Over My Dead Body
REX STOUT
Over My Dead Body
A NERO WOLFE MYSTERY
BANTAM BOOKS
NEW YORK • TORONTO • LONDON • SYDNEY • AUCKLAND
OVER MY DEAD BODY
A Bantam Crime Line Book / by arrangement with the author
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Farrar and Rhinehart edition published 1940
Bantam reissue edition / January 1994
Crime Line and the portrayal of a boxed "cl" are
trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1939, 1940, 1968, by Rex Stout.
Introduction copyright © 1993 by John Jakes.
Cover art copyright © 1993 by Tom Hallman.
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 0-553-23116-2
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 0 9 8 7
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
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Rex Stout
The Rex Stout Library
I met Rex Stout in the aftermath
of a crime. Beg pardon, alleged crime. The creator of Mr. Wolfe and Archie
didn't believe any crime had been committed.
The year was 1962; the place, Rochester, New York. I was
working there as a copywriter in an ad agency whose major account was Eastman
Kodak, irreverently known as Big Yellow. I was also one of the youngest, if not
the youngest, board members of the Friends of the Rochester Public Library.
This was the first of several Friends groups I became associated with out of my
general love of, and need for, libraries, and it stands out as one of the most
vigorous and progressive.
The crime, so-called, was not the kind that figures in one
of these fine Stout reprints. It was what some term a victimless crime. But to
the authorities in Rochester, especially the district attorney, whose press
statements seemed to reek of puritanical hellfire and political ambition, it
was a crime of the most dangerous kind.
To wit: selling a book.
The book was the Grove Press edition of Henry Miller's Tropic
of Cancer. Sale of the allegedly obscene book was prohibited in New York
State and a lot of other states as well. The alleged perp was a smallish,
mild-appearing bookseller, whom I'll call Norman B. Norman B. ran a large
independent store not far from the massive granite block of the main library,
on the bank of the Genesee River. Along with the usual array of semilurid
girlie magazines and sexy paperbacks, in which the raciest word was something
like "nipples," the bookstore offered Miller's novel for sale.
Which got Norman B. in a peck of trouble.
Now I honestly don't remember whether he was actually served
with an arrest warrant, or just ordered by the D.A. to get rid of the Miller or
else. But I do remember the quick response. Certain members of the Friends,
including several stouthearted technical writers from Kodak, formed an ad hoc
group called Audience Unlimited. Its purpose was to advertise and write letters
objecting to the law coming down hard on Norman B. and, more pertinently, on
the freedom to read. Yours truly was part of the new group.
Norman B. himself immediately took countermeasures,
instituting a legal action to overturn the Tropic ban. In 1964 the case
was decided in his favor by the New York State courts, some four months after
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the book not obscene.
In the midst of the Sturm und Drang unleashed by the Tropic
affair, Mr. Stout came to town.
He came not to defend Norman B. or Henry M. but as a guest
speaker at the sixth annual Friends Literary Award presentation. The award that
year was given to Lewis Stiles Gannett, a native of Rochester and a journalist,
author, and at that time editor of Doubleday's marvelous Mainstream of America
series of historical studies.
The award ceremony was held in the great main hall of the
Rochester library, with a small social gathering preceding. As a Friends board
member, I was invited to attend the reception. The words "high
excitement" hardly describe my state; the honored guest was a Famous Name
Writer, and I was a devoted fan of his mysteries.
I vividly recall my first sight of Rex Stout, who was at
that time seventy-five. His hair was white and so was his splendid long beard,
and I remember thinking that he looked like an American cousin of Shaw. Of
course he was a godlike figure to me – I was thirty, slogging along fairly
unsuccessfully with one third-rate pulp novel after another. But I approached
him, shook his hand, muttered a few words, and I remember that he was friendly
and humorous: kindness personified.
He was less friendly and humorous when it was his turn to
speak. Of course he was appropriately warm and complimentary to his friend
Gannett. But then he launched into a jeremiad against book-banners. He said,
"Efforts to censor what people read are not justified under the American system."
He thrilled me with his remarks. The audience gave him an ovation when he
finished.
Which brings me around to the real point of this
Introduction.
Rex Stout was a lifelong champion of writers, and a lifelong
foe of those who would take advantage of them or suppress their work. As a
highly successful writer himself, he obviously believed in giving something
back to the profession for the benefit of others who weren't so successful.
Virtually his whole life testifies to this. Stout became a
member of the Authors League in 1915. He was president of the League, the
umbrella organization for the Authors Guild and the Dramatists Guild, from 1951
to 1955 and again from 1961 to 1969.
He served the Authors Guild as president from 1943 to 1945
and was a member of the Guild Council from 1942 until the time of his death in
1975. As the Guild's Bulletin said in its obituary, "He was always
ready to give of his time and spirit to Guild business." Of his many
activities, probably none was more important than his presidency of the Authors
League Fund, which helps professional writers who happen to fall into dire
financial distress.
A man named Olin Miller has said, "Writing is the
hardest way of earning a living, with the possible exception of wrestling
alligators." That's more than a little self-serving; millions of men and
women in other jobs would make the same statement about their work. But it's
also true that writers have few defenders beyond themselves.
That's why the Authors League was formed, and its two guilds
as well.
That's why Rex Stout gave so much of himself to Guild and
League causes.
That's why he came to Rochester and spoke out against the
immoral banning of Miller's novel. (Who knows what he thought of the book? He
might have hated it; I've never been wild about it myself. But it was a serious
book, and if you allow the yahoos to ban one such, you open the door to
suppression of all of them – and a lot of other art besides. Which is hardly
big news but is, regrettably, a recurring problem.)
Rex Stout gave me great pleasure through his novels. I
expect he has done the same for you and will certainly do so again in Over
My Dead Body.
But he also gave me great pride in my chosen profession and
a sure knowledge that, someday, if ever I could, I had to give something back
too.
I'll never forget the day Rex Stout came to Rochester. If
you'd been there, you wouldn't either.
– John Jakes
The bell rang and I went to the
front and opened the door and there she was. I said good morning.
"Pliz," she said, "I would like to see Misturr Nero Wolfe."
Or you might have spelled it plihz or plizz or plihsz.
However you spelled it, it wasn't Middle West or New England or Park Avenue or
even East Side. It wasn't American, and naturally it irritated me a little. But
I politely invited her in and conducted her to the office and got her a chair,
and then extracted her name, which I had to ask her to spell.
"Mr. Wolfe will be engaged until eleven o'clock,"
I told her, with a glance at the wall clock above my desk, which said ten
thirty. "I'm Archie Goodwin, his confidential secretary. If you'd like to
save time by starting on me …"
She shook her head and said she had plenty of time. I asked
if she would like a book or magazine, and she shook her head again, and I
passed her up and resumed at my desk, where I was heading up a bunch of
hybridizing cards for use upstairs. Five minutes later I had finished and was
checking them over when I heard her voice behind me:
"I believe I would like a book. May I?"
I waved at the shelves and told her to help herself and went
on with the checking. Presently I looked up when she approached and stood
beside me with a volume in her hand.
"Misturr Wolfe reads this?" she asked. She had a
nice soft low voice which would have sounded all right if she had taken the
trouble to learn how to pronounce words. I glanced at the title and told her
Wolfe had read it some time ago.
"But he stoodies it?"
"Why should he? He's a genius, he don't have to study
anything."
"He reads once and then he is through?"
"That's the idea."
She started for her chair and then turned again. "Do
you read it perhaps?"
"I do not," I said emphatically.
She half smiled. "It's too complicated for you, the
Balkan history?"
"I don't know, I haven't tried it. But I understand all
the kings and queens got murdered. I like newspaper murders better."
She turned off the smile and went and sat down with the
book, and appeared to be absorbed in it a few minutes later when, the checking
finished, I jiggled the handful of cards neatly together and departed with
them, and mounted the two flights of carpeted stairs to the top floor and the
steeper flight to the roof level, where the entire space was glassed-in for the
orchids except the potting room and the corner where Horstmann slept. Passing
through the first two rooms, down the aisles with silver staging and concrete
benches and thousands of pots holding everything from baby seedlings to odontoglossums
and dendrobiums in full bloom, I found Nero Wolfe in the warm room, standing
with his thumbs on his hips, frowning at Horstmann, who in turn was scowling
reproachfully at an enormous coelogyne blossom with white petals and orange
keels. Wolfe was muttering:
"A full two weeks. At the very least, twelve days. As
Per Hansa says, I don't know what God expects to accomplish by such management.
If it were only a question of forcing – well, Archie?"
I handed Horstmann the cards. "For that batch of
miltonias and lycastes. The germination dates are already in where you had
them. There's a female immigrant downstairs who wants to borrow a book. She is
twenty-two years old and has fine legs. Her face is sullen but well-arranged
and her eyes are dark and beautiful and worried. She has a nice voice, but she
talks like Lynn Fontanne in Idiot's Delight. Her name is Carla
Lovchen."
Wolfe had taken the cards from Horstmann to flip through
them, but he stopped to send me a sharp glance. "What's that?" he
demanded. "Her name?"
"Lovchen." I spelled it, and grinned. "Yeah,
I know, it struck me too. You may remember I read The Native's Return. She
seems to be named after a mountain. The Black Mountain. Mount Lovchen.
Tsernagora. Montenegro, which is the Venetian variant of Monte Nero, and your
name is Nero. It may be only a coincidence, but it's natural for a trained
detective –"
"What does she want?"
"She says she wants to see you, but I think she came to
borrow a book. She took that United Yugoslavia by Henderson from the
shelf and asked if you've read it, and do you stoody it, and am I reading it
and so on. She's down there with her pretty nose in it. But as I say, her eyes
look worried. I had a notion to tell her that because of the healthy condition
of the bank account –"
I turned it off because he was ignoring me and giving his
attention to the cards. Reflecting that that was an unusually childish gesture
even for him, since it lacked only three minutes till eleven o'clock, the hour
when he invariably proceeded from the plant rooms to the office, I snorted
audibly, wheeled, and went for the stairs.
The immigrant was still in the chair, reading, but had
abandoned the book for a magazine. I looked around for it to return it to the
shelf, but saw that she had already done so; it was back in its place, and I
gave her a good mark for that because I've noticed that most girls are so
darned untidy around a house. I told her Wolfe would be down soon, and had just
got my notes cleared away and the typewriter lowered when I heard the door of
his personal elevator clanging, and a moment later he entered. A pace short of
his desk he arrested his progress to acknowledge the visitor's presence with a
little bow which achieved only one degree off the perpendicular, then continued
to his chair, got deposited, glanced at the vase of cattleyas and the morning
mail under the weight, put his thumb to the button to summon beer, leaned back
and adjusted himself, and sighed. The visitor, with the magazine closed on her
lap, was gazing at him through long lowered lashes.
Wolfe said abruptly and crisply, "Lovchen? That is not
your name. It is no one's name."
Her lashes fluttered. "My name," she said with a
half smile, "is what I say it is. Would you call it a convenience? Not to
irritate the Americans with a name like Kraljevitch?"
"Is that yours?"
"No."
"No matter." Wolfe sounded testy – as far as I
could see, for no reason. "You came to see me?"
Her lips parted for a soft little laugh. "You sound
like a Tsernagore," she declared. "Or a Montenegrin if you prefer it,
as the Americans do. You don't look like one, since Tsernagores grow up and up,
not out and all around like you. But when you talk I feel at home. That's
exactly how a Tsernagore speaks to a girl. Is it what you eat?"
I turned my head to enjoy a grin. Wolfe demanded, almost
bellowing at her, "What can I do for you, Miss Lovchen?"
"Oh yes." Her eyes showed the worry again. "I
was forgetting on account of seeing you. You are a famous man, I know that, of
course, but you don't look famous. You look more like –" She stopped, made
a little circle with her lips, and went on, "Anyway, you're famous, and
you have been in Montenegro. You see, I know much about you. Hvala Bogu.
Because I want to engage you on account of some trouble."
"I'm afraid –"
"Not my trouble," she continued rapidly.
"It's a friend of mine, a girl who came with me to America not long ago.
Her name is Neya Tormic." The long black lashes flickered. "Just as
mine is Carla Lovchen. We work together at the studio of Nikola Miltan on 48th
Street. You know, perhaps? Dancing and fencing are taught there. You know
him?"
"I've met him," Wolfe admitted gruffly, "at
the table of my friend Marko Vukčić. But I'm afraid I'm too busy at
present –"
She swept on in front. "We're good fencers, Neya and I.
Corsini in Zagreb passed us with foils, йpйe, and sabre. And the dancing, of
course, is easy. We learn the Lambeth Walk in twenty minutes, we teach it to
rich people in five lessons, and they pay high, and Nikola Miltan takes the
money and pays us only not so high. That is why, in this foolish trouble Neya
has got into, we can pay you not so much as you might expect from some people,
but we can pay you a little, and added to that is the fact that we are from Zagreb.
It's not a little trouble Neya has got into, it's a big one, through no fault
of hers, because she is not a thief, as anyone but an American fool would be
aware. They'll put her in jail, and you must act quickly, at once –"
Wolfe's face was set in a grimace, showing that he was in
the throes of an agitation away beyond his chronic reluctance to bother his
mind about business when the bank balance was up in five figures. Displaying a
palm at her, he tried to expostulate:
"I tell you I'm too busy –"
She hopped right over it. "I came instead of Neya
because she has important lessons this morning, and it is necessary we should
keep our jobs. But you will have to see her, of course, so you will have to go
there, and anyway Miltan is arranging for everyone to be there together today,
this afternoon, to settle it. It's the biggest nonsense anyone could imagine to
suppose that Neya would put her hand in a man's pocket and steal diamonds, but
it will be terrible if it happens the way Miltan says it will happen if the
diamonds are not returned – but wait – you must let me tell you –"
My mouth was standing open in astonishment. After two hours
on his feet in the plant rooms, when he came to the office at eleven o'clock
and got lowered into his chair, with me there to annoy him pleasantly and the
beer-tray freshly delivered by Fritz Brenner, Wolfe was ordinarily as immovable
as a two-ton boulder. But now he was rising; he was risen. With a mutter that
might have been taken either for an excuse or an imprecation, and with no
glance at either of us, he stalked out of the room, by the door that led to the
hall. We watched him go and then the immigrant turned and let me have her eyes
wide open.
"He gets sick!" she demanded.
I shook my head. "Eccentric," I explained. "I
suppose you might call it a form of sickness, but it's nothing tangible like
concussion of the brain or whooping-cough. Once when a respectable lawyer was
sitting in that very chair you're in now – Yes, Fritz?"
The door which Wolfe had closed behind him had opened again
and Fritz Brenner stood there with a bewildered look on his face.
"In the kitchen a moment, please, Archie."
I got up and excused myself and went to the kitchen.
Preliminary preparations for lunch were scattered around on the big
linoleum-covered table, but it was obvious that Wolfe had not been suddenly
seized with a violent curiosity about food. He stood at the far side of the
refrigerator, facing me in a determined manner that seemed entirely uncalled
for, and told me abruptly as I entered:
"Send her away."
"My God!" I admit I blew up a little. "She
said she'd pay something, didn't she? It's enough to freeze the blood of an
alligator! If you read it in her eyes that her friend Neya did actually glumb
the glass, you might at least –"
"Archie." It was about as hostile as his voice
ever got. "I have skedaddled, physically, once in my life, from one
person, and that was a Montenegrin woman. It was many years ago, but my nerves
remember it. I neither desire nor intend to explain how I felt when that
Montenegrin female voice in there said 'Hvala Bogu.' Send her
away."
"But there's no –"
"Archie!"
I saw it was hopeless, though I had no idea whether he was
overcome by terror or was staging a stunt. I gave it up and went back to the
office and stood in front of her.
"Mr. Wolfe regrets that he will be unable to help your
friend out of her trouble. He's busy."
Her head was tilted back to look up at me, and a little gasp
left her mouth open. "But he can't – he must!" She jumped to her feet
and I backed up a step as her eyes flashed at me. "We are from Tsernagora!
She is – my friend is –" Indignation choked it off.
"It's final," I said brusquely. "He won't
touch it. Sometimes I can change his mind for him, but there are limits. What
does 'Hvala Bogu' mean?"
She stared. "It means 'Thank God.' If I see him, tell
him –"
"You shouldn't have said it. It gives him the willies
to hear a Montenegrin female voice talk Montenegrin. It's a kind of allergy.
I'm sorry, Miss Lovchen, but there's not a chance. I know him from A to P,
which is as far as he goes. P is for pigheaded."
"But he – I must see him, tell him –"
She was stubborn enough herself so that it took five minutes
to persuade her out, and since the only prejudice I had acquired against
Montenegrin females up to that point was based merely on pronunciation, which
is not after all vital, I didn't want to get rough. Finally I closed the front
door behind her and went to the kitchen and announced sarcastically:
"I think it's safe now. Stay close behind me and if I
holler run like hell."
Wolfe's inarticulate growl, as I wheeled and headed for the
office, warned me that there was barbed wire in that neighborhood, so when he
came in a few minutes later and got re-established in his chair I made no
effort to explain my viewpoint any further. He drank beer and fiddled around
with a pile of catalogues, while I checked over a couple of invoices from
Hoehn's and did some miscellaneous chores. When a little later he asked me to
please open the window a crack, I knew the tension was relaxing toward normal.
But if either or both of us had any idea that we were
through with the Balkans for that day, it wasn't long before we had it jostled
out of us. It was customary for Fritz to answer the doorbell from eleven on,
when I was in the office with Wolfe. Around twelve thirty he came in, advanced
the usual three paces, stood formally, and announced a caller named Stahl who
would not declare his business but stated that he was an agent of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
I let out a low whistle and ejaculated cautiously
"Aha!" Wolfe opened his eyes a trifle and nodded, and Fritz went for
the caller.
We hadn't bumped into a G-man before in the course of
business, and when he entered I did him the honor of swiveling clear around for
a look. He was all right, medium-sized, with good shoulders and good eyes, a
little skimpy in the jaw, and he needed a shoeshine. He told us his name again
and shook hands with both of us, and took from his pocket a little leather case
which he flipped open and exhibited to Wolfe with a reserved but friendly
smile.
"My credentials," he explained in an educated
voice. He certainly had fine manners, something on the order of a high-class
insurance salesman.
Wolfe glanced at the exhibit, nodded, and indicated a chair.
"Well, sir?"
The G-man looked politely apologetic. "We're sorry to
bother you, Mr. Wolfe, but it's our job. I'd like to ask whether you are
acquainted with the Federal statute which recently went into effect, requiring
persons who are agents in this country of foreign principals to register with
the Department of State."
"Not intimately. I read newspapers. I read about that
some time ago."
"Then you know of that law?"
"I do."
"Have you registered?"
"No. I am not an agent of a foreign principal."
The G-man threw one knee over the other. "The law
applies to agents of foreign firms, individuals or organizations, as well as to
foreign governments."
"So I understand."
"It also applies, here, both to aliens and to citizens.
Are you a citizen of the United States?"
"I am. I was born in this country."
"You were at one time an agent of the Austrian
government?"
"Briefly, as a boy. Not here, abroad. I quit."
"And joined the Montenegrin army?"
"Later, but still a boy. I then believed that all
misguided or cruel people should be shot, and I shot some. I starved to death
in 1916."
The G-man looked startled. "I beg your pardon?"
"I said I starved to death. When the Austrians came and
we fought machine guns with fingernails. Logically I was dead; a man can't live
on dry grass.
Actually I went on breathing. When the United States entered
the war and I walked six hundred miles to join the A. E. F., I ate again. When
it ended I returned to the Balkans, shed another illusion, and came back to
America."
"Hvala Bogu," I put in brightly.
Stahl, startled again, shot me a glance. "I beg your
pardon? Are you a Montenegrin?"
"Nope. Pure Ohio. The ejaculation was
involuntary."
Wolfe, ignoring me, went on, "I would like to say, Mr.
Stahl, that my temperament would incline me to resent and resist an attempt by
any individual to inquire into my personal history or affairs, but I do not
regard you as an individual. Naturally. You represent the Federal government.
You are, in effect, America itself sitting in my office wanting to know
something about me, and I am so acutely grateful to my native country for the
decencies it still manages to preserve … by the way, would you care for a glass
of American beer?"
"No, thank you."
Wolfe pushed the button and leaned back. He grunted.
"To your question, sir: I represent no foreign principal, firm,
individual, organization, dictator, or government. Occasionally I pursue
inquiries here, professionally as a detective, on requests from Europe, chiefly
from Mr. Ethelbert Hitchcock of London, an English confrere, as he does there
for me. I am pursuing none at present. I am not an agent of Mr. Hitchcock or of
anyone else."
"I see," Stahl sounded open to conviction. "That's
definite enough. But your early experiences in Europe … may I ask … do you know
a Prince Donevitch?"
"I knew him long ago. He's getting ready to die, I
believe, in Paris."
"I don't mean him. Isn't there another one?"
"There is. Old Peter's nephew. Prince Stefan Donevitch.
I believe he lives in Zagreb. When I was there in 1916 he was a six-year-old
boy."
"Have you communicated with him recently?"
"No. I never have."
"Have you sent money to him or to anyone or any
organization for him – or the cause he represents?"
"No, sir."
"You do make remittances to Europe, don't you?"
"I do." Wolfe grimaced. "From my own funds,
earned at my trade. I have contributed to the Loyalists in Spain. I send money
occasionally to the – translated, it is the League of Yugoslavian Youth. Prince
Stefan Donevitch assuredly has no connection with that."
"I wouldn't know. What about your wife? Weren't you
married?"
"No. Married? No. That was what –" Wolfe stirred,
as under restraint, in his chair. "It strikes me, sir, that you are nearing
the point where even a grateful American might tell you to go to the
devil."
I put in emphatically, "I know damn well I would, and
I'm only a sixty-fourth Indian."
The G-man smiled and uncrossed his legs. "I
suppose," he said amiably, "you'd have no objection to putting this
in the form of a signed statement. What you've told me."
"On a proper occasion, none at all."
"Good. You represent no foreign principal, directly or
indirectly?"
"That is correct."
"Well, that's all we wanted to know." He got up.
"At present. Thank you very much."
"You're quite welcome. Good day, sir."
I followed him out, to open the front door for America and
make sure he was on the proper side of it when it was closed again. Wolfe could
get sentimental about it if he wanted to, but I don't like any stranger nosing
around my private affairs, let alone a nation of 130 million people. When I
returned to the office he was sitting back with his eyes closed.
"You see what happens," I told him bitterly.
"Just because you rake in two fat fees and the bank account is momentarily
bloated, in the space of three weeks you refuse nine cases. Not counting the
poor little immigrant girl with a friend who likes diamonds. You refuse to
investigate anything for anybody. Then what happens? America gets suspicious
because it's un-American not to make all the money you can, and sicks a Senior
G-man on you, and now, by God, you're going to have to investigate yourself! You
don't need –"
"Archie. Shut up." His eyes opened. "You're a
liar. Since when have you been a sixty-fourth Indian?"
Before I could parry his counterattack Fritz appeared to
announce lunch. I knew it was to be warmed-over duck scraps, so I was off at
the gun.
During meals Wolfe ordinarily
excludes business not only from his conversation but also from his mind. But
that day it appeared that his thoughts were straying from the food, though I
didn't see how they could have been on business, since there was none on hand.
He did his share of demolition to the remains of three ducks – his old friend
Marko Vukčić had dined with us the day before – but there was an air
of absent-mindedness in his ardor as he tore the backbones apart and scraped
the juicy shreds off with his gleaming white teeth. It somewhat prolonged the
operations, so that it was after two o'clock when we finished with the coffee
and waddled back to the office. That is, he waddled. I strode.
Then, instead of resuming with the catalogues or playing
with some other of his toys, he leaned back and clasped his hands over the duck
repository and shut his eyes. It wasn't a coma, for several times during the
hour he sat there I saw his lips push in and out, so I knew he was hard at work
on something. Suddenly he spoke.
"Archie. What made you say that girl wanted to borrow a
book?"
So he hadn't been able to get his mind off of Montenegrin
females. I waved a hand. "Persiflage. Chaff."
"No. You said she asked if I had read it."
"Yes, sir."
"And if I study it."
"Yes, sir."
"And are you reading it."
"Yes, sir."
He nearly opened his eyes. "Did it occur to you that
she was finding out if either of us would be apt to look at that book in the
immediate future?"
"No, sir. My mind was occupied. I was sitting down and
she was standing in front of me and I was thinking about her curves."
"That is not thought. Those nerves are in the spinal
column, not the brain. You said it was United Yugoslavia by
Henderson."
"Yes, sir."
"Where was it when you returned to the office?"
"On the shelf where it belongs. She had put it back
herself. For a Monteneg –"
"Get it, please."
I crossed the room and got it down and took it to him. He
rubbed the cover caressingly with his palm, as he always did with a book, and
then turned it with its front edge facing him, squeezed it tight shut and held
it for a moment, and suddenly released the pressure. Then he opened it around
the middle and took out a piece of paper that was there between the leaves. The
paper was folded, and he unfolded it and started reading it. I sat down and set
my teeth on my lip to hold in what might otherwise have come out. I set them
hard.
"Indeed," Wolfe said. "Shall I read it to
you?"
"Oh, please do, yes, sir."
He began an incoherent jabber and splutter that didn't even
sound human. I knew he expected me to butt in with an outcry, so I set my teeth
again. When he had finished I grinned at him.
"Okay," I said, "but why couldn't she tell me
to my face how handsome and seductive I was and so on instead of writing it
down and sticking it in that book. Especially that last –"
"And especially writing it in Serbo-Croat. Do you speak
Serbo-Croat, Archie?"
"No."
"Then I'll translate. It's dated at Zagreb, 20th
August, 1938, and bears the Donevitch crest. It says, roughly, "The bearer
of these presents, my wife, the Princess Vladanka Donevitch, is hereby
empowered without reservation to talk and act in my name, and attach my name
and honor by her signature, which appears herewith below my own, in all
financial and political matters and claims pertaining to me and to the
Donevitch dynasty, with particular reference to Bosnian forest concessions and
to the disposal of certain credits at present in the care of Barrett & De
Russy, bankers of New York. I bespeak for her loyalty from those who owe it,
and co-operation from those whose interests ride with mine.'"
Wolfe folded the paper and imprisoned it under his palm.
"It is signed Stefan Donevitch and Vladanka Donevitch. The signatures are
attested."
"Good." I glared at him. "He even spent two
bits on a notary. Let's take one thing at a time. How did you know that thing
was in that book?"
"I didn't know it. But her questioning you –"
"Sure. Your curiosity got aroused. Check that off.
Do you mean to say that that girl is a Balkan
princess?"
"I don't know. Stefan married only three years ago. I
got that from this book. Don't badger me, Archie. I don't like this."
"What don't you like about it?"
"I like nothing about it. Of all the activities of man,
international intrigue is the dirtiest. The Balkan mess, as it is today, I know
only superficially, but even on the surface the maggots of corruption may be
seen writhing. The regent who rules Yugoslavia deviously courts the friendship
of certain nations. He is a Karageorgevitch. Prince Stefan, the head of the
Donevitch clan now that old Peter is dying, is being used by certain other
nations, and he is using them for his own ambition. And now look at this!"
He slapped the paper with his palm. "They bring this to America! If it
could be used to destroy them all, I would use it!"
He puffed. "Bah!" He made a gesture of spitting,
which I had seen him do only once before in the years I had lived under his
roof. "Pfui! Bosnian forest concessions from a Donevitch! As soon as I saw
that girl and heard her voice I knew the devil was around. Confound them for
crossing the ocean and stepping on this shore – confound her for coming here,
here to my office, and soiling one of my books with this – this nauseous
–"
"Hold it," I cautioned him. "Breathe deep
three times. How do you know she put it there? It's been months since you've
had that book down, and maybe somebody –"
"Who? When?"
"Lord, I don't know. Vukčić is a Montenegrin
–"
"Gibberish."
I waved a hand. "All right, then the immigrant girl did
it, and she's either an obnoxious Balkan princess or she's not, and so what and
why? Is she in cahoots with evil forces in America, and will Mr. Stahl come
back with a search warrant and find it and throw you in the coop? Is it a
plant? Or did she swipe it from the princess and come here to cache it –"
"Archie."
"Yes, sir."
"Address an envelope to Miss Carla Lovchen in care of
the Nikola Miltan studio – get the address from the phone book. Put this thing
in it and mail it at once. I don't want it here. I'll have nothing to do with
it. I don't want – I send money to those young people over there because I know
it's hard for even a Montenegrin to be brave on an empty stomach, but it's
their stable now, not mine, and they'll have to clean it out. This is the first
time – well, Fritz?"
Fritz Brenner, entering, advanced his three paces and
announced:
"A young lady to see you, sir. Miss Carla
Lovchen."
I made a noise. Wolfe blinked at him.
Fritz held to his formal stance, waiting. He had to wait a
full two minutes, for Wolfe sat motionless, his lips puckered up, his forehead
creased with a frown. Finally:
"Where is she?"
"In the front room, sir. I always think –"
"Shut that door and come here."
Fritz obeyed and was standing by the desk. Wolfe turned to
me: "Address an envelope to Saul Panzer at his home and put a stamp on
it."
I elevated the typewriter and followed instructions. As I
put the stamp in the corner I inquired, "Registered or special?"
"No. Neither. That's another point for America, mail
gets delivered intact and promptly. Let me have it." He inserted the
folded paper in the envelope, licked the flap and pressed it down. "Here,
Fritz, go to the box at the corner and drop it in. Immediately."
"The young lady –"
"We'll attend to her."
Fritz departed. Wolfe cocked an ear and waited until the
sound of the street door opening and closing reached us, and then told me,
"Remember to phone Saul and tell him to expect that envelope and to take
care of it." He slid United Yugoslavia across the desk. "Put
this away before you bring her in."
I returned the book to its place on the shelf and then went
to the front room for her. "This way, please. Sorry you had to wait."
As I stood back to let her precede me into the office, I inspected her build
and swing and the set of her head from the fresh viewpoint of the princess
theory, but the first strong impression I had had of her was the way she said
pliz, and to me she was still an immigrant girl and in my opinion always would
be. Anyway, judging from various pictures of princesses I had seen, from brats
on up, I was inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt and assume that she
had swiped that paper from the rightful owner.
She thanked me for the chair and I returned to my own. I had
a notion to warn her to lay off on the Hvala Bogu stuff, but decided
that Wolfe was in no mood for the light touch. He was upright in his chair with
his eyes narrowed at her.
"I sent you a message this morning, Miss Lovchen,"
he said dryly, "by Mr. Goodwin, that I would be unable to help you out in
your trouble. Your friend's trouble."
She nodded. "I got it. I was disappointed, very much,
because we're from Yugoslavia and we know you have been there, and we're
strangers and there was no one else to go to." She kept the lashes up, her
dark eyes at him straight. "I told Neya – my friend – and she was
disappointed too. It is a very extremely serious trouble. We talked it over,
and there is only one thing to do, and that is you must get her out of
it."
"No." Wolfe was still dry, and positive. "I
can't engage to do that. But I would like to ask –"
"Pliz!" She snapped it out. "It must be done
quick now, because they will all be there at five o'clock to settle it, and
that man is not only an American fool, he is the kind of man who would simply
make trouble anywhere. And somehow there is a terrible mistake. There is no one
we can go to but you. So we talked it over and I said the only thing to do is
to tell you the very good reason why you must help her, and she agreed to it
because she had to. The reason is that my friend, Neya Tormic, is your
daughter."
Wolfe's eyes popped open to a new record. Not liking the
sight of that, I transferred my astonished stare to the girl.
Wolfe exploded: "My daughter? What's this
flummery?"
"She is your daughter."
"My daugh –" Wolfe was speechless. He found a
piece of his voice:
"You said her name is Tormic."
"I told you her name in America is Neya Tormic just as
mine is Carla Lovchen."
Wolfe, erect, was glaring at her. She glared back. They
stayed that way.
Wolfe blurted, "I don't believe it. It's flummery. My
daughter disappeared. I have no daughter."
"You haven't seen her since she was three years old.
Have you?"
"No."
"You should. Now you will. She's very
good-looking." She opened her handbag and fished in it. "I suspected
you wouldn't want to believe me, so I got this from Neya and brought it along.
Here." She reached to hand him a paper. "There is your name where you
signed it …"
She went on talking. Wolfe was scowling at the paper. He
went over it slowly and carefully, holding it at an angle for better light from
the window. His jaw was clamped. I watched him and listened to her. What with
the paper hid in his book and now this, it began to look as if the Montenegrin
female situation held great promise.
He finished inspecting the thing, folded it with
deliberation, and stuck it in his pocket.
Miss Lovchen extended a hand. "No, you must give it
back. I must return it to Neya. Unless you take it to her yourself?"
Wolfe regarded her. He grunted. "I don't know anything
about this. The paper's all right. That is my signature. It belonged to that
girl. It still does, if she lives. How do I know it wasn't stolen?"
"For what?" She shrugged. "You're suspicious
beyond anything to be expected. Stolen to be brought across the ocean for what?
To have an effect on you, here in America? No, you are famous, but not as
famous as all that. It was not stolen from her. She sent me to show it to you
and to tell you. She is in trouble!" Her eyes flashed at him. "What
are you in your opinion, a rock on Durmitor for a goat to stand on? You will
see your grown daughter for the first time perhaps in a jail?"
"I don't know. I am not in my opinion a rock. Neither
am I a gull. I couldn't find that girl when I went back to Yugoslavia to look
for her. I don't know her."
"But your America will know her! The daughter of Nero
Wolfe! In jail for stealing! Only she didn't steal! She is no thief!" She
sprang up and put her hands on his desk and leaned across at him. 'Pfui!"
She sat down again and flashed her eyes at me to let me know she was making no
exceptions. I winked at her. Admitting the princess theory and counting me as a
peasant, I suppose it was out of character.
Wolfe sighed, long and deep. There was a silence during
which I could hear both of them breathing. At length he muttered:
"It's preposterous. Grotesque. No matter how many
tricks you learn, life knows a better one. I've put many people in jail, and
kept many out. Now this. Archie, your notebook. Miss Lovchen, please give Mr.
Goodwin the details of this trouble your friend had got into." He leaned
back and shut his eyes.
She told it and I put it down. It looked to me, as it
unfolded, as if somebody's confidence in someone's daughter might turn out to
be misplaced. The two girls taught both dancing and fencing at Nikola Miltan's
studio on East 48th Street. It was an exclusive joint with a pedigreed
clientele and appropriate prices for lessons. They had got their jobs through
an introduction from Donald Barrett, son of John P. Barrett of Barrett & De
Russy, the bankers. Dancing lessons were given in private rooms. The salle
d'armes, on the floor above, consisted of a large room and two smaller ones,
and there were two locker rooms, one for men and one for women, where clients
exchanged street clothes for fencing costumes.
One of the fencing pupils was a man named Nat Driscoll. She
pronounced it Nawht. He was middle-aged or more and fat and rich. Yesterday
afternoon he had informed Nikola Miltan that upon going to the locker room
after completing his fencing lesson, which had been given by Carla Lovchen, he
had seen the other female fencing instructor, namely Neya Tormic, standing by
the open door of the locker, in the act of returning the coat of his street
suit, on its hanger, to its hook within the locker; and that she had then
closed the locker door and departed by the door to the hall. Upon inspection,
to which he had proceeded as soon as possible, he had found that his gold
cigarette case and wallet, the contents intact, were in the pockets where they
belonged, and it was not until after he got dressed that he remembered about
the diamonds, in a pillbox, which should be there too. They were gone. He had
carefully explored each and every pocket. They were not there. He demanded
their immediate recovery.
Miss Tormic, summoned by Nikola Miltan, denied any knowledge
of the diamonds, and further denied that she had opened Mr. Driscoll's locker
or touched his clothing. The accusation, she said, was outrageous, infamous,
and false. She had not been in the locker room. Had she been in the locker room
for any conceivable purpose, it would not have been to go through men's
clothes. Had she gone through a man's clothes, it would not have been Mr.
Driscoll's clothes; it was beyond the bounds of possibility that she should
have the faintest interest in the contents of Mr. Driscoll's pockets. She had
been justly and somewhat violently indignant.
She had submitted to a search of her person, performed by
Jeanne Miltan, Nikola's wife. Everybody at that time in the studio, on both
floors, employees and clients alike, had been questioned by Miltan, and a
search of the premises conducted. Driscoll stated positively he had seen Neya
Tormic's face, from the side, as she stood by the locker, and furthermore that
she was wearing her fencing costume. Neya and Carla had both insisted that they
be searched again before leaving the studio to go home. Miltan was half frantic
at the threat of disgrace to the reputation of his place and had successfully
resisted Driscoll's demand that the police be called. In the morning – this day
– he had spent two hours pleading with Neya to tell where the diamonds were,
what she had done with them, to whom she had given them, who was her
accomplice, and had met with the disdain which his assumption deserved. In a
desperate effort to solve the affair without police or publicity, he had
arranged for everyone concerned, all who had been on the premises yesterday
afternoon, to meet in his office at five o'clock today. In Neya Tormic's
presence he had told his wife that he would engage the services of Nero Wolfe;
and Neya, knowing Nero Wolfe to be her father, had promptly stated that he
would be present in her behalf. But Neya had a strong disinclination to reveal
her identity to her father, for reasons understandable to him, and therefore
Carla, hotfooting it for Wolfe's office, had been instructed not to divulge it.
That was the crop. Miss Lovchen, looking at her wrist and
stating that it was five minutes to four, added that Wolfe must come
immediately. Fast.
Without moving, even his eyelids, Wolfe growled:
"Why didn't Mr. Driscoll challenge Miss Tormic on the
spot, seeing her with his coat?"
"He was naked. He came from the shower bath."
"Is he too fat to be seen even at the risk of losing
diamonds?"
"He says he is modest. He also says he was too
surprised to speak, and she moved rapidly and went away at once. Then his
wallet and cigarette case were there, and he forgot about the diamonds until he
was dressed. He is not nearly as fat as you are."
"I wouldn't expect him to be. Do the lockers have
keys?"
"Yes, but there is much carelessness. The keys lie
around. That part is very confused."
"You say Miss Tormic did not steal the diamonds?"
"I do say that. Never did she."
"Did she take something else from Mr. Driscoll's
clothing? Something he fails to mention? Letters, papers, even a piece of candy
perhaps?"
"Nothing. Nothing at all."
"Did she go to the locker room?"
"What would she go there for?"
"I don't know. Did she?"
"No."
"Fantastic." Wolfe's eyes threatened to open.
"How long have you known she is my daughter?"
"All my life. I have been … her friend, very close. I
knew about you – about your – I knew your name."
"About my deplorable intransigence, you would
say." Wolfe's tone was suddenly savage. "Ha! You juicy girls with
your busts swelling with ardor for the heroics of past centuries! Pah! Do the
rats still gather crumbs from under the Donevitch table?"
"We are –" Her chin went up and her eyes showed
fire. "They preserve honor! And they will share glory!"
"They will someday share obloquy. Blind and selfish
fools. Are you a Donevitch?"
"No." Her bust was swelling, but not apparently
with ardor.
"What's your name?"
"Carla Lovchen."
"What's your name at home?"
"I am not at home now." She flung out a hand
impatiently. "What is all this? All this about me? Do you realize what I
have told you about Neya? About your daughter? Does it help for you to sit
there and sneer? I tell you, you must do this at once or there will be the police!"
Wolfe sat up. I was thinking it was about time. The clock on
the wall said two minutes past four, and his daily routine, which included an
afternoon session to the plant rooms from four until six, was supposed to be
unalterable by fire, flood or murder. I was flabbergasted when, although he
glanced at the clock, he merely sat up straight.
But his tone was brisk. "Archie, please conduct Miss
Lovchen to the front room and return for instructions."
She started to sputter. "But there's no –"
"Please." He was curt. "If I'm to do this let
me do it. Don't waste time. Go with Mr. Goodwin."
I was off and she followed. I deposited her in front and
shut the door on her, and, returning to the office, shut that one too.
Wolfe said, "I'm late. This won't do. There's no point
in getting a line on Mr. Driscoll or anyone else until you've been there and
reported. I shall have to phone Mr. Hitchcock in London before I go upstairs.
The book with his private number, please."
I got it from the safe and gave it to him.
"Thank you. Go up there with her. You will see Miss
Tormic. The assumption, from this document, is that she has the right to bear
my name. If so, I reject the possibility that she stole diamonds from a man's
coat. Start from that."
"She says she wants the document back."
"I'll keep it for the present. Apparently you will
encounter a single yes and a single no in contradiction. Neglect nothing and no
one. Nikola Miltan himself is from the peninsula, South Serbia, old Macedonia.
Look at Miss Tormic and talk to her. Your first concern is the rumpus about the
diamonds. Your second is that paper which Miss Lovchen hid in my book. If you
can't resolve the contradiction about the diamonds and Mr. Driscoll insists on
the police, bring him here to me."
"Oh, sure. How and in how many pieces?"
"Bring him. You're good at that."
"Much obliged ever so much. But the fact is I guess
you'd better pay me off. I'm resigning as of this moment."
"Resigning from what?"
"You. My job."
"Rubbish."
"No, boss, really. You told the G-man you have never
married. Yet you have a daughter. Well –" I shrugged. "I'm not a
prude, but there are limits –"
"Don't jabber. Go on up there. She was an orphan and I
adopted her."
I nodded skeptically. "That's a good trick, but pretty
transparent. What do you think my mother would say –" But I saw his whole
face tighten and knew I was getting close to out-of-bounds, so I asked
casually, "That's all?"
"That's all."
I got my hat and coat from the hall, and the immigrant
princess from the parlor, and went out to the roadster, parked at the curb. As
I shifted into high, headed for Park Avenue, I reflected that Wolfe was
prepared to go to almost any length to protect his family, since he was at that
moment spending twenty bucks on a transatlantic phone call to London, though I
didn't see how that was going to help things any.
Up to a certain point, the five
o'clock gathering at Nikola Miltan's studio for some old-fashioned fun with the
game of diamonds, diamonds, who's got the diamonds, was a howling farce.
Therefore, I admit, it took on a different aspect.
The swank of the place was more real than apparent. There
was nothing shabby about it, but it didn't give you an impression of being
dolled up to impress the customers. I trailed around after Carla in her effort
to locate Neya, and so got a look. It was one of the old four-story houses. On
the ground floor were a reception room and a large office and a couple of small
ones; one flight up, a long hall with a gray carpet, with doors leading into
the private rooms for dancing lessons; two flights, the salle d'armes, with two
medium-sized rooms, one big one, and the showers and locker rooms; and at the
top, living quarters for Miltan and his wife. Those I didn't see, then. Neya
was finally flushed in the women's locker room. Carla brought her out to where
I was waiting in the hall and introduced me, and we shook hands. Neya Tormic
said:
"Can you do something about this awful thing, Mr.
Goodwin? The awful lie that man tells? Can you? You must! I was hoping that
Nero Wolfe … my father …"
Her voice had a foreign purr in it, but she pronounced words
a little better than Carla. God knows she didn't look anything like Nero Wolfe,
but of course a girl that looked like him would be something that you would
either pass up entirely or pay a dime to look at in a side show. And then – um
– he had adopted her. Her eyes were as black as Carla's and she was about the
same height, an inch over medium, but her chin, in fact her whole face, went
more to a point, and the whole idea of her, the way she talked and stood and
looked at you, was a queer combination of come-hither and don't-touch-me.
Having known her father a long while, I suppose I gave her the preliminary
once-over with more interest than any other female I had ever met, and my first
verdict was that she had real quality, both of mind and of matter, but that a
definite judgment would have to wait for further analysis. She noticed me
taking in her costume, a green robe, belted and carelessly closed in front,
showing underneath a white canvas blouse and slacks, with gym shoes and
rolled-up socks.
"I was giving a lesson," she said. "Miltan
wanted me to. He doesn't want any fuss. Nobody does but that fool Driscoll. A
liar like that – we would know how to deal with him in my country. Carla tells
me that he – that my father has been told about me, and of course you have too.
I do not wish anyone else to know. Why didn't he come?"
"Nero Wolfe? Bad case of pernicious inertia. He never
goes anywhere anytime for anybody."
"I am his adopted daughter."
"So I understand. And you've been here in New York a
couple of months and his address is in the phone book."
"He abandoned me. I was taught to hate him. I had no
wish –"
"Until you got into trouble. I got the impression that
you abandoned him at the age of three. But let's skip that, I was sent here to
keep you out of jail and time's short. You look intelligent enough to know that
I've got to have the truth and all of it. What were you doing with Driscoll's
coat?"
Her chin went up and her eyes withered me. "Nothing. I
didn't touch his coat."
"What were you doing in the men's locker room?"
"I wasn't there."
"Is there any other girl around that looks like
you?"
"No. Not enough – no."
"Not enough for Driscoll to see her and think she was
you?"
"No."
"What were you doing yesterday afternoon at the time
Driscoll says he saw you with his coat?"
"I was giving Mr. Ludlow a lesson."
"Fencing?"
"Yes, йpйe."
"In the large room?"
"No, the small one at the end."
"Who is Mr. Ludlow?"
"He is a man who comes to take lessons with the йpйe."
"Are you sure you were with him at the time Driscoll
says he saw you frisking his coat?"
"Yes. Mr. Driscoll went to Miltan at twenty minutes to
five. He said it had taken him about fifteen minutes to dress. I began the
lesson with Mr. Ludlow at four o'clock, and we were still there when Miltan
sent for me."
"And you didn't leave that room during that time?"
"No, I did not."
Carla Lovchen put in, "But Neya! Do you forget that
Belinda Reade says she saw you outside, in the hall, a little before half past
four?"
"She lies," Neya said calmly.
"But the man that was with her saw you too!"
"He also lies."
My God, I thought, it's a good thing Wolfe isn't here to see
his daughter put on an exhibition like this. It looked very much as if the
family reunion would take place in jail.
"How about Ludlow?" I demanded. "Does he lie
too?"
She hesitated, her brow wrinkling, and before she got her
answer ready another voice broke in. It was a male voice, and its owner had
appeared from around the corner which led to the stairs. He was about my age
and size, with a good pair of light-colored eyes, and a gray suit of a
distinctive weave hung on him in a way that made it obvious the fit had not
been managed by waving a piece of chalk at a stock job.
"I was looking for you." He came up to us, with a
conventional smile. "Miltan wants you in the office. This ridiculous
affair."
Carla Lovchen said, "Mr. Ludlow, this is Mr.
Goodwin."
We shook, and I met his eyes and liked them, not on account
of any candor or friendliness, but because they showed sense.
I inquired, "Ludlow?"
"Right. Percy Ludlow."
"Miss Tormic gave you a fencing lesson yesterday
afternoon?"
"That's right."
"Then you're the man I want to see. Was she with you
continuously from four o'clock till half past?"
His brow went up and he smiled. "Well, really. All I
know about you is that your name is Goodwin."
"I represent Miss Tormic. She has engaged Nero Wolfe.
I'm his assistant."
He glanced at her and caught her nod. "Well! Nero
Wolfe? That ought to do it. I was told that Miss Tormic said yesterday that she
was with me continuously."
"Yeah. What do you say?"
His brow went up again. "I couldn't very well call Miss
Tormic a liar. Could I? Let's go down to the office. Driscoll isn't there yet,
but he should be, any minute –"
"Then she was with you? You realize that in that case
she can't possibly be held on Driscoll's charge?"
"Oh, yes, I quite realize that. But unfortunately there
are those two people who claim to have seen her in the hall." He pointed.
"Right there, not ten feet from the door of the locker room. And of course
Driscoll too."
He was moving. I obstructed him. "Look here, Mr.
Ludlow, if you'll assure me that you'll stick to it –"
"My dear chap! Assure you? This sort of thing must be
handled – anyhow, a dozen or more people have been made acquainted with this
charge against Miss Tormic, and whatever is said they should hear. To clear it
up, you know."
They were all moving, for the stairs, and I couldn't
obstruct all of them, so I went with the current. It was so loony that it dazed
me. Carla looked worried and Ludlow looked bland. As for Neya, her attitude
could have come only from the sublime assurance of innocence or the sublime
asininity of a nincompoop, or mix it yourself. Here she had a witness who might
have been wheedled into standing fast with a class A alibi and she wasn't even
bothering to toss him a suggestion. As I trailed them downstairs and entered
the office with them, I was trying to figure out a method of enticing Driscoll
down to 35th Street, for it certainly seemed likely it would come to that.
The office was the big room at the rear of the ground floor.
There was a large red carpet and a couple of desks, and chairs scattered
around. The walls were decorated with pictures of people dancing and fencing,
or standing holding a sticker, with a large one of Miltan in some kind of a
uniform, and with swords and daggers hanging here and there. I knew the picture
was Miltan because Carla Lovchen took me across and introduced me to him and
his wife. He was small and thin, next door to a runt, but wiry-looking, and had
black eyes and hair and a moustache which pointed due east and west. He looked
and acted harassed, and as soon as he shook hands with me darted off somewhere.
His wife, in spite of her New York clothes and her 1938 hair-do, looked like
one of those colored pictures in the National Geographic entitled
"Peasant Woman of Wczibrrcy Leading a Bear to Church." At that, she
was handsome if you like the type, and she had shrewd eyes.
I went and stood by a glass cabinet which displayed an
assortment of curios and implements, among them a long thin rapier with no edge
and a blunt point which apparently wasn't a rapier, since a card leaning
against it said "This йpйe was used by Nikola Miltan at Paris in 1931 in
winning the International Championship." I looked around. He was across
the room, chinning with a broad-shouldered six-footer maybe thirty years old,
with a slightly pushed-in nose and a vacant look to go with it. I looked further.
If by chance Wolfe's long lost daughter hadn't pinched Driscoll's diamonds, it
was probable that the person who had was among those present. Carla Lovchen's
voice came, beside me:
"But you … you aren't doing anything."
I shrugged. "Nothing I can do. Not right now. What's
Miltan waiting for?"
"Mr. Driscoll isn't here yet."
"Did he say he would be here?"
"Of course he did. He only agreed to wait until now to
go to the police."
"Who's that guy Miltan's talking to?"
She looked. "His name is Gill. He's a dancing client.
It was he who was with Belinda Reade yesterday when they saw Neya in the hall.
They say they did."
"Which one's Belinda Reade?"
"Over there standing by a chair. The beautiful one,
with hair like yellow amber, talking to the young man."
"Check. Baby doll with a new silk dress and pipe the
earrings. Not to mention the young man. I seem to recognize him from perhaps
the movies. Who is he?"
"Donald Barrett."
"The son of John P. Barrett of Barrett & De Russy,
who got you girls a job here?"
"Yes."
"Who are those other girls?"
"Well … the three in the corner, and the one sitting by
the end of the desk, teach dancing. That one talking now with Mrs. Miltan is
Zorka."
I boosted the brows. "Zorka?"
"Yes, the famous couturiere. She charges four hundred
dollars for a dress. That would be over twenty thousand dinars."
"She looks like a picture in our Bible at home of the
dame that cut off Samson's hair, I forget her name, but it wasn't Zorka. Does
she sell diamonds at her place?"
"I don't know."
"She wouldn't those, anyway. Who's the chinless wonder
with his – hold it. Miltan's going to make a speech."
The йpйe champion, with Percy Ludlow standing beside him,
was in the middle of the room trying to collect eyes. Some of them didn't get
it and he claimed their attention by clapping his hands. Two of them went on
talking and his wife shushed them.
"If you please." He sounded as harassed as he
looked. "Ladies and gentlemen. If you please. Mr. Driscoll has not
arrived. It is very disagreeable, asking you to wait. He should be here. Mr.
Ludlow has something to say."
Percy Ludlow looked around at the faces with complete
aplomb. "Well," he observed in a conversational tone, "really I
don't quite see that we should hang around waiting for Driscoll. It's his row,
you know. I've an explanation to make that I'd like you all to hear, because
all of you know of Driscoll's absurd accusation regarding Miss Tormic. You'll
understand it better if you'll observe the clothes I'm wearing. This is the
suit I had on yesterday. Didn't any of you notice anything peculiar about
it?"
"Certainly," said a voice promptly, fluttering the
r like a moth on a marathon. "I did."
He smiled at her. "What did you notice, Madame
Zorka?"
"I noticed that the material is of the same pattern,
perfectly, as the one Mr. Driscoll was wearing."
Two additional female voices chimed in simultaneously,
"So did I," and other voices murmured.
Ludlow nodded. "Apparently Driscoll agrees with me on
tailors." His tone sounded as if there were something about that faintly
deplorable. "The fabric is identical. I wondered that none of you
mentioned it yesterday. Perhaps you did, but not to me. Of course the
coincidence explains why, when Miss Tormic went to my locker to get my
cigarettes from my coat, and Driscoll saw her, he thought the coat was his own.
My locker adjoined his."
There was a round of ejaculations. Eyes moved from his face
to that of Neya Tormic and back again. I felt Carla Lovchen's fingers gripping
my elbow, but I didn't react because I was trying to keep my brain cleared for
action.
Ludlow continued in the same easy tone, "Yesterday when
Miss Tormic was suddenly confronted with Driscoll's ugly accusation, naturally
she was flustered. Impulsively and perhaps foolishly, she denied having been in
the locker room. Hearing that denial, I was a little flustered myself. It would
have produced a most unfortunate impression if I had contradicted her on the
spot, so I temporized and confirmed her statement that she had been with me
continuously in the end room. But as it turned out, that was no go. Driscoll
was positive that it was Miss Tormic he had seen with his coat. Miss Reade and
Mr. Gill both declared that they had seen her in the hall near the door of the
locker room shortly prior to four thirty. So it was clear that the only thing
for it was the truth, which is that while we were fencing yesterday the strap
of my pad broke and I had to change it, and we felt like a cigarette and found
that we had none, and while I was changing the pad she took my key and went to
the locker room for my cigarettes."
I had left his face and was concentrating on Neya's, but I
couldn't read it. It wasn't alarmed nor angry nor pleased; I would have said it
was more puzzled than anything else; but that seemed unlikely, so I scored
myself zero. There was a buzz around the room which stopped when Miltan
remarked, more to space than to any audience, "So! So she was there!"
Ludlow nodded negligently. "Oh, yes, she was there, but
it was my coat she had, not Driscoll's. No doubt of it, because she returned
with my cigarette case and lighter. We had a few puffs together, and we were
fencing again when word came that Miltan wished to see Miss Tormic –"
He stopped, and lost his audience. The door had opened, and
two men entered. The one in front was a gray-haired guy with a full cargo of
dignity and an air that invited respect, and behind him, practically hiding
behind him, was a plump specimen about fifty-one years old with thick lips and
bald eyebrows. They came on in and Miltan met them.
"We've been waiting for you, Mr. Driscoll –"
"I'm sorry," the plump one stammered, edging
around. "Very sorry … unh … this is Mr. Thompson, my lawyer – Mr. Miltan …"
As the gray-haired one extended a hand for the shake he
conceded the point without reservation or qualification. "I am Mr.
Driscoll's counsel. I thought it best to come personally – this regrettable
affair – extremely regrettable – will you kindly introduce me to Miss Tormic?
If you will be so good …"
That was done by Miltan, who looked a little bewildered. The
lawyer's bow was courteous and respectful, as was his verbal acknowledgement;
Neya stood motionless and silent. He turned. "These people – are these the
persons whom Mr. Driscoll – before whom he accused Miss Tormic –"
Miltan nodded. "We've been waiting for him, to –"
"I know. We're late. My client was reluctant to come,
and I had to persuade him that his presence was necessary. Miss Tormic, what I
have to say is addressed primarily to you, but these others should hear it – in
fact, they must hear it, in justice to you. First for the facts. When Mr.
Driscoll left his home yesterday morning he had in his pocket a pillbox
containing diamonds which he intended to take to a jeweler to be set in a
bracelet. From his office he phoned the jeweler and discussed the matter. His
secretary took the box of diamonds to arrange for their delivery. They are at
the jeweler's now. Here, later, Mr. Driscoll, lamentably and inexcusably, but
innocently, forgot that his secretary –"
A clatter of comment from all corners interrupted him. He
smiled at Neya but got nothing in return. Driscoll had a handkerchief out,
wiping his brow, trying to find a place to look without meeting a pair of eyes.
Miltan sputtered:
"Do you mean to say that this infamous – this
irresponsible –"
"Please!" The lawyer had a hand up. "Please
let me finish. Mr. Driscoll's lapse of memory was inexcusable. But he was
honestly convinced that he had seen Miss Tormic with his coat –"
"It was my coat," Ludlow snapped. "Of the
same pattern. I have it on."
"I see. Well. That explains that. Was it in the same
locker?"
"The one adjoining." Ludlow was severe. "But
Mr. Driscoll should know that before making a grave accusation –"
"Certainly he should." The lawyer conceded
everything again. "Even the coincidence of the coats is no excuse for him.
That's why I insisted on his coming, to make his apology to Miss Tormic in the
presence of all of you. His reluctance is understandable. He is extremely
embarrassed and humiliated." He eyed his client. "Well?"
