn't kill her. I think he did. He's a blackguard. I think he'll be tried and
convicted, and that's why I'm here. You said the other day that if he is tried
my name will inevitably be divulged, and that must not happen. My name
connected not merely with a diversion but with a sensational murder – it must
not happen." He pointed to the package he had put on Wolfe's desk.
"That parcel contains fifty thousand dollars in fifty-dollar bills. You
told me the other day that you were committed, but you don't have to stay
committed to a blackmailer and a murderer."
He took a breath. "That fifty thousand is just a
retainer. I'm in a tougher trap than I realized, and I have to get out, no
matter what it costs. I admit I don't see how it can be done, but you know
Cather and you'll know how to deal with him. I'm not asking or expecting
anything crooked. If they have the evidence to try him and convict him, all
right, that's the law. But my name must not appear. You said that, since
no one has called on me, my name isn't in that diary, and also evidently Cather
hasn't mentioned my name to the police. Isn't that true?"
"Yes." Wolfe was pinching his lip with a thumbtip
and a fingertip. "You're going much too fast, Mr. Ballou. I concede that I
don't have to stay committed to a blackmailer and a murderer, but am I? I need
to know more. Describe the man you paid the money to."
"I have never seen him. I mailed it to him."
"When and how did he demand it?"
"On the telephone. One evening in September, at my home,
I was told that a man who gave his name as Robert Service Kipling wished to
speak to me. Of course I took the phone. He told me that he didn't have to
explain why he used that name and told me to go to a nearby drugstore and be at
the booth at ten o'clock and answer the phone when it rang. You will understand
why I went. At ten o'clock the phone rang in the booth, and I answered it. It
was the same voice. It isn't necessary to tell you what he said. He said enough
to convince me that he knew of my visits to that apartment and their purpose.
He said he had no desire to interfere with them, and he thought I should show
my appreciation for his cooperation. He told me to mail him ten hundred-dollar
bills the next day, and the same amount on the fifteenth of each month. I said
I would."
He rubbed his brow with a palm. "I know it is wrong, on
principle, to submit to blackmail. But the threat was not exposure, he didn't
say he had evidence in his possession, he merely made it plain that I would
have to pay him or stop going there. He wouldn't answer my questions, how had
he learned my name, but obviously he hadn't merely seen me and recognized me,
from things he said. Just his giving his name as Robert Service Kipling would
have been enough for that. I mailed the money the next day, and each month
since. I simply preferred to pay him rather than give it up. Now I know.
Unquestionably it was Cather. Miss Kerr had told him."
Wolfe nodded. "A reasonable conjecture, but that's all.
His name and address, for mailing?"
"It was a fake name, naturally. The address was General
Delivery, Grand Central Station, Lexington Avenue and Forty-fifth Street. The
name was Milton Thales."
"Thales? T,H,A,L,E,S?"
"Yes."
"Indeed. Interesting." Wolfe closed his eyes and
in a moment opened them. "You made no effort to learn who he was?"
"No. What for? What good would that do?"
"If it was Mr. Cather, it might have prevented this.
Did you tell Miss Kerr about it?"
"Yes. I asked if she had told anyone, anyone, my
name, and she said she hadn't. She lied. She was very – well, she was
indignant. I was a little surprised at her reaction. It didn't seem to be
–" He stopped. He pursed his lips and frowned, and then he nodded. "I
see. Of course. I said I don't know why he killed her, but it's obvious. She
knew it must be Cather, and she told him, and she told him he had to stop, and
he killed her. My God, if I had known – damn him. Damn him!"
It was closer to passion than I had thought was in his
compass, and I was going to offer him a drink, but Wolfe spoke. "A detail.
The voice on the telephone. Indubitably a man?"
"Yes. He was disguising it, a kind of falsetto, but I
was sure it was a man. No doubt at all."
"Has he communicated with you again? Telephoned?"
"Once. The seventeenth of December. That name again,
Robert Service Kipling. At my home. He said he thought I would like to know
that the material was being received, and that was all."
Wolfe leaned back, closed his eyes, clasped his hands at the
high point of his middle, and pushed his lips out. Ballou started to say
something, and I showed him a palm, but it really didn't matter. When Wolfe's
lips start working like that, out and in, out and in, he has taken off and he
hears nothing. Ballou lowered his head and shut his eyes, so in effect I
was left alone for about three minutes. Finally Wolfe opened his eyes and asked
me if I could get Saul and Fred, and I said yes but I didn't know how soon. He
said, "The kitchen. Tell them to come at once," and I went.
Making phone calls merely to tell men they're wanted – I had
to try three numbers to get Saul – doesn't take much brainpower, and my mind
could work on something else. Not figuring the odds on Orrie as a blackmailer;
that was so long a shot it was just no bet. The riddle was, why was Thales an
interesting name for a blackmailer? Wolfe had really meant it; it wasn't the
tone he uses when he's faking. If he thought it was interesting I should too,
since I knew everything he did. I would give a nice new dollar bill to know how
many of the people who read this report will be on to it. I still wasn't when I
returned to the office, though I sat and pecked at it for a good five minutes
after I got Saul.
Two paces inside the office I stopped. The red leather chair
was empty. I asked Wolfe, "Did you bounce him?"
He shook his head. "He's in the front room. Lying down.
Of course he shouldn't be seen by Saul and Fred. You got them?"
"They're on the way." I crossed to my desk.
"It's too bad Orrie sank to blackmail, but then a wedding ring, furniture,
marriage license – it mounts up."
"Nonsense."
"You can say that, with fifty grand there on your desk?
Why is it interesting that he picked Thales for a name?"
"You mispronounce it. So did Mr. Ballou."
"It isn't Thales?"
"Certainly not. It's Thā-lēz."
"Oh, that's why it's interesting."
"The Milton is interesting too. Thales of Miletus, the
sixth and seventh centuries B.C., was the chief of the seven 'wise men' of
ancient Greece. He preceded Euclid by three centuries. He founded the geometry
of lines. He made the first prediction of an eclipse of the sun, to the day.
His was the first great name in the history of mathematics. Thales of
Miletus."
"I'll be damned." I sat and looked at it for a
full minute. "I will be damned. He had a hell of a nerve. Ballou
went to college. He might have liked mathematics. He might have known all about
Thales of Miletus."
"But did he know that Miss Kerr's brother-in-law is a
teacher of mathematics?"
"Probably not. Who would ever expect a goddam
blackmailer to have a sense of humor? Did you tell Ballou?"
"No. It can wait. I would like some beer."
"And I would like some milk." I rose. "This
is more like it, something to chew on." I went to the kitchen. Fritz was
below in his room, and I didn't need any help. As I poured the milk and put the
beer and glass on the tray, and took them to the office, my mind was on the
newer and hotter riddle, going back to Monday afternoon and remembering how
Barry Fleming had looked and acted and what he had said. After a couple of sips
of milk, recollecting that we had a guest, I went to the front room to ask if
he would like a drink.
He was stretched out on the sofa with his arm curled over
his eyes. He didn't want anything. In the short time I was gone Wolfe had been
to the shelves and got a book, a volume of the Britannica, and had it
open. As I picked up my glass he said, "Thales perfected the theory of the
scalene triangle and the theory of lines. He discovered the theorem that the
sides of equiangular triangles are proportional. He discovered that when two
straight lines intersect the vertically opposite angles are equal, and that the
circle is bisected by its diameter."
I said, "Golly."
It was close to eleven o'clock when Fred arrived. I took him
to the kitchen, because Wolfe was still consulting the encyclopedia, though he
must have finished with Thales long ago. When Saul came, I sent him to join
Fred in the kitchen and told Wolfe to let us know when he was ready for
company, and he glared at me because he was in the middle of an interesting
article. The way I know it was interesting is that there isn't a single page in
the whole twenty-four volumes that he wouldn't think was interesting. I went to
the kitchen and brought them, and Saul took the red leather chair and Fred one
of the yellow ones.
That was the shortest session with the help on record.
"I apologize," Wolfe said, "for getting you out so late on a
winter night, but I need you. There has been a development. The man who
maintained that apartment for Miss Kerr – call him X – is in the front room. He
came to tell me something that he should have told me two days ago. Last
September a man telephoned him and demanded money. The man knew of his visits
to that apartment and threatened to make them impossible unless the money was
paid, a thousand dollars at once and a thousand dollars a month, in cash, to be
mailed to him at general delivery – an assumed name, of course. The money has
been paid, a total of five thousand dollars. X is convinced, for reasons he
considers valid, that the blackmailer is Orrie Cather. Sunday evening I asked
your opinion as to whether Orrie had killed Miss Kerr. I now ask your opinion
as to whether he is a blackmailer. Did he blackmail X? Fred?"
Fred was frowning, concentrating. "Just like you
said?" he asked. "Just straight open-and-shut blackmail?"
"Yes."
Fred shook his head. "No, sir. Impossible."
"Saul?"
"To be sure I have it right," Saul said,
"this was at the time when Orrie was seeing her himself?"
"Yes."
"Then no. As Fred said, impossible. That would take a
real snake."
"Satisfactory," Wolfe said. "Archie and I had
made our conclusion, and I know, barely short of certainty, who the blackmailer
is, but I wanted your opinions. I didn't get you here just for that; there will
be instructions for tomorrow. Archie, may they wait in your room?"
Not the kitchen. He was taking no chances. What if a man-eating
tiger bounded in through the kitchen window and they scooted down the hall and
saw Ballou? I told them they were welcome to my room as long as they didn't
rummage, and they headed for the stairs. Wolfe gave them a full minute to get
up the two flights and then told me to bring Ballou. He was still on the sofa,
but when I entered he sat up and started talking. I told him to save it for
Wolfe, and he got to his feet and came. I swear his first glance, as he crossed
to the red leather chair, was at the package on Wolfe's desk. A habit is a
habit, even when you're up a tree.
As he sat, he spoke. "I've been going over it. I have
answered your questions, and I have made you a liberal offer, more than
liberal. Either you accept it or you don't. The other day you told me Cather wasn't
a murderer. Don't try to tell me now that he's not a blackmailer."
"You anticipate me," Wolfe said. "Mr. Cather
is not a blackmailer."
Ballou stared. "You actually – after what I …" He
rose and picked up the package. "By God, you are committed."
"I am indeed. I can name the blackmailer. Sit
down."
"I have already named him."
"No. You know only his noms de guerre, Robert
Service Kipling and Milton Thales. His real name is Barry Fleming. The husband
of Miss Kerr's sister."
"That's absurd. You didn't even know I had been
blackmailed until an hour ago."
Wolfe would have had to slant his head back to focus on his
face, and he doesn't like to, so he wasn't focusing at all. "For a man of
affairs," he said, "you're remarkably obtuse. You're in a pickle, and
I am your only hope. You must have help, and you can't go to a lawyer, or to
anyone, without disclosing your connection with Miss Kerr and a murder. But you
talk and act as if you were in control. You spring to your feet and grab that
package of money. Pfui. You probably have no further information for me. Either
sit down and listen, or go."
You have to hand it to the president of the Federal Holding
Corporation. He had pride and he had grit. If he had put the package back on
Wolfe's desk he would have been buckling under, so he didn't. He put it on the
little stand by the red leather chair, and there it was at his elbow when he
sat, under his control.
"I'm listening," he said.
"That's better," Wolfe said. "First, Mr.
Cather. Knowledge of a man cannot alone exclude him as a murderer, but it can
as a blackmailer. Murder can be merely a spasm, but not blackmail. Four of us
who have known Mr. Cather well for years – the two men I sent for, and Mr.
Goodwin and I – agree that it can't possibly be Mr. Cather who blackmailed you.
Now, the blackmailer. That name, Milton Thales – pronouncing it as you did and
as almost any American would. But if I pronounce it Thā-lēz does it
stir your memory?"
"Should it?"
"Yes."
He was frowning. "Thā-lēz – why, yes. An
early Greek … eclipse of the sun … geometry …"
Wolfe nodded. "That's enough. A renowned name in the
history of mathematics. Thā-lēz of Miletus. Milton Thales. Barry
Fleming, Miss Kerr's brother-in-law, teaches mathematics at a high school. Miss
Kerr told her sister your name, and she told her husband. So I have named the
blackmailer."
"Thā-lēz," Ballou said. "Thales.
Miletus. Milton. By God, I believe you have. And Isabel – Miss Kerr told me she
had told my name to no one. She lied. I wonder how many more."
"Probably none. Those two were special to her. I think
we may assume that only five people know of your connection with Miss Kerr: Mr.
Cather, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, Mr. Goodwin, and I. And only three know you were
blackmailed, besides the blackmailer: Mr. Goodwin, you, and I. The two men
upstairs, out of hearing, know of the blackmail, but not of you. I call your
attention to a detail. My objective is to get Mr. Cather released and not
charged with homicide. It's likely that I could achieve it simply by telling
the police about Mr. Fleming blackmailing you. At least that would divert them,
but I don't intend or desire to do it. I owe you some consideration, since I
learned of the blackmailing only through you. I'm obliged to you."
Ballou reached a hand to tap the package. "And there's
this."
"Yours. I haven't accepted it. Nor shall I, until I
have concluded with finality that you did not kill that woman. A blackmailer is
not ipso facto a murderer. I'm obliged to you because we have spent four
futile days trying to find someone with a likely motive and have failed. The
motive you suggested for Mr. Cather fits Mr. Fleming admirably. A question. How
soon after the first phone call from the blackmailer did you tell Miss Kerr
about it?"
"Right away. A day or two later."
"Was it ever mentioned again? By you or her?"
"Yes. She asked two or three times if it was
continuing. I told her about the phone call in December. The last time she
asked me was in January. Around the middle of January."
Wolfe nodded. "She knew it must be her brother-in-law,
and she told him it must stop, and he –"
"Better than that," I cut in. "She was going
to tell on him. Tell her sister. He might rather have called it off than kill
her, but he would rather kill her than have his wife know. He may not be ipso
facto a murderer, but ipso Archie Goodwin he is."
"Mr. Goodwin is sometimes a little precipitate,"
Wolfe told Ballou. "He has seen and spoken with them – Mr. and Mrs.
Fleming. At length." He pointed to the package. "That money. If I
earn it I want it, but you can't engage me now. My purpose is to clear Mr.
Cather; yours is to prevent disclosure of your name. If I can serve your
purpose without damage to mine, I shall. When you go, take the package; here in
my safe it might affect my mental processes. There is –"
"What are you going to do?" Ballou demanded.
Demanding again.
"I don't know. Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Panzer, Mr. Durkin, and
I are now going to confer." He looked at the clock. "It's nearly
midnight. If you don't want two more men in on your secret, go."
At one o'clock Friday afternoon
I was on a chair in a hotel bedroom, at arm's length from an attractive young
woman in the bed. Various possible approaches had been discussed in the
Thursday night conference that went on for more than two hours. Two of them – get
a picture of him and show it to the General Delivery clerks at the Grand
Central Station post office, and find out if he had been spending more money
than he should have had – were discarded offhand because they could only
confirm the blackmailing, and that was regarded as settled.
An obvious one was where had he been Saturday morning, but
we weren't ready for that. If he was open, he was open. If he had an alibi,
cracking it could and should wait until we had some kind of leverage on him.
Get three pictures of him, somehow – one for Saul, one for
Fred, and one for me – and do the neighborhood again, to dig up someone who had
seen him Saturday morning. The cops had of course been at that for four days,
with pictures of Orrie. Fred was for it, and Saul was willing to try, but Wolfe
vetoed it. He said we had tolerated banality long enough.
Give it to Cramer. Saul suggested it, and he had a case. We
could give him the crop, all except Ballou's name. It wouldn't hurt us any,
certainly it wouldn't stop us, and it would give Cramer something to think
about, and even work on, besides Orrie Cather. If they had a few of Fleming's
fingerprints in their collection from the apartment, or even one, it would open
it up good. Wolfe wouldn't buy it. He said it would be inept to have the police
move in on Fleming before we did; for one thing, they would probably pry X's
name out of either Fleming or his wife, and we weren't giving it even to Saul
and Fred. The fifty grand wasn't there in the safe to affect his mental
processes, but he knew where it was.
I made the suggestion that gave him a bright idea. There was
nothing bright about the suggestion; it was simply that I would bring the
Flemings to the office for some conversation with Wolfe. As we all knew, many
people had said more to Wolfe than they had realized they were saying, and why
not give them a chance? Saul and Fred could be at the peephole in the alcove,
and then we would have another conference. I was the only one who had ever seen
them. Saul and Fred were all for it, but Wolfe sat and scowled at me, which was
natural, since it would mean another session with a woman. He sat and scowled,
and we sat and looked at him. After half a minute of that he spoke to me.
"Your notebook."
I swiveled and got it, and a pen.
"A letter. The regular letterhead. To Mr. Milton
Thales, care of Mr. Barry Fleming, and the address. Dear Mr. Thales. It is a
truism that people who have a sudden substantial increase in income often spend
it, comma, or part of it, comma, on luxuries which they have previously been
unable to afford. Period. It is possible that you are an admirer of orchids,
comma, and that you would like to buy a few orchid plants with part of the five
thousand dollars of extra income you have received during the past four months.
Period. If so, comma, I shall be glad to show you my collection if you will
telephone for an appointment. Sincerely yours."
I tossed the notebook on the desk. "Wonderful," I
said. "It will bring him but not her. Maybe. If it goes to his home
address and she's there when it's delivered but he isn't, it may bring her but
not him. Statistics show that seventy-four per cent of wives open letters, with
or without a teakettle. Why not send it to the school?"
"It's two o'clock Friday morning," Saul said.
"He wouldn't get it until Monday."
Wolfe growled. I said, "Damn it."
"It's a beautiful idea," Saul said. "It will
get him sweating before he comes, and that will help, and he'll have to come.
Even if he didn't kill her, he'd have to come. But may I offer an
amendment?"
"Yes."
"The letter might read something like this – your
notebook, Archie? Dear Mr. Thales. As you know, comma, I was Isabel's closest
friend, comma, and we told each other many things. One thing she told me was
how you got that five thousand dollars and how she felt about it. I haven't
told anyone else because she told me in confidence – no, change that. Change 'because
she told me in confidence' to 'because I promised her I wouldn't.' Then: You
may want to show your appreciation by giving me part of the five thousand,
comma, at least half of it. I will expect you to bring it not later than Sunday
afternoon. I work evenings. My address is above, and my phone number is so-and-so.
It will be signed by Julie Jaquette. I suppose she should write it; I doubt if
she uses a typewriter."
Fred said, "And he croaks her and then we've got
him."
Saul nodded. "He would if we let him, and if he killed
Isabel Kerr. If he's had practice." To Wolfe: "I just think that
might be quicker than coming from you. I couldn't get her to do it, I'm a rat,
but Archie could."
"Sure," I said. "I'll tell her I'll send
orchids to her funeral." I looked at Wolfe. "You wished her
well."
"So you demur," he said.
"No, sir. I like it. I merely remark that selling her
won't be easy, and if she buys it we can't let her out of our sight for one
second, and what if she won't cooperate on that? Nobody suggests anything to
her. She said so."
"But you like it?"
"Yes. If it misses we can blame it on Saul."
"Blaming is fatuous. The wording of the letter is
important. Read it."
So that's why, at one o'clock Friday afternoon, I was
settled in a comfortable chair in a bedroom on the ninth floor of the Maidstone
Hotel, on Central Park West in the Seventies. Julie Jaquette, in the bed, was
not stretched out; she was propped up against three pillows, drinking her third
cup of coffee, having cleaned up the toast and bacon and eggs and muffins and
strawberry jam, while I explained about the blackmailing caper, including Thā-lēz
of Miletus, but not including Ballou's name. It was a nice big room, made even
nicer by the clusters of Vanda rogersi which I had brought, in a vase on
the over-the-bed table. She had stuck one of the flowers in the front V of what
she had on, a light blue thing with sleeves and no frills. She had said she was
no treat in bed in the morning, but actually she wasn't at all hard to look at.
Clear-eyed and fresh and kind of hard-boiled wholesome.
"Poor Isabel," she said. "You can't beat that
for lousy breaks, a blackmailer for a brother-in-law and a murderer for a pet.
My God."
"And a heehaw for a friend," I said.
"She only had one real friend. Me."
"Right. I call you a mule only professionally. If I was
being personal I would call you kitten or snuggle bunny or lamb. Profess
–"
"Do you realize this is a bed? That I could reach out
and grab you?"
"Yeah, I'm watching every move. I call you a mule
professionally because the minute you heard that your friend Isabel had been
murdered you decided Orrie Cather had done it and you won't budge, not even
when the third smartest detective in New York gives you ten to one. It would
–"
"Who are the two smartest?"
"Nero Wolfe and me, but don't quote me. It would take
an hour to explain why all three of us have crossed Orrie off, and even then
you might not budge. But now we think we know who did kill her. The
blackmailer. Barry Fleming. Her sister's husband."
She put the coffee cup down. "Huh. You got
reasons?"
"If you mean evidence, no. But if there's any other good
candidate we can't find him or her, and we have tried hard. Barry Fleming is
perfect. Obviously Isabel told Stella who was keeping her – X, to you – and
Stella had told Barry, since he couldn't blackmail him unless –"
"I may be a mule, but I can count up to two and I can
say the alphabet backward."
"A mule would say it backward. When X told
Isabel he was being blackmailed, she knew it must be Barry. She tried to make
him stop, but he wouldn't. Finally she told him she was going to tell Stella;
she had probably threatened to before. That was Saturday morning. She told him
she had definitely decided to tell Stella when she saw her that evening, and he
killed her. Count up to two."
"Don't wear me out." She shoved the table away,
and the vase swayed, and I jumped to save it. She slid down in the bed, tossed
one of the pillows on the floor, and propped her head on the other two.
"You're quick," she said. "Graceful, too. You could make a
chorus line easy. Leave your name with the girl at the desk. Have you explained
all this to the cops?"
"No."
"Why not?"
I thought it unnecessary to tell her about the fifty grand.
"Because they like Orrie and they've got him, and we have no evidence. Not
one little scrap. The reason I'm telling you, we thought you might be willing
to help. You do want the man that murdered her to get it, don't you?"
"You're damn right I do."
"Then you might help. You could write Fleming a letter,
calling him Thales, and telling him you want the five grand he got from X – or
most of it. Tell him that Isabel told you everything, maybe even hint that you
think he killed her and you know why. Of course he would have to see you, and
also, if he killed Isabel, he would have to kill you, and it would be a cinch
for us to arrange to have evidence of that. So we'd have him. Happy
ending."
She laughed, and she was such a good laugher that I caught
it and joined in. When she had it under control she said, "You're not
married, are you?"
I shook my head. "Nope."
"Never?"
"Nope. I've asked at least a thousand."
"I'll bet. I was once, and what a year that was.
Do you know what I'm going to do when you leave?"
"Nope."
"I'm going to stand at the window and look out, and
think it's a damn shame that it simply won't work. Anyway, if I'm going to get
killed, all you'd get out of it would be a trip to the cemetery. This letter.
Exactly what do I say?"
I waved a hand. "Forget it. A gag is for a laugh, and I
got it."
"Nuts." She aimed a finger at me. "Listen,
you. ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA. You came to deal me in. Don't spoil it with a
phony shuffle. Ten to one, twenty to one, you and Nero Wolfe wrote it out and
you've got it in your pocket. Let's see it."
She would have had me if I hadn't taken the trouble to
memorize it. "Thank God," I said, "you decided not to marry me.
I'd get a Charley horse just trying to keep up. All right, we did discuss what
the letter might say. But if you write it and I mail it, the minute he gets it
you're a sitting duck. Tomorrow's Saturday. If you write it now and I mail it,
he'll get it tomorrow morning. He might move fast and he might try anything. At
ten o'clock tomorrow morning I'll be here, outside in the hall, and Saul
Panzer, the rat, will be down in the lobby. When you leave, we leave with you, and
we stick, and you don't try any dodges just to show that you know what men are
for and what they're not for. At the Ten Little Indians we'll be there, and so
will Fred Durkin, and one of us will be here, in the hall, all night. And so on
until something happens."
"That's screwy," she said. "How could
anything happen with all you heroes right there?"
"Leave that to us. We can't arrange details until we
see how he reacts. You're willing to give it a try?"
"Certainly. The way you danced me in, I have to. Anyway,
I want to. Nobody has ever tried to kill me, and it will make me feel
important. All my life I have wanted to feel important."
"So has everybody else. But it must be understood that
you will follow sugges – you will obey orders. You'll do exactly what you're
told. What do you swear on, the Bible?"
"No, some of the men in it are awful, and so are the
women. We'll shake." She offered a hand.
It was a purely professional contact, but it was a fact that
she had nice hands, and I said so. "Before we go to work on the
letter," I said, "I should mention the possibility that Stella may
open it and read it. That would make it a different situation, but maybe even a
better one. Anyhow, tomorrow is Saturday and he'll probably be there. Now the
letter. We had the idea of addressing it to Milton Thales, care of Barry
Fleming, but that would just be a stunt. Mr. Wolfe likes stunts. Would you call
him Barry or Mr. Fleming?"
"I've never seen him. Mr. Fleming."
"Okay. On the hotel stationery. Dear Mr. Fleming. As
you know, I was Isabel's closest friend, and we told each other everything. She
told me all about Milton Thales, and how you got that five thousand dollars,
and how she felt about it. She also told me she was going to tell her sister,
and that she would tell you first that she was going to tell her. That didn't
surprise me, I knew her so well. But I wonder if that had anything to do with
what happened to her, and I would like to know. One thing, considering how you
got that five thousand dollars, I don't think you should keep it. I think you
should give it to me and I'll give it to some charity. I expect to hear from
you soon. I live at this hotel. Sincerely yours. Of course the wording can be
changed, as long as the points are covered."
She was frowning. "That's a lot of lies for one short
letter."
"Only one lie, that she told you. The fact is, I
told you. All the rest is true. You do wonder if that had anything to do with
what happened to her, and you would like to know. You're sticking your neck out
to find out."
"I'm sticking my neck out because you smooth-tongued me
into it. I never thought –"
"Whoa. Back up. I couldn't possibly smooth-tongue you
into doing something you didn't want to do. Do you want to do it?"
"Oh, damn you, yes." She sat up, and the orchid fell
out of the V. "Go in the other room and I'll come in ten minutes. I can't
write in bed."
I timed her. It was twenty-two minutes. She wasn't perfect.
Back in 1958, eight years back,
a man named Simon Jacobs should not have been stabbed to death and his body
dragged behind a bush in Van Cortlandt Park, but he was, and Nero Wolfe and I
would never forget it. We should have known it might happen and taken steps,
and we hadn't. Once is enough for that kind of goof, which accounts for the
fact that I did not arrive at the Maidstone Hotel at ten o'clock Saturday
morning. I arrived at nine-thirty. Mail deliveries in New York are terrible,
but there was one chance in a billion that the postman would get to 2938 Humboldt
Avenue extra early that one day, and the subway is rapid transit.
A hotel manager doesn't like it if a guest tells him she
wants to post a guard outside her door because she expects to be murdered, so
we hadn't bothered the Maidstone manager. Instead, we had invited the hotel
dick, I mean security officer, up to the room, and Julie Jaquette had told him
that a man had been annoying her, and he might even take a room in the hotel,
and she didn't want any trouble. It helped that he had heard of Nero Wolfe and
Archie Goodwin and that I slipped him a double sawbuck. He even offered to
supply a chair.
Since I had brought the Times and a magazine along, I
didn't have to invent games to pass the time. There were do not disturb signs
on the doorknobs of her suite, and the chambermaids skipped them. The traffic
was light all morning. I hope I'm not a snob, but I decided that on the whole I
preferred the tenants of the seventh floor of 2938 Humboldt Avenue to those of
the ninth floor of the Maidstone. They had all looked worried too, more or
less, but you had the feeling that you could stand hearing about theirs. Of
course people in hotels aren't like people at home. I was deciding why that was
so when one of her doors, the one to the bedroom, opened enough to let her head
through, and she stuck it out and asked, "What do you want for
lunch?"
I looked at my watch. Ten minutes to twelve. "I'll make
out," I said. "A bellboy will be up later. All arranged."
"Huh. You're slipping. I'm ordering breakfast. What if
he fixes the waiter and poisons it? You'll have to taste. What for you?"
"Just double your breakfast."
"I always have bacon and eggs. I'll open the other
door."
She did. In a minute it opened a crack, but I didn't go in.
Remember Simon Jacobs, and have a look at the waiter while he's still out in
the hall. It sometimes happens that the difference between being sensible and
being silly doesn't depend on you at all, it depends on something or somebody
else. That time it was silly to wait out in the hall for a look at the waiter.
When he came, at half past twelve, wheeling the chow wagon down the hall, I
watched him to the bedroom door and then went to the other one.
The meal was served in the bedroom, with her in bed and me
at a table the waiter brought in. She was in the same blue thing as the day
before, which made me feel at home. Since Fritz never fries eggs, they made me
feel away from home. We talked about Isabel, or rather she did. She had been
trying to figure out a way to persuade her to give up the idea of getting
married, and she thought she might possibly have made it. She explained that
the reason there is no such thing as a good husband is that there is no such
thing as a good wife and vice versa, and how are you going to get around that?
We had got to the muffins and jam, and she was telling me how right Isabel had
been to realize that she wasn't cut out for show business, when the phone rang,
and she twisted around and reached for it.
The first thing she said was "Hello," and the
second thing she said was "Yes, Mr. Fleming, this is Julie Jaquette,"
and I beat it to the other room and got at the phone, but I didn't hear much.
He said, "Would two o'clock be all right?" and she said, "Half
past two would be better," and he said, "All right, I'll be
there," and that was it. As I re-entered the bedroom she asked if I had
heard it, and I said yes and went to my table.
"I suppose," she said, "we'd better decide
what charity I'll give it to. Or have you arranged that too?"
"That's not funny." I poured coffee. "I'm
going to call you Julie."
"That's not funny either. Will he bring his own
ashtray?"
"Sure. I assume he's coming here."
"Yes."
"I told you we couldn't arrange details until we see
how he reacts. He certainly doesn't intend to come and have them phone up, and
take the elevator, and walk in and do you, and walk out again."
"Then you can be in the closet. Or in here." She
pushed the over-the-bed table away. "I'm going to dress up for this. My
best. Take your coffee to the other room."
I obeyed. For a hotel the sitting room wasn't bad – dark
green carpet and light green walls, with the regulation chairs and an oversized
couch, and a big window that looked down on Central Park. After I finished the
coffee I went to the window for a look out. It was Saturday, but also it was
February, and there wasn't much stirring in the park. There was still some snow
under the bare trees and along the top of the park wall, but you could call it
white only because it wasn't black.
Julie, when she came, was black – a plain black tailored
dress with half-sleeves and no trim to speak of. I know when things fit, and no
wonder she called it her best, the way it fitted. I said so and then took her
to the window. "I'm about to give an order," I said. "See that
stone wall over there? What time do you get home from work?"
"About half past one. I finish my last turn at
one."
"Fine. The park will be empty. So when you get home
tonight you turn on the lights and come and stand here to look out at the park,
and the man behind the stone wall with his rifle resting on the wall pulls the
trigger, and if he's any good at all down you go. Therefore you do not come and
stand here and look out. You lower the blind and close the drapes before you
leave for work. That's an order."
"It's a damn silly one. Way up here? At that angle? Go
get a rifle and try it. You couldn't even hit the window."
"The hell I couldn't. Before I was twelve years old I
got many a squirrel with a twenty-two in trees nearly this high. Are you going
to obey orders or not?"
She said she would, and we went and sat on the couch and
discussed the operation. She wanted to handle it with me in the other room
listening, and she had a reason: if I sat in I might say something she wouldn't
like but couldn't object to with him there. It got a little warm, and at one
point she threatened to bow out and I could see him downstairs, but finally it
was agreed that I would be present, seen but not heard unless I thought it was
absolutely essential. We were barely on speaking terms when the phone rang and
she was informed that Mr. Fleming was below and wanted to come up. I stayed on
the couch. I stayed put when the knock sounded and she went and opened the door
and he entered. Seeing it and not knowing, you would have thought it was she,
not he, who needed watching. She turned to close the door, and he turned to
keep her in view, and it wasn't until she had passed him and he turned again
that he saw me.
He spoke. He said, "Oh," but didn't know he was
saying it. Then he stood and stared. Julie faced him and said, "I believe
you have met Mr. Goodwin. I'll take your coat."
His mouth opened, but no words came. He tried again and
managed it. "I thought you – this would be private."
She nodded. "I suppose you would rather have it
private, but I thought I'd better be careful with a – with you. Have you got
the money?"
He was having trouble with his eyes. He wanted them to stay
on her, but they wanted me in. "I'm afraid," he said, "there's a
serious misunderstanding. I'm afraid Isabel told you some things that weren't
true. I'm afraid –"
"Nuts. Milton Thales. Thā-lēz. I know exactly
how you got it and who you got it from. The only reason I haven't told the cops
is because Isabel wouldn't want me to. She would want me to make you cough it
up, and that's what I'm doing. I think she would also want me to tell her
sister, because she intended to, and I think I ought to, but first I want the
money. Have you got it?"
"No. Honestly, Miss Jaquette, really –"
"Nuts." She whirled. "What do you think, Mr.
Goodwin?"
Formal, yet. She could have made it Archie. "I think
you're wasting your time," I said. "I think I ought to call Inspector
Cramer and tell him to come and get him. I suggest Cramer because he handles
homicide and he may be interested." I rose and went to the stand where the
phone was and lifted the receiver and started to dial.
Fleming's voice came, not a yell, but loud. "No!"
I turned. "No?"
"I'll give you the money." From that angle the
light was bouncing off his cheekbones. "I couldn't get it today, the
bank's closed. I'll bring it Monday."
I cradled the phone. Julie said, "All of it. Five
thousand."
"Yes. Of course." His eyes went with me back to
the couch, and then to her. "What you said – I don't think Isabel would
want you to tell my wife, now that she – I'm sure she wouldn't. Promise me you
won't. I'm going to give you the money."
Julie shook her head. "I'm not promising
anything."
"Promise me you won't tell her before Monday. We can
talk about it Monday. I can tell you why – we can talk about it."
I spoke because I considered it absolutely essential for him
to know he had some time to play with. "I'm here too," I said.
"I can't speak for Miss Jaquette, but I can for me. I promise positively
to say nothing to your wife until after you return the five grand, provided
it's Monday. Then we'll see."
"All right," she said. "Archie's promise is
no good without mine. I promise too."
He put his hat on. If he had known he was putting it on, in
a lady's room with the lady present, he would have been shocked. He wanted to
say something more, but didn't know what, and he turned, slow and stiff, and
headed for the door. Then he forgot his manners again. When he shut the door he
left it open a crack. Julie went and pushed it shut and then came to me and
asked, "How was I?"
"Terrible. You called me Mr. Goodwin and then Archie.
He'll think you don't know your own mind."
"I think you don't know yours. I thought the idea was
to fox him into killing me."
"Into trying to. It sounds better, now that I've got
acquainted with you."
"All right, you've hashed it. I knew damn well you
should have stayed in the other room. Now he knows he'd have to kill you
too."
"He does not. Didn't I explain that? Sit down." I
patted the couch, and she sat. "It's simple. He thinks they can't get him
for the murder without you because you're the only one who can supply the
motive. Of course you wouldn't go on the stand and swear that Isabel told you
she was going to tell him that she was going to tell Stella about the
blackmail, but he thinks you would. He also thinks you will tell Stella, not
before Monday, but soon after, and apparently that bites him even deeper, I
don't know why; he must see more in her than I do. So you're a double-breasted
danger, but I'm not. I'm only hearsay. As he sees it, I can only tell what you
told me, but you can tell what Isabel told you herself. That's equally true for
the witness stand and for Stella. She would probably believe you, but not me.
We haven't got a single item of evidence to connect him with either the
blackmail or the murder, but if he hands you five thousand bucks' worth of
currency, that would be evidence. He never will. So you'll have to be
removed, but I'm just a nuisance. Sorry."
"Huh. You have dealt me in."
"Up to your neck. I apologize for one thing. I should
have made it clear that once you were in you couldn't get out. I
apologize."
"I don't want out. I think he killed her."
"Certainly he did."
"What do we do now?"
"Whatever you had on your program, if there's room for
company. It's three o'clock Saturday afternoon. If you go out, Saul Panzer is
downstairs and we'll escort you. If you stay in, I'll be in the hall."
"Do you play gin?"
I said I did, and that took care of the afternoon, after I
went down and told Saul he was done for the day, provided he would call Fred
and tell him to be at the Maidstone entrance or in the lobby at five minutes to
seven, prepared to spend the night in the ninth-floor hall after our return
from the Ten Little Indians. The three hours of gin cost me $8.75. She wasn't
so good and I'm not so bad, but since she was going to drop ten bucks to Saul
on their bet I thought it only fair not to bear down. She was a neater shuffler
than anyone I know except Lon Cohen. We knocked off at six o'clock for a bite
to eat, sandwiches and coffee from room service, and for her to change.
I had seen quite a few of the Manhattan spots, mostly with
Lily Rowan, but had never been inside the Ten Little Indians, on Monarch
Street. I spent that evening not only inside, but partly way inside, in Julie's
dressing room, which was about six by eight, par for a headliner in a place
with a four-dollar cover charge. When she was on I went out to the battlefield
and stood in the rear at one side. Fred was at the center, near the door. Julie
earned her pay, probably about a grand a week, maybe more. This is not a scout
report on an artiste, so I'll let it go at that; she earned her pay. The
Saturday-night mob certainly thought so; they loved her. For that matter, so
did I, but on different grounds. One of them loved her so much that around
midnight he somehow made it to her dressing room, so boiled that I had to be
careful not to tip him over.
There was no taxi problem when the three of us made our exit
into the windy winter night, because Julie had a standing arrangement with a
hackie for a quarter past one. During the ride uptown she and Fred resumed a
discussion they had started on the ride downtown; they had agreed it would be a
good idea for her to rent one of his four children for the summer and were
considering which one and the price. Knowing him, I hoped she didn't think he
meant it, and knowing her, I hoped he didn't think she did.
When we stopped at the curb at the Maidstone, the doorman
was right there to open the door, and we piled out and the cab rolled on. I
wasn't going in; I was to relieve Fred up in the hall at ten o'clock and should
have been in bed two hours ago. We were grouped on the sidewalk, Julie in the
middle, when the first shot was fired. I reacted to the sound, a loud, sharp
crack, and Fred reacted to the bullet, though I didn't know that immediately.
He went down. I'm not certain whether the second shot was fired before, or
after, or while, I was flattening Julie. If you think it would have been better
manners just to cover her, I agree, but to do that properly you have to know
which direction the bullets are coming from. I did cover her when I had her
down. I twisted around to look up, and the damn fool doorman was standing there
with his mouth open, staring across the street. No more shots. I ordered Julie,
"Stay flat, don't move," and got to my feet, and as I did so Fred
said, "The bastard hit me." He was on one knee, with his other leg
stretched out, propping himself with a hand. I asked him where, and he said his
leg. The doorman said, "Over there by the wall, I saw it." Julie said
nothing. Good for her. I looked around. A bellboy was coming out of the hotel.
A man and woman had stopped at the corner and were gawking. In the other
direction, uptown, a bull was coming on the trot. I told Julie again to stay
flat, and hopped. He just might be crazy enough to stick, thinking she might
get up and he could try again. I had to scramble to see over the wall. There
was practically no light behind it, but there was enough snow to spot anything as
big as a man, and he wasn't there. When I got back across, the cop was bending
over Fred and telling the bellboy to phone for an ambulance. Julie hadn't
moved. I helped her up, told Fred I would be back, and started for the entrance
with her. The cop said wait, he wanted names, and I told him he had heard me
say I would be back, and went on. The desk clerk and the elevator man were
there, and the clerk went and got the key and the elevator man came and took us
up. Julie was trying not to tremble, and succeeding, and I decided she didn't
want my hand on her arm as she walked from the elevator to her door.
Inside, in the sitting room, she said, "I'll bet my
coat's a mess," and slid it off before I could move to help her.
"Yeah, rub it in," I said. "Someday I'll tell
you what a fine brave plucky game girl you are, not a single squawk, but now
I'm busy. If it had been two feet to the left and a foot higher, you would now
be meat. Luck, that's all, just pure luck, and I'm supposed to know what I'm
doing. I'll go down and see about Fred. When I come back up you will be
packed."
"Packed?"
"Right. What we call the South Room in Nero Wolfe's
house, the one above his, has three windows facing south. Very nice in winter.
You'll like it."
She shook her head. "I don't – I don't want to
hide."