Driscoll, gripping his handkerchief, faced Neya Tormic.
"I apologize," he mumbled. "I'm damn sorry." The mumble
became abruptly and surprisingly an outraged roar. "Of course I'm sorry,
damn it!"
Someone giggled. Nikola Miltan said grimly, "You
certainly should be sorry. It might have been disastrous, both for Miss Tormic
and for me."
"I know it. I've said I'm sorry and I am."
The lawyer put in smoothly and sweetly, "I hope, Miss
Tormic … may we hope for an expression from you – of forgiveness? Or … er …
quittance?" He took an envelope from his pocket. "In fact, I thought
it would be as well for you to have Mr. Driscoll's written apology to support
his oral one, so I brought it along" – he got a paper from the envelope – "and
I brought also a quittance, just an informal sentence or two, which I'm sure
you will want to sign for him in return –"
"Just a minute." It was me entering on my cue.
"I represent Miss Tormic."
The way he went on guard like lightning, facially, was a
treat. He demanded, "Who are you, sir? A lawyer?"
"Nope, I'm not a lawyer, but I speak English and I
represent Miss Tormic and we're not before a court. She isn't signing
anything."
"But my dear sir, why not? Merely an informal –"
"That's the trouble, it's too informal. For instance,
what if Miltan here gets sore about this fracas, though it's not her fault, and
she loses her job? Or what if this thing had been turned loose around town and
she can't catch up with it? Nothing doing on the quittance."
"I have no intention," Miltan put in, "of
dismissing Miss Tormic. But I agree that it is not necessary for her to sign
anything. I am quite sure she will have no desire to make trouble for Mr.
Driscoll." He looked at her.
She spoke for the first time. "No, certainly." She
sounded darned unconcerned for a girl who had just escaped being thrown in the
hoosegow as a sneak thief. Almost indifferent, as if her mind was on something
else. "I will make no trouble."
The lawyer pounced on her. "Then, Miss Tormic, if you
feel that way, surely you have no objection to signing –"
"Damn it, let her alone!" It was his own client
tripping him up. Driscoll glared at him. "Damn a lawyer anyway! If I'd had
the nerve to face it, I'd have done just as well if I'd come alone!" He
confronted Miltan. "Now I've apologized! I'm sorry! I'm damn sorry! I like
this place. I've been overweight for years. I'm damn near fat! I've monkeyed
around with exercises and health farms and damn fool games throwing a ball and
riding a horse as tall as a skyscraper, and the first thing I've ever done to
sweat that is any fun is what I do here! I may be a rotten fencer but I like
it! I don't care whether Miss Tormic signs a paper or not, I want to be friends
with Miltan!" He whirled. "Miss Lovchen! I want to be friends with
you! Miss Tormic is your friend and I acted like a damn fool. I am a damn fool.
Will you fence with me or won't you? I mean right now!"
Somebody snickered. People moved. The lawyer looked
dignified. Carla said, "I work for Mr. Miltan. I'll follow his
instructions." Miltan said something conciliatory and diplomatic, and it
was apparent that Mr. Driscoll wasn't going to be deprived of his fun. I faded
into the background. The chinless wonder, whose name I hadn't got, a blond guy
with thin lips and an aggressive nose who stood and walked like a soldier, went
up to Neya with a thin smile and said something evidently meant to be
agreeable, and was followed by Donald Barrett for a similar performance. Mrs.
Miltan crossed to her and patted her on the shoulder, and then she was
approached by Percy Ludlow. They spoke together a minute, and she left him and
headed for me.
I grinned at her. "Well, a pretty good show. I hope you
didn't mind my horning in. Nero Wolfe never lets a client sign anything except
a check drawn to his order."
"I didn't mind. I say good-bye. I am going to fence
with Mr. Ludlow. Thank you for coming."
"Your eyes glitter."
"My eyes? They always glitter."
"Any message for your father?"
"I think – not now. No."
"You ought to run down and say hello to him."
"I will someday. Au revoir then."
"So long."
Turning to go, she bumped into the lawyer and he apologized
profusely. That accomplished, he addressed me:
"Could I have your name, sir?"
I told him.
He repeated it. "Archie Goodwin. Thank you. If I may
ask, in what capacity do you represent Miss Tormic?"
I was exasperated. "Look here," I said, "I am
willing to stipulate that a lawyer has a right to live, and I'm aware that even
when he's dead no worm will enter his coffin because if it did he'd make it
sign some kind of a paper. I suppose if you don't get that thing signed you'll
have a tantrum. Give it to me."
From the envelope, which he was still clutching in his hand,
he extracted the document and handed it over. A glance showed me that his two
informal sentences were in fact five legal-size paragraphs. I got out my pen
and with a quick flourish signed on the dotted line at the bottom, "Queen
Victoria."
"There," I said, and shoved it at him, and moved
off before he could react, considering how dignity slows a man up.
The room was about empty. Miltan's wife was over by a desk,
talking with Belinda Reade. Carla Lovchen, along with the others, had
disappeared, presumably to let the rich fat man enjoy some fun. He must have
been a pip of a swordsman, I reflected, as I got my hat and coat from the rack
and meandered to the hall and out the street door to the sidewalk.
My wrist told me it was a quarter to six. Wolfe would still
be up in the plant rooms, and he wasn't enthusiastic about being disturbed
regarding business while there, but I considered that this wasn't business,
properly speaking, but a family matter. So I found a drugstore with a phone
booth and called the number.
"Hello, Mr. Wolfe? Mr. Goodwin speaking."
"Well?"
"Well, I'm in a drugstore at 48th and Lexington. It's
all over. It was a farce in three acts. First she, meaning your daughter,
seemed to be more bored than bothered. Second, a chap named Percy said she was
frisking his coat for cigarettes, not Driscoll's for diamonds, which appeared
to be news to her, judging from her expression. Third act, enter Driscoll with
a trouble hound and a written apology. There hadn't been any diamonds in his
coat. None had been stolen.
His mistake. Sorry and damn sorry. So I'm headed for home. I
may add that she doesn't resemble you a particle and she is very good-look
–"
"You're sure it's clear?"
"It's cleared up. Settled. I wouldn't say it's entirely
clear."
"You went there with two problems. What about the
second one?"
"No light on it. Not a glimmer. No chance to sniff
around on it. There was a mob present, and when the meeting broke up both
Balkans went off to give fencing lessons."
"Who is the man named Percy?"
"Percy Ludlow. My age, and a good deal like me – courteous,
gifted, of distinguished appear –"
"You say my – she seemed to be bored. Do you mean to
imply – is she stupid?"
"Oh, no. I mean it. Maybe she's a little complicated,
but she's not stupid."
Silence. No talk. It lasted so long that I finally said,
"Hello, you there?"
"Yes. Get her and bring her here. I want to see
her."
"Yeah, I thought so. I expected that. It's a perfectly
natural feeling and does you credit, but that's why I phoned, to explain that I
asked her if she had a message for you and she said no, and I said she ought to
drop in on you to say hello and she said she would someday, and now she's in
there crossing blades with Percy –"
"Wait till she's through and bring her."
"Do you mean that?"
"I do."
"I may have to carry her or –"
He hung up, which is a trick I detest.
I went to the fountain and got a glass of grapefruit juice,
and while drinking it considered persuasions to use on her short of force, but
developed nothing satisfactory, and then strolled back along 48th Street to the
scene of operations.
Nikola Miltan and his wife were the only ones in the office.
It looked to me as if she had been headed for the door when I entered, but when
I took off my hat and coat and put them on the rack, explaining that I wanted
to see Miss Tormic when she was disengaged, apparently she changed her mind and
decided to stick around. Miltan invited me to have a chair, and I sat down not
far from the desk where he was, while his wife opened a door of the big glass
cabinet and began rearranging things which didn't need it.
"I have met Mr. Nero Wolfe," Miltan offered
politely.
I nodded. "So I understand."
"He is a remarkable man. Remarkable."
"Well, I know of one guy that would agree with
you."
"Only one?"
"At least one. Mr. Wolfe."
"Ah. A joke." He laughed politely. "I imagine
there are many others. In fact – what is it, Jeanne?"
His wife had uttered a foreign exclamation, of surprise or
maybe dismay. "The col de mort," she told him. "It's not
here. Did you remove it?"
"I did not. Of course not. It was there – I'm sure
–"
He got up and trotted over to the cabinet, and I arose and
wandered after him. Together they stared at a spot. He stretched, and then
ducked, to inspect the other shelves.
"No," she said, "it's not there. It's gone.
There is nothing else gone. I was in favor long ago of having a lock put on
–"
"But my dear." Miltan looked defensive.
"There is no sensible reason that could possibly exist why anyone would
want to take that col de mort. It was a nice curiosity, but of no
particular value."
"What's a col de mort!" I asked.
"Oh, just a little thing."
"What kind of a little thing?"
"Oh, a little thing – look." He put an arm through
the open door of the cabinet and placed a finger upon the point of an йpйe
which was displayed there. "See? It's blunt."
"I see it is."
"Well, once in Paris, years ago, a man wanted to kill
another man, and he made a little thing with a sharp point, very cleverly,
which he could fit over the end of the йpйe." He took the weapon from the
shelf and dangled it in his hand. "Then, with the thing fitted on, he made
a thrust in quarte –"
He made a lunge at an imaginary victim in my neighborhood,
so unexpected and incredibly swift that I side-stepped and nearly tripped
myself up, and was perfectly willing to concede him the championship. Just as
swiftly he was back to normal position.
"So." He smiled, and returned the weapon to its
place. "A thrust in quarte gets the heart, theoretically, but that time it
was not theory. A member of the police who was a friend of mine gave me the
little thing as a curiosity. The newspapers called it col de mort. Neck
– no, not neck. Collar. Collar of death. Because it fitted the end of the йpйe
like a collar. It was amusing to have it."
"It's gone," said his wife shortly.
"I hope not gone." Miltan frowned. "There is
no reason for it to be gone. There has been enough talk of stealing around
here. We will find out. We will ask people."
"I hope you find it," I told him. "It sounds
cute. Speaking of asking people, I was about to ask you if it would be okay for
me to have a little chat with whoever it is that cleans up the fencing
rooms."
"Why … what for?"
"Oh, just a little chat. Who does the cleaning?"
"The porter. But I can't imagine why you should want
–"
His wife interrupted him, with her eyes on me. "He
wants to find out if cigarette stubs and ashes were found in the room where
Miss Tormic and Mr. Ludlow were fencing yesterday," she said calmly.
I grinned at her. "If you will pardon a personal
remark, Mrs. Miltan, I might have known from your eyes that you had that in
you."
She merely continued to look at me.
"For my part," Miltan declared, "I don't see
why you should want to know about cigarette stubs and I don't see how my wife
knew you wanted to. I am slow-witted."
"Well, you have to be slow at something, to even up for
your speed with that sticker. May I see the porter?"
"No," Jeanne Miltan said bluntly.
"Why not?"
"It isn't necessary. I don't know what is in your mind,
but I saw you looking at Miss Tormic, you who were supposed to be here as her
friend. If you want to know whether she and Mr. Ludlow were smoking cigarettes,
ask her."
"I will. I intend to. But how could I do her any harm
by discussing the matter with the porter?"
"I don't know. You may mean no harm. But this affair of
yesterday and today is ended. It was bad. It could have turned out very badly
for our business. It is a very delicate matter, the tone of a place like this.
A breath may destroy it. Even if you mean no harm to Miss Tormic or to us, I
shall tell the porter not to answer your questions if you do see him. I am
plain-spoken. Nor may you go to the salle d'armes and inspect the pads to see
if the strap of one is broken."
"What makes you think I wanted to?"
"Because I don't take you for a fool. If you were
curious about the smoking, naturally you would also be curious about the broken
strap."
I shrugged. "Okay. Anyhow, you used the right word. I
was just curious. As you know, I'm a detective, and I guess we get into bad
habits. But if you're aware of the reputation of Nero Wolfe, you're also aware
that he dishes out trouble only to people who have asked for it."
She gazed at me a moment, turned and closed the sliding door
of the cabinet, and then returned to me. "This morning," she said,
"my husband was saying that he would engage Mr. Wolfe to investigate the
disappearance of Mr. Driscoll's diamonds. Miss Tormic was present. She declared
that she had engaged Nero Wolfe to act in the matter in her behalf. Shortly
afterwards her friend, Miss Lovchen, asked permission to go out on an errand.
It is not only detectives who are curious. I am sometimes curious. If I were to
ask –"
She stopped with her mouth open, her body stiffening. Miltan
spun on his heel to face the door to the hall. I did the same. The yell that
had split the air sounded like something that you might expect but would
certainly resent if you found yourself alone in a jungle at night.
When the second yell came all three of us were running for
the door. Miltan was ahead, and in the hall he bounded for the stairs with us
after him. There were no more yells, but sounds of commotion, steps and voices,
came from above, and on the second-floor landing we were impeded by people who
popped out of doors. Miltan was a kangaroo; I couldn't have caught him for a
purse. At the top of the second flight we were brought to a halt by
obstructions. A colored man was wriggling, his arms held by the chinless
wonder; Nat Driscoll, in his shirt but no trousers, was jumping up and down;
the two Balkans, in fencing costumes, were backed against the wall; Zorka, in
gold-leaf undies and that was all, was standing apart and systematically
screaming. Before Miltan could make any progress or I could get around him, I
felt myself brushed aside and Jeanne Miltan was there.
"What?" she demanded in a tone that would have
stopped a hurricane. "Arthur! What is it?"
The colored man stopped wriggling and rolled his eyes at her
and said something I didn't get, but apparently she did, for she started off on
a lope down the hall. I was close behind her and there were steps behind me.
She went to the last door, the end room. It was standing open and she passed
through, taking the curve without slowing down. She jerked to a halt, saw it
there on the floor, and walked over to it. I was beside her. It was Percy
Ludlow, lying on his side, so tilted that he would have been on his back if he
hadn't been propped up by the protruding point of the йpйe which was sticking clean
through him.
Jeanne Miltan said something
foreign and then stood and stared down at it with her face frozen. I heard a
gasp from Miltan behind me, and other noises, and turned and saw them ganged in
the doorway.
"Keep out of here," I said. "All of
you."
I stooped over for a quick look and straightened up and told
Jeanne Miltan, "He's dead." She said peevishly, "Of course he
is." A scream came from the doorway and I yelled in that direction,
"Shut up!" and went on to Mrs. Miltan, "Somebody must stay here,
and the police of course, and nobody must leave."
She nodded. "You phone the police. In the office.
Nikola, you stay here. I'll go down to the hall –"
She was moving, but I stopped her. "I'd rather not. You
do the phoning. It's your place and you saw it first. I'll take the street
door. Don't let anyone in here, Miltan."
He looked pale as he mumbled. "The col de mort
–"
"No, it's not there. The end of the йpйe is bare and
blunt."
"It can't be. It wouldn't go through."
"I can't help that, it's not there."
Jeanne Miltan was headed for the door and I followed her.
They made way for us. Carla Lovchen was going to say something to me and I
shook my head at her. The chinless wonder grabbed at my elbow and I dodged him.
People had come up from the floor below and Nat Driscoll came running down the
hall with his shirttails flying. At the head of the stairs I wheeled to
announce: "Don't go into the end room, anybody. Ludlow's in there dead.
Nobody is to leave the building." I saw Donald Barrett moving in my
direction and the chinless wonder behind him. "If you two guys would herd
everyone downstairs into the office it might simplify matters."
I disregarded the chatter that broke out and beat it down
the steps, with Mrs. Miltan following me. On the ground floor she went to the
rear, to the office, and I went to the front, to the door to the street
vestibule. I was tempted to keep on going, right on through, and get to a phone
and call up Nero Wolfe, but I decided it would be a bad move. If I once got out
I might not get back in again, or, if I did, it would be under conditions not
nearly so favorable as they were now. Guarding the portal, loyal and true, was
the best bet.
From where I stood I could see the inmates straggling down
the stairs. They were mostly silent and subdued, but a couple of the female
dancing teachers were jabbering. Belinda Reade, the baby doll with a new silk
dress, came along to me instead of turning towards the office and said in a
determined voice that she had a very important appointment to keep. I told her
I had one too so we were in the same boat. Donald Barrett, who was hovering in
the background, approached.
"See here," he said, "I know I'm caught in
this God-awful mess. Frightful stink and I'm helpless just because I'm here.
But Miss Reade – after all – are you a cop?"
"No."
"Then my dear fellow, just turn your back and talk to
me a moment – and she can just slip out and go to her appointment –"
"And before long a dozen dicks will slip out and trace
her and haul her back. Don't be silly. Have you ever been intimate with a
murder before? I guess you haven't. The worst thing you can do is make them
start looking for you. They get upset. Take my advice and – just a minute, Miss
Tormic."
The two Balkans were there, three paces off. The glances
that passed back and forth among the four of them, in one second, obviously
meant something to them but not to me. Belinda Reade said, "Come on,
Don," and he followed her in the direction of the office. I surveyed the
pair of girls. Carla had put a long loose thing with buttons over her fencing
costume. Neya had on the green robe, carelessly closed as before, with one hand
inside its folds apparently clinging to it.
"There's no time to talk," I snapped. "You
may be a couple of goons. I don't know. But I'm asking you a damn straight
question, and maybe your life depends on giving me a straight answer." I
took Neya's eyes with mine. "You. Did you kill that man?"
"No."
"Say it again. You didn't?"
"No."
I switched to Carla. "Did you?"
"No. But I must tell you –"
"There's no time to tell me anything. That's the hell
of it. But anyhow you can – there they are! Beat it! Quick, damn it!"
They scampered down the hall towards the office and were
gone by the time the cops got through the vestibule. It was a pair of flatfeet.
I opened the glass-paneled door and when they were in the hall let it close
again.
"Hello. Precinct?"
"No. Radio patrol. Who are you?"
"Archie Goodwin, private detective from Nero Wolfe's
office, happened to be here. I was sitting on the lid. I'll keep." I
pointed. "Back in the office is Mrs. Miltan and others, and two flights up
is a corpse."
"God, you're snappy. Sit on the lid a little longer,
will you? Come on, Bill."
They tramped to the rear. I stood and played with my
fingers. In about two minutes one of them tramped down the hall again and went
upstairs. In another two minutes there were fresh arrivals in the vestibule,
three dicks in plain clothes, but one glance was enough to tell that they were
precinct men, not homicide squad. I gave them a brief picture of it. One of
them relieved me at the door, another went for the stairs, and the third went
to the office and took me with him.
The radio flatfoot was there, holding his tongue between his
teeth while he wrote down names in a notebook. The precinct dick spoke with him
a moment and then started in on Mrs. Miltan. I sidled off and made myself
unobtrusive alongside the coat rack, resisting a temptation to edge around and
get in a few words of advice to the Montenegrin females before the homicide
squad arrived, which was when the real fun would start. I decided not to take a
chance on starting a mental process even in a precinct man. The clients and
employees were scattered all around the office, some sitting, some standing,
with no sound coming from them except an occasional muttering. While I was
making the round of their faces, without any real expectation of seeing
anything interesting or significant, I suddenly saw something right in front of
my eyes that struck me as being both interesting and significant. My coat was
there on the rack where I had left it, so close my elbow was touching it, and
what I saw was that the flap of the left-hand pocket had been pushed inside and
the pocket was gaping on account of something in it. That was wrong. I didn't
patronize the kind of tailors Percy Ludlow had, but I was born neat and I don't
go around with my pocket flaps pushed in; and besides, that pocket had been
empty.
My hand had started for it instinctively, to reach in for a
feel, but I caught the impulse in time and stopped it. I looked around, but as
far as I could see no one had me under special observation, either furtive or
open. There was no time for a prolonged test of that nature, for the homicide
squad would be busting in any minute, maybe less than a minute, and once they
arrived the right of self-determination wouldn't stand a chance.
I reached up and took the hat and coat from the rack and
started for the hall door, and had taken three steps when I was halted by a
loud growl from behind:
"Hey, you, where you going?"
I turned and spoke loudly but not offensively to the
suspicious glare from the precinct dick, "The management is not
responsible for hats and coats, and these are mine. There'll be a lot of
company coming and I'd prefer to put them in a locker."
I moved as I spoke, and sailed on through the door. There
was one chance in three that he would actually abandon Mrs. Miltan and take
after me, but he didn't. In the hall, I didn't even glance toward the left,
where the watchdog stood at the entrance, knowing that it was out of the
question to bluff a passage to freedom.
Instead I turned right, and it was only five steps to a
narrow door I had noticed there. I opened it and saw an uncarpeted wooden stair
going down. There was a light switch just inside, but without flipping it on I
shut the door behind me and it was pitch-dark, black. With my pencil flashlight
for a guide, I descended to the bottom of the stair, quietly but without wasting
any time. Playing the light around, I saw that I was in a large low-ceilinged
room lined with shelves and with stacks of cartons and shipping cases occupying
the middle floor space. I stepped around them and headed for the rear, where I
could see the dim rectangles of two windows a few feet apart. I must have been
a little on edge, because I stood stiff and motionless and stopped breathing
when the beam of my light, directed toward the floor, showed me something
sticking out from behind a pile of cartons that I wasn't expecting to see. It
was the toe of a man's shoe, and it was obvious from its position and
appearance that there was a foot in it and the foot's owner was standing on it.
I kept the light on it, steady, and in a few seconds I breathed, moved the
light upwards, and put my right hand inside my coat and out again. Then I said
out loud but not too loud:
"Don't move. I'm aiming a gun at where you are and I'm
nervous. If your hands are empty stick them out beyond the edge. If they're not
empty –"
A sound came from behind the cartons that was something
between a moan and a squeal. I let my right hand fall and stepped forward with
a grunt of disgust and put the light on him, where he was flattened against the
pile of cartons.
"For the love of Mike," I said, absolutely
exasperated. "What the hell are you scared of?"
He moaned, "I seen him." His eyes were still
rolling. "I tell you I done seen him."
"So did I see him. Look here, Arthur, I have no time to
waste arguing with you about primitive superstitions. What are you going to do,
stay here and moan?"
"I ain't going back up there – don't you try it – don't
you touch me, I'm telling you –"
"Okay." I laid the light on a carton, returned the
pistol to my holster, and put on my coat and hat. Then I retrieved the light.
"I'm going out the back way to see that no one escapes. The best thing you
can do is stay right where you are."
"I mean don't I know it," he groaned.
"Fine. Have you got the key for that door?"
"They's a bolt, that's all."
"What's outside, a court with a high fence around
it?"
"Yes, sir."
"Any door in the fence?"
"No, sir."
Overhead, namely on the floor of the office directly above,
I heard the tread of dozens of heavy shoes on heavy feet. The company had come.
I even thought I detected the sound of Inspector Cramer's number twelves. As I
moved, I had a piece of luck; the beam of my light passed over a boy's-size
stepladder standing by the shelves. I went for it, arranged for a diversion by
warning Arthur to yell for help if he heard anyone else coming down, found the
rear door and unbolted it, and skipped through with the stepladder.
The court was fairly large, maybe 30 x 40, and paved with
concrete, and the solid board fence was two feet over my head. There was plenty
of light from the windows of the buildings. I trotted across to the rear,
leaned the ladder against the fence, mounted, and looked over into the
adjoining court. It was the same size as the one I was in, with a miscellaneous
clutter of vague objects scattered around and one object not so vague: a bulky
person dressed in white, including an apron and a chef's cap, apparently doing
breathing exercises from the way he stood there and puffed. Ten feet back of
him a blaze of light came from a door standing open.
I grabbed the top of the fence and pulled myself up and
perched there, teetering. At the noise he looked up, startled, but before he
could start screeching I demanded:
"Did you see that cat?"
"What cat?"
"My wife's cat. A yellow, long-haired fiend. It got
loose and jumped out a window and climbed this fence. If you –" I lost my
balance and toppled over and landed flat on the concrete on his side. As I
picked myself up I cussed appropriately. "If I find the little darling
I'll strangle the damn thing. If you've been standing here you must have seen
it."
"I didn't see it."
"You must have. Okay, then you didn't, but it came
here. It must have smelled the grub in the restaurant –"
I was on my way and kept going. He started after me, but
with slow acceleration, so I went through the open door unimpeded. It was a
large room, full of noise, cookery smells, and activity. Without coming to a
stop I inquired above the noise, "Did a cat come in here?" They stared
at me and a couple shook their heads. There was one with a loaded tray, in
waiter's uniform, headed for a swinging door, and I got on his heels and
followed him through. At the other end of a pantry corridor another swinging
door let us into the restaurant proper – purple and yellow leather, gleaming
chromium, gleaming white tables – with waiters fussing around waiting for the
evening's customers. One of them blocked me and I snapped at him,
"Catching a cat," and went on around. In the foyer the sucker usher
gave me an astonished look and the hat-check girl started for me instinctively,
but I merely repeated, "Catching a cat," and kept going, on through
two more doors and then up to the sidewalk.
I was, of course, on 49th Street. My impulse was to hoof it
around a couple of corners to 48th Street and get the roadster, but it was
parked only a few yards from the entrance to Miltan's, so I voted unanimously
for discretion and hopped into a taxi. On its cushion, bumping along downtown
on Park Avenue, I maintained the discretion by not attempting to explore my
overcoat pocket, considering that if things got complicated and aggravating
enough the taxi driver might be asked questions about what he had seen in his
mirror. So I just sat and let him bump me down to 35th Street and cross-town to
the number of Wolfe's house.
As I passed through the front hall I tossed my hat on a hook
but kept my overcoat on. In the office, Wolfe sat at his desk, and in front of
him was the metal box that was kept on a shelf in the safe, to which he alone
had a key, and which he had never opened in my presence. I had always supposed
that it contained papers too private even for me, but for all I knew it might
have been stuffed with locks of hair or the secret codes of the Japanese army.
He put something into it and shut the lid and frowned at me.
"Well?" he demanded.
I shook my head. "No soap. I might have been able to
bring her if I had had a chance to exert my charm, but on account of
circumstances beyond my control –"
"Circumstances forcing you to return here alone?"
"Not exactly forcing, no, sir. You may remember that on
the phone I mentioned a bird named Percy Ludlow who said that your daughter was
getting his cigarettes out of his coat at his request. Well, somebody murdered
him."
Wolfe glared. "I am not in a mood for buffoonery."
"Neither am I. I ruined my coat falling off of a fence
on purpose. At two minutes after six, Miss Lovchen and Miss Tormic were
upstairs giving fencing lessons and various other people were doing other things.
Miss Tormic was supposed to be giving a lesson to Percy Ludlow. I was
downstairs in the office with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan. We heard yells and ran up
two flights into a commotion of assorted people. In the fencing room at the end
we found Percy Ludlow on the floor with an йpйe running through him from front
to back and eight inches beyond. Miltan stayed there on guard and his wife went
to the office to phone for the police and I took charge of the front door. The
first two cops on the scene were radio patrol, the next three were precinct
bums, and the homicide squad arrived around 6:24."
"Well?"
"That's all."
"All?" Wolfe was as nearly speechless as I had
ever seen him. "You –" He sputtered. "You were right there,
inside there, and you deliberately ran away –"
"Wait a minute. Not deliberately. A cop relieved me at
the door and another one took me with him to the office, where the inmates had
gathered. I happened to be standing near the rack where I had hung my coat and
I noticed that the pocket was bulging open on account of something in it. When
I had hung the coat up the pocket had been empty. Maybe someone had merely
mistaken it for the wastebasket. On the other hand, there was a murderer in the
room, and Miss Tormic had presumably been fencing with the victim, and I was
there as the representative of Miss Tormic. The attitude that might be adopted
by the homicide squad in face of those facts would certainly be distasteful, in
case there was a general search and the object in my pocket wasn't wastepaper.
So I descended to the basement and left by the back door and fell over a fence
and took a taxi."
"And what was the object?"
"I don't know." I removed my coat and spread it on
his desk. "I thought it would be more fun to look at it with you. To the
tips of my fingers it felt like a piece of canvas." I was widening the
mouth of the pocket and peeping in. "Yep, it's canvas." I inserted
fingers and thumb and eased it out. It was rolled tight. As I unrolled it, it
became a heavy canvas gauntlet, with reinforced palm, and a little metal dingus
slid off onto the desk.
"Let's don't touch that," I suggested, and bent
over to inspect it. At its middle it was about a quarter of an inch thick. At
one end it had three claws, or fingers, and at the other it tapered to a single
point, sharp as an ice pick. I straightened up with a nod.
"Uh-huh, I thought so."
"What the devil is it?"
"My God, look at it! It's the col de mort!"
"Confound you, Archie –"
"Okay, but let it alone." I told him about the
disappearance of the curio from Miltan's cabinet and the history of it. He
listened with his lips compressed.
When I was through he demanded, "And you think this was
used –"
"I know damn well it was. The end of the йpйe that
killed Ludlow was blunt, and Miltan said it couldn't possibly have been thrust
through him that way. So this thing was removed afterwards. It looks as if it
would slide right off. I doubt if I need to point out those stains on the glove
where this was wrapped up in it."
"Thank you. I can see."
"And you can also see that it is a woman's glove. It
looks big on account of the way it's made, but it's not big enough –"
"I can see that too."
"And you can see that if I had stayed there and that
contraption had been found in my pocket, or if I had tried to hide it –"
I stopped because his lips were working and he had shut his
eyes. It didn't take long, maybe thirty seconds, then he reached for the button
and pushed it. When Fritz appeared he was in a cap and apron similar to those
worn by the man in the court who hadn't seen my wife's cat.
"Turn out the light in the hall and do not answer the
door," Wolfe told him.
"Yes, sir."
"If the phone rings, answer it in the kitchen. Archie
is not here and you don't know where he is or when he will return. I am engaged
and cannot be disturbed. Draw the heavy curtains in the front and the dining
room, but first – is there a full loaf of the Italian round?"
"Yes, sir."
"Bring it, please, with a small knife and a roll of
waxed paper."
When Fritz left I followed him, to hang my coat in the hall
and shoot the bolt on the front door. As I returned I flipped the light switch,
and in a moment Fritz returned with the required articles on a tray.
Wolfe told him to stand by and then attacked the loaf of
bread with the knife, which of course was like a razor, as Fritz's knives
always were. He described a circle four inches in diameter in the center of the
loaf, and then dug in, excavating a neat round hole clear to the bottom crust
but leaving the crust intact. Next he picked up the col de mort with the
tips of his fingers, placed it on the palm of the glove, rolled the glove up
tight, wrapped it in some waxed paper, and stuffed it into the hole in the
loaf. He filled the extra space with wads of paper, and spread a sheet of paper
smoothly over the top. With his swift and dexterous fingers, the entire
operation consumed not over three minutes.
He told Fritz, "Make a chocolate icing, at once, and
cover this well. Put it in the refrigerator. Dispose of the bread scraps."
"Yes, sir." Fritz picked up the tray and departed.
I said sarcastically, "Bravo. It's wonderful how your
mind works. If that had been me I would just have gone up and chucked it in my
bureau drawer. Of course it's more picturesque to disguise it as a cake, but
it's an awful waste of chocolate, and who do you think is going to come looking
for it? Do you think I'd have brought it here if anyone had any suspicion that
I had it?"
"I don't know. But someone knows that you had it and
that you brought it away – the person who put it there. Who had an opportunity
to do that?"
"Everybody. They were all there in the office. While I
was on guard at the street door."
"When you removed the coat from the rack and started
off with it, were you looking at people's faces?"
"No, I was being nonchalant. There were two cops there
and I had to get out of the room with it."
"You say Miss Tormic was supposed to be fencing with
Mr. Ludlow. Why supposed? Isn't it known whether she was or not?"
"It may be known, but not by me. I was down in the
office with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan when the porter found the body and started a
squawk. After that I had no chance to talk with Miss Tormic or anybody
else."
The telephone rang. I plugged in the kitchen extension and
we heard, faintly, Fritz's voice taking the call.
Wolfe leaned back and sighed. "Very well," he
muttered. "Tell me about it. From the moment you got there until you left.
No omissions."
I did so.
At a quarter to ten we finally
left the dining table, returned to the office, switched on the lights, and sat
down to wait. Various developments had occurred. The doorbell had rung three
times, unheeded, and the phone somewhat oftener. At the finish of the salad I
had left Wolfe alone with the green tomato pie and gone to the darkened front
room for a peek around the window curtain. Two men in plain clothes were on the
sidewalk, standing there with their hands in their pockets looking chilly and
frustrated. I gave them a Bronx cheer and went to the kitchen and used the
phone. Johnny Keems and Orrie Cather were out, and I left a message for them to
call the office. I got Fred Durkin and Saul Panzer and told them I was just
making contact and they were to await possible orders, and informed Saul about
the envelope he would receive in the morning mail. I took it for granted that
the number which had been jotted on his memo pad by Fritz, who had been
answering the phone as instructed, was the number of the Miltan studio, but I
verified it anyway by looking in the book, and told Fritz to call it and convey
the message that Mr. Wolfe and Mr. Goodwin were now both at home and at
leisure. Then I went back to the dining room and joined Wolfe at coffee.
Our wait, after we returned to the office, was a short one.
We hadn't been there more than five minutes when the doorbell called me to the
front. As I opened the door I was expecting a brace of sergeants at the most,
and was really surprised when I saw a single familiar figure confronting me,
with a felt hat cocked over one of the half-buried irate eyes and an unlit
cigar tilted up from a corner of the wide determined mouth.
"Honored," I declared, standing aside to give him
passage. "Deeply honored."
"Go to hell," Inspector Cramer growled, entering.
I shut the door and took his hat and coat and disposed of them, and followed
him into the office.
Wolfe offered a hand, greeted him nicely, and said this was
a pleasure he hadn't had for some months.
"Yeah. Quite a pleasure." Cramer sat down, took
the cigar from his mouth, scowled at me, replaced the cigar at a better angle,
and spoke.
"Where you been, Goodwin?" He was practically
snarling. Before I could reply he went on, "Forget it. If I already knew
you'd tell me and if I didn't you wouldn't." He removed the cigar again
and leaned at me. "You're the most damn contrary pest within my knowledge.
Twenty times I've had you under my feet when I was busy and had no use for you.
Now I go to look at a murder and I am told that an important witness has calmly
took his hat and coat and departed, and by God, it turns out to be you! The one
time you're supposed to be there you're not! I've told you before that I'd
throw you in the jug for a nickel. This time I'd do it for nothing!"
I inquired, "Did you find Arthur?"
"We found – none of your damn business what we found.
What did you run away for?"
"Because I wanted to." I requisitioned a friendly
grin for him. "Look, Inspector, you know perfectly well you're just being
rhetorical. I ran away to keep from losing my job. Mr. Wolfe had sent me there
on an errand with instructions to report back when the errand was finished. It
was finished, and as you know, Mr. Wolfe doesn't take an excuse. By the way, I
left my car there, parked on 48th –"
"Nuts. Why did you beat it?"
"I'm telling you. I would have been kept there till
midnight, and for nobody's benefit, because there were a dozen people there who
knew more than I did about the murder, and at least one of them a lot
more." I let my voice rise a little in indignation. "I helped out all
I could, didn't I? Didn't I guard the front door until the radio and precinct
guys –"
I stopped short.
"Uh-huh." Cramer nodded grimly. "Just
occurred to you, huh? Brain slowed up on you? I thought of that a long while
ago, all by myself. What was it, Goodwin? What was it that happened between the
time the precinct men arrived and the time you took your overcoat from the
rack?"
"Nothing happened."
"Yes, it did. I want to know what it was."
"Nothing, except that when a cop relieved me at the
door there was nothing I could do to help, and you know damn well what Mr.
Wolfe is like if I let anything interfere with his business."
He glared at me. Then he slid back to a more comfortable
position in the big leather chair, looked at Wolfe, and slowly shook his head.
"I'm tired out," he said resentfully. "I was up most of last
night on that Arlen case, and I was going to bed at eight o'clock, and now
here's this, and I find you're in on it even before it happens, and you can
guess how pure and simple that makes it seem like."
"I can assure you," Wolfe said sympathetically,
"that Mr. Goodwin's errand was neither to prevent nor to provoke murder.
We really didn't know there was to be one."
"Oh, I know all about his errand. Driscoll's diamonds.
To hell with that. Let's be reasonable. There was Goodwin, alone right at the
front door for six or seven minutes after he came downstairs with Mrs. Miltan,
before the radio men got there. Then they left him alone again until the
precinct men arrived. He knew from the beginning what a murder investigation
means for those on the premises when the squad gets on the job. If he wanted to
get away and get to you to report, all he had to do was walk right out and get
in his car and go. Instead of that, he waits until the precinct men come and
one of them is stationed at the door, then he goes to the office and stands
there and looks around, and all of a sudden he grabs his hat and coat, sneaks
down to the basement, pulls a gun and scares the daylights out of a colored
porter who –"
"He had no daylights left in him."
"Shut up. Tells the porter to stay where he is, takes a
ladder to the rear court and climbs the fence and talks about his wife's cat
and pretends to fall off, beats it through a kitchen and a restaurant on 49th
Street, and jumps a taxi and tells the driver he likes to go fast. And he tells
me nothing happened between the time the precinct men came and the time he
reached for his coat! I ask you, what does that sound like?"
"It sounds like a delayed cerebral process. I am
accustomed to it. Unfortunately."
"It sounds bughouse. And Goodwin's not bughouse."
"No, he isn't. Not quite. Will you have some
beer?"
"No. Thank you."
Wolfe pushed the button, leaned back, and let the tips of
his fingers meet at the apex of his middle mound. "Let's cut across, Mr. Cramer,"
he suggested helpfully. "You're busy and you need sleep. Regarding the
point you have broached, as to what happened up there between this time and
that time, Archie says he didn't want to be detained until midnight by the
prolonged routine of your staff. I say delayed cerebration. If something
significant really did happen it's obvious that we don't intend to tell you, at
least not now, so let's pass on that. Next, if you ask why we kept ourselves
incommunicado until half past nine, my reply is that I wished to get his
complete report without interruption and that I abhor any disturbance during
the dinner hour; further, that you had a large number of people up there to
deal with and Archie could tell you nothing that you couldn't learn from them."
Fritz came with a tray, and Wolfe uncapped a bottle and
poured. "Next? I suppose, why Archie was sent there? Because a girl named
Carla Lovchen, whom we have never seen before, came this afternoon to engage me
in the interest of a friend of hers named Neya Tormic, who had been accused of
theft. That matter was cleared up by a statement from Mr. Driscoll, who appears
to be a blundering ass. Next, you will doubtless ask, after that affair had
been settled and Mr. Goodwin had departed, why did he return? Because he phoned
me and I told him to. As you know, when I accept a commission I like to get
paid. I try to stop this side of rapacity, but I like to collect, even when, as
in this case, I have furnished more will than wit. I sent him back to see Miss
Tormic. He was waiting for her in the office when the porter's yells were
heard."
Cramer was slowly rubbing at his chin, looking stubborn and
unconvinced. He watched Wolfe swallow the glass of beer and wipe his lips, and
then turned to me:
"You're not bughouse, you know. Someday when I'm not
busy I'd like to tell you what you are, but you're not bughouse. Now suppose
you tell me a little story."
"Sure, I'll even tell you a big one. I was in the
office talking with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan when we heard the yelling –"
"Oh, no. Back up. From the time you got there. I want
the works."
I gave it to him, in my best style. I knew from the tone
Wolfe had taken that the program was eagerness to oblige in inessentials, so I
skipped none of the unimportant details. I covered the route. One of the little
cuts I made was the brief passage between the Balkans and me while I was
standing guard at the front door. When I got through Cramer asked me some
questions that offered no difficulty, ending with a few more jabs regarding
what had happened between the time when this and the time when that. My only
addition to my former explanation was that I had started to get hungry.
He sat a minute and chewed his cigar, frowning, and switched
to Wolfe.
"I don't believe it," he said flatly.
"No? What is it you don't believe, Mr. Cramer?"
"I don't believe that Goodwin's bughouse. I don't
believe he left like that because he was homesick and hungry. I don't believe
he went back there to collect a fee from Miss Tormic. I don't believe that as
far as you're concerned it's washed up and you're not interested in the
murder."
"I haven't said I'm not interested in the murder."
"Ho! Haven't you? Well, are you?"
"Yes." Wolfe grimaced. "Apparently I am.
While Archie was on guard at the door Miss Tormic approached and asked him – me
– to act in the matter in her interest. He accepted. I am committed, and the
amount of profit that may be expected …" He shrugged. "I am
committed. That was what happened that made Archie feel he should communicate
with me promptly and privately. As you are aware, Mr. Cramer, I am quite
capable of candor when the occasion presents –"
The inspector clamped his teeth on his cigar and said
through them savagely, "I knew it!"
Wolfe's brows went up a millimeter. "You knew? …"
"I knew it the minute I learned Goodwin had been there
and gone off to chase a cat. It had already begun to look like a first-class
headache, and when I heard about Goodwin that cinched it. So you've got a
client! And sure enough, by God, it has to be your client that was in that room
fencing with him! It would be!" He rescued the cigar from his teeth with
his left hand and hit the desk with his right fist, simultaneously.
"Understand this, Wolfe! I came here in a mood of cooperation, in spite of
Goodwin's tricky getaway! And what am I getting? Now you try to tell me that in
the space of ten seconds, just like that, your man accepted a murder case for
you! Nuts!" He hit the desk again. "I know what your abilities are,
no one knows that better than I do! And like a fool I came here expecting a
little disinterested discussion and you tell me you've got a client! Why have
you always got to have a goddam client? Naturally from now on I can't believe a
single solitary thing –"
My waving paw finally stopped his bellowing; the phone had
rung and I couldn't hear. It was a request for him. With a grunt he got up and
came to my desk for it, and I made way for him. For several minutes his part of
it was mostly listening, and then apparently he was told something
disagreeable, judging from the way he violated the law against the use of
profanity on the telephone. He gave some instructions, banged the thing into
its cradle, and said in a quiet but very sarcastic voice, "That's nice,
now."
He went back to his chair and sat there a minute chewing his
lip. "That's just fine," he said. "The case is as good as
solved. I won't have to go to any bother about it."
"Indeed," Wolfe murmured.
"Yes indeed. Three Federals have blown in up there.
Anybody might suppose that a murder in Manhattan is the business of the
homicide squad of which I happen to be the head, but who am I compared with a
G-man? If we throw them out on their tail, the commissioner will say tut-tut,
we've got to co-operate. It has two pleasant aspects. First, it means an
entirely new angle we haven't even suspected, and that's a cheerful idea.
Second, whoever solves it and however and whenever, the G-men will grab the
credit. They always do."
"Now, Inspector," I remonstrated. "A G-man is
the representative of the American people, in fact it would hardly be going too
far to say that a G-man is America –"
"Shut up. I wish you'd get an F.B.I. job yourself and
they'd send you to Alaska. I can pull you in, you know."
"If you can it's news to me. Who made any law about an
innocent man being overcome with repugnance at the sight of blood and taking a
taxi home?"
"Where did you see any blood?"
"I didn't. Figure of speech."
"Metonymy," Wolfe muttered.
"Kid me. I like it." Cramer glared at Wolfe.
"So you've got a client."
Wolfe made a face. "Tentatively I have. Archie accepted
the commission. I say tentatively because I have never met her. When I've seen
her and talked with her I shall know whether she's guilty or not."
"You admit she may be."
"Certainly she may be." Wolfe wiggled a finger.
"May I make a suggestion, Mr. Cramer? If you want consilience. It would be
doubly unprofitable for you to question me, since you have stated that you will
believe nothing I tell you, and since all those people are strangers to me and
I am completely ignorant of what went on."
"You say."
"Yes, sir, I say. But it might help for me to question
you. It would certainly help me, and in the long run it might even help
you."
"Great idea. Wonderful idea."
"I think so."
Cramer put his mangled cigar in the tray, got out another
one and stuck it in his mouth. "Shoot."
"Thank you. First, of course, achieved results. Have
you arrested anyone?"
"No."
"Have you found adequate motive?"
"No."
"Are there any definite conclusions in your mind?"
"No. Nor indefinite either."
"I see. No indictments from the mechanical routine – fingerprints,
photographs, blabbing objects?"
"No. There's one object, and maybe two, that ought to
be there and we can't find it. Do you know anything about fencing?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Nothing whatever."
"Well, the thing he was killed with is called an йpйe.
It's triangular in section, with no cutting edge, and the point is so blunted
that if you thrust at a man hard enough to go through him it would merely break
the blade, which is quite flexible. In fencing they fasten a little steel
button on the end, and the button has three tiny points. The points are only to
show on your opponent's jacket when you've made a hit; the thick body of the
button wouldn't permit the йpйe to pierce through the pad they wear or the mask
over their face."
I said, "He didn't have any mask on."
"I know he didn't, so he wasn't actually fencing at the
moment he was killed. Miltan says no one ever fences with the йpйe without a
mask. The one Ludlow had been wearing was on a bench over by the wall. And the йpйe
that was sticking through him had no button on it, just the blunted end, and it
couldn't possibly have pierced him like that. But there was that thing in the
cabinet in the office which Mrs. Miltan discovered was missing while your Mr.
Goodwin was present. Which she calls a culdymore. You talk French; you can say
it better than I can."
"Col de mort."
"Right. Anyone could have taken it from the cabinet.
The chances are a million to one it was used on the йpйe that killed Ludlow. At
a distance of a few feet, and especially with the йpйe in motion, he would
never have seen it was that and not the ordinary fencing button. But the
culdymore was not on the йpйe. So it had been removed. So everyone was searched
and twenty men went through that joint like molasses through cheesecloth. They
didn't find it. One person and only one had left that building, namely Goodwin
here. You don't imagine he took it with him for a souvenir?"
Wolfe smiled slightly. "I wouldn't suppose so. Thrown
out of a window perhaps?"
"It could have been. They're still looking, in the damn
dark with flashlights. Also for the other object which may be missing. Miss
Tormic has an idea a glove is gone, one of the ladies'-size fencing gauntlets,
from the cupboard in the locker room. Miss Lovchen and the dame that calls
herself Zorka don't think so. Mrs. Miltan won't commit herself. Nobody seems to
know for sure exactly how many there were."
"What about the button that had to be removed from the йpйe
before the col de mort could be used?"
"They're all over the place. Right in the fencing rooms
in drawers."
"Would the handle of the йpйe show fingerprints if it
had been grasped without a glove?"
"No. Wrapped with cord or something for a grip."
"Well." Wolfe looked sympathetic. "The only
two objects that might have helped aren't there. I'll promise you one thing,
Mr. Cramer, if Archie did take them away I shall see that they are handed over
to you as soon as we finish with them. But to go on, how many persons were in
the building at the time the body was found?"
"Counting everybody, twenty-six."
"How many have you eliminated?"
"All but eight or nine."
"Namely?"
"First and foremost, the one who was fencing with him.
Your client."
"I wouldn't expect that. If she is still my client
after I see her I'll eliminate her myself. The others?"
"Mr. and Mrs. Miltan. They alibi each other, which
would be a drug on the market at two for a nickel. The girl that came to see
you, Carla Lovchen. That's four. She had been fencing with Driscoll, but they
had quit and had gone to the locker rooms, and she could have sneaked to the
end room and done it. Driscoll. He's unlikely but not eliminated. Zorka. She
was in the big room on that floor with a young man named Ted Gill. He claims
not to be a fencer and was in there with her learning how to start."
I said, "It was him that was with Belinda Reade
yesterday when they saw our client in the hall as she was going to the locker
room not to pinch Driscoll's diamonds."
"Right. Then there's the Reade girl and young Barrett.
They were moving around and it's hard to tell. Of course if it's Donald Barrett
you can have it. Also there's a kind of a man named Rudolph Faber."
"The chinless wonder."
"Not original but good. It's him, by the way, that's
responsible for the fact that there's been no arrest. How many does that
make?"
"Ten."
"Then it's ten. And no discovered motive in the whole
damn bunch. I wouldn't –"
The phone rang. I performed and, after a moment, beckoned to
Cramer.
"For you. It's the boss."
"Who?"
"The police commissioner, by gum."
He got up, said in a resigned tone, "Oh, poop,"
and came and took it.
That telephone conversation was
in two sections. During the first section, which was prolonged, Cramer was
doing the talking, in a respectfully belligerent tone, reporting on the
situation and the regrettable lack of progress to date. During the second,
which was shorter, he was listening and apparently to something not especially
cheerful, judging from the inflection of his grunts, and from the expression on
his face when he finally cut the connection and returned to his chair.
He sat and scowled.
Wolfe said, "You were lamenting the lack of
motive."
"What?" He looked at Wolfe. "Yeah. I'd give
my afternoon off to know what you know right now."
"It would cost you more than an afternoon, Mr. Cramer.
I read a lot of books."
"To hell with books. I am fully aware that you've got
some kind of a line on this thing and I haven't; I knew that as soon as I heard
about Goodwin. If it ever did any good to look at your face I'd look at it
while I'm telling you that the commissioner just informed me that he had a
phone call ten minutes ago from the British consul general. The consul stated that
he was shocked and concerned to learn of the sudden and violent death of a
British subject named Percy Ludlow and he hoped that no effort would be spared
and so forth."
Wolfe shook his head. "I'm afraid my face wouldn't help
you any on that. My sole reaction is the thought that the British consul
general must have remarkable channels of information. It's half past ten at
night. The murder occurred only four hours ago."
"Nothing remarkable about it. He heard it on a radio
news bulletin."
"The source of the news was you or your staff?"
"Naturally."
"Then you had discovered that Ludlow was a British
subject?"
"No. No one up there knew much about him. Men are out
on that now."
"Then obviously it's remarkable. The radio tells the
consul merely that a man named Percy Ludlow has been killed at a dancing and
fencing studio on 48th Street, and he knows at once that the victim was a
British subject. Not only that, he doesn't wait until morning, when the usual
conventional communication could be sent to the police from his office, but
immediately phones the commissioner himself. So either Mr. Ludlow was himself
important, or he was concerned in important business. Maybe the consul could supply
some details."
"Much obliged. The commissioner has a date with him at
eleven o'clock. Meanwhile how about supplying a few yourself?"
"I don't know any. I heard Mr. Ludlow's name for the
first time shortly before six o'clock this afternoon."
"You say. All right, to hell with you and your client
both. I don't kick on any ordinary murder, it's my job and I try to handle it,
but I hate these damn foreign mix-ups. Look at those two girls, they barely
speak English, and if they want to monkey around playing with swords why can't
they stay where they belong and do it there? Look at Miltan, I suppose some
kind of a Frenchman, and his wife. Look at Zorka. Then look at that Rudolph
Faber guy, he reminds me of the cartoons of Prussian officers at the time of the
World War. And now the Federals are up there horning in, and this consul
general informs us that even the dead man wasn't a plain honest-to-God American
–"
"From old Ireland," I slipped in.
"Shut up. You know what I mean. I don't care if the
background is wop or mick or kike or dago or yankee or squarehead or dutch
colonial, so long as it's American. Give me an American murder with an American
motive and an American weapon, and I'll deal with it. But these damn alien
trimmings, йpйe and culdymores and consuls calling up about their damn subjects
– and moreover, why I was fool enough to expect anything here is beyond me. I
should have had you tagged and hauled in and let you wait in a cold hall until
sunrise."
He appeared to be preparing to leave his chair. Wolfe
displayed a palm.
"Please, Mr. Cramer. Good heavens, the corpse is barely
cooled off. Would you mind telling me how Mr. Faber made himself responsible
for the fact that there's been no arrest? I think that was how you put
it."
"I might and I might not. Do you know Faber?"
"I've said all those people are strangers to me. I tell
only useful lies, and only those not easily exposed."
"Okay. I would have arrested your client – I'm pretty
sure I would – if it hadn't been for Faber."
"Then I'm in debt to him."
"You sure are. Except for lack of motive, which might
have been supplied and still may be, it looked like Miss Tormic. She admitted
she was in there fencing with Ludlow. There was no evidence of anyone else
having entered the room, though of course someone could have done so
unobserved. Miss Tormic said that when she left the room Ludlow said he would
stay and fool with the dummy a while. A dummy is a thing fastened to the wall
with a mechanical arm that you can hook a sword onto. She said she went to the
locker room and left her pad and glove and mask, and then –"
"What about her йpйe?"
"She said she left it in the fencing room. There's a
dozen or more in there on a rack. There was one with a button on it lying on
the floor not far from Ludlow's body, presumably the one he had been using.
Ludlow had no mask on, but of course it could have been slipped off after he
was killed. I see no reason why it should have been, unless to make it look as
if he hadn't been fencing at the moment it happened. Nor was there any reason
for removing the culdymore as far as I can see except to play hide and seek
with it. But about Faber. He was downstairs in a dancing room with Zorka until
she went with Ted Gill to show him how to hold a sword. Then he went up and
changed to fencing clothes, intending to get Carla Lovchen to fence with him as
soon as she was through with Driscoll. He was hanging around the upper hall
when Miss Tormic came out of the end room, and Ludlow was there too, opening
the door for her to leave. Ludlow called to ask Faber if he cared to fence a
little, and Faber said no. He says. Ludlow said all right, he'd practice his
wrist on the dummy, and went back in the end room, closing the door, and Faber
and Miss Tormic went to an alcove at the other end of the hall and sat and
smoked a couple of cigarettes. They were still there when the porter entered
the end room to clean up, thinking it was empty, and saw the body and came out
squealing. They ran to see what it was, and other people appeared from all
directions."
Wolfe, who had closed his eyes, opened them to slits.
"I see," he murmured. "You couldn't very well have arrested her
after that, even if you had known she was my client. From where they sat did
they have a view of the hall?"
"No, there's a corner."
"How long were they sitting there before the
rumpus?"
"Fifteen to twenty minutes."
"Did anyone see them?"
"Yes, Donald Barrett. He was looking for Miss Tormic to
ask her to have dinner with him. He went to the door of the ladies' locker room
and Miss Lovchen told him Miss Tormic wasn't there. He found them in the
alcove, and was still with them five minutes later when the yelling
started."
"He hadn't looked for her in the end room?"
"No. Miss Lovchen told him she had stopped in the
locker room and left her pad and glove and mask, so he presumed she wasn't
fencing."
After a little silence Wolfe heaved a sigh.
"Well," he said irritably but mildly, "I don't see why the devil
you resent my client. She seems to be wrapped in a mantle of innocence from
head to foot."
"Sure, it's simply beautiful." Cramer abruptly got
up. "But … there's a couple of little things. So far as is known, she and
no one else was in that room with him, and for the purpose of lunging at him
with an йpйe. Then the alibi Faber gives her is one of those neat babies that
could be 99 per cent true and still be a phony. All you'd have to subtract
would be the part about his seeing and speaking with Ludlow as Miss Tormic left
the end room. I don't claim to know any reason why Faber –"
The interruption was the entrance of Fritz. Inside the door
a pace he halted to get a nod from Wolfe, and then advanced to the desk and
extended the card tray. Wolfe took the card, glanced at it, and elevated his
brows.
He told Fritz to stand by, and looked up at Cramer, who was
standing, speculatively.
"You know," he said, "since you're leaving
anyway, I could easily finesse around you by having this caller shown into the
front room until you're gone. But I really do like to cooperate when I can. One
of your ten inmates up there has got loose. Unless they've let him go in order
to follow him, which I believe is a usual tactic."
"Which one?"
Wolfe glanced at the card again. "Mr. Rudolph
Faber."
"You don't say." Cramer stared at Wolfe's face for
seven seconds. "This is a hell of a time of night for a complete stranger
to be making an unexpected call."
"It certainly is. Show him in, please, Fritz."
Cramer turned to face the door.
I chalked up one for the chinless wonder. He may have been
shy on chin, but his nerve was okay. While there may have been no reason why
the unlooked-for sight of Inspector Cramer's visage should have paralyzed him
with terror, it must have been at least quite a surprise, but he did no
shrinking or blanching. He merely halted in a manner that should have made his
heels click but didn't, lifted a brow, and then marched on.
Cramer grunted something at him, grunted a good night to
Wolfe and me, and tramped out. I got up to greet the newcomer, leaving the
front hall politeness to Fritz. Wolfe submitted to a handshake and motioned the
caller to the chair that was still warm from Cramer. Faber thanked him and
blinked at him, and then turned on me and demanded:
"How did you get away up there? Bribe the cop?"
I could have told, just looking at him, that that was the
tone he would use asking a question. A tone that took it for granted any
question he asked was going to be answered just because he asked it. I don't
like it and I know of no way anybody is ever going to make me like it.
I said, "Write me special delivery and I'll refer the
matter to my secretary's secretary."
His forehead wrinkled in displeasure. "Now, my man
–"
"Not on your life. Not your man. I belong to me. This
is the United States of America. I'm Nero Wolfe's employee, bodyguard, office
manager, and wage slave, but I can quit any minute. I'm my own man. I don't
know in what part of the world the door is that your key fits, but –"
"That will do, Archie." Wolfe said that without
bothering to glance at me; his eyes were on the caller. "Apparently, Mr.