"Listen, snuggle bunny. Kitten. Lamb. I have lost the
right to give orders. Have I got to beg, for God's sake?" I went.
On the sidewalk a small audience had collected, a dozen or
so. Fred was flat on his back, and the bellboy was putting a cushion under his
head. A woman was saying he'd get pneumonia. The cop and the doorman were
across the street by the stone wall. I went and squatted by Fred and asked him
which leg and where, and he said the left one a little above the knee and it probably
got the bone, the way it felt. I asked what about blood, and he said there
wasn't much, he had put his hand in and felt it, and he asked, "Is she all
right?"
I said yes. "When I get back from the hospital I'm
going to take her home with me. I don't want –"
"You're not going to any hospital. Take her now. The
cop asked questions, but I don't know anything. Do I?"
"Sure you do. You know Nero Wolfe hired you to help me
bodyguard her, and that's all."
"It's enough. Ouch. Take her now. I've been in hospitals
before. Don't leave her alone. The sonofabitch nearly got her with us right
here. I only wish –"
He stopped because the cop had come. He wanted names, and I
gave him some, Fred's and Julie's and mine, and nothing else. All I knew was
that someone had shot a gun. He thought he would get tough but decided not to,
and the ambulance came. I watched them load Fred and then went into the
Maidstone and up to the ninth floor.
When I knocked on the door, Julie's voice came. "Is it
you, Archie?"
"No. It's a Boy Scout."
She opened the door wide, and I stepped in. There on the
floor were a big suitcase and a big bag. "I didn't send for a boy to take
them down," she said, "because I thought you might change your
mind."
I picked them up.
At nine o'clock Sunday morning I
entered the kitchen, told Fritz good morning, got orange juice from the
refrigerator, sat at my breakfast table, yawned, sneered at The New York
Times, and rubbed my eyes. Fritz came with a piece of paper in his hand and
demanded, "Were you drunk when you wrote this?"
I blinked at him. "No, just pooped. I've forgotten what
I said. Please read it."
He cleared his throat. "'Three-twenty a.m. There's a
guest in the South Room. Tell him. I'll cook her breakfast. AG.'" He
dropped it on the table. "I told him, and he asked who, and what could I
say? And you will cook her breakfast in my kitchen?"
I took an economy-size swallow of orange juice. "Let's
see if I can talk straight," I suggested. "I had four hours' sleep,
exactly half what I need. As for telling him who she is, that is my function. I
admit it's your function to cook breakfast, but she likes fried eggs and you
don't fry eggs. Let's get to the real issue. There is one man who is more
allergic to a woman in this house than he is, and you are it. By God, I am
talking straight." I drank orange juice. "Don't worry, this woman is
allergic to a man in her house. As for the eggs, poach them – you know,
in red wine and bouillon –"
"Burgundian."
"That's it. With Canadian back bacon. That will show
her what men are for. Her usual hour for breakfast is half past twelve. I'm
still willing to cook it if –"
He uttered a French sound, loud, maybe it was a word. He was
at the range, with sausage. I reached for the Times.
Since Wolfe goes up to the plant rooms on Sunday morning
only for a brief look, if at all, I supposed he would be down around ten
o'clock. But it was still ten minutes short of ten when the sound of the
elevator came, then his footsteps in the hall. I hadn't seen him since bedtime
Friday evening, nearly forty hours ago. Instead of stopping at the office, the
footsteps kept coming, and the swing door opened and he appeared.
"Indeed," he said. "You're alive."
I conceded it. "Just barely. Don't count on me for
much."
"Who is the guest?"
"Miss Jaquette. Miss Jackson to you, Julie to me. She's
alive too, but it's not my fault. She was shot at this morning, at half past
one, in front of her hotel, from behind the Central Park wall. The sniper was
not seen. Fred got it in the leg and is in Roosevelt Hospital. He was asleep
when I phoned this morning. I phoned his wife when I got home last night. I
also phoned Saul and told him to stand by. I brought Julie home with me
because, with Orrie in the coop and Fred in the hospital, we're short-handed,
and anyway I got tired of hearing bullets go by. She eats breakfast in bed, and
Fritz will cook it and I'll take it up around half past twelve. That seems to
cover it."
"The sniper was not seen."
"No, sir, but it was Barry Fleming. He reacted to the
letter by coming to see her yesterday afternoon. That tagged him for blackmail,
and the gunplay tagged him for murder. So all we need now is a little evidence.
But I suppose you want a full report."
He said yes, and we went to the office. The Saturday mail
was on my desk, unopened. I don't know why he does that, but I suspect that
it's because he wants to show me that he won't butt in on my routine if I won't
butt in on his. Fritz hadn't butted in either; my desk top was dustier than it
gets in one day. I put my copy of the Sunday Times on it and sat, and
proceeded to report. I gave it verbatim only in spots, the few that might have
a bearing, thinking it unnecessary for him to know that she had asked me if I
realized it was a bed, or that I had called her snuggle bunny. Usually he opens
his eyes and sits up when I finish, but that time he held it a full minute, and
finally I spoke.
"If you're waiting for a comment, I have nothing to
offer. I could say we know but can't prove we do, but that's obvious. As for
last night, did he own a rifle, or did he get one, and if so where? Saul and I
could dig up the answers, and then what? The first bullet either hit Fred's leg
bone or went on through and hit the building, which is stone, and the second
one presumably hit the building. Identifying them as coming from his rifle
would take six experts, three on each side. If he had hit her and killed her
that would be –"
"Pfui." He came erect. "That's mere futility.
We have what we wanted, support for our surmise that he's a murderer. Is there
any doubt now that we are going to extricate Orrie?"
"No."
"Then that is no longer of concern. Supposing that we
could proceed to get proof, conclusive evidence, that Fleming killed Isabel
Kerr, do we want to? If we get it, and give it to Mr. Cramer, what will
happen?"
"Three things. One, they'll drop Orrie fast. Two,
Fleming will be arrested, tried, and probably convicted. Three, they'll try to
keep Ballou's name out of it but can't. Make it four. Four, you won't get
another look at that package."
He nodded. "What did I tell him?"
"If you can serve his purpose without damage to yours,
you will."
"Well?"
"Well, you can try. It's February sixth, with nothing
coming in yet this year, and nothing in sight, and I know how much goes out,
since I draw the checks. Do you want my opinion?"
"Yes."
"I don't see how we can possibly pull it. If we're
going to spring Orrie, and we are, we're going to have to give them Fleming,
with or without evidence, and he'll give them Ballou, and they'll have to see
him. That's the trouble. Even if they play it tight and his name is kept out of
the papers during the buildup, it's bound to get spilled in the courtroom, and
he won't think he owes you anything. Neither will you. As you know, I am
strongly in favor of income. I would hate to have my paycheck bounce. But you
wanted my opinion."
"You misunderstood. I want your opinion on the risk,
not on the feasibility. Could we conceivably jeopardize our purpose?"
"No. Orrie's as good as out now."
"Then there's no risk at all. The problem is to expose
the murderer without –"
The doorbell rang, and I went to the hall, took a look, and
stepped back in. "Cramer. Get Fritz. I'll go up and tell her not to sing
'Big Man Go-go' with the door open." I headed for the stairs.
By go-go, the door was open, though it had been shut
when I passed by at nine o'clock. I lifted a hand to tap, but it wasn't necessary.
She said, "My God, you're up and dressed." She was in a chair by a
window. Her pajamas were light green with dark green stripes, and her feet were
bare. Her hair was in all directions. I closed the door.
"I opened it," she said, "just to enjoy it. It's
been years since I had a bedroom where I could leave the door open. I'm up
because I woke up. I never stay in bed awake unless I'm reading or
eating."
I had approached. "I'm afraid you'll have to wait a
while on the eating. Inspector Cramer is here. He probably thinks you're here,
since that cop saw you leave with me, but it's possible that we're not going to
concede it. If we do, and if he insists on seeing you, we can say he'll have to
postpone it because you're in a state of shock after last night, or I'll bring
him up and you can get it over with. As you prefer. I thought I'd better ask
you."
She took a swipe at the hair. "An inspector, huh?"
"Yeah. An old pal of ours. In reverse."
"I like to get things over with."
"Okay. He'll probably want to see you alone, and not in
the office because he knows we have a hole to see and hear through. What do you
want to keep you until breakfast? Will orange juice and coffee do?"
"Not if you have grapefruit juice."
"Certainly. Fritz will bring it up, and I'll bring
Cramer up later. He may –"
"Here?"
"Sure. This room is bugged, he doesn't know that, and
we'll be listening in. He may invite you down to the District Attorney's
office, but you're not going. To take you with law he'd have to have a warrant,
and he hasn't got one. Now the –"
"How do you know he hasn't?"
"I know everything except how to bodyguard a girl
right. Now the main question. Do you remember the script? What we said last
night?"
"What you said. Yes."
"Should we check it?"
"No. ZYXWVU –"
"Of course. I keep forgetting. Fritz will be up with
the juice and coffee. Bolt the door. There's just a chance Mr. Wolfe will
decide you're not here, to gain time, and Cramer will come hopping up to barge
in. Once a cop's inside, he can move around and you don't touch him, but he
can't bust doors in, or he'd better not. Don't answer knocks."
"Damn it," she said, "I ought to be sound
asleep."
I said she could sleep all afternoon, and left.
Three paces inside the office I stopped to take in an
unexpected scene, homey and very appealing. I couldn't see Wolfe, at his desk,
because the review-of-the-week section of the Sunday Times, spread wide,
was hiding him. Cramer, in the red leather chair, had the sports section,
spread just as wide. Having checked that Cramer had been admitted and was still
there, I went to the kitchen, told Fritz the guest's name, asked him to take up
grapefruit juice and coffee, and told him not to knock but give his name. Back
in the office, Wolfe was still hidden. I crossed to my desk, sat and enjoyed
the pleasant scene a couple of minutes, and then coughed. In a moment Wolfe
folded the paper, put it on his desk, and spoke. To me.
"Mr. Cramer wishes to ask about that incident last
night. Since you were there and I wasn't, I insisted on waiting for you."
He turned. "Yes, Mr. Cramer?"
Cramer, having folded the sports section, put it on the
stand. His eyes went to Wolfe. "I told you. I want to know why you had
them guarding that girl, and who they were guarding her from. If you knew she
was in danger, you know who fired those shots at her. Durkin says he doesn't
know, but you do. I don't need Goodwin to tell me that. It's even possible he
doesn't know, but you do. Assault with intent to kill is a felony, and you know
who committed it, and I'm an officer of the law. Is that plain?"
Wolfe nodded. "Quite plain. It's also quite plain that
your true interest is not assault with intent to kill, but an assault that did
kill. Have you released Mr. Cather?"
"No. And I don't –"
"Are you prepared to release him?"
"No! I want an answer. Who fired those shots at that
girl?"
Wolfe turned. "Do you know, Archie?"
"No, sir, I don't know. I could offer guesses,
but not in the hearing of an officer of the law. Slander. I might guess Orrie
Cather, but that's out because he's in the can, and unless –"
Cramer said a word, loud, which I omit because I suspect
that some of the readers of these reports are people like retired schoolteachers
and den mothers.
"Nor do I know," Wolfe said. "Mr. Cramer. Why
not be forthright? You came here last Monday in the pretense that you hoped to
get information that would strengthen your case against Mr. Cather, though you
knew you would get none. Not from Mr. Goodwin. What you really wanted was to
learn if my support of Mr. Cather was more than a gesture. What you want now is
to learn if I have collected any evidence that will weaken your case
against Mr. Cather. Why not be straightforward and ask me?"
"All right, I ask you. Have you?"
"Yes."
"What evidence?"
"I'm not prepared to divulge it."
"By God, you admit it. You admit you have evidence in a
murder case and you withhold it."
Wolfe nodded. "It's a nice point. If I withhold
evidence that would help to convict a man of murder I am obstructing justice,
yes. But if I withhold evidence that would help to acquit a man, is that
obstructing justice? I doubt if the point has ever arisen juridically. We could
ask some –"
"Ask my ass. If you've got evidence that would help to
clear Cather, it will help to convict someone else. I want it."
"That's nonsense. Thousands of men have been cleared by
alibis, with no bearing on another's guilt. I have no evidence, none whatever,
that would help to convict anyone of the murder of Isabel Kerr. I have a
suspicion, a surmise, but that isn't evidence. As for the guarding of Miss
Jaquette and the shots fired at her, how does that concern your effort to
indict Mr. Cather? As Mr. Goodwin said, they couldn't have been fired by him,
he's in custody. Under suspicion of murder."
"He hasn't been charged with homicide."
"You're holding him without bail. Consider a
hypothesis. Suppose that Miss Jaquette had a private reason to fear that
someone might try to do her violence, a reason she would not reveal, and
arranged for protection, and got shot at. Do you think you could force her to
disclose her secret, or could force me to?"
"Balls." Cramer was getting hoarse. He always did,
with Wolfe. "You try being forthright. Will you give me your word of honor
that your guarding her and the shots fired at her had no connection with the
murder of Isabel Kerr?"
"Of course not. I suspect there was a connection. If so
I would like to establish it – with evidence."
"You haven't already established it?"
"No."
Cramer got a cigar from a pocket, rolled it between his
palms, stuck it in his mouth, and sank his teeth in it. But the rolling had
loosened the wrapper, and a flap of it pointed up and touched his nose. He
removed it, glared at it, hurled it at my wastebasket, and came close. It hit
the edge and bounced to the floor. He aimed the glare at me and blurted,
"All right, Goodwin. Where is she?"
I put a brow up. "You could mean Miss Jaquette."
"Yes, I could. You took her with you last night. And
brought her here."
I nodded. "That's what Mr. Wolfe calls a surmise. You
don't know I brought her here, just as I don't know who fired the shots. You're
expecting me to stall, so I won't. She's up in the South Room. I was there
chatting with her when you came."
"Now I'll chat with her. I'll go up." He left the
chair. "I know the way."
"The door's bolted. We thought it might be better to
hold off." I rose. "But you deserve a break. With a new Mayor and a
new Commissioner, you probably need a break." I moved.
In the hall he stopped at the elevator, but I kept on to the
stairs and he came. Policemen should keep fit. By the time he got to the second
landing I had called to her and she had opened the door. She had changed to the
blue thing and put slippers on. I pronounced names and asked if she had enough
coffee and left them.
Taking it for granted that Wolfe had gone to the kitchen, I
turned right at the bottom. He was there, in the only chair Fritz allows in his
kitchen, with a seat ample for me but not for him, and had opened a certain
cupboard door and flipped the switch. Fritz was on one of the stools at the big
table, slicing a shallot, preparing for the poached eggs Burgundian, and I got
the other stool.
Cramer's voice was coming from the cupboard. "I know
that, I know you have. You made a full statement, and we appreciate that kind
of cooperation. But that business last night is a new – element. Those two men
were there, Archie Goodwin and Fred Durkin, for your protection, that
right?"
Julie: Yes.
Cramer: You had arranged with Nero Wolfe for that
protection?
Julie: Yes.
Cramer: When?
Julie: Oh … I guess it was Saturday.
Cramer: Why? Why did you need protection?
Julie: I might as well tell you the truth.
Cramer: Yes, that's always the best way.
Julie: Between you and me, I didn't need protection. But one
evening, I think it was Tuesday, I had come here because Nero Wolfe wanted to
see me, and I met Archie Goodwin. And the next afternoon, Wednesday, I came
again, and Archie took me up to show me the orchids, and we had a long talk.
Are you sure this is confidential?
Cramer: Yes.
Julie: For God's sake don't tell him, but I simply flapped.
What a man! I had to have him. So I – well, I made arrangements. He may not
want you to know this, but he was there all day Saturday, in my hotel, from ten
o'clock on. You may not approve, I suppose you're a married man, but when I
want something I usually get it.
Wolfe was looking at me, and I was shaking my head. I had
not suggested that. I was sorry I wasn't there to see Cramer glaring at her.
Cramer: Do you mean to … are you saying that … you said you
made arrangements. What arrangements?
Julie: I told Archie a man was annoying me and I was afraid
and I wanted protection day and night. You can understand why I wanted it day
and night.
Cramer: What's the name of the man who was annoying you?
Julie: Aren't you an inspector?
Cramer: Yes.
Julie: Then you ought to listen better. Nobody was annoying
me. I didn't need protection. I needed Archie.
Cramer: If you didn't need protection, why did someone shoot
at you, try to kill you?
Julie: I've been thinking about that. Just because he hit
Fred, there by me, that doesn't prove he was shooting at me. Maybe he was
shooting at Fred. Or maybe he was just shooting at anybody. Like that boy in
Brooklyn who shot some woman going by in a car. They get a kick –
Cramer: Save it. I don't believe a word of it. Do you know
what the penalty is for giving false information to an officer investigating a
crime?
Julie: No. What is it?
Cramer: You can get five years.
Julie: What crime are you investigating? Archie said you
were investigating the murder of my friend Isabel Kerr, but you don't sound
like it. You only ask about me being protected and somebody shooting a gun. I
must be thick.
Cramer: No, Miss Jaquette, you're not thick. You're a damn
good liar. Extra good. I hope you know what you're doing. Do you know that Wolfe
and Goodwin are two of the slickest operators in New York?
Julie: I don't know much about Nero Wolfe. I know a lot
about Archie.
Cramer: Well, they are. How much are they paying you?
Julie: Paying me? Well. First I'm a liar, and now what am I?
Cramer: That's what I'd like to know. Do you still think
Orrie Cather killed your friend Isabel Kerr?
Julie: I never said that.
Cramer: You didn't have to. It was obvious from what you did
say and put in your statement. Do you remember what you said?
Julie: Certainly I do. I can say the alphabet backward.
Cramer: Do you want to retract any of it?
Julie: No. It was all true.
Cramer: Then you still think he killed her?
Julie: You ought to listen better. I told you I didn't say
that.
Cramer: You implied it strong enough. Don't forget we have
your signed statement. Don't forget that.
Five seconds of silence except for a faint sound that could
have been Cramer leaving his chair.
Cramer: I warn you again, Miss Jaquette, giving false
information to an officer investigating a capital crime is a felony. Do you
want to reconsider it?
Julie: No, thanks. You can leave the door open.
Another faint sound, the door opening. I slid off the stool,
went to the cupboard and turned the switch, crossed to the door to the hall,
and swung it open. Heavy footsteps were coming down the stairs. Cramer
appeared, turned left, and passed the office door without looking in. He must
have seen me as he was putting his coat on, but he didn't wave good-by. When he
was out and the door shut, I turned and said, "That was ad lib, nothing
like it in the script. I enjoyed every minute of it. You'd better start the
eggs, Fritz, she must be hungry." I headed for the stairs and mounted the
two flights.
The door was wide open. She was squatting on the floor,
looking at the underside of the table. At the sound of my footsteps she turned
her head, scrambled up, and said, "I'm looking for the bug."
"You won't find it there. It's not that simple. It came
through fine."
"You heard it?"
"Sure. Why he called you a liar is beyond me. If ever I
heard the ring of truth. How soon do you want breakfast?"
"Now. Right now."
"It's nearly ready. Get in bed and I'll bring it."
I don't mention everything, for
instance phone calls that have nothing to do with progress or the lack of it.
There had been two phone calls from Jill Hardy, one from Dr. Gamm, two from Lon
Cohen, and three from Nathaniel Parker. But I mention the one from Parker that
Sunday afternoon because what he wanted to do might have helped or hurt. He had
decided he should make a habeas corpus play Monday morning to get Orrie bailed
out, and it took Wolfe ten minutes to talk him out of it. It wasn't easy. Wolfe
couldn't very well tell him that we were no longer worried about Orrie, that we
now had another fish to fry.
Or maybe we did. When I went to bed Sunday night, after
winning $1.25 from Julie at gin, there had been no discussion and no
instructions, nothing. The Ten Little Indians was closed Sundays. Julie had had
an afternoon nap, and I had had a long walk. Wolfe had had the Times and
a book, and probably, while I was out, his weekly battle with television. That
may occur almost any evening, when he has got disgusted with a book, but
usually it's a Sunday afternoon, because that's when TV is supposed to be
dressed for company. He turns on one channel after another, getting grimmer and
grimmer, until he is completely assured that it's getting worse instead of
better, and quits.
The only time he and Julie were together was at the dinner
table, and it was different from any meal at that table I could remember.
Ordinarily Wolfe is perfectly willing to do most of the talking, with or
without company, but that time, from the Neptune bouchees right through to the
chestnut whip, he not only let the guest, a female guest, take over, he egged
her on. He asked her questions, dozens of questions, about her work and her
background and the people she knew. By the time coffee came, I had settled on
the only possible explanation: he had decided that I didn't understand women as
well as he had thought I did, and it was up to him to fill the gap. I could
have told him that that kind of approach wouldn't help much, but apparently I
was no longer regarded as an expert.
So I got a surprise when I entered the kitchen Monday
morning and Fritz told me I was wanted, and I went up one flight and knocked
and entered, and Wolfe said, "Good morning. Can that woman be trusted in a
matter that requires adroit execution and full discretion?"
"You ought to know," I said, "after the quiz
you put her through."
"I don't. Do you?"
"Yes. Adroit, yes. You heard her with Cramer. It would
depend on how well she liked it, whatever it was. The discretion would also
depend. She would never spill anything she didn't want to spill. She wouldn't
talk just to hear herself."
"How much verity was there in what she told Mr.
Cramer?"
"None at all. She couldn't think I'm what a man because
she couldn't think any man is."
"Then we'll risk it. Ask Mr. Ballou to come at eleven
o'clock. Tell him I'll need only ten minutes. Miss Jaquette must not see him.
Can you make sure she doesn't?"
I said I could, and went up one flight to see if there was
any sign of life there. It was only a quarter to nine, but she had gone to bed early
– for her – and she might have opened the door to enjoy it. She hadn't. I had
told her to buzz either the kitchen or the office on the house phone when she
wanted breakfast, and to allow half an hour. I went down to the office and did
the chores.
I didn't know if Avery Ballou was the early kind of
president, and waited till a quarter to ten to dial the number of the Federal
Holding Corporation. A woman answered, of course, and switched me to a man. He
would submit my name to Mr. Ballou only if I told him what I wanted; that's one
of the ways junior executives try to keep wise to what their seniors are up to.
I finally persuaded him the name was enough and Ballou would want it, but there
was a long wait before his voice came.
"Goodwin? Archie Goodwin?"
"Right. Mr. Ballou?"
"Yes."
"There has been a development in that matter we
discussed Thursday evening, and we must tell you about it. Can you be here at
eleven o'clock? Same address."
"This morning?"
"Yes."
"I'm afraid I can't. Is it urgent?"
"Yes. Eleven-thirty or twelve would do, but eleven
would be better. It shouldn't take more than ten minutes."
"Hold the wire… All right. I'll be there at eleven or
shortly after."
If the junior executive had listened in, he must have been
wondering what the hell could make Ballou jump like that, and wishing he knew.
After buzzing the plant rooms to tell Wolfe he was coming, I
had a problem. Even if Julie was awake, it wasn't advisable to go up and tell
her that a man was coming whom she must not see, so would she please stay in
her room with the door shut. She was a fine brave plucky game girl, and she
might go to my room, which fronts on 35th Street, and look out the window just
to be helpful. It wouldn't be fair to tempt her like that, so I went to the
kitchen, explained the situation to Fritz, and arranged with him. When the bell
rang and I went to the door, he would go up to the second stair landing with
the vacuum cleaner and camp there. If her door was open, he would vacuum the
hall carpet. He said he couldn't vacuum that carpet for an hour, and I said he
wouldn't have to.
Actually it was only eight or nine minutes. Wolfe came down
on the dot at eleven, as he always does, and hadn't finished looking through
the mail when the bell rang. I waited until Fritz was on his way upstairs, then
admitted the caller, took his hat and coat, and followed him to the office. He
stood and told Wolfe he didn't have time to sit.
"I like eyes at a level," Wolfe said. "It
takes three seconds to sit."
Ballou sat.
"I'll make it as brief as possible," Wolfe said.
"The first point, I am now satisfied that you didn't kill Isabel Kerr,
because I know who did, barely short of certainty. Her brother-in-law. The
blackmailer. The second point, there is no longer any question of achieving my
primary purpose, to clear Mr. Cather. That is assured. The third point, I would
like to earn that fifty thousand dollars. How can I earn it?"
"I thought that was understood. Keep me out of this
mess. Keep my name out. I can't eat. I can't sleep. I have wanted a dozen times
to call you, but I'm afraid to talk on the phone."
Wolfe shook his head. "It needs definition. Your name
is known now. Five people know it – Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, Mr. Cather, Mr.
Goodwin, and I. As for the last three, the best you can get is our assurance
that we will disclose it to no one. As for Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, the best I
could possibly do would be to create a situation which would make it highly
unlikely that they would ever disclose it. I can't open their skulls and remove
the cells where your name is filed. You see that."
"Yes."
"You would be the judge of the situation. I want to
earn the money, not extort it. Now the fourth point, the reason I had to see
you without delay. To proceed with any expectation of success, I must enlist
help. I need the assistance of a woman named Julie Jaquette, or Amy Jackson,
who was the friend –"
"I know the name. I know about her."
"From Miss Kerr."
"Yes."
"She doesn't know your name, and she doesn't need to.
She calls you the lobster. I want to ask her help, without telling her your
name, and I want to tell her that if we succeed she will receive fifty thousand
dollars in cash. Will you supply it?"
Ballou frowned at him.
"You told me," Wolfe said, "that the fifty
thousand was just a retainer and implied that there would be more if I served
your purpose. I wouldn't want more. I'll get it done in a day or two, or not at
all. I make it contingent on success, against precedent, to preclude any smell
of extortion. Also, the prospect is dim. What are the odds against us,
Archie?"
I didn't have to consider. "A thousand to one."
"This is pointless," Ballou said. "You know
damned well I'm trapped. You told me you're my only hope. What's another fifty
thousand, or ten times fifty? If you think she can help, all right. You don't
seem –"
He wasn't interrupted; I was, by the sound of the vacuum
cleaner. I rose and went to the hall, stood at the foot of the stairs, and
heard no voices, just the vacuum cleaner. I was thinking the conversation was finished
anyway and was turning to go and tell him where the door was, when he came. I
was at the rack, ready with his coat, by the time he got there. His car was out
in front, and I waited until he was in it and it was rolling, before going to
the stairs and on up to the second landing.
Fritz was giving the carpet a play, and Julie, in pajamas
and barefoot, was standing in the doorway, watching him. He had his back to
her, pretending he didn't know she was there. I went and switched the vacuum
off with my toe and spoke. "You might have waited until she was up."
"I am up," she said. "What time is it?
I forgot to wind my watch."
A bellow came from below. "Archie! Where are you?"
I called down where I was, and more bellow came. "Tell Miss Jaquette I
want her!"
Ballou had been gone not more than three minutes, and
already he had a situation created. Which I handled. I told Julie her breakfast
couldn't be ready for half an hour and asked if she would consider having
grapefruit juice and coffee in the office while Wolfe explained something to
her. She asked why I couldn't explain it, and I said because Wolfe knew more
words. She went to change, and I went down and thanked Fritz for helping out in
a pinch, requested coffee for the guest, and poured a glass of grapefruit
juice.
And after that handling, when I went to the office Wolfe
said perhaps it would be better for him to discuss it with me, and then I would
discuss it with her. I didn't try to talk him out of it; I just said no. I
admit it was still in my gizzard that it was pure luck that she hadn't been
ironed out while I was standing right by her. I'm all for luck, but you
shouldn't crowd it. After what I had told her about lowering the blind and
closing the drapes, I should have gone over for a look behind the wall before
she got out of the taxi.
When she came down, not in the blue thing, in a dark green
woolen dress, the tray was there on the stand by the red leather chair. She
sat, picked up the glass and took a sip of juice, and said, "I'm all
balled up. This will be the first time since I don't know when that I don't
have breakfast in bed. It had better be good – I mean what you're going to
explain."
Wolfe was regarding her, his lips tight. "I apologize.
But we should lose no time. I say 'we' because I'm going to propose a
collaboration. Have you all the money you want, Miss Jaquette?"
She had started the glass for her mouth but stopped it
halfway. "Of all the dumb questions," she said.
"But not pointless. Nor impertinent. I need to know if
a chance – a long one, but a chance – of making fifty thousand dollars would
interest you. Would it?"
"That's even dumber."
"Would it?"
"You're asking me?"
"I am."
"Fifty grand in cash?"
"Yes."
"Less income tax."
"Not until you paid it. I suggest nothing; I state a
fact: it would be in cash, and you would sign no receipt."
She sipped juice. "Do you know what I would do if I had
fifty grand in one wad? I would go to school for four straight years. Or
five." She sipped juice. "I suppose some college; I finished high
school. I have a feeling there are a lot of things I ought to know that I don't
know. I always have it. You say you're being serious?"
"Yes. There is a possibility of earning a hundred thousand
dollars, and we would share it equally. It would come from the man who paid
Isabel Kerr's bills – the man you call the lobster. He was here just now, and we
–"
"He was here? You know him?"
"Yes. It was his third visit. He was here twice last
week. He is a man of wealth and what is called standing. To you his name is X
and will remain X. He fears that his name will become public in connection with
what he calls his diversion and a sensational murder, and you and Mr. Goodwin
and I will try to prevent it. If we succeed, he will pay. For that you have my
word, he will pay. His fear is extreme. Shall I go on?"
She had put the glass down, not quite empty. "You are
serious," she said.
"Yes."
"You mean it."
"Yes."
"All right, go on. How do we prevent it?"
"That's the question. Probably we can't, but possibly
we can. If I go on I must tell you things that must not be repeated, and first
you must answer two questions. Are you willing to help?"
"How? I don't see how I can help."
"You already have. You have established the identity of
the blackmailer indubitably, and the identity of the murderer as a sound
conclusion. If you can help with this, are you willing?"
She looked at me. I not only looked back, I nodded. She told
Wolfe, "Yes, I'm willing."
"Do you engage to keep secret what I tell you in
confidence?"
"Yes, that's all right. I can do that."
"Then you're a paragon. But there are things you have
to know – for instance, that Mr. Goodwin and I learned X's name from Orrie
Cather. Miss Kerr told his name to two people only, Orrie Cather and her
sister. That may be safely assumed, because she didn't even tell you. Mrs.
Fleming told her husband, so there are five people who know it. I will answer
for three of the five: Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Cather, and me. There would be some
question about Mr. Cather if he were going to be tried for murder, but he
isn't. That leaves Mr. and Mrs. Fleming as the only sources for the disclosure
of X's name. I am taking pains to make sure that it's clear to you."
"You sure are. Have I told you that I can say the
alphabet backward?"
"You have told Mr. Goodwin and Mr. Cramer. So can I.
Now for the fact that gives us our one chance in a thousand. There is one
person who dreads the publication of X's association with Miss Kerr even more
intensely than X does. Tell her, Archie."
I took five seconds, not to figure it, but to realize that I
had never looked at it from that angle. I told Julie, "Stella. I told you
Saturday how she reacted. Remember? She doesn't want a trial even if they get
the right man. Of course, X's name would come out only in connection with
Isabel." I looked at Wolfe. "Yeah. I'll be damned. But how?"
"That's what we need Miss Jaquette for." His eyes
were narrowed at her. "Don't you want coffee? It's getting cold."
She picked up the glass and finished the juice, put it down,
poured coffee, picked up the cup, and took a sip. She looked at Wolfe and shook
her head. "I don't get it. What's so great about that fact?"
"The possibilities it presents. Suppose that Mrs.
Fleming knows, or even strongly suspects, that her husband killed her sister,
and knows why, and also knows that he may be arrested and charged at any
moment, and later brought to trial. What would she do?"
"I don't know. I don't know her."
"What would she do, Archie?"
"I don't know either," I said, "what she
would do. But I know she would do anything, no holds barred, to keep him or
anyone else from telling the world about Isabel and X. She certainly wouldn't
want it to get to a trial. I don't know how much she cares about him. If
she cares enough, in spite of the fact that he killed Isabel, she might blow
with him, or if she thinks he can stand the gaff and keep his trap shut, she
might stick and fight. If she doesn't care enough about him, she might
ship him off to China, or she might even bump him off. The one certain thing is
that she would do whatever she thought she had to, to make sure, for instance,
that Orrie wouldn't go on the stand as a witness for the prosecution and answer
questions about Isabel. Or that X wouldn't testify about the blackmail. Of
course she has to be told about the blackmail too. To make sure of that she
would blow up the courthouse if she could get her hands on a bomb." I was
looking at Julie. "So there you are. You tell her what you told him in
that letter. It made him snipe at you with a gun. She won't do that, but she'll
certainly do something."
She was frowning. "Why can't you tell her?"
"She wouldn't believe me. You can tell her things
Isabel told you, but I can't. As you told him in the letter."
"That was a lie, that letter."
"The only lie was that Isabel told you. What you said
she told you was true, and he proved it. Do you know that Barry
blackmailed X?"
"Certainly."
"Do you think there's any doubt that he shot at
you?"
"No."
"Do you think he would have tried to kill you just
because you knew about the blackmailing and wanted the money, if he hadn't also
killed Isabel? Remember, I was there, and he knew what I was working on. The
murder. I think it would be fine for you to pick up fifty grand, but also I
understood that you wanted the man who killed Isabel to be tagged. You said so.
Do you think there is any doubt that he killed her?"
"No."
"Then count up to two."
She picked up the cup and took a sip, found that it had
cooled enough, emptied the cup and put it down, and said, "He wouldn't be
tagged if they blow."
"No," I conceded. "But his number would be
up, and he wouldn't be here to name X. They'd find him someday, and then we'd
see. As Mr. Wolfe said, probably we can't, but possibly we can."
"She lives in the Bronx."
"Right."
"Would I have to go there?"
"I hope not. This is the day he was to bring you the
five grand, and God knows where he is or what he might try. I'm off of
bodyguarding for a while."
"Here," Wolfe said. "Get her."
"I'll sit in," I told Julie, "if you think I
won't hash it."
"What a man," she said, and poured coffee.
I swiveled, got the Bronx phone book, found the number,
lifted the receiver, and dialed, hoping she was there and was answering the
phone. She was. It was her voice that said hello.
"This is Archie Goodwin, Mrs. Fleming. You may
remember, I was there a week ago today."
"I remember."
"Then you may remember that I said the police had the
wrong man and I was looking for the right man. I have found him, and we want to
tell you about him and ask your advice about how to proceed. We know you hope
there won't be a trial, and we want to discuss it with you. Will you come here,
Nero Wolfe's office? Now?"
Silence. It went on so long I thought she had gone, but she
hadn't hung up. I finally said, "Mrs. Fleming?" but there was more
silence.
At last her voice came. "Mr. Goodwin?"
"Yes."
"What's the address?"
I gave it to her.
It was a tough decision, and it
took Wolfe a good five minutes to make it. What about lunch? It was ten minutes
past twelve when I hung up after giving Stella Fleming the address. Would she
leave immediately, and how long would it take her? Lunch-time has been, is, and
will be a quarter past one. An impossible situation. He sat and scowled at it
for five or six minutes, made his decision, and got up and went to the kitchen.
I followed him, since I eat too. Julie had no problem, since her hedgehog omelet
and broiled sausage were about ready. The crisis was licked good. Julie ate at
my breakfast table, and Wolfe and I made out on stools at the big table, with
sturgeon, smoked pheasant, celery, three kinds of cheese, and spiced brandied
cherries. Since it was a snack, not a meal, the taboo on business didn't apply,
and we discussed the program. I thought Wolfe should be present, and he thought
he shouldn't, and we let Julie decide it, and she voted with him. In the alcove
at the kitchen end of the hall there is a hole in the wall with a sliding
panel, and on the office side the hole is covered with a trick picture of a
waterfall which you can see through from the alcove side. Wolfe would be there
on a stool. We were unanimous on the other main point, that I should lead the
attack.
When she came, at twenty minutes past one, I started the
attack in the hall. A chair and a bench are there, across from the rack, very
handy, but she didn't put her handbag down when I was taking her coat, and I
didn't like the way she was clutching it. Also I was still touchy about the
bullets that had missed Julie through no fault of mine. So when, turning, she
shifted the bag from her right hand to her left, I grabbed it. She tried to
grab it back, but I stiff-armed her, perhaps a little rough, sidestepped, and
opened the bag. She squeaked and came at me, and I pushed her again and got a
hand in the bag, and it came out with something in it. She backed off and stood
and panted, so I was able to look. It was a twenty-two Bristol automatic with a
fancy carved butt, and it was loaded. I stuck it in my side pocket and held the
bag out. "Sorry if I was rude," I said. "We had an event here
once, and I frisk everybody."
She was trying hard to hold in, and I hoped she would make
it. She had shrunk. Not only did she look even smaller than she had a week ago,
but her face had positively shrunk. Her cheeks had been filled out, and now
they weren't. She took the bag and said, "Give me that gun."
"It's not a gun, it's a toy. You'll get it back. As I
say, I frisk everybody, and right now I'm glad I do. There's a woman here who
is going to say things you won't like, and you're very impulsive. Her name is
Julie Jaquette, and she was your sister's best friend. I believe you have met
her –"
"I was my sister's best friend."
"You ought to know. Let's go in and sit down." I
gestured. "That open door on the left."
I thought she was going to balk and she did too, but I had
the gun and I could have carried her under one arm. She turned and clicked down
the hall, and I followed. Two steps inside the office she stopped. I passed on
by and went to Julie, who was standing by my desk. I took the pistol from my
pocket and showed it to her. "This was in her bag," I said and turned
and asked Stella, "Where does your husband keep his rifle?"
I don't think she heard me. I had moved up a couple of the
yellow chairs, and she went to one and sat. Julie went and took the other one,
and I returned the pistol to my pocket, sat at my desk, and told Julie,
"You have met Mrs. Fleming."
She nodded. "That was in her bag? How did you get
it?"
"Took it. It didn't fire those shots Saturday
night." I eyed Stella. "Your husband shot at Miss Jaquette Saturday
night, but missed. That's why I asked where he keeps his rifle."
She gawked at me. "What? My husband what?"
"He tried to kill Miss Jaquette. That's breaking it to
you gently, Mrs. Fleming, there's much worse to come. I told you on the phone
that I have found the right man. The reason Miss Jaquette is here is that she
helped me find him. I guess the best way is to show you a copy of a letter she
sent to your husband last Friday." I opened a drawer and got it. "She
wrote it by hand; this is a typewritten copy. Shall I read it?"
She looked at Julie. "A letter you sent my
husband?"
"Yes."
She put a hand out. "Let me see it."
I passed it over. She went through it fast and then read it
again, slow. She looked at Julie. "What's it about? Who is Milton
Thales?"
Julie looked at me, and she shouldn't have. She was supposed
to be collaborating. I widened my eyes a little, and she went back to Stella.
"Your husband," she said. "He is Milton Thales. I said in that
letter that Isabel told me everything, but the one thing she didn't tell me was
the name of the man who was paying her bills, so I have to call him X. You're
the only one she told his name to, and –"
"She didn't tell me his name."
"She told me she did tell you. Isabel wasn't a
liar."
That was more like it. What a girl. She was going on.
"So when X got a phone call from a man who knew all about it and told X to
send him money, a thousand dollars a month, to mail it to Milton Thales,
General Delivery, and X told Isabel, she knew Milton Thales must be your
husband. Because no other man could know what Milton Thales knew. Isabel knew
you must have told your husband, and he –"
"I didn't tell my husband."
"You must have, because if –"
I cut in. "It's no good, Mrs. Fleming. That's nailed
down. Your husband got that letter Saturday morning. At one o'clock he phoned
Miss Jaquette at her hotel. At half past two he came in person. I was there
with Miss Jaquette. He told us he hadn't brought the five thousand dollars he
had screwed out of X because the bank wasn't open. He said he would bring it
Monday. Today. What time did he get home Saturday night?"
No answer. She was staring at me.
"I know he got home late, because at half past one he
was behind the wall in Central Park with either a rifle or a revolver, shooting
at Miss Jaquette across the street when we got out of a taxicab. I brought Miss
Jaquette home with me, here, so we don't know if he has tried to get in touch
with her today, and we don't care. The point is, you did tell him X's name, and
he did blackmail X, and Isabel knew it. That's settled."
She was clawing, but not at me. Her hands were resting on
her knees, with the fingers curled, and she was scraping at her palms with her
nails. "I can't believe it," she said, so low that I barely heard.
She said louder, "I can't believe it."
"That's hard," I said, "but there's harder.
This isn't nailed down, but it can be. As it stands now, it's what Isabel told
Miss Jaquette. She not only told her about the blackmailing, she also told her
that she was going to tell your husband that she had decided to tell you about
it. When I first heard that, from Miss Jaquette, I wondered why the police were
holding Orrie Cather instead of your husband, but then Miss Jaquette told me
she hadn't told the police about the blackmailing at all. You can ask her why;
I think it was because she didn't realize what it might mean. The police would
have realized it. If she had told them about the blackmailing, all that Isabel
told her, your husband would now be in jail, either along with Orrie Cather or
instead of him, as a murder suspect. And when we tell them about his coming to
see Miss Jaquette Saturday afternoon, and his trying to kill her that night,
that will settle that. They'll get the evidence, for instance his movements the
morning Isabel was killed, and he'll be booked for murder, and tried, and
probably convicted. I told you on the phone that I have found the right man,
and I have. Barry Fleming."
She had stopped the clawing and made fists, and had nodded
three times as I talked – little involuntary nods, without knowing she was
doing it, like the shake of her head when I told her that Orrie Cather might
have been the one who was paying the rent. Now she whispered to herself,
"That's why."
I didn't ask her why what, because I wasn't after evidence.
You want evidence in order to prove something to the District Attorney or a
judge or a jury, and that wasn't the program. Her "why" was probably
something, or things, he had said or done – for instance, where he had said he
had been, but hadn't, the morning Isabel was killed. Whatever it was, it made
it a lot simpler than I had thought it would be. I had expected her to throw at
least three fits, especially after finding the toy in her bag, and there she
was whispering to herself.
Julie said, "You don't have to club her."
That was unnecessary, so I ignored it. What the hell, she
had brought a gun, even if she had had no idea what for. Probably to mow me
down if I called Isabel a doxy. "You may wonder," I told Stella,
"why we wanted to discuss it with you. Since it's practically certain that
he killed Isabel, why didn't we just tell the police? Of course we'll have to,
but I haven't forgotten what you told me that day, that your sister's
reputation was the most important thing in the world. I know nothing about your
relations with your husband, but I thought it was possible you could do
something. You might persuade him to go to the police and admit he killed her,
and give an entirely different reason, some reason that would leave out the
blackmailing and X and everything you don't want to come out. I don't know if
that's possible, but I thought you ought to have the chance. We can't wait
long, not more than a day or two. Say Wednesday morning."
"This is Monday," she said. She was getting her
voice back.
"Right."
"I want that letter."
It had dropped to the floor when she started the clawing,
and I had picked it up and put it on my desk. "It's just a typewritten
copy," I said.
"I want it."
I got it, folded it, and handed it to her. She said,
"The gun."
"When you leave. Whose is it, yours or your
husband's?"
"It's his. He has medals for shooting." She put
the letter in her bag, looked at Julie, and said, "You. It was people like
you."
"Nuts," Julie said. "Anybody can say that to
anybody. You mean I was bad for Isabel. I was a lot better for her than you
were. I really loved her, but what about you? From what she told me, what
–"
That did it. I had relaxed some, and she was so damned
sudden. Her lunge at Julie was so fast that she was on her before I moved, and
again it wasn't my fault that Julie didn't get hurt, at least some good
scratches. Julie jerked her knees up, and with her feet off the floor the
impact toppled her and the chair backward. Stella would have been on top, but
by that time I was there and had her shoulders from behind. I pulled her off
and up and pinned her arms, but she said, "I'm all right," and she
was. The fit had gone as fast as it came. Julie scrambled up, took a swipe at
her hair, and said, "You can club her, for all I care."
Wolfe's voice came, his coldest voice. "Mrs.
Fleming."
We all turned. He was in the doorway. "Mr. Goodwin was
too generous," he said, "giving you until Wednesday morning. Tomorrow
morning at the latest. Get her out, Archie." He headed for his desk.
Stella's eyes followed him to his chair, then she looked
around, evidently for her bag. I picked it up from where she had dropped it,
put the gun in it, said, "I'll give it to you at the door," and
moved, and she came.
At four o'clock Julie was in a
chair by a window in the South Room, deeply interested, if you go by
appearances, in a magazine, and I was standing in the doorway. We weren't
speaking. I had asked her if I should ring the Ten Little Indians to tell them
she wouldn't come this evening, or would she rather do it herself, and she had
said neither one, she was going, and I had said she wasn't. The conversation
had got very outspoken. At one point she had asked me to tell her Saul Panzer's
number so she could call him and ask him to come and take her, since I didn't
want to expose myself. At another point I said that I doubted if more than half
of the customers would leave when they learned that she wouldn't appear. At
still another she asked if I actually meant that she was being held there by
force, against her will, and I said yes. By four o'clock it became apparent
that we weren't going to be speaking.
Then the sound came of the elevator groaning its way up, and
she raised her head to listen. When the groaning stopped and the sound came of
the door opening above, she tossed the magazine on the table, got up, and
walked. As she approached the doorway I politely moved aside, and she passed
through, went to the stairs, and started up. She was either going to appeal to
the owner of the house or help him with the orchids, and as far as I was
concerned it didn't matter which. I went down the two flights to the office,
called the Ten Little Indians, and said that Miss Jaquette had a cold and
wouldn't be able to make it. I didn't say where she was because they might send
someone with flowers and she didn't need any up there.
Being a warder, I couldn't go for a walk, and anyway I had
to catch the news broadcasts every half-hour to learn if there had been any
development worth reporting in a murder case, for instance that a man named
Barry Fleming had been taken to the District Attorney's office for questioning
in connection with the murder of his sister-in-law. There hadn't. I spent the
two hours at the files and my desk, with the germination records. It helps, at
a time like that, to have something to do that needs only one small corner of
your mind, like entering on cards such items as the results to date of a cross between
Odonto-glossum crispo-harryanum x aireworthi or Miltonia
vexillaria x roezli.
When they came down together in the elevator at six o'clock,
I was too busy even to turn my head, but I became aware of a presence near my
right shoulder, and a voice asked, "Can I help?"
So we were speaking. I said, "No, thanks."
"Did you phone?"
"Yeah, you have a cold."
"Has anything happened?"
"Yes. We have made up. Apparently."
"Oh, I never nurse a huff. Anyway, I knew you were
right. I just wanted to see how mean you could get. One thing I could have
said, I could have threatened to call a cop. Evidently the one thing you and
Nero can't stand is for anybody to tell a cop anything. It's been more than
four hours since she left. Damn it, what's she doing?"
That was the second time I had ever heard a woman call him
Nero, but the other time it had been a gag. For Julie it was just natural. If
she stayed two days and two nights in a man's house, and ate with him, and
collaborated with him, and helped him with his orchids, it would have been
silly to call him Mister. If she got the fifty grand and picked a college that
wasn't too far away, I might drop in after she had been there a while to see
what effect she was having. It was a cinch that she would have more effect on
it than it would have on her.
I accepted her offer to help with the germination records.
At the dinner table Wolfe didn't repeat his performance of
the day before. It was no longer necessary to quiz her, and he put her in her
place by discussing the difference between imagination and invention in
literature. She did get a word in now and then. Once when his mouth was full of
sweetbreads she said, "You're talking over my head on purpose. Show me one
thing in one book and ask me if it's imagination or invention and I'll tell you
every time, and let's see you prove I'm wrong." That's no way to talk to a
man who is doing his best to prepare you for college.
While Fritz was pouring after-dinner coffee in the office,
Julie said, "I'd give a brand-new dollar bill to know what she's doing.
What's her number? I'll call her."
"Yeah," I said.
She looked at Wolfe. "You get on my nerves because you
haven't got any. You wouldn't give a rusty nickel to know what she's
doing."
"Why should I?" he growled, and sipped coffee.
It was obvious that they had had enough of each other for a
while, and when we had finished with the coffee I took her down to the
basement. The basement has Fritz's room and bath, a storeroom, and a large room
with a pool table. I had mentioned it to her, and she had said she would like
to learn how to use a cue, and it might take her mind off of Stella Fleming,
not to mention mine. But she didn't get her pool lesson. I had taken the cover
off, and picked a cue for her, and racked the balls, when the doorbell rang. If
I hadn't caught her arm she would have beaten me to the stairs, and she was
right at my heels when I reached the hall and took a look at the front.
"My God," she said, "she hashed it." I
stepped to the office door and told Wolfe, "Cramer." He looked up
from his book and tightened his lips. I told Julie, "Go to the kitchen and
stay there." The doorbell rang. Julie went, but not to the kitchen, to the
alcove, where the hole was. I said, "If you sneeze, I'll boil you in
oil," and went to the front and opened the door.
From the look Cramer gave me, he was set to boil me in oil
whether I sneezed or not. That was all he had for me, the look. By the time I
had his coat hung up he was at the office door, and when I got there he was
already in the red leather chair and talking. He was saying, "… and you
knew Barry Fleming fired those shots, and I want to know how you knew. You also
knew Barry Fleming had killed Isabel Kerr, and I want to know how you knew
that."
Good-by, fifty grand, I thought as I crossed to my desk.
They had Fleming, and ten to one they would open him up, no matter how Stella
had handled him. Maybe they already had.
Wolfe said, "You're fuming, Mr. Cramer."
"You're damn right I am."
"Then you're at a disadvantage. Don't you want to
compose your mind?"
"I want you to answer questions!"
"If I know the answers. You say that I knew that Barry
Fleming killed Isabel Kerr. I remind you that last evening I told you that I
had no evidence that would help to convict anyone of that murder, that I had only
a surmise. I repeat that. I still have no evidence. Have you?"
"Yes."
"Is Barry Fleming in custody?"
"No." Cramer's jaw was set. "Look, Wolfe.
You've got what you wanted. You wanted to spring Cather, and you've worked it.
He's clear. Now. I don't need evidence for Fleming, even if you've got it. I
want some facts. I want to know if Barry Fleming fired those shots at Julie
Jaquette, and if so why."
Wolfe's shoulders went up an eighth of an inch and down
again. "Is that important? Important to you? Since you have him for murder
– or have you? You say he's not in custody. If by any chance you think I have
him here, waiting for you, I haven't. Is it –"
"You haven't got him here. He's dead."
"Indeed. By violence?"
"Yes."
A corner of Wolfe's mouth twisted up. "Mr. Goodwin and
Miss Jaquette and I haven't left the house all day. So if you had any
expectation –"
"Oh, cork it. He shot himself. About three hours ago.
In the temple with a Bristol twenty-two automatic. It was his, he had a permit.
And I want –"
"If you please. At his home?"
"Yes. I –"
"Was a policeman there? Had he been questioned?"
"No. If you –"
"Then how the devil do you know he killed Isabel Kerr?
How do you know anything at all? Don't expect me to clear it up. I have told
you twice, I have no evidence –"
"Goddammit, I don't need evidence. Not about Isabel
Kerr. If you want it about him, okay. When he got home this afternoon, he and
his wife had a talk, she says, and he wrote something and signed it. She went
out to buy some groceries and was gone about half an hour and when she went
back he was dead. How do I know he killed Isabel Kerr? She had it, what he
wrote and signed."
He got a piece of folded paper from his breast pocket.
"It has been checked with his handwriting, but the laboratory will verify
it." He unfolded it. "It's his printed letterhead. Dated today."
He read:
"To Whom It May Concern:
I hereby state and acknowledge that on Saturday, January 29,
1966, I struck my sister-in-law, Isabel Kerr, on the head with an ashtray and
killed her. It was not premeditated. I did it in an uncontrollable frenzy of
anger and resentment. The resentment had been festering for three years. She
had been living in great luxury and my wife and I were paying for it. All of my
savings were gone, and with my small salary I would soon be at the end of my
rope, but she would not listen to reason, and my wife was so devoted to her
that she would not do what had to be done. That Saturday morning I tried once
more to persuade Isabel, but could not, and I lost control of myself and hit
her. I did not mean to kill her, but I do not expect forgiveness, even from my
wife. My wife insists that I must write this so that she will have evidence of
the circumstances of Isabel's death. She has given me no promises and I do not
know what she will do with it.
Barry Fleming"
Cramer folded it and returned it to his pocket.
"Naturally, the first thing you'll say, and I said, is that he doesn't say
he's going to kill himself. No good-by. But they often don't. The gun was there
on the floor, and the bullet went through his right temple at the right angle.
She talked a little to the precinct man, but now she's out, completely out,
under sedation. Of course we'll get at her later, but I'm not expecting much.
I'm spilling this to you because it settles the Kerr thing and you might as
well know it, but it doesn't settle everything. The shots that were fired at
Julie Jaquette. You told me yesterday that you didn't know who fired
them."
"I didn't. I still don't."
"That's a goddam lie."
"I lie only when I must. Now it isn't necessary. I told
you yesterday that I suspected there was a connection between the murder of
Isabel Kerr and the shots fired at Miss Jaquette, that I could guess, but I
didn't know." Wolfe turned a hand over. "Mr. Cramer. There are
certain details that I don't intend to divulge, and anyway, you don't need them
now and would have no use for them. The murder is solved, and the culprit is
dead. But not only are you a policeman with duties, you are also a man with the
itch of curiosity, and furthermore I gall you. So I tell you this: I learned,
no matter how, who was supplying the money for Isabel Kerr's luxurious way of
life, and certain facts about it, and that led me to my surmise that Barry
Fleming had killed her. I also learned, again no matter how, that Barry Fleming
feared that Miss Jaquette would disclose certain facts which he thought she had
got from Isabel Kerr, and therefore she was in danger and should be protected.
I did not know he fired the shots; I don't know it now. As for
lying, I give you my word of honor that what I have just told you is completely
true. Miss Jaquette is still here, and you may see her if you have time to
waste; I presume she would chaff you as she did yesterday."
Cramer looked at me. He knew from experience that when Wolfe
gave his word of honor he meant it. He squinted at me, frowning, until I
wondered if my tie was crooked. "I thought you did everything right,"
he said. "Always cocky. How much did it miss her, with you standing there,
about a foot?"
What I would have liked to do you don't do to a cop, especially
an inspector. All I could do was squint back at him. He got to his feet and
looked down at Wolfe. "I'm still curious," he said. "You learned
a lot, and of course you learned it from Cather. Do you realize that if he
hadn't buttoned his lip, if he had told us what he told you, all of it, he
would have been out before now, and Fleming would be in and still alive? Sure
you realize it. But you had to do it. You had to show once more how
sharp you are. I wish to God – oh, what's the use."
He turned and started for the door, but short of it he
stopped and wheeled. "Don't you think you ought to send flowers to his
funeral?"
I would have gone to hold his coat if he hadn't made that
crack. It had missed her by a yard, not a foot. When I heard the front door
close, I went to the hall for a look. He was out. I turned and called Julie,
and she came around the alcove corner. There was a funny look on her face, as
if she was trying to say the alphabet backward and didn't know how to start.
She stopped and fastened the look on me, and I took her arm and steered her
into the office. She went to the red leather chair, sank into it, and told
Wolfe, "You knew that would happen. You knew it."
He scowled at her. "I did not. I am not a Chaldean. It
was Archie, not I, who gave her the idea. 'Give an entirely different reason'
was his suggestion, and she seized it. Brilliantly. Archie. What exactly did I
say to X?"
"You said, quote, 'As for Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, the
best I could possibly do would be to create a situation which would make it
highly unlikely that they would ever disclose it.' End quote. And that he would
be the judge of the situation."
"I called her a beetle," Julie said. "My God,
she must be … first her sister, and now her husband. What are you doing,
Archie?"
I had got a quarter from my pocket and tossed it up.
"I'm deciding something that can't be decided any other way." I bent
over for a look. "Tails. She shot him."
One day last week I got a
letter:
Dear Archie –
Thanks for telling me about Orrie Cather marrying that
airline girl. You know what I think of that but I wish them well, I really do.
Why not? I say that to people sometimes, I wish you well, and you ought to see
them stare.
In a class one day last week we were supposed to say
something about imagination and invention and I cleaned it up. I said nearly
everything Nero said that day at dinner and it made their eyes pop. They don't
know any better. I'm not sure anybody here knows any better about anything, but
I'm giving it a whirl and we'll see. Somebody here must know something I want
to know but I haven't seen any sign of it yet. How is Fritz? Tell him I can
still taste that hedgehog omelet. And the sauce with the sweetbreads.
Write if you want to. I wish you well.
J
Death of A Doxy
REX STOUT
Death of a Doxy
A NERO WOLFE MYSTERY
Introduction by Sandra West Prowell
BANTAM BOOKS
NEW YORK • TORONTO • LONDON • SYDNEY • AUCKLAND
DEATH OF A DOXY
A Bantam Crime Line Book / published by arrangement with
Viking Penguin
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Viking edition published August 1966
Bantam edition / August 1967
Bantam reissue edition / October 1995
Crime Line and the portrayal of a boxed "cl" are
trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1966 by Rex Stout.
Cover art copyright © 1995 by Tom Hallman.
Introduction copyright © 1995 by Sandra West Prowell.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: Bantam
Books.
ISBN 0-553-27606-9
Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada
Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of
Random House, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam
Books" and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540
Broadway, New York, New York 10036.
OPM 20 19 18 17
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
The world is much changed since
the first Nero Wolfe mystery was published in 1934. We recovered from the Great
Depression, fought a World War, eradicated polio, engaged in another, colder
war, invented rock music, and put a man on the moon. We became hip, struggled
to include the disenfranchised, marched for peace, and learned, painfully, that
we – and our leaders – sometimes had feet of clay. It is remarkable that for
four decades Rex Stout was able to craft and sustain his series in the midst of
this whirlwind of change, his readership growing each year. Even after Stout's
death in 1975 readers haunted bookstores in hopes of a continuation of the
chronicles of those inhabiting the old brownstone on West Thirty-fifth Street.
The appeal is broader than mere nostalgia. Stout's perception of human nature
(and, by extension, Wolfe's) is closer to the mark at times than all our pop
psychology. The plots are serpentine enough for the most cerebral reader. And
there is action when action is required, not gratuitous but, as Wolfe would
say, satisfactory.
Granted, some of Archie's expressions now seem a little
dated; no one refers to women as doxies anymore. (In fact, the lines between those
women and us have faded and all but disappeared.) If the series is to be
criticized at all, it seems most likely that it would, in our atmosphere of
political correctness, be accused of blatant sexism. Wolfe's attitude toward
women, after all, is quite clear. He is uncomfortable with them. He doesn't
trust them: "When [women] stick to the vocations for which they are best
adapted, such as chicanery, sophistry, self-advertisement, cajolery,
mystification, and incubation, they are sometimes superb creatures." Yet,
and this is fascinating, Wolfe's reaction to Julie Jaquette in Death of a
Doxy demonstrates anything but sexism.
Death of a Doxy is, on the one hand, classic Nero
Wolfe. Orrie Cather, occasional legman for the great detective, is in hot
water. Orrie is being held for the murder of Isabel Kerr, a showgirl he has
been seeing, and Wolfe, viewing it as a personal obligation, takes the case,
albeit reluctantly. The water is muddied by evidence that the woman was
attempting to blackmail Orrie with proof of their trysts. Additionally,
Isabel's sister, Stella Fleming, seems more interested in avoiding scandal than
in seeing her sister's killer brought to justice.
On the other hand, it is with Julie Jaquette, Isabel's best
friend, that we observe a rare phenomenon. At the conclusion of their initial
interview, Wolfe says, "I have the impression that your opinion of our
fellow beings and their qualities is somewhat similar to mine." And then
he does something almost unprecedented in the Stout oeuvre: "He got to his
feet. He almost never stands for comers or goers, male or female. And he
actually repeated it. 'I wish you well, madam.'" From Wolfe, this is more
than a compliment; it is a lavish tribute. Later, when Julie's life is
threatened and she takes refuge in the old brownstone, she spends two hours
with Wolfe in the plant rooms among the orchids. Need it be said that Stout is
subtle, that orchids have long been held as a symbol of sexuality, that the
image of Wolfe and Julie Jaquette in the hot, humid plant rooms for two hours
with all that rich dark soil and all those orchids is particularly evocative?
And when she comes down she is calling him Nero! Of course, nothing
happened, because later Julie complains to Wolfe, "You get on my nerves
because you haven't got any." Or did it happen on a purely subliminal
level, the kind of seduction, after all, to which Wolfe would be most
susceptible? And did he later rebuff her? This is not the misogynistic Nero
Wolfe we've come to know and love.
It is clear that what Nero Wolfe is afraid of concerning
women is in himself. Wolfe says in Over My Dead Body, "I used to be
idiotically romantic. I still am, but I've got it in hand." And later in
the same book, "I have skedaddled, physically, once in my life, from one
person, and that was a Montenegrin woman." In Too Many Cooks he
says, "Not like women? They are astounding and successful animals. For
reasons of convenience, I merely preserve an appearance of immunity which I
developed some years ago under the pressure of necessity." If Wolfe has
issues with members of the opposite sex, isn't he, in this regard at least,
little different from most of us? That he takes his fear to the extreme of an
aversion is merely consistent with his grandiose nature, and that he can state
the reasons for this aversion strongly and literately is not, de facto, sexism.
We, however, from our superior perspective of 1995 enlightenment, can recognize
his foolish position for what it is, for we ourselves are above it, right?
Speak up, I can't hear you!
In any event, if you've read Death of a Doxy before,
welcome back. If not, you're in for a treat. As Nero says, I wish you well.
– Sandra West Prowell
I stood and sent my eyes around.
It's just routine, when leaving a place where you aren't supposed to be, to
consider if and where you have touched things, but that time it went beyond
mere routine. I made certain. There were plenty of things in the room – fancy
chairs, a marble fireplace without a fire, a de luxe television console, a
coffee table in front of a big couch with a collection of magazines, and so
forth. Deciding I had touched nothing, I turned and stepped back into the
bedroom. Nearly everything there was too soft to take a fingerprint – the wall-to-wall
carpet, the pink coverlet on the king-size bed, the upholstered chairs, the
pink satin fronts on the three pieces of furniture. I crossed for another look
at the body of a woman on the floor a couple of feet from the bed, on its back
with the legs spread out and one arm bent. I hadn't had to touch it to check
that it was just a body or to see the big dent in the skull, but was there one
chance in a million that I had put fingers on the heavy marble ashtray lying
there? The butts and ashes that had been in it were scattered around, and it
was a good bet that it had made the dent in the skull. I shook my head; I
couldn't possibly have been such an ape.
I left. Of course I had to use my handkerchief on the
doorknob, inside and outside, and I used a knuckle on the button that summoned
the do-it-yourself elevator, and also, in the elevator, on the 1 button. I
dabbed the 4 button, which I had pushed coming in, with my handkerchief. There
was no one in the little lobby down below, and since I had been gloved when I
entered I didn't have to bother about the knobs of the outside door. As I
headed west, toward Lexington Avenue, I turned up my overcoat collar and put my
gloves on. It was the coldest day of the winter, with a gusty wind.
I don't try to do any hard thinking while I'm walking, you
bump into people, but anyway it didn't even call for guessing, let alone
thinking. What was needed was asking, and the person to ask lived on the second
floor of a walkup on 52nd Street between Eighth and Ninth Avenues. Since this
was 39th Street, thirteen short blocks up and four long blocks crosstown. My
watch said 4:36. Getting a taxi at that time of day is a career, and there was
no hurry. He was on a job. I walked.
It was one minute to five when I entered a phone booth in a
bar and grill on Eighth Avenue and dialed a number. When Fritz answered I asked
him to buzz the plant rooms, and after a wait a growl came: "Yes?"
"Me," I said. "I've run into a snag on this
personal errand and I don't know when I'll be back. Probably not in time for
dinner."
"Are you in trouble?"
"No."
"Can I reach you if a need arises?"
"No."
"Very well." He hung up.
He was being tolerant because I was on a personal errand,
none of his business. He hates to be bothered when he's up with the orchids,
and if the errand had been for him he would have said I should have told Fritz.
Outside again, half a block west, cold-faced but with the
blood going good, I entered a vestibule and pushed the button marked Cather.
After two more pushes there was still no click – as expected. It was too damn
cold to hang around, so I headed back for Eighth Avenue, with a notion about
five or six fingers of bourbon, but with me the time for bourbon is when I'm
going to let down, not when I have to pick up, so I went to a drugstore counter
instead and got coffee.
When the coffee was down I went to the booth and dialed a
number, hung up after ten rings with no answer, returned to the counter, and
bought a glass of milk. Another trip to the booth; still no answer, and I
ordered a corned beef on rye and coffee. There is never any rye bread in the kitchen
of the old brownstone on West 35th Street. It was twenty minutes past six, on
my fifth try at the phone, after the second piece of pumpkin pie and the fourth
cup of coffee, when a voice said hello.
"Orrie? Archie. You alone?"
"Sure, I'm always alone. Did you go?"
"Yeah. I –"
"What'd you get?"
"I'd rather show you. Expect me in two minutes."
"What the hell, I'll come –"
"I'm in the neighborhood. Two minutes." I hung up.
I didn't stop to put on my overcoat and gloves. Two minutes
of near-zero wind is a good test of your staying power. When I pushed the
button in the vestibule the click came quick, and when I entered and started up
the stairs Orrie called down from the top, "Hell, I could have come."
Once Nero Wolfe, showing off, said to me, "Vultus
est index animi," and I said, "That's not Greek," and he
said, "A Latin proverb. The face is the index of the mind." It
depends on whose face and whose mind. Across from you at the poker table, Saul
Panzer's face is an index of absolutely nothing. But you keep on trying, and I
was still at it on Orrie Cather's face after he showed me in and took my hat
and coat and we sat. I sat and eyed him until he demanded, "Can't you
place me?"
I said, "Vultus est index animi."
"Good," he said. "I've often wondered. What the
hell's eating you?"
"Just curiosity. Is it possible that you're playing
me?"
"For God's sake. Playing you how? For what?"
"I wish I knew." I crossed my legs. "Okay,
I'll report. I followed the script. I arrived at a quarter past four on the
dot, pushed the button several times, got no reaction as expected, used the key
you gave me, took the elevator to the fourth floor, used the other key, and
entered. No one in the living room, and I went to the bedroom. I don't say
someone was there, because properly speaking a corpse is not someone. It was on
the floor not far from the bed. I had never seen Isabel Kerr or a picture of
her, but I suppose it had been her. A pink thing with lace and pink slippers,
no stockings. A couple of –"
"You're saying she was dead?"
"Don't interrupt. A couple of inches over five feet,
hundred and ten pounds, well-designed oval face, blue eyes, lots of clover-blossom-honey
hair, small ears close –"
"By God. By God."
"Her?"
"Yes."
"Stop interrupting. Mr. Wolfe never does. I didn't have
to touch her to check. I mean it. There was a bruise on the forehead and
a big dent in the skull, two inches above and back of the left ear. On the
floor, three feet from her right shoulder, was a marble ashtray which looked
heavy enough to dent a thicker skull than hers probably was. There were purple
spots on an arm and a leg. Cadaveric lividities to you. Her forehead was good
and cold, and –"
"You said you didn't touch her."
"I touch with my fingers. I don't call applying a wrist
to a forehead or a leg touching. The leg was cold too. It had been a corpse for
at least five hours and probably more. The ashtray had been wiped. There were
butts and ashes on the carpet but no particles on the tray. I was in there a
total of about six minutes. The idea of staying to look for things didn't
appeal to me." I put a hand in a pocket and got something. "Here are
your keys."
He didn't see them. His jaw was clamped. He unclamped it to
say, "Playing you. For God's sake. Playing you."
"Naturally I'm curious."
He got up and went through a doorway. I tossed the keys onto
a table by a window and looked around. It was a good-sized room with three
windows, with furniture that would do all right for a bachelor who wasn't fussy.
The only light was from a pair of bulbs in a wall bracket, but there was a lamp
by an easy chair that wasn't turned on. Orrie came back with a bottle and two
glasses and offered me one, but I said no thanks, I had just dined. He put one
glass down and poured in the other, took a healthy gulp, made a face, and sat
down.
"Playing you," he said. "Nuts. Now you ask me
where I've been since eight o'clock this morning and can I prove it."
I shook my head. "Since I'm merely curious, that would
be stretching it. If I wanted to be nasty I would have opened up by barking at
you something like, 'Why did you leave the ashtray on the floor?' Of course we
do have to consider facts, such as the fact that I may be the only one besides
you who knows that her being dead pulls a thorn for you. A bad thorn in deep.
So of course I'm curious about one detail. Did you kill her?"
"No. My God, Archie. Am I a sap?"
"No. You're no mental giant, but you're not a sap. It
would be nice if you could sell me. After all, you pulled me in, you knew I was
going there today. It would be extra nice if you were covered."
"I'm not covered." He was staring at me but
possibly not seeing me. He took a mouthful of whiskey and swallowed it twice.
"As I told you, I'm on a job for Bascom. I was out at eight and picked up
a subject a little before nine and was on him all day. It was –"
"Single tail?"
"Yes. Just routine. From nine-nineteen until twelve-thirty-five
I was in the lobby of an office building."
"No company?"
"No."
"Then I'm still curious. You would be if we traded
spots, you know damn well you would, but that's all I am, just curious. Do you
want to ask me anything?"
"Yes, I do. You had gloves and keys, I don't mean mine.
You knew there might be something there. Why didn't you take a quick look?"
I grinned at him. "You don't mean that."
"The hell I don't."
I nodded. "Now and then you are a sap." I
stood up. "As you know, Orrie, and as I know, you think it would be fine
if you had my job. That's all right, there's nothing wrong with ambition. But
what if you had got too ambitious? What if you knew there was nothing
there to point to you? What if you had arranged for one man, me, to go there at
a quarter past four, and for another man, maybe a cop on an anonymous tip, to
arrive a few minutes later? It wouldn't have hooked me for murder, since the ME
would set the time, but I would have the keys on me, not only yours, and the
rubber gloves, and that would have been good for at least a couple of years. Of
course I didn't really believe it, but being the nervous type –"
"Balls." He was staying put, his head tilted back.
"What are you going to do?"
I looked at my wrist. "Dinner will be half over, and
anyway I ate. I'm going home and eat two helpings of crиme Gйnoise. You
crush eight homemade macaroons and soak them in half a cup of brandy. Put two
cups of rich milk, half a cup of sugar, and the finely cut rind of a small
orange into –"
"So clown it!" he yelled. "Are you going to
tell Wolfe?"
"I'd rather not."
"Are you?"
"As it stands now, no."
"Or Saul or Fred?"
"No. Nor Cramer nor J. Edgar Hoover." I went to
the couch for my hat and coat. "Don't do anything you wouldn't expect me
to do. You know what doctors call professional courtesy?"
"Yeah."
"I sincerely hope you won't need any."
I went.
The New York Times knows
how to put things. "It does not appear that Miss Kerr was employed
anywhere or engaged in any regular activity." You can't beat that, leaving
it wide open for all types of minds.
At the little table in the kitchen where I eat breakfast, with
the Times on the rack facing me, I poured Puerto Rico molasses on a
buckwheat cake and told Fritz, "It would be a good murder to work on.
Walking distance."
At the big table inspecting dried mushrooms, with an eye on
me to know when to start the next cake, he shook his head and said, "No
murder is good to work on. When it's a murder the doorbell scares me and I
never know if you'll come back alive."
I told him he was just blowing, I had yet to see him scared,
forked a bite of cake and molasses, and Creole sausage, and started the Times
piece again. I knew a lot more than it did, which suited me fine. The only
items that were news to me were that the body had been discovered by Isabel
Kerr's sister Stella, that Stella was the wife of Barry Fleming, who taught
mathematics at the Henry Hudson High School, that Stella had gone to the
apartment a little before seven o'clock Saturday evening – less than three
hours after I left – that tentatively Isabel had died between eight o'clock and
noon, that Stella wouldn't talk to reporters, and that the police and the
District Attorney's office had begun a thorough investigation. The picture of
Isabel had probably been dug up in the files of a theatrical agent; she had a
chorus-girl smile. The one of Stella had been snapped as a cop had escorted her
across the sidewalk.
So far, so good. But if the errand I had tackled for Orrie
had been on the level, if he hadn't been playing me, and I didn't really think
he had, there would be fur flying soon, and when I finished breakfast and went
into the office I turned the radio on. Ten-o'clock news, nothing. When Wolfe
came down from the plant rooms at eleven o'clock the radio was still on, and
when he had crossed to his desk and settled his bulk in the only chair that
holds it to suit him, he scowled at the radio and then at me and demanded,
"Is there an urgency?"
"Yes, sir," I said. "Will the Braves play in
Milwaukee or in Atlanta? Also it's Sunday, the day of rest."
"I thought you had an engagement."
"It's for one o'clock, and I may skip it. The lunch
will be all right, but then a man is going to read poetry."
"Whose poetry?"
"His."
"Pfui."
"Sure. I think Miss Rowan knew he was hungry and merely
wanted to feed him, but then he said he would do her and her friends a big
favor and she was stuck. He calls it an epithon because it's an epic and it
takes hours."
A corner of his mouth was up an eight of an inch. "Serves
you right."
"Yeah. What she did in the car that night was in the
line of duty, but you'll never forgive her. I may not go."
He flipped a hand. "You will." He went at his copy
of the Sunday Times. We get three, a total of twenty pounds – one for
him, one for me, and one for Fritz.
When the noon news still had nothing new about murder, I
decided it would be silly to sit around all afternoon rassling with the Times,
holding my breath for the radio every half-hour, and mounted the two flights to
my room. Having already shaved, I had only to change to a clean shirt and one
of my four best suits. Downstairs again, I looked in at the kitchen and the
office to say I was going. Outside, I headed for the garage on Tenth Avenue
where we keep the Heron which Wolfe owns and I drive. On Sundays it is often
possible to find a spot to put a car.
At twenty minutes past four I was in a big roomy chair in
the living room of Lily Rowan's penthouse on top of a building on 63rd Street,
leaning back with my eyes closed, trying to decide which one I would rather
have, Willie Mays or Sandy Koufax, on my team. The poet, a long-faced specimen
with whiskers, who didn't look hungry, but of course had recently had a good
meal, was still going strong, but I had stopped hearing him an hour back. It
was just a background noise. At a poke on my shoulder I opened my eyes, and Mimi,
the maid, was there. She moved her lips to say "Telephone" without
saying it. I pulled myself up and to my feet, went to a door at the corner of
the room and on through, crossed to the desk where Lily makes out checks for
causes which may be worthy, picked up the phone, and told it, "This is
Archie Goodwin."
Wolfe's voice said, "I presume you read about the
murder of a woman named Isabel Kerr."
I said yes.
"So did I. Mr. Parker is here. He received a telephone
call from Orrie Cather, asking him to come to the police station on Twentieth
Street, and he went. Orrie is in custody as a material witness. He gave Mr.
Parker some information, not much, and told him to consult you. Why?"
"Because. Parker's still there?"
"Yes."
"I'll be there in twenty minutes."
I hung up, went to the kitchen and told Mimi to tell Lily,
went to the foyer for my coat and hat, let myself out, and summoned the
elevator. The car was around the corner on Madison Avenue. When I was in it and
going, turning to head west, I told my mind it might as well go right on with
Willie Mays and Sandy Koufax. There was absolutely nothing else for it to do,
and wouldn't be until I had heard Parker. As I turned into the garage I decided
definitely for Willie Mays. Koufax's arm was too much of a gamble. So I felt I
had accomplished something as I walked to the old brownstone, mounted the
stoop, let myself in, ditched my coat and hat, and went to the office.
Nathaniel Parker, the lawyer Wolfe uses when he has to, was
in the red leather chair with a bottle of scotch, one of soda, a bowl of ice,
and a glass on the stand at his elbow. Wolfe was at his desk, with beer. Since
he skips his afternoon session in the plant rooms on Sundays, that is his
biggest beer day. I hadn't seen Parker for a couple of months, and he rose to
shake hands. I told Wolfe, "This is going to be worse than listening to
poetry," went to my desk, whirled my chair around, sat, and told Parker,
"If you're going to spring him I'd rather wait till I see him."
"It would be a long wait," Parker said. "I
think they'll keep him. The way they look and talk."
"A murder charge?"
"Not yet, but I think it soon will be. Perhaps
tomorrow."
Wolfe growled at me, "Did he kill that woman? Was that
your personal errand yesterday?"
"Let's keep it cool," I suggested. "If he
said to consult me, I have to know exactly how he said it." To Parker:
"If you don't mind?"
"Certainly." The lawyer took a sip and put the
glass down. "He didn't say much. He had refused to answer any questions,
any at all, until he saw me. Of course he knows the rules. But also he wouldn't
open up with me. He wouldn't even tell me if he had known the woman or had any
connection with her. He told me just three things. One, he hadn't killed her
and hadn't been near her or her apartment at any time yesterday. Two, where he had
been yesterday. Three, I should see you, and you should decide what to tell me.
When I left, it was understood that he would tell them of his whereabouts and
movements yesterday and stand mute on everything else, and that I would see him
tomorrow, after I had talked with you."
"You're acting for him?"
"I agreed to, yes. Provisionally until I had seen
you."
"It's up to me?"
"Yes. He said to tell you that he wants you to decide
how to handle it."
"That's just dandy. To be trusted like that, I do
appreciate it. Excuse me while I rub my nose." I rubbed it with a
fingertip, my eyes focused on the big globe over by the bookshelves but not
seeing it. It didn't take long because it was really quite simple; it was all
or nothing, and it didn't matter if Parker got it now or tomorrow.
I stood up. "I thought you played bridge on winter
Sundays."
"I do. The call from Cather intruded."
"Then I suggest that you go back and resume. I have
decided how to handle it. I'm going to report to Mr. Wolfe. I'd rather have him
glare at me while I'm telling him than while I'm telling you. I'll tell you
later, or he will, say tomorrow morning. If you prefer, you can wait in the
front room, but it will take a while."
Wolfe, his lips pressed so tight he didn't have any mouth,
reached for a bottle and poured beer. Parker looked at him, picked up his glass
and emptied it, put the glass down, rose, looked at me, and said, "You
might tell me one thing, to be regarded as a privileged communication, did he
kill her?"
"Even granting that I know," I said, "it
wouldn't be privileged. I'm not your client."
I headed for the hall, but out by the rack I stood and held
his coat for a couple of minutes while he exchanged words with Wolfe. Finally
he came, took his time getting his scarf adjusted, his overcoat buttoned, and
his gloves on, and pulled his shoulders in as a gust hit him when he crossed
the sill. When I re-entered the office Wolfe had opened his current book, Invitation
to an Inquest, by Walter and Miriam Schneir. That was childish. He was
rubbing it in that his Sunday-afternoon reading had been ruined, first by Orrie
and now by me. I said as I sat, "If you're in the middle of a chapter
there's no rush."
He made a noise, put the book down, and glared.
"Friday afternoon," I said, "day before
yesterday, Orrie phoned and asked me to meet him that evening. You may remember
that I wasn't here to help with the capon Souvaroff, which I regretted. I met
Orrie at seven o'clock at Giordano's, a restaurant on West Thirty-ninth Street.
I now –"
"Don't cram it," he snapped.
"I won't. I now report what he told me. He was up a
stump. He was going to marry a girl named Jill Hardy, an airline stewardess. He
showed me a picture of her. They had set a date early in May, when she would
have a vacation coming. But it had hit a snag. Another girl, by name Isabel
Kerr, was objecting. She had the idea of marrying Orrie herself, and also the
idea that he was, or would be, the father of the baby she expected to have in
about seven months. She intended to make an issue of it, in public if necessary.
She said she had in her possession, presumably in a locked drawer in her
apartment, or possibly stashed somewhere, certain objects she could use. One of
the objects was his private investigator's license, which she had lifted from
his pocket one night about a month ago. Also some pictures and letters, and
perhaps other items that Orrie didn't know about. The big point wasn't that she
could hook him, but that she could queer him with Jill Hardy."
Wolfe grunted. "She couldn't force him to marry her.
Why marry at all?"
"Sure. That's your slant, but it wasn't Orrie's. He
wanted the objects, and he was pretty sure they were in the apartment. He knew
she spent two or three afternoons a week at the movies, and nearly always
Saturday afternoons. He had keys. The idea was that I was to go there the next
day, Saturday, now yesterday, at a quarter past four, ring the bell, get no
response, go in and up, and look around. I didn't care for it much. Such a
chore for Saul or Fred, of course, but while I have nothing against Orrie, I
wouldn't borrow his socks. He pointed out that I wouldn't be out on a limb, no
matter what. If she was there and answered the bell I would bow out. Almost
certainly she wouldn't come before I left, but if she or anyone did I could
just be polite; I hadn't broken and entered, I had used keys which she had
given him."
"So you went," Wolfe growled.
"Don't rush me. I told him nothing doing unless I had
the whole picture. It took a while and a lot of questions, but I had to know if
Isabel Kerr was something hot, like the runaway daughter of an ambassador. No.