Faber, Mr. Goodwin doesn't like you. Let's disregard that. What can I do for
you?"
"You can first," said Faber in his perfect precise
English, "instruct your subordinate to answer questions that are put to
him."
"I suppose I can. I'll try it some time. What else can
I do for you?"
"There is no discipline in your country, Mr.
Wolfe."
"Oh, I wouldn't say that. There are various kinds of
discipline. One man's flower is another man's weed. We submit to traffic cops and
the sanitary code and so on, but we are extremely fond of certain liberties.
Surely you didn't come here in order to discipline Mr. Goodwin? Don't try it;
you'd soon get sick of the job. Forget it. Beyond that? …"
"I came to satisfy myself as to your position and
intentions regarding Miss Neya Tormic."
"Well." Wolfe was keeping his voice oiled – controlling
himself. "What is it in you that requires satisfaction? Your
curiosity?"
"No. I am interested. I might be prepared, under
certain conditions, to explain my interest, and you might find it profitable to
help me advance it. I know your reputation of course – and your methods. You're
expensive. What you want is money."
"I like money, and I use a lot of it. Would it be your
money, Mr. Faber?"
"It would be yours after it was paid to you."
"Quite right. What would I have to do to earn it?"
"I don't know. It is an affair of urgency and it
demands great discretion. That inspector of police who was here – can you satisfy
me that you are not a secret agent of the police?"
"I couldn't say. I don't know how hard you are to
satisfy. I can give you my word, but I know what it's worth and you don't.
Before I went to a lot of trouble to establish my good faith, I would need
satisfaction on a few points myself. Your own position and intentions, for
instance. Is your interest a personal one in Miss Tormic, or is it – somewhat
broader? And does it coincide with hers? It is at least, I suppose, not hostile
to her, or you wouldn't have established that alibi for her when she was
threatened with a charge of murder. But exactly what is it?"
Rudolph Faber looked at me, with his thin lips thinner, and
then said to Wolfe, "Send him out of the room."
I started to deride him with a grin, knowing the reception
that kind of suggestion always got, no matter who made it; but the grin froze
on my face with amazement when I heard Wolfe saying calmly, "Certainly,
sir. Archie, leave us, please."
I was so damn flabbergasted and boiling I got up to go
without a word. I guess I staggered. But when I was nearly to the door Wolfe's
voice from behind stopped me:
"By the way, we promised to phone Mr. Green. You might
do so from Mr. Brenner's room."
So that was it. I might have known it. I said, "Yes,
sir," and went on out, closing the door behind me, and proceeded three
paces towards the kitchen. Where I stopped there was hanging on the left wall,
the one that separated the hall from the office, an old brown wood carving, a
panel in three sections. The two side sections were hinged to the middle one. I
swung the right section around, stooped a little – for it had been constructed
at the level of Wolfe's eyes – and looked through the peephole, camouflaged on
the other side by a painting with the two little apertures backed by gauze,
into the office. I could see them both, Faber's profile and Wolfe's full, and I
mean full, face. Also I could hear their words, by straining a little, but it
was obvious that they were both going on with the sparring with no prospect of
getting anywhere, so I went to the kitchen. Fritz was there in his sock feet
reading a newspaper, with his slippers beside him on another chair in case of a
summons. He looked up and nodded.
"Milk, Archie?"
"No. Keep it low. The hole's uncovered. Tricks."
"Ah!" His eyes gleamed. He loved conspiracies and
sinister things. "Good case?"
"Case hell. The second World War. It started this
afternoon up on 48th Street. We'd better not talk."
I sat on the edge of the table for two minutes by my watch
and then went to the house phone on the wall and buzzed the office. Wolfe
answered.
"Well?"
"Mr. Goodwin speaking. Green says he has got to talk
with you."
"I'm busy."
"I told him that. He said what the hell."
"You can give him the program as well as I can, and the
reports we got yesterday –"
"I told him that too. He says he wants to hear it from
you. I'll switch him onto your line."
"No, no, don't do that. Confound him anyway. You know
I'm not alone – and that's a confidential – tell him to hold the wire. He's an
unspeakable nuisance. I'll come there and take it."
"Okay."
I hung up and tiptoed back to the wood carving in the hall.
In a moment the office door opened and Wolfe came out and shut the door. He got
to me fast, whispered to me, "Quick on the signal," and glued his
eyes to the peephole.
And I nearly missed connections. Rudolph Faber must have
been in a hurry. Wolfe hadn't been at the peephole more than ten seconds before
he jerked his hand up and waved it. I wasn't supposed to jump or run, so I trod
the three paces to the office door, giving my steps plenty of weight, and flung
the door open and kept going on in. Faber, in an attitude of arrested motion,
was standing across the room from where his chair was, with his back to the
bookshelves, but his hands were empty. He blinked at me once, but otherwise his
face was impassive except for its inborn expression of superior and bullheaded
meanness. With only one swift glance at him, I went to my desk and sat down,
opened a drawer and took out a file of papers, and began going through them to
look for something.
He didn't say a word and neither did I. I finished going
through the file and started on another one, and was prepared to continue with
that indefinitely, but it wasn't necessary. I was halfway through the second
one when noises filtered in through the door to the hall, and pretty soon the
door opened and I looked up and got another shock. Nero Wolfe was there, in
overcoat, muffler, hat and gloves, with his applewood stick in his hand. I
gawked at him.
"I'm sorry," he told Faber. "I must go out on
business. If you want to go on with this, come tomorrow between eleven and one
or two and four or six and eight. Those are my hours. Archie, we'll take the sedan.
If you please. Fritz! Fritz, if you will help Mr. Faber with his coat …"
This time Faber's heels did click. I suppose they're more
apt to when you're upset. He went, without having committed himself on the
question of going on with it tomorrow.
When Fritz came back in Wolfe said, "Here, take these,
please," and handed him stick, hat, gloves, muffler and overcoat.
"Two bottles of beer." Hearing that, I put the files away in the
drawer and went to the kitchen and got a glass of milk. When I returned to the
office he was back at his desk, leaning back with his eyes closed. I sat and
sipped the milk until the arrival of the beer made him straighten up, and then
said:
"Genius again. He was going for United Yugoslavia."
Wolfe nodded. "He had his fingers on it when you opened
the door."
"Lucky guess."
"Not a guess, an experiment. He was stalling. He wasn't
saying anything and had no intention of saying anything. But he wanted you out
of the room. Why?"
"Sure. Very good. But how did he figure on getting you
out of the room too?"
"I don't know." Wolfe emptied the glass. "I
don't manage his mind for him, thank God. I did go out, didn't I?"
"Yeah. Okay. So, did one of the Balkans send him to get
that paper, or has he got Miss Tormic in his power because he's her alibi on
the murder, or did he – by jiminy!" I slapped my thigh. "I've got it!
He's Prince Donevitch!"
"Don't be amusing. I'm in no humor for it."
"I realize you're not." I sipped some more milk.
"Where do we stand, anyway? Are we on a case or not? If so, what kind of a
case?"
"I don't know. I don't like it. I don't like that
paper. I don't like having that thing in the refrigerator disguised as a cake.
We'll either have to find out who used it or turn it over to Mr. Cramer, and
neither prospect is pleasing. And I have a responsibility. I adopted that
girl."
"You don't even know whether it's her or not."
"I intend to find out. I sent you back to bring her
here. You didn't do it."
"Well, boil my bones!" I glared at him. "Am I
to infer that you insinuate that I should have lugged her along when I sneaked
through the basement and fell over the fence and so forth? No. You're being
aggravating, and God knows you're good at it. Do you want me to go get her
right now?"
"Yes."
I gaped. "You do?"
"Yes."
I looked at him. He wasn't stringing me; he meant it. And
not one red cent involved. It was at that moment that I decided never under any
circumstances to adopt a daughter. Without another word I finished the milk and
got up, and the next minute would have been gone if the phone hadn't rung.
I sat down and took it. "Office of Nero Wolfe. Archie
Goodwin speaking."
"Ah, Meesturrr Gudwinnnn? Zees ess Madame
Zorrrka."
"Oh, yeah." I passed Wolfe the sign to listen in
on his phone. "I saw you up there this afternoon."
"Yes. Zat ees why I phone. What happen zis afternoon,
eet ess terrible!"
"Right. Awful."
"Yes. Zee police, zey kestion me long time. I tell zem
everysing but one sing. I deed not tell zem how I see Mees Tormic put something
in your pocket."
"No?"
"But no. I sink eet ees not my beesiness and I do not
want any trrrouble. But I am worried. Now I sink eet ees a murrrder, and I owe
a duty. I must now tell zee police or I cannot sleep. I am duty bound."
"Sure, I see. Duty bound."
"Yes. But also I sink eet ees only fair I tell you
before I tell zee police. Now I tell you. Now I tell zee police."
"Wait a minute, please. Let me get this straight.
You're going to phone the police now?"
"Yes."
"And exactly what are you going to tell them?"
"Zat I see Mees Tormic put somesing in your pocket in
zee coat hanging on zee rack and trying not to have anybody see. Zen pretty
soon you take zee coat and go."
"Now, listen." I tried to laugh. "You sure
are seeing things. Where are you now?"
"Zey let me go home. I am at my apartment, 78th Street.
542 East."
"Well, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll get hold of
Miss Tormic and we'll drop in to see you. If you think we're murderers, which
we're not –"
"Oh, I'm not afraid. But I am worried."
"Don't you worry for a minute. We'll be there in less
than an hour. You're sure you'll be there?"
"Certainly I will."
"The police can wait that long."
"But not longer, Meesturrr Gudwinnnn."
"Okay. Absolutely."
I shoved back the phone and stood up.
"There," I said, with no feeling because my
feelings were too deep. "There you are. What else could I say?"
"Nothing," Wolfe muttered. "Now be
quiet."
He shut his eyes and his lips began to push in and out. That
went on for ten minutes. I sat and tried to figure out something milder than
kidnapping, but my brain wouldn't work because I was too damn disgruntled.
Finally he said quietly:
"Get Mr. Cramer."
That took a little doing, because the saps Cramer had left
up at Miltan's studio had to go into a huddle before they would even admit he
wasn't there. Next I tried his office at headquarters, and got him; apparently
the base of operations had been moved down there. Wolfe took it:
"Mr. Cramer? I have a little something on that Ludlow
case. No, it's somewhat complicated. I think the best idea would be for you to
have a man collect Madame Zorka and Miss Tormic and bring them to my office as
soon as possible. No, I want to co-operate, but I hardly think any other
procedure would be feasible. No, I haven't solved the case, but this is a
development that I am sure will interest you. You know whether I may be
depended on for that sort of thing. You'll come yourself? Fine."
He hung up and rubbed his nose with his forefinger. I
blurted, "And whoever goes to get Zorka, she'll spill the entire bag of
beans before they get here –"
"Let me alone, Archie. Take that confounded thing out
of that idiotic cake and put it back in your pocket the way it was."
I gave up. And obeyed blindly. Talk about discipline.
Neya Tormic was the first to
arrive for the party.
It was close to midnight when I went to answer the bell,
saving Fritz the trouble of putting his slippers in commission and glad of a
chance to stretch my legs even that much.
"Hullo," I said in polite surprise, for three of
them crossed the threshold and I knew all of them. First Neya Tormic, then
Carla Lovchen, and bringing up the rear, Sergeant Purley Stebbins. Purley and I
had often been enemies and even friends once or twice. While I helped with
wraps he said:
"This other one coupled on and I would have had to use
force to separate her. So I thought if she's not wanted we can do the
separating here."
"Sure," I agreed, "let Cramer do it. He ought
to be here any minute. You go on to the kitchen, you know the way, and Fritz'll
give you a pork tenderloin sandwich with onion grass."
He looked wistful. "I guess I won't let her out of my
sight –"
"Pooh pooh. My dear fellow. This is a conference and
Mr. Wolfe and I are conferees. Breaded pork tenderloin and steaming black
coffee?"
So he headed for the kitchen and I herded the Balkans into
the office.
I was afraid Wolfe might be skittish, confronted with two
Montenegrin females at once, but he stood up and greeted them like a man. I had
chairs already arranged. It was the first time I had seen Neya in anything but
her fencing costume with robe. She was natty in a dark-brown suit and brown
oxfords, with no foreign touch as far as I could see, but my interest in
women's clothes is not technical. Her eyes were as black as two prunes in a
dish of cream, but there was a little flush on her cheeks, which may have been
from the cold outdoors.
She said, with the eyes aimed at him, "You are Nero
Wolfe."
Wolfe nodded just perceptibly. He was leaning forward with
his elbows resting on the desk and his fingers linked together. Having seen him
scrutinize a lot of people, I was aware that he was putting on a special and
rare performance.
She said, "You sent a policeman to bring me here. I
don't understand that."
"Inspector Cramer sent him."
"But you must have permitted it." There was a
swift movement of her head; a characteristic arrested toss that I had observed
that afternoon. "Or suggested it."
"Yes, Miss Tormic. I arranged it. A certain fact was
exposed which required immediate action in order to save Mr. Goodwin from
arrest. He is my confidential assistant, and I wouldn't welcome the ignominy of
bailing him out of jail. Or perhaps instead of a fact, it's a lie. We'll find
out. I thought it better to do so in the presence of Inspector Cramer, and
besides, I want to see how you behave under pressure."
"I can stand pressure."
"Good. We'll see."
She smiled at him. When her mouth was composed the don't-touch-me
was in command, but when she smiled it was all come-hither. "Have you told
him that I am your adopted daughter?"
Wolfe frowned and turned to me. "Is the man who brought
them in the kitchen?"
"Yes, sir. It's Stebbins. You know Sergeant Stebbins."
He nodded. "Nevertheless, Miss Tormic, I think we'll
discuss that later. I haven't told the police that you are my daughter. For the
present, it is desirable that I should not be suspected of so intimate a
prejudice. Do you agree to that?"
"I should think …" She hesitated. The smile had
gone. "Of course I'll do whatever you say, but …" She smiled again.
"I'd like to have that paper back, the record of adoption which you
signed. I want to hang onto that. I admit it's pure selfishness, because I know
what it might mean to be the daughter of Nero Wolfe. I proved that by sending
for you when I got into trouble. Of course, since I've never seen you since I
was three years old, I can't be expected to show violent affection and throw my
arms around you and kiss you –"
"No indeed," Wolfe agreed hastily. "There's
no question of … it's a matter of responsibility and that's all. My
responsibility. I was sane, in the legal sense, when I assumed it. As for the
record of adoption, I would prefer, if you don't mind – but that's probably Mr.
Cramer. Unless it's Madame Zorka."
"Zorka!" exclaimed Carla Lovchen in surprise.
But it was Cramer, ushered in by Fritz. He glanced sharply
around, offered a curt collective greeting, and, finding his usual chair
occupied by Neya Tormic, took one at the left of Carla Lovchen.
"Where's the Zorka woman?" he demanded.
"Not here yet," I told him.
"Where's Stebbins?"
"In the kitchen eating our food."
He grunted and looked at Carla, "I told him to bring
Miss Tormic."
Carla said, "I came along" in a tone that
indicated an intention to stay.
"I see you did. Well, Mr. Wolfe?"
"We'll wait for Madame Zorka. In the meantime, what did
the commissioner learn from the consul general?"
Cramer glowered at him.
"Oh, come," Wolfe said testily, "don't degrade
discretion into secretiveness. If either of these girls killed Mr. Ludlow, they
certainly knew who he was. The fact that you have found that out might frighten
them into betraying something. If they didn't kill him, what's the
difference?"
Cramer growled, "Tomorrow's papers will have it anyway.
I suppose. They always do. Ludlow was a confidential agent of the British
government."
"Indeed. What was he doing at the fencing studio?
Working or playing?"
"The consul doesn't know. Ludlow reported direct to
London. They're trying to get someone in London now. It's five o'clock in the
morning there. I told you before that this looks –"
He stopped to let me answer the phone. It was a call for
him, and I made room for him to take it at my desk.
After he had listened a while he used profanity again. That
made it evident he had got more than a minor irritation, since he had
old-fashioned ideas about swearing in front of ladies, and he had strong
principles to which he steadfastly adhered when they didn't interfere with his
work. Finally he cut the connection, banging the thing into the cradle, went
back and sat down, and sighed clear to his belt.
He glared at Wolfe and demanded, "What was the big idea
of getting this Zorka down here? Spill it!"
Wolfe shook his head. "Wait till she gets here. Was
that her on the phone? Isn't she coming?"
"Coming hell. She's skipped!"
"Skipped?"
"Gone! Left! Departed! And you knew she was going to!
You had me send a man up there on a run-around! Damn you, Wolfe, I've told you
twenty times that some day –"
"Please, Mr. Cramer." Wolfe was frowning in
distaste. "I beg you, sir. I don't make a game of run sheep run out of a
murder. I hadn't the faintest notion that Madame Zorka intended to skip. She
telephoned here – what time, Archie?"
I glanced at my pad. "11:21."
"Thank you. And told us something. Archie told her he
would get Miss Tormic and call on her at her apartment, from where she was
talking. Then we made a brief investigation and decided it would be better to
have the matter discussed with you present. As you know, I never go out on
business, so we asked you to bring them here. Since her phoning here was by her
own volition, and since she expected Archie and Miss Tormic to call, it is odd
that she should leave her apartment."
"Yeah. Especially with a bag and a suitcase."
Wolfe's brows went up. "But I presume you were having
her followed?"
"No! Why should we? Have I got a million men on the
squad to tail everybody on the premises every time there's a homicide? Nuts! I
sent a man to get her and bring her here. She wasn't there. Downstairs they
told him that she went out with a bag and suitcase ten minutes before he
arrived."
"Any trail?"
"They're after it."
"Pfui." Wolfe looked around at us. "Well.
Here we are. Under the circumstances, the best thing we can do is to proceed
without her."
"Go ahead," Cramer said grimly.
Wolfe leaned back and half closed his eyes and Miss Tormic
was possibly unaware that he was watching her like a hawk. "As I say,
Madame Zorka phoned here at 11:21. She stated that shortly after the murder was
discovered, when everyone was together up there in the office, she saw Miss Tormic
put something into the pocket of Mr. Goodwin's coat, which was hanging on a
rack. She hadn't mentioned the incident to the police and her conscience was
bothering her because she thinks murder is terrible. So she had decided to
phone Mr. Goodwin and tell him that she intended to inform the police at once
–"
Cramer barked at Neya, "What did you put in Goodwin's
pocket?"
She kept her eyes leveled at Wolfe and paid no attention to
him.
Wolfe said in his tone of authority, "Just a moment. I
arranged this meeting and I'm handling it. Archie told Madame Zorka he would
get Miss Tormic and go to see her. Of course he was stalling. He went to the
hall to investigate, and there was something in the pocket of his overcoat
which he had not put there. He didn't take it out. He left it there
undisturbed, and it was decided to phone you and get Miss Tormic and Madame
Zorka down here. That's all so far. Archie, go get the coat."
I went to the hall and removed it from the hanger and took
it back and laid it on Wolfe's desk, with the guilty pocket uppermost.
Wolfe said, "Please, Mr. Cramer. It seemed preferable
that you should have the first look at it."
Even when he said that he didn't look at Cramer, but kept
watching Neya. Cramer advanced and stuck his hand in the pocket and pulled the
thing out. I was right at his elbow, beside myself with curiosity as to what it
might be. He stared at the rolled-up bunch of canvas clenched in his fist, then
put it down on the desk and unrolled it. The stains were now the color of dark
mahogany. As the little metal doodad was disclosed to our gaze I permitted
myself an ejaculation of astonishment.
Wolfe said, "I suspected that. Your two missing
objects, Mr. Cramer. Aren't they?"
Cramer said to me through his teeth, "So that's why you
took a powder."
I gave him a cold hard eye. "Guess again. You heard
what Mr. Wolfe said –"
He wheeled on Neya. "You!" he said with his jaw
still clamped. "Let's have it." He grabbed the glove, with the col
de mort nested in the palm, and stuck it under her nose. "Did you put
that in Goodwin's pocket?"
She nodded her head. "Yes, I did."
That unclamped his jaw. He goggled at her and I guess I
joined him. She was all right. Her hands were clasped tight on her lap and she
sat stiff, but she certainly showed no signs of hysteria. Cramer opened his
mouth to speak, then shut it again, tramped to the door and pulled it open and
bellowed:
"Stebbins! Come here!"
Purley came trotting, with a startled and embarrassed look
on his big face because he was trying to chew and swallow at the same time.
Cramer motioned to the chair he had been occupying and growled, "Sit down
there and take your notebook."
"Wait a minute," Wolfe put in. "Are you
charging Miss Tormic?"
"No." Cramer didn't look at him. "I'm asking
her. Any objections? If so, I can take her downtown."
"None at all. I prefer it here. We're four to
two."
"I don't care if you're a hundred to two." Cramer
exhibited the objects to the sergeant. "Put down that I showed her this
canvas gauntlet and this steel thing with a point and asked her if she put them
in Goodwin's overcoat pocket and she replied, 'Yes, I did.'" He confronted
Neya Tormic. "Now. You state that you put these two things into Goodwin's
overcoat pocket while it was hanging on a rack in the office of Miltan's studio
not long after Ludlow's dead body was discovered. Is that right?"
"Yes."
"Did you kill Percy Ludlow?"
She said in a good clear voice, "You've asked me that
before and I said no."
Carla Lovchen blurted, "She can explain –"
"Shut up please! – Do you still say no?"
"Yes."
"Did you take this steel thing off of the end of the йpйe
after it had gone through Ludlow's chest?"
"No."
"Did you take it off the йpйe with this glove on your
hand and then discover there was blood on the glove and you would have to get
rid of both of them?"
"No. I never –"
"When did you take this thing out of the cabinet in
Miltan's office?"
"I didn't take it out."
"You put these two things in Goodwin's pocket, didn't
you?"
"Yes."
"You had them then, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Where did you get them?"
"I found them in the pocket of my robe – the green robe
I put on over my fencing costume."
"What do you mean, you found them?"
"I just mean that. Isn't that a good word? Found?"
"Sure, it's a swell word. It's a beaut. How and when
and why did you find them?"
"Just a moment, Mr. Cramer." It was Wolfe, in a
tone that meant business. "Miss Tormic is a stranger in this country.
Either I advise her to say nothing whatever and I get a lawyer for her, or I
will tell her one or two things myself. At this point."
"What do you want to tell her?"
"You will hear it." Wolfe wiggled a finger.
"Miss Tormic. It is unlikely that you will be charged with murder as long
as the alibi furnished by Mr. Faber is unimpeached. That is, remains good. You
can, however, be put under arrest as a material witness – a device to prevent
you from running away – and then be released under a bond to appear when
needed. You have been asked to give a circumstantial account of your connection
with the instrument of murder, which you have admitted was in your possession
shortly after the crime was committed. Your words are being taken down by a
stenographer. If you give that account, you will be committed to it as the
truth, so it had better be the truth. If you refuse to give it, you will
probably be arrested as a material witness. You must decide for yourself. Have
I made it clear?"
"Yes," she said, and smiled at him. "I think
I understand that all right. There's no reason why I shouldn't tell the truth –
it's the only thing I can do, now." She shifted her eyes to Cramer.
"It was in the office when we were all in there, waiting for the police to
come. I put my hand in the pocket of my robe and there was something in there.
It's a big pocket, quite big. I started to pull it out to see what it was, but
the feel of it told me it must be a fencing glove. I tried to think what to do.
I knew it shouldn't be there – I mean I knew I hadn't put it there. For a
minute I was scared, but I made myself think. Mr. Ludlow had been killed in the
fencing room where I had been fencing with him, and there I was with a
wadded-up glove in my pocket, and if we were searched …" She upturned a
palm. "I looked around for a place to put it and saw Mr. Goodwin's coat. I
knew it must be his, because the others were all upstairs in their lockers, and
I knew he had come there anyway to get me out of trouble – so I went over to it
and when I thought no one was looking I took it out of my pocket and put it in
his."
"Very much obliged –"
"Shut up, Goodwin! Do you realize what you're trying to
tell me, Miss Tormic?"
"I … I think I do."
"You're trying to tell me that you had a bulky thing
like that in your pocket and didn't know it."
"So am I," I put in. "The same goes for
me."
"I know damn well it does! Did I ask you to close your
trap? What about it, Miss Tormic?"
She shook her head. "I don't know – of course I was
excited. It's a loose robe and it's a big pocket. I had it on – you saw
it."
"Yeah, I saw it. So you admit you concealed evidence of
a crime?"
"Is that … wrong?"
"Hell, no. Oh, my, no. And do you know who put it in
your pocket?"
"No."
"Of course you don't. Or when?"
"No." Neya frowned. "I have thought about
that. I left the robe in the locker room, lying on a bench, when I went to the
end room to fence. After I left Mr. Ludlow there and met Mr. Faber in the hall,
I stopped in the locker room to leave my pad and glove and mask, and put on the
robe and went with Mr. Faber to the alcove. Whoever put the glove in my pocket,
I don't think they did it until afterwards, because I think I would have
noticed it. After the porter started to yell, we were all running around and
jostling against each other – and I suppose someone did it then … that's the
only way I can explain how it might have happened –"
"And you knew nothing about it."
"I knew nothing about it until I felt something in my
pocket there in the office."
"And you were scared. You were just simply perfectly
innocent."
"Yes. I was. I am."
"Sure. But though you were perfectly innocent, you
didn't tell the police about it, and you weren't going to tell about it, and
you never would have told about it, if Madame Zorka hadn't reported that she
saw you do it and you were afraid to deny it!" He was yapping into her
face at a range of thirty inches. "Huh?"
"I –" She swallowed. "I think I might. But
the way I thought about it, I thought Mr. Goodwin would find it in his pocket
and turn it over to you, and it wouldn't matter whether you knew it had ever
been in my pocket or not."
"Then you thought wrong. Mr. Goodwin doesn't turn
things over to the police. Mr. Goodwin climbs a fence and runs home to papa and
says see what I got, and papa says –"
"Nonsense!" Wolfe cut in sharply. "We'll
dispose of that point now. You know what I told you; I don't need to repeat it.
Granted that your supposititious assumption is correct, that Archie knew it was
in his pocket and ran away with it, and that we concealed it from you, you
can't possibly establish it as a fact, so why the devil waste time harping on
it? Especially in view of a fact that is established, that when Madame Zorka's
phone call caused us to investigate the overcoat pocket, we immediately
communicated with you."
"You had to!"
Wolfe grimaced. "I don't know. Had to? Ingenuity can
nearly always create an alternative if none exists. Anyway, we did. And if we
hadn't, but had proceeded without you, your two missing objects would still be
missing, for when Archie and Miss Tormic called on Madame Zorka she would have
been gone, and the compulsion of her threatened exposure would have been
removed. So you owe your possession of those two objects to us. You owe your
knowledge of a suspicious circumstance, Madame Zorka's flight with a bag and
suitcase, to us. And you owe your knowledge of the manner in which the criminal
disposed of the glove and col de mort to the courageous candor of my
client."
Cramer, standing, stared down at him, and as far as I could
see his face was not glowing with gratitude.
He said, "So she's your client, is she?"
"I told you so."
"You said tentatively. You said you'd decide when you
had met her."
"I have met her."
"All right, you've met her. Is she your client?"
"She is."
Cramer hesitated, then turned slowly and looked down at
Neya. His gaze had concentration, but no acute hostility; and I suppressed a
grin. I knew what was eating him. He was well aware that the time had yet to
come when he would successfully pin a murder charge on any man, woman or child
whom Nero Wolfe had accepted as a client, and he was strongly tempted to call
it a day then and there as far as Neya Tormic was concerned and throw in
another line. He even, half unconsciously, favored Carla Lovchen with a sidewise
suspicious glance, but he returned to Neya and, after a moment, wheeled again
to Wolfe.
"Faber gives her an alibi. Okay. But you don't need to
be told that an alibi works both ways. What if Faber thought she needed one and
so he provided it? And she thought she needed it to, and accepted it and
confirmed it? Without maybe realizing that while Faber was giving her an alibi,
what he was really doing was arranging one for himself?"
Wolfe nodded. "An old trick, but still a good one.
That's quite possible, of course. Will you have some beer?"
"No."
"You, Miss Tormic, Miss Lovchen?"
He got their declinations, pressed the button and went on.
"This thing's messy, Mr. Cramer. It looks as if I'm going to have to find
out who killed Mr. Ludlow, unless you do it first yourself. You certainly
aren't going to get anywhere badgering my client. Look at her. I'll have a
little talk with her after you leave, and one thing I shall tell her is to hang
onto the Faber alibi, for the present, even if it was fabricated by him. True,
it protects Faber, but it also protects her. If and when you can point a
suspicion at Faber, especially a motive, let me know and we'll discuss the
alibi business."
"You suspect her of lying yourself!"
"Not specifically. Anyone would tell a lie, at least by
acquiescence, rather than stand trial for murder. By the way, about this Mr.
Faber. You are entirely wrong in your suspicion that he wasn't a stranger to
me. I never saw him or heard of him in my life before today. Is he by any
chance another confidential government agent?"
Cramer eyed him. "How did you know that if he was such
a stranger to you?"
"I didn't. Mere conjecture. If I had known it I
wouldn't have asked. Not British, is he?"
"No."
"Of course not. He might as well display an emblem on an
arm band. Archie and I don't like him. It's a pity my client's alibi depends on
him; I would prefer to establish her innocence without that. Do you suppose the
attack on Ludlow was the eagle clawing the lion?"
"I don't suppose. It was a human being murdering a
man."
"Yes, it was that, all right." Wolfe glanced up at
the clock. "It's well past midnight, and I want to have a little talk with
Miss Tormic. Is there anything else you want to ask her?"
"She's an alien. I ought to have her under bond."
"She won't skip, at least not tonight, and we can
arrange for the bond tomorrow if you insist on it."
Cramer grunted. "She's important. She had the murder
weapon in her possession. I'd like to have her come to my office tomorrow
morning at nine o'clock and see Lieutenant Rowcliff."
Wolfe frowned. "Mr. Rowcliff is the officer who came
here once with a warrant and searched my house."
"Yeah. You don't forget that, do you?"
"No. Neither do you – Come in … Yes, Fritz?" On
account of the barricade of chairs, Fritz had to talk over the top of Neya
Tormic's head. He was stiffly formal, as was his invariable custom when there
were ladies present, not from any sense of propriety but from fear. Whenever
any female, no matter what her age or appearance, got inside the house, he was
apprehensive and ill at ease until she got out again.
"A gentleman to see you, sir. Mr. Stahl. He was here
this afternoon."
Wolfe said to show him in.
The G-man was wearing the same
suit and the same manners, and the only visible change was that he had had his
shoes shined. Cramer took one look at him, let out a grunt, and propped himself
against the edge of my desk.
The G-man apologized in his educated voice. "I didn't
know you were engaged, Mr. Wolfe … I don't want to interrupt –"
"I'll be engaged for some time. Do you need to see me
alone?"
That seemed to stump him. He frowned and took a quick survey
of the crowd. "Perhaps not," he decided. "It's only … about that
statute requiring the registration of agents of foreign principals."
"What about it?"
"Well – it is necessary to make sure that you
understand the requirements."
"I think I do understand them."
"Perhaps. Section 5 of the Act says, 'Any person who
willfully fails to file any statement required to be filed under this act, or,
in complying with the provisions of this act, makes a false statement of a
material fact, or willfully omits to state any material fact required to be
stated therein, shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by a fine of not more
than $1000 or imprisonment for not more than two years, or both.'"
"Yes, I understand that."
"Perhaps. Another section of the Act defines an agent
of a foreign principal to mean any individual, partnership, association or
corporation who acts or engages as agent or representative for a foreign
principal, and a foreign principal is defined to mean the government of a
foreign country, a person domiciled abroad, or any foreign business,
partnership, association, corporation, or political organization."
"Say it again."
He repeated it.
Wolfe shook his head. "I don't know. I don't think I
need to register under the act. I am agent for a young woman named Neya Tormic.
She is foreign. But she is not a business, partnership, association,
corporation, or political organization, nor is she at present domiciled
abroad."
"Where is she?"
"Right there."
The G-man looked at Neya; in fact, he studied her. Then he
switched to Wolfe and studied him. Finally he slowly shook his head. "I
don't know either," he declared. "It's a situation I haven't met.
I'll have to get an opinion from the attorney general. I'll let you know."
He bowed with perfect aplomb, turned, and departed.
I tittered.
Cramer threw up both hands, pawed the air, and headed for
the door. Halfway across he turned to announce, "I heard every word of
that and I don't believe it. If I had it on a phonograph record and played it
all day I still wouldn't believe it. And in spite of that, I believe in law enforcement.
Come on, Stebbins. Bring that glove and that thing. Miss Tormic, there'll be a
man at your apartment at 8:30 in the morning to bring you to my office. You'll
be there?"
She said she would, and went out with the sergeant at his
heels.
Wolfe poured beer and drank. I covered a yawn.
Neya Tormic asked, with her forehead wrinkled, "Was it
silly of me to admit it like that? I thought – it seemed to be the only thing I
could do."
Wolfe wiped his lips, leaned back, and looked at her.
"Anyhow, it was one thing to do, and you did it. Was it the truth?"
"Yes."
"Is Faber's story, which you have confirmed, and which
gives you both an alibi, also true?"
"Yes."
"You realize, I suppose, that without that alibi you
would probably now be under arrest, charged with murder."
"Yes."
"Did you know that Ludlow was an agent of the British
government?"
"Yes."
"And that Faber is an agent of the German
government?"
"Yes."
"Are you a government agent, or is Miss Lovchen?"
"No."
"Do you know who killed Ludlow?"
"No."
"Have you any idea?"
"No."
His eyes darted aside. "Did you kill Ludlow, Miss
Lovchen?"
"No, sir."
"Have you any idea who did?"
"No, sir."
Wolfe sighed. "Now. Take those orders. Mr. and Mrs.
Miltan, Driscoll, Gill, Barrett, Miss Reade, Madame Zorka. Do you know whether
they were involved with Ludlow, either politically or personally?"
Neya's eyes shifted to Carla and then returned to Wolfe. She
opened her mouth, closed it, and then spoke. "I don't know how much
involved. They all knew each other. We haven't been there very long
ourselves."
"Did you first meet Ludlow and Faber at Miltan's?"
"Yes."
"How did you learn they were government agents?"
"Why … they told me."
"Indeed. Just told you to make conversation?"
"They … well, they told me." She smiled at him. "Under
certain conditions – I mean, a man is apt to tell a girl things if the
conditions are such that he feels like it."
"Were you intimate with Mr. Ludlow? Are you intimate
with Mr. Faber?"
"Oh, no." Her nose seemed to go up. "Not
intimate."
"Yet they told you – never mind. You say you are not a
government agent. Are you a political agent? Did you come to this country on a
political mission?"
"No."
"Did you, Miss Lovchen?"
"No, sir."
"You're both lying."
They stared at him. Neya's chin went up. Carla's eyes
narrowed, which left them still wide enough for ordinary purposes.
Wolfe snapped, "As an intrigante, Miss Lovchen, you are
incredibly maladroit. Twice since you entered this room you have glanced at the
place on the bookshelves where my copy of United Yugoslavia stands. I
know you put that paper there. I've removed it and put it somewhere else."
Neya merely continued to stare, but Carla jumped up, with
her face white, and started to sputter at him, "But I – I only meant
–"
"I know." He showed her a palm. "You only
meant to leave it there a while for safekeeping. It's even safer where I put
it. The reason I mention it –"
"Where is it?" Neya Tormic's eyes were two йpйes
going through him and her tone was a dagger whizzing at him. She was up and at
the edge of his desk in one swift movement that reminded me of the lunge Miltan
had made with his championship sticker to show me how it was done. She threw
the dagger again, at short range: "Where is it?"
She turned, because Carla was up too and had grabbed her
arm. She shook herself loose, but Carla seized her elbow again and told her
sharply, "Neya – Neya! Sit down! Neya – you know –"
Neya spouted a torrent at her that I would have had no
symbols for if I had been at my notebook. Carla returned it, but not in a
torrent; she was cool and controlled.
Wolfe said, "I understand Serbo-Croat."
They both said, "Oh!"
He nodded. "I used to knock around. I did some work for
the Austrian government when I was too young to know better. And I was in your
country in 1921, and adopted a daughter –"
"I want that paper."
"I know you do, Miss Lovchen. But I won't even discuss
it, let alone return it to you, unless you children sit down and behave
yourselves. None of this jumping up and caterwauling; I don't like it; besides,
it won't do you any good. Sit down!"
They sat.
"That's better. I mentioned that paper only to show you
how I knew you were lying when you said you aren't in this country on a
political mission – and by the way, I suppose you lied to the police too? Of
course you did. Now that the paper's been mentioned – where did you get it,
Miss Lovchen?"
"I …" She fingered her skirt. "I got
it."
"Where and how? Is it yours?"
"I stole it."
Neya snapped, "You did not! I stole it myself!"
Wolfe shrugged. "Split the honors. Who did you steal it
from?"
"From the person who had it."
"From the Princess Vladanka Donevitch?"
"I won't tell you."
"Good. That's better than trying to lie. Is the
princess in New York now?"
"I won't tell you anything about that paper."
"You are in danger. You are actually in peril of your
life. Faber's unsupported alibi is the only thing between you and an indictment
for murder. Do you want my assistance in the removal of that danger?"
"Yes." It looked for an instant as if she were
going to smile at him, but she didn't. "Yes," she repeated, "I
do."
"Are you prepared to pay me? My usual fee? Several
thousand dollars, for instance?"
"My God, no." She glanced at Carla and back at
him. "But … I might."
"But when you sent Miss Lovchen here in the first
place, you expected me to help you because you are my adopted daughter, didn't
you?"
She nodded. "I thought you might feel –"
"I carry this fat to insulate my feelings. They got too
strong for me once or twice and I had that idea. If I had stayed lean and kept
moving around I would have been dead long ago. You are aware that I have no
proof that you are my daughter. You sent Miss Lovchen here with that record of
adoption bearing my signature. Another paper. Did you steal that too?"
Carla ejaculated something indignant. Neya was on her feet,
with her eyes flashing. "If you think I did that, there's no use –"
"I don't think you did that. I just don't know. I asked
you to stop jumping up. Please sit down, Miss Tormic. Thank you. I used to be
idiotically romantic. I still am, but I've got it in hand. I thought it
romantic, when I was a boy, twenty-five years ago, to be a secret agent of the
Austrian government. My progress toward maturity got interrupted by the World
War and my experience with it. War doesn't mature men; it merely pickles them
in the brine of disgust and dread. Pfui! After the war I was still lean and I
moved around. In Montenegro I assumed responsibility for the sustenance and
mental and physical thrift of a three-year-old orphan girl by adopting her. I
did something else there too, which advanced my maturity, but that has nothing
to do with you. I saw that girl's ribs. The something else I did finished
Montenegro for me, and I left the girl, I thought, in good hands, and returned
to America."
Wolfe leaned back and let his lids down a little. "You
go on from there, please."
Neya said, "You left me in Zagreb with Pero Brovnik and
his wife."
"That's right. Your name?"
"My name was Anna. When I was eight years old they were
arrested as revolutionaries and shot. I don't remember that very well, but I
know all about it."
"Yes." Wolfe looked grim. "And for three
years the money I continued to send to Zagreb was appropriated by someone in
Brovnik's name, and when I got suspicious and went over there, in spite of the
fact that I was no longer lean, I got nowhere. I couldn't find the girl. I got
no satisfaction about the money. I got put in jail, and the American consul got
me out and I was given ten hours to leave the country." He made a face.
"I have not been in Europe, nor in jail, since. Where were you?"
"I was eleven years old then."
"Yes. I can add. Where were you?"
She looked at him a while before she spoke. "I can't
tell you that."
"You'll either tell me that or march on out of here and
not come back. And I have the paper which you stole and your friend left in my
book for safekeeping. Now don't start caterwauling."
Carla said, "Tell him, Neya."
"But Carla! Then he'll know –"
"Tell him."
"And tell the truth," Wolfe advised, "or I'll
know that, and I'll know it even better after I've cabled Europe."
She told him. "When the Brovniks were arrested I was
sent to an institution. A year later I was taken out by a woman named Mrs.
Campbell."
"Who was she?"
"She was the English secretary of Prince Peter
Donevitch."
"What did she want with you?"
"She visited the institution and she took a liking to
me. My ribs didn't show then. She wanted to adopt me, but she couldn't,
legally, on account of you."
"Why didn't she communicate with me?"
"Because … her connection with Prince Donevitch. The
kind of friends you had had in Yugoslavia, like the Brovniks. They knew you
would make trouble, and they didn't want trouble from an American."
"No. You can't take an American out and shoot him. So
she just stole the money I sent for three years."
"I don't know anything about that."
"Where is she now?"
"She died four years ago."
"Where did you go then?"
"I continued to live there."
"With Donevitch?"
"In that house."
"Did young Prince Stefan live there?"
"Yes, he – he and his sisters."
"And his wife?"
"After – of course. When he was married, two years
ago."
"Were you treated as one of the family?"
"No." She hesitated and then said more
emphatically, "No, I wasn't."
Wolfe turned abruptly to Carla Lovchen and snapped at her,
"Are you Stefan's wife? The Princess Vladanka?"
Her eyes popped open. "Me? Boga ti! No!"
"You had that paper which you put in my book."
Neya said, "I told you I stole that paper. I don't
always lie."
"Where did you steal it, Zagreb or New York?"
She shook her head. "I can't tell about that paper. Not
even – no matter what you do."
He grunted. "Your secret political mission. I know. Die
first. I used to play that silly dirty game myself. But since you lived in the
same house with the Princess Vladanka, you must know her pretty well. Are you
and she friends?"
"Friends?" Neya's forehead showed a crease.
"No."
"What's she like?"
"She is clever, beautiful, selfish and
treacherous."
"Indeed. What does she look like?"
"Well … she is tall. Her arms move like snakes. Her
face is like this." Neya described an oval with her fingers. "Her
eyes are as black as mine – sometimes blacker."
"Is she in Zagreb now?"
"She was when I left. It was said she was going to
Paris to see old Prince Peter and then to America."
"You're lying."
She looked straight at him. "Sometimes it is necessary
to lie. There are some things I can't tell."
"Ha, over your dead body. The curlicues of some old
bandit's trademark engraved on your heart, and what do you get out of it? When
do you expect to finish this political errand you're working on?"
She looked at him, at Carla, back at him, and said nothing.
"Come, come," he insisted impatiently. "I
merely ask when. Is the end in sight?"
"I think so," she admitted. "I think it will
be … Tomorrow."
"It's past midnight. Do you mean this day?"
"Yes. But I must have that paper. You have no right to
keep it. When that imbecile, that Driscoll, made the trouble about his diamonds
being stolen, I thought the police might come and search everything, even my
room where I live. I thought of you, the American who had adopted me when I was
a baby; I had brought the record of adoption with me when I left Zagreb; Mrs.
Campbell had given it to me before she died. So Carla and I decided the paper
would be safer with you than anywhere else, and we decided how to do it so she
could easily get it again. Then you refused to help me and she had to return
and let you know who I am." She stopped and smiled at him, but she was so
anxious that the effort was a little cockeyed. "I must have that paper
now! I must!"
"We'll see. You admit you stole it. So you expect to
accomplish your mission this day."
"Yes."
"You realize, of course, that the police won't let you
leave New York until they're satisfied their murder case is solved."
"But I … you said yourself my alibi –"
"That doesn't solve the case. Don't you do anything
silly. If you do complete your errand, don't try sneaking aboard a ship
disguised as a Nereid. Who is Madame Zorka?"
They both stared at him in surprise.
"Well?" Wolfe demanded. "You know her, don't
you?"
Carla laughed. It sounded quite natural, as though something
really had struck her as funny. Neya said:
"Why … she's nobody. She's a dressmaker."
"So I understand. Where did she get that name? The name
of the daughter of King Nikita of Montenegro."
"But Queen Zorka has been dead –"
"I know that. Where did this dressmaker get the
name?"
Carla laughed again. "She must have found it in a
book."
"Who is she?"
Neya shrugged and upturned her palms. "We know nothing
about her."
Wolfe eyed them a moment and then sighed. "All right.
It's late and you ought to be in bed, since you have to get up early to visit
Mr. Rowcliff. That smile ought to help with him. When you are through there,
come here, and I'll see you at eleven o'clock and give you that paper."
"I want it now!"
"You can't have it now. It isn't here. I will –"
Neya jumped up. "What did you – where is it?"
"Stop screaming at me. It's safe. I'll give it to you
at eleven o'clock. Sit down – no, don't bother to sit down; you're going.
Remember now, don't do anything silly. As for you, Miss Lovchen, I would advise
you to do nothing whatever except eat and sleep. I say that on account of your
performance yesterday when you hid that paper in my book – asking Mr. Goodwin
if I had read it and did I study it and was he reading it. Unbelievable!"
Carla flushed. "I thought … I was casual –"
"Good heavens! Casual? I still suspect you meant us to
find it, though I can't imagine what for. Well, good night – By the way, Miss
Tormic, about your being my client. I'll return that adoption paper to you in
the morning along with the other; it seems likely that it belongs to you; but I
am cautious and skeptical and I don't like misunderstandings. You are my client
only so long as it remains established that you are the girl whose ribs I saw
in 1921. I am your protector, but if it turns out that you have duped me on
that, I shall be your enemy. I don't like to be fooled."
"I doubt if I could fool you if I wanted to." She
met his eye and suddenly smiled at him. "You can feel my ribs if you want
to, but as for looking at them –"
"Oh, no. No, thank you. Good night. Good night, Miss
Lovchen."
I went with them and extended the courtesies of the hall,
and when they were out I shot the night bolt on the door. Then I went back to
the office and stood and looked down at Wolfe's colossal countenance, immobile
with closed eyes, and treated myself to an unrestricted stretch and yawn.
"Hvala Bogu," I declared. "I like
Montenegrin girls, but it's time to go to bed. They're all right. I offered to
take them home and they refused to let me. In spite of which, I have to run up
to 48th Street before I turn in, to get the damn roadster I left there. This is
a very peculiar case. I've got a feeling in my bones that there is going to be
a strange romantic twist to it by the time we get through. I have an inner
conviction that when the full moon comes I'll be standing right here in this
office asking you formally for the hand of your daughter in marriage. You've
got something there, gospodar. Only you'll have to help me break her of
lying."
"Shut up."
"Shall I go up for the roadster?"
"I suppose you'll have to." Wolfe shuddered. Out into
the night like that. "What time will Saul be here in the morning?"
"Nine o'clock."
"Phone him and tell him to bring that envelope."
"Yes, sir. Are you really going to hand it over to
her?"
"I am. I want to see what she is going to do with it.
Will Fred and Orrie also be here at nine?"
"Yes, sir. Who do you want to tail whom?"
"Tailing may not be necessary. On the other hand it may
be, for her protection. Mr. Faber wanted that paper."
"Not only did he want it, he knew where to look for
it." I yawned. "And since Carla put it there, did she tell him about
it? Or did he learn it from a member of your family?"
"I have no family."
"A daughter is commonly considered to be a member of
one's family. In this case it would hardly be too much to say that a daughter
is a family." I made my voice grave and respectful. "When I marry her
I guess it will be unavoidable for me to call you Dad."
"Archie, I swear by all –"
"And I would be your heir in case you die. I would be
the beneficiary on your life insurance. We could play in father and son golf
tournaments. Later on you could hold the baby. Babies. When the time comes for
the divorce – now what the hell!"
The doorbell was ringing.
At half past one in the morning,
with me yawning my head off and an outside errand still to do, the doorbell
should ring.
I went to the front and unlocked, leaving the chain bolt on
so that the door only opened to a five-inch crack, and peered through at the
male figure standing there.
"Well?"
"I want to see Nero Wolfe."
"Name, please?"
"Open the door!" He was a bit peremptory.
"Tut tut," I said. "It's after office hours.
If you don't like your own name, make up one. But it had better be a good one,
at this time of night."
"My name is Donald Barrett."
"Oh. Okay. Hold that pose. I'll be back."
I went to the office and told Wolfe. He opened his eyes,
frowned, muttered something, and nodded. I returned to the front and let the
nightwalker in, flunkeyed for him, and escorted him to the office. In the
bright light he looked handsome and harassed, with his white tie somewhat
crooked and his hair disarranged. He blinked at Wolfe and said he was Donald
Barrett.
"So I understand. Sit down."
"Thanks." He lodged his sitter on the edge of a
chair in a temporary manner. "This is a frightful stink, this thing."
Wolfe's brows went slightly up. "This thing?"
"This – up at Miltan's. Ludlow. It's murder, you
know."
"I believe it is. You were among those present."
"Yes, I was, damn it. Of course you got that from this
fellow you sent up there."
"Excuse me," Wolfe murmured. "I thought you
two had met. Mr. Barrett, this is Mr. Goodwin, my assistant."
"Oh, we met. We spoke a few words. He was guarding the
door and I asked him to let a young lady through to keep an important
appointment and he wouldn't do it."
Wolfe nodded. "That was Miss Reade."
"Oh? He told you that too?"
"Mr. Goodwin tells me everything."
"I suppose he would. Naturally. He was damn bullheaded
about letting Miss Reade out. He said the worst thing she could do was to leave
the place and start the cops looking for her, and then, by God, he gets out
himself somehow and starts them looking for him!"
"I know. He goes by whim." Wolfe was sympathetic.
"Is that what you came to see me for? To reproach me for Mr. Goodwin's
behavior?"
Barrett looked at him suspiciously, but Wolfe's expression
was bland. "No," he said, "I just mentioned it. He was damn
bullheaded. There was no reason in the world why Miss Reade should have been
kept there. As far as I myself was concerned, I was perfectly willing to stand
the inconvenience. But I came to see you regarding another … well, another
angle. This fellow that you sent up there – you sent him to represent Miss
Tormic, didn't you?"
"What fellow?"
"Your assistant, damn it!" His head went sidewise
in my direction. "Goodwin."
"Yes. I'm not really obtuse, Mr. Barrett, only I like
the custom of designating people by their names; it's so handy. Yes, Mr.
Goodwin was there in the interest of Miss Tormic."
"That's what he said."
"She agreed, didn't she?"
"Sure. That was all right. But that was about that
business of Driscoll's diamonds – the damn fool. What I want to know is, are
you still representing her? I mean, in connection with the murder."
"Do you ask that question as a curious friend?"
"Why, I – a friend, yes. It's not just curiosity."
"Well, I am representing Miss Tormic. What moved you
besides curiosity?"
"Oh, just …" He hesitated. He put his hand up to
smooth his straggled hair, shifted in his chair, and cleared his throat.
"Frankly, just that I'm a little interested in Miss Tormic and I should
hate it … you know? Such a frightful stink? I only met her a couple of months
ago, and I got her and Miss Lovchen their jobs at Miltan's – and I feel some
responsibility about that too. She's a stranger in New York, and I wanted to be
sure she has proper and competent advice. Of course, if you're representing her
…"
"I am."
"That ought to settle it."
"Thank you."
"Provided you …" He smoothed his hair, and cleared
his throat again. It was plain that he was having trouble getting the cork out.
"Provided you appreciate that it's important that she shouldn't be tangled
up in the thing at all. For instance, take that rumor that she was seen putting
something in that fellow – in Goodwin's overcoat pocket. If that got to the
police it would start a hell of a row. Although I don't believe she did any
such thing. I doubt if anybody did." He turned to me. "You ought to
know. Did you find anything in your overcoat pocket?"
"Sure." I grinned at him. "Driscoll's
diamonds."
"No, damn it –"
"Permit me," Wolfe said brusquely. "If we are
in possession of any secrets which we think should remain secret in the
interest of Miss Tormic, we certainly aren't going to disclose them. Neither to
the police nor to anyone else. Including you, sir. If you came here for
information of that kind you may expect a famine."
"I am a friend of Miss Tormic."
"Then you should be glad that she has discreet
advisers."
"That's all right. Certainly. But sometimes you fellows
like to stand in with the police. You know? And it would be bad if they got
hold of that talk about her putting something in Goodwin's pocket. They'd go
after her plenty and they'd turn her inside out. It was bad enough that she had
been in there fencing with Ludlow, and this would make it ten times worse. I
wanted to be sure you appreciate –"
"We do, Mr. Barrett. We haven't much native subtlety,
but a long experience has taught us things – for instance, never to toss
ammunition to the enemy except under compulsion or in exchange for something
better." Wolfe's tone was a soothing purr, which made me wonder when and
why he was getting ready to pounce. He went on with it: "By the way, I
don't suppose you happened to meet Miss Tormic on your way down here just
now?"
"No, I didn't. Why? Where was she?"
"She was here for a little talk. She and her friend,
Miss Lovchen. They left shortly before you arrived and I wondered if by any
chance you had seen them."
"No."
"Have you had an opportunity to talk this thing over
with her in much detail?"
"Not much of one. You might say none, really. They
questioned the men first up there, and they let me go around eight o'clock. She
was still there. I don't know how long they kept her."
"Indeed. Since you are a sufficiently good friend of
hers to bother to come down here, it might be thought that you wouldn't have
gone off and left her there."
"I couldn't get at her. The place was full of cops and
there was one for everybody. Anyway, that's my business. Meaning it's none of
yours. You know?"
"Yes, excuse me. You're quite right." Then Wolfe
pounced. As usual, there was no change whatever in his tone as his forefinger
traced a tiny circle on the polished mahogany of his chair arm. "But I
think you'll have to concede that this is my business: where have you hid
Madame Zorka?"
Donald Barrett wasn't especially
good; not much above the average man when he is suddenly and abruptly faced
with a question which he isn't supposed to know the answer to but does. His jaw
loosened, his eyes widened, and his breathing stopped. The first two may be the
result of innocent surprise, but not the third. But he was fairly quick on the
recovery. He stared at Wolfe and made folds in his smooth handsome brow and
demanded:
"Where have I hid who?"
"Madame Zorka."
He shook his head. "If it's a joke you'll have to
explain it to me. I don't get it."
Wolfe said patiently, "I'll explain it. Madame Zorka
phoned here this evening and said she saw Miss Tormic put something in Mr.
Goodwin's pocket and she was going to report it to the police
immediately."
"The devil she did!"
"Please don't interrupt. It's wasted. Mr. Goodwin
persuaded her to postpone informing the police until he could take Miss Tormic
to Madame Zorka's apartment for a discussion of the matter. When he and Miss
Tormic arrived some time later, they found the apartment empty; and they
learned that Madame Zorka had departed fifteen minutes previously, in a hurry,
with a bag and suitcase. Mr. Goodwin then brought Miss Tormic and Miss Lovchen
here to see me."
"Well, that –"
"Please. The two young ladies have a talk with me and
leave. Soon you arrive. You reveal that you possess knowledge of three facts:
that someone says that Miss Tormic was seen putting something in Mr. Goodwin's
pocket, that that information has not yet reached the police, and that it has
reached me. The first two you might have got hold of in several conceivable
ways, but not the third. You couldn't possibly have known that the information
had reached me unless Madame Zorka communicated with you after she phoned
here."
Barrett was standing up, apparently with the idea that it
was time to go. "Rubbish," he snorted. "If that's the kind of
deduction –"
Wolfe shook his head and his tone got sharp. "I won't
have it, sir. I won't spend an hour working it into your skull that I know what
I know. Madame Zorka told you what she had told me. Don't try dodging; you'll
only annoy me."
"It would be too damn bad if I annoyed you." He
looked and sounded nasty. "What if Zorka did tell me about it? What if
that's why I came down here? What's wrong with that?"
"Did she?"
"What if she did?"
"Did she?"
"Yes!"
"On the telephone?"
"Yes."
"And you, being a friend of Miss Tormic, saw that the
only way to make sure that her story would not reach the police was to hustle
her away somewhere – and you somehow persuaded her. Then you thought of the
possibility that I might pass it on to the police, and came here to plug that
hole. Where is Madame Zorka, Mr. Barrett?"
"I don't know. I supposed she was at home until you
said Goodwin was told she had gone with her bag and suitcase. I'll tell you
something. I don't like the way you're handling this and I'm going to tell Miss
Tormic so. She ought to have a good lawyer, anyway, and I'll see that she gets
one. If she lets you out, how much cash will you take not to peddle this fairy
tale to the police about her putting something in Goodwin's pocket?"
I got up and took a step toward him, but Wolfe shook his
head at me. "No, Archie. Let me –"
I said, "Excuse me. There are times when you get mad
and there are times when I get mad. I'll make a concession. I was going to hit
him and then talk, but I'll talk first."
I put my face fourteen inches from Barrett's. "You. I
am restraining myself. You have implied that this office has a stooling
department. What evidence have you got to back that up? Talk like a man whether
you are one or not. I warn you I'm mad. Have you got any evidence?"
"I … I didn't mean –"
"Have you?"
"No."
"Are you sorry you said it?"
"Yes."