She had formerly been a showgirl, but three years ago had been rescued and
installed in the nest she was still occupying. The toughest detail to get was
the name of the rescuer. Orrie claimed he didn't know, but of course he did,
and I insisted. His name is Avery Ballou, president of the Federal Holding
Corporation. Apparently Isabel had some quality that he enjoyed, for he was
still paying the rent and the grocery bill and was paying her visits two or
three times a week, evenings. But she knew that kind of setup never lasts
forever, and anyway she wanted Orrie. They had met somewhere, that's irrelevant
and immaterial, about a year ago, and she had been – well, feeding him some of
Avery Ballou's groceries, and she had decided she had to have him for keeps. I
accepted that. Women don't fall for Orrie quite as fast and furious as he
thinks they do, but he is no baboon, and female eyes do sometimes fasten on
him."
"So you went."
"Yes. I am not dodging, but I mention that it seemed
advisable. While he is no Saul Panzer, for years he has come in very handy for
you – okay, for us. He has done a lot of pretty good chores and has never
skunked as far as we know. So I went, yesterday afternoon, with gloves and an
assortment of keys, arriving at exactly four-fifteen. There was no answer to my
ring, and I went in and up. It's one of those remodeled four-story houses, self-service
elevator, no doorman or hallman, and I wasn't seen. Since you have read the
piece in the Times, you know what I found. I didn't stay to use the
gloves or keys; I don't think Orrie rated that. Anyway, even if I found some
objects, granting they were there, it was a cinch they would find his prints,
since he had been there for hours only three days ago. So I left."
"Seen?"
"No. I phoned you not to expect me for dinner, and
–"
"That was at five o'clock."
Just like him. He never seems to notice but he knows. I
nodded. "Yeah. I had walked for nearly half an hour, to Orrie's address,
or near it. I waited around until he came, saw him in his apartment and told
him, and returned his keys. I asked him if he killed her, and he said no. He
was on a tailing job for Bascom all day but can't prove it. For the important
time, eight o'clock to noon, he's wide open. He wanted to know why I didn't stay
for a look. I poked him a little, not much, and came home and ate two helpings
of crиme Gйnoise. Of course I knew he would be tagged – if nothing else,
his prints. That was the urgency on the radio this morning."
"You should have told me."
"What good would it have done? It would only have
spoiled the day for you."
"So you went to hear a man read poetry."
I cocked my head. "Look," I said, "you might
as well forget me. You're sore and want a target, but I'm not it. Of course, if
you forget Orrie too, there is no target and you can go back to your
book."
He looked at the book, picked it up, and put it down again.
He picked up his glass, frowned at it because the head was gone, drank it
anyway, to the bottom, returned the glass to the tray, and pushed the tray
aside. "Orrie," he said. "Confound him. The question is, did he
kill her? If he did, the problem is Mr. Parker's and can be left to him. If he
didn't, we are –"
The phone rang, and I swiveled and got it. "Nero
Wolfe's resi –"
"Lon, Archie. I'm surprised you're there."
"Shouldn't I be?"
"Of course not. With your sidekick in the jug?"
"You're ahead of me. I spent the afternoon at a poetry
reading and just got here."
"You're saying you didn't know that Orrie Cather has
been pulled in on the Isabel Kerr murder?"
"Really?"
"Yep, really. If it would help to have something in
print, I'm always available. I don't expect you to show me Wolfe's hole card,
but if there's some little item …"
"Sure. Certainly. Of course. The minute I have
something hot, or even warm, I'll ring you. Right now I'm busy. I'm telling Mr.
Wolfe about a beautiful poem a man read."
"I'll bet you are. Just enough for a paragraph?"
"At the moment, no. Not on Sunday. Thanks for
calling."
I hung up, swiveled, and told Wolfe, "Lon Cohen
fishing, probably from home, since it's Sunday. An item in the Gazette tomorrow
will start: 'Orrie Cather, a private detective, trusted assistant of Nero
Wolfe, is being held as a material witness in connection with the murder of
Isabel Kerr. Mr. Cather, a free-lance operative, has been an important factor
in the spectacular success of many of Nero Wolfe's famous cases. Archie
Goodwin, who is merely Nero Wolfe's errand boy, told –'"
"Shut up!"
I hunched my shoulders and raised my hands, palms up.
He slapped his desk blotter so hard the bottle trembled, and
bellowed, "Did he kill her?"
I said firmly, "I pass."
"That won't do. When you were with him Friday evening
was he planning murder? When you saw him yesterday was he bearing guilt?"
"I still pass. As for Friday evening, he may not have
planned it. He may have gone there yesterday morning, no telling why, and flapped.
As for yesterday afternoon, what do you mean, bearing guilt? Murderers have sat
here in this room and looked you in the eye and answered your questions, and
when they left you were still guessing. Now I'm guessing. Of course you want a
verdict, but I haven't got it."
"You like to give odds. What are the odds?"
"For a bet, even money, and I'll take either end.
That's ignoring my personal preference. I would prefer it that he didn't. I
would rather not see a headline Nero Wolfe's assistant convicted of homicide
– and so would you. People who read only headlines might think it was me."
"You refuse to resolve it."
"I do."
"Then get Saul and Fred here as soon as possible."
At a quarter to ten Wolfe was
making a speech. Saul Panzer, five feet seven, 145 pounds, big nose and flat
ears, hair the color of rust but not rusty, was in the red leather chair with a
bottle of Montrachet 1958 on the stand and a glass with a stem in his hand.
Fred Durkin, five feet ten, 190 pounds, bald and burly, was on one of the
yellow chairs facing Wolfe's desk, with a bottle of Canadian and a pitcher of
water handy. He hadn't touched the water. I had no refreshment. Fritz had been
gone since early afternoon on his own affairs, and Wolfe and I had helped
ourselves around seven o'clock, concentrating mainly on a block of headcheese.
I have spent a total of at least ten hours watching Fritz make headcheese,
trying to find out why it is so much better than any other I have ever tasted,
including what my mother used to make out in Ohio, but finally I gave up. It
could be the way he holds the spoon when he skims.
Saul and Fred had been thoroughly briefed on the situation,
except for one item, the name of the man who had rescued Isabel Kerr from show
business. Orrie wouldn't have liked that, but he had told Parker that he wanted
me to decide how to handle it, and if they were going to vote they had to know
the facts. The name of the fairy godfather didn't matter. When they had asked a
few questions and had been answered, Wolfe started his speech.
"It is not merely a question," he said, "of
devising an effective defense. If Orrie killed that woman to prevent her from
interfering with his private plans, I am not obliged to thwart the agents of
justice and neither are you. Sympathy with misfortune, certainly, but not
contravention of Nemesis. Mr. Parker is a competent lawyer, and it can be left
to him. But if he didn't kill her I have an obligation I can't ignore. I am
constrained not only by his long association with me but also by my self-esteem.
You must know that I have no affection for him; he has frequently vexed me; he
has not the dignity of a man who has found his place and occupies it, as you
have, Fred; nor the integrity of one who knows his superiority but restricts it
to areas that are acceptable to him, as you have, Saul. But if he didn't kill
that woman, I intend to deliver him."
He turned a palm up. "The question is, did he? Having
no firm opinion of my own, and no basis for one, I asked Archie. I thought he
would at least have odds, one way or the other. He always has odds, but he
failed me. He said that for a bet it was even money. Archie? That was four
hours ago. Now?"
I shook my head. "I still pass. Damn it, go ahead and
start something and see what we get!"
"No. We would be committed and make mistakes. Fred. You
have known Orrie longer than I have. The situation has been fully described to
you. What do you say?"
"Jesus," Fred said.
"That doesn't help. He would merely tell him to go and
sin no more. Did he kill her?"
Fred put his glass down and shifted in his chair. He looked
at Saul, then at me, and back at Wolfe. "It's too tough," he said.
"Have I got it straight? If we decide he killed her you lay off and it's
up to Parker. If we decide he didn't, you try to prove it, and of course the
only way to prove it would be to find out who did and nail him. Is that
it?"
"Yes."
"Then I say he didn't."
"Is that your considered opinion?"
"To be honest, no. The only way I could be sure he
killed her would be if he confessed, and Orrie never would. But we know Orrie.
He has always done whatever he felt like with women, and they let him. I mean
they couldn't help it. But now apparently it's hit him and he wants to get
hitched. So if this Isabel Kerr got in his way, really blocked him … well, I
don't know. I mean I think I really do know. But you called us in to help you
decide, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Then I say no. He didn't."
Wolfe didn't even frown at him. Such a contribution from me
would have got what I deserved, but he knows how Fred's mind works, and he had
asked for it. He merely said, "That is hardly decisive," and turned
his head. "Saul?"
"No," Saul said. "To put it the way Archie
would, one will get you twenty that he didn't kill her."
"Indeed." Wolfe was surprised. "An opinion,
or a gesture?"
"Call it a conclusion. Make it fifty to one. I'm not
saying I'm superior to Archie. Since he knows everything I know, you may wonder
why he didn't settle it, but that's obvious. He couldn't see it because he's
involved personally. He's not conceited enough."
"Pfui. This is flummery."
"No, sir. I'll spell it out. First, say Orrie planned
it. When he was with Archie, Friday evening, he intended to go there in the
morning and kill her, and when Archie went in the afternoon, with gloves and
keys, he would either find the body or, if someone had beat him to it, he would
find police cars outside and a flock of cops inside. That's absolutely
impossible. I don't know if you know it, but Orrie regards Archie as the
smartest and quickest performer around. There's not the slightest chance that he
would deliberately arrange to sit facing him and frame that kind of a deal.
Anyway, why? If he was going to kill her, why such a flimflam with
Archie?"
"All right, cross it off," I said. "I already
had. Friday evening he wasn't even intending to see her, let alone kill her.
But what if he decided to go, no matter why, Saturday morning? And she stung
him."
Saul nodded. "And he killed her. Okay. Whether he stays
to frisk the place for the objects he wants, or he doesn't, he goes back to his
tailing job. He has a tough decision to make, whether to ring you and tell you
not to go, with some kind of a reason. I admit he might not be able to cook up
a good enough reason and he might decide it was too risky, it would be better
to let you go. But now here's the point, the big point. You know him, and so do
I. We know exactly how his mind works. You heard me ask Mr. Wolfe if there were
any phone calls for you yesterday afternoon between four-thirty and six-thirty,
and he said no. That's what settles it."
"Good. Wonderful."
"It's perfectly simple. You didn't see it because you
were personally involved. Here's Orrie on his tailing job with the murder
behind him. He decides not to call you off. He knows that when you go there and
find the body you'll wonder about him. He knows that you think he'll be holding
his breath, waiting to hear what objects you found and got. He knows that if he
hadn't gone there and killed her, if she was still alive as far as he knew, he
would be damned anxious to learn how you had made out, say from five-thirty on,
and he would have called you. Therefore he would call you. But he
didn't. That's the point."
"Back up," I said. "You can't have it both
ways. If he didn't kill her, why didn't he call?"
"He would have, probably soon after he got home, but
you rang him first. If he had killed her he wouldn't have waited until he got
home. As you know, his worst fault is that he pushes. He knew that the natural
thing would be for him to call, and, pushing it, if he had killed her, he would
probably have called around five o'clock. Certainly by five-thirty. Damn it,
he's not some stranger we can only guess about; we know him like a book."
He turned to Wolfe. "Since you and Archie are passing
and Fred is yes and no, my vote tips it. If you buy that and take it on, and
want to use me, it will be on me, including expenses. I have no more affection
for Orrie than you have, but of course I would want to back up my vote."
"Me too," Fred blurted. "I voted no."
That was quite an offer. Saul, who asks ten dollars an hour
and gets it, could afford it, but Fred doesn't rate that high and he has a wife
and four children.
Wolfe's eyes came to me, and I met them. "The trouble
is," I said, "I'm personally involved. It depends partly on how smart
and quick Orrie thinks I am, and that cramps me. But it also depends on how
smart I think Saul is, and I would hate to embarrass him either way. I'll
switch and vote no, but I'm not giving any twenty to one."
He drew in a bushel of air through his nose, held it three
seconds, and let it out through his open mouth. He screwed his head around to
look at the wall clock, curled his fingers over the ends of the chair arms, and
said, "Grrrhhhh." It was hard to take. A month of the new year had
passed with no new business, and he was going to have to work for nothing.
He looked at Saul. "When can you start?"
"Now," Saul said.
"You, Fred?"
"Tuesday," Fred said. "I'm on a little job,
but I can clean it up tomorrow."
Wolfe grunted. "You know the situation. We have
nothing. We have never had less. We don't even know what objects the police
found, if any, involving Orrie. On that Mr. Parker may help. Archie. Are they
infesting that neighborhood?"
"Certainly. Of course they're concentrating on Orrie,
trying to find someone who saw him yesterday morning. For a case, they need to
get him there."
He turned to Saul. "We'll have to begin with banality.
Who are the other tenants of the building? Who was seen entering or leaving
yesterday morning? Did anyone see Archie enter or leave yesterday afternoon?
That might become an issue. You will start on that tomorrow, and Fred will join
you on Tuesday, but you will call twice a day to ask if something better has
been suggested." He turned to me. "You will see someone. Who?"
I took five seconds. "Jill Hardy, if she's available.
She may be in Rome. Or Tokyo."
"In that case, the sister? Mrs. Fleming?"
"Maybe, but I like Jill Hardy better. Do you want
her?"
He made a face. "Only if you think I must." He
pushed his chair back and pried himself up. "Confound it, I'm going to
bed. I appreciate your offer, Saul, and yours, Fred, but this undertaking is
mine. Your usual rates and, of course, expenses. Good night."
He headed for the door.
As I sat in the kitchen at ten
minutes past eight Monday morning, having brioches, grilled ham, and grape
thyme jelly, my mind was hopping around.
First, why was Fritz so damn stubborn about the jelly? Why
wouldn't he try it, just once, with half as much sugar and twice as much sauterne?
I had been at him for years.
Second, why were journalists so damn lazy? If the Times
felt it had to decorate the follow-up on the murder with a picture, surely they
could have scared up one of Orrie, but they had the nerve to run that eight-year-old
shot of Nero Wolfe. He ought to sue them for invasion of privacy. He hadn't
been pinched. As far as they knew he wasn't in it at all. Of course it might
not be laziness; maybe they were still sore about a letter he had once written
the food editor.
Third, should I buzz him, or go up, before leaving? Fritz
had had no word for me when he came down from taking up his breakfast tray, so
apparently I was to proceed as instructed, but it wouldn't hurt to check.
Fourth, where was Jill Hardy? Orrie had told me she was with
Pan Am, but it would take more than a phone call to get her address out of
them. I had tried the phone books of all five boroughs last night; no Jill
Hardy. Parker could get it when he saw Orrie, but that would mean waiting. I
would be ready to go when I finished the second cup of coffee, and the sooner I
–
The phone rang. Fritz started to come; he agrees with Wolfe
that nothing and no one should be allowed to interrupt a meal; but I reached
and got it. "Nero Wolfe's office, Archie Goodwin speaking."
"Oh! I – This is Archie Goodwin?"
"Right."
"The Archie Goodwin who works for Nero Wolfe?"
"I must be, since you called Nero Wolfe's number."
"Of course. My name is Jill Hardy. You probably – you
may have heard it." Her voice was what Lily Rowan calls mezzotinto, good
and full but with sharp edges.
"Yes, I believe I have."
"From Orrie Cather."
"Right."
"Then you know who I am. I'm calling – I have just seen
the morning paper. Is it true about Orrie? He has been arrested?"
"You can call it that, yes. He is being held as a
material witness. That means that the police think he knows things he hasn't
told them, and they want him to."
"About a murder?"
"Apparently."
"They must be crazy!"
"That's quite possible. Are you at home, Miss
Hardy?"
"Yes, at my apartment. Do you know –"
"Hold it, please. Since you say you just saw it in the
paper, I assume the police haven't paid you a call yet. But they will. At
least, they may. I need to ask a question. I sort of gathered from things Orrie
said that you and he are planning to get married. I might have misunderstood…"
"You didn't. We're going to be married in May."
"Is it known? Have you told people?"
"I have told a few people – friends. I'm going to go on
working for a while, and an airline stewardess is not allowed –"
"I know. But if Orrie has told his friends, and he told
me, you'll have callers before long. If you want to have –"
"I want to know why he was arrested! I want to know – was
he working for Nero Wolfe?"
"No. He hasn't been on a job for Mr. Wolfe for more
than two months. If you –"
"Why should I have callers?"
"I'd rather not tell you on the phone. It's
complicated. If you want to know about it before the police come to ask
questions, why don't you come and ask me questions? Nero Wolfe's office, Nine-thirty-eight
West Thirty-fifth Street. I'll be –"
"I can't. I'm due for a Rio flight at ten-thirty."
"Then I'll come and pick you up and we can talk on the
way to the airport. I'm a good driver. What's the address?"
"I don't think –" Silence. "What if Orrie
–" More silence. "I'll see." She hung up.
I had room for another brioche and slice of ham, and I
didn't dawdle. It might take her only a couple of minutes. When Fritz brought
coffee I told him that when you wanted to see someone and didn't know where she
was all you had to do was send out waves, and he asked if we had a client.
"Yes and no," I said. "A job for someone,
yes. A customer who can be properly billed, no. You heard me mention Orrie's
name, so you might as well know that he's in a hole and we're going to pull him
out. How do you say in French 'the brotherhood of man'?"
"There is no such thing in French. So that's what your
personal errand was Saturday. I'm glad it's Orrie instead of Saul or Fred, but
all the same –"
The phone rang. I got it. "Nero Wolfe's office –"
"Jill Hardy again, Mr. Goodwin. I've fixed it. I'll be
there in about an hour."
"Good for you. Do you mind giving me your address and
phone number? Just to have."
She didn't mind. The address was 217 Nutmeg Street, in the
Village. When I had finished the coffee and went to the office, I wrote it on a
slip of paper, and the phone number, and considered a problem: should it go in
Orrie's folder? Deciding against it, I got out a new folder and marked it Cather,
Orrie, client. In ten minutes Wolfe would be taking the elevator for his
morning session, nine to eleven, with the orchids, and I buzzed his room on the
house phone. He took his time to answer.
"Yes?"
"Good morning. I thought you would want to know that
it's possible that Jill Hardy will still be here when you come down. She'll
arrive in about an hour, probably less."
"You have already found her?"
"Oh, sure. It's easy when you know how."
"Swagger," he said, and hung up.
As I dusted desks and chairs, removed yesterday's sheets
from the desk calendars, changed the water in the vase on Wolfe's desk, and
opened the mail, I decided that Jill Hardy would be tall and stiff with quick,
sharp eyes, the sergeant type, but the corners of her eyes would slant up a
little because some Oriental had got mixed in somewhere along the line. It
would have taken something unusual like that to hook Orrie so hard, but there
was another reason why she had to be like that. Since we had ruled Orrie out,
the sooner we found a replacement for him the better, and of course Jill Hardy
was a candidate, and it would simplify it if she looked the part.
Damn it, she didn't. When the doorbell rang a little after
nine-thirty and I went to the hall and to the front door, what I saw through
the one-way glass was a size twelve black leather coat with a fur collar, and a
little oval face, pink from the cold, with big gray-blue eyes, under a fur-and-leather
pancake. When I had opened up and she was inside and the coat was off, she
looked even smaller in the well-fitted dark blue suit. She must have just
barely hit the minimum height for her job. In the office, I had one of the
yellow chairs in place for her. The red leather chair is too far away from my
desk.
"I've calmed down a little," she said as she sat.
"You look a little like Orrie. The same size."
That didn't strike me as an ideal opening for a friendly
conversation. I do not look like Orrie. He's handsome and I'm not. My face
needs more nose, but I quit worrying about it when I was twelve. I turned the
other cheek. "I'm not surprised," I said, "that Orrie decided to
merge. Seeing you. I'll congratulate him again when I see him."
She ignored the oil. "When will you see him?"
"I'm not sure. Possibly this afternoon."
"I want to see him, but I don't know how. What do I
do?"
"I wouldn't try to rush it if I were you. He might get
bailed out. He has a good lawyer. When did you see him last?"
"Why did they arrest him?" she demanded.
"What could he know about a murder? You say he wasn't working for
Nero Wolfe?"
"Yes. He wasn't. I don't know, Miss Hardy, if I can
tell you much of anything you don't already know, since you've read the paper.
I suppose that woman, Isabel Kerr, was involved in some case he was working on,
but that's just a guess. Another guess is that he was in her apartment
recently, and they found his fingerprints there, and that's why they've got
him. You probably know that private detectives sometimes get into a place and
make a search, but if it had been that, Orrie wouldn't have left any prints
because he would have had gloves on. Of course he might not have been there on
business, it might have been just – social. Do you know if he knew Miss
Kerr?"
"No." She was frowning.
"He has never mentioned her name?"
"No."
"When did you see him last?"
She was tops at ignoring questions. She was still frowning.
"You said you'd rather not tell me on the phone why I would have callers,
but you're not telling me anything, it seems to me. You're Orrie's close
friend, but you don't seem to know much. Why would I have callers? You mean the
police?"
I decided I wasn't going to get anywhere walking on eggs.
"I don't want to jolt you," I said, "but I think you ought to
know the situation."
"So do I. That's exactly what I think."
"Fine. When a man is arrested he has a right to call a
lawyer. Orrie called Nathaniel Parker, and Parker went and saw him, and then he
came here and talked with Mr. Wolfe and me. Orrie knew he was going to. They
don't hold a man without bail merely because they think he knows things.
They're holding him because they think he killed Isabel Kerr. They don't just
think he knows something about a murder, they think he did it."
Her eyes were wide, staring. "I don't believe it."
"If you don't believe he did it, neither do I. If you
don't believe they think he did, ask them. Or his lawyer. Because Mr. Wolfe
doesn't think he did, he intends to do something about it, like for instance
finding out who did. I haven't answered your question, why you should expect
callers. Because as soon as the cops find out that Orrie is going to marry you,
which won't take them long, they will want to ask you things. Like what I
asked, do you know if he knew Isabel Kerr, and like what you haven't answered,
when did you see him last? I only asked it twice, but they'll bear down.
They'll also want to know where and how you spent Saturday morning; that's the
kind of minds they have. They will wonder if you were there with him, and maybe
even held her while he got the ashtray. It's also the kind of mind I have.
Since I think he didn't kill her I have to consider who did, and it might have
been you. Where were you Saturday morning?"
Her jaw was working. "I thought you were a friend
of Orrie's," she said. "You wouldn't talk like that if he was
here."
"Yes, I would, and he would understand. He wouldn't
like it, but he would understand." I leaned to her, elbows on knees.
"Listen, Miss Hardy. I like your looks and I like your voice. You have
very nice hands. You say you had never heard of Isabel Kerr, and I have no
evidence that you had, so apparently you're out, but I would really appreciate
it if you would tell me when you saw Orrie last and where you were Saturday
morning."
"Why do they think he killed her?" she
demanded. "Why would he kill her?"
"I don't know. I may have an idea later, possibly this
afternoon if I see him, from the questions they have asked him. They probably
think they have some line on motive, but not necessarily."
"How could he have a motive?"
"You'll have to ask them, not me, because I think
they're off. It's supposed to be possible to convict a man of murder without
proving motive, but juries don't like the idea."
"Juries? You mean they will – there'll be a trial?"
"I sincerely hope not."
Her eyes were fastened on me. "I believe you really
mean that."
"I really do."
"Saturday morning I was at home in bed, until after
noon. I had been on a flight from Caracas that was due at midnight, but we
weren't down until after two o'clock. I saw Orrie that evening. I had dinner
with him at a restaurant. I have to answer so many questions in the air that
when I'm on the ground I don't listen to them." She pulled her feet back,
stood up, and took a step. "Get up and put your arms around me."
It was an order, and I obeyed. She didn't lift her arms so
we could lock, but when I had her enclosed she gripped my jacket with both
hands near my backbone and hid her face on my chest. The dark blue suit felt
like wool, but nowadays you never know. I didn't squeeze, just held her nice
and firm, trying to decide whether she knew she was in trouble and wanted to
enlist me, or she was getting started on me in case Orrie got permanently
eliminated, or it was just a habit she had. She hadn't used any perfume, or
very little, and she smelled fine. There's no telling how long it would have
lasted if it hadn't been for the doorbell. It rang.
I unwound my arms, politely, crossed to the hall and took a
look, stepped back in, and told her, "It's a cop, one I happen to know.
Since you're in no hurry to meet him, you will please duck." I had crossed
to the door to the front room and opened it. "In here. You don't have to
hold your breath, it's soundproofed. You can even sneeze."
Generally speaking, airline stewardesses know how to react.
Without a word she picked up her handbag, which had dropped to the floor when
she gripped my jacket, moved to the door I was holding, and on through. As I
shut the door the doorbell rang again. I broke no records getting to the hall
and the front; and if Inspector Cramer noticed the black leather coat on the
rack, let him. It was me he wanted to see, since he knew Wolfe was never
available until eleven, and one more question to refuse to answer wouldn't
matter. I opened the door, said, "Sorry, I was busy yawning," and
gave him room. His big round face was redder than usual from the cold. There
have been times when he refused help with his coat because he wanted to get his
eyes on me and keep them there, but now he let me behind him to take it, and he
led the way to the office. He hadn't noticed the black leather coat, but he did
notice the yellow chair near my desk, and as he lowered his broad rump onto the
red leather one he asked, "Company?"
I nodded. "Come and gone. Have you turned Orrie loose
yet?"
"No. Not yet and not soon. Unless you can give me a
damn good reason. Can you?"
"Sure. He's clean."
"Go right ahead."
"Parker came here after seeing him yesterday and told
us that Orrie had told him he was innocent. We have seen a lot of Orrie and we
know he's not a liar. So Mr. Wolfe is going to look into it. Of course that's
what you came for, to ask if he's going to horn in. He is."
"I don't have to ask that. I came to get
information." He got better arranged in the chair. "When did you see
Cather last?"
I shook my head. "No comment."
"Has he ever spoken to you about Isabel Kerr?"
"Pass."
"Has he ever spoken to you about Jill Hardy?"
"No comment."
"You can't get away with it, Goodwin. If a man is
charged he can clam up, but you're not charged. But, by God, you can be charged."
"I feel another yawn coming," I said. "Do we
have to go through it again? I don't say I will answer no questions at all
about Orrie Cather. If you ask me where he buys his shoes or when did Mr. Wolfe
last use him on a job, I'll tell you, even in writing. But the kind of
questions you're loaded with, no. Certainly, if you pin a murder on him and
make it stick, and if you can prove that I had information that you could have
used, you can tag me for obstructing justice and I'll be sunk. But if it turns
out that instead of obstructing justice I'm doing it as a favor by helping Mr.
Wolfe find out who did kill Isabel Kerr, he and I ought to get a ticker-tape
parade, but we won't insist on it."
He opened his tight lips to say, "You've crawled out on
that limb before."
"Yeah. I said do we have to go through it again."
I glanced at my wrist. "Mr. Wolfe will be down in twenty minutes, if you
think you can scare him better than me."
He started tapping the floor with the toe of his heavy shoe,
focusing on Wolfe's empty chair. That wasn't very satisfactory, since it made
no sound on the thick rug, not like the linoleum in his office. He was looking
at the chair instead of me because it wasn't my stand that was eating him. He
had the answer to one question, where did Wolfe stand, and now the point was,
why? Did we really have something, and, if so, what?
"It occurs to me," I said, "that we might
make a deal. It would have to be okayed by Mr. Wolfe, but I'm sure he would.
We'll make an affidavit, the last sentence of which will say that it includes
everything we know, and everything Orrie has said and done to our knowledge,
that could possibly have any bearing on the murder, and we'll trade it for a
look at your file. The whole file. It would be a bargain for both of us.
You would know exactly what we've got, and we would know why you're risking
holding him without bail. Fair enough?"
"Balls," Cramer said. He stood up. "One thing
I came for, to tell Wolfe something, but you can tell him. Tell him that it's
too bad I can't show him Isabel Kerr's diary. If he read it he would change his
mind about horning in. And a tip for you. When you decide to kill someone make
damn sure he isn't keeping a diary. Or she." He turned and marched out.
I stayed put. It would have been a shame to spoil such a
good exit line. When I heard the front door open and close I went to the hall
for a look, to see that he had been outside when he shut it, then stepped back
into the office and considered a matter. Should Jill Hardy be there in the red
leather chair when Wolfe came down? If I left her in the front room and
reported, almost certainly he would refuse to see her, and of course he should.
It would be eleven o'clock in three minutes. I decided to bring her in, went
and opened the door and crossed the sill, and looked around at an empty room.
She had exited without a line, by the door to the hall. I went and looked at
the rack; her coat was gone. The house phone buzzed in the office, and I went
and got it. It was Wolfe, in the plant rooms, wanting to know if she had gone,
and I told him yes, and in a minute the sound came of the elevator grumbling
its way down. He entered, in his hand the daily orchids for his desk – a
panicle of Odonto-glossum hellemense, which, according to the records I
keep, is a cross of harvengtense and crispum. A stunner if you feel like
orchids, which I didn't just then. I sat and simmered as he put them in the
vase, got settled in his chair, and glanced through the mail. When he finished
with a letter from a man upstate who sends deer meat, the only important item,
I said, rather loud, "Miss Kerr kept a diary."
He put the letter down, looked up, regarded me for half a
minute, and asked, "How did you pry it out of him?"
"Out of who?"
"Mr. Cramer, of course."
I stared. "To see the street from up there you have to
stick your head way out."
"I never have. But he would certainly come, and soon,
and who else could supply such a particular? How did you pry it out of
him?"
"All right, I'll report." I did so, starting with
Jill Hardy. Sometimes, reporting a conversation, it's essential to give it
verbatim, but even when it isn't I do it anyway because that's how I have
trained and it's easier. As usual, he leaned back with his eyes closed. I went
right on through, from Jill Hardy on to Cramer, since there had been no break,
just a change of cast. When I finished he opened his eyes halfway, closed them
again, and muttered, "Nothing."
"Right," I agreed. "As for her, if she's a liar
she's pretty good. Orrie certainly thinks she knows nothing about Isabel Kerr,
and if she does it would take a lot of digging to prove it. If she doesn't
she's crossed off completely and is absolutely useless. As for Cramer, he
probably has got a diary, but so what, we knew he had something hot, and I
doubt if it says at the end, 'He is reaching for the ashtray and is going to
hit me with it,' which is the point. Cramer may have needed a diary to tell him
that it would be handy for Orrie if she died, but we don't, we already knew it.
What we need is somebody else it is handy for. It is for Jill Hardy, in a way,
but I doubt if she knew it. As you say, nothing."
He opened his eyes. "You think Orrie killed her."
"No. I have looked over Saul's point, from all angles,
and I like it. At the very least it packs a reasonable doubt, which is enough
for a jury, so it will do for me. Anyhow, we're now on record. With Cramer. If
it turns out that Orrie did it I'll never forgive him. I'll cop his girl. She already
thinks I look like him."
He grunted. "Now what? Who?"
"I suppose the sister. Or Avery Ballou."
"We would have to discuss Mr. Ballou. The sister
first." He straightened up and reached for Invitation to an Inquest.
There was a Barry Fleming in the
Bronx phone book – address, 2938 Humboldt Avenue. Of course I didn't dial the
number. According to the Times, she wasn't talking to reporters, and
naturally she would think I was trying a dodge. I consulted the Bronx street
guide to locate Humboldt Avenue, then grinned to myself as my hand went
automatically to a pocket for my keyfold. Because of a regrettable occurrence
some years back, I had made it a hard and fast rule never to go on an errand
connected with a murder without a gun, and the rules you make yourself are the
hardest to break, but there's a limit. Sororicide is by no means unheard of,
but to suppose that Stella Fleming might have killed her sister, and therefore
anyone who got in her reach should be ready to shoot, would be overdoing it, at
least until I had a look at her. I returned the keyfold to my pocket, told
Wolfe not to expect me for lunch, and left. After descending the stoop to the
sidewalk I turned up my collar, even for the short stretch around the corner to
the garage. Instead of a January thaw we were having a good long freeze, and
the wind was doing its best to help.
It was twenty past twelve when I left the Heron in a parking
lot and walked a block and a half to Number 2938, which was a regulation ten-story
brick hive, to be found in all five boroughs, but especially the Bronx. Of
course it might not be the right Barry Fleming, but I would soon find out. The
tiled floor of the lobby had a rubber runner, no rugs. There was no doorman,
but the elevator man was there, a pasty-faced bozo in a uniform that was past
due for the cleaner and presser, leaning against the wall. I advanced and said,
"Fleming, please."
He shook his head and said, "There's nobody
there."
"I know," I said, "that Mrs. Fleming isn't
receiving any strangers, but I'm not a newspaperman. I want to discuss a
personal matter with her, and I'm sure she would want to." In his case,
the face was the index of the mind. He wasn't impressed and wasn't going
to be. The only question was how much. I removed my gloves, got out my case and
extracted a card, got out my wallet and extracted a finif, and said, "On
the level. Do you want to see my license? Take me up, and if she doesn't let me
in I'll double this."
He took the card and looked it over, took the bill and stuck
it in a pocket, and said, "On the level, there's nobody there. She went
out around ten o'clock."
He deserved a good poke, but it wouldn't have been tactful.
I merely asked, "Do you know where she went?"
He shook his head. "No idea."
"Do you know when she'll be back?"
"No, I don't."
I gave him a friendly smile. "That's not fifty cents' worth,
let alone five bucks'." I got my wallet again and took out a ten.
"What floor is she on?"
"Seven. Seven D."
"I need to see her, and she needs to see me. Take me
up, and I'll wait there. You have my card. If you want to, get an inkpad and
take my fingerprints."
He surprised me. He had a heart in him somewhere. He
actually said, "She might be gone all day, and there's no place to
sit."
"There's always the floor."
He gave me his eyes, looked straight at me for the first
time. "No funny business, mister. The doors have got pretty good
locks."
"I don't know anything about locks. There's nothing
there for me until she comes." I went to the elevator and pressed my
fingertips, all ten, against the metal frame, at eye level. "There. You've
got me." I offered the sawbuck. He took it, followed me into the elevator,
shut the door, and pushed the handle.
There are a lot of interesting things to do while you're
waiting in an upper hall of an apartment house for four hours and twenty
minutes. You can count spots and decide which has more, the left wall or the
right wall. You can try to sort out smells and decide how many different
flavors there are in the overall effect. You can listen to the wails coming
through the door of 7B and decide whether the little lamb is male or female and
how old it is, and what steps you would take if you were inside. When people
arrive or leave you can look straight at them and notice which ones look back
and which ones pretend they haven't seen you. When a hefty, broad-shouldered
woman turns after inserting a key into the lock of 7C and asks, "Are you
waiting for someone?" you can say pleasantly and distinctly,
"Yes," and see how she reacts. On the whole, it was time well spent.
My one regret was that I hadn't brought along a chocolate bar, five or six
bananas, and a quart of milk.
I admit I frequently glanced at my watch. It was ten minutes
to five when the elevator door opened and a man emerged. When he kept coming
down the hall I assumed he was headed for E or F, but he stopped to face me and
spoke.
"I understand you're waiting for my wife."
Of course I had to concede it. "Yes, sir, I am, if
you're Barry Fleming."
"She won't see you. You're wasting your time. She won't
see anybody."
I nodded. "I know, but I think she'll see me if she
lets me explain why."
I sent a hand to my pocket for the case, but before I had a
card out he said, "I know who you are. I should say, I have seen the card
you gave the elevator man. Are you Archie Goodwin?"
"I am. In person. Look, Mr. Fleming, why not leave it
to her? When she comes I'll tell her what I want to talk about, and it will be
up to her. I won't insist, I'll just ask her."
"What do you want to talk about?"
I would have preferred to tell her, but a husband is a
husband. "About a man," I said. "His name is Orrie Cather, and
the police think he killed Isabel Kerr. He has worked off and on for Nero
Wolfe, and Mr. Wolfe and I know him very well, and we don't think he did. You
know I work for Nero Wolfe?"
"Of course."
"We are looking into it a little, and I would like very
much to ask your wife if she can supply any information that might help.
Naturally she wants the murderer of her sister caught and punished, but she
wouldn't want it to be Orrie Cather if he's innocent. You wouldn't, would
you?"
"Of course not." He was puckering his lips and
frowning at me. He was about my height, narrow-shouldered and narrow-hipped,
with a long face that showed the cheekbones. He went on, "I wouldn't want
an innocent man punished for anything, certainly not for murder. But I doubt
very much if my wife can give you any information that would help. She's not – she's
taking it pretty hard."
"Sure. Believe me, I don't want to make it any harder
for her."
"Well – where's your coat?"
"There." I pointed to it, on the floor by the
wall.
"Get it. There's no sense in waiting out here." With
a key ring in his hand, he went to the door of 7D. When I came with my coat he
was holding the door open and I entered. The foyer was about the size of a pool
table. He hung my coat in the closet before he took his off, and as he was
hanging his up the door opened and a woman entered. At the sight of me she
gawked a second, then whirled to him.
"Barry! You let him in?"
From her tone I knew then and there that I had had a break,
him coming first.
"Now, dear." He put an arm across her shoulders
and kissed her on the cheek. "He only wants some information, if we have
any. He thinks –"
"We have no information for anybody! You know
that!"
I spoke up. "But you must have a preference, Mrs.
Fleming. If an innocent man is convicted of murdering your sister, the trouble
is that the guilty man goes free. Do you want that?"
She focused up at me. Up, because she wasn't more than an
inch over five feet. "It's none of your business what I want," she
said, and meant it.
"No," I said, "but it's your business.
I'm not a newshound trying to get a headline, I'm a private detective trying to
dig up some facts. I already have some. I know why you won't see reporters, why
you have no information for anybody. Because your sister was a doxy, and you
–"
"My sister was a what?"
"D,O,X,Y, doxy. I happen to like that better than
concubine or paramour or mistress. I don't –"
I stopped because I had to, to protect my face. When a woman
flies at you to claw, what you do depends on the woman. If she has real tiger
in her you may even have to plug her, but with Stella Fleming, with her short
reach, all I had to do was stiff-arm her, with my palm flat on her mouth. Then
the husband got her shoulders from behind and pulled her back and told me,
"You'd better go."
I was inclined to agree, but it was just as well that Wolfe
couldn't read my mind by short-wave because he thinks I understand women. She
turned and drummed on his chest with her fists and squeaked, "I don't want
him to go," and then calmly, no hurry, started to shed her coat. When he
had it she told me, "Come on inside," perfectly polite, and headed
through an archway. When he had the closet door shut he motioned me on, and I
moved.
She had turned on lights and gone to a couch and sat and was
biting her lip. I hadn't really seen her, too busy, and as I crossed to a
nearby chair I noted that she resembled her sister not at all, with her brown
hair and brown eyes and round filled-out face. As I approached she demanded,
"Why did you say that?"
"To jar you." I sat. "I had to. Either that
or –"
"I mean why do you lie like that about my sister?"
I shook my head. "That line is wasted with me, Mrs.
Fleming. We both know it's not a lie, so skip it. It's not important, not to
me. I only said it to –"
"Did you know my sister?"
"No. I had never heard of her until yesterday."
"Then how could you know …"
I gave her three seconds, but she let it hang. I flipped a
hand. "It's obvious. A showgirl leaves –"
"She was an actress."
"Okay. An actress leaves the theater, takes a three-hundred-dollar
apartment, has no job, eats well, dresses well, has a car, uses thirty-dollar
perfume. Who wouldn't know? Who doesn't know? That's not important, not now.
What's –"
"It is to me. It's the most important thing in the
world."
"Now, dear," Fleming said. He was beside her on
the couch.
"Well," I said, "if it's that important to
you, that's what you want to talk about. Go ahead."
"She was twenty-eight years old. I'm thirty-one. She
was only twenty-five when she … stopped work. She was six and I was nine when
our mother died, and she was twelve and I was fifteen when our father died.
That's why it's so important."
I nodded. "Certainly."
"You're not a newspaper reporter. William told me your
name, but I don't remember."
"William's the elevator man," Fleming said.
To him: "Thank you." To her: "My name is
Archie Goodwin. I'm a private detective, I work for Nero Wolfe, and I came
–"
"You're a detective."
"Yes."
"Then you know about things. You said I wouldn't want
the man that killed my sister to go free, and no, I wouldn't, but if he's
arrested and there's a trial, no one is going to say about my sister what you
said about her. If anyone said that at the trial it would be in the newspapers.
If anyone is going to say that there mustn't be any trial. Even if he goes
free. So you didn't know what I want."
That made the second woman in one day who didn't want a
trial, though for a different reason. "I do now," I told her,
"and from your standpoint there's no argument. I even agree with you, at
least part way. You don't want a trial even if they get the right man. What I
don't want is a trial of the wrong man, and that's what is going to happen
unless someone stops it. Of course you read the papers."
"I read all of them."
"Naturally. Then you know they are holding a man named
Orrie Cather and that he has worked for Nero Wolfe. Had you ever heard or seen
that name before? Orrie Cather?"
"No."
"Are you sure? Didn't your sister ever mention
him?"
"No. I'm sure she didn't."
"Mr. Wolfe and I know him very well. We do not believe
he killed your sister. I don't say we know all about him. He may have
had, he may have, some – uh – connections that we don't know about. I will even
concede that he may have been the one who was paying the rent for your sister's
apartment, and her other – You're shaking your head."
"She didn't shake her head," Fleming said.
"Sorry, I thought you did. Anyway, whether he was
paying the rent or not, we do not believe he killed her, and that's why Mr.
Wolfe sent me to see you. If they bring him to trial – you know what will
happen. Everything they have found out about your sister will be on record. As
you know, a jury is supposed to acquit a man if there's a reasonable doubt. We
want to establish a reasonable doubt for the police so it won't get in a
courtroom for a jury, and we thought you might help. You saw your sister fairly
often, didn't you?"
"That's pretty clever," Fleming said. "But I
must remind you that for my wife a trial of the right man might be just as bad
as a trial of the wrong man. I don't agree with her, not at all, but Isabel was
her sister."
"No," I said, "I'm not being clever. All we
need is a reasonable doubt. For instance, what if we can show the police that
there's another man, or woman, who had a good motive? Or what if they learn
that Isabel told someone – it could be your wife – that someone had threatened
to kill her? If and if and if. For our purpose, Mr. Wolfe's and mine, it
doesn't have to be strong enough to charge him and try him, just the doubt. But
even if they nailed him, his trial might not be as bad, for your wife, as Orrie
Cather's trial is sure to be. We know something about the line they think they
have on Orrie."
"What is it?"
"I can't tell you that. We got it in confidence."
He was squinting at me. "You know, Mr. Goodwin, I'm a
mathematics teacher and I like problems. Since this is so close to us, though
it's closer to my wife than to me, it isn't just a problem, but still my
mind has the habit." He put a hand on his wife's knee. "You won't
mind, dear, if I admit I would like to help with this problem. But I won't. I
know how you feel. You do exactly what you want to do."
"Fair enough," I told him. And to her: "You
saw your sister often, didn't you?"
She had put her hand on top of his. "Yes," she
said.
"Once or twice a week?"
"Yes. Nearly always we had dinner together on Saturday
and went to a show or a movie. My husband plays chess Saturday evenings."
"According to the newspaper, when you went there day
before yesterday you got no answer to your ring and the superintendent let you
in. Is that correct?"
"Yes."
"That was an important moment, when you entered the
bedroom. I don't want to jar you again, Mrs. Fleming, I truly don't, but it's
important. What was your first thought when you saw your sister's dead body
there on the floor?"
"I didn't – it wasn't a thought."
"First there was the shock, of course. But when you saw
the – when you realized she had been murdered, it would have been natural to
have the thought He killed her or She killed her, something like
that. That's why it's important; a first thought like that is often right. Who
was the he or the she?"
"There wasn't any he or she. I didn't have any such
thought."
"Are you sure? At a time like that your mind jerks
around."
"I know it does, but I didn't have a thought such as
that then or any other time, that he killed her or she killed
her. I couldn't even try to guess who killed her. All I know is there mustn't
be a trial."
"There will be a trial, of Orrie Cather, unless we can
find a way to stop it. Did your sister ever show you her diary?"
She frowned. "She didn't keep a diary."
"Yes, she did. The police have it. But since –"
"What does it say?"
"I don't know. I haven't seen it. Since –"
"She shouldn't have done that. That makes it worse. She
didn't tell me. She must have kept it in that drawer she kept locked. Don't I
have a right to it? Can't I make them give it to me?"
"Not now. You can later. If there's a trial it will be
evidence. It's called an exhibit. Since you never saw it, we'll have to skip
it. It looks pretty hopeless, because I don't know of anyone but you who can
give me any information. Of course a good prospect would be the man who paid
the rent for the apartment, and the car and the perfume and so on, but I don't
know who he is. Do you?"
"No."
"That surprises me. I thought you would. You were close
with your sister, weren't you?"
"Certainly I was."
"Then you must know who else was. Since you say you
couldn't even try to guess who killed her, I'm not asking that, just who knew
her well. Of course you have told the police."
"No, I haven't."
I raised a brow. "Are you refusing to talk to them too?"
"No, but I couldn't tell them much because I don't
know. It was …" She stopped, shook her head, and turned to her husband.
"You tell him, Barry."
He squeezed her hand. "You could almost say," he
said, "that Isabel lived two lives. One of them was with my wife, her
sister, and to a much less extent me. The other one was with her – well, call
it her circle. My wife and I know very little about it, but we sort of
understood that her friends were mostly from the world of the theater. You will
realize that in the circumstances my wife preferred not to associate with
them."
"It wasn't what I preferred," she corrected.
"It was what was."
That helped a lot, another whole circle, but I might have
expected it. "All right," I told her, "you can't give me names
you don't know. Isn't there anyone, anyone at all, that you know and she
knew?"
She shook her head. "Nobody."
"Dr. Gamm," Fleming said.
"Oh, of course," she said.
"Her doctor?" I asked.
Fleming nodded. "Ours too. An internist. He's – you
might say – a friend of mine. He plays chess. When Isabel had a bad case of
bronchitis a couple of years ago I –"
"Nearly three years ago," she said.
"Was it? I recommended him. He's a widower with two
children. We have had him and Isabel here two or three evenings for bridge, but
she wasn't very good at it."
"She was terrible," Stella Fleming said.
"No card sense," Fleming said. "His name is
Theodore Gamm with two Ms. His office is on Seventy-eighth Street in
Manhattan."
Presumably he was helping with the problem, and I fully
appreciated it; at least, by gum, I had one name and address. I got my notebook
out and wrote it down to show that I was on the ball.
"He can't tell you anything," she said, perfectly
calm, but suddenly she was on her feet, trembling, her hands tight fists, her
eyes hot. "Nobody can! They won't, they won't! Get out! Get out!"
Fleming, up too, had an arm across her shoulders, but she
didn't know it. If I had sat tight she would probably have soon got organized
again, but I hadn't had a bite since breakfast. I nodded at Fleming, and he
nodded back, and I went to the foyer for my hat and coat and let myself out. As
I entered the elevator, William said, "So you got in, huh?" and I
said, "Thanks to you, pal, telling both of them I was there." Outside
it was even colder, but the Heron started like an angel, as it damn well
should, and I headed for the Grand Concourse.
When I entered the office, a little after half past six,
Wolfe was at his desk, scowling at a document two inches thick – part of the
transcript of the Rosenberg trial, which he had sent for after reading the
first three chapters of Invitation to an Inquest. My desk was clean, no
memos or messages about phone calls. I yanked a sheet from my pocket notebook
and sat studying it until Wolfe cleared his throat, whereupon I rose and handed
it to him.
"There," I said. "The name and address of the
doctor who treated Isabel Kerr when she had bronchitis nearly three years
ago."
He grunted. "And?"
"You'll appreciate it more if I lead up to it. I spent
an hour with Mr. and Mrs. Barry Fleming. Now or after dinner?"
He looked at the clock. Thirty-five minutes to anchovy
fritters. "Is it urgent?"
"Hell, no."
"Then it can wait. Saul called twice. Nothing. Fred
will join him in the morning. I rang Mr. Parker, and he came after lunch and I
described the situation, everything relevant except the name of Avery Ballou.
He telephoned later. He had seen Orrie, and he has arranged for you to see him
in the morning at ten o'clock. He thinks it advisable."
"Has Orrie been charged? Homicide?"
"No."
"But no bail?"
"No. Mr. Parker doesn't wish to press it." He
glanced at the sheet I had handed him. "What's this? Did this man kill
her?"
"No, he cured her. I'm very proud of it. It's the
crop."
"Pfui." He dropped it and resumed with the
transcript.
Business is taboo at the dinner table, but crime and
criminals aren't, and the Rosenberg case hogged the conversation all through
the anchovy fritters, partridge in casserole with no olives in the sauce,
cucumber mousse, and Creole curds and cream. Of course it was academic, since
the Rosenbergs had been dead for years, but the young princes had been dead for
five centuries, and Wolfe had once spent a week investigating that case, after
which he removed More's Utopia from his bookshelves because More had
framed Richard III.
He let up only when we were back in the office and had
finished with coffee. He pushed the tray aside and asked if it had to be
verbatim, and I said yes and proceeded. When I told about the deal with William
he pursed his lips, not objecting, merely reacting to the fact that the fifteen
bucks was down the drain, since we couldn't expect to bill Orrie. Then he
leaned back and closed his eyes and quit reacting, as usual, until I had
finished.
He opened his eyes and demanded, "You had no lunch?
None at all?"
I shook my head. "If I had gone out it might have cost
a C to get back up. William is a mooch."
He straightened up. "Never do that."
"It's good for me. I was nine ounces overweight. Do you
comment or do I?"
"You."
I took a minute. "First, did Stella kill her sister?
Two to one she didn't. She –"
"Only two?"
"That's the best I'll give. The most important thing in
the world, she said. If it's still that important when she's dead, what was it
when she was alive? She left the rails twice in my presence. She just can't
stand it. If she went there Saturday morning and – do I need to spell it?"
"No. Why two to one? Why not even or less?"
"Because, on the record, a woman kills her sister only
if she hates her or is afraid of her. Stella didn't. She loved her and wanted to
– well, save her. Make it three to one. Anyway, even if she did it, she's
hopeless. Try and prove it. Even if we got enough to satisfy us, Cramer and the
DA would never buy it, let alone a jury. So forget her. As for him, no bet. He
could have had an elegant motive, anybody could, but as of now the only one
visible is that he killed her to stop his wife worrying about her, which is a
little farfetched. One thing, though, why did he let me in?"
"So she wouldn't encounter you in the hall."
"Possibly, but he could have ordered me out and called
a cop if he had to. It's just a comment; maybe it was because he likes
problems, or maybe he thought it would be good for her. More than a comment, a
conclusion: if they're out, they have no idea who is in. She said she couldn't
even try to guess, and I believe her. She's no good at covering. When I pulled
an obvious little dodge, saying that it might have been Orrie who was paying
the rent, it wasn't only her expression, she actually shook her head. Later she
said she didn't know who, but she does. What the hell, so do we."
"If Orrie was candid."
"He was. He had the lid off. For comments, I have saved
the best for the last. Isabel's other life. The circle."
He grunted. "Yes."
"Yes what?"
"That expands it. That was to be expected, as soon as
you learned that her relations with her sister were restricted. A woman who
eats by sufferance, without a contract, would of course prefer not to eat
alone. You laugh?"
"I do. Most men wouldn't put it all on eating. All
right, so we have a circle too – as expected. Dozens, maybe hundreds.
Godalmighty. I suggest again that we consider Avery Ballou."
"I am considering him. I wanted first – no matter.
We'll discuss it in the morning after you see Orrie." He reached for the
transcript.
Where you go to see a man in
custody in Manhattan depends partly on why he's there. It can be a precinct
station, a room in the City Prison, a room in the District Attorney's office,
or the paddock. I don't know how many cops call it the paddock, but Sergeant
Purley Stebbins does. It is a bare, smelly room about twelve yards long, split
along the center by a steel grill which extends from the middle of a wide
wooden counter up to the ceiling, and there are a dozen or so wooden chairs
strung along each side of the counter, the same kind of chairs for the visitors
and visitees. Democracy.
Seated on one of the chairs on the visitors' side at ten
minutes past ten Tuesday morning, I was not chipper. I had supposed I would see
Orrie in a room at the DA's office until Parker had phoned to say it would be
the City Prison, and then I had taken it for granted it would be in a room. But
I had been escorted to the paddock, and there I was, with four other visitors
spread along the line, the nearest one, a middle-aged fat woman with red eyes,
only seven feet away. I would have liked to think they were merely showing what
they thought of Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, but I didn't. They had decided
that Orrie Cather was a murderer, though they hadn't charged him yet, and were
taking no chances. Try to make them eat it.
A door opened in the back wall, the other side of the grill
and counter, and Orrie entered, cuffed, with a dick right behind. The dick
steered him to a chair opposite me, watched him sit, said, "Fifteen
minutes," and went back to the wall, where another dick was standing. My
eyes and Orrie's met as well as they could through the grill. The rims of his
were puffy. He had once admitted to me that he brushed his hair ten minutes
every morning, but he hadn't that morning.
"It could be bugged," I said.
"I don't think so," he said. His cuffed hands were
on the counter. "Too risky. Too big a stink."
"Well, all we can do is keep it low. Parker has told
you that Mr. Wolfe and Saul and Fred and I have decided that you didn't kill
her and we're on it."
"Yeah, I knew he'd have to. I'm not his Archie Goodwin,
but even me he'd have to."
"I prefer to regard myself as my Archie Goodwin, but we
won't go into that now. I have a couple of questions, but Parker says you
wanted to see me. Well?"
"I want you to do me a favor, Archie, a big favor. I
want you to see Jill Hardy and tell her –"
"I've already seen her. She came to the office
yesterday morning, don't interrupt, and we had a talk. I didn't know how much
you had told her about Isabel Kerr, so I –"
"I have never told her anything about Isabel Kerr. She
didn't know there was an Isabel Kerr. Goddammit, what did you tell
her?"
"Same as you, nothing. Of course that's the favor you
were going to ask, and it's already done. I told her that the cops thought you
killed her, and we thought you didn't, and we were going to investigate, and we
knew nothing about Isabel Kerr. Now I have –"
"You're wonderful, Archie. Wonderful."
"Put it in writing and I'll frame it. I have questions,
and we haven't much time. Have you opened up at all?"
"No. I'm a dummy."
"Stay that way. As you know, Parker agrees. What have
they got? We know they got your license and the other objects, since you didn't
get them and I didn't, and your prints, and her diary, but is that –"
"Her diary?"
"Yeah. You didn't know she kept one?"
"My God, no."
"She did, and they have it, so Cramer says. He didn't
say what's in it. Probably you are, but we want your opinion on another point:
would she put his name in it? The name I had to pry out of you."
"Oh." He looked at it a few seconds. "I see.
That might be a point. I don't think she would. Of course she had the diary
stashed, but even so I'm pretty sure she wouldn't. She was too cagey. It's more
than just an opinion. I say no."
I looked at my wrist. Six minutes to go. "Now the
question. How many people knew about you and her?"
"Nobody."
"Nuts. You can't know that."
"As far as I know, nobody. You've heard me blow,
Archie, but you never heard me blow about her. After just a few times with her
she scared me. I had had women cotton to me before, but she was hipped. I liked
her all right, she was good all right, but she was hipped. After we got started
we were never together anywhere except her place. She wanted it that way, and
that suited me. But I completely misjudged her. I told her about meeting Jill,
you know, just that I had met an airline stewardess, and then like a damn fool
I thought I could ease her along to the idea that since I wasn't her only
contact she couldn't expect to be my only contact. Then I got hipped,
for the first time in my life. On Jill. And she – I've told you how she took
it. She was absolutely going to marry me herself, for God's sake. I told her my
income was about half of what he was spending on that setup, and she said just
a room and bath would do us even after the baby came. That kind of crap. I
don't for a minute believe there was going to be a baby, and even if there was,
whose would it be? I'm answering your question. I told nobody about her, and I
doubt if she told anyone about me."
"But she told you about other people, didn't she?"
"Some, yes. You know, just talk, sure."
"Which one of them killed her? Who had a reason to?"
He nodded. "Naturally I've thought about it. If she
ever said a single damn thing about anyone that might give a hint I can't dig
it up. I realize that there's only one way you can spring me, and God knows I
wish I could give you a steer, but I swear I can't. Sure, she told me about
people, men who made passes at her, women she liked and some she didn't like,
but I have gone over it and over it and came up with nothing. I know you have
to start somewhere, and that's the other thing, besides Jill, I wanted to tell
you. The woman she liked best, and saw the most of, is a night-club singer
named Julie Jaquette. Her real name is Amy Jackson. She was at the Ten Little
Indians week before last and may still be there. She would probably be the best
bet. Have you got anything yet? Anything at all?"
"No. Did you ever meet the sister, Stella
Fleming?"
"No. Isabel talked about her. She said that when we
were married not only would she be happy, her sister would be too. I was
supposed to get a kick out of that, making two women happy at once."
"You should have. Did she ever mention –" I
stopped because we were about to be interrupted. The dick was coming. He
touched Orrie on the shoulder, which was unnecessary, and said time was up. I
raised my voice. "What's your name?"
He looked down his nose at me. "My name?"
"Yes. Your personal name."
"My name is William Flanagan."
"Another William." I rose. "I'm going to
report you for brutality. Mr. Cather is merely detained as a material witness.
You didn't have to grab his shoulder." I turned and headed for the door,
and the dick who had brought me in joined me as I reached for the knob.
William Flanagan hadn't stopped anything important; I had
only been going to ask if Isabel had ever mentioned Dr. Gamm.
In the taxi, going uptown, I touched bottom. I had hoped to
get some little lead out of Orrie, at least a glimmer, but as we turned west at
35th Street I realized that I was going over how he had looked and what he had
said for indications about him, which was plain silly, since he was supposed to
be definitely out. Of course the trouble was that the only way to get something
out of your mind is to get something else in. The idea that Orrie might have
conked Isabel Kerr with that ashtray had popped into my head as soon as I saw
the dent in her skull, and it was going to stay there, no matter what, until I
had an X or Y to substitute for Orrie; and after three days and nights there
was still no X or Y anything like good enough. If you say, even so, I shouldn't
have been considering Orrie because we had barred him, you're perfectly right
but you don't know much.
To show how I was taking it, when I entered the office I did
not open the top left drawer of my desk to get the pad on which I enter items for
my weekly expense account. The $3.75 cab fare would be on me. Wolfe had told us
the undertaking was his, but until we brought him something he would have
nothing to undertake, and he had no corner in self-esteem. Since it was only a
couple of minutes past eleven, he had just come down from the plant rooms and
was taking a look at the mail. When he found there was nothing interesting, no
checks and no lists from orchid collectors, he pushed it aside and said good
morning. I said it wasn't, and to prove it gave him a verbatim report of my
talk with Orrie, ending with the comment that he had better take on the next
one himself, since I had got nowhere with the three I had tackled, Jill Hardy
and the Flemings.
"Anyway," I said, "it's a man. I admit that
Julie Jaquette would probably be too much for you, but she can wait until you
have had a go at Avery Ballou."
He frowned. "Dr. Gamm."
I frowned back. "You can't put it off forever. As you
know, I agree with you on jobs like divorce evidence, they're too grubby. Any
job is apt to be if the main point is who has been, or is, or will be, sleeping
with whom. But while it's true that Ballou was probably not paying her rent so
he could read poetry to her, that presumably sex was a factor, that's not the
main point and you can ignore it. You can pretend that he might have killed her
because she snickered when he pronounced a word wrong."
His lips were tight. He breathed three times before he said,
"Very well. Bring him."
I nodded. "Okay, but I don't know when or how. I looked
him up a little last night. He is not only president of the Federal Holding
Corporation, he's also a director of nine other big outfits. He has a house on
Sixty-seventh Street, one at Rhinebeck, and one at Palm Beach. He's fifty-six years
old. He has one married son and two married daughters. I would have to call the
bank to learn the size of his stack, and we don't want to advertise that you
have any curiosity about him, but it –"
"I said bring him."
"I heard you. I am explaining that it wouldn't be
advisable to tell the receptionist at his office, and the underling she would
pass me to, that a private detective named Nero Wolfe wants to consult him
about a matter that is too confidential for any ears but his. Phoning would be
even worse. Therefore I must arrange something, and Julie Jaquette will have to
be postponed."
He grunted. "Any word from Saul?"
"He phoned at nine o'clock. Fred was with him and they
were proceeding. He'll call around one."
"Pfui. A prodigy on a treadmill. Take him off. Give him
Miss Jaquette. He will get names from her, and Fred will help with them."
He reached for the mail. "Your notebook. This letter from that ass in
Paris will have to be answered."
At four o'clock that afternoon I
stood in the marble lobby of a forty-story financial castle in Wall Street,
across from the row of elevators that were marked "32-40." I was
equipped. In my head was a picture of Avery Ballou, acquired from a back number
of Fortune magazine at the New York Public Library, and in my pocket was
a card. It was like the card I had given William the elevator man – my name in
the middle and Nero Wolfe's name and address and phone number in smaller type
at the bottom – but I had added something. Typewritten below my name was the
information: "There was a diary in the pink bedroom and the police have
it." It filled the space neatly.
I may have been overdoing it. It was conceivable that not
only Ballou's wife and family, but also some of his friends, and even some of
the Federal Holding Corporation personnel, knew how he had spent some of his
evenings. But it was likely that they didn't. Some of the adjectives about him
in Fortune were "astute," "aloof,"
"conventional," and "scrupulous." I don't swallow printed
adjectives whole, but if that batch was only half right it was going to be
ticklish.
So I spent a hundred minutes down in the lobby instead of
going up to the thirty-fourth floor. Anyhow it was better than the upstairs
hall at 2938 Humboldt Avenue, especially from five o'clock on, when every
elevator unloaded a flock of wrens, a pleasing sight. I know that the wrens who
lay eggs don't flock, but if they used elevators instead of wings they would
have to.
I had looked at my watch at 5:38, and it was two minutes
later that Avery Ballou showed. Of those who had been with him in the elevator,
one man stayed with him as they went down the lobby, talking. I followed, six
steps back, hoping they would separate, and they did, out on the sidewalk. The
man went toward Broadway, and Ballou just stood there. I approached, faced him,
offered the card, and said, "This will interest you, Mr. Ballou. Is there
enough light?"
For a second I thought he was going to snub it, and so did
he, but he looked at my face, the manly honest face that had launched a
thousand cards, took it, tilted it for better light, and focused on it. I had
plenty of time to size him up. His dark gray coat had set him back three Cs,
possibly four, and his dark gray hat around forty bucks. His head was the right
size for his big solid frame, and his face was a little seamy but had no sag.
It still didn't say when he finished with the card, stuck it in his pocket, and
looked at me.
"Interest me?" he asked.
I nodded. "Of course this is no place to discuss it.
The best place for that is Nero Wolfe's office. He knows even more than the
police do about that pink bedroom and about the man they're holding, and about
you. The best time would be now. That's really all I have to say, I'm just the
messenger boy. But you have to admit it was considerate of me not to go up to
the thirty-fourth floor and give somebody that card to take in."
He turned his head, clear around – to see if there was a cop
handy? No. A Rolls-Royce town car had pulled up and stopped, and the uniformed
chauffeur was getting out. Ballou turned back to me and asked, "Where is
it?"
"West Thirty-fifth Street. Nine-thirty-eight."
"Have you a car?"
"Not here."
"If you ride with me you'll keep your mouth shut."
"Right. I've said my piece."
He stepped to the Rolls and got in, and I followed, and the
driver shut the door and got in behind the wheel. As we moved, Ballou told him
we would make a stop and gave him the address. As we stopped for a light at the
corner I was thinking that it was the first time I had ever delivered a murder
suspect to the old brownstone in his own Rolls-Royce. The rest of the way,
since we were not speaking, I concentrated on how it handled, and decided it
was a little smoother than the Heron but not quite as fast on the take.
It was after six when we got there, so Wolfe would be down.
While I am not as childish as he is about showing off, I like to do things
right, so after attending to Ballou's hat and coat, and mine, in the hall, I
went to the office door, stepped in, announced, "Mr. Ballou," and
moved aside. He entered, stopped, glanced around, and asked, "Is this room
bugged?"
"Confound it," Wolfe said, "it will soon be
impossible to converse anywhere about anything. I can give you my word of honor
that what we say will not be recorded, and do, but though I know what my word
is worth, you don't." He pointed to the vase. "The microphone could
even be in there, but it isn't."
Ballou had taken the card from his overcoat pocket and had
it in his hand. He showed it. "What is this about a pink bedroom and a
diary?"
Wolfe turned a hand over. "That's obvious. A device to
get you here. But not bogus, factual. The bedroom is pink, as you know, since
you have spent many hours in it; and Miss Kerr did keep a diary; and the police
have it." He motioned at the red leather chair. "Please be seated;
eyes are better at a level."
"I have never spent an hour in a pink bedroom."
"Then why are you here?"
"Because I know something of your reputation. I know
you are capable of elaborate maneuvers, and apparently you intended to involve
me in one. I wanted to tell you, don't try it."
Wolfe shook his head. "No good, Mr. Ballou. The
question is not whether I know of your association, over a three-year period,
with Miss Kerr, nor is it what evidence I have at hand to support my knowledge.
The question is, can public disclosure of it be prevented, and if so, how? That
is the question for you. For me the question is, did you kill that woman? If
you did, I'm going to establish it and you're doomed. If you didn't, I have no
desire to expose your association with her, and it may never transpire. It is
not overweening to say that that issue depends chiefly on how candid you are
with me."
Ballou turned his head as I crossed behind him to my desk.
He regarded me as I sat, looked at Wolfe, moved to the red leather chair, got
himself comfortably seated, taking his time, and told Wolfe, "I'm
listening."
Wolfe swiveled to have him straight front. "Some of
this may be news to you, but some may not. You know, of course, that a man
named Orrie Cather is in custody as a material witness, but he will be charged
with homicide at any moment. I have assumed, on sufficient ground, that he is
innocent. Mr. Cather has worked for me, on occasion, for years, and I am under
an incumbency. If I am to satisfy it I must now violate a confidence. Mr.
Cather had been on intimate terms with Miss Kerr for about a year. He visited
her frequently at her apartment with the pink bedroom, at times when she knew
you would not come, and there were traces there of his presence and the
intimacy, not visible to you but discoverable by a search. The police found
them, and that's why they have him. Do you wish to comment?"
"I'm listening." From Ballou's face you might have
thought he was merely hearing a proposition to hold something.
"Miss Kerr told Mr. Cather many things about you, her
provider, but naturally did not tell you about him, her Strephon. Apparently
she also put him in her diary, but not you. If you were there, you would have
been visited before now by a policeman or the District Attorney. Have you
been?"
"I'm listening."
"That won't do. I need to know, and it doesn't commit
you. Has anyone called on you?"
"No."
"Have you had any indication whatever that your name
might be a factor in the murder of Isabel Kerr?"
"No."
"Then it isn't in the diary. I know only one thing
about the diary, that the police found it in Miss Kerr's apartment. A
policeman, an inspector, told Mr. Goodwin that they had it. I know nothing of
its contents except, now, that it doesn't name you, and that's fortunate. It's
probable that the District Attorney will not charge Mr. Cather with murder
until he learns who was paying for that apartment; that would be dictated by
prudence. You hope he never learns, and I would be just as well
satisfied."
Wolfe cocked his head. "That's the point, Mr. Ballou.
If Mr. Cather is brought to trial, you're in for it. He will take the stand, he
will speak, and he will certainly name you; and the dogs will be loose. There
may be a chance, even a good one, that if the murderer in fact is exposed and
tried, and convicted, your name will never be divulged; but if Mr. Cather is
tried, it will inevitably be divulged. Assuming his innocence as I do, I don't
want him to be tried, and neither do you, now that I have described the
situation. We have a common interest, and I expect you to help me pursue it – to
identify the man who killed Isabel Kerr. If you refuse, I shall of course
assume that you killed her, and if you didn't I would waste much valuable time,
and that would be a pity. Have I made it clear?"
Ballou's face looked seamier, but that was all; there was
still no sag. He took a deep breath, rubbed his brow with a palm, and said,
"Could I have a drink?" I rose and said certainly, name it, because
that was quicker than ringing for Fritz, and he said gin on the rocks with lemon
peel, and I went to the kitchen. Fritz shaved slivers of lemon peel while I got
the gin and a glass and a bowl of ice cubes. When I re-entered the office the
red leather chair was empty; Ballou was over by the globe, slowly twirling it
with a fingertip. As I put the tray on the stand he came, sat, put one ice cube
in the glass, poured gin, twisted two pieces of lemon peel and dropped them in,
and stirred.
When I was back in my chair he was still stirring. Finally
he picked up the glass, took two medium sips, and put it down.
"Yes," he said. "You have made it
clear."
Wolfe opened his eyes and grunted.
"Obviously," Ballou said, "I'm in a trap. I
can't check a single thing you have said. I did want a drink, I always have one
as soon as I get home, but what I had to have was a little time to consider. I
have decided that the probability is that the facts are as you have given them,
partly because I don't see what you could possibly expect to gain by inventing
them. The only alternative is to walk out, and I can't risk it. I have a
question: when did Miss Kerr – when did that man, Cather, first learn my
name?"
Wolfe turned. "Do we know, Archie?"
"No, sir." To Ballou: "I can find out, if
it's important."
"Could it have been as long as four months ago?"
"Certainly."
"I would like to know. It may not be important now, but
I would like to know." He got the glass and took a sip. "I have
nothing to say to your guess that I killed Miss Kerr except that I didn't.
Would a man in my position, of my standing – No, that wouldn't impress you. To
me the idea is simply fantastic. You say you expect me to help you identify the
man who killed her. If Cather didn't, and if the facts are as you say, I
certainly want to, but how?"
"First you," Wolfe said. "Where were you
Saturday morning?"
"I was at home all morning and until about three
o'clock. We had guests for lunch."
"If pressed, could you account for every half-hour from
eight o'clock to noon?"
"I think so. There were phone calls."
"Could your wife?"
"Why the devil should she?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Don't start that. You have held
your poise admirably; don't spoil it. I don't drag your wife in, circumstances
do. Did she know of your association with Miss Kerr?"
"No."
"How sure are you?"
"Completely. I have taken great precautions."
Wolfe frowned. "You see how difficult it is. It may be
highly desirable for Mr. Goodwin or me to see your wife, but with what excuse,
without involving you? It must be managed somehow, and Mr. Goodwin –"
"It will not be managed! You will not see
my wife!"
"Your poise. As you said, you're in a trap; don't
thrash about. If it wasn't you or your wife, who was it? I must have a fact, a
hint, a name. You spent many intimate hours with her. You may have to spend
hours with me. She told you of places she went and people she knew. Tell
me."
A muscle on Ballou's neck was twitching. "I insist, I insist,
that my wife is not to be disturbed. You expect to be paid, naturally. I never
'thrash about.' How much?"
Wolfe nodded. "Naturally for you. Men with money always
assume there is no other medium of exchange. I am engaged on behalf of Mr.
Cather, and you can't hire me or pay me. I am coercing you, certainly, but only
to get information. We shall disturb your wife only if it is requisite. From
you I want all the facts, all –"
The phone rang. I turned and got it. "Nero Wolfe's
–"
"Saul, Archie. I'm –"
"Hold it." I put it down and moved, to the hall
and on to the kitchen, and took the phone.
"We have company. Okay, shoot."
"You're going to have more company. I'm licked. I have
met my match. Julie Jaquette. I would give a week's pay to know if you could
have handled her. The trouble is partly that Nero Wolfe's a celebrity, so she
says, but mostly it's the orchids. If he will show her his orchids she'll tell
him all about Isabel Kerr. She won't tell me a damn thing. Nothing."
"Well, well. It might have taken me a whole ten
minutes."
"Go soak it. I said a week's pay. She –"
"Where are you?"
"A booth on Christopher Street. The one at the Ten
Little Indians had a line waiting. She's working. She'll be off until eight and
then from nine-ten to ten-fifteen."
"Then it's simple. Bring her at nine-ten."
"Like hell it's simple." It clicked and he was
gone.
I don't expect you to believe me when I report the first
words I heard as I re-entered the office, but you have a right to know why we
got about as little from Avery Ballou as Saul had got from Julie Jaquette. The
words, uttered by Ballou, were, "Rudyard Kipling." As I crossed to my
desk my head kept turning to have my eyes on him. As I sat, Wolfe asked him,
"The poems?"
"Mostly the poems," Ballou said, "but some of
the stories too. And Robert Service and Jack London. A little of some others,
but of those three, Kipling and Service and London, I had complete sets there,
bound in leather. There's something I have wanted to ask about, but haven't,
and you would know. Can they get my fingerprints from those bindings? The
leather isn't smooth, it's rippled."
Wolfe's head turned. "Archie?"
"Probably not," I told Ballou, "from rippled
leather, but your prints must be on other surfaces there. Are they on file
anywhere?"
"I don't know. I simply don't know."
Wolfe's shoulders went up a quarter of an inch and down.
"Then on that you can only abide. But this isn't easy to believe, Mr.
Ballou, that you spent ten hours or more a week there, five hundred hours a
year for three years, and Miss Kerr never spoke of how she spent the other – let's
see – nearly twenty-five thousand hours. The places she went, the people she
saw."
"I have told you," Ballou said, "under
coercion. Except for physical intimacy there was no sharing of experience. But
I did not read those poems and stories just to hear myself. I did not impose
them on her. She understood them and enjoyed them, and we discussed them. You
realize that I am not enjoying this. This is the first time in my life
that I have wanted to tell a man to go to hell and can't."
"I still find it hard to believe. Did she never speak
of her sister?"
"Yes. Speak of her, yes, but casually and rarely."
"You didn't know that her sister strongly disapproved
of her association with you?"
"No. I don't know it now."
"She did and does. Did Miss Kerr ever mention this
name: Julie Jaquette?"
"I don't think so. If she did it was only casual and I
don't remember it."
"Remarkable. You were with her, close, frequently, for
a period of three years. I wanted and expected names, and you have supplied
three: Jack London, Robert Service, and Rudyard Kipling." Wolfe pushed his
chair back. "A question: why did you want to know when Mr. Cather first
learned your name?"
"Oh … I was curious."
"You said it may not be important now. When would it
have been important, and why?"
"I meant important to me, not to you, not for what you
are trying to do. What are you going to do? You say I can't hire you or
pay you, but why not? There's no conflict between Cather's interest and mine,
as you tell it. Ten thousand now as a retainer? Twenty thousand?"
"No." Wolfe rose. "I'm committed." He
walked out.
At a quarter past nine we were
back in the office and Fritz had taken the coffee things out; so, though I
didn't know it yet, the stage was set for one of the most impressive floor
shows the old brownstone has ever seen. After letting Ballou out I had gone to
the kitchen and told Wolfe about Saul's phone call. Of course he would have
enjoyed the onion soup and Kentucky burgoo more if I had waited, but it would
have created an atmosphere if I had sprung it on him with the coffee. The
question was which could stand it best, appetite or digestion, and it takes a
lot to make a serious dent in his appetite.
It is true that digestion was getting it too. He had drunk
more coffee than usual, emptying the pot, and now that it was gone, and I was
there – I'm usually out on Tuesday evenings – he was making a stab at
continuing the dinner conversation, which had been mostly about Viet Nam, but
just then he wasn't really interested in Viet Nam. He was going to tackle not
only a woman, which was bad enough, but also a night-club singer, which was
preposterous. A hell of a way to spend an evening. When the doorbell rang he
glared at me, though he should have saved it for Saul, and I told him so as I
got up to go.
Even through the one-way glass, as I approached the door,
she took the eye. She was two inches taller than Saul, and if the coat was real
sable it must have taken at least a hundred sables. As she entered she gave me
a dazzling three-inch smile, and another one when I turned after hanging her
coat up. Saul was trying not to grin. She took my arm and asked, "Where is
he, Archie?" in a rich cuddly voice, and she kept the arm down the hall
and into the office, but then she broke away, danced to the middle of the room
and faced Wolfe's desk, let her handbag fall to the floor, and burst into song:
"Big man, go-go,
Big man, go big,
Talk big, act big,
Lo-o-o-o-o-o-ove big!
Go-go-go-go-go-go,
Big man, big man,
Be big, do big,
Lo-o-o-o-o-o-ove big,
Go!"
She extended two long, bare, well-shaped arms to him and
said, "Now the orchids. Show me!"
It was impressive. So, I admit, was Wolfe. He was
giving her exactly the same scowl I have often seen him give a crossword puzzle
that had him stumped. He switched the scowl to me and demanded, "Did you
suggest this?"
"No," she said. "Nobody ever suggests
anything to me; they don't have to. Now the orchids, big man. Go!"
"Miss Jackson," he said.
"Not here," she said. "I'm Julie
Jaquette."
"Not here," he said. "It's conceivable that
long ago, in different circumstances, I might have appreciated your
performance, but not here and –"
"It's not a performance, man, it's me."
"I don't believe it. The creature who pranced in here
and mouthed that doggerel couldn't possibly eat or sleep or read or write – or
love. Are you capable of love?"
"Ha! Am I!"
Wolfe nodded. "You see? One minute ago you would have
said, 'Am I, man.' We're making progress. As for your wish to see my orchids,
that can easily be gratified. Either Mr. Panzer or Mr. Goodwin can take you to
them at a suitable hour, perhaps tomorrow. Now we have other business, and
little time. Do you want the man who killed Isabel Kerr to be exposed and
punished?"
"Yes, damn him, I do. I do, man."
Wolfe made a face. "Don't revert. I too want him
exposed, because that's the only feasible way to get a man who is in custody
released. Orrie Cather. Miss Kerr may have told you of him."
She stared down at him from her five feet nine. "Are
you sick?" she demanded.
"No. I am sour, but I'm not sick. If you think Mr. Cather
killed her, you're wrong, he didn't, and I'm going to find out who did. Did
you?"
Saul and I were standing between her and the door. She
turned to us and said distinctly, "You rat."
"Not guilty," Saul said. "You made it plain
right away that you thought he killed her. You also made it plain –"
"You said Nero Wolfe wanted me to help nail him."
"I did not. I merely said he wanted you to help. You
also made it plain that you would tell me nothing."
She glanced around, went to my chair at my desk, sat, and eyed
Wolfe. It would have been quite a lifting job for both of us, so I went to the
red leather chair and Saul moved up one of the yellow ones.
"So you think you're going to bounce him," she
said. "Because he works for you. Nuts. Tell me how."
Wolfe shook his head. "I can't. I don't know.
Manifestly you are satisfied that he's guilty, and of course you have told the
police why, but it hasn't fully satisfied them. He is being held only as a
material witness. If you care to, try to satisfy me. Why are you so sure?"
"Damn it, I warned her," she said.
"You warned her that Mr. Cather would kill her?"
"No, but I warned her there was no telling what he
would do. I suppose you know he wanted to marry another girl?"
"Yes."
"So it was an ungodly mess, the kind people get into
when a screw gets loose. They had a perfect setup, the damn fools. Whoever was
paying her bills, she never told me who it was, he had a place with her in it
whenever he needed a change, and you couldn't beat that. She had the place to herself
most of the time, and she had a man who did her good, and you couldn't beat that.
He had a woman who suited him, ready for him nearly any time, for nothing, and
you couldn't beat that. A perfect setup. But she decides she has got to
marry him, and he decides he has got to marry some other dame, and even she
has got a good job – an airline stewardess. You know that?"
"Yes."
"So she could stay loose too if she had any brains.
None of them had any brains. I warned Isabel she had better deal him out, he
had the sweat up and might do anything, but she wouldn't listen. She put the
sting on him, and he killed her. When people's brains quit working, just go
somewhere else. But he killed her, and now he'll have to go somewhere
else."
"You have told the police all this?"
"I sure have."
"What if he didn't kill her?"
"Nuts."
Wolfe regarded her. Since his eyes were used to seeing me
when they aimed at that chair, he had to adjust. "Do you ever
gamble?" he asked her. "Do you like to bet?"
"That's a silly question. Who doesn't?"
"Good. Saul, what odds will you give Miss Jackson that
Orrie Cather didn't kill Isabel Kerr?"
Saul didn't hesitate. "Ten to one." He got his
wallet from a pocket and took bills out. "A hundred to ten."
"She may not have it. Will you –"
"I always have it." She opened her bag, which she
had put on my desk after picking it up from the floor, where she had dropped it
while performing. "But who settles it?"
"The District Attorney," Saul said. "A
hundred to ten that he isn't even tried. All right for Archie Goodwin to hold
it?"
"No. Nero Wolfe." She got up and handed Wolfe a
bill, and Saul went with his. Wolfe checked Saul's, five twenties, opened a
drawer, and dropped them in. She went back to my chair, put her bag on my desk,
and told Wolfe, "Now tell me why I have just lost ten bucks."
He shook his head. "That must await the event. I merely
wished to demonstrate that we are acting on a conclusion, not a conjecture. Do
you have animus for Mr. Cather?"
"What's animus?"
"Hostility. Hatred."