"Don't say it to oblige me. I'd rather you refused to
say it. You are sorry?"
"Yes."
"Marshmallows," I muttered, and went back to my
chair.
Wolfe said, "You'll have to learn to control that,
Archie. Physical duress, unless carried to an intolerable extreme, is a
miserable weapon." He wiggled a finger at Barrett. "Not that I object
to duress when it's necessary, as it is now. It doesn't matter what it was that
moved Madame Zorka to tell you about her phone call to me; the fact is that she
did so; nor does it matter what form of persuasion you used on her. It's
obvious that you hid her, or at least you know where she is, since it was you
who got her to pack up and go –"
Barrett started off. I circled around him on the lope to
head him off at the door. Wolfe snapped at his back:
"Come back here! Unless you want everyone sniffing on
the trail of Bosnian forest concessions and Yugoslav credits –"
I admit that Wolfe's form of duress was more effective than
mine. Mine had made him eat a bite of crow, but Wolfe's apparently drained him
of his blood. Three steps from the door he stopped and stiffened, and his
cheeks went pasty. He turned slowly then, to face Wolfe. I went back to my
chair and sat and enjoyed looking at him.
He wet his lips with his tongue, twice. Then he moved, clear
to the corner of Wolfe's desk, and squeaked down at him: "What are you
talking about? Do you know what you're talking about?"
"Certainly. About banditry. A euphemism for it is
international finance. In this case represented by the well-known firm of
Barrett & De Russy."
"And what about it?"
Wolfe shook his head. "I furnish no details, Mr.
Barrett. You know them better than I do. The precise amount of the credits held
by your firm, for instance, and the extent of its relations with the Donevitch
gang. I don't need to supply details in order to blackmail you, which is all
I'm after. I merely want to see Madame Zorka, and I'm sure you'll help me on
that rather than have this Yugoslav foray exposed to a lot of disconcerting
curiosity."
Barrett, motionless and silent, gazed at him. Southwest of
his ear, above the edge of his starched white collar, I could see the tendons
on his neck standing out. Finally he squeaked again:
"Who are you working for?"
"For Miss Tormic."
"I asked you, who are you working for? Rome?"
"I am working on a murder case. My client is Neya
Tormic. My only interest –"
"Oh, skip it. Do you think I'm a boob?" The
international financier put the tips of eight fingers on the desk and gave them
some weight. "Look here. I understand perfectly that no matter who you're
working for, you wouldn't be tipping me off just for your health. If you'll put
this damn pet gorilla of yours on a leash, I'm quite willing to discuss details
and terms – subject of course to consultation with my associates –"
"Pfui." Wolfe was disgusted. "I might have
known it would make you ugly. Now how the devil am I going to convince you that
my only concern is the welfare of my client?"
"I don't know. If I were you I wouldn't try."
Barrett's voice had lost its squeak and assumed a tone that might have sold me
on the idea he was really tough if I hadn't already caught a glimpse of the
yellow. "I don't know how far you're in, but I presume you know what
you're doing. If you do, I don't need to tell you that it's too dangerous a
game for anybody to try any private hijacking."
"I said blackmail."
"All right, blackmail. Who are you selling out and
what's your price?"
I let it pass. If he was going to wholesale his insults, it
would save trouble to wait till he was finished and then collect in a lump sum.
Wolfe leaned back and sighed. "Will you sit down,
sir?"
"I'm all right standing."
"Then please back up. I'm not comfortable with my head
tilted. Now listen. Get it out of your head that I represent any interest,
either friendly or hostile to you, in your Balkan enterprise. I don't. Then,
you wonder, how did I learn of it? What's the difference? I did. Next you must
somehow manage to believe that I do not want a slice of the loot. Incredible
and even immoral as that must seem to a man of your instinct and training, I
don't. I want just one thing. I want you to conduct Mr. Goodwin to Madame
Zorka, wherever you have put her, and he will bring her here. That's all.
Unless you do that, I shall send information at once, to three different
quarters, of your firm's projected raid on the property of the people of
Yugoslavia. You know better than I do the sort of hullabaloo that would start.
Don't complicate matters by assuming for me a cupidity and corruption beyond
the limits I have set for myself. You're suffering from an occupational
disease. When an international financier is confronted by a holdup man with a
gun, he automatically hands over not only his money and jewelry but also his
shirt and pants, because it doesn't occur to him that a robber might draw the
line somewhere. I beg you, understand that I want Madame Zorka and nothing
else. Beyond that I do not and shall not represent any threat to you – unless,
of course, it should turn out that it was you who murdered Percy Ludlow."
Wolfe shifted his eyes to me. "Archie, I'm afraid
there's no help for it. Mr. Barrett will take you to Madame Zorka. You will
bring her here."
"What if she's skipped town?"
"I doubt it. She can't have got far. Take the roadster
and go after her. Hang onto Mr. Barrett."
"That's the part I don't like, hanging onto
Barrett."
"I know. You'll have to put up with it. It may be only
–" He switched to Barrett. "Where is she? How far away?"
The financier was standing there trying to concentrate, with
his gaze fastened on Wolfe and his lips working. He made them function:
"Damn you, if you let this out –"
Wolfe said curtly, "I've told you what I want, and
that's all I want. Where is she?"
"She's – I think – not far away."
"In the city?"
"I think so."
"Good. Don't try any tricks with Mr. Goodwin. They make
him lose his temper."
"I'm coming back with them. I want to talk –"
"No. Not tonight. Tomorrow perhaps. Don't let him in,
Archie."
"Okay." I was on my feet. "For God's sake,
let's step on it, or my bed will think I'm having an affair with the couch. I
only wish I was."
He didn't like going, leaving Wolfe there within three feet
of a telephone and all that intimate knowledge of Bosnian forests buzzing in
his head, but I eased him into the hall and on out into the November night.
I had rather expected to find a Minerva town car waiting at
the curb, considering his category, but there wasn't anything there at all, and
we had to hoof it to Eighth Avenue before we could ambush a taxi at that
ungodly hour. We piled in, me last, and he told the driver Times Square.
As we jolted off I surveyed him disapprovingly. "Don't
tell me you left her standing on the sidewalk."
Disregarding that, he twisted himself on the cushion to face
me in a confidential manner. "See here, Goodwin," he demanded,
"you've got to help me. I'm in a bad hole. It wouldn't have done any good
to try to persuade Wolfe that I don't know where Zorka is, because he was
convinced that I do. But the fact is, I don't know."
"That's too bad."
"Yes. I'm in one hell of a fix. If you go back and say
I told you I couldn't take you to her because I don't know where she is, he'll
do what he threatened to do."
"He sure will. So I won't go back and say that."
"No, that wouldn't do. If I couldn't persuade him I
don't know, I can't expect you to. But we could work it this way. We can drop
in somewhere and have a couple of drinks. Then, say in half an hour or so, you
go back and tell him I took you to an address – pick out any likely address – and
we went in expecting to find Zorka and she wasn't there. You can describe how
astonished and upset I was – you know, make it vivid."
"Sure, I'm good at that. But you haven't –"
"Wait a minute." The taxi swerved into 42nd Street,
and he lurched against me and got straight again. "I know you'll get the
devil for going back without Zorka, but you can't help that anyway, because I
don't know where she is. I wouldn't expect you to help me out of this just for
the hell of it. Why should you? You know? How about fifty dollars?"
I have never seen a worse case of briber's itch.
I made a scornful sound. "Now, brother! Fifty lousy
bucks with a big deal in international finance trembling in the balance? A
century at least."
The driver called back, "Which corner?"
Barrett told him to stop at the curb and leave his meter on.
Then he stretched out a leg to get into his trouser pocket, and extracted a
modest roll. "I don't know if I happen to have that much with me." He
peered and counted in the dim light. Glancing through the window, I saw an old
woman in a shawl headed for us with a box of chewing gum. I wouldn't even have
to leave the cab.
"I've got it," Barrett said.
"Good. Gimme, please. I can concentrate on the details
better with the jack in my jeans."
He handed it over. Without bothering to count it, I shoved
it through the window at the old woman and told her, "Here, grandma, two
packets and keep the change." She passed them in, took the currency and
gave it a look, gave me a swift startled glance from bleary old eyes and
shuffled off double-quick. I offered a packet of gum to Barrett and said,
"Here, one apiece."
Instead of taking it he sputtered, "You goddam
lunatic!"
I shook my head. "Nope, wrong again. You sure do make a
lot of mistakes, mister. That little gesture I just made, that wasn't original
– I first had the idea upstate in a cow barn and the beneficiary was a guy in
overalls with a pitchfork." I stuck a piece of gum in my mouth.
"Maybe this will keep me awake. That's enough horseplay and, besides, Mr.
Wolfe is waiting. Lead me to Zorka."
"Why you dirty cheap –"
"Oh, can it! What's the address?"
"I don't know. I don't know where she is."
"Okay." I leaned forward to the driver. "Go
to 48th Street, east of Lexington."
He nodded and got in gear.
Barrett demanded, "What are you going to do? What are
you going to Miltan's for?"
"I left my car there. I'm going to get it and drive it
home, and tell Mr. Wolfe the sad news, and then, I suppose, help him until dawn
with phone calls and so on. He never puts off till tomorrow what I can do
today."
"Do you mean to say that after taking my money and
giving it to that hag –"
"I mean to say exactly that. Either you quit stalling
and squirming and take me to Zorka, or I go back to Nero Wolfe and watch him
throw the switch. I ought to be asleep right now. You claim you don't know
where Zorka is. My employer claims you do. I have no opinion. My mind is open,
but I follow instructions blindly. Take me to Zorka or pop goes the
weasel."
The taxi bumped across Sixth Avenue and scooted ahead for
Fifth, along Bryant Park. Nearing the library, he called to the driver:
"Stop at the curb and leave the meter on." As we rolled to a
standstill I said, "You'd better keep the rest of your dough to pay the
fare with."
He sat and glared at me in silence. Finally he blurted,
"Look here, I can't take you to her. I can't do that. I'll tell you what
I'll do. You wait right here, and I'll take another cab and be back here with
her inside of twenty minutes."
I stared at him. "The reason I don't talk," I told
him, "is because I'm speechless. Holy heaven!"
"What's wrong with that? I give you my word –"
"I don't want it. Cut the comedy and let's go."
He glared some more. I permitted it for a full minute and
then got impatient. "I'll count up to twenty-nine," I said, "one
for each year of my life and one to grow on and one to get married on, and then
–"
"Wait a minute." He was approaching the pleading
stage. "The reason I can't take you to her is a personal reason. I don't
intend to try any deception, I can't. You know damn well the hole I'm in. What
about this? You go with me to a phone booth, and I'll call her up and tell her
to meet us –"
I shook my head emphatically. "No. A thousand times no.
Quit trying to wiggle off the hook. How do I know but what you've got a code
with her to use in emergencies? Remember I'm ignorant. I don't even know but
what Wolfe has got it figured out that she killed Ludlow and, in that case
–" I shrugged. "I'm only a puppet and I'm under orders. For God's
sake, shut up and let's go."
He curled his fingers to make fists. "I can just open
this door and beat it. You know?"
"Go ahead. Don't let me stop you. Then I could phone
Wolfe and go on home."
"But goddam it, if you hear me phone –"
"Shut up. I'm bored stiff."
He gave me one more good long glare and then leaned forward
and gave the driver an address on Madison Avenue, not ten blocks away. The
driver nodded and got going again.
He had enough left to pay the fare. It wasn't a modern apartment
house we stopped in front of, but an older building whose days of pride were in
the past. The ground floor was a trinket shop, dark of course. Barrett got out
a key and unlocked a door that let us into a small public corridor, went to the
rear of it, and with another key admitted us into a miniature elevator of the
drive-it-yourself variety. That took us up five stories, and then we had to
climb a flight of stairs. The layout wasn't exactly shabby, though it was far
from ostentatious. From the top of the stairs he preceded me through a sort of
vestibule and used a third key on a wide solid-looking door. I followed him in
and he shut the door and turned to call out:
"Yoohoo!"
An answer came: "Back here, Donnybonny!"
I could already smell perfume, and the temperature even
there in the foyer must have been close to ninety. I copied his example when he
took off his coat, but when he scowled at me and said, "Wait here a
minute," I disregarded it and went along behind him into a large and
dazzling room full of heat, synthetic smells, thick rugs, divans and cushions,
miscellaneous stuff, and a pair of damsels. They were sprawled out, one on a
divan and the other on a chaise lounge.
Zorka, a loose red thing around her, started a wave of
greeting at Barrett and then halted it in mid-air as she saw me. Belinda Reade,
nothing at all around her, called, "How's my Donny – Oh!" And
grabbed for a pale blue negligee that was draped over the back of the divan.
Barrett growled at me, "Didn't
I ask you to wait?"
"It doesn't matter," I soothed him. "When my
mind is on business –"
"Why!" Belinda Reade cried in innocent delight,
"it's the detective man! Have a drink?"
She was working on one herself, and the ingredients for
plenty more were handy on a little table. Zorka was having one too; she had
raised herself to her elbow on the chaise longue and was smiling at me
foolishly, without any intention, apparently, of saying anything.
Barrett said, "Be quiet, Bel. This fellow came …"
He turned to Zorka. "He came for you. My God, look at you. Both of
you." He frowned at her and switched to me: "You explain it to
her."
"Thees ess no time," Zorka declared in an injured
tone, "for explanations."
"Have a drink," Miss Reade insisted. "I have
never had a drink with a detective, and especially such a darned good-looking
detective." She patted the divan and tugged at the negligee to cover a
knee. "Sit here by me and have a drink."
"Don't be a damned fool," Barrett told her.
Zorka tittered. "She only wants to make you jealous,
Donald. Because you make her jealous of the Tormic girl."
"Bah," said Miss Reade. "Have a drink! What's
your name?"
"Call me Archie." It struck me that a little
reinforcement might help, so I stretched for the bottle and a glass. Then I
drew back and turned to Barrett. "But excuse me. If you're the host …"
"This is Miss Reade's apartment," he said stiffly.
"But you came here –"
"Please have a drink," the lady begged me.
"Thanks, I will." I poured a good one and tossed
it off, and then advised Barrett, "You ought to have a shot yourself.
You're under a strain." I confronted Zorka. "The idea is this. After
you phoned me at Nero Wolfe's office and told me –"
"What? After what?"
I went closer so she could focus easier. "After you
phoned and told me you saw Miss Tormic putting something in my overcoat pocket
–"
"But I didn't! I? I phoned you?" She waved her
glass at Belinda, spilling a drop or two on the rug, and said in a hurt tone,
"Don't let him have another drink! He says I phoned him!"
"Maybe you did, darling. You phone so many men. I
wouldn't blame you for phoning him. I like him."
"But I didn't!"
"Well, you should have." Belinda used the blue
eyes on me. "Have a drink, Percy."
"Not Percy, Archie. Percy was the one that got
murdered."
"Oh." She frowned at me. "That's right.
That's why we started drinking, to forget about it. Brrrh." She shivered.
"And I called you Percy! How funny! Don't you think that's funny,
Donnyhoney?"
"No," Barrett declared curtly. "This fellow
–"
"But of course it's funny! I like Archie, and
why should I call him Percy?" She shivered again. "It was perfectly
terrible! Simply awful! The porter yelling and Percy lying there on the floor,
and the police and –" She stopped and stared at me with her lips parted.
"Why! I forgot! You son-of-a-gun! It was you that wouldn't let me out of
that door! You dirty bum!"
Barrett tapped me on the shoulder. "You know, you came
–"
"Yeah, I know." I faced Zorka. She had the fixed
smile on again. I would have given an hour's sleep to know how many drinks she
had had. "About your phoning me," I said. "Maybe I was just
trying to brag. It's my one weakness, bragging about women phoning me. The fact
is, I came along with Donald Barrett to save him some trouble. I had to come to
48th Street anyway, to get my car. He told me he had asked you to come and
spend the night with Miss Reade, but after the talk we had that wasn't
necessary, so he supposed you would want to go home. Isn't that right,
Barrett?"
"I didn't agree –"
"Isn't that right?"
"Well … yes."
"Sure it is. So if you'll just put on a coat – you
don't need to bother to dress – we can take your bag and suitcase –"
"What for?" she demanded.
"Why, if you're going home you'll want your luggage
–"
"I'm not going home."
"My God, it's nearly daylight –"
"I'm not going home. Am I going home, Belinda?"
"You are not. Even if you were, you wouldn't go with
him. I don't like him. Didn't you hear me say I remembered that I don't like
him?"
I poured myself another drink, drank it, sat down on the end
of the chaise longue next to Zorka's feet and considered the situation. It had
various aspects, the basic problem being whether she was or was not honestly
stoozled. If she was, she wouldn't be worth a damn to Wolfe even if I got her
there. But I had my reputation to consider. Over a period of years Wolfe had
sent me many places many times, to bring him everything from a spool of thread
to a Wall Street broker, and I had batted mighty close to a thousand. Besides
that, if I went back without her I knew what Wolfe would say: and in addition
to that, her silly smile aggravated me.
I stood up and told Barrett in a cold inflexible tone,
"It's up to you, brother. You got her here, now you can get her out."
"He didn't get me here," Zorka said. "I came
here myself."
"How do you expect me to get her out?" Barrett
demanded. "Carry her?"
Zorka said, "Nobody had better touch anybody.
Especially you, you good-looking bum."
Barrett said, "I brought you here. That's all I agreed
to do. I didn't agree – what's the idea?"
I ignored him and continued on around the head of the divan
to where a red-enameled phone was resting on a long narrow table. He scowled at
me while I dialed a number. Belinda commanded him, "Tackle him,
Donnydarling. Knock him down and walk on him. Don't let him use my phone. Don't
let him use anything –"
A voice sounded in my ear: "This is Nero Wolfe."
I said, "Hello, Police Headquarters? Give me Inspector
Cramer of the homicide squad."
Wolfe's voice said, "Indeed. Go ahead."
Barrett leaned across the divan at me and started to
expostulate. I waved a hand at him to subside, and talked again:
"Hello, Homicide Division? I want to talk to Inspector
Cramer. Oh, he has. Who is this talking? Sergeant Finkle? I guess you'll do.
This is Archie Goodwin of Nero Wolfe's office. I want to report a development
in the Ludlow mur –"
Barrett's hand shot out and pushed the cradle down and held
it.
"Don't be a sap," I told him politely. "Even
if I don't want to start a roughhouse –"
"What are you going to tell him?"
"Where he can find a woman who says she saw Miss Tormic
put something in my pocket and is now saying she didn't say it."
"You're a goddam fool. You're supposed to be protecting
Miss Tormic."
"I know I am. But in the long run the truth is the best
protection against –"
"Truth, hell. Do you realize they can trace that
call?"
I shrugged. "I presume so. If they do they'll ring
back. Then, if they don't get satisfaction, I presume they'll send somebody
here and it would be bad tactics not to let them in. And of course if they find
Zorka and me here –"
He had his jaw clamped. "You dirty treacherous –"
I shrugged Miss Reade said, "I am darned sick and tired
of hearing about that Tormic! As far as I'm concerned, Archie –"
"Be quiet!" Barrett told her savagely. "You
know damn well –" He bit it off and wheeled to Zorka. "You'll have to
go, and go quick! Get a move on!"
"But," she protested, "you told me –"
"I don't care what I told you! This double-crossing
–" He grabbed her shoulder and got her upright. He was pretty masterful in
a real emergency. "Where's your coat? Where's your shoes and stockings? To
hell with stockings. Shoes!"
He raced to the far end of the room and through a door. I
went in the opposite direction, to the foyer, and got my hat and coat and put
them on. Then I opened the closet door, thinking to help, but stood bewildered
at the array of furbearing animals hanging there. I thought what's the
difference, and reached for one, but felt my elbow seized from behind and heard
Belinda's voice:
"Hey, no you don't, that's my mink! Get out of the
way!"
She pushed past me, her open negligee doing practically
nothing to conceal distractions, and emerged with a mink coat that looked all
the same to me. I took it and trotted back in. Zorka, shod, was on her feet,
and Barrett was tying the girdle of the red gown. She swayed a little while we
got the coat on her and buttoned it up to her chin, but navigated well enough
when I hooked onto her arm and escorted her to the foyer. Miss Reade was
standing there holding the outer door open. As we passed through Barrett told
her, "I'll have to take them down. If the phone rings, don't answer it.
I'll be right back."
She stumbled on the stairs, but I had a good hold and we got
her into the elevator without mishap. Barrett pushed the button and we
descended. At the ground floor he preceded us along the corridor and opened the
street door.
"Do you want me to help –"
"No, thanks. If they trace that call, my advice –"
"Go to hell."
The door shut and I was alone on the sidewalk with my booty.
She was clinging to my arm and at intervals was saying something that sounded
like "Oops." I squeezed her hand reassuringly and started to convey
her gently in the direction of Grand Central, but had negotiated less than half
a block when a taxi appeared and I flagged it. Getting her in was more a matter
of strength than strategy. She was floppy on the cushion, and I held her
against me as we bounced along and around a corner towards Lexington Avenue.
She was now murmuring something like "Urpees."
The roadster was still there, like a faithful dog waiting
for its master. The taxi driver was sympathetic and helpful, and with his
assistance it was an easy matter to make the transfer. As we were boosting her
in she started to kick, but with a firm tone and a firm hand I got her onto the
seat and the door closed. The driver nodded his thanks for the moderate tip I
gave him and offered advice: "Taking her out, if she gets nasty, work from
behind. That way she can't reach your face and she's not so apt to bite."
"Okay. Much obliged."
I climbed in and started the engine and rolled. As I rounded
the corner to head downtown she said, "Gribblezook." I replied, "Hvala
Bogu." Apparently it was satisfactory, for she relaxed into the corner
and shut up. A couple of times en route I opened my mouth to inform her where
we were bound for and what she had to look forward to, but a glance at her made
me decide I'd be wasting my breath. The traffic was at home in bed where it
belonged, and I made good time down to 35th and then cross-town.
I stopped at the curb in front of the house, grabbed her
shoulder and straightened her up, and called her name. No response and her eyes
were shut. I shook her. I turned her loose and she flopped in the corner as
runny as mush. I pinched her thigh, a good one, and she didn't flinch. I pulled
her up straight and shook her again, and her head bounced onto my shoulder and
stayed there, and then rolled off. "Hell," I muttered, "it's
only ten yards to a touchdown," and I climbed out, pulled her across to my
side, got my shoulder under her, and hoisted her up. She was as dead as a bag
of oats. I distributed her weight better, something around 120, and crossed the
sidewalk, staggered up the steps, and rang the bell two shorts and a long. In a
minute the door opened as far as the chain and Fritz's voice came through:
"Archie?"
"Yeah. Open up."
The door swung open and I entered. After one glance at my
cargo Fritz staggered back a step.
"Grand Dieu! Is she dead?"
"Naw, she's not even sick. Lock the door."
The door to the office was standing open and I went through
sidewise to keep from knocking her head against the jamb. Wolfe was there
reading a book. He looked up and saw what I had, made a face, dog-eared a page and
closed the book, and sat and shook his head. A glance at the couch showed me
that it was still covered with the maps which he had spread all over it three
days previously with instructions that they were not to be touched, so I put
her down on the floor, in the middle of the rug, straightened my back to remove
a kink, pointed an unwavering finger at her, and said casually: "Madame
Zorka."
He folded his arms. "What's the matter with her?"
"Nothing."
"Did you hit her?"
"No."
"Don't be an ass. You don't carry women around and lay
them on the floor when there's nothing wrong with them. Is she
unconscious?"
"I don't think so. Her contention is that she is in a
drunken stupor, but I think she's playing charades. I found her in a penthouse
love nest on Madison Avenue. Barrett furnishes the nest and Belinda Reade the
love. You know? Belinda was there and Zorka was her guest. Zorka denied that
she had made any phone call to this office and she refused to leave. I made a
phone call to work up pressure and she came. She is almost certainly listening
carefully to what we are saying. She'll smother in here with that fur coat
buttoned up."
I stooped and unfastened the coat and flung it open. Wolfe
got to his feet, walked around the desk, and stood frowning down at her.
"She has no stockings on."
"Right."
"What's that thing she wearing? A dress?"
"Oh, heavens, no. I think it's a drinking gown."
"And you think she's shamming?"
"I do."
"Well." He turned and called, "Fritz!"
Fritz was right there. Wolfe told him, "Bring a dozen ice cubes."
I knelt down beside the patient and felt her pulse, and then
pried open her eyelid and took a look at the iris, and announced that it would
be perfectly safe to proceed with the experiment. Wolfe, looking down at me,
nodded gravely. Fritz appeared with the dish of ice cubes and Wolfe told him to
give them to me. I took a cube and laid it on her cheek and it slid off. I
picked it up and carefully placed it at the base of her neck, in the little
depression where the shoulder began, and it stayed nicely. Then I gently but
firmly lifted her arm, held it up with my left hand, and with my right hand got
another cube and as modestly as possible worked it under the edge of the red
robe until it was snug in her arm pit; and let the arm down.
The reaction was so sudden and violent it startled me into
spilling the rest of the cubes all over the rug, and her knees in my belly
nearly spilled me too. She didn't stop at sitting up, but scrambled to her
feet, with Wolfe retreating to make room for her. She shook herself, more of a
spasm than a shake, and the ice cube emerged from under the hem of the gown to
the floor. She goggled around at us, perceived a chair, and sank into it.
"What – what –" she stammered.
"Wrong line," I told her. "Say, 'Where am
I?'"
She groaned and pressed both palms against her forehead.
Wolfe, having waited until Fritz had retrieved all the cubes, moved back to his
chair and lowered his fundament. He regarded her sourly for a full minute of
silence and then spoke to me.
"And what," he demanded resentfully, "would
you suggest that we do with her?"
"Search me. It was you that wanted her."
"I don't want her like that."
"Send her home." I added emphatically, "In a
taxi."
"We can't send her home. The police are looking for
her, and one will be posted at her door, and I want to talk to her first."
"Go ahead and talk to her."
"I want to ask her some questions. Is she capable of
coherence?"
"Capable, yes. But I doubt if she'll cohere, with ice
or without. Go on and try it."
He looked at her. "Madame Zorka, I am Nero Wolfe. I
would like to discuss something with you. When were you last in
Yugoslavia?"
With her face covered with her hands, she shook her head,
moaned, and muttered something not even as intelligible as gribblezook.
"But, madame," Wolfe said patiently. "I'm
sorry you don't feel well, but that is a very simple question." Then he
spouted some lingo at her, a couple of sentences, that may have been words but
not to me. She didn't even shake her head.
"Don't you understand Serbo-Croat?" he demanded.
"No," she muttered. "Zat I do not
onderstand."
He kept at it for a solid hour. When he wanted to be, he
could be as patient as he was big, and apparently on that occasion he wanted to
be. I took it all down in my notebook, and I never filled as many pages with
less dependable information. There was no telling, when he got through, whether
she had ever been in Yugoslavia, how and when she had acquired the name Zorka,
or whether she had actually ever been born or not. It seemed to be tentatively
established that she had once resided in a hotel in Paris, at least for one
night, that her couturiere enterprise had been installed within the year on the
street floor of the Churchill with the help of outside capital, that her native
tongue was not Serbo-Croat, that she was not on intimate terms with Neya Tormic
or Carla Lovchen, that she had known Percy Ludlow only slightly, and that she
had taken up fencing to keep her weight down and was not an expert. Wolfe did
succeed in extorting an admission that she had made the phone call to our
office, but it was an empty triumph; she couldn't remember what she had said!
She just simply couldn't remember.
At twenty minutes past four Wolfe arose from his chair with
a sigh and said to me: "Put her to bed in the south room, above mine, and
lock the door."
She rose too, steadying herself with her hand on the edge of
his desk, and declared, "I want to go home."
"The police are there laying for you. As I told you, I
have informed them of your phone call. They'll take you to headquarters and be
much more insistent than I have been. Well?"
"All right." She groaned.
"Good night, madame. Good night, Archie." He
stalked out.
It was two flights to the floor above his, and I was in no
mood to elevate her that far by brute force, so I trotted up and got the
elevator after he had ascended, and took it down and got her. Fritz, half
asleep and half displeased, went along to make sure that the bed was habitable
and that towels and accessories were at hand; and for the honor of the house he
brought with him the vase of cattleyas from Wolfe's desk. She may have had no
nightie or slippers or toothbrush, but by golly she had orchids. Fritz turned
the bed down and, me steering her, she got seated on the edge of it.
Fritz said, "She's forlorn."
"Yep." I asked her, "Do you want me to help
you off with your coat or anything?"
She shook her head.
"Shall I open the window?"
Another shake.
We left her there. From the outside I locked the door and
put the key in my pocket. It was ten to five, and a dingy November dawn was
feebly whimpering "Let there be light," at my windows when I finally
hit the mattress.
At eight o'clock in the morning, bathed and dressed but
bleary-eyed and grouchy, I took a pot of coffee up to her. When my third and
loudest knock got no response, I used the key and went in. She wasn't there.
The bed was just as Fritz had turned it down. The window on the left, the one
that opened onto the fire escape, was standing wide-open.
I descended a flight to Wolfe's
room, tapped on the door, and entered. He was in bed, propped up against three
pillows, just ready to attack the provender on the breakfast table which
straddled his mountainous ridge under the black silk coverlet. There was orange
juice, eggs an beurre noir, two slices of broiled Georgia ham, hashed
brown potatoes, hot blueberry muffins, and a pot of steaming cocoa.
He snapped at me, "I haven't eaten!"
"Neither have I," I said bitterly. "I'm in no
better humor than you are, so let's call it a tie. I just went up to take our
guest some coffee –"
"How is she?"
"I don't know."
"Is she asleep?"
"I don't know."
"What the devil –"
"I was starting to tell you and you interrupted me.
Please don't interrupt. She's gone. She didn't even lie down. She went by the
window and the fire escape, and presumably found her way to 34th Street by the
passage we use sometimes. Since she descended the fire escape, she went right
past that window" – I pointed – "facing you, and it must have been
daylight."
"I was asleep."
"So it seems. I thought maybe with a woman in the
house, and possibly a murderess, you might have been on the qui vive –"
"Shut up."
He took some of the orange juice, frowned at me half a
minute, and took some more.
"Phone Mr. Cramer. Give him everything."
"Including my trip to the love nest?"
He grimaced. "Don't use terms like that when my
stomach's empty. Including everything about Madame Zorka, Mr. Barrett, and Miss
Reade, except the subject of my threat to Mr. Barrett."
"Bosnian forests."
"All of that to be deleted. If he wants a transcript of
our talk with Madame Zorka, furnish it; he's welcome to it. He has resources
for investigating those people and for finding Madame Zorka. If he wants to see
me, eleven o'clock."
"Your daughter's coming at eleven."
"Then noon for Mr. Cramer if he wants it." He
swallowed more orange juice. "Phone Seven Seas Radio and ask if they have
anything for me. If they haven't, tell them to rush it to me when it comes.
Make an appointment for me to talk with Mr. Hitchcock in London at nine
o'clock."
"Do you want a record –"
"No. Who is downstairs?"
"No one has come yet. They ought to be here any
minute."
"When Saul comes, put the envelope in the safe. I'll
see them as soon as I'm through talking to Mr.
Hitchcock. Send Saul up first, then Fred, then Orrie. Have
you had your breakfast?"
"You know damn well I haven't."
"Good heavens. Get it."
I went down to the kitchen and did that, after first calling
Seven Seas Radio and arranging for a wire to London at nine. With my breakfast
I consumed portions of the Times, specializing on the report of the
Ludlow murder. They had my name spelled wrong, and they were pretty stale for a
paper that had gone to press at midnight, for they said that the police were
looking for me. As Cramer had predicted, they had the low-down on Ludlow's
being an agent of the British government, but there wasn't any hint of
Montenegro or Bosnian forests or Balkan princesses. On an inside page there was
a spread of pictures and a two-column piece about the murder in Paris that the col
de mort had figured in some years before.
When Saul and Fred and Orrie came I shooed them into the
front room to wait, since I had jobs to do. After my second cup of coffee and
what preceded it, I felt better and was almost cheerful by the time I got
Inspector Cramer on the wire to relate the sad story. He hadn't had much more
sleep than me, and was naturally disgruntled when he learned that we had had
Zorka in our clutches for a couple of hours without bothering him about it, and
he got rude and vulgar at the news that she had left before breakfast, but I
applied the salve by reminding him how many presents he was getting absolutely
gratis. He had no news to speak of himself, or if he had he wasn't handing it
out, but he said he would drop in around noon if he could make it, and in the
meantime he would like me to type a report, not only of our session with Zorka,
but also of the one with Barrett and of my visit on Madison Avenue. That was
sweet of him. I felt a lot like a hard morning at the alphabet piano, no I
didn't.
As it turned out, I didn't get much typing done. The talk
with Hitchcock in London took place at nine o'clock as scheduled, and of course
I didn't listen in, since Wolfe had said no record. Then I sent Saul up to meet
Wolfe in the plant rooms, having first procured the envelope and stowed it away
in the safe. The instructions for Saul must have been complicated, for fifteen
minutes passed before he came back down and calmly requested fifty bucks
expense money. I whistled and asked who he was going to bribe and he said the
District Attorney. Wolfe rang me on the house phone and said to keep Fred in
storage for the present and to send Orrie Cather up. Orrie's schedule must have
been a simple one, for he returned in no time at all, marched over to me and
said:
"Give me about three thousand dollars in threes."
"With pleasure. I'm busy. How much in cold cash?"
"Nothing, my dear fellow."
"Nothing?"
"Right. And please don't disturb me. I shall be
spending the day on research at the public library. Hold yourself in readiness
–"
He dodged the notebook I threw, and danced out.
I put a sheet in the typewriter and started, without any
enthusiasm, on the report for Cramer, but had only filled a third of a page
when it occurred to me that it would be fun to locate Zorka without moving from
my desk. I pulled the phone over and dialed a number. The ringing signal was in
my ear a long while before there was a voice. It sounded disconsolate.
"Hullohullohullo!"
I made mine vigorous but musical. "Hello,
Belinda?"
"Yes. Who is this?"
"Guess."
"I'm in no condition to guess."
"It's Archie. Archie the good-looking bum. I want to
warn –"
"How did you get this number? It's private and it's not
listed."
"I know, but I can read, can't I? I saw it on your
phone when I used it. I want to say three things. First, that I think you're
very very beautiful and if you ever ask me to come and read aloud to you I
will. Second, I forgot to thank you for the drinks. Third, I want to warn you
about Zorka. About a thousand cops are looking for her, and if they come and
find her there it will get you in a lot of trouble, and I'd be glad to –"
"What are you talking about? How are they going to find
her here when you took her away?"
"But she went back there."
"She did not. Where is she?"
"She started for your place about five o'clock."
"Well, she didn't get here."
"That's funny. What do you suppose happened to
her?"
"I have no idea."
A click in my ear ended it. So much for that. It sounded
very much as if Zorka had not returned to Madison Avenue. I wrote three more
lines of the report and the doorbell rang and I went up to the front and opened
up.
It was Rudolph Faber.
I admit it was Wolfe's house and I was employed there, and
courtesy is courtesy, but he hung up his coat himself. That was the effect that
guy had on me. I let him precede me into the office because I didn't want him
behind me, and he required no invitation to take a chair. I had explained in
the hall that Mr. Wolfe was never available in the morning until eleven
o'clock, but I seated myself at my desk and rang up the plant rooms, and in a
moment Wolfe answered.
I told him, "Mr. Rudolph Faber is here."
"Indeed. What does he want?"
"To see you. He says he'll wait."
"I doubt if I can see him before lunch."
"I told him so."
"Well. Let's see." A pause. "Come up here.
Better still, call on Mr. Green. Before leaving, give him a good book to read,
and see what happens."
"A really good book?"
"The best you can find."
I hung up and swiveled to face the caller. "Mr. Wolfe
needs me upstairs, and he suggested that I should give you a book to amuse
yourself with while I'm gone."
I went to the shelves and got down United Yugoslavia and
returned and handed it to him. "I think you'll find it very interesting,
especially –"
He stood up and threw the book on the floor and started for
the exit.
I trotted around and got between him and the door, faced
him, and said urgently, "Pick it up!" I knew at the time that it was
childish, but in the first place the impulse to make some kind of alteration on
the supercilious look of his face was absolutely irresistible, and in the
second place I had been permanently impressed by what I had been reading in the
papers about certain things being done by certain people in certain parts of
the world. I did give him a second chance by telling him again to pick it up,
but he kept right on coming, apparently expecting me to melt into a grease
spot. I said calmly, "Look out, here it is," and put it there. I
didn't aim for the chin because there wasn't any and I didn't want to pay a
hospital bill. Instead, I took his left eye with a right hook and most of me
behind it.
The door connecting with the front room opened a crack and
Fred Durkin stuck his head in.
"Hey, need any help?"
"Come on in. What do you think?"
He walked over and stood looking down at Faber. "I'll
be darned. How many times did you hit him?"
"Once."
"I'll be darned. And you with a name like Goodwin.
Sometimes I'm inclined to think – was your mother ever in Ireland?"
"Go suck an orange. Stand back and give him room."
Faber got up by degrees. First on his hands, then on his
hands and knees, and then slow but sure on up. He turned slowly, and looked at
me, and I looked away on account of the expression in his eyes. It embarrassed
me so much it damn near scared me, to see such an expression in the eyes of a
man who had merely been knocked down. Naturally, it had been my intention to
request him to pick the book up when he got upright again, but I didn't do it.
When he got under headway towards the door I stepped aside and let him go, and
asked Fred to go to the hall and let him out. I picked up the book and put it
away and sat down and rubbed my knuckles and worked my fingers open and shut a
few times, and then phoned Wolfe a communiquй. All he did was grunt.
I worked my fingers limber enough so I could resume at the
typewriter, but that report was hoeing a hard row. In addition to my
deep-seated reluctance to spoiling white paper just to furnish a cop with
reading matter, there were constant interruptions. A phone call from Miltan the
йpйe champion. All he wanted was information and I had none to give him. One
from a guy in town from St. Louis who wanted to discuss orchids with Wolfe, and
an appointment was made for next day. One from Orrie Cather for Wolfe and, a
little later, one from Saul Panzer, both of which I was invited to keep out of.
Towards eleven o'clock there was a phone call from the
Emperor of Japan. At least it might as well have been. First a woman asked for
Mr. Wolfe, and I asked who was it and she said Mr. Barrett and I said put him
on and she said hold the wire. I waited a while. Then a man said he wanted Mr.
Wolfe, and I said is this Mr. Barrett, and he said authoritatively, no, it
isn't, put Mr. Wolfe on, please, and I asked who it was that wanted to talk to
Mr. Wolfe, and he said Mr. Barrett, and I said put him on and he said hold the
wire. That kind of a shenanigan. There was more to it than that, but after a
terrific and exhausting struggle I finally heard something definite, in a
leisurely cultivated male voice:
"This is Barrett. Mr. Wolfe?"
"Donald Barrett?"
"No, no, John P. Barrett."
"Oh, Donald's father. Of Barrett & De Russy?"
"That's right. Mr. Wolfe, could you –"
"Hold it. This is Archie Goodwin, Mr. Wolfe's
confidential assistant."
"I thought I had Wolfe."
"Nope. I wore 'em out. Mr. Wolfe will be engaged until
eleven o'clock. I'll take any message."
"Well." Hesitation. "That will do, I suppose.
I would like to have Mr. Wolfe call at my office as soon after eleven as
possible."
"No, sir. I'm sorry. He never makes calls."
"But this is important. In fact, urgent. It will be
well worth his while –"
"No, sir. There's no use prolonging it. Mr. Wolfe
transacts business only at his office. He wouldn't go across the street to
receive the keys to the Bank of England."
"That's ridiculous!"
"Yes, sir. I've always said so. But there's no use
discussing it, except as an interesting case of cussedness."
For ten seconds I heard nothing. Then, "Where is your
office?"
"506 West 35th Street."
"Mr. Wolfe is there throughout the day?"
"And night. Office and home."
"Well … I'll see. Thank you."
Wolfe came down from the plant rooms a few minutes later,
and after he had run through the mail, tested his pen, rung for beer, and
glanced at the three pages of the report I had managed to finish, I told him
about it. He listened impressively and thanked me with a disinterested nod.
Thinking a little prodding was in order, I observed that he was in the case
anyway, on account of family obligations, spending money right and left, and
that it was therefore short-sighted and unintelligent not to permit Miss Tormic
to have a co-client, when the co-client was of the nature of John P. Barrett,
obviously anxious to join in the fun and ready to ante. I told him about the
hundred bucks of Barrett dough which had already passed through our hands and
said what a pity it would be to stop there, but before I could really get
worked up about it I was interrupted by the arrival of the client herself.
Fritz announced Miss Neya Tormic and escorted her in.
She greeted Wolfe in a hurry and me not at all, and without
taking time to sit down demanded of him: "The paper? Have you got the
paper?"
She looked drawn and she acted jerky.
Wolfe said, "Yes, it's here. Please sit down, won't
you?"
"I … the paper!"
"Give it to her, Archie."
I went to the safe and got it. It was still in the envelope
addressed to Saul Panzer. I removed it, tossed the envelope into the
wastebasket, and handed the paper to her. She unfolded it and inspected it.
Wolfe said, extending his hand, "Let me see it,
please."
That didn't appeal to her. She made no move to comply. He
frowned at her and repeated his request in a crisper tone, and she handed it
over but kept her eyes glued to it. He gave it a glance, folded it up, and
asked her:
"Where is Miss Lovchen?"
"I suppose she's at the studio. She said she was going
there."
"Surely there'll be no fencing lessons there
today."
"I don't know. That's what she said."
"You saw her this morning?"
"Of course. We live together in a little flat on 38th
Street." She put her hand out. "Give me –"
"Wait a minute. I don't know why I assumed that Miss Lovchen
would accompany you here this morning – it was stupid of me to do so, but I
did. Anyway, it was she who left this paper here, and I'd rather return it to
her. If she –"
"I'll take it to her."
"No, I think not. Here, Archie. Go along with Miss
Tormic to Miltan's and deliver this to Miss Lovchen. I like it better that way
–"
"That's absurd!" the client protested.
"What's the difference whether it's me or Carla?"
"None, perhaps. But this suits me better. It's
neater." He handed the thing to me and then regarded her gloomily. "I
hope you know what you're doing. I hope you have some idea of what's going on.
I haven't. Mr. Faber has come here twice for the purpose of getting hold of
that paper."
"Oh." She compressed her lips. "He has?"
"Yes. The second time was only a little more than an
hour ago, and Mr. Goodwin lost his temper and hit him in the eye. So … I
presume you girls realize that possession of that document –"
"We realize it."
"Very well. Do you still expect to complete your … errand
… today?"
"Yes."
"When and where."
She shook her head.
He shrugged. "Did you keep your appointment with Mr.
Cramer this morning?"
"Yes, but not with Mr. Cramer. A man came and took me
down there, and two men talked with me. That's where I came from, here."
"You told about finding those things in your pocket and
so on."
"Yes."
"Did they ask about your political mission – anything
of that sort?"
"Why, no, they don't know anything about that."
"Were you followed when you left there?"
"I –" She bit it off. In a moment she said,
"I don't think so." Her head jerked at me and back at him. "If
you're going to insist – I haven't much time. I must see Carla anyway, but if
he's going –"
Wolfe nodded. "All right. Pfui. Archie, give that paper
to Miss Lovchen in the presence of Miss Tormic."
I suggested, "Fred's in the front room –"
"No. You do it."
"Cramer's due in half an hour."
"I know. Hurry back."
I ushered her out. The roadster was still at the curb in
front where I had left it. We climbed in and I warmed up the engine a minute,
and rolled. She was completely don't-touch-me. Whatever her mind was on, it
certainly wasn't on me, and during the short ride to 48th Street I accepted
that as the status quo.
Across the street from Miltan's a little group was collected
on the sidewalk, and in front of the entrance a flatfoot was pacing a short
beat. He gave us an eye as we went in, but made no attempt to interfere. Inside
was no sign of life in the hall or reception room, but a murmur came from the
rear and we went back there to the large office. Jeanne Miltan was in a chair
at a desk, with two squad dicks, each with a notebook, seated facing her. Her
husband, looking haggard and hopeless, was pacing the floor, shaking his head
at himself. As we entered one of the dicks looked up and barked:
"What do you want?"
I waved a friendly hand. "Okay, private business."
Neya intercepted Miltan and asked, "Is Miss Lovchen
upstairs?"
He groaned. "No one is upstairs. We are deserted. We
are ruined. Mr. Goodwin, can you tell me –"
"I'm sorry, I can't tell you a darned thing. Has Miss
Lovchen been here this morning?"
"She came and stayed a while, but she left."
"How long ago?"
"Oh, my God, I don't know – half an hour." He
clapped a hand to his head and stared at Neya. "She said to tell you
something if you came –"
Jeanne Miltan's voice sounded: "She went home, Miss
Tormic."
"That's it," Miltan agreed. "She said to tell
you she went home. That was all. She went home."
"What do you want with her?" a dick demanded.
"Sell her a chance on a turkey raffle. Come on, Miss
Tormic."
We went back out to the sidewalk. Halting there, I asked
her, "You said 38th Street? East or west?"
She smiled at me. "It's silly for you to go. It's so
silly. Why don't you just give it to me?"
"I'd love to," I assured her. I didn't see any
sense in antagonizing her if she was my future wife. "I really
would." We were moving along to the roadster. "But here's my car and
I have to go downtown anyway. Besides, if I don't follow instructions I'll get
fired. What's the address?"
"404 East 38th."
"Okay, that'll only take – excuse me a minute." I
had caught a glimpse of something comical. "Climb in," I told her,
"I'll be right back."
I left her and went down the sidewalk to where a taxi had
parked twenty feet behind the roadster. My glimpse had been of the passenger
inside ducking out of our sight. As I lifted a foot to the running board the
driver said:
"Busy."
"Yeah, so I see." I stretched my neck to get a
better view of Fred Durkin huddled on the seat. So Wolfe was putting a tail on
his own client. "I just wanted to save you some trouble. 404 East 38th
Street."
I returned to the roadster and got in and started off,
telling Neya that I had merely exchanged the time of day with a Russian nobleman
friend of mine who was driving a taxicab for his health. She said nothing.
Apparently she was concentrating again on Balkan history, or whatever kind it
was she was making. I retaliated by concentrating on my driving.
There was space for me directly in front of 404. It was an
old house, one of a row, that had been done over into inexpensive flats by
blocking off the stairs and sticking in some partitions. Eight steps up to the
stoop, then a vestibule with mailboxes and bell buttons, then the door into the
narrow hall. It wasn't even necessary for Neya to use her key on the door,
because it had stopped an inch short of closing and all I had to do was push it
open. I let her go ahead. She led me up two flights of stairs with just enough
light to keep you from groping, went to a door towards the front, and opened
her bag and started fishing for a key. Then she thought better of that and
pushed the button, and I could hear a bell ringing inside. But nothing else was
heard, though after an interval she rang the bell again, and then again.
She muttered, "He said she was coming home."
"So he did. Got a key?"
She opened her bag again, and this time produced the key.
She used it herself, pushed the door open, went in four paces with me on her
heels, and stopped in her tracks, jerking her head up and freezing there. Over
her shoulder I could see what she saw: the body of a man sprawled on the floor
in a very unlikely attitude; and the face, which was the one I had undertaken
to alter with my fist two hours previously.
Before I could stop her she jerked her head up higher and
yowled into space:
"Carla!"
I said resentfully, "Will
you kindly close your trap?"
She didn't move. I got in front of her and took a look at
her face. She didn't seem to be prepared for more clamor, so I went and
squatted for a quick survey of the corpus. A quick one was enough. I glanced up
at her again and saw that she was breathing through her nose. I rocked on my
heels for half a minute, gazing at the chinless wonder and using my brain up to
capacity. Then I stood up and said:
"The first and worse thing seems to be that I've got
that goddam paper in my pocket."
She met my eye and said with her lips barely moving,
"Give it to me."
"Sure. That'd be swell."
I walked around a table to get at one of the windows, which
fronted on 38th Street, and opened it and poked my head out, and saw what I
hoped to see. I pulled my head in and asked her, "How's your nerve?"
"My nerve's all right."
"Then come over here."
She came, nice and steady, and I told her to look out the
window with me.
"See that gray and white taxicab at the curb in the
middle of the block?"
"Yes."
"Go down there and you'll find a man inside. Ask him if
his name is Fred Durkin and he'll say it is. Tell him I want him up here quick,
but no more than that because the driver will hear you. Come back up with him
and use your keys. I'll be watching from the window, and if you get an impulse
to scoot off –"
"I won't."
"Okay. Step on it. You're a good brave girl."
She went. In a few seconds, from my post at the window, I
saw her descend the stoop, trot to the taxi, open the door and speak to its
inhabitant, and come back with Fred. Not sure of what a Montenegrin female
might do under stress, I stayed at the window until they both entered the room.
Fred stopped short at sight of the casualty on the floor.
"I'll be damned," he said, and looked at me.
"No," I said, "not guilty this time. Nobody
will ever sock him again." I pulled the paper from my pocket. "Here's
something important. I discovered this corpse and I can't leave it, and after
certain events that happened yesterday they're apt to frisk me to the skin when
they come. Take this – hey, you little devil!"
Neya had lunged like a champion with an йpйe, grabbed the
paper from my fingers and sprung back. She stood there clutching it.
"Jesus," I said, "you're like a streak of
lightning! But you're dumb. You've got to stay here too and I'll see that you
do. When the cops come they'll go through this place, including us, extra
special for today considering yesterday. They would love to have that paper and
they'll have it. Hand it to Fred. Well?"
Her breast heaved.
"Don't be dumb, damn it! The only chance of getting it
out of here is for him to take it! Hand it over!"
Fred stuck out a hand. "Gimme, lady."
"What will he do with it?"
"Take care of it." She didn't move. I stepped over
and yanked it out of her fingers and passed it to Fred. "Go down and
dismiss your taxi," I told him, "and take the roadster and go to the
office. If Wolfe's alone, give him that paper. If he isn't, go to the kitchen
and have Fritz bring Wolfe to the kitchen and give him the paper there."
"Do I tell him –"
"I'll phone him. If and when you're questioned, tell
them just what happened, leaving out the paper. I'm sending you to the office
because I know I'll be held up here God knows how long, and with me absent
Wolfe will need you. Okay?"
"Okay." He turned to go.
"Hold it. Stay there by the door a minute." I
began darting around. I took a look behind a sofa and even under it, and opened
a closet door for a glance inside, and had my hand on the knob of another door
leading to the rear of the flat when Fred growled:
"Hey, what about prints?"
"To hell with prints. I've got a right to look for a murderer,
haven't I?" I went on through, and kept moving, bothering only with places
big enough to hide a man or woman. It didn't take long, since there was only a
bath, a kitchenette, and two small bedrooms. I trotted back to the front and
told Fred, "All right, one two three go," and he beat it.
I looked at Neya. "You're starting to tremble. You'd
better sit down."
She shook her head. "I'm all right. But I … I … Carla.
Where is she?"
"Search me." I had gone around the table to where
the phone was and lifted it from its cradle.
"But wait – please! Why can't we … just leave? Just go
and find her?"
"Sure. Splendid." I started dialing. "You
certainly get charming ideas. Like the one yesterday, stuffing that junk in my
pocket. Just lock up and go, huh? With those babies at Miltan's knowing we
started for here and Fred's taxi driver –"
The phone told me, "This is Nero Wolfe."
I kept my voice down. "Hullo, boss. Let's be
discreet."
"Oh, yes."
"Cramer there?"
"Yes."
"Well, leave it open so that if you want to you can say
it was the Salvation Army. We went to Miltan's and Carla had been there but
left for home. We came on here, 404 East 38th. Got the address?"
"Yes."
"Old house, walk-up, two flights. Neya let us in with
her key. Rudolph Faber was lying on the floor dead. Hole through his coat, left
breast. Shirt soaked with blood inside. No weapon. Carla not around on quick
inspection. I'm phoning from right here, this room, and Neya is standing here
–"
"One moment. I was empowered with reservation –"
"That's all right. Fred was tailing us and Neya went
down for him and I gave it to him and he's on his way with it now. He can be
traced here easy and so can we. The place has been frisked by someone in a
hurry – drawers standing open, things scattered on the floor and so on. The
number of this phone is Hammond 3-4505. Do you want me to keep on
talking?"
"No."
"Do you want to ring off and let your genius work and
I'll call again in three minutes?"
"No. You had better stay there, both of you. Mr. Cramer
is here and I'll tell him about it. Hold the wire."
I heard him telling Cramer, and I heard noises which were
presumably the inspector turning somersaults. Then a voice in my ear not
Wolfe's.
"Goodwin!" Cramer yapped.
"Yes, sir, speaking."
"You stay there, hear me?"
"Yes, sir."
That was all, except the click. I hung up and walked to
Neya, took her elbow and steered her to a chair, and put her in it.
"They'll be here in five minutes. Or less. This time
Inspector Cramer will get here first. And this time you're connected up. Here
in your own front room. What are you going to tell him?"
Her eyes met mine. They didn't waver, but she was having
trouble with her chin. She shook her head. "What can I tell him?"
"I don't know. What can you?"
"Nothing."
"Not enough. Under the circumstances. Did your friend
Carla do it?"
"I don't know."
"Did you?"
"You know I didn't!"
"I do not. Is there a lot of stuff around here about
Bosnian forests and Barrett & De Russy and secret codes –"
"No, nothing. I am very careful."
"Yeah, this looks like it. All I'm saying, if you try
telling Cramer that you know nothing about Faber and you can't imagine why in
the world he came here to get killed, you'll find yourself out on a limb. If
you tell the truth, that won't be it, and if you decide on lies, you'll have to
do a lot better than that. One little fact is that whoever killed Faber
deprived you of your alibi for the murder of Ludlow. I'm not trying to scare
you, I'm only trying to make you grab hold –"
The phone rang and I went and got it.
"This is Hammond 3-45 –"
"Archie. Mr. Cramer will be there shortly."
"Goody!"
"How is Miss Tormic?"
"She's all right. She says her mind's a blank?"
"Shock?"
"No, just ignorance."
"When she is questioned about anything except her
movements since ten o'clock this morning – which is the time Mr. Faber left
this house alive – she will decline to reply except in the presence of her
attorney. That is amply justified in the circumstances."
"I'll tell her that."
"Do so. I'll arrange for Mr. Parker to represent her.
What does she say about Miss Lovchen?"
"More ignorance. The first thing she did when she
entered the room and looked at the floor was let out a yell for Carla."
"I see. That's too bad. By the way, where did you put
those germination records on the oncidium hybrids? I want to check them
over."
"Christ almighty," I said bitterly. "Here's your
daughter sizzling on a spot, and here am I with blood on my fingers off of
Faber's shirt, and you prate – why don't you try doing a little work for a
change –"
"I can't work with nothing to work on. Get away as soon
as you can. Where did you put those records?"
I told him. He thanked me and rang off. I looked at Neya,
sitting there with her jaw clamped and her fingers twisted, and observed
grimly, "You certainly picked a lulu for an adopted daddy. Do you know
what he's doing? Checking up on orchid seeds he planted a year ago!
Incidentally, he says you are to answer any questions the cops ask about your
movements since ten o'clock this morning. All other questions, refuse to answer
until you see a lawyer. He's getting one."
"A lawyer for me?"
"Yes."
A police siren sounded through the window I had left open.
At five minutes past two Wolfe
sipped the last drop of his luncheon coffee, put down his cup, and made two
distinct and separate oral noises. The first was meant to express his pleasure
and satisfaction in the immediate past, the hour spent at table; the second was
a grunt of resigned dismay at the prospect of the immediate future, which was
embodied in the bulky figure of Inspector Cramer, planted in a chair in the
office. He had arrived on the stroke of two and was waiting.
Wolfe and I went in and sat down. The end of the unlighted
cigar in Cramer's mouth described a figure 8.
"I hate to hurry your meal," he said
sarcastically.
Wolfe eructed.
The inspector turned the sarcasm on me. "Have you had
any new ideas about the purpose of your going there with Miss Tormic?"
I shook my head. "No, sir. As I told you, we merely
went there to get Miss Lovchen."
"And what were you going to do with her?"
"We were going to bring her to see Mr. Wolfe. To go
over things."
"Had she suddenly developed paralysis of the
legs?"
"Please, Mr. Cramer," Wolfe murmured. "That's
childish and you know it is. Flopping your arms around is no way to discuss
anything. If Archie and Miss Tormic were engaged on a mysterious errand, you
don't suppose you're going to squeeze it out of him, do you?"
With his fingers entwined, Cramer rubbed his thumb tips
together, back and forth, with the cigar in his mouth aimed at the ceiling.
Finally he said, "I've been sitting here
thinking."
Wolfe nodded sympathetically. "It's a good room to
think in. The faint sounds from the street are just right."
Silence.