"Of course not. I don't hate anybody."
"If he didn't kill Miss Kerr, are you willing to lose
that ten dollars?"
"Why not? It's a bet."
"Then if someone else killed her you would rather have
him justly punished than Mr. Cather wrongfully punished?"
"Certainly."
"Again, good. You and Miss Kerr were close friends.
Except for the name of the man who was paying her bills, she confided in you.
What kind of woman was she? That question is not at random; I need to know.
What was she like?"
"She was a duck. She was a damn fine woman until she
flapped about that square. She knew the game and she knew the score. She always
had her dignity, all the way. She had a good big heart, but she never let it bleed.
I'd rather not have any heart than have it bleeding around everywhere. One
reason we were so close was that we both knew exactly what men are for and what
they're not for – until that Cather baboon popped up."
"You know him?"
"No. I've never seen him and I don't want to."
Wolfe looked at the clock. "You must be back at a
quarter past ten?"
"At ten past ten. I have to change."
"Then we haven't much time. I ask you to accept a
hypothesis. Suppose you knew positively, no matter how, that he did not kill
her. Then who did? Whom would you suspect?"
"That's easy. The lobster, of course."
"What? Lobster?"
"Excuse me. The man who was keeping her."
"You don't even know his name."
"So what? He was shelling out around twenty grand a
year. Maybe it was stripping him. Maybe he was hooking it. He found out about
that Cather, and he killed her. That's ABC."
"Very well, I'll consider it. But extend the
hypothesis. Eliminate him too. Who then? Didn't you and Miss Kerr have many
mutual friends?"
"Yes. If you want to call them friends to be polite.
Sure we did."
"Suppose it was one of them. Which one?"
She pronounced a word which she should have kept to herself,
since there was a lady present.
"Meaning?" Wolfe asked.
"Meaning I know them. You don't kill someone unless you
have a reason, and even if you have a reason you've got to have the guts. They
don't fit."
"Not one?"
"No."
"Will you give Mr. Goodwin or Mr. Panzer some of their
names while he is showing you the orchids?"
"He can't show me the orchids. I have to be
going."
"Perhaps tomorrow morning."
"He'd have to bring them to me in bed. Spread them all
over me. I'd like that, but he wouldn't. In bed in the morning I'm no
treat."
"Then the afternoon. Have you ever met a Dr.
Gamm?"
"Teddy?" She laughed. "Yes, I know Teddy. I
guess he's a pretty good doctor, but as a man you can have him. He got the idea
he was going to make Isabel, and that was an idea. God knows what he'll
do for an idea now."
"That one didn't work?"
"Certainly not."
"Have you ever met Miss Kerr's sister? Mrs.
Fleming?"
She nodded. "That beetle. Now there's an idea.
It's not funny, either. I honestly believe she thought Isabel would be better
off dead. All right, if it wasn't Cather and it wasn't the lobster, it was
her." She looked at the wall clock. "I've got to go." She left
my chair. "Come along. Why not? You can have a front table and I'll spot
you. I'll announce you big. I'll tell the suckers that Nero Wolfe in person is
here and will take a bow. You can bow sitting down if you want to, they'll
stand on their chairs to see you. It will be a feather in my bra. Come along.
The beer will be on the house."
Wolfe's head was tilted back to squint up at her. "I
decline your invitation, Miss Jackson," he said, "but I wish you
well. I have the impression that your opinion of our fellow beings and their
qualities is somewhat similar to mine." He got to his feet. He almost
never stands for comers or goers, male or female. And he actually repeated it.
"I wish you well, madam."
"Big man," she said. She turned. "You come,
Archie. That Panzer's a rat."
Forty-seven hours later, at nine
o'clock Thursday evening, Wolfe put his coffee cup down and said, "Four
days and nights of nothingness." I put my cup down and said, "No
argument." Actually there could have been one. There had been plenty of
nothingness in results, but not in efforts. Somewhere in the nine notebooks
here on my table – I write these reports on my own machine up in my room, not
in the office – are the names of four males and six females, supplied by
Jaquette-Jackson when she came to look at the orchids Wednesday afternoon, who
had been seen by Saul and Fred. For something to bite on, hopeless. Of course
anything is possible. It was possible that one of the women had thought that
Isabel had pinched her lipstick and had gone to get it and got mad and bopped
her, or that one of the men hated Rudyard Kipling and couldn't stand a woman
who had him bound in leather, but you need something better than ten billion
possibles to get your teeth into. Any little piece of straw will do, but you
have to have something.
For instance, statistics. There are two kinds of statistics,
the kind you look up and the kind you make up.
I admit this is the second kind: out of every thousand
murders committed by amateurs, eighty-three are a woman killing another woman
because she has taken her husband, or part of him. Therefore, from the
statistical point of view, on the list of names we had collected the only one
with a worthy known motive was Mrs. Avery Ballou, and that automatically gave
her top billing. The difficulty was the approach. If I went and asked her if
she had known that her husband had for three years been reading Kipling's poems
to the woman who had been murdered last week, Ballou would never speak to us
again, and we might need him for something. So after breakfast Wednesday
morning I rang Lily Rowan and asked her if she had ever met Mrs. Avery Ballou,
and she said no, and from the little she knew about her she didn't particularly
care to.
"Then I won't insist," I said. "But I need to
find out if I want to meet her. This is strictly private. I don't need a
detailed rйsumй, just a sketch, especially what her main interests are. For
instance, if she collects autographs of famous private detectives, that would
be perfect."
"She can't be that sappy."
I said she might do worse and it was a rush order, and an
hour later she called me back. She had more than I needed, and I'll omit most
of it. Mrs. Ballou had been Minerva Chadwick of the steel and railroad
Chadwicks. She had married Ballou in 1936. Their son and two daughters were
married. Her friends called her Minna. She never gave big parties but liked to
have a few friends in for dinner. She was an Episcopalian but seldom went to
church. She didn't like Paris much and she hated Florida. She liked horses and
had four Arabians, but her special interest was Irish wolfhounds, and she had
either twelve or fourteen…
I have wasted my space and your time, since obviously it was
Irish wolfhounds. About all I knew about them was that they are big, so I
called a man I know who knows dogs and got a few facts, and then rang the
listed number of the Ballou house on 67th Street. When a voice like a butler
said, "Mrs. Ballou's residence," I told him my name was Archibald
Goodwin and I would like to make an appointment with Mrs. Ballou to ask her
advice about an Irish wolfhound. He said she was not then available and he
would give her the message, and I gave him my phone number. Toward noon a call
came, a businesslike female voice who said she was Miss Corcoran, Mrs. Ballou's
secretary, and what kind of advice did I want about an Irish wolfhound. I told
her I was thinking of buying one, and I didn't know which of the commercial
kennels had the best ones, and a friend had told me that Mrs. Ballou knew more
about it than anyone else in the country; and she said if I came at five
o'clock Mrs. Ballou would see me. That was okay, since Jackson-Jaquette was due
at two-thirty to look at orchids.
You probably have no strong desire to spend another couple
of hours with either Julie Jaquette or Miss Jackson, and I have already
reported on the ten names I got from her, so I'll skip it and give you the
pleasure of meeting Minna Ballou. The setting and supporting cast were fully up
to expectations: the butler who let me in, with keen, careful eyes that sized
me up in two seconds; the mat that protected the first six feet of the rug in
the reception hall, bigger than the 14-by-26 Keraghan in Wolfe's office; the
uniformed maid who turned her nose up as she took my hat and coat; the wide
marble stairs; the elevator with red lacquered panels; the middle-aged gray-haired
gray-eyed Miss Corcoran, who was there when I stepped out on the fourth floor;
the room she took me to, with a desk and typewriter and cabinets to the left,
and a couch and soft chairs and a coffee table to the right. Pictures of dogs
and horses were spotted around, but my glance caught no picture of Avery Ballou.
His wife was stretched out on the couch, on her back, with what I would call a
faded red bathrobe reaching down nearly to her ankles. As we entered she turned
her head and said, "I hoped you wouldn't come. I'm tired." She
pointed to a chair near the foot of the couch. "Sit there."
I obeyed the order and was facing her. She had thin lips and
a thin nose, and a twist of her dyed brown hair straggled down her forehead.
She was barefooted and her toes bulged. I smiled at her cordially.
"Aren't you going to say anything?" she demanded.
"If you're not too tired," I said, "I suppose
Miss Corcoran told you what I said on the phone. Actually it's a friend of mine
who wants to get an Irish wolfhound. She has a place up in Westchester. I live
in town, and I guess a city apartment is no place for an Irish wolfhound."
"It certainly isn't."
"Somebody told her she should get one from
Ireland."
"Who told her that?"
"I don't know."
"Whoever it was, he's a fool. Commercial breeders in
Ireland have very inferior stock. The best wolfhound breeder in the world is
Florence Nagle in England, but she's not commercial, and she's very particular
whom she sells to. All good breeders are. Of course I'm not commercial either,
I sell only as a very special favor. I love wolfhounds and they love me. When
I'm there, eight of them sleep in my bedroom."
I smiled nicely. "Does your husband like that?"
"I doubt if he even knows it. He wouldn't know a
wolfhound from an ostrich. What's your friend's name?"
"Lily Rowan. Her place is near Katonah."
"Why does she want a wolfhound?"
"Well, partly for protection. There are no close
neighbors."
"That reason's not good enough. You have to love them.
You have to like it when a tail knocks over a vase or a lamp. Does she know
that a good male weighs up to a hundred and thirty pounds, and when he rears up
he's six feet six? Does she know that when he leaps at you because he loves
you, you go down? Does she know that he has to run three miles a day and you
have to tailgate him behind a station wagon? Tell her to get just a dog, a
Great Dane or a Doberman."
I shook my head. "I don't think that's very smart, Mrs.
Ballou."
"I do. Why not?"
"Because you ought to realize that Miss Rowan is all
set to love an Irish wolfhound. Look at the trouble she's taking. She finds out
about kennels, but that doesn't satisfy her, and she hears that the person who
knows most about it is you, and she gets me to try to see you, because she
thinks a man would stand a better chance with you than another woman. I told
her she could do it herself by seeing your husband, but she didn't know if he
was interested in wolfhounds. Apparently he isn't."
She closed her eyes and opened them again. "My husband
is interested in absolutely nothing but finance and what he calls the structure
of economics. What's the name of that Englishwoman who writes books about
it?"
"Barbara Ward."
She nodded. "She might interest him, but no other woman
would. What's your friend's name?"
"Lily Rowan."
"Yes. I'm tired. You seem to have some sense. Do you
think a wolfhound would be happy with her?"
"I do, or I wouldn't be here."
"Does she want a male or a bitch?"
"I was told to ask you. Which would you advise?"
"It depends. I would have to know … she lives in the
country?"
"Not in the winter. She has an apartment in town."
I didn't add that her penthouse was about four hundred yards from where I was
sitting.
"I would have to see her." She turned her head.
"Celia, have you got that name? Lucy Rowan?"
Miss Corcoran, at the desk, said yes, she had it, and Mrs.
Ballou returned to me. "Tell her to call Miss Corcoran. That's what she
should have done instead of bothering you. I didn't get your name … it doesn't
matter." She shut her eyes.
I arose and stood, thinking it would be better manners to
thank her with her eyes open, but they didn't open, so I said thank you, and
she said with her eyes shut, "I thought you had gone." If I had been
an Irish wolfhound I would have wagged my tail as I left the room and knocked
something over. Miss Corcoran, who accompanied me to the elevator to see that I
entered it, told me that between ten and eleven in the morning would be the
best time for Miss Rowan to phone.
I hadn't had a decent walk since Saturday, it wasn't five-thirty
yet, and I might as well save taxi fare. But first there was a phone call to
make, so I went to Madison Avenue, found a booth, got Lily Rowan, explained the
situation, and said that she had better ring Miss Corcoran in the morning and
tell her she had decided to get a dachshund instead. What she said was
irrelevant and personal. Outside again, I turned my collar up and put gloves
on. Winter was going all out.
If you have the impression that the help was doing all the
work, Saul and Fred after the ten names I had got from Julie Jaquette and me
cornering a jealous wife, no indeed. When I entered the office at a quarter
past six there was Wolfe at his desk with a book, and I saw at a glance that it
wasn't Invitation to an Inquest. It was The Jungle Book by
Rudyard Kipling, so I tiptoed across to my desk, not to disturb him. When he
finished a paragraph and looked up I asked, "Wouldn't you get the feel
better if you read aloud? Pretend I'm her."
He ignored it and demanded, "Have you done any
better?"
"No, sir. Unless we want an Irish wolfhound for
stalking. Mrs. Ballou is scratched. Even if someone had told her all about it,
full details, she couldn't have gone there and settled Isabel Kerr because (a)
she would have been too tired, and (b) she would have forgotten the name and
address. Of course Miss Jackson has broadened your understanding of women, and
you may not agree."
I reported. It was so brief that he hadn't much more than
got comfortably arranged, leaning back with his eyes closed, when I reached the
end, the phone call to Lily Rowan.
"There is one difference between you and her," I
said. "You shut your eyes to concentrate on what I'm saying, and she shuts
hers to hope I'm not there. She didn't even notice that I dragged her husband
in by the heels, twice. I swear I could have told her all about Isabel Kerr and
the pink bedroom, and when he came home from work she wouldn't have bothered to
mention it to him."
He grunted and opened his eyes. "How could eight dogs
that size possibly spend the night in her bedroom?" he demanded.
I nodded. "That worried me too. If you figure an
average of two square yards to a dog, and maybe more if –"
The doorbell rang, and I went. It was a man in a heavy brown
tweed overcoat and a smooth dark blue narrow-rimmed hat, which was ridiculous,
and I guessed it was one of the bozos Saul or Fred had flushed. But when I
opened the door he said, "I am Dr. Gamm. Theodore Gamm, M.D. Are you the
man who called on Mr. and Mrs. Fleming Monday afternoon?" I told him yes,
and he said, "I insist on seeing Nero Wolfe," and would have walked
right through me if I hadn't sidestepped.
Of course that isn't the way to do it. You merely say
something first and then you insist. He wasn't even built for it, after
he peeled his coat off. He was round all over, round-shouldered and round-hipped
and round-faced, and the bald top of his head was barely up to my chin. I put
him in the front room, took the long route to the office, by the hall, and told
Wolfe that Dr. Theodore Gamm insisted on asking him why he had sent me to see
Mr. and Mrs. Fleming. He looked at the clock and growled, "Dinner in half
an hour." I said that Mrs. Ballou had taken me only ten minutes, went and
opened the connecting door, and brought him in. As I motioned him to the red
leather chair Wolfe said something about twenty minutes. That chair is deep,
and when he found that his feet weren't on the floor he slid forward, pinned
his eyes on Wolfe, and said, "You're grossly overweight."
Wolfe nodded. "Seventy pounds. Perhaps eighty. Death
will see to that. Does it concern you?"
"Yes, it does." He curled his pudgy hands over the
ends of the chair arms. "Any conflict with natural health is an
impertinence, and I resent it." His voice was bigger than he was. "It
is my concern for health that brought me here – the health of one of my
patients, Mrs. Barry Fleming. You sent a man – that man" – his eyes darted
to me and back to Wolfe – "to torment her. She was already in a state of
strain, and now she threatens to collapse. Can you justify it?"
"Easily." Wolfe's brows were up. "Both the
intention and the deed, but it's the deed you challenge. Mrs. Fleming's state
of strain was partly from the shock of her sister's death, but mostly from the
fear that her way of life would be exposed. Mr. Goodwin rendered her a service
by making it clear that the exposure is inevitable unless certain steps are
taken. That should propel her not to collapse, but to action, if she is –"
"What kind of action?"
"The only kind that could be effective. Did she tell
you all that Mr. Goodwin said?"
"Her husband did. That if the man they have arrested,
Orrie Cather, is tried, everything about Isabel will come out. That Cather is
innocent, and the only hope is to get enough evidence to make them release him.
You call that a service, to tell her that?"
"If it's valid, yes. It's obvious. Do you question
it?"
"Yes. I think it was a cheap trick. Why do you say
Cather is innocent? Can you prove it?"
"No, but I intend to."
"I don't believe it. I think you're merely trying to
raise enough dust to make it hard to convict him. There is no reason why you
should want to do Mrs. Fleming a service, but if you did want to you could. You
could persuade Cather and his lawyer to make it unnecessary for certain facts
to be brought out at his trial. I know you won't, but you could."
"You would like me to?"
"Certainly. For Mrs. Fleming that – it might save her
life."
"But you know I won't?"
"Yes."
"Then why did you bother to come?"
"She asked me to. They both did. They think it was just
a trick, your sending him with that hogwash, and so do I. Why do you say Cather
is innocent?"
Wolfe squinted at him. "You should arrange your mind
better, Doctor. As Mr. Goodwin explained to Mrs. Fleming, it will serve her
interest if Mr. Cather is innocent, but you don't like that. You contend. Is it
possible that you are less concerned about your patient's health than about
your own? Did you kill Isabel Kerr?"
Gamm goggled. "Why, you –" He swallowed.
"Damn your impertinence!"
"Naturally you damn it. But since I have assumed that
Mr. Cather did not kill her, for reasons I prefer not to disclose, I need to
know who did. As a man whose repeated advances to her were spurned, you are
eligible. Persistent mortification can become insupportable. It's a question of
character and temperament, and I know nothing of yours; I would have to consult
people who know you well – for instance, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming. But I can
collect facts. Where were you last Saturday morning from eight o'clock to noon?
If you can establish –"
He stopped because his audience was going. Dr. Gamm didn't
have the figure or the style for an impressive exit, it was more like a waddle,
but it got him to the door and on through. I took my time rising and crossing
to the hall, and got there just as he was opening the front door. When he was
out and the door closed I went back in, raised my arms for a good stretch and
an uncovered yawn, and said, "Another one down. He wouldn't have walked
out, he wouldn't have dared, until he found out if you have anything and how
much. Or tried to."
Wolfe's lips were tight. He loosened them to say, "He's
either a murderer or a jackass."
"Then he's a jackass. It seems to me –"
The phone rang and I went and got it. It was Saul, reporting
on a couple of names. I told him we could match him and wished him better luck
tomorrow.
He didn't have it, and neither did we. Thursday was even
emptier than Wednesday, though I tried hard because Wolfe had paid me a
compliment. Partly he was merely desperate, but the fact remains that Wednesday
evening he told me to go and give the neighborhood a play. It was the first
time he had ever sent me on something that Saul had already covered, and I
admit it would have been highly satisfactory to get a break – for example, a
janitor across the street who had seen a stranger enter that building Saturday
morning, a stranger who could have been Dr. Gamm or Stella Fleming or Barry
Fleming or Julie Jaquette, or even Avery or Minna Ballou. Or even just a
stranger, to try to find. What the hell, there are only twelve million people
in the metropolitan area. Actually it was a farce without a laugh. Not only had
Saul and Fred seen everyone, but also the cops had worked it hard, trying to
find somebody who could put Orrie Cather there. During the long day I spoke
with more than forty people, all ages and sizes and colors, and they had
already been spoken to so often that they had their answers down pat. At six-thirty
I called it a week and went home to dinner. The only thing that had happened
there was that Parker had called to say that he had seen Orrie again, and had
talked with an assistant district attorney, and he still thought it was
inadvisable to start action to get him out on bail.
So back in the office after dinner Wolfe put his coffee cup
down and said, "Four days and nights of nothingness," and I put mine
down and said, "No argument."
"Confound it," Wolfe said, "ask
questions."
"If there were any good ones," I said, "you
would ask them yourself. All right, Jill Hardy. Why did she want my arms around
her? Because she had killed Isabel Kerr and was going to confess and wanted to
soften me up but Cramer interrupted?"
"I don't want chaff. I want a question."
"So do I. Stella Fleming. She is subject to fits, for
instance going for me with claws. But if she had one Saturday morning and killed
her sister, would she have gone back that evening and got the superintendent to
let her in so she could discover the body? I don't believe it. A thousand to
one."
"Negative," he muttered. "Something
positive."
"Try this. Barry Fleming. Why did he invite me in,
knowing how his wife was? Because I had told him we were going to clear Orrie,
and he wanted to find out if we knew or suspected that he had killed
Isabel. That's positive."
"But vain without a motive."
"Oh, if you want motive. Mrs. Ballou. Her chat with me
was a production. She's really a hellcat and nuts about her husband. Boiling
with jealousy. Only in that case I'm a sap and you'll have to fire me."
"I'll consider it. Mr. Ballou."
I shook my head. "Your turn. You had him."
"I reject him, provisionally. Cracking that woman's
skull with an ashtray was an act of passion, not within his compass. There is a
question: why would he like to know when Orrie first heard his name? Why is it
not important now but still he would like to know?"
I shook my head again. "We'd better skip that. Probably
curiosity as to whether it coincided with a change he noticed in the way she
reacted to Kipling and Service and London. That wouldn't interest you. I agree
on his compass. All right, Miss Jackson. She's yours too, you wished her
well."
"No. Yours."
"Thank you. There is nothing she couldn't and wouldn't
do if it appealed to her. But if she had any reason for wanting Isabel dead I
would have to see it in color, with sound. Talking with ten of their mutual
friends, Saul or Fred would surely have got a hint, especially Saul. And they
didn't. Anyway, she's crossed off since you wished her well. So we're down to
Dr. Gamm."
"Pfui."
"I agree. We're down to nothing. You told us Sunday
evening that we have never had less, and you can say it again. Not a sign of a
crack anywhere. I was thinking during dinner, while you were commenting on what
they intend to do to Ellis Island, that maybe you should make a deal with
Cramer. I mean it. His scientists didn't miss an inch of that apartment, and
there's a chance that whoever killed her left his prints somewhere, at least
one. They latched on to Orrie so fast that they have probably filed other
possibilities. Offer to trade Cramer all we have for all the prints they got.
With your word of honor, which he knows is good. It wouldn't sink Orrie any
deeper, and it just might give us a lead. As it stands, there isn't one single
damn item on the program for tomorrow."
His jaw was set. "No," he said.
"No what? If you prefer –"
The doorbell rang. I went, took a look, stuck my head back
in, and said, "Mr. Ballou. He doesn't look jaunty."
If Avery Ballou had somehow
dropped all his stack, and had been kicked out of his job as president of the
Federal Holding Corporation, he wouldn't have starved. I have never seen a
neater job of wrapping and taping than he had done on the little package he put
on Wolfe's desk before he sat down. Any shipping room in town would have
grabbed him. I am assuming that he had done it himself on account of what was
in it, but I admit it might have been packaged at the bank. The seams in his
face were deeper than ever, and he looked as tired as his wife had felt.
Seated, he lowered his head and rubbed his brow with a palm, slowly back and
forth. On Tuesday that had been followed by a request for a drink, but now
apparently he was beyond that. He raised his head, pulled his shoulders up,
looked at Wolfe, and said, "You said I couldn't hire you or pay you."
"And told you why," Wolfe said.
"I know. But the situation is – I want you to
reconsider it." He turned to me. "You said you could find out when
that man Cather learned my name. Have you?"
I shook my head. "You said it isn't important
now."
"You also said it could have been as long as four
months ago."
"Right. I said 'certainly.' Or eight months, or
ten."
"Four is enough." He returned to Wolfe. "I
know you have had a wide experience, but you may not realize the absolute
necessity of good repute for a man of my standing. Byron wrote 'The glory and
the nothing of a name,' but he was a poet. A poet can take liberties that are
fatal to a man like me. As I think I told you, I took great precautions when I
visited Miss Kerr. No one who ever saw me enter or leave that building could
possibly have recognized me. I had full reliance on her discretion; I was more
than liberal with her, financially. I was completely certain that nobody
whatever knew of my … diversion."
He stopped, apparently inviting comment. Wolfe obliged.
"You should know that your only safe secrets are those you have yourself
forgotten."
He nodded. "I now suspect that there are many things I
should know that I don't know. My reliance on Miss Kerr was misplaced. I was a
fool. I should have known that she might … form an attachment. I assume she
did, with Cather? She became attached to him?"
Wolfe turned to me. "Archie?"
"She burned," I told Ballou. "She wanted to
marry him."
"I see. I was a fool. But that explains why she told
him my name, and that's important. She was discreet, but of course with
him there was no discretion. Doesn't that follow?"
He wanted an answer, and Wolfe supplied it. "Yes."
"Then he knew my name, but no one else did. Then he's a
scoundrel and a blackmailer. I have been paying him a thousand dollars a month
for four months. Almost certainly he is also a murderer. He killed her. I don't
know why he killed her, but he's a scoundrel."
Wolfe's eyes came to me, and I met them. I put one brow up.
His eyes went back to Ballou. "Why the devil," he demanded,
"didn't you tell me this before? Two days ago."
"I didn't see it then. Not as I do now, after
considering it. You had given me a bad jolt. And you had said that Cather
didn't kill her. I think he did. He's a blackguard. I think he'll be tried and
convicted, and that's why I'm here. You said the other day that if he is tried
my name will inevitably be divulged, and that must not happen. My name
connected not merely with a diversion but with a sensational murder – it must
not happen." He pointed to the package he had put on Wolfe's desk.
"That parcel contains fifty thousand dollars in fifty-dollar bills. You
told me the other day that you were committed, but you don't have to stay
committed to a blackmailer and a murderer."
He took a breath. "That fifty thousand is just a
retainer. I'm in a tougher trap than I realized, and I have to get out, no
matter what it costs. I admit I don't see how it can be done, but you know
Cather and you'll know how to deal with him. I'm not asking or expecting
anything crooked. If they have the evidence to try him and convict him, all
right, that's the law. But my name must not appear. You said that, since
no one has called on me, my name isn't in that diary, and also evidently Cather
hasn't mentioned my name to the police. Isn't that true?"
"Yes." Wolfe was pinching his lip with a thumbtip
and a fingertip. "You're going much too fast, Mr. Ballou. I concede that I
don't have to stay committed to a blackmailer and a murderer, but am I? I need
to know more. Describe the man you paid the money to."
"I have never seen him. I mailed it to him."
"When and how did he demand it?"
"On the telephone. One evening in September, at my home,
I was told that a man who gave his name as Robert Service Kipling wished to
speak to me. Of course I took the phone. He told me that he didn't have to
explain why he used that name and told me to go to a nearby drugstore and be at
the booth at ten o'clock and answer the phone when it rang. You will understand
why I went. At ten o'clock the phone rang in the booth, and I answered it. It
was the same voice. It isn't necessary to tell you what he said. He said enough
to convince me that he knew of my visits to that apartment and their purpose.
He said he had no desire to interfere with them, and he thought I should show
my appreciation for his cooperation. He told me to mail him ten hundred-dollar
bills the next day, and the same amount on the fifteenth of each month. I said
I would."
He rubbed his brow with a palm. "I know it is wrong, on
principle, to submit to blackmail. But the threat was not exposure, he didn't
say he had evidence in his possession, he merely made it plain that I would
have to pay him or stop going there. He wouldn't answer my questions, how had
he learned my name, but obviously he hadn't merely seen me and recognized me,
from things he said. Just his giving his name as Robert Service Kipling would
have been enough for that. I mailed the money the next day, and each month
since. I simply preferred to pay him rather than give it up. Now I know.
Unquestionably it was Cather. Miss Kerr had told him."
Wolfe nodded. "A reasonable conjecture, but that's all.
His name and address, for mailing?"
"It was a fake name, naturally. The address was General
Delivery, Grand Central Station, Lexington Avenue and Forty-fifth Street. The
name was Milton Thales."
"Thales? T,H,A,L,E,S?"
"Yes."
"Indeed. Interesting." Wolfe closed his eyes and
in a moment opened them. "You made no effort to learn who he was?"
"No. What for? What good would that do?"
"If it was Mr. Cather, it might have prevented this.
Did you tell Miss Kerr about it?"
"Yes. I asked if she had told anyone, anyone, my
name, and she said she hadn't. She lied. She was very – well, she was
indignant. I was a little surprised at her reaction. It didn't seem to be
–" He stopped. He pursed his lips and frowned, and then he nodded. "I
see. Of course. I said I don't know why he killed her, but it's obvious. She
knew it must be Cather, and she told him, and she told him he had to stop, and
he killed her. My God, if I had known – damn him. Damn him!"
It was closer to passion than I had thought was in his
compass, and I was going to offer him a drink, but Wolfe spoke. "A detail.
The voice on the telephone. Indubitably a man?"
"Yes. He was disguising it, a kind of falsetto, but I
was sure it was a man. No doubt at all."
"Has he communicated with you again? Telephoned?"
"Once. The seventeenth of December. That name again,
Robert Service Kipling. At my home. He said he thought I would like to know
that the material was being received, and that was all."
Wolfe leaned back, closed his eyes, clasped his hands at the
high point of his middle, and pushed his lips out. Ballou started to say
something, and I showed him a palm, but it really didn't matter. When Wolfe's
lips start working like that, out and in, out and in, he has taken off and he
hears nothing. Ballou lowered his head and shut his eyes, so in effect I
was left alone for about three minutes. Finally Wolfe opened his eyes and asked
me if I could get Saul and Fred, and I said yes but I didn't know how soon. He
said, "The kitchen. Tell them to come at once," and I went.
Making phone calls merely to tell men they're wanted – I had
to try three numbers to get Saul – doesn't take much brainpower, and my mind
could work on something else. Not figuring the odds on Orrie as a blackmailer;
that was so long a shot it was just no bet. The riddle was, why was Thales an
interesting name for a blackmailer? Wolfe had really meant it; it wasn't the
tone he uses when he's faking. If he thought it was interesting I should too,
since I knew everything he did. I would give a nice new dollar bill to know how
many of the people who read this report will be on to it. I still wasn't when I
returned to the office, though I sat and pecked at it for a good five minutes
after I got Saul.
Two paces inside the office I stopped. The red leather chair
was empty. I asked Wolfe, "Did you bounce him?"
He shook his head. "He's in the front room. Lying down.
Of course he shouldn't be seen by Saul and Fred. You got them?"
"They're on the way." I crossed to my desk.
"It's too bad Orrie sank to blackmail, but then a wedding ring, furniture,
marriage license – it mounts up."
"Nonsense."
"You can say that, with fifty grand there on your desk?
Why is it interesting that he picked Thales for a name?"
"You mispronounce it. So did Mr. Ballou."
"It isn't Thales?"
"Certainly not. It's Thā-lēz."
"Oh, that's why it's interesting."
"The Milton is interesting too. Thales of Miletus, the
sixth and seventh centuries B.C., was the chief of the seven 'wise men' of
ancient Greece. He preceded Euclid by three centuries. He founded the geometry
of lines. He made the first prediction of an eclipse of the sun, to the day.
His was the first great name in the history of mathematics. Thales of
Miletus."
"I'll be damned." I sat and looked at it for a
full minute. "I will be damned. He had a hell of a nerve. Ballou
went to college. He might have liked mathematics. He might have known all about
Thales of Miletus."
"But did he know that Miss Kerr's brother-in-law is a
teacher of mathematics?"
"Probably not. Who would ever expect a goddam
blackmailer to have a sense of humor? Did you tell Ballou?"
"No. It can wait. I would like some beer."
"And I would like some milk." I rose. "This
is more like it, something to chew on." I went to the kitchen. Fritz was
below in his room, and I didn't need any help. As I poured the milk and put the
beer and glass on the tray, and took them to the office, my mind was on the
newer and hotter riddle, going back to Monday afternoon and remembering how
Barry Fleming had looked and acted and what he had said. After a couple of sips
of milk, recollecting that we had a guest, I went to the front room to ask if
he would like a drink.
He was stretched out on the sofa with his arm curled over
his eyes. He didn't want anything. In the short time I was gone Wolfe had been
to the shelves and got a book, a volume of the Britannica, and had it
open. As I picked up my glass he said, "Thales perfected the theory of the
scalene triangle and the theory of lines. He discovered the theorem that the
sides of equiangular triangles are proportional. He discovered that when two
straight lines intersect the vertically opposite angles are equal, and that the
circle is bisected by its diameter."
I said, "Golly."
It was close to eleven o'clock when Fred arrived. I took him
to the kitchen, because Wolfe was still consulting the encyclopedia, though he
must have finished with Thales long ago. When Saul came, I sent him to join
Fred in the kitchen and told Wolfe to let us know when he was ready for
company, and he glared at me because he was in the middle of an interesting
article. The way I know it was interesting is that there isn't a single page in
the whole twenty-four volumes that he wouldn't think was interesting. I went to
the kitchen and brought them, and Saul took the red leather chair and Fred one
of the yellow ones.
That was the shortest session with the help on record.
"I apologize," Wolfe said, "for getting you out so late on a
winter night, but I need you. There has been a development. The man who
maintained that apartment for Miss Kerr – call him X – is in the front room. He
came to tell me something that he should have told me two days ago. Last
September a man telephoned him and demanded money. The man knew of his visits
to that apartment and threatened to make them impossible unless the money was
paid, a thousand dollars at once and a thousand dollars a month, in cash, to be
mailed to him at general delivery – an assumed name, of course. The money has
been paid, a total of five thousand dollars. X is convinced, for reasons he
considers valid, that the blackmailer is Orrie Cather. Sunday evening I asked
your opinion as to whether Orrie had killed Miss Kerr. I now ask your opinion
as to whether he is a blackmailer. Did he blackmail X? Fred?"
Fred was frowning, concentrating. "Just like you
said?" he asked. "Just straight open-and-shut blackmail?"
"Yes."
Fred shook his head. "No, sir. Impossible."
"Saul?"
"To be sure I have it right," Saul said,
"this was at the time when Orrie was seeing her himself?"
"Yes."
"Then no. As Fred said, impossible. That would take a
real snake."
"Satisfactory," Wolfe said. "Archie and I had
made our conclusion, and I know, barely short of certainty, who the blackmailer
is, but I wanted your opinions. I didn't get you here just for that; there will
be instructions for tomorrow. Archie, may they wait in your room?"
Not the kitchen. He was taking no chances. What if a man-eating
tiger bounded in through the kitchen window and they scooted down the hall and
saw Ballou? I told them they were welcome to my room as long as they didn't
rummage, and they headed for the stairs. Wolfe gave them a full minute to get
up the two flights and then told me to bring Ballou. He was still on the sofa,
but when I entered he sat up and started talking. I told him to save it for
Wolfe, and he got to his feet and came. I swear his first glance, as he crossed
to the red leather chair, was at the package on Wolfe's desk. A habit is a
habit, even when you're up a tree.
As he sat, he spoke. "I've been going over it. I have
answered your questions, and I have made you a liberal offer, more than
liberal. Either you accept it or you don't. The other day you told me Cather wasn't
a murderer. Don't try to tell me now that he's not a blackmailer."
"You anticipate me," Wolfe said. "Mr. Cather
is not a blackmailer."
Ballou stared. "You actually – after what I …" He
rose and picked up the package. "By God, you are committed."
"I am indeed. I can name the blackmailer. Sit
down."
"I have already named him."
"No. You know only his noms de guerre, Robert
Service Kipling and Milton Thales. His real name is Barry Fleming. The husband
of Miss Kerr's sister."
"That's absurd. You didn't even know I had been
blackmailed until an hour ago."
Wolfe would have had to slant his head back to focus on his
face, and he doesn't like to, so he wasn't focusing at all. "For a man of
affairs," he said, "you're remarkably obtuse. You're in a pickle, and
I am your only hope. You must have help, and you can't go to a lawyer, or to
anyone, without disclosing your connection with Miss Kerr and a murder. But you
talk and act as if you were in control. You spring to your feet and grab that
package of money. Pfui. You probably have no further information for me. Either
sit down and listen, or go."
You have to hand it to the president of the Federal Holding
Corporation. He had pride and he had grit. If he had put the package back on
Wolfe's desk he would have been buckling under, so he didn't. He put it on the
little stand by the red leather chair, and there it was at his elbow when he
sat, under his control.
"I'm listening," he said.
"That's better," Wolfe said. "First, Mr.
Cather. Knowledge of a man cannot alone exclude him as a murderer, but it can
as a blackmailer. Murder can be merely a spasm, but not blackmail. Four of us
who have known Mr. Cather well for years – the two men I sent for, and Mr.
Goodwin and I – agree that it can't possibly be Mr. Cather who blackmailed you.
Now, the blackmailer. That name, Milton Thales – pronouncing it as you did and
as almost any American would. But if I pronounce it Thā-lēz does it
stir your memory?"
"Should it?"
"Yes."
He was frowning. "Thā-lēz – why, yes. An
early Greek … eclipse of the sun … geometry …"
Wolfe nodded. "That's enough. A renowned name in the
history of mathematics. Thā-lēz of Miletus. Milton Thales. Barry
Fleming, Miss Kerr's brother-in-law, teaches mathematics at a high school. Miss
Kerr told her sister your name, and she told her husband. So I have named the
blackmailer."
"Thā-lēz," Ballou said. "Thales.
Miletus. Milton. By God, I believe you have. And Isabel – Miss Kerr told me she
had told my name to no one. She lied. I wonder how many more."
"Probably none. Those two were special to her. I think
we may assume that only five people know of your connection with Miss Kerr: Mr.
Cather, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, Mr. Goodwin, and I. And only three know you were
blackmailed, besides the blackmailer: Mr. Goodwin, you, and I. The two men
upstairs, out of hearing, know of the blackmail, but not of you. I call your
attention to a detail. My objective is to get Mr. Cather released and not
charged with homicide. It's likely that I could achieve it simply by telling
the police about Mr. Fleming blackmailing you. At least that would divert them,
but I don't intend or desire to do it. I owe you some consideration, since I
learned of the blackmailing only through you. I'm obliged to you."
Ballou reached a hand to tap the package. "And there's
this."
"Yours. I haven't accepted it. Nor shall I, until I
have concluded with finality that you did not kill that woman. A blackmailer is
not ipso facto a murderer. I'm obliged to you because we have spent four
futile days trying to find someone with a likely motive and have failed. The
motive you suggested for Mr. Cather fits Mr. Fleming admirably. A question. How
soon after the first phone call from the blackmailer did you tell Miss Kerr
about it?"
"Right away. A day or two later."
"Was it ever mentioned again? By you or her?"
"Yes. She asked two or three times if it was
continuing. I told her about the phone call in December. The last time she
asked me was in January. Around the middle of January."
Wolfe nodded. "She knew it must be her brother-in-law,
and she told him it must stop, and he –"
"Better than that," I cut in. "She was going
to tell on him. Tell her sister. He might rather have called it off than kill
her, but he would rather kill her than have his wife know. He may not be ipso
facto a murderer, but ipso Archie Goodwin he is."
"Mr. Goodwin is sometimes a little precipitate,"
Wolfe told Ballou. "He has seen and spoken with them – Mr. and Mrs.
Fleming. At length." He pointed to the package. "That money. If I
earn it I want it, but you can't engage me now. My purpose is to clear Mr.
Cather; yours is to prevent disclosure of your name. If I can serve your
purpose without damage to mine, I shall. When you go, take the package; here in
my safe it might affect my mental processes. There is –"
"What are you going to do?" Ballou demanded.
Demanding again.
"I don't know. Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Panzer, Mr. Durkin, and
I are now going to confer." He looked at the clock. "It's nearly
midnight. If you don't want two more men in on your secret, go."
At one o'clock Friday afternoon
I was on a chair in a hotel bedroom, at arm's length from an attractive young
woman in the bed. Various possible approaches had been discussed in the
Thursday night conference that went on for more than two hours. Two of them – get
a picture of him and show it to the General Delivery clerks at the Grand
Central Station post office, and find out if he had been spending more money
than he should have had – were discarded offhand because they could only
confirm the blackmailing, and that was regarded as settled.
An obvious one was where had he been Saturday morning, but
we weren't ready for that. If he was open, he was open. If he had an alibi,
cracking it could and should wait until we had some kind of leverage on him.
Get three pictures of him, somehow – one for Saul, one for
Fred, and one for me – and do the neighborhood again, to dig up someone who had
seen him Saturday morning. The cops had of course been at that for four days,
with pictures of Orrie. Fred was for it, and Saul was willing to try, but Wolfe
vetoed it. He said we had tolerated banality long enough.
Give it to Cramer. Saul suggested it, and he had a case. We
could give him the crop, all except Ballou's name. It wouldn't hurt us any,
certainly it wouldn't stop us, and it would give Cramer something to think
about, and even work on, besides Orrie Cather. If they had a few of Fleming's
fingerprints in their collection from the apartment, or even one, it would open
it up good. Wolfe wouldn't buy it. He said it would be inept to have the police
move in on Fleming before we did; for one thing, they would probably pry X's
name out of either Fleming or his wife, and we weren't giving it even to Saul
and Fred. The fifty grand wasn't there in the safe to affect his mental
processes, but he knew where it was.
I made the suggestion that gave him a bright idea. There was
nothing bright about the suggestion; it was simply that I would bring the
Flemings to the office for some conversation with Wolfe. As we all knew, many
people had said more to Wolfe than they had realized they were saying, and why
not give them a chance? Saul and Fred could be at the peephole in the alcove,
and then we would have another conference. I was the only one who had ever seen
them. Saul and Fred were all for it, but Wolfe sat and scowled at me, which was
natural, since it would mean another session with a woman. He sat and scowled,
and we sat and looked at him. After half a minute of that he spoke to me.
"Your notebook."
I swiveled and got it, and a pen.
"A letter. The regular letterhead. To Mr. Milton
Thales, care of Mr. Barry Fleming, and the address. Dear Mr. Thales. It is a
truism that people who have a sudden substantial increase in income often spend
it, comma, or part of it, comma, on luxuries which they have previously been
unable to afford. Period. It is possible that you are an admirer of orchids,
comma, and that you would like to buy a few orchid plants with part of the five
thousand dollars of extra income you have received during the past four months.
Period. If so, comma, I shall be glad to show you my collection if you will
telephone for an appointment. Sincerely yours."
I tossed the notebook on the desk. "Wonderful," I
said. "It will bring him but not her. Maybe. If it goes to his home
address and she's there when it's delivered but he isn't, it may bring her but
not him. Statistics show that seventy-four per cent of wives open letters, with
or without a teakettle. Why not send it to the school?"
"It's two o'clock Friday morning," Saul said.
"He wouldn't get it until Monday."
Wolfe growled. I said, "Damn it."
"It's a beautiful idea," Saul said. "It will
get him sweating before he comes, and that will help, and he'll have to come.
Even if he didn't kill her, he'd have to come. But may I offer an
amendment?"
"Yes."
"The letter might read something like this – your
notebook, Archie? Dear Mr. Thales. As you know, comma, I was Isabel's closest
friend, comma, and we told each other many things. One thing she told me was
how you got that five thousand dollars and how she felt about it. I haven't
told anyone else because she told me in confidence – no, change that. Change 'because
she told me in confidence' to 'because I promised her I wouldn't.' Then: You
may want to show your appreciation by giving me part of the five thousand,
comma, at least half of it. I will expect you to bring it not later than Sunday
afternoon. I work evenings. My address is above, and my phone number is so-and-so.
It will be signed by Julie Jaquette. I suppose she should write it; I doubt if
she uses a typewriter."
Fred said, "And he croaks her and then we've got
him."
Saul nodded. "He would if we let him, and if he killed
Isabel Kerr. If he's had practice." To Wolfe: "I just think that
might be quicker than coming from you. I couldn't get her to do it, I'm a rat,
but Archie could."
"Sure," I said. "I'll tell her I'll send
orchids to her funeral." I looked at Wolfe. "You wished her
well."
"So you demur," he said.
"No, sir. I like it. I merely remark that selling her
won't be easy, and if she buys it we can't let her out of our sight for one
second, and what if she won't cooperate on that? Nobody suggests anything to
her. She said so."
"But you like it?"
"Yes. If it misses we can blame it on Saul."
"Blaming is fatuous. The wording of the letter is
important. Read it."
So that's why, at one o'clock Friday afternoon, I was
settled in a comfortable chair in a bedroom on the ninth floor of the Maidstone
Hotel, on Central Park West in the Seventies. Julie Jaquette, in the bed, was
not stretched out; she was propped up against three pillows, drinking her third
cup of coffee, having cleaned up the toast and bacon and eggs and muffins and
strawberry jam, while I explained about the blackmailing caper, including Thā-lēz
of Miletus, but not including Ballou's name. It was a nice big room, made even
nicer by the clusters of Vanda rogersi which I had brought, in a vase on
the over-the-bed table. She had stuck one of the flowers in the front V of what
she had on, a light blue thing with sleeves and no frills. She had said she was
no treat in bed in the morning, but actually she wasn't at all hard to look at.
Clear-eyed and fresh and kind of hard-boiled wholesome.
"Poor Isabel," she said. "You can't beat that
for lousy breaks, a blackmailer for a brother-in-law and a murderer for a pet.
My God."
"And a heehaw for a friend," I said.
"She only had one real friend. Me."
"Right. I call you a mule only professionally. If I was
being personal I would call you kitten or snuggle bunny or lamb. Profess
–"
"Do you realize this is a bed? That I could reach out
and grab you?"
"Yeah, I'm watching every move. I call you a mule
professionally because the minute you heard that your friend Isabel had been
murdered you decided Orrie Cather had done it and you won't budge, not even
when the third smartest detective in New York gives you ten to one. It would
–"
"Who are the two smartest?"
"Nero Wolfe and me, but don't quote me. It would take
an hour to explain why all three of us have crossed Orrie off, and even then
you might not budge. But now we think we know who did kill her. The
blackmailer. Barry Fleming. Her sister's husband."
She put the coffee cup down. "Huh. You got
reasons?"
"If you mean evidence, no. But if there's any other good
candidate we can't find him or her, and we have tried hard. Barry Fleming is
perfect. Obviously Isabel told Stella who was keeping her – X, to you – and
Stella had told Barry, since he couldn't blackmail him unless –"
"I may be a mule, but I can count up to two and I can
say the alphabet backward."
"A mule would say it backward. When X told
Isabel he was being blackmailed, she knew it must be Barry. She tried to make
him stop, but he wouldn't. Finally she told him she was going to tell Stella;
she had probably threatened to before. That was Saturday morning. She told him
she had definitely decided to tell Stella when she saw her that evening, and he
killed her. Count up to two."
"Don't wear me out." She shoved the table away,
and the vase swayed, and I jumped to save it. She slid down in the bed, tossed
one of the pillows on the floor, and propped her head on the other two.
"You're quick," she said. "Graceful, too. You could make a
chorus line easy. Leave your name with the girl at the desk. Have you explained
all this to the cops?"
"No."
"Why not?"
I thought it unnecessary to tell her about the fifty grand.
"Because they like Orrie and they've got him, and we have no evidence. Not
one little scrap. The reason I'm telling you, we thought you might be willing
to help. You do want the man that murdered her to get it, don't you?"
"You're damn right I do."
"Then you might help. You could write Fleming a letter,
calling him Thales, and telling him you want the five grand he got from X – or
most of it. Tell him that Isabel told you everything, maybe even hint that you
think he killed her and you know why. Of course he would have to see you, and
also, if he killed Isabel, he would have to kill you, and it would be a cinch
for us to arrange to have evidence of that. So we'd have him. Happy
ending."
She laughed, and she was such a good laugher that I caught
it and joined in. When she had it under control she said, "You're not
married, are you?"
I shook my head. "Nope."
"Never?"
"Nope. I've asked at least a thousand."
"I'll bet. I was once, and what a year that was.
Do you know what I'm going to do when you leave?"
"Nope."
"I'm going to stand at the window and look out, and
think it's a damn shame that it simply won't work. Anyway, if I'm going to get
killed, all you'd get out of it would be a trip to the cemetery. This letter.
Exactly what do I say?"
I waved a hand. "Forget it. A gag is for a laugh, and I
got it."
"Nuts." She aimed a finger at me. "Listen,
you. ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA. You came to deal me in. Don't spoil it with a
phony shuffle. Ten to one, twenty to one, you and Nero Wolfe wrote it out and
you've got it in your pocket. Let's see it."
She would have had me if I hadn't taken the trouble to
memorize it. "Thank God," I said, "you decided not to marry me.
I'd get a Charley horse just trying to keep up. All right, we did discuss what
the letter might say. But if you write it and I mail it, the minute he gets it
you're a sitting duck. Tomorrow's Saturday. If you write it now and I mail it,
he'll get it tomorrow morning. He might move fast and he might try anything. At
ten o'clock tomorrow morning I'll be here, outside in the hall, and Saul
Panzer, the rat, will be down in the lobby. When you leave, we leave with you, and
we stick, and you don't try any dodges just to show that you know what men are
for and what they're not for. At the Ten Little Indians we'll be there, and so
will Fred Durkin, and one of us will be here, in the hall, all night. And so on
until something happens."
"That's screwy," she said. "How could
anything happen with all you heroes right there?"
"Leave that to us. We can't arrange details until we
see how he reacts. You're willing to give it a try?"
"Certainly. The way you danced me in, I have to. Anyway,
I want to. Nobody has ever tried to kill me, and it will make me feel
important. All my life I have wanted to feel important."
"So has everybody else. But it must be understood that
you will follow sugges – you will obey orders. You'll do exactly what you're
told. What do you swear on, the Bible?"
"No, some of the men in it are awful, and so are the
women. We'll shake." She offered a hand.
It was a purely professional contact, but it was a fact that
she had nice hands, and I said so. "Before we go to work on the
letter," I said, "I should mention the possibility that Stella may
open it and read it. That would make it a different situation, but maybe even a
better one. Anyhow, tomorrow is Saturday and he'll probably be there. Now the
letter. We had the idea of addressing it to Milton Thales, care of Barry
Fleming, but that would just be a stunt. Mr. Wolfe likes stunts. Would you call
him Barry or Mr. Fleming?"
"I've never seen him. Mr. Fleming."
"Okay. On the hotel stationery. Dear Mr. Fleming. As
you know, I was Isabel's closest friend, and we told each other everything. She
told me all about Milton Thales, and how you got that five thousand dollars,
and how she felt about it. She also told me she was going to tell her sister,
and that she would tell you first that she was going to tell her. That didn't
surprise me, I knew her so well. But I wonder if that had anything to do with
what happened to her, and I would like to know. One thing, considering how you
got that five thousand dollars, I don't think you should keep it. I think you
should give it to me and I'll give it to some charity. I expect to hear from
you soon. I live at this hotel. Sincerely yours. Of course the wording can be
changed, as long as the points are covered."
She was frowning. "That's a lot of lies for one short
letter."
"Only one lie, that she told you. The fact is, I
told you. All the rest is true. You do wonder if that had anything to do with
what happened to her, and you would like to know. You're sticking your neck out
to find out."
"I'm sticking my neck out because you smooth-tongued me
into it. I never thought –"
"Whoa. Back up. I couldn't possibly smooth-tongue you
into doing something you didn't want to do. Do you want to do it?"
"Oh, damn you, yes." She sat up, and the orchid fell
out of the V. "Go in the other room and I'll come in ten minutes. I can't
write in bed."
I timed her. It was twenty-two minutes. She wasn't perfect.
Back in 1958, eight years back,
a man named Simon Jacobs should not have been stabbed to death and his body
dragged behind a bush in Van Cortlandt Park, but he was, and Nero Wolfe and I
would never forget it. We should have known it might happen and taken steps,
and we hadn't. Once is enough for that kind of goof, which accounts for the
fact that I did not arrive at the Maidstone Hotel at ten o'clock Saturday
morning. I arrived at nine-thirty. Mail deliveries in New York are terrible,
but there was one chance in a billion that the postman would get to 2938 Humboldt
Avenue extra early that one day, and the subway is rapid transit.
A hotel manager doesn't like it if a guest tells him she
wants to post a guard outside her door because she expects to be murdered, so
we hadn't bothered the Maidstone manager. Instead, we had invited the hotel
dick, I mean security officer, up to the room, and Julie Jaquette had told him
that a man had been annoying her, and he might even take a room in the hotel,
and she didn't want any trouble. It helped that he had heard of Nero Wolfe and
Archie Goodwin and that I slipped him a double sawbuck. He even offered to
supply a chair.
Since I had brought the Times and a magazine along, I
didn't have to invent games to pass the time. There were do not disturb signs
on the doorknobs of her suite, and the chambermaids skipped them. The traffic
was light all morning. I hope I'm not a snob, but I decided that on the whole I
preferred the tenants of the seventh floor of 2938 Humboldt Avenue to those of
the ninth floor of the Maidstone. They had all looked worried too, more or
less, but you had the feeling that you could stand hearing about theirs. Of
course people in hotels aren't like people at home. I was deciding why that was
so when one of her doors, the one to the bedroom, opened enough to let her head
through, and she stuck it out and asked, "What do you want for
lunch?"
I looked at my watch. Ten minutes to twelve. "I'll make
out," I said. "A bellboy will be up later. All arranged."
"Huh. You're slipping. I'm ordering breakfast. What if
he fixes the waiter and poisons it? You'll have to taste. What for you?"
"Just double your breakfast."
"I always have bacon and eggs. I'll open the other
door."
She did. In a minute it opened a crack, but I didn't go in.
Remember Simon Jacobs, and have a look at the waiter while he's still out in
the hall. It sometimes happens that the difference between being sensible and
being silly doesn't depend on you at all, it depends on something or somebody
else. That time it was silly to wait out in the hall for a look at the waiter.
When he came, at half past twelve, wheeling the chow wagon down the hall, I
watched him to the bedroom door and then went to the other one.
The meal was served in the bedroom, with her in bed and me
at a table the waiter brought in. She was in the same blue thing as the day
before, which made me feel at home. Since Fritz never fries eggs, they made me
feel away from home. We talked about Isabel, or rather she did. She had been
trying to figure out a way to persuade her to give up the idea of getting
married, and she thought she might possibly have made it. She explained that
the reason there is no such thing as a good husband is that there is no such
thing as a good wife and vice versa, and how are you going to get around that?
We had got to the muffins and jam, and she was telling me how right Isabel had
been to realize that she wasn't cut out for show business, when the phone rang,
and she twisted around and reached for it.
The first thing she said was "Hello," and the
second thing she said was "Yes, Mr. Fleming, this is Julie Jaquette,"
and I beat it to the other room and got at the phone, but I didn't hear much.
He said, "Would two o'clock be all right?" and she said, "Half
past two would be better," and he said, "All right, I'll be
there," and that was it. As I re-entered the bedroom she asked if I had
heard it, and I said yes and went to my table.
"I suppose," she said, "we'd better decide
what charity I'll give it to. Or have you arranged that too?"
"That's not funny." I poured coffee. "I'm
going to call you Julie."
"That's not funny either. Will he bring his own
ashtray?"
"Sure. I assume he's coming here."
"Yes."
"I told you we couldn't arrange details until we see
how he reacts. He certainly doesn't intend to come and have them phone up, and
take the elevator, and walk in and do you, and walk out again."
"Then you can be in the closet. Or in here." She
pushed the over-the-bed table away. "I'm going to dress up for this. My
best. Take your coffee to the other room."
I obeyed. For a hotel the sitting room wasn't bad – dark
green carpet and light green walls, with the regulation chairs and an oversized
couch, and a big window that looked down on Central Park. After I finished the
coffee I went to the window for a look out. It was Saturday, but also it was
February, and there wasn't much stirring in the park. There was still some snow
under the bare trees and along the top of the park wall, but you could call it
white only because it wasn't black.
Julie, when she came, was black – a plain black tailored
dress with half-sleeves and no trim to speak of. I know when things fit, and no
wonder she called it her best, the way it fitted. I said so and then took her
to the window. "I'm about to give an order," I said. "See that
stone wall over there? What time do you get home from work?"
"About half past one. I finish my last turn at
one."
"Fine. The park will be empty. So when you get home
tonight you turn on the lights and come and stand here to look out at the park,
and the man behind the stone wall with his rifle resting on the wall pulls the
trigger, and if he's any good at all down you go. Therefore you do not come and
stand here and look out. You lower the blind and close the drapes before you
leave for work. That's an order."
"It's a damn silly one. Way up here? At that angle? Go
get a rifle and try it. You couldn't even hit the window."
"The hell I couldn't. Before I was twelve years old I
got many a squirrel with a twenty-two in trees nearly this high. Are you going
to obey orders or not?"
She said she would, and we went and sat on the couch and
discussed the operation. She wanted to handle it with me in the other room
listening, and she had a reason: if I sat in I might say something she wouldn't
like but couldn't object to with him there. It got a little warm, and at one
point she threatened to bow out and I could see him downstairs, but finally it
was agreed that I would be present, seen but not heard unless I thought it was
absolutely essential. We were barely on speaking terms when the phone rang and
she was informed that Mr. Fleming was below and wanted to come up. I stayed on
the couch. I stayed put when the knock sounded and she went and opened the door
and he entered. Seeing it and not knowing, you would have thought it was she,
not he, who needed watching. She turned to close the door, and he turned to
keep her in view, and it wasn't until she had passed him and he turned again
that he saw me.
He spoke. He said, "Oh," but didn't know he was
saying it. Then he stood and stared. Julie faced him and said, "I believe
you have met Mr. Goodwin. I'll take your coat."
His mouth opened, but no words came. He tried again and
managed it. "I thought you – this would be private."
She nodded. "I suppose you would rather have it
private, but I thought I'd better be careful with a – with you. Have you got
the money?"
He was having trouble with his eyes. He wanted them to stay
on her, but they wanted me in. "I'm afraid," he said, "there's a
serious misunderstanding. I'm afraid Isabel told you some things that weren't
true. I'm afraid –"
"Nuts. Milton Thales. Thā-lēz. I know exactly
how you got it and who you got it from. The only reason I haven't told the cops
is because Isabel wouldn't want me to. She would want me to make you cough it
up, and that's what I'm doing. I think she would also want me to tell her
sister, because she intended to, and I think I ought to, but first I want the
money. Have you got it?"
"No. Honestly, Miss Jaquette, really –"
"Nuts." She whirled. "What do you think, Mr.
Goodwin?"
Formal, yet. She could have made it Archie. "I think
you're wasting your time," I said. "I think I ought to call Inspector
Cramer and tell him to come and get him. I suggest Cramer because he handles
homicide and he may be interested." I rose and went to the stand where the
phone was and lifted the receiver and started to dial.
Fleming's voice came, not a yell, but loud. "No!"
I turned. "No?"
"I'll give you the money." From that angle the
light was bouncing off his cheekbones. "I couldn't get it today, the
bank's closed. I'll bring it Monday."
I cradled the phone. Julie said, "All of it. Five
thousand."
"Yes. Of course." His eyes went with me back to
the couch, and then to her. "What you said – I don't think Isabel would
want you to tell my wife, now that she – I'm sure she wouldn't. Promise me you
won't. I'm going to give you the money."
Julie shook her head. "I'm not promising
anything."
"Promise me you won't tell her before Monday. We can
talk about it Monday. I can tell you why – we can talk about it."
I spoke because I considered it absolutely essential for him
to know he had some time to play with. "I'm here too," I said.
"I can't speak for Miss Jaquette, but I can for me. I promise positively
to say nothing to your wife until after you return the five grand, provided
it's Monday. Then we'll see."
"All right," she said. "Archie's promise is
no good without mine. I promise too."
He put his hat on. If he had known he was putting it on, in
a lady's room with the lady present, he would have been shocked. He wanted to
say something more, but didn't know what, and he turned, slow and stiff, and
headed for the door. Then he forgot his manners again. When he shut the door he
left it open a crack. Julie went and pushed it shut and then came to me and
asked, "How was I?"
"Terrible. You called me Mr. Goodwin and then Archie.
He'll think you don't know your own mind."
"I think you don't know yours. I thought the idea was
to fox him into killing me."
"Into trying to. It sounds better, now that I've got
acquainted with you."
"All right, you've hashed it. I knew damn well you
should have stayed in the other room. Now he knows he'd have to kill you
too."
"He does not. Didn't I explain that? Sit down." I
patted the couch, and she sat. "It's simple. He thinks they can't get him
for the murder without you because you're the only one who can supply the
motive. Of course you wouldn't go on the stand and swear that Isabel told you
she was going to tell him that she was going to tell Stella about the
blackmail, but he thinks you would. He also thinks you will tell Stella, not
before Monday, but soon after, and apparently that bites him even deeper, I
don't know why; he must see more in her than I do. So you're a double-breasted
danger, but I'm not. I'm only hearsay. As he sees it, I can only tell what you
told me, but you can tell what Isabel told you herself. That's equally true for
the witness stand and for Stella. She would probably believe you, but not me.
We haven't got a single item of evidence to connect him with either the
blackmail or the murder, but if he hands you five thousand bucks' worth of
currency, that would be evidence. He never will. So you'll have to be
removed, but I'm just a nuisance. Sorry."
"Huh. You have dealt me in."
"Up to your neck. I apologize for one thing. I should
have made it clear that once you were in you couldn't get out. I
apologize."
"I don't want out. I think he killed her."
"Certainly he did."
"What do we do now?"
"Whatever you had on your program, if there's room for
company. It's three o'clock Saturday afternoon. If you go out, Saul Panzer is
downstairs and we'll escort you. If you stay in, I'll be in the hall."
"Do you play gin?"
I said I did, and that took care of the afternoon, after I
went down and told Saul he was done for the day, provided he would call Fred
and tell him to be at the Maidstone entrance or in the lobby at five minutes to
seven, prepared to spend the night in the ninth-floor hall after our return
from the Ten Little Indians. The three hours of gin cost me $8.75. She wasn't
so good and I'm not so bad, but since she was going to drop ten bucks to Saul
on their bet I thought it only fair not to bear down. She was a neater shuffler
than anyone I know except Lon Cohen. We knocked off at six o'clock for a bite
to eat, sandwiches and coffee from room service, and for her to change.
I had seen quite a few of the Manhattan spots, mostly with
Lily Rowan, but had never been inside the Ten Little Indians, on Monarch
Street. I spent that evening not only inside, but partly way inside, in Julie's
dressing room, which was about six by eight, par for a headliner in a place
with a four-dollar cover charge. When she was on I went out to the battlefield
and stood in the rear at one side. Fred was at the center, near the door. Julie
earned her pay, probably about a grand a week, maybe more. This is not a scout
report on an artiste, so I'll let it go at that; she earned her pay. The
Saturday-night mob certainly thought so; they loved her. For that matter, so
did I, but on different grounds. One of them loved her so much that around
midnight he somehow made it to her dressing room, so boiled that I had to be
careful not to tip him over.
There was no taxi problem when the three of us made our exit
into the windy winter night, because Julie had a standing arrangement with a
hackie for a quarter past one. During the ride uptown she and Fred resumed a
discussion they had started on the ride downtown; they had agreed it would be a
good idea for her to rent one of his four children for the summer and were
considering which one and the price. Knowing him, I hoped she didn't think he
meant it, and knowing her, I hoped he didn't think she did.
When we stopped at the curb at the Maidstone, the doorman
was right there to open the door, and we piled out and the cab rolled on. I
wasn't going in; I was to relieve Fred up in the hall at ten o'clock and should
have been in bed two hours ago. We were grouped on the sidewalk, Julie in the
middle, when the first shot was fired. I reacted to the sound, a loud, sharp
crack, and Fred reacted to the bullet, though I didn't know that immediately.
He went down. I'm not certain whether the second shot was fired before, or
after, or while, I was flattening Julie. If you think it would have been better
manners just to cover her, I agree, but to do that properly you have to know
which direction the bullets are coming from. I did cover her when I had her
down. I twisted around to look up, and the damn fool doorman was standing there
with his mouth open, staring across the street. No more shots. I ordered Julie,
"Stay flat, don't move," and got to my feet, and as I did so Fred
said, "The bastard hit me." He was on one knee, with his other leg
stretched out, propping himself with a hand. I asked him where, and he said his
leg. The doorman said, "Over there by the wall, I saw it." Julie said
nothing. Good for her. I looked around. A bellboy was coming out of the hotel.
A man and woman had stopped at the corner and were gawking. In the other
direction, uptown, a bull was coming on the trot. I told Julie again to stay
flat, and hopped. He just might be crazy enough to stick, thinking she might
get up and he could try again. I had to scramble to see over the wall. There
was practically no light behind it, but there was enough snow to spot anything as
big as a man, and he wasn't there. When I got back across, the cop was bending
over Fred and telling the bellboy to phone for an ambulance. Julie hadn't
moved. I helped her up, told Fred I would be back, and started for the entrance
with her. The cop said wait, he wanted names, and I told him he had heard me
say I would be back, and went on. The desk clerk and the elevator man were
there, and the clerk went and got the key and the elevator man came and took us
up. Julie was trying not to tremble, and succeeding, and I decided she didn't
want my hand on her arm as she walked from the elevator to her door.
Inside, in the sitting room, she said, "I'll bet my
coat's a mess," and slid it off before I could move to help her.
"Yeah, rub it in," I said. "Someday I'll tell
you what a fine brave plucky game girl you are, not a single squawk, but now
I'm busy. If it had been two feet to the left and a foot higher, you would now
be meat. Luck, that's all, just pure luck, and I'm supposed to know what I'm
doing. I'll go down and see about Fred. When I come back up you will be
packed."
"Packed?"
"Right. What we call the South Room in Nero Wolfe's
house, the one above his, has three windows facing south. Very nice in winter.
You'll like it."
She shook her head. "I don't – I don't want to
hide."
"Listen, snuggle bunny. Kitten. Lamb. I have lost the
right to give orders. Have I got to beg, for God's sake?" I went.
On the sidewalk a small audience had collected, a dozen or
so. Fred was flat on his back, and the bellboy was putting a cushion under his
head. A woman was saying he'd get pneumonia. The cop and the doorman were
across the street by the stone wall. I went and squatted by Fred and asked him
which leg and where, and he said the left one a little above the knee and it probably
got the bone, the way it felt. I asked what about blood, and he said there
wasn't much, he had put his hand in and felt it, and he asked, "Is she all
right?"
I said yes. "When I get back from the hospital I'm
going to take her home with me. I don't want –"
"You're not going to any hospital. Take her now. The
cop asked questions, but I don't know anything. Do I?"
"Sure you do. You know Nero Wolfe hired you to help me
bodyguard her, and that's all."
"It's enough. Ouch. Take her now. I've been in hospitals
before. Don't leave her alone. The sonofabitch nearly got her with us right
here. I only wish –"
He stopped because the cop had come. He wanted names, and I
gave him some, Fred's and Julie's and mine, and nothing else. All I knew was
that someone had shot a gun. He thought he would get tough but decided not to,
and the ambulance came. I watched them load Fred and then went into the
Maidstone and up to the ninth floor.
When I knocked on the door, Julie's voice came. "Is it
you, Archie?"
"No. It's a Boy Scout."
She opened the door wide, and I stepped in. There on the
floor were a big suitcase and a big bag. "I didn't send for a boy to take
them down," she said, "because I thought you might change your
mind."
I picked them up.
At nine o'clock Sunday morning I
entered the kitchen, told Fritz good morning, got orange juice from the
refrigerator, sat at my breakfast table, yawned, sneered at The New York
Times, and rubbed my eyes. Fritz came with a piece of paper in his hand and
demanded, "Were you drunk when you wrote this?"
I blinked at him. "No, just pooped. I've forgotten what
I said. Please read it."
He cleared his throat. "'Three-twenty a.m. There's a
guest in the South Room. Tell him. I'll cook her breakfast. AG.'" He
dropped it on the table. "I told him, and he asked who, and what could I
say? And you will cook her breakfast in my kitchen?"
I took an economy-size swallow of orange juice. "Let's
see if I can talk straight," I suggested. "I had four hours' sleep,
exactly half what I need. As for telling him who she is, that is my function. I
admit it's your function to cook breakfast, but she likes fried eggs and you
don't fry eggs. Let's get to the real issue. There is one man who is more
allergic to a woman in this house than he is, and you are it. By God, I am
talking straight." I drank orange juice. "Don't worry, this woman is
allergic to a man in her house. As for the eggs, poach them – you know,
in red wine and bouillon –"
"Burgundian."
"That's it. With Canadian back bacon. That will show
her what men are for. Her usual hour for breakfast is half past twelve. I'm
still willing to cook it if –"
He uttered a French sound, loud, maybe it was a word. He was
at the range, with sausage. I reached for the Times.
Since Wolfe goes up to the plant rooms on Sunday morning
only for a brief look, if at all, I supposed he would be down around ten
o'clock. But it was still ten minutes short of ten when the sound of the
elevator came, then his footsteps in the hall. I hadn't seen him since bedtime
Friday evening, nearly forty hours ago. Instead of stopping at the office, the
footsteps kept coming, and the swing door opened and he appeared.
"Indeed," he said. "You're alive."
I conceded it. "Just barely. Don't count on me for
much."
"Who is the guest?"
"Miss Jaquette. Miss Jackson to you, Julie to me. She's
alive too, but it's not my fault. She was shot at this morning, at half past
one, in front of her hotel, from behind the Central Park wall. The sniper was
not seen. Fred got it in the leg and is in Roosevelt Hospital. He was asleep
when I phoned this morning. I phoned his wife when I got home last night. I
also phoned Saul and told him to stand by. I brought Julie home with me
because, with Orrie in the coop and Fred in the hospital, we're short-handed,
and anyway I got tired of hearing bullets go by. She eats breakfast in bed, and
Fritz will cook it and I'll take it up around half past twelve. That seems to
cover it."
"The sniper was not seen."
"No, sir, but it was Barry Fleming. He reacted to the
letter by coming to see her yesterday afternoon. That tagged him for blackmail,
and the gunplay tagged him for murder. So all we need now is a little evidence.
But I suppose you want a full report."
He said yes, and we went to the office. The Saturday mail
was on my desk, unopened. I don't know why he does that, but I suspect that
it's because he wants to show me that he won't butt in on my routine if I won't
butt in on his. Fritz hadn't butted in either; my desk top was dustier than it
gets in one day. I put my copy of the Sunday Times on it and sat, and
proceeded to report. I gave it verbatim only in spots, the few that might have
a bearing, thinking it unnecessary for him to know that she had asked me if I
realized it was a bed, or that I had called her snuggle bunny. Usually he opens
his eyes and sits up when I finish, but that time he held it a full minute, and
finally I spoke.
"If you're waiting for a comment, I have nothing to
offer. I could say we know but can't prove we do, but that's obvious. As for
last night, did he own a rifle, or did he get one, and if so where? Saul and I
could dig up the answers, and then what? The first bullet either hit Fred's leg
bone or went on through and hit the building, which is stone, and the second
one presumably hit the building. Identifying them as coming from his rifle
would take six experts, three on each side. If he had hit her and killed her
that would be –"
"Pfui." He came erect. "That's mere futility.
We have what we wanted, support for our surmise that he's a murderer. Is there
any doubt now that we are going to extricate Orrie?"
"No."
"Then that is no longer of concern. Supposing that we
could proceed to get proof, conclusive evidence, that Fleming killed Isabel
Kerr, do we want to? If we get it, and give it to Mr. Cramer, what will
happen?"
"Three things. One, they'll drop Orrie fast. Two,
Fleming will be arrested, tried, and probably convicted. Three, they'll try to
keep Ballou's name out of it but can't. Make it four. Four, you won't get
another look at that package."
He nodded. "What did I tell him?"
"If you can serve his purpose without damage to yours,
you will."
"Well?"
"Well, you can try. It's February sixth, with nothing
coming in yet this year, and nothing in sight, and I know how much goes out,
since I draw the checks. Do you want my opinion?"
"Yes."
"I don't see how we can possibly pull it. If we're
going to spring Orrie, and we are, we're going to have to give them Fleming,
with or without evidence, and he'll give them Ballou, and they'll have to see
him. That's the trouble. Even if they play it tight and his name is kept out of
the papers during the buildup, it's bound to get spilled in the courtroom, and
he won't think he owes you anything. Neither will you. As you know, I am
strongly in favor of income. I would hate to have my paycheck bounce. But you
wanted my opinion."
"You misunderstood. I want your opinion on the risk,
not on the feasibility. Could we conceivably jeopardize our purpose?"
"No. Orrie's as good as out now."
"Then there's no risk at all. The problem is to expose
the murderer without –"
The doorbell rang, and I went to the hall, took a look, and
stepped back in. "Cramer. Get Fritz. I'll go up and tell her not to sing
'Big Man Go-go' with the door open." I headed for the stairs.
By go-go, the door was open, though it had been shut
when I passed by at nine o'clock. I lifted a hand to tap, but it wasn't necessary.
She said, "My God, you're up and dressed." She was in a chair by a
window. Her pajamas were light green with dark green stripes, and her feet were
bare. Her hair was in all directions. I closed the door.
"I opened it," she said, "just to enjoy it. It's
been years since I had a bedroom where I could leave the door open. I'm up
because I woke up. I never stay in bed awake unless I'm reading or
eating."
I had approached. "I'm afraid you'll have to wait a
while on the eating. Inspector Cramer is here. He probably thinks you're here,
since that cop saw you leave with me, but it's possible that we're not going to
concede it. If we do, and if he insists on seeing you, we can say he'll have to
postpone it because you're in a state of shock after last night, or I'll bring
him up and you can get it over with. As you prefer. I thought I'd better ask
you."
She took a swipe at the hair. "An inspector, huh?"
"Yeah. An old pal of ours. In reverse."
"I like to get things over with."
"Okay. He'll probably want to see you alone, and not in
the office because he knows we have a hole to see and hear through. What do you
want to keep you until breakfast? Will orange juice and coffee do?"
"Not if you have grapefruit juice."
"Certainly. Fritz will bring it up, and I'll bring
Cramer up later. He may –"
"Here?"
"Sure. This room is bugged, he doesn't know that, and
we'll be listening in. He may invite you down to the District Attorney's
office, but you're not going. To take you with law he'd have to have a warrant,
and he hasn't got one. Now the –"
"How do you know he hasn't?"
"I know everything except how to bodyguard a girl
right. Now the main question. Do you remember the script? What we said last
night?"
"What you said. Yes."
"Should we check it?"
"No. ZYXWVU –"
"Of course. I keep forgetting. Fritz will be up with
the juice and coffee. Bolt the door. There's just a chance Mr. Wolfe will
decide you're not here, to gain time, and Cramer will come hopping up to barge
in. Once a cop's inside, he can move around and you don't touch him, but he
can't bust doors in, or he'd better not. Don't answer knocks."
"Damn it," she said, "I ought to be sound
asleep."
I said she could sleep all afternoon, and left.
Three paces inside the office I stopped to take in an
unexpected scene, homey and very appealing. I couldn't see Wolfe, at his desk,
because the review-of-the-week section of the Sunday Times, spread wide,
was hiding him. Cramer, in the red leather chair, had the sports section,
spread just as wide. Having checked that Cramer had been admitted and was still
there, I went to the kitchen, told Fritz the guest's name, asked him to take up
grapefruit juice and coffee, and told him not to knock but give his name. Back
in the office, Wolfe was still hidden. I crossed to my desk, sat and enjoyed
the pleasant scene a couple of minutes, and then coughed. In a moment Wolfe
folded the paper, put it on his desk, and spoke. To me.
"Mr. Cramer wishes to ask about that incident last
night. Since you were there and I wasn't, I insisted on waiting for you."
He turned. "Yes, Mr. Cramer?"
Cramer, having folded the sports section, put it on the
stand. His eyes went to Wolfe. "I told you. I want to know why you had
them guarding that girl, and who they were guarding her from. If you knew she
was in danger, you know who fired those shots at her. Durkin says he doesn't
know, but you do. I don't need Goodwin to tell me that. It's even possible he
doesn't know, but you do. Assault with intent to kill is a felony, and you know
who committed it, and I'm an officer of the law. Is that plain?"
Wolfe nodded. "Quite plain. It's also quite plain that
your true interest is not assault with intent to kill, but an assault that did
kill. Have you released Mr. Cather?"
"No. And I don't –"
"Are you prepared to release him?"
"No! I want an answer. Who fired those shots at that
girl?"
Wolfe turned. "Do you know, Archie?"
"No, sir, I don't know. I could offer guesses,
but not in the hearing of an officer of the law. Slander. I might guess Orrie
Cather, but that's out because he's in the can, and unless –"
Cramer said a word, loud, which I omit because I suspect
that some of the readers of these reports are people like retired schoolteachers
and den mothers.
"Nor do I know," Wolfe said. "Mr. Cramer. Why
not be forthright? You came here last Monday in the pretense that you hoped to
get information that would strengthen your case against Mr. Cather, though you
knew you would get none. Not from Mr. Goodwin. What you really wanted was to
learn if my support of Mr. Cather was more than a gesture. What you want now is
to learn if I have collected any evidence that will weaken your case
against Mr. Cather. Why not be straightforward and ask me?"
"All right, I ask you. Have you?"
"Yes."
"What evidence?"
"I'm not prepared to divulge it."
"By God, you admit it. You admit you have evidence in a
murder case and you withhold it."
Wolfe nodded. "It's a nice point. If I withhold
evidence that would help to convict a man of murder I am obstructing justice,
yes. But if I withhold evidence that would help to acquit a man, is that
obstructing justice? I doubt if the point has ever arisen juridically. We could
ask some –"
"Ask my ass. If you've got evidence that would help to
clear Cather, it will help to convict someone else. I want it."
"That's nonsense. Thousands of men have been cleared by
alibis, with no bearing on another's guilt. I have no evidence, none whatever,
that would help to convict anyone of the murder of Isabel Kerr. I have a
suspicion, a surmise, but that isn't evidence. As for the guarding of Miss
Jaquette and the shots fired at her, how does that concern your effort to
indict Mr. Cather? As Mr. Goodwin said, they couldn't have been fired by him,
he's in custody. Under suspicion of murder."
"He hasn't been charged with homicide."
"You're holding him without bail. Consider a
hypothesis. Suppose that Miss Jaquette had a private reason to fear that
someone might try to do her violence, a reason she would not reveal, and
arranged for protection, and got shot at. Do you think you could force her to
disclose her secret, or could force me to?"
"Balls." Cramer was getting hoarse. He always did,
with Wolfe. "You try being forthright. Will you give me your word of honor
that your guarding her and the shots fired at her had no connection with the
murder of Isabel Kerr?"
"Of course not. I suspect there was a connection. If so
I would like to establish it – with evidence."
"You haven't already established it?"
"No."
Cramer got a cigar from a pocket, rolled it between his
palms, stuck it in his mouth, and sank his teeth in it. But the rolling had
loosened the wrapper, and a flap of it pointed up and touched his nose. He
removed it, glared at it, hurled it at my wastebasket, and came close. It hit
the edge and bounced to the floor. He aimed the glare at me and blurted,
"All right, Goodwin. Where is she?"
I put a brow up. "You could mean Miss Jaquette."
"Yes, I could. You took her with you last night. And
brought her here."
I nodded. "That's what Mr. Wolfe calls a surmise. You
don't know I brought her here, just as I don't know who fired the shots. You're
expecting me to stall, so I won't. She's up in the South Room. I was there
chatting with her when you came."
"Now I'll chat with her. I'll go up." He left the
chair. "I know the way."
"The door's bolted. We thought it might be better to
hold off." I rose. "But you deserve a break. With a new Mayor and a
new Commissioner, you probably need a break." I moved.
In the hall he stopped at the elevator, but I kept on to the
stairs and he came. Policemen should keep fit. By the time he got to the second
landing I had called to her and she had opened the door. She had changed to the
blue thing and put slippers on. I pronounced names and asked if she had enough
coffee and left them.
Taking it for granted that Wolfe had gone to the kitchen, I
turned right at the bottom. He was there, in the only chair Fritz allows in his
kitchen, with a seat ample for me but not for him, and had opened a certain
cupboard door and flipped the switch. Fritz was on one of the stools at the big
table, slicing a shallot, preparing for the poached eggs Burgundian, and I got
the other stool.
Cramer's voice was coming from the cupboard. "I know
that, I know you have. You made a full statement, and we appreciate that kind
of cooperation. But that business last night is a new – element. Those two men
were there, Archie Goodwin and Fred Durkin, for your protection, that
right?"
Julie: Yes.
Cramer: You had arranged with Nero Wolfe for that
protection?
Julie: Yes.
Cramer: When?
Julie: Oh … I guess it was Saturday.
Cramer: Why? Why did you need protection?
Julie: I might as well tell you the truth.
Cramer: Yes, that's always the best way.
Julie: Between you and me, I didn't need protection. But one
evening, I think it was Tuesday, I had come here because Nero Wolfe wanted to
see me, and I met Archie Goodwin. And the next afternoon, Wednesday, I came
again, and Archie took me up to show me the orchids, and we had a long talk.
Are you sure this is confidential?
Cramer: Yes.
Julie: For God's sake don't tell him, but I simply flapped.
What a man! I had to have him. So I – well, I made arrangements. He may not
want you to know this, but he was there all day Saturday, in my hotel, from ten
o'clock on. You may not approve, I suppose you're a married man, but when I
want something I usually get it.
Wolfe was looking at me, and I was shaking my head. I had
not suggested that. I was sorry I wasn't there to see Cramer glaring at her.
Cramer: Do you mean to … are you saying that … you said you
made arrangements. What arrangements?
Julie: I told Archie a man was annoying me and I was afraid
and I wanted protection day and night. You can understand why I wanted it day
and night.
Cramer: What's the name of the man who was annoying you?