Cramer said, "I'm not a fool."
Wolfe nodded again. "We all feel like that
occasionally. The poison of conceit. It's all right if you keep an antidote
handy."
"Hell, I'm not conceited." The inspector removed
the cigar. "What I chiefly meant about not being a fool, I meant that I'm
sitting here because I doubt very much if I'll get a start on this case
anywhere except right here in this room."
"Well, as I say, it's a good room to think in."
"Yeah. I'm not talking about thinking. I'm talking
about you. This case is a hush-hush and I don't know why, and as sure as God
made little apples you do know why. I don't expect you to blurt it out, but
you've given me a hint before and you might do it again. I wouldn't be
surprised if you know right now who killed Ludlow and who killed Faber."
"You're wrong. I don't."
"Well, you know something about it that I don't know.
Take your client, for instance. Why is that girl your client? Can she pay the
kind of fee you charge? She cannot. Then who's going to pay you? You know that,
don't you? You're damn right you do. You go in for fancy tricks only when
someone makes it well worth your while. For example, that Durkin that works for
you that was there in the taxi. And Goodwin admits he called him up to that
room and then sent him away in his car. Your car. I'm betting the Lovchen girl
went with him."
"Nonsense. Fred came directly here alone."
"You say."
"Well, ask Fritz, who opened the door –"
"Nuts. What good does it do to ask questions of anybody
who works for you? But we'll find Lovchen, and we'll find Zorka too, don't
think we won't."
"You've found no trace of them?"
"Not yet. We will. We had a tail on Lovchen, but he
hasn't reported and we don't know where he is. Another thing, you had Zorka
right here in this house, on the grill –"
"She was drunk."
"She wasn't too drunk to climb down a fire escape.
According to you." Cramer brandished the cigar at him. "Do you
realize that this time I could actually slap a charge of obstructing justice on
you?"
"I doubt it. Why don't you try?"
"For a damn good reason. Because the commissioner and
the district attorney are both on the soft pedal."
Wolfe's brows went up. "They are?"
"Yes. Didn't I say it's a hush-hush? It's exactly the
kind of thing that makes my guts turn over. I'm a cop. I am paid a salary to go
and look at dead people and decide if they died as the result of a crime and,
if they did, find the criminal and fasten it on him so it will stick. That's
the job I'm paid to do. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred I get official
cooperation as required, but once in a while a bunch of politicians or
influential citizens will try to rope me off. I don't like being roped off by
anyone whatever." He stuck the cigar in his mouth and laid his heavy fists
on the chair arms. "I do not like it."
"And you are being roped off from this case?"
"I am. The British consul phoned the commissioner to
express his deep concern at the violent death of a British subject, and his
earnest hope and so forth. The commissioner saw him at eleven o'clock last
night, and the consul was communicating with London as soon as possible. This
morning I ask the commissioner for the dope, and he says the consul can furnish
no information regarding Ludlow's activities, but of course it is to be hoped
that justice will be done. Like it is to be hoped we'll have a mild winter.
Then, a little later, talking with the district attorney, I suggested that he
might phone the British embassy in Washington, and he vetoes it and says he
doubts if it would be fruitful to pursue an investigation along that line. I
damn near went ahead and phoned Washington myself!"
"Why didn't you?"
"Because I'm too old to look for another job. Besides,
it wouldn't have been fruitful. But what I did this morning, within five
minutes after I got there on 38th Street, I phoned right from that room to the
German consul general and asked him about Faber, and he had the brass to tell
me that he hadn't the faintest notion what Faber was doing in New York! After
telling me last evening, in connection with Ludlow, that he could vouch for
Faber absolutely! I phoned the German embassy in Washington then and there, and
got the same run-around. What the hell right have countries got to send guys to
other countries to do things they're ashamed to talk about? Even when the guys
get murdered?"
Wolfe shook his head.
Cramer glared at him a while in silence and then announced
abruptly, "I sent a cable to a place in Yugoslavia called Zagreb."
Wolfe murmured, "Indeed."
"Yes, indeed. That's the town those two girls came
from. It's the address on their passports. They say they came over here because
America is the land of opportunity. They were asked, in that case why didn't
they enter on the quota instead of visitors' visas. They said they wanted to
see what it was like first."
"Cautious." Wolfe grunted. "You cabled, of
course, to learn if they might be suspected of a grudge against the British
Empire. I doubt if you'll get much. If they're working for the Yugoslav government,
of course you won't. If for someone else – Zagreb is the Croatian capital, and
the authorities there certainly wouldn't help you any. May I ask why you picked
on those two girls especially?"
"I didn't. I picked on everybody. But it isn't
surprising if I pick on 'em now, is it? With one of 'em evaporated? And Faber
stabbed to death right in their flat? Is Tormic still your client?"
"She is."
"If she's innocent it's a mistake not to let her
talk."
"I don't think so."
"I do." Cramer discarded his cigar and leaned
back. "I'll tell you frankly, I don't think she did it. Chiefly for two
reasons, and one is that she's your client. I admit that's a reason. The other
is that Faber's death takes away her alibi for Ludlow. She wouldn't be that
dumb.
But. She left headquarters at a quarter past ten this
morning and she was tailed. She took a taxi. At Canal Street she suddenly
hopped out of the taxi and into the subway. It was so unexpected that the tail
lost her in the shuffle because a train was just pulling in and she made it and
he didn't. So what did she do between then and the time she got to your office,
ten after eleven?"
"What does she say?"
"She says she told the taxi driver to take her to your
place, but she suddenly decided that she would have time to go to Miltan's and
see Miss Lovchen about something if she took the subway, so she did. Then she
decided she wouldn't have time after all, so she got out at Grand Central and
phoned Miss Lovchen instead, and then took a taxi here."
"She phoned Miss Lovchen where? Miltan's?"
"Yes. And she did. Miltan answered the phone himself
and recognized her voice and called Miss Lovchen. About a quarter to
eleven."
"What does she say she phoned Miss Lovchen about?"
"She says it's none of my business."
Wolfe sighed. "Well, disprove it."
"Sure. I know. I said frankly, I don't think she did
it."
"Who do you think did? Miss Lovchen?"
"How the hell do I know?" Cramer sat up and made
fists again. "Haven't I made it plain that I don't know a damn thing? I
can't even put anyone in that room between ten o'clock, the time that Faber
left here on his feet, and the time Goodwin and Miss Tormic went there and
found him. We can't find anyone that saw anybody go in or out of the building.
We're still trying it, but you know that game."
He banged a fist and demanded, "And what if we do? What
if I had stood there on the sidewalk myself and saw her go in with Faber and
come out again without him? What good would that do me? When the question comes
up, what did she kill him for, or Ludlow either, what do I say then? Huh? Or
anybody else! It is customary, before you turn a murder case over to a jury and
ask them for a conviction, to give them some slight hint of what the motivation
was. They like it better that way. And where it stands now, I could give just
as good a motive for Goodwin here, and say he did it with his jackknife when he
went there with Miss Tormic, as I could for anybody else."
I protested, "I don't carry a jackknife. A
penknife."
"Maybe your field's too narrow," Wolfe suggested.
"Have you considered –"
"I haven't got any field. As far as I'm concerned, it's
wide open. Naturally, we're checking up on everyone that was at Miltan's last
evening. Young Gill was at his office. One out. Miltan and his wife were at
their place. Three out. That leaves six in, of that bunch. Driscoll went for a
walk at half past ten and got to his office at eleven thirty. Donald Barrett
says he was at his office, Barrett & De Russy, but it hasn't been confirmed
yet to make it tight. Lovchen and Tormic and Zorka. Two of those disappeared.
Belinda Reade left her apartment shortly after ten o'clock to go shopping and
hasn't been located."
"The weapon?"
"Hasn't been found. He was stabbed in the left breast
with a blade long enough to reach the heart, and it was withdrawn in a few
minutes, but not immediately, judging from the amount of bleeding. He was also
struck a severe blow, before he was stabbed, on the left eye. A very hard blow
with something blunt and hard and heavy. Very unlikely that he could have got it
falling, and anyway, if it had happened at the moment he was stabbed to death
it wouldn't look the way it does. It indicates that there was a struggle – what's
the idea?"
I had doubled up my right fist and displayed it in front of
his nose.
"Blunt and hard and heavy," I declared.
"Huh? What –"
"Yes, sir. It was me. He got obnoxious here in this
office and I plugged him. I tell it because you may dig up someone who saw him
soon after, and I don't want to be accused of withholding evidence."
Cramer's chin slowly sunk to his breastbone. It looked like
a slow motion of Jack Dempsey preparing to wade in. Then, also slowly, he put
the tip of a forefinger to his nose and rubbed up and down, gently and
rhythmically, meanwhile surveying me through narrowed lids. It was quite a
while before he said thoughtfully:
"You wouldn't stab a guy."
"No, sir," I agreed brightly, "it wouldn't be
in character –"
"Shut up. But what if you and Tormic went there and
found him there going through things. You got mad and socked him. Tormic got
mad and stuck a knife in him. You sent for Durkin and made him a gift of the
knife and he left with it. You phoned here and I was here."
"It sounds pretty plausible," I conceded,
"but you're confronted with the question of motive again. What was it that
infuriated Tormic to the point of croaking him? Another trouble is that Fred
Durkin was here in the office when I plugged him." I shook my head.
"That theory is full of holes. I'm in favor of crossing it off –"
The phone interrupted me. It was a call for Cramer. I gave
him room to take it at my desk. He talked for a full ten minutes, everything
from noncommittal grunts to elaborate detailed instructions, and when it was
finished returned to his chair.
He regarded me with a cold eye. "You know, son,"
he said finally, "you have one or two good qualities. In a way I even like
you. In another way I could stand and watch your hide peeling off and not shed
any tears. You have undoubtedly got the goddamnedest nerve of anybody I know
except maybe Nero Wolfe. Tormic is down at headquarters, with that lawyer you
got for her, refusing to answer questions. I've got half a notion to try that
old gag on her. I think I'll phone Rowcliff to tell her that you have admitted
that Faber was on his feet when you and she got there, and you knocked him
down."
"Go ahead," I urged him. "It will be
interesting to see how it works out. But as far as my nerve is concerned, I
never have had, do not now have, and never will have, enough nerve to risk one
teeny-weeny chance of sitting in the frying-chair."
"Yesterday afternoon you fled the scene of a murder
with the weapon used for the crime."
"Not knowingly. To begin with, I didn't fled, I merely
went. And I did not know that culdymore was in my pocket."
Cramer leaned back, sighed, and began rubbing his nose
again.
The door opened. Fritz entered, approached, and said:
"Mr. Cather, sir."
Wolfe's chin went up. "Show him in."
I could tell from the tone of Wolfe's voice that there was a
possibility that Orrie was bringing home a chunk of important bacon, but a
glance at Orrie's face told me that he didn't have it. Wolfe obviously reached
the same conclusion, for he said, more a statement than a question:
"No result."
Orrie stood with his overcoat on and his hat in his hand.
"No, sir."
Wolfe grimaced. "Did you find the – things I
suggested?"
"Yes, sir. More too. There were mentions – I saw the
name – in a lot of articles and sometimes in headlines, but that was all. Of
course I couldn't read –"
"That wouldn't help any. No pictures."
"No, sir. I went through every possible thing at the
library, and I tried the other places. The Times thought they would have
one, but they didn't. I'm on my way now to the consulate and I just stopped by
here instead of phoning –"
"Don't go to the consulate. I phoned there and it's
hopeless. Mr. Cramer and I are both out of humor with consulates. Have you been
to Second Avenue?"
"No, I was going there last."
"Try it. You might find it there. It is possible that
Mr. Cramer has arranged that anyone leaving this house shall be followed. If
so, shake him. I don't want the police in on this. Not yet."
Orrie grinned. "That will be a pleasure." He
tramped out.
Cramer said in a tone of disgust, "Horse
feathers."
"It wouldn't be the first time you've tried that
stratagem," Wolfe observed mildly. "Anyway, it's not as annoying as
your former attempts at bulldozing. Thank heaven, you seem to have given that
up. Are you through amusing yourself with Archie?"
"Amusing myself? Good God!"
"You must have been. You couldn't very well have been
serious. Will you have some beer?"
"No, thanks – yes I will too. I'm thirsty."
"Good." Wolfe pushed the button. "Did I
understand you to say that you were having Miss Lovchen followed?"
"Yes. A double tail. One of them phoned in at ten forty
that she had left the house at 38th Street and gone to Miltan's, and was in
there then, and we haven't heard from them since. Their instructions are to
report in every two hours if they can do so without danger of losing
contact."
"I see. It's very handy to have so many men."
"Yeah. It would be if more of them were worth a damn.
There are over a hundred of them on this case right now. Sifting out up at 38th
Street. Looking for the thing he was stabbed with. Getting backgrounds.
Tailing. Looking for Lovchen and Zorka. Checking alibis. I'm expecting any
minute to be told to pull a bunch of them off. Hush-hush." The inspector
set his jaw. "But until I get direct orders to the contrary, I'm going to
proceed on the theory that the people who pay my salary don't want any kind of
a murderer to get any kind of a break. That's why I'm sitting here chinning
with you. This is the one place where I might get a line on whatever it is that
the goddam consuls and ambassadors are so bashful about … much obliged."
He took the beer Wolfe had poured for him, gulped, licked
the foam from his lips, and gulped again.
He sat back holding the half-filled glass. "Let me ask
you something. If you had your pick of everybody, everybody in or near New
York, to be brought in here right now, for you to ask questions of about this
case, who would it be?"
"Thank heaven," Wolfe declared, "I can answer
that unequivocally. Madame Zorka."
The phone rang. It was for Cramer again and he took it at my
desk. It was a short conversation this time, and when he disconnected and went
back to his chair he had a satisfied grin on his mug.
"Well, well," he said. "I call that pretty
good. No sooner asked for. They've got Zorka and I told them to bring her
here."
"Indeed." Wolfe was filling his glass again.
"Where did they find her?"
"In a room at the Brissenden. Registered phone. Arrived
at ten minutes past five this morning."
"I hope," Wolfe muttered, "that she has
something to wear besides that red thing she had on last night."
"Huh? I beg your pardon?"
"Nothing. Soliloquy – Yes, Fritz?"
Fritz was in again. He had the salver this time, and crossed
to Wolfe. Wolfe took the card, read it and frowned.
"The devil," he said. "Where is he?"
"In the hall, sir."
"Please put him in the front room, close the door, and
come back."
As Fritz went Wolfe addressed the inspector:
"I don't suppose you have an errand somewhere
else."
"Neither do I," Cramer said emphatically.
"I've told you ten times I like it here. If I once got out you might not
let me in again unless I brought a warrant."
"Very well. Then I'm afraid – Oh, Fritz. Will you
please take Mr. Cramer up in the elevator and ask Theodore to show him the
orchids?" He smiled at the inspector. "You haven't been up there for
a long while. I'm sure you'll enjoy it."
"I'll love it," Cramer declared, and got up and
followed Fritz out.
Wolfe handed me the card and I read, "John P.
Barrett."
The sound came of the elevator door clanging, and Wolfe
said, "Bring him in."
The appearance of Donnybonny's
father in the flesh fitted the sound of his voice on the telephone. He was the
kind many people call distinguished-looking and I call Headwaiter's Dream. He
was around fifty, smooth-shaven, with gray eyes that needed to look only once
at something, and was wearing $485 worth of quiet clothes. He shook hands with
Wolfe in a pleasant manner, as if there could never be any hurry or urgency
about anything in the world.
"You're over here by the river in a corner of your
own," he observed genially as he sat down.
Wolfe nodded. "Yes, I bought this place a long time ago
and I'm hard to move. You must excuse me, Mr. Barrett, if I say that I haven't
much time to spare. I'm wedging you in. Another caller kindly went up to my
plant rooms for an interlude. Mr. Cramer of the police."
"Cramer?"
"Inspector Cramer of the Homicide Bureau."
"Oh." Barrett's tone was nonchalant but his eyes,
for an instant, were not. "I came to see you on account of some remarks you
made last night to my son.
Regarding Bosnian forests, credits held by my firm, and the
Donevitch gang. That was your word, I believe – gang."
"I believe it was," Wolfe admitted. "Was
there something wrong with my remarks?"
"Oh, no. Nothing wrong. May I smoke?"
Permission received, he got a cigarette from a case which
boosted his freight loading from the $485 up to around eight hundred berries,
lit, and thanked me for the ash tray I provided.
"My son," he said in a tone of civilized
exasperation, "is a little bit green. It's unavoidable that youth should
arrange people in categories, it's the only way of handling the mass of
material at first to avoid hopeless confusion, but the sorting out should not
be too long delayed. My son seems to be pretty slow at it. He overrates some
people and underrates others. Perhaps I've tried to rush it by opening too many
doors for him. A father's conceit can be a very disastrous thing."
He tapped ashes from his cigarette. He asked abruptly but
not at all pugnaciously, "What is it you want, Mr. Wolfe?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Nothing right now. I wanted to
see Madame Zorka and your son kindly made that possible."
"Yes, he told me about that. But what else?"
"Nothing at present. Really."
"Well." Barrett smiled. "I understand that as
a private investigator you undertake almost any sort of job that promises a fee
proportionate to your abilities."
"Yes, sir, I do. Within certain boundaries I have set.
I try to keep my prejudices intact."
"Naturally." Barrett laughed sympathetically.
"We can't leave it to anyone else to defend our prejudices for us."
He tapped off ashes again. "My son also tells me that you are engaged in
the interests of a young woman named Tormic who is a friend of his. At least – hum
– an acquaintance. In connection with the murder of that man Ludlow."
"That's right," Wolfe agreed. "I was
originally engaged to clear her of a charge of stealing diamonds from a man
named Driscoll. Then Mr. Ludlow got killed, and Miss Tormic needed a little
help on that too because she was implicated by circumstances."
"And was it from this Miss Tormic that you received
information which enabled you to put pressure on my son? You did put pressure
on him, didn't you?"
"Certainly. I blackmailed him."
"Yes. With a threat to disclose certain facts. Did you
get those facts from Miss Tormic?"
"My dear sir." Wolfe wiggled a finger at him.
"You can't possibly be fatuous enough to expect me to tell you that."
Barrett smiled at him. "There's always a chance that
you might. Especially since there's no good reason why you shouldn't. Are you
under obligation to defend the interests of anyone except Miss Tormic?"
"Yes. My own. Always my own."
"That, of course. But anyone else? I should think there
would be no impropriety in your telling me if you represent any interest except
that of Miss Tormic. For instance, Madame Zorka?"
Wolfe frowned. "I am always reluctant to make a present
of information. Just as you are reluctant to make a present of money. You're a
banker and your business is selling money; I'm a detective and mine is selling
information. But I don't want to be churlish. In connection with the activities
we are speaking of, I represent no interest whatever except that of Miss
Tormic."
"And, always, your own."
"Always my own."
"Good." Barrett crushed his cigarette in the tray.
"That clears the way for us, I should think. Please don't think I'm
fatuous. I've made some inquiries and I find you have an enviable reputation
for good faith. I have a proposal to make regarding this little project my firm
is interested in. This – um – business you mentioned to my son. We need your
services. Nothing onerous, and certainly nothing to offend your
prejudices." He pulled a little leather fold from his pocket. "I'll
give you a check now as a retainer. Say ten thousand dollars?"
I thought to myself, what do you know about that;
Donny-darling got his briber's itch honestly, by direct inheritance. Then I
grinned, looking at Wolfe. One corner of his mouth was twisted a little out of
line, which mean that he was suffering acute pain. It was a situation he had
had to face fairly often during the years I had known him, and the torture
involved was in direct proportion to the number of ciphers. Ten thousand bucks
would have kept a good man, even Ray Borchers, in Central America for a full
year, hunting rare orchids, always with the possibility of finding one
absolutely new. Or 5000 cases of beer or 600 pounds of caviar…
He said bravely, but with somewhat more breath than the word
should require, "No."
"No?"
"No."
"If I assure you that you will be expected to do
nothing that will interfere with the interest you already represent? And in
case my assurance doesn't satisfy you, if at any time you find your engagements
in conflict you may merely return the ten thousand dollars –"
Wolfe's lip twitched. I turned my head away. But his voice
showed that he had it licked: "No, sir. To return that amount of money
would ruin my digestion for a week. If I could bring myself to do it, which is
doubtful. No, sir. Abandon the idea. I shall accept no commission or retainer
from you."
"Is that – urn – definite?"
"Irrevocable."
One little vertical crease showed in the middle of Barrett's
forehead. With no other sign of fits, he returned the leather fold to his
breast pocket, and then regarded Wolfe with what was probably as close to an
open stare as he ever got.
"The only recourse that leaves me," he said, with
no affability left in his tone at all, "is to draw my own
conclusions."
"If you find you must have a conclusion, yes,
sir."
"But I confess I'm puzzled. I'm not often puzzled, but
I am now. I'm not gullible enough to believe that your interest is only what
you profess it to be. I have very good reasons for not believing it besides the
fact that in that case there would be no explanation for your refusing my
proposal. My son thinks that you are representing either London or Rome, but
there are two objections to that: first, no contacts have been reported to us,
and second, if that were true why would you have exposed yourself as you did
last night? Is it any wonder that we regarded that as an invitation to
deal?"
"I'm sorry I misled you," Wolfe murmured.
"But you're not going to tell me whom you're tied up
with."
"I have no client but Miss Tormic."
"And you're not prepared to deal with us."
Wolfe shook his head, if not with enthusiasm, with finality.
John P. Barrett stood up. There was a vague sort of vexation
on his face, like a man with a feeling that he has gone off and left something
somewhere but unable to say either what it was or where he left it.
"I hope," he said, with an edge to his tone,
"for your own sake, that you don't happen to get in our way unwittingly.
We know who our opponents are, and we know how to handle them. If you're in
this on your own and you're trying to play for a haul –"
"Nonsense." Wolfe cut him off. "I'm a
detective working on a job. I am not apt to get in anyone's way, or perform any
other maneuver, unwittingly. I will say this. There is a possibility that in
finishing up my own business I'll be compelled to interfere with yours. If that
seems likely to occur, I'll let you know in advance."
Bang went another illusion. I wouldn't have supposed that a
man of Barrett's appearance and breeding, and especially with the clothes he
was wearing, could do or say anything mean. But the look in his eyes at that
moment, and the tone of his voice, were plain mean and you could even say
nasty. All he said was, "Don't try it, Mr. Wolfe. Don't try interfering
with my business."
He turned to go.
Fortunately I had noticed the sound of Fritz in the hall
and, passing Wolfe a signal to hold Barrett a moment, I bounced up and out,
shutting the office door behind me, not in Barrett's face, for he had turned at
a remark from Wolfe. As I trotted down the hall Fritz was holding the street
door open and three people were entering in the shape of a sandwich: a dick,
Zorka, and another dick. Without ceremony or apology I hustled them into the
front room and shut them in, then trotted back to the office and nearly knocked
Barrett off his pins swinging the door against him.
"Sorry, sir, I did it unwittingly."
He gave me a frosty eye and departed. I stayed there on the
threshold until I saw Fritz had got him accoutered and dispatched on his way,
and then told Wolfe who had come and asked him if he thought Cramer would
prefer to go on looking at orchids. He told me to phone up and tell Horstmann
to bring the inspector down, and I did so, and then returned to the front room
for Zorka. The two dicks started to come along, and I waved them back and said
I would take her to Inspector Cramer.
"We'll help you, buddy," they said as if they were
twins, and stayed as close to her as they could without being vulgar. Wolfe
frowned as the four of us cluttered into the office. In a minute we were a neat
half-dozen when Cramer joined us, five full-grown men against one dressmaker.
One of the dicks got out a notebook and I arranged myself at my desk with mine.
Wolfe leaned back with his clasped hands resting on his meal container, looking
at Zorka with his eyes half shut. Cramer was scowling at her.
I had remembered the name of the girl in the Bible she
resembled – Delilah. But right then she looked crumby, with puffs under her
eyes, scared and nervous, and altogether anything but carefree. I was glad to
notice, for Wolfe's sake, that she had snared a dark red woolen suit somewhere,
and some shoes and stockings, but it was just like Wolfe to pick on that as the
first means of harassing her. Naturally he was sore at her for using his fire
escape.
He growled at her, "Where did you get those
clothes?"
She looked at the skirt as if she hadn't realized she had it
on. "Zeeze –" She stopped, frowning at him.
"I mean the clothes you're wearing. When you left here
last night – this morning – all you had on was a red thing. Under your coat.
Those things you're wearing now were in the bag and suitcase you took to Miss
Reade's apartment. Is that right?"
"You say zey waire."
"Weren't they? Who took them to you at the Hotel
Brissenden? Mr. Barrett?"
She shrugged.
Cramer barked, "We can prove that and that's not all we
can prove! After those clothes were delivered to you this morning, you put them
on and left the hotel, and you were followed."
"Zat ees not true." She set her teeth on her lower
lip for a moment, and then went on, "For one sing, if you had me followed
you would know where I was and you would not wait so late to get me and bring
me here. For anozzer sing, I did not leave zee hotel, not once until zee men
came –"
"That won't get you anywhere! Now look here –"
"Please, Mr. Cramer?" Wolfe opened his eyes.
"If you don't mind? Remember what you said, that you'd be no better off if
you had stood across the street yourself and seen her go in with him and emerge
without him. There's no point in running her up a tree if you have no
ammunition to bring her down again."
"Have you?" the inspector demanded.
"I don't know, but I'd like to find out."
Cramer pulled out a cigar and stuck it between his teeth.
"Go ahead."
Wolfe cleared his throat and focused on her. "Madame
Zorka. Is that your name?"
"Of course eet ees."
"I know it's the name on your letterheads and in the
telephone book. But were you christened Zorka?"
"Eet ees my name."
"What's the rest of it?"
She fluttered a nervous hand. "Zorka."
"Now my dear young lady. Last night, inferentially at
least, you were drunk. But you're not drunk now, you're merely bedraggled. Do
you intend to tell us the rest of your name or not?"
"I …" She hesitated, and then said with sudden
determination, "No. I can't."
"Why can't you?"
"Because I – it would be dangerous."
"Dangerous to whom? To you?"
"No, not to me – as much as uzzer people." She
took a deep breath. "I am a refugee. I escaped."
"Where from?"
She shook her head.
"Come, come," Wolfe said brusquely. "Not the
place, the city, the village, if you think you can't. What country? Germany?
Russia? Italy? Yugoslavia?"
"All right. Zat much. Yugoslavia."
"I see. Croatia? Serbia? Montenegro?"
"I said, Yugoslavia."
"Yes, but – very well." Wolfe shrugged. "How
long ago did you escape?"
"About one year ago."
"And came to America? To New York?"
"First Paris. Paris some time, then America."
"Did you bring a lot of money with you?"
"Oh, no." She spread out her hands to reject an
absurdity. "No money. No refugee could have money."
"But I understand you have a business here in New York
which must have cost a good deal to set up."
She almost smiled at him. "I knew you would ask zat. A
friend was very kind to me."
"Is the friend's name Donald Barrett?"
She sat silent a moment, just looking at him, and then said,
"But I am foolish. Zaire is no disgrace. Anyway, eet ees known to a few
people, and you would ask and find out. Zee kind friend who lent me money ees
Mr. Barrett. He ees, what you call eet, silent partner."
"You're in debt to Mr. Barrett, then."
"Debt?" She frowned. "Oh, debt. Yes, very
much."
Wolfe nodded. "I sympathize with you, madame. I hate
being in debt. Some people don't seem to mind it. By the way, those people in
Yugoslavia – those who might be in danger if you told us the rest of your name
– are they relatives of yours?"
"Yes, some. Some relatives."
"Are you Jewish?"
"Oh, no. I am very old Yugoslavian family."
"Indeed. Nobility?"
"Well …" She pulled her shoulders up and together,
and released them again.
"I see. I won't press that. The danger to your
relatives – would that be on account of your activities in New York?"
"But I have no activities in New York, except my
business."
"Then I don't understand how revealing your name would
place your relatives in peril."
"Zat ees … eet would be suspect."
"What would be suspect?"
She shook her head.
Cramer growled, "We known damn well she's not normal. I
could have told you that much. When we went through her apartment this morning
–"
Zorka's head jerked around at him and she squeaked in
indignation, "You went through my apartment!"
"Yes, ma'am," he said calmly. "And your place
of business. Anybody that stages the kind of performance you did last night can
expect some unwelcome attention. You're lucky you're not down at headquarters
right now phoning for your kind friend to furnish bail for you, and that's
exactly where you'll be when we're through here maybe." He resumed to
Wolfe, "There's not a thing, not a scratch of anything, at her home or
office either, that takes you back further than a year ago, the time she came
to New York. That's why I say we already knew she wasn't normal."
"Did you find a passport?"
"No. That's another thing –"
"Where is your passport, madame?"
She looked at him. She wet her lips twice. "I am in
zees country legally," she declared.
"Then you must have a passport. Where is it?"
For the first time her eyes had a cornered look. "I
weel explain … to zee propaire officaire …"
"There's nothing improper about me," Cramer said
grimly.
Zorka spread out her hands. "I lost eet."
"I'm afraid the water's getting hot," said Wolfe.
"Now about last night. Why did you phone here and say that you saw Miss
Tormic putting something in Mr. Goodwin's pocket?"
"Because I did see eet."
"Then why hadn't you told the police about it?"
"Because I thought not to make trouble." She edged
forward in her chair. "Now look. Zat happen precisely zee way I say. I
thought not to make trouble. Zen I sink, murder ees so horrible, I have no
right. Zen I phone you and say I weel tell zee police. Zen I sink, Mr. Barrett
ees friend of Mees Tormic, so to be fair I should tell heem what I do, and I
phone heem. Of course he know how I am refugee, how I escape, how I must not
put people in danger –"
"By the way, where did you first meet Mr.
Barrett?"
"I meet heem in Paris."
"Go ahead."
"So he say, good God, zee police kestion me so much,
zey must know everysing about me, so dangerous to me and to so many people, so
why do I not go veesit Mees Reade, so I pack my bags –"
There was a knock at the door and Fritz entered. He advanced
and spoke over a dick's shoulder:
"Mr. Panzer, sir."
"Tell him I'm engaged with Madame Zorka and Mr.
Cramer."
"I did so, sir. He said he would like to see you."
"Send him in."
Cramer bellowed, "So it was Donald Barrett that got you
to take a powder –"
"Just a moment," Wolfe begged him. "I think
we're getting a reinforcement."
Nobody seeing Saul Panzer for the first time would have
regarded him as a valuable reinforcement for anything whatever, but they would
have been wrong. A lot of people had underrated him, and a lot of people had
paid for it. He had left his old brown cap and coat in the hall and, as he
stood there absorbing a couple of million details of the little group with one
quick glance, everything about him looked insignificant but his big nose.
Wolfe asked him, "Results, Saul?"
"Yes, sir."
"Definite?"
"Yes, sir."
"Indeed. Let us have them."
"I was going to bring her birth certificate along, but
I thought that might make trouble, so I took a copy –"
He retreated a step, because Zorka had leaped to her feet,
confronted him, and practically shrieked at him, "You didn't! You couldn't
–"
A dick reached for her elbow and Cramer bawled, "Sit
down!"
"But he – if he –"
"I said sit down!"
She backed up, stumbled on the other dick's foot, recovered
her balance, and dropped into her chair. Her shoulders sagged, and she sat that
way.
Saul said, "I didn't have to make any expenditures of
the kind you contemplated, but I spent three dollars and ninety cents on a
phone call. I thought it was justified."
"No doubt. Go ahead."
Saul took his step back. "First I went to Madame
Zorka's apartment. There were four city detectives there making a search, and
the maid was sitting in a bedroom crying. I had already decided what to do if I
found that, so I merely went in –"
He stopped, with a glance at Cramer and the dicks.
"Go on, don't mind them," Wolfe told him. "If
it ruins a modus operandi for you, you'll invent an even better one for next
time."
"Thank you, sir. I went in for a minute only,
establishing a friendly basis, and got the maid to look at me. Then I went to
Madame Zorka's place of business on 54th Street. There were more city
detectives there, but aside from that it didn't look promising, and I decided
to leave it as a last resort. From a certain source I got three leads on
friends and associates, and I spent nearly four hours on that line, counting
lunch, but got nothing at all.
"I then, at 2:15, returned to the apartment. I learned
downstairs that two of the detectives were still there, so I waited until they
left, which was at 2:35, and then went up. I rang the bell and the maid opened
the door and I went in. On account of the impression created at my visit in the
morning, she took it for granted that I was a city detective, though I did not
say so. I merely went in and started searching –"
Cramer growled, "By God, impersonating –"
"Oh, no, Inspector." Saul looked shocked. "I
wouldn't impersonate an officer. But I did suspect the maid made a mistake and
took me for one, for otherwise she might have objected to my searching the
place. I thought if she had it fixed in her mind that I was a city detective,
she probably wouldn't believe me anyway if I tried to tell her I wasn't, so I
didn't try. And if you won't regard it as impertinent, I'd like to compliment you
on the job your men did. You would hardly know the place had been touched, the
way they left things, and they must have gone through every inch. And the fact
that they had been over it made it unnecessary for me to do any of the
superficial things. I could concentrate on the long chance that there was some
trick they had missed. It wasn't much of a trick at that, only a false bottom
in a leather hatbox. Underneath it I found her birth certificate and a few
letters and things. I left it all there after taking a copy of the certificate,
and then I went out to a phone booth and made a long distance call to Ottumwa,
Iowa. To her mother. Just to make sure –"
Zorka blurted at him, "You – you phoned my mother …"
"Yes, ma'am, I did. It's all right, I didn't scare her
or anything, I made it all right. Having found out from the birth certificate
that your name is Pansy Bupp, and having read a letter –"
"What's that?" Wolfe demanded. "Her name is
what?"
"Pansy Bupp." He pulled a piece of paper from his
pocket. "P, A, N, S, Y, B, U, P, P. Her father is William O. Bupp. He runs
a feed store. She was born at Ottumwa on April 9, 1912 –"
"Give me that paper."
Saul handed it over. Wolfe glared at it, ate it with his
eyes, and transferred the glare to her, and it was one of the few times on
record that I would have called his tone a snarl as he shot at her:
"Why?"
She snarled back, "Why what?"
"Why that confounded drivel? That imbecile
flummery?"
She looked as if she would like to stick a knife through
him. "What do you think would happen," she demanded, "to a Fifth
Avenue couturiere if it came out that her name was Pansy Bupp?" Her voice
rose to an indignant wail. "What do you think will happen?"
Wolfe, beside himself with fury, wiggled a whole hand at her.
"Answer me!" he roared. "Is your name Pansy Bupp?"
"Yes."
"Were you born in Ottumwa, Iowa?"
"Yes."
"When did you leave there?"
"Why, I … I took trips to Denver –"
"I'm not speaking of trips to Denver! When did you
leave there?"
"Two years ago. Nearly. My father gave me money for a
trip to Paris – and I got a job there and learned to design – and I met Donald
Barrett and he suggested –"
"Where did you get the name Zorka?"
"I saw it somewhere –"
"Have you ever been in Yugoslavia?"
"No."
"Or anywhere in Europe besides Paris?"
"No."
"Is what you said last night – about the reason for
your phoning here and then running away to Miss Reade's place – is that the
truth?"
"Yes, it is. Like a fool, an utter fool" – she
gulped – "I let my conscience bother me because it was murder. If I hadn't
done that, none of this …" She flung out her hands. "Oh, can it be – can't
this be –" Her chin was quivering.
"Miss Bupp!" Wolfe thundered. "Don't you
dare! Archie, get her out of here! Get her out of the house!"
"Zat weel be a plaizhoore," I said.
Wolfe looked up at the wall
clock and said, "Ten minutes to four. I'll have to leave you pretty soon
to go up to my plants."
We were comparatively peaceful again. The two dicks had
departed with Miss Bupp, and Lieutenant Rowcliff had been phoned to expect her
at headquarters for a little talk.
Cramer said, "It could be a frame, you know.
We've tried some of her friends and associates too. We heard she was a Turk, a
Hungarian, a Russian Jew, and maybe part Jap. It won't hurt any to check it
up."
Wolfe shook his head, grimaced, and muttered, "Ottumwa,
Iowa."
"I guess so," the inspector admitted. "Does
that shove you off onto a siding?"
"No. It merely …" Wolfe shrugged.
"It merely leaves you still waiting at the station,
huh?" Getting no answer, he regarded Wolfe a moment and then went on,
"As far as I'm concerned, I'm still playing these. If you go up to your
plants, I go along. If you go to the kitchen to mix salad dressing –"
"You don't mix salad dressing in the kitchen. You do it
at the table and use it immediately."
"All right. No matter what you go to the kitchen for, I
go too. It's plainer than ever that you know where the kernel is in this nut
and I don't. Take the fact of Donald Barrett chasing this Zorka Bupp away so we
couldn't get at her. I would get fat trying to put the screws on Donald
Barrett, with both the commissioner and the district attorney having a bad
attack of bashfulness. Wouldn't I? But you don't even waste time with Donald.
You have his old man, John P., himself, coming right here and walking right
into your office. That goes to show."
Wolfe looked at me. "Archie. Find out if Theodore
failed to understand that when I send a gentleman to look at orchids –"
Cramer snorted. "Don't bother. I didn't sneak
downstairs and take a peek. Rowcliff told me on the phone that he had received
a report that John P. Barrett had been seen entering this address at 2:55 this
p.m."
"Were you having Mr. Barrett followed?"
"No."
"I see. You have a regiment watching this house."
"I wouldn't say a regiment. But I've said and I say
again that right now I'm more interested in this house than any other building
in the borough of Manhattan. If you want me out of it you'll have to call the
police. By the way, another thing Rowcliff told me, they've found Belinda
Reade. She's at a matinee at the Lincoln Theater. Do we want her in here?"
"I don't."
"Then I don't either. The boys'll take care of her. If
she can account satisfactorily for – is that for me?"
I nodded, and vacated my chair for him to take another phone
call. This was a comparatively short one. He emitted a few grunts and made a
few unilluminating remarks, and hung up and returned to his chair. No sooner
had I got back into mine than the house phone buzzed. As I pulled it over to me
I heard Wolfe asking Cramer if there was anything new and the inspector
replying that there was nothing worth mentioning and then, over the house
phone, in response to my hello, Fred Durkin's voice was in my ear:
"Archie? Come up here."
I said with irritation, "Damn it, Fritz, I'm
busy." Then I waited a minute and said, "Okay, okay, quit running off
your face," and got up and beat it to the hall, shutting the door behind
me. I went quickly but noiselessly up one flight of stairs, opened the door of
Wolfe's room, and entered. Fred Durkin was there on a chair beside the bed,
within reach of the phone, where he had been instructed to place himself two
hours previously.
He started to grumble, "This is one hell of a job
–"
"Don't crab, my boy. From each according to his
ability. What is it, Lovchen?"
He nodded. "I didn't call you when he got the report on
Zorka, because he told them to bring her here, but –"
"What about Lovchen?"
"Her tail phoned in to headquarters." Fred looked
at a pad of paper he had scribbled on. "They followed her to Miltan's this
morning, and she left there at 10:53 and went back to 404 East 38th Street
–"
"The hell she did. Anyone with her?"
"No, she was alone. She stayed in there only about ten
minutes. At 11:15 she came out and went to Second Avenue and took a taxi. She
got out at the Maidstone Building on 42nd Street. They were a little behind her
as she entered the building, and she popped into an elevator just as the door
was closing and they missed it. They couldn't find out from the elevator boy
what floor she got off at, and anyway, as you know and I know, that would be
bad tailing because she could have taken to the stairs and gone up or down.
There are four different rows of elevators to watch in that building, and they
were afraid to leave to go to a phone, but just now a cop passed by and they
flagged him and had him send in a report. They're sure she hasn't left the
building and they want help because the rush hour will be on at five
o'clock."
"Is that all?"
"That's the crop."
I made a face. "And Cramer, the louse, said there was
no news worth mentioning! He's going upstairs with Wolfe, to the roof. When you
hear the elevator go up, you go down to the office and stay there. Take all
calls. If anybody comes, tell Wolfe on the house phone. Write out a report of
what you've told me, and add to it that I've gone to the Maidstone Building,
and send it up to Wolfe by Fritz. If I call in and there's anyone in the
office, use code. Got it?"
"I've got it, but why not let me go –"
"No, my boy, this is a job for a master."
I left him there. Descending the stairs as fast as I could
without making a hubbub, I went to the kitchen and told Fritz:
"Go to the office and tell Wolfe the goose hasn't been
delivered and you've sent me to the Washington Market for it. Tell him I
protested and complain bitterly of the language I used. That is for the benefit
of Inspector Cramer. Fred has the low-down. Got it?"
"Yes," Fritz hissed.
I left by way of the front hall, grabbing my hat and coat.
Outside was no regiment, but there was a dick on the sidewalk not far from the
stoop, and another one across the street, and a taxi was parked fifty yards
east. Not to mention Cramer's police car, there nosing the hind end of my
roadster. I climbed in the roadster and started the engine, called to Cramer's
chauffeur, "Follow me to the scene of the crime!" and rolled. I
didn't go far, only around the corner and a couple of blocks on Tenth Avenue,
and then stopped at the curb, locked the ignition, got out, and stopped the
first taxi that came along. I waited a minute to see either the police car or
the taxi if they turned in from 35th Street, but apparently my invitation
hadn't been accepted, so I hopped in and told the driver 42nd and Lexington.
Entering the marble lobby of the fifty-story Maidstone
Building, I felt fairly sappy. I had come because Wolfe had instructed me that
if Fred copped any news about Carla Lovchen I was to follow it up, and the only
way I could follow it up was to go there. I felt sappy because, observing the
extent and complications of the lobby, with the four banks of elevators and the
twisting crowds, not to mention such things as stairways and possibly basement
exits, it seemed good for even money that she had moved out and on; and also,
even if she hadn't, I stood a fat chance of grabbing her and getting away with
her under the circumstances. Apparently the tails had already got their
reinforcements; I had easily spotted three of them on one quick survey. It was
obvious that the lobby was no place for me, even if she walked out of an
elevator right into my arms.
I had had one feeble idea on my way up in the taxi, and I
proceeded to use that up. The building directory board was in two sections, on
two sides of the lobby, one A to L and the other M to Z. I tackled the first
section and went over it thoroughly, a name at a time, hoping for a hint or a
hunch. I got neither, and moved across to the second section, and there,
nearing the end, I saw Wheeler & Driscoll 3259. It looked slim, but I went
to the information booth and told the guy, "I'm looking for a tenant and
don't know his firm. Nat Driscoll. Or maybe instead of Nat, Nathaniel."
He opened his book with weary hands and looked at it with
weary eyes and said in a weary voice, "Driscoll, Nathaniel, 3259,
thirty-second floor, elevators on the –"
I was gone. My heart had started to pump. I love the feeling
of a hunch.
I got out at the thirty-second and walked half a mile,
around three corners, to 3259. The lettering on the door said:
WHEELER & DRISCOLL
IMPORTERS AND BROKERS
I opened the door and went in, and right away, even in the
anteroom, found myself in the midst of prosperity, judging by the rugs and
furniture and the type of employee displayed. She was the kind who without any
visible effort conveys the impression that she got a job in an office only
because she was fed up with yachting and riding to hounds. Not wanting to
frighten anyone into scooting out of any other Wheeler & Driscoll doors
into the public corridor, I told her:
"My name is Goodwin and I would like to see Mr.
Nathaniel Driscoll."
"Have you an appointment?"
"Nope, I just dropped in. Have you heard about the
diamonds? The ones he thought had been stolen from him?"
"Oh, yes." Her lip twitched. "Yes,
indeed."
"Tell him my name is Goodwin and Miss Tormic sent me to
see him. I represent Miss Tormic."
"I'm sorry. Mr. Driscoll isn't in."
"Has he gone home?"
"He hasn't been here this afternoon."
In the first place, my hunch was still alive and kicking,
and in the second place, she wasn't a good liar, even with a common
conventional lie like that. I got out my memo pad and wrote on it:
If you don't want the cops busting in here in about two minutes
looking for your fencing teacher, let's have a little talk. And for God's sake,
don't let her show her face in the hall.
A.G.
I grinned at the employee to show there was no hard feeling,
and indeed there wasn't. "May I have an envelope?"
She got one and handed it to me, and I inserted the note and
licked the flap and sealed it. "Here," I said, "take this to Mr.
Driscoll, there's a good girl, and don't argue. Do I look like a man who would
come all this way to see him unless I knew he was here?"
Without saying a word, she pressed a button. A boy entered
from a door at the left, and she gave him the envelope and told him to deliver
it to Mr. Driscoll's desk. I said, "Deliver it to him," and
then, as the boy disappeared, I went to the entrance door and opened it and
stood there where I could see the hall in both directions. There were several
passers-by, but no sign of any frantic dash for freedom. I must have stood
there all of three minutes before I saw, about fifty feet down the hall, the
top of a head and then a pair of eyes protruding beyond the edge of a door
jamb. I called in a tone of authority:
"Hey, back in there!"
The head disappeared. It had not shown again when I heard
the employee's voice calling my name. I turned. The boy was there holding a
door open. He said, "This way, sir," and I followed him into an inner
corridor and past three doors to one at the end, which he opened.
The room I entered was at least five times as big as the
anteroom and six times as prosperous. I realized that in my one swift glance as
I started to where Nat Driscoll stood at the corner of a large and elegant
desk, telling him: "If you sneaked her out while I was coming in here, the
cops will have her inside of a minute."
With one hand gripping the edge of the desk hard enough to
bleach the knuckles, he said, "Unh." He looked as bewildered and
terrified as a corpulent uncle who had been inveigled into taking a ride on the
Ziparoo at Coney Island.
I looked around. "Where is she?"
He said, "Unh."
There were two doors besides the one I had entered by. I
trotted across and opened one, and saw only gleaming tiles and a washbowl and
sittery. I closed that and went and opened the other one, and looked into a
small room with filing cabinets, a bookcase, and a de luxe secretary's desk.
The secretary sat there staring at me with big round blue eyes, and a more
glittering stare was bestowed on me from a chair in a corner occupied by Carla
Lovchen.
She didn't say anything, just goggled at me. My elbow was
grabbed from behind, and I was agreeably surprised to find that Nat Driscoll
could grip like that.
I pulled away, and we were both inside the small room, and I
shut the door.
I demanded, "What did you figure on doing? Keeping her
here till after the funeral?"
Carla asked in a low tense voice, without altering her
stare, "Where's Neya?"
"She's all right. For a while anyhow. You were tailed
to this building –"
"Tailed?"
"Shadowed. Followed by policemen. There are a dozen of
them downstairs now, covering all the elevators and exits."
Driscoll dropped onto a chair and groaned. The blue-eyed
secretary inquired in a cool business-like tone:
"Are you Archie Goodwin of Nero Wolfe's office?"
"I am. Pleased to meet you." I met Carla's stare.
"Did you kill Rudolph Faber?"
"No." A shiver ran over her, and she controlled it
and sat rigid again.
Driscoll mumbled at me, "You mean Ludlow. Percy
Ludlow."
"Do I? I don't." I fired at the secretary,
"What time did Driscoll get here this morning?"
"Ask him," she said icily.
"I'm asking you. Let me tell you folks something. I may
not be your best and dearest friend, but I'm quite a pal compared to the guys
downstairs I mentioned. Otherwise I would have brought them up here. That can
be done at any moment. What time did Driscoll get here this morning?"
"About half past eleven."
"That was his first appearance here today?"
"Yes."
"What time did he leave?"
"He didn't leave at all. He had some lunch brought in
on account of Miss Lovchen."
"She got here at 11:20."
"Yes." The secretary was getting no warmer.
"How did you know that? How did you know she was here?"
"Intuition. I'm an intuitive genius." I shifted to
Driscoll. "So you didn't kill Faber, huh?"
He stammered, "You mean … you must mean Ludlow –"
"I mean Rudolph Faber. A little before noon today he
was found in the apartment occupied by Neya Tormic and Carla Lovchen, lying on
the floor dead. Stabbed. Miss Tormic and I went there looking for Miss Lovchen,
and found him."
The secretary looked impressed. Driscoll's eyes widened and
his mouth stood open. I snapped at Carla:
"He was there when you went there. Either alive or
dead, or alive and then dead."
"I didn't – I wasn't there –"
"Can it. What do you think this is, hide and seek? They
were tailing you. You went in there at 11:05 and came out again at 11:15. Faber
was there."
She shivered again. "I didn't kill him."
"Was he there?"
She shook her head and took a deep jerky breath. "I'm
not … going to say anything. I am going away, away from America." She
clasped her hands at me. "Pliz you must help me! Mr. Driscoll would help
me! Oh you must, you must –"
Driscoll demanded in an improved voice, "You say Faber
was there in her apartment stabbed to death?"
"Yes."
"And she had just been there?"
"She left there about thirty minutes before the body
was found."
"Good God." He stared at her. The secretary was
staring at her too.
I said briskly, "She says she didn't do it. I don't
know. The immediate point is that Nero Wolfe wants to see her before the cops
get hold of her. What were you going to do, help her get away?"
Driscoll nodded. Then he shook his head. "I don't know.
Good God – she didn't tell me about Faber. She said …" He flung out his
hands. "Damn it, she appealed to me! She swore she had nothing to do with
– Ludlow – but she didn't need to! She has been damn fine with me down there – that
fencing – greatest pleasure I ever had in my life – she has been damn fine and
understanding! She is a very fine young woman! I would be proud to have her for
a sister and I've told her so! Or daughter! Daughter would be better! She came
here and appealed to me to help her get away from trouble, and by God I was
doing it, and I didn't consult any lawyer either! And by God I'll still do it!
Do you realize that she appealed to me? I don't care if her apartment was as
full of dead bodies as the morgue, that young woman is no damn murderer!"
"I understand," said the secretary with ice still
in her voice box, "that it is perfectly legal to help anyone go anywhere
they want to, provided they have not committed a crime."
"I don't give a damn," Driscoll declared,
"whether it's legal or not! To hell with legal!"
"Okay." I pushed a palm at him. "Don't yell
so loud. The point –"
"I want you to understand –"
"Pipe down! I understand everything. You're a hero.
Skip it. Here's the way it stands. You can't go ahead and send her on a world
cruise, because to begin with you don't stand a chance of getting her out of
here and away, and to end with I won't let you. Nero Wolfe wants to see her.
Whatever Nero Wolfe wants he gets or he has a tantrum and I get fired. I have
no idea whether she's a very fine young woman or a murderer or what, but I do
know that the next thing on her program is a talk with Nero Wolfe, and I'm in
charge of the program."
"I suppose," said the secretary crushingly,
"that you stand a chance of getting her out of here."
"Chance is right," I agreed grimly. "May I
use your phone?"
She pushed it across the desk and I asked the anteroom
employee to get me a number. In a moment I had the connection.
"Hello, Hotel Alexander? Let me talk to Ernie Flint.
The house detective."
In two minutes I had him.
"Hello, Ernie? Archie Goodwin. That's right. How's
about things? Fine, thanks, everything rosy, I'm studying to be a detective.
Not on your life. Say, listen, I'm pulling a stunt and I want you to do me a
favor. Send a bellboy in uniform over to the Maidstone Building, Room 3259.
Wait, get this. A small one, about five foot three, and not a fat one. With a
cap on, don't forget the cap. With a dark complexion if you've got one like
that. Yep, dark hair and eyes. Good. Have him bring a parcel with him
containing all his own clothes, everything, including hat. Right. Oh, not long.
He can be back there within an hour, only you'll have to give him another
uniform. Oh, no. Just a stunt I'm pulling. I'm playing a trick on a feller.
I'll describe it when I see you. Make it snappy, will you, Ernie?"
I rang off, took the expense roll from my pocket, peeled off
a ten, and tendered it to the secretary. "Here, run down to the nearest
store and get a pair of black low-heeled oxfords that will fit her. Like what a
bellboy might wear. Step on it."
She looked critically at Carla's feet. "Five?"
Carla nodded. Driscoll told the secretary:
"Give him back that money." He got out his wallet
and produced a twenty-dollar bill. "Here. Get a good pair."
She took it, handed me mine, and went. She may have been
chilly, but she wasn't a goof.
Carla said, "I won't go."
"Oh." I looked at her. "You won't?"
"No."
"Would you rather go to police headquarters and
entertain the homicide squad?"
"I won't – I want to go away. I must go away.
Mr. Driscoll said he would help me."
"Yeah, well, he wasn't quick enough on his feet. Even
after all his fencing lessons. Anyway, you would have been nabbed downstairs.
Do you realize at all the kind of spot you're inhabiting right now?"
"I realize –" She stopped to make her voice work.
"I'm in a terrible fix. Oh – terrible! You don't know how terrible!"
"Wrong again. I do know. Would I be staging a damn fool
stunt like this to get you to Nero Wolfe if I didn't?"
"It won't do any good to take me to Nero Wolfe. I won't
talk to him. I won't talk to anybody."
Driscoll went over and stood in front of her. "Look
here, Miss Lovchen," he said, "I don't think that's a sensible
attitude. If you don't want to talk to the police, I can understand that. You
may have a reason that's absolutely commendable. But sooner or later you'll
have to talk to somebody, and if you're not careful it will be a lawyer, and
then you are up against it. From what I have heard of this Nero Wolfe …"
He was still jabbering away when the phone announced that
the bellboy was in the anteroom.
I shooed Driscoll and Carla into Driscoll's room and had the
bellboy sent in to me. He looked about right, maybe an inch taller than her,
but not too skinny or too husky. He was grinning because he could see it was a
good joke. I opened the parcel for him while he took his uniform off, and
handed him a couple of dollars and told him:
"Put your clothes on and sit here. It's a nice view
from the window. Maybe twenty minutes. A blue-eyed girl will come and tell you
when to go. Return to the hotel and they'll give you another uniform to work
in. That two bucks was just for your trouble. Here's a finif if its effect will
be to keep your trap entirely closed regarding the fun we're having.
Okay?"
He said it was, and sounded believable. I gave him the five-spot,
gathered up the uniform and cap and wrapping paper, and went to the other room,
shutting him in.
Carla, on the edge of the chair, and the secretary, kneeling
on the rug in front of her, were busy getting her shoes changed, while
Driscoll, with his lips screwed up and his hands in his pockets, gazed down at
the operation. Carla stood up and stamped, and said they were all right. I
handed the uniform to her and said go ahead but she would have to take off her
clothes or it would look bunchy, and told Driscoll:
"Turn your back."
He blushed rosy. "I … I can go in there –"
"I forgot you're modest. Suit yourself. Backturning
will do me."
He went and looked through a window, and I, facing the same
way, regarded him suspiciously. It was getting dark outdoors and the lights
were on in the room, and under those circumstances a windowpane is a fairly
good mirror. I admit I may have been doing him an injustice. I spread the
wrapping paper out on his desk and, when the secretary handed me Carla's
clothes, including coat and hat, made a bundle and got it tied up.
The secretary said, "Look, it's tight around under the
arms."
I looked. "Naturally. What would you expect? I think
it'll do. Walk to the door and back." Carla walked. I frowned. "The
hips are bad. I mean they're good, but you understand me. Put the cap on … No,
you'll have to stuff the hair under better than that. There by the left ear.
That's it. I believe we'll make it. What do you think?"
The secretary said coldly, "I hope so. It's your
idea."
Driscoll crabbed, "It's no good. I'd know her across
the street."
"Oh," I said sarcastically, "we wouldn't try
to fool you. There's hundreds of people going and coming in that lobby
and why should they be interested in a bellboy? Anyway, we'll take a shot at
it." I got the parcel under my arm and confronted Carla. "Now. We
have nothing to fear on this floor. We'll go down in the same elevator. You'll
leave the elevator before me at the main floor. Walk straight to the Lexington
Avenue entrance and on out, and don't look behind or around. I'll be following
you all right. Turn right and keep going on across 43rd Street. Between 43rd
and 42nd there'll be taxis at the curb. Hop into one and tell the driver to
take you to 37th Street and Tenth Avenue –"
The secretary put in an oar: "You'll be with her
–"
"I'll be behind her in another taxi. There's a chance
that one of those birds in the lobby knows me and will be curious enough to
follow me out, in which case I don't want to be seen going for a ride with a
bellboy, especially a bellboy with hips. 37th Street and Tenth Avenue. Got
that?"
Carla nodded.
"Okay. Stay there in the taxi till I come. I'll
probably be right behind you, but you stay there. If you try a trick, you're
done. Every cop in New York is looking for you. Understand?"
"Yes, but I want – I must –"
"What you want is a different matter entirely, like the
guy that fell out of the airplane. Will you go to that corner and stay there in
the taxi?"
"Yes."
"Right. Good-bye, folks. In ten minutes, not sooner,
send the bellboy home. I'll take you on with the йpйe some day, Driscoll."
He looked as if he was about ready to cry as he shook hands
with her. The secretary looked as arctic as ever, but I noticed her voice was a
little husky as she wished Carla good luck.
We departed. As she went along the corridor ahead of me on
the way to the elevator, she looked kind of preposterous, but of course I saw
not only what I saw but also what I knew. The other passengers in the elevator
gave her a glance or two, but nothing alarming. At the main floor she preceded
me out and marched through the lobby, dodging as necessary in the crowd, and it
began to look like everything was jake when a call came from my right:
"Hey, Goodwin! Archie!"
It was Sergeant Purley Stebbins
coming at me. The danger was Carla, but for once she acted as if she had some
brains. She certainly heard my name called, but she didn't scream or stop and
turn around or break into a run. She just kept on going to the entrance. I saw
that out of the corner of my eye as I greeted Purley with a hearty grin.
"Well, well, well!"
"It may be," he growled. "What are you doing
here?"
I looked around stealthily to guard against eavesdroppers,
put my mouth within two inches of his big red ear, and whispered into it,
"None of your goddam business."
He grunted, "It's quite a coincidence."
"What is?"
"Your being here in this building."
I tapped him on the chest. "Now that's funny."
"What's funny?"
"Your saying it's quite a coincidence. It's funny
because that's exactly what I was going to say. Mind if I say it? It's quite a
coincidence."
"Go to hell."
"Same to you and many of them. May I ask, what are you
doing in this building?" I glanced around. "You and all your
playmates."
"Go to hell."
"How's the roads?"
"Whatta you got in the bundle?"
"Revolvers, daggers, narcotics, smuggled jewels, and a
bottle of blood. Want to look at it?"
"Go to hell."
I shrugged politely, told him I'd meet him at the corner of
Fire and Brimstone, and left him.
That was okay. But the danger was, with Carla having such a
fixed idea about going away from America, that she might be keeping her promise
and she might not. Even so, I didn't jump into a taxi at the entrance. I hoofed
it to the corner and popped into Bigger's drugstore and stood there. Since it
had another exit on 43rd, anyone Purley sent on my tail would either have to
pop in after me or make it to the turn in a hurry where he could see both
doors. No one did that. I left by 43rd, crossed the street and entered Grand
Central the back way, did another maneuver in the smoking room to make doubly
sure, went out to Madison Avenue, jumped into a taxi, and sat on the edge of
the seat with my fingers crossed and sweat on my brow until we got to the
rendezvous and I saw she was there.
I dismissed my taxi, went to hers and opened the door and
beckoned her out, paid the driver and sent him off, and waited until he had
rounded the corner out of sight before I steered her down the sidewalk to where
I had parked the roadster. She wasn't having anything to say. I told her to
climb in and handed her the bundle.
It was only a matter of three minutes across to Ninth, down
to 34th, and west to the middle of the block. The day was gone and I stopped at
a distance from a street light, shut off the engine, and told her:
"There's an assortment of cops in front of Wolfe's
house, so we're going in the back way. Follow me and don't say anything after
we get inside the house. Just stay behind me."
"I must know …" Her voice quavered and she
stopped. In a moment she went on, "I must know one thing. Is Neya
there?"
"I don't know. She wasn't when I left."
"Where was she?"
"Police headquarters. Not under arrest, they were
questioning her and she wasn't answering. They may have brought her to Wolfe's
house or they may not. I don't know. Inspector Cramer is there with
Wolfe."
"But you said I would only have to see Mr. Wolfe
–"
"I said Wolfe wants to talk with you first. Come
on."
I got out and went around to her side and opened the door.
She had her teeth sunk into her lip. She sat that way a minute, then climbed
out and followed me. I led her down the sidewalk to the entrance to the
passageway between a warehouse building and a garage, and along the dark
passage until we came to the door in the board fence. It was the door Zorka had
used after her trip down the fire escape, only from the inside she had only
needed to turn the knob of the spring lock, whereas I had to use my key. I
guided her across the court and up the steps to the little porch, and used
another key, and entered the kitchen ahead of her. No one was in there but
Fritz.
He stared at me. "Now, Archie, you ought to tap –"
"Okay. I forgot. No cause for alarm. Keep Miss Lovchen
here on the quiet for about four minutes till I get back."
He stared again, at her. "Miss Lovchen?"
"Right. You'd better hide her in the pantry."
I put the parcel on a chair, went out the way I had come,
through the door in the fence and along the passage to 34th Street, got in the
roadster and drove around two corners into 35th Street, and rolled to the curb
in front of the house. The police car there had been joined by another one, and
the taxi was still parked down a ways, and as I crossed the sidewalk to the
stoop I saw the dick there with his foot on the running board, chinning with
Cramer's chauffeur. I was in too much of a hurry to toss them anything, because
I had one more lap to go. I let myself in, shed my coat and hat, and went to
the office.
"Oh," I said, "hello."
There was the explanation of the second police car. Over in
a corner was a dick looking bored, and on one of the yellow leather chairs sat
Neya Tormic, not looking bored. The way her eyes darted at me, I had to control
an impulse to side-step to get out of the line of fire.
The dart was a question and I knew what it was, but I
ignored it and spoke to Fred Durkin, who was seated at my desk:
"Get out of my chair, you big bum, and come out here
and help me a minute."
He arose and lumbered across, and I steered him into the
hall and shut the office door.
"Are Wolfe and Cramer upstairs?"
"Yes."
"Anyone in the front room?"
"No."
"Stand here and hold this doorknob, in case that dick
should get a sudden notion to stretch his legs."
He got his paw on it, and I went to the kitchen. Fritz put
down a pan he was stirring and came close to me and whispered, "In the
pantry." I pushed the swinging door and there she was, on a chair he had
put there for her, with the parcel at her feet. I got the parcel and told her
to follow me and keep quiet. In the hall Fred was hanging onto the doorknob and
I winked at him as we passed. Up one flight of stairs, down the hall six paces,
through a door – and I closed it behind us, turned on the light, put the parcel
on a table, and shut the window curtains.
"Hvala Bogu," I said. "This is Mr.
Wolfe's room. Don't leave it. If you open a window bells ring all over the
house. It's 5:35 and he will be here shortly after six. You might as well put
your own clothes on. That door there is a bathroom. Okay?"
She just looked at me, and I saw she was concentrating so
hard on keeping a stiff jaw that she couldn't even nod her head, so I went on
out. At the head of the stairs I called down, "All right, Fred, go back in
and try another chair," and then proceeded to the next flight up. Two of
them took me to the narrow door at the top which opened into the plant rooms. I
had to go all the way through to the potting room to find Wolfe. He was at the
bench with Theodore, inspecting some recent sprouts with a magnifying glass,
and Cramer was on a stool with his back propped against the wall, chewing on a
cigar.
I hoisted myself onto the free end of the bench and sat
swinging my legs. In a few minutes Wolfe came to a coma, shook his head
disapprovingly at something he saw through the glass, sighed, and muttered at
me, "Did you get the goose?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good."
He got busy with the glass again. I swung my legs. After a
while the phone rang. Theodore went to his desk to answer it and told Cramer it
was for him. The inspector went and grunted into it for three or four minutes,
then hung up and returned to the stool. I knew he was glaring at me, but I was
interested in the tips of my number nines swinging back and forth.
He said, and I knew what it must be costing him to restrain
himself like that, "You, Goodwin." There was even a suggestion of a
tremble in his voice. "When did they move the Washington Market to the
Maidstone Building?"
"Why," I said in a friendly tone, "that must
have been Sergeant Stebbins on the phone! How's that for deduction?"
"Fine." Cramer threw his cigar at the trash
basket, missed, went and picked it up and dropped it in, and returned to the
stool. "Don't think I'm going to blow up, because I'm not. I'm beyond
that. Ten minutes after you left I told Wolfe that Carla Lovchen was trailed to
the Maidstone Building this morning and was holed up there, but that was after
you left as I say. All I'm going to do is ask a simple question. Why did you go
to the Maidstone Building?"
I grinned at him. "Here's the first answer that occurs
to me. There was a phone call here at noon from a certain party, and it was
traced to a public phone at that building. All right?"
"No."
I shrugged. "Get Mr. Wolfe to tell you one."
Wolfe, going on with his work, paid no attention. Cramer
said, "I still am not going to blow up. I have planted myself here on two
assumptions. The first is that Wolfe has got something on this case that I
stand damn little chance of getting unless and until the break comes and he
loosens up. The second is, inasmuch as I have never yet found him picking up
the pieces for a murderer, that he's not doing that now. If my first assumption
is wrong, I'm just out of luck. If my second one is, you are. Both of you.
That's all. Now you can take the Maidstone Building and stick it up your
chimney. But in case you don't already know it, Carla Lovchen went in that
place on 38th Street at eleven o'clock this morning and came out again in ten
minutes. I want her, and I want her plenty. I'm telling you. So if it turns out
that she has actually pulled a getaway and you helped her do it …"
"The man's mad," I declared.
"Shut up. That's all."
I continued to admire my feet.
At five minutes to six Wolfe put the magnifying glass away
in the drawer, gave Theodore a few instructions regarding the sprouts, and
announced that it was time to descend. Never having felt full confidence in the
capacity of the elevator as posted on its wall, I left it to him and took to
the stairs, and Cramer joined me. Two flights down we saw that the elevator had
stopped there and Wolfe was emerging. We halted as he approached us.
"I'll go to my room and clean up a little. Archie, will
you come with me? We'll be with you in the office shortly, Mr. Cramer. Miss
Tormic is there, you know."
Cramer hesitated, looked at him suspiciously, and then
tramped to the stairs and started down. We waited till we heard the office door
close behind him and then went to the door of Wolfe's room and entered. Carla
was in a straight-backed chair by the wall, her shoulders hunched over, her
hands clenched in her lap, her chin down; but she was wearing her own clothes.
The bellboy's outfit, neatly folded, was on the table.
Wolfe stopped in front of her and said, "How do you do,
Miss Lovchen."
She looked up at him for an instant, then let her head fall
again and made no reply.
Wolfe said, "I have no time now because I am expected
downstairs. Mr. Goodwin told me he brought a goose. He did. Whether you killed
Mr. Ludlow and Mr. Faber or not, you are pure imbecile. Most people are, under
great stress, but that merely gives you company. I don't know how or where Mr.
Goodwin found you, but you must have been making an awful fool of yourself or
he wouldn't have found you at all. Even though he is fairly good at finding
things. If you think I am severe, it is because I have no sympathy to waste on
people who come and ask my help and tell me nothing but lies. For the present
you will stay in this room. I'll come back pretty soon and ask you some
questions."
Carla raised her head again, moved it once from side to
side, and said, "I won't answer any questions. I've decided that. I won't
say anything. Not to you or anybody."
"Oh. You won't?"
"No. Nothing. No matter what happens. If I don't say
anything, what can anybody do? What can they prove if I don't say anything?
Maybe you think I haven't enough will power for it, but I have."
"You might have, for a while. Try it, by all means. It
would be an improvement on your conduct so far." Wolfe turned to go.
"I'll be back to see you, anyway, or send for you. Come, Archie."
With his hand on the knob he asked, "Are you hungry?
Could you eat something?"
"No, thank you."
We went.
The trio in the office was now four; with us, six. The dick
was still bored. Fred, the bum, had reoccupied my chair against my expressed
orders, but as I entered he moved to another one. Cramer stood over by the big
globe, twirling it. Neya Tormic's eyes fastened on Wolfe as he appeared in the
door and followed him as he crossed to his desk, sat, and reached for the
button. I realized that he was in about as bad a humor as I could remember,
because he issued no invitation for anyone to have beer. Neya Tormic said, with
her eyes boring holes through him:
"I want to see you alone. To ask you something."
Wolfe nodded. "I know what you want. That will have to
wait. You didn't get to finish your errand. Isn't that it?"
"I –" She stopped and wet her lips. "You
promised."
"No, Miss Tormic, I didn't. I know you've had a hard
afternoon, but surely you remember why you and Mrs. Goodwin were looking for
Miss Lovchen. And you didn't find her."
"She's gone."
"How do you know that?"
"This – Inspector Cramer just told me they can't find
her."
"Where has she gone to?"
"I don't know."
Wolfe uncapped a bottle of beer and poured.
"Anyway," he declared, "that will have to wait. Confound it,
everything will have to wait!" He drank until the glass was empty.
"Mr. Cramer, you have been hanging around here since two o'clock. You have
shown admirable patience and restraint – for instance, regarding Archie's
presence at the Maidstone Building – and of course I know why. You want
something and you think you can get it here and nowhere else. I tell you
frankly, it isn't here. I don't suppose you contemplate spending the night in
my house …"
I didn't hear the rest of the build-up for sending the
inspector out into the night, because the doorbell rang and I went to answer
it. Usually I performed that service anyway from six to eight, when Fritz was
busy getting dinner, and on this occasion, considering the goose I had left in
Wolfe's room, I had a special interest in the possibility of invading hordes.
But what I found on the stoop wasn't a horde at all, but merely a youth in a
snappy uniform with a little flat package he wanted to deliver to Nero Wolfe. I
put out a hand for it, but he said he had instructions to put it into the hands
of Nero Wolfe and no one else's. So I took him to the office. He marched across
to the desk like a West Point cadet ready for his commission, stood with his
heels together and asked politely:
"Mr. Nero Wolfe?"
"Yes, sir."
"From Seven Seas Radio. Sign here, please. The bill,
sir. Twenty-six dollars, please."
Wolfe, reaching for his pen, told me to fork over the dough.
I did so. The youth uttered thanks, stowed away the cash and the receipt, and
preceded me to the hall. I let him out and put the chain on, and went back in.
Wolfe was undoing the package, and Cramer was standing
across from him, right against the desk, looking down at it. It certainly was
an exhibition of bad manners. Wolfe said:
"You make me nervous, Mr. Cramer. Sit down."
"I'm all right."
"But I'm not. Take a chair."
Cramer grunted, backed into the chair I had ready and
lowered himself. Wolfe got the wrapping paper opened up and helped himself to
an exclusive look at what was inside. Then he gave a little grunt, folded the
paper over it again, and handed it to me.
"Put it in the safe, Archie."
I did so, closed the door and spun the knob, and returned to
my chair.
Wolfe heaved a deep sigh and then muttered irritably,
"That was the break we were waiting for, Mr. Cramer."
The inspector growled, "The break?"
Wolfe nodded. "A minute ago I said that what you want
wasn't here. It is now."
Cramer, slowly and carefully as
if he wanted to be sure of not sitting on an egg, got more comfortable in his
chair, resting his back, and lifted a forefinger to rub the side of his nose.
Wolfe also was leaning back. His eyes were closed, and his lips began to work
in and out. In the silence, the dick in the corner suddenly coughed and I
glared at him.
"Hell," Cramer said mildly, "I'm in no
hurry."
Apparently everyone took him at his word, for the silence
continued for another three minutes, and then Wolfe said without opening his
eyes:
"Of your two assumptions, Mr. Cramer, the first at
least is correct. I doubt if you could get what I've got. Or, considering the
attitude of your official superiors, if you did get it I doubt if you'd be able
to use it."
"You'll get no argument from me on that," the
inspector asserted. "What have I been saying? And while I know you can
handle your affairs without the help of any gratitude from me, still and all
–"
"I know. You're being tactful and adroit. You're
dripping honey. Pfui. I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll give you what you want,
on the condition that you agree without reservation to let me do it my way,
without interference or protest."
"Well." Cramer regarded him with narrowed eyes, but
it was one-sided, because Wolfe's eyes were still shut. "That's sort of
vague. That you'll give me what I want. Who decides what I want?"
"Nonsense. I'm not quibbling. You want the identity of
the murderer and the motive. I'll give you those."
"Any evidence?"
"Enough to satisfy you. And some of it I don't think
you'll ever get unless you get it here and soon."
"Is it that thing in the safe?"
"Oh, no, you could get that yourself in about
twenty-four hours. It took me twenty-five. I'll have to pry off a lid to get
the evidence I'm speaking of."
Cramer eyed him a moment longer and said, "Shoot."
"Without reservation, no interference or protest from
you."
"Right. Shoot."
Wolfe opened his eyes at me. "Archie, get Mr. Barrett
on the phone."
"Donny or Dad?"
"Mr. Barrett Senior."
Neya Tormic blurted, "You mustn't –"
As I got at the phone Wolfe shushed her, and he had to keep
on shushing her while I fiddled around with three different numbers before I
finally reached the desired party at the Thistle Club. She subsided when Wolfe
got on the phone:
"Mr. Barrett? This is Nero Wolfe. I'm calling to
fulfill a promise. I told you that if I should find it necessary to interfere
with your business I'd let you know in advance. I'm afraid I'm not giving you
much notice; I'm going ahead now. No, please, please, that won't help matters
any. At my office. Yes. Yes, I'll consent to that. No! If your son is there
with you, you'd better bring him along. Yes. We'll be expecting you within
fifteen minutes."
He pushed the phone away and got to his feet, and moved in
the direction of the door.
Neya Tormic jumped up and grabbed at him. She got his
sleeve. "Where – I'll go with you –"
"No, Miss Tormic. I'll be back in a moment.
Archie!"
I rose and started over, but before I got there she let him
go, and he went on out. I had no idea what her status was, or her intentions
either, so I ambled to the door and stood there with my back against it. She
didn't go back and sit down, but stood pat, with her eyes leveled at me, or
maybe at the door since I don't like to flatter myself. We had held the tableau
perhaps three minutes, not more than four, when I felt the door pressing
against me and stood aside to let Wolfe re-enter. He halted to hand me an
envelope, sealed, with For Neya Tormic on it in his writing, and then
went on to his desk.
He looked at Cramer and indicated with a thumb the dick in
the corner. "What is that man's name?"
"That? Charlie Heath."
"Tell him to obey the instructions I give him."
Cramer twisted his neck. "Here, Heath. Follow
orders."
"Thank you." Wolfe regarded the dick, approaching.
"Have you a car, Mr. Heath?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good. Take that envelope from Mr. Goodwin and put it
in your pocket. No, your inside pocket. Take Miss Tormic in your car and drive
–"
Neya was at him: "No! I don't – I'm not going –"
"That will do," Wolfe snapped. "You are
going. I do this my way. Have you any cash with you?"
"But I won't –"
"You will! Confound it, how much cash have you?"
"I … have a little."
"How much?"
"A few dollars."
"Archie, give Miss Tormic a hundred dollars."
I produced the expense roll and peeled it off, making the
roll look pretty sick, and handed it to her and she took it.
Wolfe said to the dick, "Drive to the corner of Fifth
Avenue and 35th Street, let Miss Tormic out, give her the envelope, leave her
there, and return straight here immediately. You are not to loiter to see what
she does or which way she goes. Nor are you to communicate in any way with any
other person, either going or returning."
I said grimly, "Send Fred along or let me go."
"Will that be necessary, Mr. Cramer?"
"No. I'm not a complete damn fool. Follow instructions,
Heath."
"Yes, sir. I take her to Fifth, drop her, give her the
envelope, and come straight back."
Wolfe nodded. "Will you do that?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good." He turned. "Au revoir, Miss
Tormic."
"Ah," she said. Her black eyes were piercing him.
"You think so?"
"Well … a conjecture. It wouldn't surprise me
any."
"You … you fat fool!"
"Yes, I'm fat. And of course we're all fools. I'm sorry
you won't be here to see the end of this. A silly little victory, but it's
mine."
"Victory!"
"Yes."
Her lip curled. She turned and started off. I got to the
door and opened it, but before she passed through she halted to fling back at
him, "Teega mee bornie roosa," or at least that was what it
sounded like. Then she went on, don't-touch-me all over, with the dick at her
heels. I let them out, followed them into the November night air, and stood on
the stoop to overlook the departure. As well as I could see in the dim light,
the dick didn't pass any signal to any colleague, and when they rolled off in
the police car they certainly weren't followed.
I stayed on the stoop long enough to be absolutely sure of
that, knowing as I did the lengths a cop will sometimes go to on account of his
passion for law and order, and was about to check it off and go back in when a
big black town car rolled to the curb there below me. A chauffeur jumped out
and opened the door, and touched his cap when one of the two men who emerged
said something to him. They started up the steps, and I recrossed the threshold
and turned to welcome two generations of Barretts. I asked them to wait there a
minute and went to the office and told Wolfe:
"Father and son."
"Bring them in."
I did that. John P., who hadn't changed his clothes, took
the chair Neya had occupied. His face was all tightened up, and the glance that
he shot first at Cramer and then at Wolfe was not what I would call
conciliatory. I moved up another chair for Donald. He looked so fierce and
truculent that I had a notion to go get him a hunk of raw meat. Nobody had
seemed to have any inclination to shake hands like gentlemen.
Wolfe said, "Fred, wait in front."
Fred went.
"Archie, take your notebook."
I took it.
John P. asked, "Are you Police Inspector Cramer?"
"Yes, sir," Cramer told him. "Of the Homicide
Bureau."
John P. said to Wolfe, "That's ridiculous. This is a
confidential business matter. And telling your man to take his notebook."
Wolfe leaned back and pressed his five right finger tips
against his five left ones. "No," he said, "I wouldn't call it
ridiculous. Mr. Cramer's presence is surely appropriate, since one of the
things you'll want to do is to try to arrange it so that your son will escape
an indictment for first-degree murder."
Cramer's head jerked around. Donald gawked, and some of the
color leaving his face made him look a little less fierce. John P. betrayed no
sign whatever of having heard anything more provocative than a remark about the
weather. But he clipped off words and lunged with them:
"That's worse than ridiculous. And more dangerous.
That's actionable."
"So it is." Wolfe's tone sharpened. "I'm
coming right out with it, Mr. Barrett. My dinner's in an hour, and I don't want
to waste time flopping around in a mire of inanities. I hold the cards and I
don't have to finesse. Your deal with the Donevitch gang is done for. Accept
that. Swallow it. I want to go on from that –"
"I'd like to see you alone." John P. stood up.
"Get them out of here or take me –"
"No. Sit down."
"Sit down for what? You say the deal's done for.
Whether it is or isn't, I'm not talking on that basis. There's nothing to talk
about. Come, Donald."
He started off. Wolfe's words hit him in the back:
"Within an hour a warrant will issue charging your son
with murder! It will be too late to talk to me then!"
Donald was up and following his leader. But his leader
suddenly wheeled, strode back to confront Cramer, and demanded:
"You're a responsible police officer. This blackmailing
threat is made in your presence. Do you know who I am? … Well?"
That was a fizzle, in spite of the fact that Cramer hadn't
the faintest idea of what was going on. I wouldn't have given an unconditioned
guarantee on his brains, but there was nothing wrong with his guts.
"Yeah, I know who you are," he said calmly.
"Sit down and give him rope. He owns this house and about a million
dollars' worth of orchids. It's a good thing you've got me here as a witness in
case you try for damages."
Wolfe snorted irritably. "Get out if you want to and
take the consequences. You're acting like a schoolgirl in a pet. Can't you see
I've got something to say and the best of your alternatives is to sit down and
listen to it? Do you take me for a maudlin blatherskite?"
Donald blurted, "He's a goddam bluffer –"
A look from his father cut him off, and a jerk of his
father's head ordered him back to his chair. Donald sat down. John P. did the
same and told Wolfe curtly:
"Say it."
"That's better." Wolfe got his finger tips
together again. "I'll make it as brief as I can since you already know it
and all Mr. Cramer needs at present is the outline." He gave the inspector
his eyes. "You might as well have the name of the murderer to begin with.
I promised you that. The Princess Vladanka Donevitch."
Cramer grunted. "I don't know her."
"Yes you do. We'll get to that. Her home is in Zagreb,
Croatia – Yugoslavia. She is the wife of young Prince Stefan. They like the
Nazis. Most Croats don't. The Donevitch family agree with other Croats in their
hatred of Belgrade. Belgrade is trying to make up its mind whether to be
dominated by Germany, Italy, France, or England. Germany, Italy, France, and
England are doing all they can to hasten the process. The attitude of the
Croats is Germany's biggest obstacle. She is trying to buy them, with the
Donevitch gang as selling agents. The other countries are competing –"
Cramer growled, "I'm a New York cop."
"I know, and most of the money in the world is in New
York, or controlled from here. That's why people come here from all directions
with things like this." Wolfe reached in to his breast pocket, pulled out
a paper and extended it to Cramer. "Keep that; it's evidence. You can't
read it. It is signed by Prince Stefan Donevitch and it empowers the princess,
his wife, to conclude certain transactions in his name –"
John P.'s lips twitched. "Where did you get that?"
"That doesn't matter, Mr. Barrett. Not now." Wolfe
went on to Cramer, "Specifically, transactions regarding concessions of
Bosnian forests and the transfer of credits held by a firm of international
bankers, Barrett & De Russy. The princess came to New York incognito, under
an alias, and started negotiations. Because secrecy was essential on account of
American restrictions regarding the export of capital in the form of loans, and
I suspect other skullduggery besides the violation of those restrictions, she
even went to the trouble of pretending to be an immigrant and getting a job in
a fencing school. I don't suppose many persons were aware of her true identity,
but certainly three were: Mr. Barrett here and his son, and a man named Rudolph
Faber who was assisting in the negotiations as a secret agent of the Nazi
government. You see, Barrett & De Russy have financial relations with the
Nazis,"
Donald began explosively, "We merely act –" but a
glance from his father shut him up again.
Wolfe nodded. "I know. Money and morals don't speak …
But a British agent named Ludlow got onto it. He not only got onto the princess
and what she was up to, he even threatened – I don't know how, but possibly by
informing the American government – to ruin the deal. And that just at the
moment when all details had been decided and it was ready for consummation. So
she killed Ludlow. I want to make it plain that the princess did that herself.
A friend, another young woman, had come from Zagreb with her, also under an
alias, but she had no part in the murder. You understand that, Mr.
Cramer?"
Cramer muttered, "Go on."
"There isn't a lot to go on with. Rudolph Faber knew
what the princess had done and he blackmailed her. Up to last evening he had
been merely a negotiator, a bidder; that made him boss. He imposed terms on
her, and I imagine they weren't generous; he didn't strike me as a generous
man. He forced her to tell where that paper was and he tried to get it. The
paper was of course vital. I presume, Mr. Barrett, it was to be attached to the
agreement you were drawing up, to validate it?"
John P. didn't answer.
Wolfe shrugged. "So she killed Faber. She made an
appointment to meet him in her own apartment and stabbed him. God only knows
what she thought she was going to do next. There is no way of telling what goes
on in that kind of a head. She seems to be as heedless and harebrained as a
lunatic. She may have counted on the taciturnity of governments and
international financiers regarding their privy intrigues, but what the devil
did she take me for, a goat on a chain? A creature like that is outside the
realm of calculation. I wouldn't have been surprised if she had tried to stab
me. Were you able to deal with her on a rational basis, Mr. Barrett?"
John P. was regarding him steadily. "I'm waiting for
you to say something."
"That's about all there is."
"Bah. You've made a lot of loose accusations, with
nothing to support them."
"There's that paper."
"You stole it."
"I didn't, but what if I did? There it is, for
evidence."
"Damn flimsy evidence for two murders."
"I know." Wolfe wiggled a finger at him. "See
here, Mr. Barrett, you're making a blunder. I made a serious threat. I said
that a warrant would issue charging your son with murder. I meant, of course,
as accessory, which is the same thing. It's obvious that he knew the Princess
Vladanka had killed Ludlow. You probably knew it too, but I have no proof that
you tried actively to cheat the law. I have got proof that your son did, and
three witnesses: Belinda Reade, Madame Zorka, and Mr. Goodwin, my
assistant."
"That was only –"
"Quiet, son." John P. didn't move his eyes from
Wolfe. "What else?"
"Nothing to stun you with, I'm afraid. Frankly, sir, I
have no bomb to explode under you. But the point is this. Mr. Cramer here
doesn't like murder. He doesn't like to see it practiced with impunity under
any circumstances whatever, but in this case he was impeded by a wall of
reluctance which he couldn't possibly have breached. By luck I had made a hole
in the wall and I've let him through, and if you knew him as I do you would
realize that he can't be chased out again. He has it now and he'll hang onto
it, unless you can get him ditched, which I doubt. He has that paper and he'll
arrest the princess, so your deal's off anyway.
He has enough to take your son as a material witness. With
that paper, he can get a court order to examine your records and
correspondence. But you know as well as I do what this will mean if you try to
fight it. If you try to shield a murderer from the penalty she has earned. The
fact is –"
I missed some then because I had to answer the doorbell. It
was Charlie Heath. He started for the office as if he owned the place, but I
blocked him off and demanded, "Would you mind explaining what it was that
took so long?"
"I'll report to the inspector."
"He's busy and you'll wait in here." I opened the
door to the front room, where Fred Durkin was sitting with a magazine.
"What used up all the time?"
"Nothing used it up. I mean I got back ten minutes ago.
I've been out front."
"You have."
"I have."
"Okay. Wait here."
I went back to the office and ran into a scowling match, and
took advantage of it to report the return of Heath. All Cramer did was to favor
me with five seconds of his share of the scowl. Wolfe didn't even look at me.
Apparently he was still trying to undermine Barrett without a bomb and was
finding it hard digging.
"No," he said, "I wouldn't expect that. We
don't expect much from you, Mr. Barrett, in any event. But you seem to have
overlooked one thing, at least. You seem to be ignoring the existence of a
person who knows as much about all this as the princess herself does. Including
your part in it, and your son's part. I mean, of course, the friend who came
here with the princess from Zagreb."
"Maybe he's ignoring it," Cramer put in, "but
I'm not. And you let her go, and gave her money to go with. That was cute."
"No," Wolfe asserted, "I did not."
Cramer stared. Wolfe said, "Archie, get that package
from the safe and give it to Mr. Cramer."
I went and got it and handed it over. Cramer started to
unfold it.
"That," Wolfe said, "is the photograph of the
Princess Vladanka Donevitch, radioed from London. If I had only got it this
morning –"
Cramer jumped up, sputtering, "What kind of a goddam
run-around – this is that Tormic –"
"Now, please!" Wolfe pushed a palm at him.
"Yes, it is Miss Tormic. I agreed –"
"And she's – and by God, you had one of my men
take her and turn her loose –"
"I did. What else could I do? She was sitting here in
my office, thinking she was my client, under my protection. I didn't agree to catch
the murderer for you, I agreed to disclose the identity and the motive. If
you'll take my advice, the simplest way to get her –"
But Cramer wasn't taking advice. He nearly knocked me out of
my chair, getting at the phone. Father and son sat tight. Wolfe looked up at
the clock and heaved a sigh. Cramer got his number and began spouting orders to
someone. I picked up the radiophoto of the princess and laid it on Wolfe's
desk, and gathered up the wrapping paper and put it in the wastebasket.
Cramer finished and stood up and yapped at Wolfe, "If
we don't get her I'll –"
"It was a bargain," Wolfe snapped.
"One hell of a bargain." He moved for the door,
turned, and spoke to the Barretts, "I'll want to see you. If you try
setting a fire under me, I'll give you all I've got." He went and I was
right behind him. While he grabbed his coat and hat I got Heath from the front
room, always glad to get cops out of the house, from flatfoots on up. I
followed them out to the stoop, leaving the door ajar, and watched the army
that had been surrounding the house being called into action. Cramer waved them
in and gave them curt and crackling orders. His own car had to back up a few
feet before it could nose around the rear of the Barrett town car. The taxi
down the street rolled up, then it and Heath's car sped away. Cramer's car
started, then stopped, and my name was called:
"Hey, Goodwin, come here!"
I trotted down the steps and past Barrett's car on over to
him. Cramer leaned from the window:
"I want that picture. Understand?"
"Sure we're through with it," I told him
obligingly, and stood at the curb and watched their tail light as they headed
for the corner.
I watched them too long.
What happened, happened quick, but even so I might have
headed her off if I had turned two seconds sooner. She came from inside the
tonneau of Barrett's car, leaping out, and went like a bat out of hell across
the sidewalk, up the steps and through the door I had left ajar. I was after
her, and I am not old enough to be incapable of rapid movement. I was starting
up the steps as she hurtled through the door, and by the light in the hall I
saw a glittering streak from something she had in her hand. I gave it all I had
then, but I couldn't catch lightning. When I was at the door she was swerving into
the office. As I made the office she was halfway across it and her hand was up
with the shining blade, and Wolfe was there in his chair with no time to move,
and I had no gun, and all I could do was yell and keep going.
I do not know how Wolfe did it and I never will know, though
he has kindly explained it to me several times. He says that when he heard the
commotion in the hall he stiffened into attention, which is the most incredible
part of it; that when he saw her leaping in with the dagger flashing he grabbed
a beer bottle with each hand; that when she was upon him he struck
simultaneously with both hands, with his left at her descending wrist and with
his right at anything at all. I don't know. I do know that something broke her
right wrist and something cracked her skull.
When I reached them he was still sitting in his chair with a
beer bottle in each hand and she was on the floor back of his chair, flat on
the floor, with her legs twitching spasmodically. I looked at him for blood and
didn't see any. Fred Durkin busted in from the front room. Fritz came running
from the kitchen. Father and son stood there white and speechless. I couldn't
see anything wrong with Wolfe, but I asked him in a voice that sounded funny to
me:
"Did she get you?"
"No!" he bellowed. He couldn't get up because her
body against his chair kept him from shoving it back to make room.
I knelt down to take a look at her. Her legs had stopped
twitching. I couldn't feel any heart. It was close quarters, with her there
between Wolfe's chair and the wall, and I squirmed around to get on the other
side of her. As I did so I heard a voice from the middle of the room:
"Excuse me for walking right in, Mr. Wolfe, but the
door was standing open. I was on my way uptown and I dropped in to say that we
may expect a ruling from the attorney general on that point in about a week – the
matter of registration as the agent of a foreign principal when the –"
I raised myself up enough to see the face of Stahl the G-man
looking polite but stern. Then I sat back on my heels and howled with laughter.
Wolfe said in a tone of
exasperation, "Fritz tells me nothing on your tray was touched. Confound
it, you have to eat something!"
Carla shook her head. "I can't. I'm sorry. I
can't."
I had brought her down to the office. The clock on the wall
said 11:20. The chairs were back in place.
Wolfe sighed. "It's nearly midnight. Mr. Goodwin is
yawning. You may go now whenever you want to. Or I'll ask one or two questions
if you feel like telling the truth."
"I can tell the truth – now."
"It would have been just as well …" His massive
shoulders went up a sixteenth of an inch and down again. "I would like to
know if you were aware that that woman was a maniac."
"But she wasn't –" Carla stopped for repairs to
her voice. "I never had any idea …" Her hand fluttered and dropped
again to her lap.
"Were you in fact her friend?"
"Not – no, not her friend. It wasn't like that. When
Mrs. Campbell died I was left dependent on the Donevitch family. Then Prince
Stefan married her and she came there and in no time she was head of things.
She treated me as well as I could expect, since I was not a
Donevitch. I didn't dislike her. I was a little afraid of her and so was
everybody else, even Prince Stefan. When she decided to come to America she
selected me to come with her, and I thought then that the reason she did that
was because she knew about you and she thought she might need to use you. One
reason I thought that was because she told me to bring that adoption paper
along –"
"Yes. Excuse me. Get it, Archie."
I went to the safe and dug it out and handed it to him. He
unfolded it to glance at it, folded it up again, and passed it over to her. She
looked at it a second as if she was afraid it might bite, and then reached out
and took it.
"I came with her because I had to – and anyway I wanted
to," she went on in a better voice. "It was an adventure to come to
America. I knew all about – what she was coming for. She trusted me. I knew she
would do dangerous things – but I never thought of anything like murder as a
thing she would do. When Ludlow was killed I suspected she had done it, but I
didn't know. I asked her last night, and she told me I was a fool. Then when I
went there this morning and saw Faber, of course I knew she had done that and
the other one too. I was frightened and I couldn't think. I couldn't answer
questions about her – I couldn't betray her – but I couldn't lie for her any
more either. I tried to run away – and I couldn't use my head – and in a
strange country – and I was stupid –"
She stopped, and her hand fluttered and fell to her lap
again.
In a moment Wolfe said gruffly, "It is faintly
encouraging that you are aware that you were stupid."
She offered no comment. He demanded:
"What are you going to do?"
"I …" She shook her head. "I don't
know."
"Well, I suppose you are legally my daughter. That puts
some responsibility on me."
Her chin went up. "I'm not asking any –"
"Pfui! Don't. I know. Confound it, you've been
dependent on someone all your life, haven't you? Are you going back to
Yugoslavia?"
"No."
"Oh. You're not."
"No."
"What do you want to do, stay in America?"
"Yes."
"As a spy for the Donevitch gang?"
There was a flash in her eye. "No!"
"Where are you going to sleep tonight? In that
apartment on 38th Street?"
"Why, I …" A shiver went over her. "No,"
she said, "I … I don't think I could. I couldn't go back there. Somewhere
else. Anywhere. I have a little money." She got to her feet. "I can
go –"
"Nonsense. You'd get run over or fall into a hole. You
haven't eaten anything and your brain isn't working. I hope it turns out that
you've got one. I'll have Fritz fix up another tray for you –"
"No, I couldn't, really I couldn't …"
"Well, you must sleep and in the morning you must eat.
You are in no condition now, anyway, to make any sort of intelligent decision.
We'll discuss it tomorrow. If you decide to stay in America and not to tear
that paper up I suppose your name will be Carla Wolfe. In that case – Archie,
what the devil are you grinning about? Baboon! Take Miss – take my – take her
upstairs to the south room! And tell her if she undertakes to use the fire
escape not to tumble through my window as she goes by!"
I arose. "Come on, Miss my Carla."
Ten minutes later I went back to the office. I hadn't heard
the elevator so I knew he was still there. Not only was he still there but he
had just received a fresh consignment of beer.
I took a good stretch accompanied by a yawn.
"Well," I observed good-naturedly, "that was a damn profitable
case. You turned loose of about four centuries not counting loss of brain
tissue, and what you got out of it was one shapely responsibility and nothing
else."
He put down his empty glass and said nothing.
"There is one thing," I announced, "that I
would like to have cleared up now, once and for all. I was at fault in one
respect and only one. I should not have left the front door ajar when I went
down to the sidewalk when Cramer called me. Aside from that, I couldn't help
it. The nervy little devil had come along to the Barretts' chauffeur five
minutes before we went out and told him she was supposed to meet his employer
there, and he opened the door for her so she could wait inside the car. Two
dicks saw it, though they didn't recognize her in the dim light, and they
kindly said nothing about it. She was out of the car, behind my back, and starting
up the steps before I knew she was there. There wasn't a chance in the world of
catching her."
Wolfe shrugged. "I managed without you," he
murmured in an absolutely insufferable tone.
I gritted my teeth, and as soon as I had got it swallowed,
yawned. "Okay," I said sleepily. "There are, however, one or two
little questions. What was in the envelope you gave that dick to give
her?"
"Nothing. Only a sentence saying that she was not my
client, and, under the terms as stated, never had been."
"And what was it she said as she went out? 'Teega
mee bornie roosa,' or something like that."
"That was her native tongue."
"Yeah. What does it mean?"
"'Over my dead body.'"
"Is that so." I humphed. "She called the turn
then. I guess that's all I need, except maybe one thing. Such items as her
claiming your help by using Carla's adoption paper for herself – I get all
that. But I'll be darned if I can see why Ludlow said she went to the locker
room to get his cigarettes. Him a British spy and her a Balkan princess? Why
did he –"
"He didn't. She went to the locker room to steal
something from his coat. Probably that paper which she sent here the next
morning to be hid in a safe place, because he had previously stolen it from
her. And he was letting her know that he knew that."
Wolfe sighed, pushed back his chair, and manipulated himself
to his feet. "I'm going to bed." He got halfway to the door, but
stopped again. "By the way, remind me tomorrow to ask Mr. Cramer for that
hundred dollars. I wish I could cure myself of those idiotic romantic
gestures."
"Oh, that hundred?" I patted my pocket. "I've
already got it. That was the first thing I did."
Rex Stout, the creator of Nero
Wolfe, was born in Noblesville, Indiana, in 1886, the sixth of nine children of
John and Lucetta Todhunter Stout, both Quakers. Shortly after his birth the
family moved to Wakarusa, Kansas. He was educated in a country school, but by
the age of nine he was recognized throughout the state as a prodigy in
arithmetic. Mr. Stout briefly attended the University of Kansas but he left to
enlist in the Navy and spent the next two years as a warrant officer on board
President Theodore Roosevelt's yacht. When he left the Navy in 1908, Rex Stout
began to write free-lance articles and worked as a sightseeing guide and an
itinerant bookkeeper. Later he devised and implemented a school banking system
that was installed in four hundred cities and towns throughout the country. In
1927 Mr. Stout retired from the world of finance and, with the proceeds from
his banking scheme, left for Paris to write serious fiction. He wrote three
novels that received favorable reviews before turning to detective fiction. His
first Nero Wolfe novel, Fer-de-Lance, appeared in 1934. It was followed
by many others, among them, Too Many Cooks, The Silent Speaker, If
Death Ever Slept, The Doorbell Rang, and Please Pass the Guilt,
which established Nero Wolfe as a leading character on a par with Erie Stanley
Gardner's famous protagonist, Perry Mason. During World War II Rex Stout waged
a personal campaign against Nazism as chairman of the War Writers' Board,
master of ceremonies of the radio program "Speaking of Liberty," and
member of several national committees. After the war he turned, his attention
to mobilizing public opinion against the wartime use of thermonuclear devices,
was an active leader in the Authors Guild, and resumed writing his Nero Wolfe
novels. Rex Stout died in 1975 at the age of eighty-eight. A month before his
death he published his seventy-second Nero Wolfe mystery, A Family Affair.
Ten years later, a seventy-third Nero Wolfe mystery was discovered and
published in Death Times Three.
Fer-de-Lance
The League of Frightened Men
The Rubber Band
The Red Box
Too Many Cooks
Some Buried Caesar
Over My Dead Body
Where There's a Will
Black Orchids
Not Quite Dead Enough
The Silent Speaker
Too Many Women
And Be a Villain
The Second Confession
Trouble in Triplicate
In the Best Families
Three Doors to Death
Murder by the Book
Curtains for Three
Prisoner's Base
Triple Jeopardy
The Golden Spiders
The Black Mountain
Three Men Out
Before Midnight
Might As Well Be Dead
Three Witnesses
If Death Ever Slept
Three for the Chair
Champagne for One
And Four to Go
Plot It Yourself
Too Many Clients
Three at Wolfe's Door
The Final Deduction
Gambit
Homicide Trinity
The Mother Hunt
A Right to Die
Trio for Blunt Instruments
The Doorbell Rang
Death of a Doxy
The Father Hunt
Death of a Dude
Please Pass the Guilt
A Family Affair
Death Times Three
Over My Dead Body
REX STOUT
Over My Dead Body
A NERO WOLFE MYSTERY
BANTAM BOOKS
NEW YORK • TORONTO • LONDON • SYDNEY • AUCKLAND
OVER MY DEAD BODY
A Bantam Crime Line Book / by arrangement with the author
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Farrar and Rhinehart edition published 1940
Bantam reissue edition / January 1994
Crime Line and the portrayal of a boxed "cl" are
trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1939, 1940, 1968, by Rex Stout.
Introduction copyright © 1993 by John Jakes.
Cover art copyright © 1993 by Tom Hallman.
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 0-553-23116-2
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 0 9 8 7
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
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Rex Stout
The Rex Stout Library
I met Rex Stout in the aftermath
of a crime. Beg pardon, alleged crime. The creator of Mr. Wolfe and Archie
didn't believe any crime had been committed.
The year was 1962; the place, Rochester, New York. I was
working there as a copywriter in an ad agency whose major account was Eastman
Kodak, irreverently known as Big Yellow. I was also one of the youngest, if not
the youngest, board members of the Friends of the Rochester Public Library.
This was the first of several Friends groups I became associated with out of my
general love of, and need for, libraries, and it stands out as one of the most
vigorous and progressive.
The crime, so-called, was not the kind that figures in one
of these fine Stout reprints. It was what some term a victimless crime. But to
the authorities in Rochester, especially the district attorney, whose press
statements seemed to reek of puritanical hellfire and political ambition, it
was a crime of the most dangerous kind.
To wit: selling a book.
The book was the Grove Press edition of Henry Miller's Tropic
of Cancer. Sale of the allegedly obscene book was prohibited in New York
State and a lot of other states as well. The alleged perp was a smallish,
mild-appearing bookseller, whom I'll call Norman B. Norman B. ran a large
independent store not far from the massive granite block of the main library,
on the bank of the Genesee River. Along with the usual array of semilurid
girlie magazines and sexy paperbacks, in which the raciest word was something
like "nipples," the bookstore offered Miller's novel for sale.
Which got Norman B. in a peck of trouble.
Now I honestly don't remember whether he was actually served
with an arrest warrant, or just ordered by the D.A. to get rid of the Miller or
else. But I do remember the quick response. Certain members of the Friends,
including several stouthearted technical writers from Kodak, formed an ad hoc
group called Audience Unlimited. Its purpose was to advertise and write letters
objecting to the law coming down hard on Norman B. and, more pertinently, on
the freedom to read. Yours truly was part of the new group.
Norman B. himself immediately took countermeasures,
instituting a legal action to overturn the Tropic ban. In 1964 the case
was decided in his favor by the New York State courts, some four months after
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the book not obscene.
In the midst of the Sturm und Drang unleashed by the Tropic
affair, Mr. Stout came to town.
He came not to defend Norman B. or Henry M. but as a guest
speaker at the sixth annual Friends Literary Award presentation. The award that
year was given to Lewis Stiles Gannett, a native of Rochester and a journalist,
author, and at that time editor of Doubleday's marvelous Mainstream of America
series of historical studies.
The award ceremony was held in the great main hall of the
Rochester library, with a small social gathering preceding. As a Friends board
member, I was invited to attend the reception. The words "high
excitement" hardly describe my state; the honored guest was a Famous Name
Writer, and I was a devoted fan of his mysteries.
I vividly recall my first sight of Rex Stout, who was at
that time seventy-five. His hair was white and so was his splendid long beard,
and I remember thinking that he looked like an American cousin of Shaw. Of
course he was a godlike figure to me – I was thirty, slogging along fairly
unsuccessfully with one third-rate pulp novel after another. But I approached
him, shook his hand, muttered a few words, and I remember that he was friendly
and humorous: kindness personified.
He was less friendly and humorous when it was his turn to
speak. Of course he was appropriately warm and complimentary to his friend
Gannett. But then he launched into a jeremiad against book-banners. He said,
"Efforts to censor what people read are not justified under the American system."
He thrilled me with his remarks. The audience gave him an ovation when he
finished.
Which brings me around to the real point of this
Introduction.
Rex Stout was a lifelong champion of writers, and a lifelong
foe of those who would take advantage of them or suppress their work. As a
highly successful writer himself, he obviously believed in giving something
back to the profession for the benefit of others who weren't so successful.
Virtually his whole life testifies to this. Stout became a
member of the Authors League in 1915. He was president of the League, the
umbrella organization for the Authors Guild and the Dramatists Guild, from 1951
to 1955 and again from 1961 to 1969.
He served the Authors Guild as president from 1943 to 1945
and was a member of the Guild Council from 1942 until the time of his death in
1975. As the Guild's Bulletin said in its obituary, "He was always
ready to give of his time and spirit to Guild business." Of his many
activities, probably none was more important than his presidency of the Authors
League Fund, which helps professional writers who happen to fall into dire
financial distress.
A man named Olin Miller has said, "Writing is the
hardest way of earning a living, with the possible exception of wrestling
alligators." That's more than a little self-serving; millions of men and
women in other jobs would make the same statement about their work. But it's
also true that writers have few defenders beyond themselves.
That's why the Authors League was formed, and its two guilds
as well.
That's why Rex Stout gave so much of himself to Guild and
League causes.
That's why he came to Rochester and spoke out against the
immoral banning of Miller's novel. (Who knows what he thought of the book? He
might have hated it; I've never been wild about it myself. But it was a serious
book, and if you allow the yahoos to ban one such, you open the door to
suppression of all of them – and a lot of other art besides. Which is hardly
big news but is, regrettably, a recurring problem.)
Rex Stout gave me great pleasure through his novels. I
expect he has done the same for you and will certainly do so again in Over
My Dead Body.
But he also gave me great pride in my chosen profession and
a sure knowledge that, someday, if ever I could, I had to give something back
too.
I'll never forget the day Rex Stout came to Rochester. If
you'd been there, you wouldn't either.
– John Jakes
The bell rang and I went to the
front and opened the door and there she was. I said good morning.
"Pliz," she said, "I would like to see Misturr Nero Wolfe."
Or you might have spelled it plihz or plizz or plihsz.
However you spelled it, it wasn't Middle West or New England or Park Avenue or
even East Side. It wasn't American, and naturally it irritated me a little. But
I politely invited her in and conducted her to the office and got her a chair,
and then extracted her name, which I had to ask her to spell.
"Mr. Wolfe will be engaged until eleven o'clock,"
I told her, with a glance at the wall clock above my desk, which said ten
thirty. "I'm Archie Goodwin, his confidential secretary. If you'd like to
save time by starting on me …"
She shook her head and said she had plenty of time. I asked
if she would like a book or magazine, and she shook her head again, and I
passed her up and resumed at my desk, where I was heading up a bunch of
hybridizing cards for use upstairs. Five minutes later I had finished and was
checking them over when I heard her voice behind me:
"I believe I would like a book. May I?"
I waved at the shelves and told her to help herself and went
on with the checking. Presently I looked up when she approached and stood
beside me with a volume in her hand.
"Misturr Wolfe reads this?" she asked. She had a
nice soft low voice which would have sounded all right if she had taken the
trouble to learn how to pronounce words. I glanced at the title and told her
Wolfe had read it some time ago.
"But he stoodies it?"
"Why should he? He's a genius, he don't have to study
anything."
"He reads once and then he is through?"
"That's the idea."
She started for her chair and then turned again. "Do
you read it perhaps?"
"I do not," I said emphatically.
She half smiled. "It's too complicated for you, the
Balkan history?"
"I don't know, I haven't tried it. But I understand all
the kings and queens got murdered. I like newspaper murders better."
She turned off the smile and went and sat down with the
book, and appeared to be absorbed in it a few minutes later when, the checking
finished, I jiggled the handful of cards neatly together and departed with
them, and mounted the two flights of carpeted stairs to the top floor and the
steeper flight to the roof level, where the entire space was glassed-in for the
orchids except the potting room and the corner where Horstmann slept. Passing
through the first two rooms, down the aisles with silver staging and concrete
benches and thousands of pots holding everything from baby seedlings to odontoglossums
and dendrobiums in full bloom, I found Nero Wolfe in the warm room, standing
with his thumbs on his hips, frowning at Horstmann, who in turn was scowling
reproachfully at an enormous coelogyne blossom with white petals and orange
keels. Wolfe was muttering:
"A full two weeks. At the very least, twelve days. As
Per Hansa says, I don't know what God expects to accomplish by such management.
If it were only a question of forcing – well, Archie?"
I handed Horstmann the cards. "For that batch of
miltonias and lycastes. The germination dates are already in where you had
them. There's a female immigrant downstairs who wants to borrow a book. She is
twenty-two years old and has fine legs. Her face is sullen but well-arranged
and her eyes are dark and beautiful and worried. She has a nice voice, but she
talks like Lynn Fontanne in Idiot's Delight. Her name is Carla
Lovchen."
Wolfe had taken the cards from Horstmann to flip through
them, but he stopped to send me a sharp glance. "What's that?" he
demanded. "Her name?"
"Lovchen." I spelled it, and grinned. "Yeah,
I know, it struck me too. You may remember I read The Native's Return. She
seems to be named after a mountain. The Black Mountain. Mount Lovchen.
Tsernagora. Montenegro, which is the Venetian variant of Monte Nero, and your
name is Nero. It may be only a coincidence, but it's natural for a trained
detective –"
"What does she want?"
"She says she wants to see you, but I think she came to
borrow a book. She took that United Yugoslavia by Henderson from the
shelf and asked if you've read it, and do you stoody it, and am I reading it
and so on. She's down there with her pretty nose in it. But as I say, her eyes
look worried. I had a notion to tell her that because of the healthy condition
of the bank account –"
I turned it off because he was ignoring me and giving his
attention to the cards. Reflecting that that was an unusually childish gesture
even for him, since it lacked only three minutes till eleven o'clock, the hour
when he invariably proceeded from the plant rooms to the office, I snorted
audibly, wheeled, and went for the stairs.
The immigrant was still in the chair, reading, but had
abandoned the book for a magazine. I looked around for it to return it to the
shelf, but saw that she had already done so; it was back in its place, and I
gave her a good mark for that because I've noticed that most girls are so
darned untidy around a house. I told her Wolfe would be down soon, and had just
got my notes cleared away and the typewriter lowered when I heard the door of
his personal elevator clanging, and a moment later he entered. A pace short of
his desk he arrested his progress to acknowledge the visitor's presence with a
little bow which achieved only one degree off the perpendicular, then continued
to his chair, got deposited, glanced at the vase of cattleyas and the morning
mail under the weight, put his thumb to the button to summon beer, leaned back
and adjusted himself, and sighed. The visitor, with the magazine closed on her
lap, was gazing at him through long lowered lashes.
Wolfe said abruptly and crisply, "Lovchen? That is not
your name. It is no one's name."
Her lashes fluttered. "My name," she said with a
half smile, "is what I say it is. Would you call it a convenience? Not to
irritate the Americans with a name like Kraljevitch?"
"Is that yours?"
"No."
"No matter." Wolfe sounded testy – as far as I
could see, for no reason. "You came to see me?"
Her lips parted for a soft little laugh. "You sound
like a Tsernagore," she declared. "Or a Montenegrin if you prefer it,
as the Americans do. You don't look like one, since Tsernagores grow up and up,
not out and all around like you. But when you talk I feel at home. That's
exactly how a Tsernagore speaks to a girl. Is it what you eat?"
I turned my head to enjoy a grin. Wolfe demanded, almost
bellowing at her, "What can I do for you, Miss Lovchen?"
"Oh yes." Her eyes showed the worry again. "I
was forgetting on account of seeing you. You are a famous man, I know that, of
course, but you don't look famous. You look more like –" She stopped, made
a little circle with her lips, and went on, "Anyway, you're famous, and
you have been in Montenegro. You see, I know much about you. Hvala Bogu.
Because I want to engage you on account of some trouble."
"I'm afraid –"
"Not my trouble," she continued rapidly.
"It's a friend of mine, a girl who came with me to America not long ago.
Her name is Neya Tormic." The long black lashes flickered. "Just as
mine is Carla Lovchen. We work together at the studio of Nikola Miltan on 48th
Street. You know, perhaps? Dancing and fencing are taught there. You know
him?"
"I've met him," Wolfe admitted gruffly, "at
the table of my friend Marko Vukčić. But I'm afraid I'm too busy at
present –"
She swept on in front. "We're good fencers, Neya and I.
Corsini in Zagreb passed us with foils, йpйe, and sabre. And the dancing, of
course, is easy. We learn the Lambeth Walk in twenty minutes, we teach it to
rich people in five lessons, and they pay high, and Nikola Miltan takes the
money and pays us only not so high. That is why, in this foolish trouble Neya
has got into, we can pay you not so much as you might expect from some people,
but we can pay you a little, and added to that is the fact that we are from Zagreb.
It's not a little trouble Neya has got into, it's a big one, through no fault
of hers, because she is not a thief, as anyone but an American fool would be
aware. They'll put her in jail, and you must act quickly, at once –"
Wolfe's face was set in a grimace, showing that he was in
the throes of an agitation away beyond his chronic reluctance to bother his
mind about business when the bank balance was up in five figures. Displaying a
palm at her, he tried to expostulate:
"I tell you I'm too busy –"
She hopped right over it. "I came instead of Neya
because she has important lessons this morning, and it is necessary we should
keep our jobs. But you will have to see her, of course, so you will have to go
there, and anyway Miltan is arranging for everyone to be there together today,
this afternoon, to settle it. It's the biggest nonsense anyone could imagine to
suppose that Neya would put her hand in a man's pocket and steal diamonds, but
it will be terrible if it happens the way Miltan says it will happen if the
diamonds are not returned – but wait – you must let me tell you –"
My mouth was standing open in astonishment. After two hours
on his feet in the plant rooms, when he came to the office at eleven o'clock
and got lowered into his chair, with me there to annoy him pleasantly and the
beer-tray freshly delivered by Fritz Brenner, Wolfe was ordinarily as immovable
as a two-ton boulder. But now he was rising; he was risen. With a mutter that
might have been taken either for an excuse or an imprecation, and with no
glance at either of us, he stalked out of the room, by the door that led to the
hall. We watched him go and then the immigrant turned and let me have her eyes
wide open.
"He gets sick!" she demanded.
I shook my head. "Eccentric," I explained. "I
suppose you might call it a form of sickness, but it's nothing tangible like
concussion of the brain or whooping-cough. Once when a respectable lawyer was
sitting in that very chair you're in now – Yes, Fritz?"