Julie: Aren't you an inspector?
Cramer: Yes.
Julie: Then you ought to listen better. Nobody was annoying
me. I didn't need protection. I needed Archie.
Cramer: If you didn't need protection, why did someone shoot
at you, try to kill you?
Julie: I've been thinking about that. Just because he hit
Fred, there by me, that doesn't prove he was shooting at me. Maybe he was
shooting at Fred. Or maybe he was just shooting at anybody. Like that boy in
Brooklyn who shot some woman going by in a car. They get a kick –
Cramer: Save it. I don't believe a word of it. Do you know
what the penalty is for giving false information to an officer investigating a
crime?
Julie: No. What is it?
Cramer: You can get five years.
Julie: What crime are you investigating? Archie said you
were investigating the murder of my friend Isabel Kerr, but you don't sound
like it. You only ask about me being protected and somebody shooting a gun. I
must be thick.
Cramer: No, Miss Jaquette, you're not thick. You're a damn
good liar. Extra good. I hope you know what you're doing. Do you know that Wolfe
and Goodwin are two of the slickest operators in New York?
Julie: I don't know much about Nero Wolfe. I know a lot
about Archie.
Cramer: Well, they are. How much are they paying you?
Julie: Paying me? Well. First I'm a liar, and now what am I?
Cramer: That's what I'd like to know. Do you still think
Orrie Cather killed your friend Isabel Kerr?
Julie: I never said that.
Cramer: You didn't have to. It was obvious from what you did
say and put in your statement. Do you remember what you said?
Julie: Certainly I do. I can say the alphabet backward.
Cramer: Do you want to retract any of it?
Julie: No. It was all true.
Cramer: Then you still think he killed her?
Julie: You ought to listen better. I told you I didn't say
that.
Cramer: You implied it strong enough. Don't forget we have
your signed statement. Don't forget that.
Five seconds of silence except for a faint sound that could
have been Cramer leaving his chair.
Cramer: I warn you again, Miss Jaquette, giving false
information to an officer investigating a capital crime is a felony. Do you
want to reconsider it?
Julie: No, thanks. You can leave the door open.
Another faint sound, the door opening. I slid off the stool,
went to the cupboard and turned the switch, crossed to the door to the hall,
and swung it open. Heavy footsteps were coming down the stairs. Cramer
appeared, turned left, and passed the office door without looking in. He must
have seen me as he was putting his coat on, but he didn't wave good-by. When he
was out and the door shut, I turned and said, "That was ad lib, nothing
like it in the script. I enjoyed every minute of it. You'd better start the
eggs, Fritz, she must be hungry." I headed for the stairs and mounted the
two flights.
The door was wide open. She was squatting on the floor,
looking at the underside of the table. At the sound of my footsteps she turned
her head, scrambled up, and said, "I'm looking for the bug."
"You won't find it there. It's not that simple. It came
through fine."
"You heard it?"
"Sure. Why he called you a liar is beyond me. If ever I
heard the ring of truth. How soon do you want breakfast?"
"Now. Right now."
"It's nearly ready. Get in bed and I'll bring it."
I don't mention everything, for
instance phone calls that have nothing to do with progress or the lack of it.
There had been two phone calls from Jill Hardy, one from Dr. Gamm, two from Lon
Cohen, and three from Nathaniel Parker. But I mention the one from Parker that
Sunday afternoon because what he wanted to do might have helped or hurt. He had
decided he should make a habeas corpus play Monday morning to get Orrie bailed
out, and it took Wolfe ten minutes to talk him out of it. It wasn't easy. Wolfe
couldn't very well tell him that we were no longer worried about Orrie, that we
now had another fish to fry.
Or maybe we did. When I went to bed Sunday night, after
winning $1.25 from Julie at gin, there had been no discussion and no
instructions, nothing. The Ten Little Indians was closed Sundays. Julie had had
an afternoon nap, and I had had a long walk. Wolfe had had the Times and
a book, and probably, while I was out, his weekly battle with television. That
may occur almost any evening, when he has got disgusted with a book, but
usually it's a Sunday afternoon, because that's when TV is supposed to be
dressed for company. He turns on one channel after another, getting grimmer and
grimmer, until he is completely assured that it's getting worse instead of
better, and quits.
The only time he and Julie were together was at the dinner
table, and it was different from any meal at that table I could remember.
Ordinarily Wolfe is perfectly willing to do most of the talking, with or
without company, but that time, from the Neptune bouchees right through to the
chestnut whip, he not only let the guest, a female guest, take over, he egged
her on. He asked her questions, dozens of questions, about her work and her
background and the people she knew. By the time coffee came, I had settled on
the only possible explanation: he had decided that I didn't understand women as
well as he had thought I did, and it was up to him to fill the gap. I could
have told him that that kind of approach wouldn't help much, but apparently I
was no longer regarded as an expert.
So I got a surprise when I entered the kitchen Monday
morning and Fritz told me I was wanted, and I went up one flight and knocked
and entered, and Wolfe said, "Good morning. Can that woman be trusted in a
matter that requires adroit execution and full discretion?"
"You ought to know," I said, "after the quiz
you put her through."
"I don't. Do you?"
"Yes. Adroit, yes. You heard her with Cramer. It would
depend on how well she liked it, whatever it was. The discretion would also
depend. She would never spill anything she didn't want to spill. She wouldn't
talk just to hear herself."
"How much verity was there in what she told Mr.
Cramer?"
"None at all. She couldn't think I'm what a man because
she couldn't think any man is."
"Then we'll risk it. Ask Mr. Ballou to come at eleven
o'clock. Tell him I'll need only ten minutes. Miss Jaquette must not see him.
Can you make sure she doesn't?"
I said I could, and went up one flight to see if there was
any sign of life there. It was only a quarter to nine, but she had gone to bed early
– for her – and she might have opened the door to enjoy it. She hadn't. I had
told her to buzz either the kitchen or the office on the house phone when she
wanted breakfast, and to allow half an hour. I went down to the office and did
the chores.
I didn't know if Avery Ballou was the early kind of
president, and waited till a quarter to ten to dial the number of the Federal
Holding Corporation. A woman answered, of course, and switched me to a man. He
would submit my name to Mr. Ballou only if I told him what I wanted; that's one
of the ways junior executives try to keep wise to what their seniors are up to.
I finally persuaded him the name was enough and Ballou would want it, but there
was a long wait before his voice came.
"Goodwin? Archie Goodwin?"
"Right. Mr. Ballou?"
"Yes."
"There has been a development in that matter we
discussed Thursday evening, and we must tell you about it. Can you be here at
eleven o'clock? Same address."
"This morning?"
"Yes."
"I'm afraid I can't. Is it urgent?"
"Yes. Eleven-thirty or twelve would do, but eleven
would be better. It shouldn't take more than ten minutes."
"Hold the wire… All right. I'll be there at eleven or
shortly after."
If the junior executive had listened in, he must have been
wondering what the hell could make Ballou jump like that, and wishing he knew.
After buzzing the plant rooms to tell Wolfe he was coming, I
had a problem. Even if Julie was awake, it wasn't advisable to go up and tell
her that a man was coming whom she must not see, so would she please stay in
her room with the door shut. She was a fine brave plucky game girl, and she
might go to my room, which fronts on 35th Street, and look out the window just
to be helpful. It wouldn't be fair to tempt her like that, so I went to the
kitchen, explained the situation to Fritz, and arranged with him. When the bell
rang and I went to the door, he would go up to the second stair landing with
the vacuum cleaner and camp there. If her door was open, he would vacuum the
hall carpet. He said he couldn't vacuum that carpet for an hour, and I said he
wouldn't have to.
Actually it was only eight or nine minutes. Wolfe came down
on the dot at eleven, as he always does, and hadn't finished looking through
the mail when the bell rang. I waited until Fritz was on his way upstairs, then
admitted the caller, took his hat and coat, and followed him to the office. He
stood and told Wolfe he didn't have time to sit.
"I like eyes at a level," Wolfe said. "It
takes three seconds to sit."
Ballou sat.
"I'll make it as brief as possible," Wolfe said.
"The first point, I am now satisfied that you didn't kill Isabel Kerr,
because I know who did, barely short of certainty. Her brother-in-law. The
blackmailer. The second point, there is no longer any question of achieving my
primary purpose, to clear Mr. Cather. That is assured. The third point, I would
like to earn that fifty thousand dollars. How can I earn it?"
"I thought that was understood. Keep me out of this
mess. Keep my name out. I can't eat. I can't sleep. I have wanted a dozen times
to call you, but I'm afraid to talk on the phone."
Wolfe shook his head. "It needs definition. Your name
is known now. Five people know it – Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, Mr. Cather, Mr.
Goodwin, and I. As for the last three, the best you can get is our assurance
that we will disclose it to no one. As for Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, the best I
could possibly do would be to create a situation which would make it highly
unlikely that they would ever disclose it. I can't open their skulls and remove
the cells where your name is filed. You see that."
"Yes."
"You would be the judge of the situation. I want to
earn the money, not extort it. Now the fourth point, the reason I had to see
you without delay. To proceed with any expectation of success, I must enlist
help. I need the assistance of a woman named Julie Jaquette, or Amy Jackson,
who was the friend –"
"I know the name. I know about her."
"From Miss Kerr."
"Yes."
"She doesn't know your name, and she doesn't need to.
She calls you the lobster. I want to ask her help, without telling her your
name, and I want to tell her that if we succeed she will receive fifty thousand
dollars in cash. Will you supply it?"
Ballou frowned at him.
"You told me," Wolfe said, "that the fifty
thousand was just a retainer and implied that there would be more if I served
your purpose. I wouldn't want more. I'll get it done in a day or two, or not at
all. I make it contingent on success, against precedent, to preclude any smell
of extortion. Also, the prospect is dim. What are the odds against us,
Archie?"
I didn't have to consider. "A thousand to one."
"This is pointless," Ballou said. "You know
damned well I'm trapped. You told me you're my only hope. What's another fifty
thousand, or ten times fifty? If you think she can help, all right. You don't
seem –"
He wasn't interrupted; I was, by the sound of the vacuum
cleaner. I rose and went to the hall, stood at the foot of the stairs, and
heard no voices, just the vacuum cleaner. I was thinking the conversation was finished
anyway and was turning to go and tell him where the door was, when he came. I
was at the rack, ready with his coat, by the time he got there. His car was out
in front, and I waited until he was in it and it was rolling, before going to
the stairs and on up to the second landing.
Fritz was giving the carpet a play, and Julie, in pajamas
and barefoot, was standing in the doorway, watching him. He had his back to
her, pretending he didn't know she was there. I went and switched the vacuum
off with my toe and spoke. "You might have waited until she was up."
"I am up," she said. "What time is it?
I forgot to wind my watch."
A bellow came from below. "Archie! Where are you?"
I called down where I was, and more bellow came. "Tell Miss Jaquette I
want her!"
Ballou had been gone not more than three minutes, and
already he had a situation created. Which I handled. I told Julie her breakfast
couldn't be ready for half an hour and asked if she would consider having
grapefruit juice and coffee in the office while Wolfe explained something to
her. She asked why I couldn't explain it, and I said because Wolfe knew more
words. She went to change, and I went down and thanked Fritz for helping out in
a pinch, requested coffee for the guest, and poured a glass of grapefruit
juice.
And after that handling, when I went to the office Wolfe
said perhaps it would be better for him to discuss it with me, and then I would
discuss it with her. I didn't try to talk him out of it; I just said no. I
admit it was still in my gizzard that it was pure luck that she hadn't been
ironed out while I was standing right by her. I'm all for luck, but you
shouldn't crowd it. After what I had told her about lowering the blind and
closing the drapes, I should have gone over for a look behind the wall before
she got out of the taxi.
When she came down, not in the blue thing, in a dark green
woolen dress, the tray was there on the stand by the red leather chair. She
sat, picked up the glass and took a sip of juice, and said, "I'm all
balled up. This will be the first time since I don't know when that I don't
have breakfast in bed. It had better be good – I mean what you're going to
explain."
Wolfe was regarding her, his lips tight. "I apologize.
But we should lose no time. I say 'we' because I'm going to propose a
collaboration. Have you all the money you want, Miss Jaquette?"
She had started the glass for her mouth but stopped it
halfway. "Of all the dumb questions," she said.
"But not pointless. Nor impertinent. I need to know if
a chance – a long one, but a chance – of making fifty thousand dollars would
interest you. Would it?"
"That's even dumber."
"Would it?"
"You're asking me?"
"I am."
"Fifty grand in cash?"
"Yes."
"Less income tax."
"Not until you paid it. I suggest nothing; I state a
fact: it would be in cash, and you would sign no receipt."
She sipped juice. "Do you know what I would do if I had
fifty grand in one wad? I would go to school for four straight years. Or
five." She sipped juice. "I suppose some college; I finished high
school. I have a feeling there are a lot of things I ought to know that I don't
know. I always have it. You say you're being serious?"
"Yes. There is a possibility of earning a hundred thousand
dollars, and we would share it equally. It would come from the man who paid
Isabel Kerr's bills – the man you call the lobster. He was here just now, and we
–"
"He was here? You know him?"
"Yes. It was his third visit. He was here twice last
week. He is a man of wealth and what is called standing. To you his name is X
and will remain X. He fears that his name will become public in connection with
what he calls his diversion and a sensational murder, and you and Mr. Goodwin
and I will try to prevent it. If we succeed, he will pay. For that you have my
word, he will pay. His fear is extreme. Shall I go on?"
She had put the glass down, not quite empty. "You are
serious," she said.
"Yes."
"You mean it."
"Yes."
"All right, go on. How do we prevent it?"
"That's the question. Probably we can't, but possibly
we can. If I go on I must tell you things that must not be repeated, and first
you must answer two questions. Are you willing to help?"
"How? I don't see how I can help."
"You already have. You have established the identity of
the blackmailer indubitably, and the identity of the murderer as a sound
conclusion. If you can help with this, are you willing?"
She looked at me. I not only looked back, I nodded. She told
Wolfe, "Yes, I'm willing."
"Do you engage to keep secret what I tell you in
confidence?"
"Yes, that's all right. I can do that."
"Then you're a paragon. But there are things you have
to know – for instance, that Mr. Goodwin and I learned X's name from Orrie
Cather. Miss Kerr told his name to two people only, Orrie Cather and her
sister. That may be safely assumed, because she didn't even tell you. Mrs.
Fleming told her husband, so there are five people who know it. I will answer
for three of the five: Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Cather, and me. There would be some
question about Mr. Cather if he were going to be tried for murder, but he
isn't. That leaves Mr. and Mrs. Fleming as the only sources for the disclosure
of X's name. I am taking pains to make sure that it's clear to you."
"You sure are. Have I told you that I can say the
alphabet backward?"
"You have told Mr. Goodwin and Mr. Cramer. So can I.
Now for the fact that gives us our one chance in a thousand. There is one
person who dreads the publication of X's association with Miss Kerr even more
intensely than X does. Tell her, Archie."
I took five seconds, not to figure it, but to realize that I
had never looked at it from that angle. I told Julie, "Stella. I told you
Saturday how she reacted. Remember? She doesn't want a trial even if they get
the right man. Of course, X's name would come out only in connection with
Isabel." I looked at Wolfe. "Yeah. I'll be damned. But how?"
"That's what we need Miss Jaquette for." His eyes
were narrowed at her. "Don't you want coffee? It's getting cold."
She picked up the glass and finished the juice, put it down,
poured coffee, picked up the cup, and took a sip. She looked at Wolfe and shook
her head. "I don't get it. What's so great about that fact?"
"The possibilities it presents. Suppose that Mrs.
Fleming knows, or even strongly suspects, that her husband killed her sister,
and knows why, and also knows that he may be arrested and charged at any
moment, and later brought to trial. What would she do?"
"I don't know. I don't know her."
"What would she do, Archie?"
"I don't know either," I said, "what she
would do. But I know she would do anything, no holds barred, to keep him or
anyone else from telling the world about Isabel and X. She certainly wouldn't
want it to get to a trial. I don't know how much she cares about him. If
she cares enough, in spite of the fact that he killed Isabel, she might blow
with him, or if she thinks he can stand the gaff and keep his trap shut, she
might stick and fight. If she doesn't care enough about him, she might
ship him off to China, or she might even bump him off. The one certain thing is
that she would do whatever she thought she had to, to make sure, for instance,
that Orrie wouldn't go on the stand as a witness for the prosecution and answer
questions about Isabel. Or that X wouldn't testify about the blackmail. Of
course she has to be told about the blackmail too. To make sure of that she
would blow up the courthouse if she could get her hands on a bomb." I was
looking at Julie. "So there you are. You tell her what you told him in
that letter. It made him snipe at you with a gun. She won't do that, but she'll
certainly do something."
She was frowning. "Why can't you tell her?"
"She wouldn't believe me. You can tell her things
Isabel told you, but I can't. As you told him in the letter."
"That was a lie, that letter."
"The only lie was that Isabel told you. What you said
she told you was true, and he proved it. Do you know that Barry
blackmailed X?"
"Certainly."
"Do you think there's any doubt that he shot at
you?"
"No."
"Do you think he would have tried to kill you just
because you knew about the blackmailing and wanted the money, if he hadn't also
killed Isabel? Remember, I was there, and he knew what I was working on. The
murder. I think it would be fine for you to pick up fifty grand, but also I
understood that you wanted the man who killed Isabel to be tagged. You said so.
Do you think there is any doubt that he killed her?"
"No."
"Then count up to two."
She picked up the cup and took a sip, found that it had
cooled enough, emptied the cup and put it down, and said, "He wouldn't be
tagged if they blow."
"No," I conceded. "But his number would be
up, and he wouldn't be here to name X. They'd find him someday, and then we'd
see. As Mr. Wolfe said, probably we can't, but possibly we can."
"She lives in the Bronx."
"Right."
"Would I have to go there?"
"I hope not. This is the day he was to bring you the
five grand, and God knows where he is or what he might try. I'm off of
bodyguarding for a while."
"Here," Wolfe said. "Get her."
"I'll sit in," I told Julie, "if you think I
won't hash it."
"What a man," she said, and poured coffee.
I swiveled, got the Bronx phone book, found the number,
lifted the receiver, and dialed, hoping she was there and was answering the
phone. She was. It was her voice that said hello.
"This is Archie Goodwin, Mrs. Fleming. You may
remember, I was there a week ago today."
"I remember."
"Then you may remember that I said the police had the
wrong man and I was looking for the right man. I have found him, and we want to
tell you about him and ask your advice about how to proceed. We know you hope
there won't be a trial, and we want to discuss it with you. Will you come here,
Nero Wolfe's office? Now?"
Silence. It went on so long I thought she had gone, but she
hadn't hung up. I finally said, "Mrs. Fleming?" but there was more
silence.
At last her voice came. "Mr. Goodwin?"
"Yes."
"What's the address?"
I gave it to her.
It was a tough decision, and it
took Wolfe a good five minutes to make it. What about lunch? It was ten minutes
past twelve when I hung up after giving Stella Fleming the address. Would she
leave immediately, and how long would it take her? Lunch-time has been, is, and
will be a quarter past one. An impossible situation. He sat and scowled at it
for five or six minutes, made his decision, and got up and went to the kitchen.
I followed him, since I eat too. Julie had no problem, since her hedgehog omelet
and broiled sausage were about ready. The crisis was licked good. Julie ate at
my breakfast table, and Wolfe and I made out on stools at the big table, with
sturgeon, smoked pheasant, celery, three kinds of cheese, and spiced brandied
cherries. Since it was a snack, not a meal, the taboo on business didn't apply,
and we discussed the program. I thought Wolfe should be present, and he thought
he shouldn't, and we let Julie decide it, and she voted with him. In the alcove
at the kitchen end of the hall there is a hole in the wall with a sliding
panel, and on the office side the hole is covered with a trick picture of a
waterfall which you can see through from the alcove side. Wolfe would be there
on a stool. We were unanimous on the other main point, that I should lead the
attack.
When she came, at twenty minutes past one, I started the
attack in the hall. A chair and a bench are there, across from the rack, very
handy, but she didn't put her handbag down when I was taking her coat, and I
didn't like the way she was clutching it. Also I was still touchy about the
bullets that had missed Julie through no fault of mine. So when, turning, she
shifted the bag from her right hand to her left, I grabbed it. She tried to
grab it back, but I stiff-armed her, perhaps a little rough, sidestepped, and
opened the bag. She squeaked and came at me, and I pushed her again and got a
hand in the bag, and it came out with something in it. She backed off and stood
and panted, so I was able to look. It was a twenty-two Bristol automatic with a
fancy carved butt, and it was loaded. I stuck it in my side pocket and held the
bag out. "Sorry if I was rude," I said. "We had an event here
once, and I frisk everybody."
She was trying hard to hold in, and I hoped she would make
it. She had shrunk. Not only did she look even smaller than she had a week ago,
but her face had positively shrunk. Her cheeks had been filled out, and now
they weren't. She took the bag and said, "Give me that gun."
"It's not a gun, it's a toy. You'll get it back. As I
say, I frisk everybody, and right now I'm glad I do. There's a woman here who
is going to say things you won't like, and you're very impulsive. Her name is
Julie Jaquette, and she was your sister's best friend. I believe you have met
her –"
"I was my sister's best friend."
"You ought to know. Let's go in and sit down." I
gestured. "That open door on the left."
I thought she was going to balk and she did too, but I had
the gun and I could have carried her under one arm. She turned and clicked down
the hall, and I followed. Two steps inside the office she stopped. I passed on
by and went to Julie, who was standing by my desk. I took the pistol from my
pocket and showed it to her. "This was in her bag," I said and turned
and asked Stella, "Where does your husband keep his rifle?"
I don't think she heard me. I had moved up a couple of the
yellow chairs, and she went to one and sat. Julie went and took the other one,
and I returned the pistol to my pocket, sat at my desk, and told Julie,
"You have met Mrs. Fleming."
She nodded. "That was in her bag? How did you get
it?"
"Took it. It didn't fire those shots Saturday
night." I eyed Stella. "Your husband shot at Miss Jaquette Saturday
night, but missed. That's why I asked where he keeps his rifle."
She gawked at me. "What? My husband what?"
"He tried to kill Miss Jaquette. That's breaking it to
you gently, Mrs. Fleming, there's much worse to come. I told you on the phone
that I have found the right man. The reason Miss Jaquette is here is that she
helped me find him. I guess the best way is to show you a copy of a letter she
sent to your husband last Friday." I opened a drawer and got it. "She
wrote it by hand; this is a typewritten copy. Shall I read it?"
She looked at Julie. "A letter you sent my
husband?"
"Yes."
She put a hand out. "Let me see it."
I passed it over. She went through it fast and then read it
again, slow. She looked at Julie. "What's it about? Who is Milton
Thales?"
Julie looked at me, and she shouldn't have. She was supposed
to be collaborating. I widened my eyes a little, and she went back to Stella.
"Your husband," she said. "He is Milton Thales. I said in that
letter that Isabel told me everything, but the one thing she didn't tell me was
the name of the man who was paying her bills, so I have to call him X. You're
the only one she told his name to, and –"
"She didn't tell me his name."
"She told me she did tell you. Isabel wasn't a
liar."
That was more like it. What a girl. She was going on.
"So when X got a phone call from a man who knew all about it and told X to
send him money, a thousand dollars a month, to mail it to Milton Thales,
General Delivery, and X told Isabel, she knew Milton Thales must be your
husband. Because no other man could know what Milton Thales knew. Isabel knew
you must have told your husband, and he –"
"I didn't tell my husband."
"You must have, because if –"
I cut in. "It's no good, Mrs. Fleming. That's nailed
down. Your husband got that letter Saturday morning. At one o'clock he phoned
Miss Jaquette at her hotel. At half past two he came in person. I was there
with Miss Jaquette. He told us he hadn't brought the five thousand dollars he
had screwed out of X because the bank wasn't open. He said he would bring it
Monday. Today. What time did he get home Saturday night?"
No answer. She was staring at me.
"I know he got home late, because at half past one he
was behind the wall in Central Park with either a rifle or a revolver, shooting
at Miss Jaquette across the street when we got out of a taxicab. I brought Miss
Jaquette home with me, here, so we don't know if he has tried to get in touch
with her today, and we don't care. The point is, you did tell him X's name, and
he did blackmail X, and Isabel knew it. That's settled."
She was clawing, but not at me. Her hands were resting on
her knees, with the fingers curled, and she was scraping at her palms with her
nails. "I can't believe it," she said, so low that I barely heard.
She said louder, "I can't believe it."
"That's hard," I said, "but there's harder.
This isn't nailed down, but it can be. As it stands now, it's what Isabel told
Miss Jaquette. She not only told her about the blackmailing, she also told her
that she was going to tell your husband that she had decided to tell you about
it. When I first heard that, from Miss Jaquette, I wondered why the police were
holding Orrie Cather instead of your husband, but then Miss Jaquette told me
she hadn't told the police about the blackmailing at all. You can ask her why;
I think it was because she didn't realize what it might mean. The police would
have realized it. If she had told them about the blackmailing, all that Isabel
told her, your husband would now be in jail, either along with Orrie Cather or
instead of him, as a murder suspect. And when we tell them about his coming to
see Miss Jaquette Saturday afternoon, and his trying to kill her that night,
that will settle that. They'll get the evidence, for instance his movements the
morning Isabel was killed, and he'll be booked for murder, and tried, and
probably convicted. I told you on the phone that I have found the right man,
and I have. Barry Fleming."
She had stopped the clawing and made fists, and had nodded
three times as I talked – little involuntary nods, without knowing she was
doing it, like the shake of her head when I told her that Orrie Cather might
have been the one who was paying the rent. Now she whispered to herself,
"That's why."
I didn't ask her why what, because I wasn't after evidence.
You want evidence in order to prove something to the District Attorney or a
judge or a jury, and that wasn't the program. Her "why" was probably
something, or things, he had said or done – for instance, where he had said he
had been, but hadn't, the morning Isabel was killed. Whatever it was, it made
it a lot simpler than I had thought it would be. I had expected her to throw at
least three fits, especially after finding the toy in her bag, and there she
was whispering to herself.
Julie said, "You don't have to club her."
That was unnecessary, so I ignored it. What the hell, she
had brought a gun, even if she had had no idea what for. Probably to mow me
down if I called Isabel a doxy. "You may wonder," I told Stella,
"why we wanted to discuss it with you. Since it's practically certain that
he killed Isabel, why didn't we just tell the police? Of course we'll have to,
but I haven't forgotten what you told me that day, that your sister's
reputation was the most important thing in the world. I know nothing about your
relations with your husband, but I thought it was possible you could do
something. You might persuade him to go to the police and admit he killed her,
and give an entirely different reason, some reason that would leave out the
blackmailing and X and everything you don't want to come out. I don't know if
that's possible, but I thought you ought to have the chance. We can't wait
long, not more than a day or two. Say Wednesday morning."
"This is Monday," she said. She was getting her
voice back.
"Right."
"I want that letter."
It had dropped to the floor when she started the clawing,
and I had picked it up and put it on my desk. "It's just a typewritten
copy," I said.
"I want it."
I got it, folded it, and handed it to her. She said,
"The gun."
"When you leave. Whose is it, yours or your
husband's?"
"It's his. He has medals for shooting." She put
the letter in her bag, looked at Julie, and said, "You. It was people like
you."
"Nuts," Julie said. "Anybody can say that to
anybody. You mean I was bad for Isabel. I was a lot better for her than you
were. I really loved her, but what about you? From what she told me, what
–"
That did it. I had relaxed some, and she was so damned
sudden. Her lunge at Julie was so fast that she was on her before I moved, and
again it wasn't my fault that Julie didn't get hurt, at least some good
scratches. Julie jerked her knees up, and with her feet off the floor the
impact toppled her and the chair backward. Stella would have been on top, but
by that time I was there and had her shoulders from behind. I pulled her off
and up and pinned her arms, but she said, "I'm all right," and she
was. The fit had gone as fast as it came. Julie scrambled up, took a swipe at
her hair, and said, "You can club her, for all I care."
Wolfe's voice came, his coldest voice. "Mrs.
Fleming."
We all turned. He was in the doorway. "Mr. Goodwin was
too generous," he said, "giving you until Wednesday morning. Tomorrow
morning at the latest. Get her out, Archie." He headed for his desk.
Stella's eyes followed him to his chair, then she looked
around, evidently for her bag. I picked it up from where she had dropped it,
put the gun in it, said, "I'll give it to you at the door," and
moved, and she came.
At four o'clock Julie was in a
chair by a window in the South Room, deeply interested, if you go by
appearances, in a magazine, and I was standing in the doorway. We weren't
speaking. I had asked her if I should ring the Ten Little Indians to tell them
she wouldn't come this evening, or would she rather do it herself, and she had
said neither one, she was going, and I had said she wasn't. The conversation
had got very outspoken. At one point she had asked me to tell her Saul Panzer's
number so she could call him and ask him to come and take her, since I didn't
want to expose myself. At another point I said that I doubted if more than half
of the customers would leave when they learned that she wouldn't appear. At
still another she asked if I actually meant that she was being held there by
force, against her will, and I said yes. By four o'clock it became apparent
that we weren't going to be speaking.
Then the sound came of the elevator groaning its way up, and
she raised her head to listen. When the groaning stopped and the sound came of
the door opening above, she tossed the magazine on the table, got up, and
walked. As she approached the doorway I politely moved aside, and she passed
through, went to the stairs, and started up. She was either going to appeal to
the owner of the house or help him with the orchids, and as far as I was
concerned it didn't matter which. I went down the two flights to the office,
called the Ten Little Indians, and said that Miss Jaquette had a cold and
wouldn't be able to make it. I didn't say where she was because they might send
someone with flowers and she didn't need any up there.
Being a warder, I couldn't go for a walk, and anyway I had
to catch the news broadcasts every half-hour to learn if there had been any
development worth reporting in a murder case, for instance that a man named
Barry Fleming had been taken to the District Attorney's office for questioning
in connection with the murder of his sister-in-law. There hadn't. I spent the
two hours at the files and my desk, with the germination records. It helps, at
a time like that, to have something to do that needs only one small corner of
your mind, like entering on cards such items as the results to date of a cross between
Odonto-glossum crispo-harryanum x aireworthi or Miltonia
vexillaria x roezli.
When they came down together in the elevator at six o'clock,
I was too busy even to turn my head, but I became aware of a presence near my
right shoulder, and a voice asked, "Can I help?"
So we were speaking. I said, "No, thanks."
"Did you phone?"
"Yeah, you have a cold."
"Has anything happened?"
"Yes. We have made up. Apparently."
"Oh, I never nurse a huff. Anyway, I knew you were
right. I just wanted to see how mean you could get. One thing I could have
said, I could have threatened to call a cop. Evidently the one thing you and
Nero can't stand is for anybody to tell a cop anything. It's been more than
four hours since she left. Damn it, what's she doing?"
That was the second time I had ever heard a woman call him
Nero, but the other time it had been a gag. For Julie it was just natural. If
she stayed two days and two nights in a man's house, and ate with him, and
collaborated with him, and helped him with his orchids, it would have been
silly to call him Mister. If she got the fifty grand and picked a college that
wasn't too far away, I might drop in after she had been there a while to see
what effect she was having. It was a cinch that she would have more effect on
it than it would have on her.
I accepted her offer to help with the germination records.
At the dinner table Wolfe didn't repeat his performance of
the day before. It was no longer necessary to quiz her, and he put her in her
place by discussing the difference between imagination and invention in
literature. She did get a word in now and then. Once when his mouth was full of
sweetbreads she said, "You're talking over my head on purpose. Show me one
thing in one book and ask me if it's imagination or invention and I'll tell you
every time, and let's see you prove I'm wrong." That's no way to talk to a
man who is doing his best to prepare you for college.
While Fritz was pouring after-dinner coffee in the office,
Julie said, "I'd give a brand-new dollar bill to know what she's doing.
What's her number? I'll call her."
"Yeah," I said.
She looked at Wolfe. "You get on my nerves because you
haven't got any. You wouldn't give a rusty nickel to know what she's
doing."
"Why should I?" he growled, and sipped coffee.
It was obvious that they had had enough of each other for a
while, and when we had finished with the coffee I took her down to the
basement. The basement has Fritz's room and bath, a storeroom, and a large room
with a pool table. I had mentioned it to her, and she had said she would like
to learn how to use a cue, and it might take her mind off of Stella Fleming,
not to mention mine. But she didn't get her pool lesson. I had taken the cover
off, and picked a cue for her, and racked the balls, when the doorbell rang. If
I hadn't caught her arm she would have beaten me to the stairs, and she was
right at my heels when I reached the hall and took a look at the front.
"My God," she said, "she hashed it." I
stepped to the office door and told Wolfe, "Cramer." He looked up
from his book and tightened his lips. I told Julie, "Go to the kitchen and
stay there." The doorbell rang. Julie went, but not to the kitchen, to the
alcove, where the hole was. I said, "If you sneeze, I'll boil you in
oil," and went to the front and opened the door.
From the look Cramer gave me, he was set to boil me in oil
whether I sneezed or not. That was all he had for me, the look. By the time I
had his coat hung up he was at the office door, and when I got there he was
already in the red leather chair and talking. He was saying, "… and you
knew Barry Fleming fired those shots, and I want to know how you knew. You also
knew Barry Fleming had killed Isabel Kerr, and I want to know how you knew
that."
Good-by, fifty grand, I thought as I crossed to my desk.
They had Fleming, and ten to one they would open him up, no matter how Stella
had handled him. Maybe they already had.
Wolfe said, "You're fuming, Mr. Cramer."
"You're damn right I am."
"Then you're at a disadvantage. Don't you want to
compose your mind?"
"I want you to answer questions!"
"If I know the answers. You say that I knew that Barry
Fleming killed Isabel Kerr. I remind you that last evening I told you that I
had no evidence that would help to convict anyone of that murder, that I had only
a surmise. I repeat that. I still have no evidence. Have you?"
"Yes."
"Is Barry Fleming in custody?"
"No." Cramer's jaw was set. "Look, Wolfe.
You've got what you wanted. You wanted to spring Cather, and you've worked it.
He's clear. Now. I don't need evidence for Fleming, even if you've got it. I
want some facts. I want to know if Barry Fleming fired those shots at Julie
Jaquette, and if so why."
Wolfe's shoulders went up an eighth of an inch and down
again. "Is that important? Important to you? Since you have him for murder
– or have you? You say he's not in custody. If by any chance you think I have
him here, waiting for you, I haven't. Is it –"
"You haven't got him here. He's dead."
"Indeed. By violence?"
"Yes."
A corner of Wolfe's mouth twisted up. "Mr. Goodwin and
Miss Jaquette and I haven't left the house all day. So if you had any
expectation –"
"Oh, cork it. He shot himself. About three hours ago.
In the temple with a Bristol twenty-two automatic. It was his, he had a permit.
And I want –"
"If you please. At his home?"
"Yes. I –"
"Was a policeman there? Had he been questioned?"
"No. If you –"
"Then how the devil do you know he killed Isabel Kerr?
How do you know anything at all? Don't expect me to clear it up. I have told
you twice, I have no evidence –"
"Goddammit, I don't need evidence. Not about Isabel
Kerr. If you want it about him, okay. When he got home this afternoon, he and
his wife had a talk, she says, and he wrote something and signed it. She went
out to buy some groceries and was gone about half an hour and when she went
back he was dead. How do I know he killed Isabel Kerr? She had it, what he
wrote and signed."
He got a piece of folded paper from his breast pocket.
"It has been checked with his handwriting, but the laboratory will verify
it." He unfolded it. "It's his printed letterhead. Dated today."
He read:
"To Whom It May Concern:
I hereby state and acknowledge that on Saturday, January 29,
1966, I struck my sister-in-law, Isabel Kerr, on the head with an ashtray and
killed her. It was not premeditated. I did it in an uncontrollable frenzy of
anger and resentment. The resentment had been festering for three years. She
had been living in great luxury and my wife and I were paying for it. All of my
savings were gone, and with my small salary I would soon be at the end of my
rope, but she would not listen to reason, and my wife was so devoted to her
that she would not do what had to be done. That Saturday morning I tried once
more to persuade Isabel, but could not, and I lost control of myself and hit
her. I did not mean to kill her, but I do not expect forgiveness, even from my
wife. My wife insists that I must write this so that she will have evidence of
the circumstances of Isabel's death. She has given me no promises and I do not
know what she will do with it.
Barry Fleming"
Cramer folded it and returned it to his pocket.
"Naturally, the first thing you'll say, and I said, is that he doesn't say
he's going to kill himself. No good-by. But they often don't. The gun was there
on the floor, and the bullet went through his right temple at the right angle.
She talked a little to the precinct man, but now she's out, completely out,
under sedation. Of course we'll get at her later, but I'm not expecting much.
I'm spilling this to you because it settles the Kerr thing and you might as
well know it, but it doesn't settle everything. The shots that were fired at
Julie Jaquette. You told me yesterday that you didn't know who fired
them."
"I didn't. I still don't."
"That's a goddam lie."
"I lie only when I must. Now it isn't necessary. I told
you yesterday that I suspected there was a connection between the murder of
Isabel Kerr and the shots fired at Miss Jaquette, that I could guess, but I
didn't know." Wolfe turned a hand over. "Mr. Cramer. There are
certain details that I don't intend to divulge, and anyway, you don't need them
now and would have no use for them. The murder is solved, and the culprit is
dead. But not only are you a policeman with duties, you are also a man with the
itch of curiosity, and furthermore I gall you. So I tell you this: I learned,
no matter how, who was supplying the money for Isabel Kerr's luxurious way of
life, and certain facts about it, and that led me to my surmise that Barry
Fleming had killed her. I also learned, again no matter how, that Barry Fleming
feared that Miss Jaquette would disclose certain facts which he thought she had
got from Isabel Kerr, and therefore she was in danger and should be protected.
I did not know he fired the shots; I don't know it now. As for
lying, I give you my word of honor that what I have just told you is completely
true. Miss Jaquette is still here, and you may see her if you have time to
waste; I presume she would chaff you as she did yesterday."
Cramer looked at me. He knew from experience that when Wolfe
gave his word of honor he meant it. He squinted at me, frowning, until I
wondered if my tie was crooked. "I thought you did everything right,"
he said. "Always cocky. How much did it miss her, with you standing there,
about a foot?"
What I would have liked to do you don't do to a cop, especially
an inspector. All I could do was squint back at him. He got to his feet and
looked down at Wolfe. "I'm still curious," he said. "You learned
a lot, and of course you learned it from Cather. Do you realize that if he
hadn't buttoned his lip, if he had told us what he told you, all of it, he
would have been out before now, and Fleming would be in and still alive? Sure
you realize it. But you had to do it. You had to show once more how
sharp you are. I wish to God – oh, what's the use."
He turned and started for the door, but short of it he
stopped and wheeled. "Don't you think you ought to send flowers to his
funeral?"
I would have gone to hold his coat if he hadn't made that
crack. It had missed her by a yard, not a foot. When I heard the front door
close, I went to the hall for a look. He was out. I turned and called Julie,
and she came around the alcove corner. There was a funny look on her face, as
if she was trying to say the alphabet backward and didn't know how to start.
She stopped and fastened the look on me, and I took her arm and steered her
into the office. She went to the red leather chair, sank into it, and told
Wolfe, "You knew that would happen. You knew it."
He scowled at her. "I did not. I am not a Chaldean. It
was Archie, not I, who gave her the idea. 'Give an entirely different reason'
was his suggestion, and she seized it. Brilliantly. Archie. What exactly did I
say to X?"
"You said, quote, 'As for Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, the
best I could possibly do would be to create a situation which would make it
highly unlikely that they would ever disclose it.' End quote. And that he would
be the judge of the situation."
"I called her a beetle," Julie said. "My God,
she must be … first her sister, and now her husband. What are you doing,
Archie?"
I had got a quarter from my pocket and tossed it up.
"I'm deciding something that can't be decided any other way." I bent
over for a look. "Tails. She shot him."
One day last week I got a
letter:
Dear Archie –
Thanks for telling me about Orrie Cather marrying that
airline girl. You know what I think of that but I wish them well, I really do.
Why not? I say that to people sometimes, I wish you well, and you ought to see
them stare.
In a class one day last week we were supposed to say
something about imagination and invention and I cleaned it up. I said nearly
everything Nero said that day at dinner and it made their eyes pop. They don't
know any better. I'm not sure anybody here knows any better about anything, but
I'm giving it a whirl and we'll see. Somebody here must know something I want
to know but I haven't seen any sign of it yet. How is Fritz? Tell him I can
still taste that hedgehog omelet. And the sauce with the sweetbreads.
Write if you want to. I wish you well.
J