The door which Wolfe had closed behind him had opened again
and Fritz Brenner stood there with a bewildered look on his face.
"In the kitchen a moment, please, Archie."
I got up and excused myself and went to the kitchen.
Preliminary preparations for lunch were scattered around on the big
linoleum-covered table, but it was obvious that Wolfe had not been suddenly
seized with a violent curiosity about food. He stood at the far side of the
refrigerator, facing me in a determined manner that seemed entirely uncalled
for, and told me abruptly as I entered:
"Send her away."
"My God!" I admit I blew up a little. "She
said she'd pay something, didn't she? It's enough to freeze the blood of an
alligator! If you read it in her eyes that her friend Neya did actually glumb
the glass, you might at least –"
"Archie." It was about as hostile as his voice
ever got. "I have skedaddled, physically, once in my life, from one
person, and that was a Montenegrin woman. It was many years ago, but my nerves
remember it. I neither desire nor intend to explain how I felt when that
Montenegrin female voice in there said 'Hvala Bogu.' Send her
away."
"But there's no –"
"Archie!"
I saw it was hopeless, though I had no idea whether he was
overcome by terror or was staging a stunt. I gave it up and went back to the
office and stood in front of her.
"Mr. Wolfe regrets that he will be unable to help your
friend out of her trouble. He's busy."
Her head was tilted back to look up at me, and a little gasp
left her mouth open. "But he can't – he must!" She jumped to her feet
and I backed up a step as her eyes flashed at me. "We are from Tsernagora!
She is – my friend is –" Indignation choked it off.
"It's final," I said brusquely. "He won't
touch it. Sometimes I can change his mind for him, but there are limits. What
does 'Hvala Bogu' mean?"
She stared. "It means 'Thank God.' If I see him, tell
him –"
"You shouldn't have said it. It gives him the willies
to hear a Montenegrin female voice talk Montenegrin. It's a kind of allergy.
I'm sorry, Miss Lovchen, but there's not a chance. I know him from A to P,
which is as far as he goes. P is for pigheaded."
"But he – I must see him, tell him –"
She was stubborn enough herself so that it took five minutes
to persuade her out, and since the only prejudice I had acquired against
Montenegrin females up to that point was based merely on pronunciation, which
is not after all vital, I didn't want to get rough. Finally I closed the front
door behind her and went to the kitchen and announced sarcastically:
"I think it's safe now. Stay close behind me and if I
holler run like hell."
Wolfe's inarticulate growl, as I wheeled and headed for the
office, warned me that there was barbed wire in that neighborhood, so when he
came in a few minutes later and got re-established in his chair I made no
effort to explain my viewpoint any further. He drank beer and fiddled around
with a pile of catalogues, while I checked over a couple of invoices from
Hoehn's and did some miscellaneous chores. When a little later he asked me to
please open the window a crack, I knew the tension was relaxing toward normal.
But if either or both of us had any idea that we were
through with the Balkans for that day, it wasn't long before we had it jostled
out of us. It was customary for Fritz to answer the doorbell from eleven on,
when I was in the office with Wolfe. Around twelve thirty he came in, advanced
the usual three paces, stood formally, and announced a caller named Stahl who
would not declare his business but stated that he was an agent of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
I let out a low whistle and ejaculated cautiously
"Aha!" Wolfe opened his eyes a trifle and nodded, and Fritz went for
the caller.
We hadn't bumped into a G-man before in the course of
business, and when he entered I did him the honor of swiveling clear around for
a look. He was all right, medium-sized, with good shoulders and good eyes, a
little skimpy in the jaw, and he needed a shoeshine. He told us his name again
and shook hands with both of us, and took from his pocket a little leather case
which he flipped open and exhibited to Wolfe with a reserved but friendly
smile.
"My credentials," he explained in an educated
voice. He certainly had fine manners, something on the order of a high-class
insurance salesman.
Wolfe glanced at the exhibit, nodded, and indicated a chair.
"Well, sir?"
The G-man looked politely apologetic. "We're sorry to
bother you, Mr. Wolfe, but it's our job. I'd like to ask whether you are
acquainted with the Federal statute which recently went into effect, requiring
persons who are agents in this country of foreign principals to register with
the Department of State."
"Not intimately. I read newspapers. I read about that
some time ago."
"Then you know of that law?"
"I do."
"Have you registered?"
"No. I am not an agent of a foreign principal."
The G-man threw one knee over the other. "The law
applies to agents of foreign firms, individuals or organizations, as well as to
foreign governments."
"So I understand."
"It also applies, here, both to aliens and to citizens.
Are you a citizen of the United States?"
"I am. I was born in this country."
"You were at one time an agent of the Austrian
government?"
"Briefly, as a boy. Not here, abroad. I quit."
"And joined the Montenegrin army?"
"Later, but still a boy. I then believed that all
misguided or cruel people should be shot, and I shot some. I starved to death
in 1916."
The G-man looked startled. "I beg your pardon?"
"I said I starved to death. When the Austrians came and
we fought machine guns with fingernails. Logically I was dead; a man can't live
on dry grass.
Actually I went on breathing. When the United States entered
the war and I walked six hundred miles to join the A. E. F., I ate again. When
it ended I returned to the Balkans, shed another illusion, and came back to
America."
"Hvala Bogu," I put in brightly.
Stahl, startled again, shot me a glance. "I beg your
pardon? Are you a Montenegrin?"
"Nope. Pure Ohio. The ejaculation was
involuntary."
Wolfe, ignoring me, went on, "I would like to say, Mr.
Stahl, that my temperament would incline me to resent and resist an attempt by
any individual to inquire into my personal history or affairs, but I do not
regard you as an individual. Naturally. You represent the Federal government.
You are, in effect, America itself sitting in my office wanting to know
something about me, and I am so acutely grateful to my native country for the
decencies it still manages to preserve … by the way, would you care for a glass
of American beer?"
"No, thank you."
Wolfe pushed the button and leaned back. He grunted.
"To your question, sir: I represent no foreign principal, firm,
individual, organization, dictator, or government. Occasionally I pursue
inquiries here, professionally as a detective, on requests from Europe, chiefly
from Mr. Ethelbert Hitchcock of London, an English confrere, as he does there
for me. I am pursuing none at present. I am not an agent of Mr. Hitchcock or of
anyone else."
"I see," Stahl sounded open to conviction. "That's
definite enough. But your early experiences in Europe … may I ask … do you know
a Prince Donevitch?"
"I knew him long ago. He's getting ready to die, I
believe, in Paris."
"I don't mean him. Isn't there another one?"
"There is. Old Peter's nephew. Prince Stefan Donevitch.
I believe he lives in Zagreb. When I was there in 1916 he was a six-year-old
boy."
"Have you communicated with him recently?"
"No. I never have."
"Have you sent money to him or to anyone or any
organization for him – or the cause he represents?"
"No, sir."
"You do make remittances to Europe, don't you?"
"I do." Wolfe grimaced. "From my own funds,
earned at my trade. I have contributed to the Loyalists in Spain. I send money
occasionally to the – translated, it is the League of Yugoslavian Youth. Prince
Stefan Donevitch assuredly has no connection with that."
"I wouldn't know. What about your wife? Weren't you
married?"
"No. Married? No. That was what –" Wolfe stirred,
as under restraint, in his chair. "It strikes me, sir, that you are nearing
the point where even a grateful American might tell you to go to the
devil."
I put in emphatically, "I know damn well I would, and
I'm only a sixty-fourth Indian."
The G-man smiled and uncrossed his legs. "I
suppose," he said amiably, "you'd have no objection to putting this
in the form of a signed statement. What you've told me."
"On a proper occasion, none at all."
"Good. You represent no foreign principal, directly or
indirectly?"
"That is correct."
"Well, that's all we wanted to know." He got up.
"At present. Thank you very much."
"You're quite welcome. Good day, sir."
I followed him out, to open the front door for America and
make sure he was on the proper side of it when it was closed again. Wolfe could
get sentimental about it if he wanted to, but I don't like any stranger nosing
around my private affairs, let alone a nation of 130 million people. When I
returned to the office he was sitting back with his eyes closed.
"You see what happens," I told him bitterly.
"Just because you rake in two fat fees and the bank account is momentarily
bloated, in the space of three weeks you refuse nine cases. Not counting the
poor little immigrant girl with a friend who likes diamonds. You refuse to
investigate anything for anybody. Then what happens? America gets suspicious
because it's un-American not to make all the money you can, and sicks a Senior
G-man on you, and now, by God, you're going to have to investigate yourself! You
don't need –"
"Archie. Shut up." His eyes opened. "You're a
liar. Since when have you been a sixty-fourth Indian?"
Before I could parry his counterattack Fritz appeared to
announce lunch. I knew it was to be warmed-over duck scraps, so I was off at
the gun.
During meals Wolfe ordinarily
excludes business not only from his conversation but also from his mind. But
that day it appeared that his thoughts were straying from the food, though I
didn't see how they could have been on business, since there was none on hand.
He did his share of demolition to the remains of three ducks – his old friend
Marko Vukčić had dined with us the day before – but there was an air
of absent-mindedness in his ardor as he tore the backbones apart and scraped
the juicy shreds off with his gleaming white teeth. It somewhat prolonged the
operations, so that it was after two o'clock when we finished with the coffee
and waddled back to the office. That is, he waddled. I strode.
Then, instead of resuming with the catalogues or playing
with some other of his toys, he leaned back and clasped his hands over the duck
repository and shut his eyes. It wasn't a coma, for several times during the
hour he sat there I saw his lips push in and out, so I knew he was hard at work
on something. Suddenly he spoke.
"Archie. What made you say that girl wanted to borrow a
book?"
So he hadn't been able to get his mind off of Montenegrin
females. I waved a hand. "Persiflage. Chaff."
"No. You said she asked if I had read it."
"Yes, sir."
"And if I study it."
"Yes, sir."
"And are you reading it."
"Yes, sir."
He nearly opened his eyes. "Did it occur to you that
she was finding out if either of us would be apt to look at that book in the
immediate future?"
"No, sir. My mind was occupied. I was sitting down and
she was standing in front of me and I was thinking about her curves."
"That is not thought. Those nerves are in the spinal
column, not the brain. You said it was United Yugoslavia by
Henderson."
"Yes, sir."
"Where was it when you returned to the office?"
"On the shelf where it belongs. She had put it back
herself. For a Monteneg –"
"Get it, please."
I crossed the room and got it down and took it to him. He
rubbed the cover caressingly with his palm, as he always did with a book, and
then turned it with its front edge facing him, squeezed it tight shut and held
it for a moment, and suddenly released the pressure. Then he opened it around
the middle and took out a piece of paper that was there between the leaves. The
paper was folded, and he unfolded it and started reading it. I sat down and set
my teeth on my lip to hold in what might otherwise have come out. I set them
hard.
"Indeed," Wolfe said. "Shall I read it to
you?"
"Oh, please do, yes, sir."
He began an incoherent jabber and splutter that didn't even
sound human. I knew he expected me to butt in with an outcry, so I set my teeth
again. When he had finished I grinned at him.
"Okay," I said, "but why couldn't she tell me
to my face how handsome and seductive I was and so on instead of writing it
down and sticking it in that book. Especially that last –"
"And especially writing it in Serbo-Croat. Do you speak
Serbo-Croat, Archie?"
"No."
"Then I'll translate. It's dated at Zagreb, 20th
August, 1938, and bears the Donevitch crest. It says, roughly, "The bearer
of these presents, my wife, the Princess Vladanka Donevitch, is hereby
empowered without reservation to talk and act in my name, and attach my name
and honor by her signature, which appears herewith below my own, in all
financial and political matters and claims pertaining to me and to the
Donevitch dynasty, with particular reference to Bosnian forest concessions and
to the disposal of certain credits at present in the care of Barrett & De
Russy, bankers of New York. I bespeak for her loyalty from those who owe it,
and co-operation from those whose interests ride with mine.'"
Wolfe folded the paper and imprisoned it under his palm.
"It is signed Stefan Donevitch and Vladanka Donevitch. The signatures are
attested."
"Good." I glared at him. "He even spent two
bits on a notary. Let's take one thing at a time. How did you know that thing
was in that book?"
"I didn't know it. But her questioning you –"
"Sure. Your curiosity got aroused. Check that off.
Do you mean to say that that girl is a Balkan
princess?"
"I don't know. Stefan married only three years ago. I
got that from this book. Don't badger me, Archie. I don't like this."
"What don't you like about it?"
"I like nothing about it. Of all the activities of man,
international intrigue is the dirtiest. The Balkan mess, as it is today, I know
only superficially, but even on the surface the maggots of corruption may be
seen writhing. The regent who rules Yugoslavia deviously courts the friendship
of certain nations. He is a Karageorgevitch. Prince Stefan, the head of the
Donevitch clan now that old Peter is dying, is being used by certain other
nations, and he is using them for his own ambition. And now look at this!"
He slapped the paper with his palm. "They bring this to America! If it
could be used to destroy them all, I would use it!"
He puffed. "Bah!" He made a gesture of spitting,
which I had seen him do only once before in the years I had lived under his
roof. "Pfui! Bosnian forest concessions from a Donevitch! As soon as I saw
that girl and heard her voice I knew the devil was around. Confound them for
crossing the ocean and stepping on this shore – confound her for coming here,
here to my office, and soiling one of my books with this – this nauseous
–"
"Hold it," I cautioned him. "Breathe deep
three times. How do you know she put it there? It's been months since you've
had that book down, and maybe somebody –"
"Who? When?"
"Lord, I don't know. Vukčić is a Montenegrin
–"
"Gibberish."
I waved a hand. "All right, then the immigrant girl did
it, and she's either an obnoxious Balkan princess or she's not, and so what and
why? Is she in cahoots with evil forces in America, and will Mr. Stahl come
back with a search warrant and find it and throw you in the coop? Is it a
plant? Or did she swipe it from the princess and come here to cache it –"
"Archie."
"Yes, sir."
"Address an envelope to Miss Carla Lovchen in care of
the Nikola Miltan studio – get the address from the phone book. Put this thing
in it and mail it at once. I don't want it here. I'll have nothing to do with
it. I don't want – I send money to those young people over there because I know
it's hard for even a Montenegrin to be brave on an empty stomach, but it's
their stable now, not mine, and they'll have to clean it out. This is the first
time – well, Fritz?"
Fritz Brenner, entering, advanced his three paces and
announced:
"A young lady to see you, sir. Miss Carla
Lovchen."
I made a noise. Wolfe blinked at him.
Fritz held to his formal stance, waiting. He had to wait a
full two minutes, for Wolfe sat motionless, his lips puckered up, his forehead
creased with a frown. Finally:
"Where is she?"
"In the front room, sir. I always think –"
"Shut that door and come here."
Fritz obeyed and was standing by the desk. Wolfe turned to
me: "Address an envelope to Saul Panzer at his home and put a stamp on
it."
I elevated the typewriter and followed instructions. As I
put the stamp in the corner I inquired, "Registered or special?"
"No. Neither. That's another point for America, mail
gets delivered intact and promptly. Let me have it." He inserted the
folded paper in the envelope, licked the flap and pressed it down. "Here,
Fritz, go to the box at the corner and drop it in. Immediately."
"The young lady –"
"We'll attend to her."
Fritz departed. Wolfe cocked an ear and waited until the
sound of the street door opening and closing reached us, and then told me,
"Remember to phone Saul and tell him to expect that envelope and to take
care of it." He slid United Yugoslavia across the desk. "Put
this away before you bring her in."
I returned the book to its place on the shelf and then went
to the front room for her. "This way, please. Sorry you had to wait."
As I stood back to let her precede me into the office, I inspected her build
and swing and the set of her head from the fresh viewpoint of the princess
theory, but the first strong impression I had had of her was the way she said
pliz, and to me she was still an immigrant girl and in my opinion always would
be. Anyway, judging from various pictures of princesses I had seen, from brats
on up, I was inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt and assume that she
had swiped that paper from the rightful owner.
She thanked me for the chair and I returned to my own. I had
a notion to warn her to lay off on the Hvala Bogu stuff, but decided
that Wolfe was in no mood for the light touch. He was upright in his chair with
his eyes narrowed at her.
"I sent you a message this morning, Miss Lovchen,"
he said dryly, "by Mr. Goodwin, that I would be unable to help you out in
your trouble. Your friend's trouble."
She nodded. "I got it. I was disappointed, very much,
because we're from Yugoslavia and we know you have been there, and we're
strangers and there was no one else to go to." She kept the lashes up, her
dark eyes at him straight. "I told Neya – my friend – and she was
disappointed too. It is a very extremely serious trouble. We talked it over,
and there is only one thing to do, and that is you must get her out of
it."
"No." Wolfe was still dry, and positive. "I
can't engage to do that. But I would like to ask –"
"Pliz!" She snapped it out. "It must be done
quick now, because they will all be there at five o'clock to settle it, and
that man is not only an American fool, he is the kind of man who would simply
make trouble anywhere. And somehow there is a terrible mistake. There is no one
we can go to but you. So we talked it over and I said the only thing to do is
to tell you the very good reason why you must help her, and she agreed to it
because she had to. The reason is that my friend, Neya Tormic, is your
daughter."
Wolfe's eyes popped open to a new record. Not liking the
sight of that, I transferred my astonished stare to the girl.
Wolfe exploded: "My daughter? What's this
flummery?"
"She is your daughter."
"My daugh –" Wolfe was speechless. He found a
piece of his voice:
"You said her name is Tormic."
"I told you her name in America is Neya Tormic just as
mine is Carla Lovchen."
Wolfe, erect, was glaring at her. She glared back. They
stayed that way.
Wolfe blurted, "I don't believe it. It's flummery. My
daughter disappeared. I have no daughter."
"You haven't seen her since she was three years old.
Have you?"
"No."
"You should. Now you will. She's very
good-looking." She opened her handbag and fished in it. "I suspected
you wouldn't want to believe me, so I got this from Neya and brought it along.
Here." She reached to hand him a paper. "There is your name where you
signed it …"
She went on talking. Wolfe was scowling at the paper. He
went over it slowly and carefully, holding it at an angle for better light from
the window. His jaw was clamped. I watched him and listened to her. What with
the paper hid in his book and now this, it began to look as if the Montenegrin
female situation held great promise.
He finished inspecting the thing, folded it with
deliberation, and stuck it in his pocket.
Miss Lovchen extended a hand. "No, you must give it
back. I must return it to Neya. Unless you take it to her yourself?"
Wolfe regarded her. He grunted. "I don't know anything
about this. The paper's all right. That is my signature. It belonged to that
girl. It still does, if she lives. How do I know it wasn't stolen?"
"For what?" She shrugged. "You're suspicious
beyond anything to be expected. Stolen to be brought across the ocean for what?
To have an effect on you, here in America? No, you are famous, but not as
famous as all that. It was not stolen from her. She sent me to show it to you
and to tell you. She is in trouble!" Her eyes flashed at him. "What
are you in your opinion, a rock on Durmitor for a goat to stand on? You will
see your grown daughter for the first time perhaps in a jail?"
"I don't know. I am not in my opinion a rock. Neither
am I a gull. I couldn't find that girl when I went back to Yugoslavia to look
for her. I don't know her."
"But your America will know her! The daughter of Nero
Wolfe! In jail for stealing! Only she didn't steal! She is no thief!" She
sprang up and put her hands on his desk and leaned across at him. 'Pfui!"
She sat down again and flashed her eyes at me to let me know she was making no
exceptions. I winked at her. Admitting the princess theory and counting me as a
peasant, I suppose it was out of character.
Wolfe sighed, long and deep. There was a silence during
which I could hear both of them breathing. At length he muttered:
"It's preposterous. Grotesque. No matter how many
tricks you learn, life knows a better one. I've put many people in jail, and
kept many out. Now this. Archie, your notebook. Miss Lovchen, please give Mr.
Goodwin the details of this trouble your friend had got into." He leaned
back and shut his eyes.
She told it and I put it down. It looked to me, as it
unfolded, as if somebody's confidence in someone's daughter might turn out to
be misplaced. The two girls taught both dancing and fencing at Nikola Miltan's
studio on East 48th Street. It was an exclusive joint with a pedigreed
clientele and appropriate prices for lessons. They had got their jobs through
an introduction from Donald Barrett, son of John P. Barrett of Barrett & De
Russy, the bankers. Dancing lessons were given in private rooms. The salle
d'armes, on the floor above, consisted of a large room and two smaller ones,
and there were two locker rooms, one for men and one for women, where clients
exchanged street clothes for fencing costumes.
One of the fencing pupils was a man named Nat Driscoll. She
pronounced it Nawht. He was middle-aged or more and fat and rich. Yesterday
afternoon he had informed Nikola Miltan that upon going to the locker room
after completing his fencing lesson, which had been given by Carla Lovchen, he
had seen the other female fencing instructor, namely Neya Tormic, standing by
the open door of the locker, in the act of returning the coat of his street
suit, on its hanger, to its hook within the locker; and that she had then
closed the locker door and departed by the door to the hall. Upon inspection,
to which he had proceeded as soon as possible, he had found that his gold
cigarette case and wallet, the contents intact, were in the pockets where they
belonged, and it was not until after he got dressed that he remembered about
the diamonds, in a pillbox, which should be there too. They were gone. He had
carefully explored each and every pocket. They were not there. He demanded
their immediate recovery.
Miss Tormic, summoned by Nikola Miltan, denied any knowledge
of the diamonds, and further denied that she had opened Mr. Driscoll's locker
or touched his clothing. The accusation, she said, was outrageous, infamous,
and false. She had not been in the locker room. Had she been in the locker room
for any conceivable purpose, it would not have been to go through men's
clothes. Had she gone through a man's clothes, it would not have been Mr.
Driscoll's clothes; it was beyond the bounds of possibility that she should
have the faintest interest in the contents of Mr. Driscoll's pockets. She had
been justly and somewhat violently indignant.
She had submitted to a search of her person, performed by
Jeanne Miltan, Nikola's wife. Everybody at that time in the studio, on both
floors, employees and clients alike, had been questioned by Miltan, and a
search of the premises conducted. Driscoll stated positively he had seen Neya
Tormic's face, from the side, as she stood by the locker, and furthermore that
she was wearing her fencing costume. Neya and Carla had both insisted that they
be searched again before leaving the studio to go home. Miltan was half frantic
at the threat of disgrace to the reputation of his place and had successfully
resisted Driscoll's demand that the police be called. In the morning – this day
– he had spent two hours pleading with Neya to tell where the diamonds were,
what she had done with them, to whom she had given them, who was her
accomplice, and had met with the disdain which his assumption deserved. In a
desperate effort to solve the affair without police or publicity, he had
arranged for everyone concerned, all who had been on the premises yesterday
afternoon, to meet in his office at five o'clock today. In Neya Tormic's
presence he had told his wife that he would engage the services of Nero Wolfe;
and Neya, knowing Nero Wolfe to be her father, had promptly stated that he
would be present in her behalf. But Neya had a strong disinclination to reveal
her identity to her father, for reasons understandable to him, and therefore
Carla, hotfooting it for Wolfe's office, had been instructed not to divulge it.
That was the crop. Miss Lovchen, looking at her wrist and
stating that it was five minutes to four, added that Wolfe must come
immediately. Fast.
Without moving, even his eyelids, Wolfe growled:
"Why didn't Mr. Driscoll challenge Miss Tormic on the
spot, seeing her with his coat?"
"He was naked. He came from the shower bath."
"Is he too fat to be seen even at the risk of losing
diamonds?"
"He says he is modest. He also says he was too
surprised to speak, and she moved rapidly and went away at once. Then his
wallet and cigarette case were there, and he forgot about the diamonds until he
was dressed. He is not nearly as fat as you are."
"I wouldn't expect him to be. Do the lockers have
keys?"
"Yes, but there is much carelessness. The keys lie
around. That part is very confused."
"You say Miss Tormic did not steal the diamonds?"
"I do say that. Never did she."
"Did she take something else from Mr. Driscoll's
clothing? Something he fails to mention? Letters, papers, even a piece of candy
perhaps?"
"Nothing. Nothing at all."
"Did she go to the locker room?"
"What would she go there for?"
"I don't know. Did she?"
"No."
"Fantastic." Wolfe's eyes threatened to open.
"How long have you known she is my daughter?"
"All my life. I have been … her friend, very close. I
knew about you – about your – I knew your name."
"About my deplorable intransigence, you would
say." Wolfe's tone was suddenly savage. "Ha! You juicy girls with
your busts swelling with ardor for the heroics of past centuries! Pah! Do the
rats still gather crumbs from under the Donevitch table?"
"We are –" Her chin went up and her eyes showed
fire. "They preserve honor! And they will share glory!"
"They will someday share obloquy. Blind and selfish
fools. Are you a Donevitch?"
"No." Her bust was swelling, but not apparently
with ardor.
"What's your name?"
"Carla Lovchen."
"What's your name at home?"
"I am not at home now." She flung out a hand
impatiently. "What is all this? All this about me? Do you realize what I
have told you about Neya? About your daughter? Does it help for you to sit
there and sneer? I tell you, you must do this at once or there will be the police!"
Wolfe sat up. I was thinking it was about time. The clock on
the wall said two minutes past four, and his daily routine, which included an
afternoon session to the plant rooms from four until six, was supposed to be
unalterable by fire, flood or murder. I was flabbergasted when, although he
glanced at the clock, he merely sat up straight.
But his tone was brisk. "Archie, please conduct Miss
Lovchen to the front room and return for instructions."
She started to sputter. "But there's no –"
"Please." He was curt. "If I'm to do this let
me do it. Don't waste time. Go with Mr. Goodwin."
I was off and she followed. I deposited her in front and
shut the door on her, and, returning to the office, shut that one too.
Wolfe said, "I'm late. This won't do. There's no point
in getting a line on Mr. Driscoll or anyone else until you've been there and
reported. I shall have to phone Mr. Hitchcock in London before I go upstairs.
The book with his private number, please."
I got it from the safe and gave it to him.
"Thank you. Go up there with her. You will see Miss
Tormic. The assumption, from this document, is that she has the right to bear
my name. If so, I reject the possibility that she stole diamonds from a man's
coat. Start from that."
"She says she wants the document back."
"I'll keep it for the present. Apparently you will
encounter a single yes and a single no in contradiction. Neglect nothing and no
one. Nikola Miltan himself is from the peninsula, South Serbia, old Macedonia.
Look at Miss Tormic and talk to her. Your first concern is the rumpus about the
diamonds. Your second is that paper which Miss Lovchen hid in my book. If you
can't resolve the contradiction about the diamonds and Mr. Driscoll insists on
the police, bring him here to me."
"Oh, sure. How and in how many pieces?"
"Bring him. You're good at that."
"Much obliged ever so much. But the fact is I guess
you'd better pay me off. I'm resigning as of this moment."
"Resigning from what?"
"You. My job."
"Rubbish."
"No, boss, really. You told the G-man you have never
married. Yet you have a daughter. Well –" I shrugged. "I'm not a
prude, but there are limits –"
"Don't jabber. Go on up there. She was an orphan and I
adopted her."
I nodded skeptically. "That's a good trick, but pretty
transparent. What do you think my mother would say –" But I saw his whole
face tighten and knew I was getting close to out-of-bounds, so I asked
casually, "That's all?"
"That's all."
I got my hat and coat from the hall, and the immigrant
princess from the parlor, and went out to the roadster, parked at the curb. As
I shifted into high, headed for Park Avenue, I reflected that Wolfe was
prepared to go to almost any length to protect his family, since he was at that
moment spending twenty bucks on a transatlantic phone call to London, though I
didn't see how that was going to help things any.
Up to a certain point, the five
o'clock gathering at Nikola Miltan's studio for some old-fashioned fun with the
game of diamonds, diamonds, who's got the diamonds, was a howling farce.
Therefore, I admit, it took on a different aspect.
The swank of the place was more real than apparent. There
was nothing shabby about it, but it didn't give you an impression of being
dolled up to impress the customers. I trailed around after Carla in her effort
to locate Neya, and so got a look. It was one of the old four-story houses. On
the ground floor were a reception room and a large office and a couple of small
ones; one flight up, a long hall with a gray carpet, with doors leading into
the private rooms for dancing lessons; two flights, the salle d'armes, with two
medium-sized rooms, one big one, and the showers and locker rooms; and at the
top, living quarters for Miltan and his wife. Those I didn't see, then. Neya
was finally flushed in the women's locker room. Carla brought her out to where
I was waiting in the hall and introduced me, and we shook hands. Neya Tormic
said:
"Can you do something about this awful thing, Mr.
Goodwin? The awful lie that man tells? Can you? You must! I was hoping that
Nero Wolfe … my father …"
Her voice had a foreign purr in it, but she pronounced words
a little better than Carla. God knows she didn't look anything like Nero Wolfe,
but of course a girl that looked like him would be something that you would
either pass up entirely or pay a dime to look at in a side show. And then – um
– he had adopted her. Her eyes were as black as Carla's and she was about the
same height, an inch over medium, but her chin, in fact her whole face, went
more to a point, and the whole idea of her, the way she talked and stood and
looked at you, was a queer combination of come-hither and don't-touch-me.
Having known her father a long while, I suppose I gave her the preliminary
once-over with more interest than any other female I had ever met, and my first
verdict was that she had real quality, both of mind and of matter, but that a
definite judgment would have to wait for further analysis. She noticed me
taking in her costume, a green robe, belted and carelessly closed in front,
showing underneath a white canvas blouse and slacks, with gym shoes and
rolled-up socks.
"I was giving a lesson," she said. "Miltan
wanted me to. He doesn't want any fuss. Nobody does but that fool Driscoll. A
liar like that – we would know how to deal with him in my country. Carla tells
me that he – that my father has been told about me, and of course you have too.
I do not wish anyone else to know. Why didn't he come?"
"Nero Wolfe? Bad case of pernicious inertia. He never
goes anywhere anytime for anybody."
"I am his adopted daughter."
"So I understand. And you've been here in New York a
couple of months and his address is in the phone book."
"He abandoned me. I was taught to hate him. I had no
wish –"
"Until you got into trouble. I got the impression that
you abandoned him at the age of three. But let's skip that, I was sent here to
keep you out of jail and time's short. You look intelligent enough to know that
I've got to have the truth and all of it. What were you doing with Driscoll's
coat?"
Her chin went up and her eyes withered me. "Nothing. I
didn't touch his coat."
"What were you doing in the men's locker room?"
"I wasn't there."
"Is there any other girl around that looks like
you?"
"No. Not enough – no."
"Not enough for Driscoll to see her and think she was
you?"
"No."
"What were you doing yesterday afternoon at the time
Driscoll says he saw you with his coat?"
"I was giving Mr. Ludlow a lesson."
"Fencing?"
"Yes, йpйe."
"In the large room?"
"No, the small one at the end."
"Who is Mr. Ludlow?"
"He is a man who comes to take lessons with the йpйe."
"Are you sure you were with him at the time Driscoll
says he saw you frisking his coat?"
"Yes. Mr. Driscoll went to Miltan at twenty minutes to
five. He said it had taken him about fifteen minutes to dress. I began the
lesson with Mr. Ludlow at four o'clock, and we were still there when Miltan
sent for me."
"And you didn't leave that room during that time?"
"No, I did not."
Carla Lovchen put in, "But Neya! Do you forget that
Belinda Reade says she saw you outside, in the hall, a little before half past
four?"
"She lies," Neya said calmly.
"But the man that was with her saw you too!"
"He also lies."
My God, I thought, it's a good thing Wolfe isn't here to see
his daughter put on an exhibition like this. It looked very much as if the
family reunion would take place in jail.
"How about Ludlow?" I demanded. "Does he lie
too?"
She hesitated, her brow wrinkling, and before she got her
answer ready another voice broke in. It was a male voice, and its owner had
appeared from around the corner which led to the stairs. He was about my age
and size, with a good pair of light-colored eyes, and a gray suit of a
distinctive weave hung on him in a way that made it obvious the fit had not
been managed by waving a piece of chalk at a stock job.
"I was looking for you." He came up to us, with a
conventional smile. "Miltan wants you in the office. This ridiculous
affair."
Carla Lovchen said, "Mr. Ludlow, this is Mr.
Goodwin."
We shook, and I met his eyes and liked them, not on account
of any candor or friendliness, but because they showed sense.
I inquired, "Ludlow?"
"Right. Percy Ludlow."
"Miss Tormic gave you a fencing lesson yesterday
afternoon?"
"That's right."
"Then you're the man I want to see. Was she with you
continuously from four o'clock till half past?"
His brow went up and he smiled. "Well, really. All I
know about you is that your name is Goodwin."
"I represent Miss Tormic. She has engaged Nero Wolfe.
I'm his assistant."
He glanced at her and caught her nod. "Well! Nero
Wolfe? That ought to do it. I was told that Miss Tormic said yesterday that she
was with me continuously."
"Yeah. What do you say?"
His brow went up again. "I couldn't very well call Miss
Tormic a liar. Could I? Let's go down to the office. Driscoll isn't there yet,
but he should be, any minute –"
"Then she was with you? You realize that in that case
she can't possibly be held on Driscoll's charge?"
"Oh, yes, I quite realize that. But unfortunately there
are those two people who claim to have seen her in the hall." He pointed.
"Right there, not ten feet from the door of the locker room. And of course
Driscoll too."
He was moving. I obstructed him. "Look here, Mr.
Ludlow, if you'll assure me that you'll stick to it –"
"My dear chap! Assure you? This sort of thing must be
handled – anyhow, a dozen or more people have been made acquainted with this
charge against Miss Tormic, and whatever is said they should hear. To clear it
up, you know."
They were all moving, for the stairs, and I couldn't
obstruct all of them, so I went with the current. It was so loony that it dazed
me. Carla looked worried and Ludlow looked bland. As for Neya, her attitude
could have come only from the sublime assurance of innocence or the sublime
asininity of a nincompoop, or mix it yourself. Here she had a witness who might
have been wheedled into standing fast with a class A alibi and she wasn't even
bothering to toss him a suggestion. As I trailed them downstairs and entered
the office with them, I was trying to figure out a method of enticing Driscoll
down to 35th Street, for it certainly seemed likely it would come to that.
The office was the big room at the rear of the ground floor.
There was a large red carpet and a couple of desks, and chairs scattered
around. The walls were decorated with pictures of people dancing and fencing,
or standing holding a sticker, with a large one of Miltan in some kind of a
uniform, and with swords and daggers hanging here and there. I knew the picture
was Miltan because Carla Lovchen took me across and introduced me to him and
his wife. He was small and thin, next door to a runt, but wiry-looking, and had
black eyes and hair and a moustache which pointed due east and west. He looked
and acted harassed, and as soon as he shook hands with me darted off somewhere.
His wife, in spite of her New York clothes and her 1938 hair-do, looked like
one of those colored pictures in the National Geographic entitled
"Peasant Woman of Wczibrrcy Leading a Bear to Church." At that, she
was handsome if you like the type, and she had shrewd eyes.
I went and stood by a glass cabinet which displayed an
assortment of curios and implements, among them a long thin rapier with no edge
and a blunt point which apparently wasn't a rapier, since a card leaning
against it said "This йpйe was used by Nikola Miltan at Paris in 1931 in
winning the International Championship." I looked around. He was across
the room, chinning with a broad-shouldered six-footer maybe thirty years old,
with a slightly pushed-in nose and a vacant look to go with it. I looked further.
If by chance Wolfe's long lost daughter hadn't pinched Driscoll's diamonds, it
was probable that the person who had was among those present. Carla Lovchen's
voice came, beside me:
"But you … you aren't doing anything."
I shrugged. "Nothing I can do. Not right now. What's
Miltan waiting for?"
"Mr. Driscoll isn't here yet."
"Did he say he would be here?"
"Of course he did. He only agreed to wait until now to
go to the police."
"Who's that guy Miltan's talking to?"
She looked. "His name is Gill. He's a dancing client.
It was he who was with Belinda Reade yesterday when they saw Neya in the hall.
They say they did."
"Which one's Belinda Reade?"
"Over there standing by a chair. The beautiful one,
with hair like yellow amber, talking to the young man."
"Check. Baby doll with a new silk dress and pipe the
earrings. Not to mention the young man. I seem to recognize him from perhaps
the movies. Who is he?"
"Donald Barrett."
"The son of John P. Barrett of Barrett & De Russy,
who got you girls a job here?"
"Yes."
"Who are those other girls?"
"Well … the three in the corner, and the one sitting by
the end of the desk, teach dancing. That one talking now with Mrs. Miltan is
Zorka."
I boosted the brows. "Zorka?"
"Yes, the famous couturiere. She charges four hundred
dollars for a dress. That would be over twenty thousand dinars."
"She looks like a picture in our Bible at home of the
dame that cut off Samson's hair, I forget her name, but it wasn't Zorka. Does
she sell diamonds at her place?"
"I don't know."
"She wouldn't those, anyway. Who's the chinless wonder
with his – hold it. Miltan's going to make a speech."
The йpйe champion, with Percy Ludlow standing beside him,
was in the middle of the room trying to collect eyes. Some of them didn't get
it and he claimed their attention by clapping his hands. Two of them went on
talking and his wife shushed them.
"If you please." He sounded as harassed as he
looked. "Ladies and gentlemen. If you please. Mr. Driscoll has not
arrived. It is very disagreeable, asking you to wait. He should be here. Mr.
Ludlow has something to say."
Percy Ludlow looked around at the faces with complete
aplomb. "Well," he observed in a conversational tone, "really I
don't quite see that we should hang around waiting for Driscoll. It's his row,
you know. I've an explanation to make that I'd like you all to hear, because
all of you know of Driscoll's absurd accusation regarding Miss Tormic. You'll
understand it better if you'll observe the clothes I'm wearing. This is the
suit I had on yesterday. Didn't any of you notice anything peculiar about
it?"
"Certainly," said a voice promptly, fluttering the
r like a moth on a marathon. "I did."
He smiled at her. "What did you notice, Madame
Zorka?"
"I noticed that the material is of the same pattern,
perfectly, as the one Mr. Driscoll was wearing."
Two additional female voices chimed in simultaneously,
"So did I," and other voices murmured.
Ludlow nodded. "Apparently Driscoll agrees with me on
tailors." His tone sounded as if there were something about that faintly
deplorable. "The fabric is identical. I wondered that none of you
mentioned it yesterday. Perhaps you did, but not to me. Of course the
coincidence explains why, when Miss Tormic went to my locker to get my
cigarettes from my coat, and Driscoll saw her, he thought the coat was his own.
My locker adjoined his."
There was a round of ejaculations. Eyes moved from his face
to that of Neya Tormic and back again. I felt Carla Lovchen's fingers gripping
my elbow, but I didn't react because I was trying to keep my brain cleared for
action.
Ludlow continued in the same easy tone, "Yesterday when
Miss Tormic was suddenly confronted with Driscoll's ugly accusation, naturally
she was flustered. Impulsively and perhaps foolishly, she denied having been in
the locker room. Hearing that denial, I was a little flustered myself. It would
have produced a most unfortunate impression if I had contradicted her on the
spot, so I temporized and confirmed her statement that she had been with me
continuously in the end room. But as it turned out, that was no go. Driscoll
was positive that it was Miss Tormic he had seen with his coat. Miss Reade and
Mr. Gill both declared that they had seen her in the hall near the door of the
locker room shortly prior to four thirty. So it was clear that the only thing
for it was the truth, which is that while we were fencing yesterday the strap
of my pad broke and I had to change it, and we felt like a cigarette and found
that we had none, and while I was changing the pad she took my key and went to
the locker room for my cigarettes."
I had left his face and was concentrating on Neya's, but I
couldn't read it. It wasn't alarmed nor angry nor pleased; I would have said it
was more puzzled than anything else; but that seemed unlikely, so I scored
myself zero. There was a buzz around the room which stopped when Miltan
remarked, more to space than to any audience, "So! So she was there!"
Ludlow nodded negligently. "Oh, yes, she was there, but
it was my coat she had, not Driscoll's. No doubt of it, because she returned
with my cigarette case and lighter. We had a few puffs together, and we were
fencing again when word came that Miltan wished to see Miss Tormic –"
He stopped, and lost his audience. The door had opened, and
two men entered. The one in front was a gray-haired guy with a full cargo of
dignity and an air that invited respect, and behind him, practically hiding
behind him, was a plump specimen about fifty-one years old with thick lips and
bald eyebrows. They came on in and Miltan met them.
"We've been waiting for you, Mr. Driscoll –"
"I'm sorry," the plump one stammered, edging
around. "Very sorry … unh … this is Mr. Thompson, my lawyer – Mr. Miltan …"
As the gray-haired one extended a hand for the shake he
conceded the point without reservation or qualification. "I am Mr.
Driscoll's counsel. I thought it best to come personally – this regrettable
affair – extremely regrettable – will you kindly introduce me to Miss Tormic?
If you will be so good …"
That was done by Miltan, who looked a little bewildered. The
lawyer's bow was courteous and respectful, as was his verbal acknowledgement;
Neya stood motionless and silent. He turned. "These people – are these the
persons whom Mr. Driscoll – before whom he accused Miss Tormic –"
Miltan nodded. "We've been waiting for him, to –"
"I know. We're late. My client was reluctant to come,
and I had to persuade him that his presence was necessary. Miss Tormic, what I
have to say is addressed primarily to you, but these others should hear it – in
fact, they must hear it, in justice to you. First for the facts. When Mr.
Driscoll left his home yesterday morning he had in his pocket a pillbox
containing diamonds which he intended to take to a jeweler to be set in a
bracelet. From his office he phoned the jeweler and discussed the matter. His
secretary took the box of diamonds to arrange for their delivery. They are at
the jeweler's now. Here, later, Mr. Driscoll, lamentably and inexcusably, but
innocently, forgot that his secretary –"
A clatter of comment from all corners interrupted him. He
smiled at Neya but got nothing in return. Driscoll had a handkerchief out,
wiping his brow, trying to find a place to look without meeting a pair of eyes.
Miltan sputtered:
"Do you mean to say that this infamous – this
irresponsible –"
"Please!" The lawyer had a hand up. "Please
let me finish. Mr. Driscoll's lapse of memory was inexcusable. But he was
honestly convinced that he had seen Miss Tormic with his coat –"
"It was my coat," Ludlow snapped. "Of the
same pattern. I have it on."
"I see. Well. That explains that. Was it in the same
locker?"
"The one adjoining." Ludlow was severe. "But
Mr. Driscoll should know that before making a grave accusation –"
"Certainly he should." The lawyer conceded
everything again. "Even the coincidence of the coats is no excuse for him.
That's why I insisted on his coming, to make his apology to Miss Tormic in the
presence of all of you. His reluctance is understandable. He is extremely
embarrassed and humiliated." He eyed his client. "Well?"
Driscoll, gripping his handkerchief, faced Neya Tormic.
"I apologize," he mumbled. "I'm damn sorry." The mumble
became abruptly and surprisingly an outraged roar. "Of course I'm sorry,
damn it!"
Someone giggled. Nikola Miltan said grimly, "You
certainly should be sorry. It might have been disastrous, both for Miss Tormic
and for me."
"I know it. I've said I'm sorry and I am."
The lawyer put in smoothly and sweetly, "I hope, Miss
Tormic … may we hope for an expression from you – of forgiveness? Or … er …
quittance?" He took an envelope from his pocket. "In fact, I thought
it would be as well for you to have Mr. Driscoll's written apology to support
his oral one, so I brought it along" – he got a paper from the envelope – "and
I brought also a quittance, just an informal sentence or two, which I'm sure
you will want to sign for him in return –"
"Just a minute." It was me entering on my cue.
"I represent Miss Tormic."
The way he went on guard like lightning, facially, was a
treat. He demanded, "Who are you, sir? A lawyer?"
"Nope, I'm not a lawyer, but I speak English and I
represent Miss Tormic and we're not before a court. She isn't signing
anything."
"But my dear sir, why not? Merely an informal –"
"That's the trouble, it's too informal. For instance,
what if Miltan here gets sore about this fracas, though it's not her fault, and
she loses her job? Or what if this thing had been turned loose around town and
she can't catch up with it? Nothing doing on the quittance."
"I have no intention," Miltan put in, "of
dismissing Miss Tormic. But I agree that it is not necessary for her to sign
anything. I am quite sure she will have no desire to make trouble for Mr.
Driscoll." He looked at her.
She spoke for the first time. "No, certainly." She
sounded darned unconcerned for a girl who had just escaped being thrown in the
hoosegow as a sneak thief. Almost indifferent, as if her mind was on something
else. "I will make no trouble."
The lawyer pounced on her. "Then, Miss Tormic, if you
feel that way, surely you have no objection to signing –"
"Damn it, let her alone!" It was his own client
tripping him up. Driscoll glared at him. "Damn a lawyer anyway! If I'd had
the nerve to face it, I'd have done just as well if I'd come alone!" He
confronted Miltan. "Now I've apologized! I'm sorry! I'm damn sorry! I like
this place. I've been overweight for years. I'm damn near fat! I've monkeyed
around with exercises and health farms and damn fool games throwing a ball and
riding a horse as tall as a skyscraper, and the first thing I've ever done to
sweat that is any fun is what I do here! I may be a rotten fencer but I like
it! I don't care whether Miss Tormic signs a paper or not, I want to be friends
with Miltan!" He whirled. "Miss Lovchen! I want to be friends with
you! Miss Tormic is your friend and I acted like a damn fool. I am a damn fool.
Will you fence with me or won't you? I mean right now!"
Somebody snickered. People moved. The lawyer looked
dignified. Carla said, "I work for Mr. Miltan. I'll follow his
instructions." Miltan said something conciliatory and diplomatic, and it
was apparent that Mr. Driscoll wasn't going to be deprived of his fun. I faded
into the background. The chinless wonder, whose name I hadn't got, a blond guy
with thin lips and an aggressive nose who stood and walked like a soldier, went
up to Neya with a thin smile and said something evidently meant to be
agreeable, and was followed by Donald Barrett for a similar performance. Mrs.
Miltan crossed to her and patted her on the shoulder, and then she was
approached by Percy Ludlow. They spoke together a minute, and she left him and
headed for me.
I grinned at her. "Well, a pretty good show. I hope you
didn't mind my horning in. Nero Wolfe never lets a client sign anything except
a check drawn to his order."
"I didn't mind. I say good-bye. I am going to fence
with Mr. Ludlow. Thank you for coming."
"Your eyes glitter."
"My eyes? They always glitter."
"Any message for your father?"
"I think – not now. No."
"You ought to run down and say hello to him."
"I will someday. Au revoir then."
"So long."
Turning to go, she bumped into the lawyer and he apologized
profusely. That accomplished, he addressed me:
"Could I have your name, sir?"
I told him.
He repeated it. "Archie Goodwin. Thank you. If I may
ask, in what capacity do you represent Miss Tormic?"
I was exasperated. "Look here," I said, "I am
willing to stipulate that a lawyer has a right to live, and I'm aware that even
when he's dead no worm will enter his coffin because if it did he'd make it
sign some kind of a paper. I suppose if you don't get that thing signed you'll
have a tantrum. Give it to me."
From the envelope, which he was still clutching in his hand,
he extracted the document and handed it over. A glance showed me that his two
informal sentences were in fact five legal-size paragraphs. I got out my pen
and with a quick flourish signed on the dotted line at the bottom, "Queen
Victoria."
"There," I said, and shoved it at him, and moved
off before he could react, considering how dignity slows a man up.
The room was about empty. Miltan's wife was over by a desk,
talking with Belinda Reade. Carla Lovchen, along with the others, had
disappeared, presumably to let the rich fat man enjoy some fun. He must have
been a pip of a swordsman, I reflected, as I got my hat and coat from the rack
and meandered to the hall and out the street door to the sidewalk.
My wrist told me it was a quarter to six. Wolfe would still
be up in the plant rooms, and he wasn't enthusiastic about being disturbed
regarding business while there, but I considered that this wasn't business,
properly speaking, but a family matter. So I found a drugstore with a phone
booth and called the number.
"Hello, Mr. Wolfe? Mr. Goodwin speaking."
"Well?"
"Well, I'm in a drugstore at 48th and Lexington. It's
all over. It was a farce in three acts. First she, meaning your daughter,
seemed to be more bored than bothered. Second, a chap named Percy said she was
frisking his coat for cigarettes, not Driscoll's for diamonds, which appeared
to be news to her, judging from her expression. Third act, enter Driscoll with
a trouble hound and a written apology. There hadn't been any diamonds in his
coat. None had been stolen.
His mistake. Sorry and damn sorry. So I'm headed for home. I
may add that she doesn't resemble you a particle and she is very good-look
–"
"You're sure it's clear?"
"It's cleared up. Settled. I wouldn't say it's entirely
clear."
"You went there with two problems. What about the
second one?"
"No light on it. Not a glimmer. No chance to sniff
around on it. There was a mob present, and when the meeting broke up both
Balkans went off to give fencing lessons."
"Who is the man named Percy?"
"Percy Ludlow. My age, and a good deal like me – courteous,
gifted, of distinguished appear –"
"You say my – she seemed to be bored. Do you mean to
imply – is she stupid?"
"Oh, no. I mean it. Maybe she's a little complicated,
but she's not stupid."
Silence. No talk. It lasted so long that I finally said,
"Hello, you there?"
"Yes. Get her and bring her here. I want to see
her."
"Yeah, I thought so. I expected that. It's a perfectly
natural feeling and does you credit, but that's why I phoned, to explain that I
asked her if she had a message for you and she said no, and I said she ought to
drop in on you to say hello and she said she would someday, and now she's in
there crossing blades with Percy –"
"Wait till she's through and bring her."
"Do you mean that?"
"I do."
"I may have to carry her or –"
He hung up, which is a trick I detest.
I went to the fountain and got a glass of grapefruit juice,
and while drinking it considered persuasions to use on her short of force, but
developed nothing satisfactory, and then strolled back along 48th Street to the
scene of operations.
Nikola Miltan and his wife were the only ones in the office.
It looked to me as if she had been headed for the door when I entered, but when
I took off my hat and coat and put them on the rack, explaining that I wanted
to see Miss Tormic when she was disengaged, apparently she changed her mind and
decided to stick around. Miltan invited me to have a chair, and I sat down not
far from the desk where he was, while his wife opened a door of the big glass
cabinet and began rearranging things which didn't need it.
"I have met Mr. Nero Wolfe," Miltan offered
politely.
I nodded. "So I understand."
"He is a remarkable man. Remarkable."
"Well, I know of one guy that would agree with
you."
"Only one?"
"At least one. Mr. Wolfe."
"Ah. A joke." He laughed politely. "I imagine
there are many others. In fact – what is it, Jeanne?"
His wife had uttered a foreign exclamation, of surprise or
maybe dismay. "The col de mort," she told him. "It's not
here. Did you remove it?"
"I did not. Of course not. It was there – I'm sure
–"
He got up and trotted over to the cabinet, and I arose and
wandered after him. Together they stared at a spot. He stretched, and then
ducked, to inspect the other shelves.
"No," she said, "it's not there. It's gone.
There is nothing else gone. I was in favor long ago of having a lock put on
–"
"But my dear." Miltan looked defensive.
"There is no sensible reason that could possibly exist why anyone would
want to take that col de mort. It was a nice curiosity, but of no
particular value."
"What's a col de mort!" I asked.
"Oh, just a little thing."
"What kind of a little thing?"
"Oh, a little thing – look." He put an arm through
the open door of the cabinet and placed a finger upon the point of an йpйe
which was displayed there. "See? It's blunt."
"I see it is."
"Well, once in Paris, years ago, a man wanted to kill
another man, and he made a little thing with a sharp point, very cleverly,
which he could fit over the end of the йpйe." He took the weapon from the
shelf and dangled it in his hand. "Then, with the thing fitted on, he made
a thrust in quarte –"
He made a lunge at an imaginary victim in my neighborhood,
so unexpected and incredibly swift that I side-stepped and nearly tripped
myself up, and was perfectly willing to concede him the championship. Just as
swiftly he was back to normal position.
"So." He smiled, and returned the weapon to its
place. "A thrust in quarte gets the heart, theoretically, but that time it
was not theory. A member of the police who was a friend of mine gave me the
little thing as a curiosity. The newspapers called it col de mort. Neck
– no, not neck. Collar. Collar of death. Because it fitted the end of the йpйe
like a collar. It was amusing to have it."
"It's gone," said his wife shortly.
"I hope not gone." Miltan frowned. "There is
no reason for it to be gone. There has been enough talk of stealing around
here. We will find out. We will ask people."
"I hope you find it," I told him. "It sounds
cute. Speaking of asking people, I was about to ask you if it would be okay for
me to have a little chat with whoever it is that cleans up the fencing
rooms."
"Why … what for?"
"Oh, just a little chat. Who does the cleaning?"
"The porter. But I can't imagine why you should want
–"
His wife interrupted him, with her eyes on me. "He
wants to find out if cigarette stubs and ashes were found in the room where
Miss Tormic and Mr. Ludlow were fencing yesterday," she said calmly.
I grinned at her. "If you will pardon a personal
remark, Mrs. Miltan, I might have known from your eyes that you had that in
you."
She merely continued to look at me.
"For my part," Miltan declared, "I don't see
why you should want to know about cigarette stubs and I don't see how my wife
knew you wanted to. I am slow-witted."
"Well, you have to be slow at something, to even up for
your speed with that sticker. May I see the porter?"
"No," Jeanne Miltan said bluntly.
"Why not?"
"It isn't necessary. I don't know what is in your mind,
but I saw you looking at Miss Tormic, you who were supposed to be here as her
friend. If you want to know whether she and Mr. Ludlow were smoking cigarettes,
ask her."
"I will. I intend to. But how could I do her any harm
by discussing the matter with the porter?"
"I don't know. You may mean no harm. But this affair of
yesterday and today is ended. It was bad. It could have turned out very badly
for our business. It is a very delicate matter, the tone of a place like this.
A breath may destroy it. Even if you mean no harm to Miss Tormic or to us, I
shall tell the porter not to answer your questions if you do see him. I am
plain-spoken. Nor may you go to the salle d'armes and inspect the pads to see
if the strap of one is broken."
"What makes you think I wanted to?"
"Because I don't take you for a fool. If you were
curious about the smoking, naturally you would also be curious about the broken
strap."
I shrugged. "Okay. Anyhow, you used the right word. I
was just curious. As you know, I'm a detective, and I guess we get into bad
habits. But if you're aware of the reputation of Nero Wolfe, you're also aware
that he dishes out trouble only to people who have asked for it."
She gazed at me a moment, turned and closed the sliding door
of the cabinet, and then returned to me. "This morning," she said,
"my husband was saying that he would engage Mr. Wolfe to investigate the
disappearance of Mr. Driscoll's diamonds. Miss Tormic was present. She declared
that she had engaged Nero Wolfe to act in the matter in her behalf. Shortly
afterwards her friend, Miss Lovchen, asked permission to go out on an errand.
It is not only detectives who are curious. I am sometimes curious. If I were to
ask –"
She stopped with her mouth open, her body stiffening. Miltan
spun on his heel to face the door to the hall. I did the same. The yell that
had split the air sounded like something that you might expect but would
certainly resent if you found yourself alone in a jungle at night.
When the second yell came all three of us were running for
the door. Miltan was ahead, and in the hall he bounded for the stairs with us
after him. There were no more yells, but sounds of commotion, steps and voices,
came from above, and on the second-floor landing we were impeded by people who
popped out of doors. Miltan was a kangaroo; I couldn't have caught him for a
purse. At the top of the second flight we were brought to a halt by
obstructions. A colored man was wriggling, his arms held by the chinless
wonder; Nat Driscoll, in his shirt but no trousers, was jumping up and down;
the two Balkans, in fencing costumes, were backed against the wall; Zorka, in
gold-leaf undies and that was all, was standing apart and systematically
screaming. Before Miltan could make any progress or I could get around him, I
felt myself brushed aside and Jeanne Miltan was there.
"What?" she demanded in a tone that would have
stopped a hurricane. "Arthur! What is it?"
The colored man stopped wriggling and rolled his eyes at her
and said something I didn't get, but apparently she did, for she started off on
a lope down the hall. I was close behind her and there were steps behind me.
She went to the last door, the end room. It was standing open and she passed
through, taking the curve without slowing down. She jerked to a halt, saw it
there on the floor, and walked over to it. I was beside her. It was Percy
Ludlow, lying on his side, so tilted that he would have been on his back if he
hadn't been propped up by the protruding point of the йpйe which was sticking clean
through him.
Jeanne Miltan said something
foreign and then stood and stared down at it with her face frozen. I heard a
gasp from Miltan behind me, and other noises, and turned and saw them ganged in
the doorway.
"Keep out of here," I said. "All of
you."
I stooped over for a quick look and straightened up and told
Jeanne Miltan, "He's dead." She said peevishly, "Of course he
is." A scream came from the doorway and I yelled in that direction,
"Shut up!" and went on to Mrs. Miltan, "Somebody must stay here,
and the police of course, and nobody must leave."
She nodded. "You phone the police. In the office.
Nikola, you stay here. I'll go down to the hall –"
She was moving, but I stopped her. "I'd rather not. You
do the phoning. It's your place and you saw it first. I'll take the street
door. Don't let anyone in here, Miltan."
He looked pale as he mumbled. "The col de mort
–"
"No, it's not there. The end of the йpйe is bare and
blunt."
"It can't be. It wouldn't go through."
"I can't help that, it's not there."
Jeanne Miltan was headed for the door and I followed her.
They made way for us. Carla Lovchen was going to say something to me and I
shook my head at her. The chinless wonder grabbed at my elbow and I dodged him.
People had come up from the floor below and Nat Driscoll came running down the
hall with his shirttails flying. At the head of the stairs I wheeled to
announce: "Don't go into the end room, anybody. Ludlow's in there dead.
Nobody is to leave the building." I saw Donald Barrett moving in my
direction and the chinless wonder behind him. "If you two guys would herd
everyone downstairs into the office it might simplify matters."
I disregarded the chatter that broke out and beat it down
the steps, with Mrs. Miltan following me. On the ground floor she went to the
rear, to the office, and I went to the front, to the door to the street
vestibule. I was tempted to keep on going, right on through, and get to a phone
and call up Nero Wolfe, but I decided it would be a bad move. If I once got out
I might not get back in again, or, if I did, it would be under conditions not
nearly so favorable as they were now. Guarding the portal, loyal and true, was
the best bet.
From where I stood I could see the inmates straggling down
the stairs. They were mostly silent and subdued, but a couple of the female
dancing teachers were jabbering. Belinda Reade, the baby doll with a new silk
dress, came along to me instead of turning towards the office and said in a
determined voice that she had a very important appointment to keep. I told her
I had one too so we were in the same boat. Donald Barrett, who was hovering in
the background, approached.
"See here," he said, "I know I'm caught in
this God-awful mess. Frightful stink and I'm helpless just because I'm here.
But Miss Reade – after all – are you a cop?"
"No."
"Then my dear fellow, just turn your back and talk to
me a moment – and she can just slip out and go to her appointment –"
"And before long a dozen dicks will slip out and trace
her and haul her back. Don't be silly. Have you ever been intimate with a
murder before? I guess you haven't. The worst thing you can do is make them
start looking for you. They get upset. Take my advice and – just a minute, Miss
Tormic."
The two Balkans were there, three paces off. The glances
that passed back and forth among the four of them, in one second, obviously
meant something to them but not to me. Belinda Reade said, "Come on,
Don," and he followed her in the direction of the office. I surveyed the
pair of girls. Carla had put a long loose thing with buttons over her fencing
costume. Neya had on the green robe, carelessly closed as before, with one hand
inside its folds apparently clinging to it.
"There's no time to talk," I snapped. "You
may be a couple of goons. I don't know. But I'm asking you a damn straight
question, and maybe your life depends on giving me a straight answer." I
took Neya's eyes with mine. "You. Did you kill that man?"
"No."
"Say it again. You didn't?"
"No."
I switched to Carla. "Did you?"
"No. But I must tell you –"
"There's no time to tell me anything. That's the hell
of it. But anyhow you can – there they are! Beat it! Quick, damn it!"
They scampered down the hall towards the office and were
gone by the time the cops got through the vestibule. It was a pair of flatfeet.
I opened the glass-paneled door and when they were in the hall let it close
again.
"Hello. Precinct?"
"No. Radio patrol. Who are you?"
"Archie Goodwin, private detective from Nero Wolfe's
office, happened to be here. I was sitting on the lid. I'll keep." I
pointed. "Back in the office is Mrs. Miltan and others, and two flights up
is a corpse."
"God, you're snappy. Sit on the lid a little longer,
will you? Come on, Bill."
They tramped to the rear. I stood and played with my
fingers. In about two minutes one of them tramped down the hall again and went
upstairs. In another two minutes there were fresh arrivals in the vestibule,
three dicks in plain clothes, but one glance was enough to tell that they were
precinct men, not homicide squad. I gave them a brief picture of it. One of
them relieved me at the door, another went for the stairs, and the third went
to the office and took me with him.
The radio flatfoot was there, holding his tongue between his
teeth while he wrote down names in a notebook. The precinct dick spoke with him
a moment and then started in on Mrs. Miltan. I sidled off and made myself
unobtrusive alongside the coat rack, resisting a temptation to edge around and
get in a few words of advice to the Montenegrin females before the homicide
squad arrived, which was when the real fun would start. I decided not to take a
chance on starting a mental process even in a precinct man. The clients and
employees were scattered all around the office, some sitting, some standing,
with no sound coming from them except an occasional muttering. While I was
making the round of their faces, without any real expectation of seeing
anything interesting or significant, I suddenly saw something right in front of
my eyes that struck me as being both interesting and significant. My coat was
there on the rack where I had left it, so close my elbow was touching it, and
what I saw was that the flap of the left-hand pocket had been pushed inside and
the pocket was gaping on account of something in it. That was wrong. I didn't
patronize the kind of tailors Percy Ludlow had, but I was born neat and I don't
go around with my pocket flaps pushed in; and besides, that pocket had been
empty.
My hand had started for it instinctively, to reach in for a
feel, but I caught the impulse in time and stopped it. I looked around, but as
far as I could see no one had me under special observation, either furtive or
open. There was no time for a prolonged test of that nature, for the homicide
squad would be busting in any minute, maybe less than a minute, and once they
arrived the right of self-determination wouldn't stand a chance.
I reached up and took the hat and coat from the rack and
started for the hall door, and had taken three steps when I was halted by a
loud growl from behind:
"Hey, you, where you going?"
I turned and spoke loudly but not offensively to the
suspicious glare from the precinct dick, "The management is not
responsible for hats and coats, and these are mine. There'll be a lot of
company coming and I'd prefer to put them in a locker."
I moved as I spoke, and sailed on through the door. There
was one chance in three that he would actually abandon Mrs. Miltan and take
after me, but he didn't. In the hall, I didn't even glance toward the left,
where the watchdog stood at the entrance, knowing that it was out of the
question to bluff a passage to freedom.
Instead I turned right, and it was only five steps to a
narrow door I had noticed there. I opened it and saw an uncarpeted wooden stair
going down. There was a light switch just inside, but without flipping it on I
shut the door behind me and it was pitch-dark, black. With my pencil flashlight
for a guide, I descended to the bottom of the stair, quietly but without wasting
any time. Playing the light around, I saw that I was in a large low-ceilinged
room lined with shelves and with stacks of cartons and shipping cases occupying
the middle floor space. I stepped around them and headed for the rear, where I
could see the dim rectangles of two windows a few feet apart. I must have been
a little on edge, because I stood stiff and motionless and stopped breathing
when the beam of my light, directed toward the floor, showed me something
sticking out from behind a pile of cartons that I wasn't expecting to see. It
was the toe of a man's shoe, and it was obvious from its position and
appearance that there was a foot in it and the foot's owner was standing on it.
I kept the light on it, steady, and in a few seconds I breathed, moved the
light upwards, and put my right hand inside my coat and out again. Then I said
out loud but not too loud:
"Don't move. I'm aiming a gun at where you are and I'm
nervous. If your hands are empty stick them out beyond the edge. If they're not
empty –"
A sound came from behind the cartons that was something
between a moan and a squeal. I let my right hand fall and stepped forward with
a grunt of disgust and put the light on him, where he was flattened against the
pile of cartons.
"For the love of Mike," I said, absolutely
exasperated. "What the hell are you scared of?"
He moaned, "I seen him." His eyes were still
rolling. "I tell you I done seen him."
"So did I see him. Look here, Arthur, I have no time to
waste arguing with you about primitive superstitions. What are you going to do,
stay here and moan?"
"I ain't going back up there – don't you try it – don't
you touch me, I'm telling you –"
"Okay." I laid the light on a carton, returned the
pistol to my holster, and put on my coat and hat. Then I retrieved the light.
"I'm going out the back way to see that no one escapes. The best thing you
can do is stay right where you are."
"I mean don't I know it," he groaned.
"Fine. Have you got the key for that door?"
"They's a bolt, that's all."
"What's outside, a court with a high fence around
it?"
"Yes, sir."
"Any door in the fence?"
"No, sir."
Overhead, namely on the floor of the office directly above,
I heard the tread of dozens of heavy shoes on heavy feet. The company had come.
I even thought I detected the sound of Inspector Cramer's number twelves. As I
moved, I had a piece of luck; the beam of my light passed over a boy's-size
stepladder standing by the shelves. I went for it, arranged for a diversion by
warning Arthur to yell for help if he heard anyone else coming down, found the
rear door and unbolted it, and skipped through with the stepladder.
The court was fairly large, maybe 30 x 40, and paved with
concrete, and the solid board fence was two feet over my head. There was plenty
of light from the windows of the buildings. I trotted across to the rear,
leaned the ladder against the fence, mounted, and looked over into the
adjoining court. It was the same size as the one I was in, with a miscellaneous
clutter of vague objects scattered around and one object not so vague: a bulky
person dressed in white, including an apron and a chef's cap, apparently doing
breathing exercises from the way he stood there and puffed. Ten feet back of
him a blaze of light came from a door standing open.
I grabbed the top of the fence and pulled myself up and
perched there, teetering. At the noise he looked up, startled, but before he
could start screeching I demanded:
"Did you see that cat?"
"What cat?"
"My wife's cat. A yellow, long-haired fiend. It got
loose and jumped out a window and climbed this fence. If you –" I lost my
balance and toppled over and landed flat on the concrete on his side. As I
picked myself up I cussed appropriately. "If I find the little darling
I'll strangle the damn thing. If you've been standing here you must have seen
it."
"I didn't see it."
"You must have. Okay, then you didn't, but it came
here. It must have smelled the grub in the restaurant –"
I was on my way and kept going. He started after me, but
with slow acceleration, so I went through the open door unimpeded. It was a
large room, full of noise, cookery smells, and activity. Without coming to a
stop I inquired above the noise, "Did a cat come in here?" They stared
at me and a couple shook their heads. There was one with a loaded tray, in
waiter's uniform, headed for a swinging door, and I got on his heels and
followed him through. At the other end of a pantry corridor another swinging
door let us into the restaurant proper – purple and yellow leather, gleaming
chromium, gleaming white tables – with waiters fussing around waiting for the
evening's customers. One of them blocked me and I snapped at him,
"Catching a cat," and went on around. In the foyer the sucker usher
gave me an astonished look and the hat-check girl started for me instinctively,
but I merely repeated, "Catching a cat," and kept going, on through
two more doors and then up to the sidewalk.
I was, of course, on 49th Street. My impulse was to hoof it
around a couple of corners to 48th Street and get the roadster, but it was
parked only a few yards from the entrance to Miltan's, so I voted unanimously
for discretion and hopped into a taxi. On its cushion, bumping along downtown
on Park Avenue, I maintained the discretion by not attempting to explore my
overcoat pocket, considering that if things got complicated and aggravating
enough the taxi driver might be asked questions about what he had seen in his
mirror. So I just sat and let him bump me down to 35th Street and cross-town to
the number of Wolfe's house.
As I passed through the front hall I tossed my hat on a hook
but kept my overcoat on. In the office, Wolfe sat at his desk, and in front of
him was the metal box that was kept on a shelf in the safe, to which he alone
had a key, and which he had never opened in my presence. I had always supposed
that it contained papers too private even for me, but for all I knew it might
have been stuffed with locks of hair or the secret codes of the Japanese army.
He put something into it and shut the lid and frowned at me.
"Well?" he demanded.
I shook my head. "No soap. I might have been able to
bring her if I had had a chance to exert my charm, but on account of
circumstances beyond my control –"
"Circumstances forcing you to return here alone?"
"Not exactly forcing, no, sir. You may remember that on
the phone I mentioned a bird named Percy Ludlow who said that your daughter was
getting his cigarettes out of his coat at his request. Well, somebody murdered
him."
Wolfe glared. "I am not in a mood for buffoonery."
"Neither am I. I ruined my coat falling off of a fence
on purpose. At two minutes after six, Miss Lovchen and Miss Tormic were
upstairs giving fencing lessons and various other people were doing other things.
Miss Tormic was supposed to be giving a lesson to Percy Ludlow. I was
downstairs in the office with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan. We heard yells and ran up
two flights into a commotion of assorted people. In the fencing room at the end
we found Percy Ludlow on the floor with an йpйe running through him from front
to back and eight inches beyond. Miltan stayed there on guard and his wife went
to the office to phone for the police and I took charge of the front door. The
first two cops on the scene were radio patrol, the next three were precinct
bums, and the homicide squad arrived around 6:24."
"Well?"
"That's all."
"All?" Wolfe was as nearly speechless as I had
ever seen him. "You –" He sputtered. "You were right there,
inside there, and you deliberately ran away –"
"Wait a minute. Not deliberately. A cop relieved me at
the door and another one took me with him to the office, where the inmates had
gathered. I happened to be standing near the rack where I had hung my coat and
I noticed that the pocket was bulging open on account of something in it. When
I had hung the coat up the pocket had been empty. Maybe someone had merely
mistaken it for the wastebasket. On the other hand, there was a murderer in the
room, and Miss Tormic had presumably been fencing with the victim, and I was
there as the representative of Miss Tormic. The attitude that might be adopted
by the homicide squad in face of those facts would certainly be distasteful, in
case there was a general search and the object in my pocket wasn't wastepaper.
So I descended to the basement and left by the back door and fell over a fence
and took a taxi."
"And what was the object?"
"I don't know." I removed my coat and spread it on
his desk. "I thought it would be more fun to look at it with you. To the
tips of my fingers it felt like a piece of canvas." I was widening the
mouth of the pocket and peeping in. "Yep, it's canvas." I inserted
fingers and thumb and eased it out. It was rolled tight. As I unrolled it, it
became a heavy canvas gauntlet, with reinforced palm, and a little metal dingus
slid off onto the desk.
"Let's don't touch that," I suggested, and bent
over to inspect it. At its middle it was about a quarter of an inch thick. At
one end it had three claws, or fingers, and at the other it tapered to a single
point, sharp as an ice pick. I straightened up with a nod.
"Uh-huh, I thought so."
"What the devil is it?"
"My God, look at it! It's the col de mort!"
"Confound you, Archie –"
"Okay, but let it alone." I told him about the
disappearance of the curio from Miltan's cabinet and the history of it. He
listened with his lips compressed.
When I was through he demanded, "And you think this was
used –"
"I know damn well it was. The end of the йpйe that
killed Ludlow was blunt, and Miltan said it couldn't possibly have been thrust
through him that way. So this thing was removed afterwards. It looks as if it
would slide right off. I doubt if I need to point out those stains on the glove
where this was wrapped up in it."
"Thank you. I can see."
"And you can also see that it is a woman's glove. It
looks big on account of the way it's made, but it's not big enough –"
"I can see that too."
"And you can see that if I had stayed there and that
contraption had been found in my pocket, or if I had tried to hide it –"
I stopped because his lips were working and he had shut his
eyes. It didn't take long, maybe thirty seconds, then he reached for the button
and pushed it. When Fritz appeared he was in a cap and apron similar to those
worn by the man in the court who hadn't seen my wife's cat.
"Turn out the light in the hall and do not answer the
door," Wolfe told him.
"Yes, sir."
"If the phone rings, answer it in the kitchen. Archie
is not here and you don't know where he is or when he will return. I am engaged
and cannot be disturbed. Draw the heavy curtains in the front and the dining
room, but first – is there a full loaf of the Italian round?"
"Yes, sir."
"Bring it, please, with a small knife and a roll of
waxed paper."
When Fritz left I followed him, to hang my coat in the hall
and shoot the bolt on the front door. As I returned I flipped the light switch,
and in a moment Fritz returned with the required articles on a tray.
Wolfe told him to stand by and then attacked the loaf of
bread with the knife, which of course was like a razor, as Fritz's knives
always were. He described a circle four inches in diameter in the center of the
loaf, and then dug in, excavating a neat round hole clear to the bottom crust
but leaving the crust intact. Next he picked up the col de mort with the
tips of his fingers, placed it on the palm of the glove, rolled the glove up
tight, wrapped it in some waxed paper, and stuffed it into the hole in the
loaf. He filled the extra space with wads of paper, and spread a sheet of paper
smoothly over the top. With his swift and dexterous fingers, the entire
operation consumed not over three minutes.
He told Fritz, "Make a chocolate icing, at once, and
cover this well. Put it in the refrigerator. Dispose of the bread scraps."
"Yes, sir." Fritz picked up the tray and departed.
I said sarcastically, "Bravo. It's wonderful how your
mind works. If that had been me I would just have gone up and chucked it in my
bureau drawer. Of course it's more picturesque to disguise it as a cake, but
it's an awful waste of chocolate, and who do you think is going to come looking
for it? Do you think I'd have brought it here if anyone had any suspicion that
I had it?"
"I don't know. But someone knows that you had it and
that you brought it away – the person who put it there. Who had an opportunity
to do that?"
"Everybody. They were all there in the office. While I
was on guard at the street door."
"When you removed the coat from the rack and started
off with it, were you looking at people's faces?"
"No, I was being nonchalant. There were two cops there
and I had to get out of the room with it."
"You say Miss Tormic was supposed to be fencing with
Mr. Ludlow. Why supposed? Isn't it known whether she was or not?"
"It may be known, but not by me. I was down in the
office with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan when the porter found the body and started a
squawk. After that I had no chance to talk with Miss Tormic or anybody
else."
The telephone rang. I plugged in the kitchen extension and
we heard, faintly, Fritz's voice taking the call.
Wolfe leaned back and sighed. "Very well," he
muttered. "Tell me about it. From the moment you got there until you left.
No omissions."
I did so.
At a quarter to ten we finally
left the dining table, returned to the office, switched on the lights, and sat
down to wait. Various developments had occurred. The doorbell had rung three
times, unheeded, and the phone somewhat oftener. At the finish of the salad I
had left Wolfe alone with the green tomato pie and gone to the darkened front
room for a peek around the window curtain. Two men in plain clothes were on the
sidewalk, standing there with their hands in their pockets looking chilly and
frustrated. I gave them a Bronx cheer and went to the kitchen and used the
phone. Johnny Keems and Orrie Cather were out, and I left a message for them to
call the office. I got Fred Durkin and Saul Panzer and told them I was just
making contact and they were to await possible orders, and informed Saul about
the envelope he would receive in the morning mail. I took it for granted that
the number which had been jotted on his memo pad by Fritz, who had been
answering the phone as instructed, was the number of the Miltan studio, but I
verified it anyway by looking in the book, and told Fritz to call it and convey
the message that Mr. Wolfe and Mr. Goodwin were now both at home and at
leisure. Then I went back to the dining room and joined Wolfe at coffee.
Our wait, after we returned to the office, was a short one.
We hadn't been there more than five minutes when the doorbell called me to the
front. As I opened the door I was expecting a brace of sergeants at the most,
and was really surprised when I saw a single familiar figure confronting me,
with a felt hat cocked over one of the half-buried irate eyes and an unlit
cigar tilted up from a corner of the wide determined mouth.
"Honored," I declared, standing aside to give him
passage. "Deeply honored."
"Go to hell," Inspector Cramer growled, entering.
I shut the door and took his hat and coat and disposed of them, and followed
him into the office.
Wolfe offered a hand, greeted him nicely, and said this was
a pleasure he hadn't had for some months.
"Yeah. Quite a pleasure." Cramer sat down, took
the cigar from his mouth, scowled at me, replaced the cigar at a better angle,
and spoke.
"Where you been, Goodwin?" He was practically
snarling. Before I could reply he went on, "Forget it. If I already knew
you'd tell me and if I didn't you wouldn't." He removed the cigar again
and leaned at me. "You're the most damn contrary pest within my knowledge.
Twenty times I've had you under my feet when I was busy and had no use for you.
Now I go to look at a murder and I am told that an important witness has calmly
took his hat and coat and departed, and by God, it turns out to be you! The one
time you're supposed to be there you're not! I've told you before that I'd
throw you in the jug for a nickel. This time I'd do it for nothing!"
I inquired, "Did you find Arthur?"
"We found – none of your damn business what we found.
What did you run away for?"
"Because I wanted to." I requisitioned a friendly
grin for him. "Look, Inspector, you know perfectly well you're just being
rhetorical. I ran away to keep from losing my job. Mr. Wolfe had sent me there
on an errand with instructions to report back when the errand was finished. It
was finished, and as you know, Mr. Wolfe doesn't take an excuse. By the way, I
left my car there, parked on 48th –"
"Nuts. Why did you beat it?"
"I'm telling you. I would have been kept there till
midnight, and for nobody's benefit, because there were a dozen people there who
knew more than I did about the murder, and at least one of them a lot
more." I let my voice rise a little in indignation. "I helped out all
I could, didn't I? Didn't I guard the front door until the radio and precinct
guys –"
I stopped short.
"Uh-huh." Cramer nodded grimly. "Just
occurred to you, huh? Brain slowed up on you? I thought of that a long while
ago, all by myself. What was it, Goodwin? What was it that happened between the
time the precinct men arrived and the time you took your overcoat from the
rack?"
"Nothing happened."
"Yes, it did. I want to know what it was."
"Nothing, except that when a cop relieved me at the
door there was nothing I could do to help, and you know damn well what Mr.
Wolfe is like if I let anything interfere with his business."
He glared at me. Then he slid back to a more comfortable
position in the big leather chair, looked at Wolfe, and slowly shook his head.
"I'm tired out," he said resentfully. "I was up most of last
night on that Arlen case, and I was going to bed at eight o'clock, and now
here's this, and I find you're in on it even before it happens, and you can
guess how pure and simple that makes it seem like."
"I can assure you," Wolfe said sympathetically,
"that Mr. Goodwin's errand was neither to prevent nor to provoke murder.
We really didn't know there was to be one."
"Oh, I know all about his errand. Driscoll's diamonds.
To hell with that. Let's be reasonable. There was Goodwin, alone right at the
front door for six or seven minutes after he came downstairs with Mrs. Miltan,
before the radio men got there. Then they left him alone again until the
precinct men arrived. He knew from the beginning what a murder investigation
means for those on the premises when the squad gets on the job. If he wanted to
get away and get to you to report, all he had to do was walk right out and get
in his car and go. Instead of that, he waits until the precinct men come and
one of them is stationed at the door, then he goes to the office and stands
there and looks around, and all of a sudden he grabs his hat and coat, sneaks
down to the basement, pulls a gun and scares the daylights out of a colored
porter who –"
"He had no daylights left in him."
"Shut up. Tells the porter to stay where he is, takes a
ladder to the rear court and climbs the fence and talks about his wife's cat
and pretends to fall off, beats it through a kitchen and a restaurant on 49th
Street, and jumps a taxi and tells the driver he likes to go fast. And he tells
me nothing happened between the time the precinct men came and the time he
reached for his coat! I ask you, what does that sound like?"
"It sounds like a delayed cerebral process. I am
accustomed to it. Unfortunately."
"It sounds bughouse. And Goodwin's not bughouse."
"No, he isn't. Not quite. Will you have some
beer?"
"No. Thank you."
Wolfe pushed the button, leaned back, and let the tips of
his fingers meet at the apex of his middle mound. "Let's cut across, Mr. Cramer,"
he suggested helpfully. "You're busy and you need sleep. Regarding the
point you have broached, as to what happened up there between this time and
that time, Archie says he didn't want to be detained until midnight by the
prolonged routine of your staff. I say delayed cerebration. If something
significant really did happen it's obvious that we don't intend to tell you, at
least not now, so let's pass on that. Next, if you ask why we kept ourselves
incommunicado until half past nine, my reply is that I wished to get his
complete report without interruption and that I abhor any disturbance during
the dinner hour; further, that you had a large number of people up there to
deal with and Archie could tell you nothing that you couldn't learn from them."
Fritz came with a tray, and Wolfe uncapped a bottle and
poured. "Next? I suppose, why Archie was sent there? Because a girl named
Carla Lovchen, whom we have never seen before, came this afternoon to engage me
in the interest of a friend of hers named Neya Tormic, who had been accused of
theft. That matter was cleared up by a statement from Mr. Driscoll, who appears
to be a blundering ass. Next, you will doubtless ask, after that affair had
been settled and Mr. Goodwin had departed, why did he return? Because he phoned
me and I told him to. As you know, when I accept a commission I like to get
paid. I try to stop this side of rapacity, but I like to collect, even when, as
in this case, I have furnished more will than wit. I sent him back to see Miss
Tormic. He was waiting for her in the office when the porter's yells were
heard."
Cramer was slowly rubbing at his chin, looking stubborn and
unconvinced. He watched Wolfe swallow the glass of beer and wipe his lips, and
then turned to me:
"You're not bughouse, you know. Someday when I'm not
busy I'd like to tell you what you are, but you're not bughouse. Now suppose
you tell me a little story."
"Sure, I'll even tell you a big one. I was in the
office talking with Mr. and Mrs. Miltan when we heard the yelling –"
"Oh, no. Back up. From the time you got there. I want
the works."
I gave it to him, in my best style. I knew from the tone
Wolfe had taken that the program was eagerness to oblige in inessentials, so I
skipped none of the unimportant details. I covered the route. One of the little
cuts I made was the brief passage between the Balkans and me while I was
standing guard at the front door. When I got through Cramer asked me some
questions that offered no difficulty, ending with a few more jabs regarding
what had happened between the time when this and the time when that. My only
addition to my former explanation was that I had started to get hungry.
He sat a minute and chewed his cigar, frowning, and switched
to Wolfe.
"I don't believe it," he said flatly.
"No? What is it you don't believe, Mr. Cramer?"
"I don't believe that Goodwin's bughouse. I don't
believe he left like that because he was homesick and hungry. I don't believe
he went back there to collect a fee from Miss Tormic. I don't believe that as
far as you're concerned it's washed up and you're not interested in the
murder."
"I haven't said I'm not interested in the murder."
"Ho! Haven't you? Well, are you?"
"Yes." Wolfe grimaced. "Apparently I am.
While Archie was on guard at the door Miss Tormic approached and asked him – me
– to act in the matter in her interest. He accepted. I am committed, and the
amount of profit that may be expected …" He shrugged. "I am
committed. That was what happened that made Archie feel he should communicate
with me promptly and privately. As you are aware, Mr. Cramer, I am quite
capable of candor when the occasion presents –"
The inspector clamped his teeth on his cigar and said
through them savagely, "I knew it!"
Wolfe's brows went up a millimeter. "You knew? …"
"I knew it the minute I learned Goodwin had been there
and gone off to chase a cat. It had already begun to look like a first-class
headache, and when I heard about Goodwin that cinched it. So you've got a
client! And sure enough, by God, it has to be your client that was in that room
fencing with him! It would be!" He rescued the cigar from his teeth with
his left hand and hit the desk with his right fist, simultaneously.
"Understand this, Wolfe! I came here in a mood of cooperation, in spite of
Goodwin's tricky getaway! And what am I getting? Now you try to tell me that in
the space of ten seconds, just like that, your man accepted a murder case for
you! Nuts!" He hit the desk again. "I know what your abilities are,
no one knows that better than I do! And like a fool I came here expecting a
little disinterested discussion and you tell me you've got a client! Why have
you always got to have a goddam client? Naturally from now on I can't believe a
single solitary thing –"
My waving paw finally stopped his bellowing; the phone had
rung and I couldn't hear. It was a request for him. With a grunt he got up and
came to my desk for it, and I made way for him. For several minutes his part of
it was mostly listening, and then apparently he was told something
disagreeable, judging from the way he violated the law against the use of
profanity on the telephone. He gave some instructions, banged the thing into
its cradle, and said in a quiet but very sarcastic voice, "That's nice,
now."
He went back to his chair and sat there a minute chewing his
lip. "That's just fine," he said. "The case is as good as
solved. I won't have to go to any bother about it."
"Indeed," Wolfe murmured.
"Yes indeed. Three Federals have blown in up there.
Anybody might suppose that a murder in Manhattan is the business of the
homicide squad of which I happen to be the head, but who am I compared with a
G-man? If we throw them out on their tail, the commissioner will say tut-tut,
we've got to co-operate. It has two pleasant aspects. First, it means an
entirely new angle we haven't even suspected, and that's a cheerful idea.
Second, whoever solves it and however and whenever, the G-men will grab the
credit. They always do."
"Now, Inspector," I remonstrated. "A G-man is
the representative of the American people, in fact it would hardly be going too
far to say that a G-man is America –"
"Shut up. I wish you'd get an F.B.I. job yourself and
they'd send you to Alaska. I can pull you in, you know."
"If you can it's news to me. Who made any law about an
innocent man being overcome with repugnance at the sight of blood and taking a
taxi home?"
"Where did you see any blood?"
"I didn't. Figure of speech."
"Metonymy," Wolfe muttered.
"Kid me. I like it." Cramer glared at Wolfe.
"So you've got a client."
Wolfe made a face. "Tentatively I have. Archie accepted
the commission. I say tentatively because I have never met her. When I've seen
her and talked with her I shall know whether she's guilty or not."
"You admit she may be."
"Certainly she may be." Wolfe wiggled a finger.
"May I make a suggestion, Mr. Cramer? If you want consilience. It would be
doubly unprofitable for you to question me, since you have stated that you will
believe nothing I tell you, and since all those people are strangers to me and
I am completely ignorant of what went on."
"You say."
"Yes, sir, I say. But it might help for me to question
you. It would certainly help me, and in the long run it might even help
you."
"Great idea. Wonderful idea."
"I think so."
Cramer put his mangled cigar in the tray, got out another
one and stuck it in his mouth. "Shoot."
"Thank you. First, of course, achieved results. Have
you arrested anyone?"
"No."
"Have you found adequate motive?"
"No."
"Are there any definite conclusions in your mind?"
"No. Nor indefinite either."
"I see. No indictments from the mechanical routine – fingerprints,
photographs, blabbing objects?"
"No. There's one object, and maybe two, that ought to
be there and we can't find it. Do you know anything about fencing?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Nothing whatever."
"Well, the thing he was killed with is called an йpйe.
It's triangular in section, with no cutting edge, and the point is so blunted
that if you thrust at a man hard enough to go through him it would merely break
the blade, which is quite flexible. In fencing they fasten a little steel
button on the end, and the button has three tiny points. The points are only to
show on your opponent's jacket when you've made a hit; the thick body of the
button wouldn't permit the йpйe to pierce through the pad they wear or the mask
over their face."
I said, "He didn't have any mask on."
"I know he didn't, so he wasn't actually fencing at the
moment he was killed. Miltan says no one ever fences with the йpйe without a
mask. The one Ludlow had been wearing was on a bench over by the wall. And the йpйe
that was sticking through him had no button on it, just the blunted end, and it
couldn't possibly have pierced him like that. But there was that thing in the
cabinet in the office which Mrs. Miltan discovered was missing while your Mr.
Goodwin was present. Which she calls a culdymore. You talk French; you can say
it better than I can."
"Col de mort."
"Right. Anyone could have taken it from the cabinet.
The chances are a million to one it was used on the йpйe that killed Ludlow. At
a distance of a few feet, and especially with the йpйe in motion, he would
never have seen it was that and not the ordinary fencing button. But the
culdymore was not on the йpйe. So it had been removed. So everyone was searched
and twenty men went through that joint like molasses through cheesecloth. They
didn't find it. One person and only one had left that building, namely Goodwin
here. You don't imagine he took it with him for a souvenir?"
Wolfe smiled slightly. "I wouldn't suppose so. Thrown
out of a window perhaps?"
"It could have been. They're still looking, in the damn
dark with flashlights. Also for the other object which may be missing. Miss
Tormic has an idea a glove is gone, one of the ladies'-size fencing gauntlets,
from the cupboard in the locker room. Miss Lovchen and the dame that calls
herself Zorka don't think so. Mrs. Miltan won't commit herself. Nobody seems to
know for sure exactly how many there were."
"What about the button that had to be removed from the йpйe
before the col de mort could be used?"
"They're all over the place. Right in the fencing rooms
in drawers."
"Would the handle of the йpйe show fingerprints if it
had been grasped without a glove?"
"No. Wrapped with cord or something for a grip."
"Well." Wolfe looked sympathetic. "The only
two objects that might have helped aren't there. I'll promise you one thing,
Mr. Cramer, if Archie did take them away I shall see that they are handed over
to you as soon as we finish with them. But to go on, how many persons were in
the building at the time the body was found?"
"Counting everybody, twenty-six."
"How many have you eliminated?"
"All but eight or nine."
"Namely?"
"First and foremost, the one who was fencing with him.
Your client."
"I wouldn't expect that. If she is still my client
after I see her I'll eliminate her myself. The others?"
"Mr. and Mrs. Miltan. They alibi each other, which
would be a drug on the market at two for a nickel. The girl that came to see
you, Carla Lovchen. That's four. She had been fencing with Driscoll, but they
had quit and had gone to the locker rooms, and she could have sneaked to the
end room and done it. Driscoll. He's unlikely but not eliminated. Zorka. She
was in the big room on that floor with a young man named Ted Gill. He claims
not to be a fencer and was in there with her learning how to start."
I said, "It was him that was with Belinda Reade
yesterday when they saw our client in the hall as she was going to the locker
room not to pinch Driscoll's diamonds."
"Right. Then there's the Reade girl and young Barrett.
They were moving around and it's hard to tell. Of course if it's Donald Barrett
you can have it. Also there's a kind of a man named Rudolph Faber."
"The chinless wonder."
"Not original but good. It's him, by the way, that's
responsible for the fact that there's been no arrest. How many does that
make?"
"Ten."
"Then it's ten. And no discovered motive in the whole
damn bunch. I wouldn't –"
The phone rang. I performed and, after a moment, beckoned to
Cramer.
"For you. It's the boss."
"Who?"
"The police commissioner, by gum."
He got up, said in a resigned tone, "Oh, poop,"
and came and took it.
That telephone conversation was
in two sections. During the first section, which was prolonged, Cramer was
doing the talking, in a respectfully belligerent tone, reporting on the
situation and the regrettable lack of progress to date. During the second,
which was shorter, he was listening and apparently to something not especially
cheerful, judging from the inflection of his grunts, and from the expression on
his face when he finally cut the connection and returned to his chair.
He sat and scowled.
Wolfe said, "You were lamenting the lack of
motive."
"What?" He looked at Wolfe. "Yeah. I'd give
my afternoon off to know what you know right now."
"It would cost you more than an afternoon, Mr. Cramer.
I read a lot of books."
"To hell with books. I am fully aware that you've got
some kind of a line on this thing and I haven't; I knew that as soon as I heard
about Goodwin. If it ever did any good to look at your face I'd look at it
while I'm telling you that the commissioner just informed me that he had a
phone call ten minutes ago from the British consul general. The consul stated that
he was shocked and concerned to learn of the sudden and violent death of a
British subject named Percy Ludlow and he hoped that no effort would be spared
and so forth."
Wolfe shook his head. "I'm afraid my face wouldn't help
you any on that. My sole reaction is the thought that the British consul
general must have remarkable channels of information. It's half past ten at
night. The murder occurred only four hours ago."
"Nothing remarkable about it. He heard it on a radio
news bulletin."
"The source of the news was you or your staff?"
"Naturally."
"Then you had discovered that Ludlow was a British
subject?"
"No. No one up there knew much about him. Men are out
on that now."
"Then obviously it's remarkable. The radio tells the
consul merely that a man named Percy Ludlow has been killed at a dancing and
fencing studio on 48th Street, and he knows at once that the victim was a
British subject. Not only that, he doesn't wait until morning, when the usual
conventional communication could be sent to the police from his office, but
immediately phones the commissioner himself. So either Mr. Ludlow was himself
important, or he was concerned in important business. Maybe the consul could supply
some details."
"Much obliged. The commissioner has a date with him at
eleven o'clock. Meanwhile how about supplying a few yourself?"
"I don't know any. I heard Mr. Ludlow's name for the
first time shortly before six o'clock this afternoon."
"You say. All right, to hell with you and your client
both. I don't kick on any ordinary murder, it's my job and I try to handle it,
but I hate these damn foreign mix-ups. Look at those two girls, they barely
speak English, and if they want to monkey around playing with swords why can't
they stay where they belong and do it there? Look at Miltan, I suppose some
kind of a Frenchman, and his wife. Look at Zorka. Then look at that Rudolph
Faber guy, he reminds me of the cartoons of Prussian officers at the time of the
World War. And now the Federals are up there horning in, and this consul
general informs us that even the dead man wasn't a plain honest-to-God American
–"
"From old Ireland," I slipped in.
"Shut up. You know what I mean. I don't care if the
background is wop or mick or kike or dago or yankee or squarehead or dutch
colonial, so long as it's American. Give me an American murder with an American
motive and an American weapon, and I'll deal with it. But these damn alien
trimmings, йpйe and culdymores and consuls calling up about their damn subjects
– and moreover, why I was fool enough to expect anything here is beyond me. I
should have had you tagged and hauled in and let you wait in a cold hall until
sunrise."
He appeared to be preparing to leave his chair. Wolfe
displayed a palm.
"Please, Mr. Cramer. Good heavens, the corpse is barely
cooled off. Would you mind telling me how Mr. Faber made himself responsible
for the fact that there's been no arrest? I think that was how you put
it."
"I might and I might not. Do you know Faber?"
"I've said all those people are strangers to me. I tell
only useful lies, and only those not easily exposed."
"Okay. I would have arrested your client – I'm pretty
sure I would – if it hadn't been for Faber."
"Then I'm in debt to him."
"You sure are. Except for lack of motive, which might
have been supplied and still may be, it looked like Miss Tormic. She admitted
she was in there fencing with Ludlow. There was no evidence of anyone else
having entered the room, though of course someone could have done so
unobserved. Miss Tormic said that when she left the room Ludlow said he would
stay and fool with the dummy a while. A dummy is a thing fastened to the wall
with a mechanical arm that you can hook a sword onto. She said she went to the
locker room and left her pad and glove and mask, and then –"
"What about her йpйe?"
"She said she left it in the fencing room. There's a
dozen or more in there on a rack. There was one with a button on it lying on
the floor not far from Ludlow's body, presumably the one he had been using.
Ludlow had no mask on, but of course it could have been slipped off after he
was killed. I see no reason why it should have been, unless to make it look as
if he hadn't been fencing at the moment it happened. Nor was there any reason
for removing the culdymore as far as I can see except to play hide and seek
with it. But about Faber. He was downstairs in a dancing room with Zorka until
she went with Ted Gill to show him how to hold a sword. Then he went up and
changed to fencing clothes, intending to get Carla Lovchen to fence with him as
soon as she was through with Driscoll. He was hanging around the upper hall
when Miss Tormic came out of the end room, and Ludlow was there too, opening
the door for her to leave. Ludlow called to ask Faber if he cared to fence a
little, and Faber said no. He says. Ludlow said all right, he'd practice his
wrist on the dummy, and went back in the end room, closing the door, and Faber
and Miss Tormic went to an alcove at the other end of the hall and sat and
smoked a couple of cigarettes. They were still there when the porter entered
the end room to clean up, thinking it was empty, and saw the body and came out
squealing. They ran to see what it was, and other people appeared from all
directions."
Wolfe, who had closed his eyes, opened them to slits.
"I see," he murmured. "You couldn't very well have arrested her
after that, even if you had known she was my client. From where they sat did
they have a view of the hall?"
"No, there's a corner."
"How long were they sitting there before the
rumpus?"
"Fifteen to twenty minutes."
"Did anyone see them?"
"Yes, Donald Barrett. He was looking for Miss Tormic to
ask her to have dinner with him. He went to the door of the ladies' locker room
and Miss Lovchen told him Miss Tormic wasn't there. He found them in the
alcove, and was still with them five minutes later when the yelling
started."
"He hadn't looked for her in the end room?"
"No. Miss Lovchen told him she had stopped in the
locker room and left her pad and glove and mask, so he presumed she wasn't
fencing."
After a little silence Wolfe heaved a sigh.
"Well," he said irritably but mildly, "I don't see why the devil
you resent my client. She seems to be wrapped in a mantle of innocence from
head to foot."
"Sure, it's simply beautiful." Cramer abruptly got
up. "But … there's a couple of little things. So far as is known, she and
no one else was in that room with him, and for the purpose of lunging at him
with an йpйe. Then the alibi Faber gives her is one of those neat babies that
could be 99 per cent true and still be a phony. All you'd have to subtract
would be the part about his seeing and speaking with Ludlow as Miss Tormic left
the end room. I don't claim to know any reason why Faber –"
The interruption was the entrance of Fritz. Inside the door
a pace he halted to get a nod from Wolfe, and then advanced to the desk and
extended the card tray. Wolfe took the card, glanced at it, and elevated his
brows.
He told Fritz to stand by, and looked up at Cramer, who was
standing, speculatively.
"You know," he said, "since you're leaving
anyway, I could easily finesse around you by having this caller shown into the
front room until you're gone. But I really do like to cooperate when I can. One
of your ten inmates up there has got loose. Unless they've let him go in order
to follow him, which I believe is a usual tactic."
"Which one?"
Wolfe glanced at the card again. "Mr. Rudolph
Faber."
"You don't say." Cramer stared at Wolfe's face for
seven seconds. "This is a hell of a time of night for a complete stranger
to be making an unexpected call."
"It certainly is. Show him in, please, Fritz."
Cramer turned to face the door.
I chalked up one for the chinless wonder. He may have been
shy on chin, but his nerve was okay. While there may have been no reason why
the unlooked-for sight of Inspector Cramer's visage should have paralyzed him
with terror, it must have been at least quite a surprise, but he did no
shrinking or blanching. He merely halted in a manner that should have made his
heels click but didn't, lifted a brow, and then marched on.
Cramer grunted something at him, grunted a good night to
Wolfe and me, and tramped out. I got up to greet the newcomer, leaving the
front hall politeness to Fritz. Wolfe submitted to a handshake and motioned the
caller to the chair that was still warm from Cramer. Faber thanked him and
blinked at him, and then turned on me and demanded:
"How did you get away up there? Bribe the cop?"
I could have told, just looking at him, that that was the
tone he would use asking a question. A tone that took it for granted any
question he asked was going to be answered just because he asked it. I don't
like it and I know of no way anybody is ever going to make me like it.
I said, "Write me special delivery and I'll refer the
matter to my secretary's secretary."
His forehead wrinkled in displeasure. "Now, my man
–"
"Not on your life. Not your man. I belong to me. This
is the United States of America. I'm Nero Wolfe's employee, bodyguard, office
manager, and wage slave, but I can quit any minute. I'm my own man. I don't
know in what part of the world the door is that your key fits, but –"
"That will do, Archie." Wolfe said that without
bothering to glance at me; his eyes were on the caller. "Apparently, Mr.
Faber, Mr. Goodwin doesn't like you. Let's disregard that. What can I do for
you?"
"You can first," said Faber in his perfect precise
English, "instruct your subordinate to answer questions that are put to
him."
"I suppose I can. I'll try it some time. What else can
I do for you?"
"There is no discipline in your country, Mr.
Wolfe."
"Oh, I wouldn't say that. There are various kinds of
discipline. One man's flower is another man's weed. We submit to traffic cops and
the sanitary code and so on, but we are extremely fond of certain liberties.
Surely you didn't come here in order to discipline Mr. Goodwin? Don't try it;
you'd soon get sick of the job. Forget it. Beyond that? …"
"I came to satisfy myself as to your position and
intentions regarding Miss Neya Tormic."
"Well." Wolfe was keeping his voice oiled – controlling
himself. "What is it in you that requires satisfaction? Your
curiosity?"
"No. I am interested. I might be prepared, under
certain conditions, to explain my interest, and you might find it profitable to
help me advance it. I know your reputation of course – and your methods. You're
expensive. What you want is money."
"I like money, and I use a lot of it. Would it be your
money, Mr. Faber?"
"It would be yours after it was paid to you."
"Quite right. What would I have to do to earn it?"
"I don't know. It is an affair of urgency and it
demands great discretion. That inspector of police who was here – can you satisfy
me that you are not a secret agent of the police?"
"I couldn't say. I don't know how hard you are to
satisfy. I can give you my word, but I know what it's worth and you don't.
Before I went to a lot of trouble to establish my good faith, I would need
satisfaction on a few points myself. Your own position and intentions, for
instance. Is your interest a personal one in Miss Tormic, or is it – somewhat
broader? And does it coincide with hers? It is at least, I suppose, not hostile
to her, or you wouldn't have established that alibi for her when she was
threatened with a charge of murder. But exactly what is it?"
Rudolph Faber looked at me, with his thin lips thinner, and
then said to Wolfe, "Send him out of the room."
I started to deride him with a grin, knowing the reception
that kind of suggestion always got, no matter who made it; but the grin froze
on my face with amazement when I heard Wolfe saying calmly, "Certainly,
sir. Archie, leave us, please."
I was so damn flabbergasted and boiling I got up to go
without a word. I guess I staggered. But when I was nearly to the door Wolfe's
voice from behind stopped me:
"By the way, we promised to phone Mr. Green. You might
do so from Mr. Brenner's room."
So that was it. I might have known it. I said, "Yes,
sir," and went on out, closing the door behind me, and proceeded three
paces towards the kitchen. Where I stopped there was hanging on the left wall,
the one that separated the hall from the office, an old brown wood carving, a
panel in three sections. The two side sections were hinged to the middle one. I
swung the right section around, stooped a little – for it had been constructed
at the level of Wolfe's eyes – and looked through the peephole, camouflaged on
the other side by a painting with the two little apertures backed by gauze,
into the office. I could see them both, Faber's profile and Wolfe's full, and I
mean full, face. Also I could hear their words, by straining a little, but it
was obvious that they were both going on with the sparring with no prospect of
getting anywhere, so I went to the kitchen. Fritz was there in his sock feet
reading a newspaper, with his slippers beside him on another chair in case of a
summons. He looked up and nodded.
"Milk, Archie?"
"No. Keep it low. The hole's uncovered. Tricks."
"Ah!" His eyes gleamed. He loved conspiracies and
sinister things. "Good case?"
"Case hell. The second World War. It started this
afternoon up on 48th Street. We'd better not talk."
I sat on the edge of the table for two minutes by my watch
and then went to the house phone on the wall and buzzed the office. Wolfe
answered.
"Well?"
"Mr. Goodwin speaking. Green says he has got to talk
with you."
"I'm busy."
"I told him that. He said what the hell."
"You can give him the program as well as I can, and the
reports we got yesterday –"
"I told him that too. He says he wants to hear it from
you. I'll switch him onto your line."
"No, no, don't do that. Confound him anyway. You know
I'm not alone – and that's a confidential – tell him to hold the wire. He's an
unspeakable nuisance. I'll come there and take it."
"Okay."
I hung up and tiptoed back to the wood carving in the hall.
In a moment the office door opened and Wolfe came out and shut the door. He got
to me fast, whispered to me, "Quick on the signal," and glued his
eyes to the peephole.
And I nearly missed connections. Rudolph Faber must have
been in a hurry. Wolfe hadn't been at the peephole more than ten seconds before
he jerked his hand up and waved it. I wasn't supposed to jump or run, so I trod
the three paces to the office door, giving my steps plenty of weight, and flung
the door open and kept going on in. Faber, in an attitude of arrested motion,
was standing across the room from where his chair was, with his back to the
bookshelves, but his hands were empty. He blinked at me once, but otherwise his
face was impassive except for its inborn expression of superior and bullheaded
meanness. With only one swift glance at him, I went to my desk and sat down,
opened a drawer and took out a file of papers, and began going through them to
look for something.
He didn't say a word and neither did I. I finished going
through the file and started on another one, and was prepared to continue with
that indefinitely, but it wasn't necessary. I was halfway through the second
one when noises filtered in through the door to the hall, and pretty soon the
door opened and I looked up and got another shock. Nero Wolfe was there, in
overcoat, muffler, hat and gloves, with his applewood stick in his hand. I
gawked at him.
"I'm sorry," he told Faber. "I must go out on
business. If you want to go on with this, come tomorrow between eleven and one
or two and four or six and eight. Those are my hours. Archie, we'll take the sedan.
If you please. Fritz! Fritz, if you will help Mr. Faber with his coat …"
This time Faber's heels did click. I suppose they're more
apt to when you're upset. He went, without having committed himself on the
question of going on with it tomorrow.
When Fritz came back in Wolfe said, "Here, take these,
please," and handed him stick, hat, gloves, muffler and overcoat.
"Two bottles of beer." Hearing that, I put the files away in the
drawer and went to the kitchen and got a glass of milk. When I returned to the
office he was back at his desk, leaning back with his eyes closed. I sat and
sipped the milk until the arrival of the beer made him straighten up, and then
said:
"Genius again. He was going for United Yugoslavia."
Wolfe nodded. "He had his fingers on it when you opened
the door."
"Lucky guess."
"Not a guess, an experiment. He was stalling. He wasn't
saying anything and had no intention of saying anything. But he wanted you out
of the room. Why?"
"Sure. Very good. But how did he figure on getting you
out of the room too?"
"I don't know." Wolfe emptied the glass. "I
don't manage his mind for him, thank God. I did go out, didn't I?"
"Yeah. Okay. So, did one of the Balkans send him to get
that paper, or has he got Miss Tormic in his power because he's her alibi on
the murder, or did he – by jiminy!" I slapped my thigh. "I've got it!
He's Prince Donevitch!"
"Don't be amusing. I'm in no humor for it."
"I realize you're not." I sipped some more milk.
"Where do we stand, anyway? Are we on a case or not? If so, what kind of a
case?"
"I don't know. I don't like it. I don't like that
paper. I don't like having that thing in the refrigerator disguised as a cake.
We'll either have to find out who used it or turn it over to Mr. Cramer, and
neither prospect is pleasing. And I have a responsibility. I adopted that
girl."
"You don't even know whether it's her or not."
"I intend to find out. I sent you back to bring her
here. You didn't do it."
"Well, boil my bones!" I glared at him. "Am I
to infer that you insinuate that I should have lugged her along when I sneaked
through the basement and fell over the fence and so forth? No. You're being
aggravating, and God knows you're good at it. Do you want me to go get her
right now?"
"Yes."
I gaped. "You do?"
"Yes."
I looked at him. He wasn't stringing me; he meant it. And
not one red cent involved. It was at that moment that I decided never under any
circumstances to adopt a daughter. Without another word I finished the milk and
got up, and the next minute would have been gone if the phone hadn't rung.
I sat down and took it. "Office of Nero Wolfe. Archie
Goodwin speaking."
"Ah, Meesturrr Gudwinnnn? Zees ess Madame
Zorrrka."
"Oh, yeah." I passed Wolfe the sign to listen in
on his phone. "I saw you up there this afternoon."
"Yes. Zat ees why I phone. What happen zis afternoon,
eet ess terrible!"
"Right. Awful."
"Yes. Zee police, zey kestion me long time. I tell zem
everysing but one sing. I deed not tell zem how I see Mees Tormic put something
in your pocket."
"No?"
"But no. I sink eet ees not my beesiness and I do not
want any trrrouble. But I am worried. Now I sink eet ees a murrrder, and I owe
a duty. I must now tell zee police or I cannot sleep. I am duty bound."
"Sure, I see. Duty bound."
"Yes. But also I sink eet ees only fair I tell you
before I tell zee police. Now I tell you. Now I tell zee police."
"Wait a minute, please. Let me get this straight.
You're going to phone the police now?"
"Yes."
"And exactly what are you going to tell them?"
"Zat I see Mees Tormic put somesing in your pocket in
zee coat hanging on zee rack and trying not to have anybody see. Zen pretty
soon you take zee coat and go."
"Now, listen." I tried to laugh. "You sure
are seeing things. Where are you now?"
"Zey let me go home. I am at my apartment, 78th Street.
542 East."
"Well, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll get hold of
Miss Tormic and we'll drop in to see you. If you think we're murderers, which
we're not –"
"Oh, I'm not afraid. But I am worried."
"Don't you worry for a minute. We'll be there in less
than an hour. You're sure you'll be there?"
"Certainly I will."
"The police can wait that long."
"But not longer, Meesturrr Gudwinnnn."
"Okay. Absolutely."
I shoved back the phone and stood up.
"There," I said, with no feeling because my
feelings were too deep. "There you are. What else could I say?"
"Nothing," Wolfe muttered. "Now be
quiet."
He shut his eyes and his lips began to push in and out. That
went on for ten minutes. I sat and tried to figure out something milder than
kidnapping, but my brain wouldn't work because I was too damn disgruntled.
Finally he said quietly:
"Get Mr. Cramer."
That took a little doing, because the saps Cramer had left
up at Miltan's studio had to go into a huddle before they would even admit he
wasn't there. Next I tried his office at headquarters, and got him; apparently
the base of operations had been moved down there. Wolfe took it:
"Mr. Cramer? I have a little something on that Ludlow
case. No, it's somewhat complicated. I think the best idea would be for you to
have a man collect Madame Zorka and Miss Tormic and bring them to my office as
soon as possible. No, I want to co-operate, but I hardly think any other
procedure would be feasible. No, I haven't solved the case, but this is a
development that I am sure will interest you. You know whether I may be
depended on for that sort of thing. You'll come yourself? Fine."
He hung up and rubbed his nose with his forefinger. I
blurted, "And whoever goes to get Zorka, she'll spill the entire bag of
beans before they get here –"
"Let me alone, Archie. Take that confounded thing out
of that idiotic cake and put it back in your pocket the way it was."
I gave up. And obeyed blindly. Talk about discipline.
Neya Tormic was the first to
arrive for the party.
It was close to midnight when I went to answer the bell,
saving Fritz the trouble of putting his slippers in commission and glad of a
chance to stretch my legs even that much.
"Hullo," I said in polite surprise, for three of
them crossed the threshold and I knew all of them. First Neya Tormic, then
Carla Lovchen, and bringing up the rear, Sergeant Purley Stebbins. Purley and I
had often been enemies and even friends once or twice. While I helped with
wraps he said:
"This other one coupled on and I would have had to use
force to separate her. So I thought if she's not wanted we can do the
separating here."
"Sure," I agreed, "let Cramer do it. He ought
to be here any minute. You go on to the kitchen, you know the way, and Fritz'll
give you a pork tenderloin sandwich with onion grass."
He looked wistful. "I guess I won't let her out of my
sight –"
"Pooh pooh. My dear fellow. This is a conference and
Mr. Wolfe and I are conferees. Breaded pork tenderloin and steaming black
coffee?"
So he headed for the kitchen and I herded the Balkans into
the office.
I was afraid Wolfe might be skittish, confronted with two
Montenegrin females at once, but he stood up and greeted them like a man. I had
chairs already arranged. It was the first time I had seen Neya in anything but
her fencing costume with robe. She was natty in a dark-brown suit and brown
oxfords, with no foreign touch as far as I could see, but my interest in
women's clothes is not technical. Her eyes were as black as two prunes in a
dish of cream, but there was a little flush on her cheeks, which may have been
from the cold outdoors.
She said, with the eyes aimed at him, "You are Nero
Wolfe."
Wolfe nodded just perceptibly. He was leaning forward with
his elbows resting on the desk and his fingers linked together. Having seen him
scrutinize a lot of people, I was aware that he was putting on a special and
rare performance.
She said, "You sent a policeman to bring me here. I
don't understand that."
"Inspector Cramer sent him."
"But you must have permitted it." There was a
swift movement of her head; a characteristic arrested toss that I had observed
that afternoon. "Or suggested it."
"Yes, Miss Tormic. I arranged it. A certain fact was
exposed which required immediate action in order to save Mr. Goodwin from
arrest. He is my confidential assistant, and I wouldn't welcome the ignominy of
bailing him out of jail. Or perhaps instead of a fact, it's a lie. We'll find
out. I thought it better to do so in the presence of Inspector Cramer, and
besides, I want to see how you behave under pressure."
"I can stand pressure."
"Good. We'll see."
She smiled at him. When her mouth was composed the don't-touch-me
was in command, but when she smiled it was all come-hither. "Have you told
him that I am your adopted daughter?"
Wolfe frowned and turned to me. "Is the man who brought
them in the kitchen?"
"Yes, sir. It's Stebbins. You know Sergeant Stebbins."
He nodded. "Nevertheless, Miss Tormic, I think we'll
discuss that later. I haven't told the police that you are my daughter. For the
present, it is desirable that I should not be suspected of so intimate a
prejudice. Do you agree to that?"
"I should think …" She hesitated. The smile had
gone. "Of course I'll do whatever you say, but …" She smiled again.
"I'd like to have that paper back, the record of adoption which you
signed. I want to hang onto that. I admit it's pure selfishness, because I know
what it might mean to be the daughter of Nero Wolfe. I proved that by sending
for you when I got into trouble. Of course, since I've never seen you since I
was three years old, I can't be expected to show violent affection and throw my
arms around you and kiss you –"
"No indeed," Wolfe agreed hastily. "There's
no question of … it's a matter of responsibility and that's all. My
responsibility. I was sane, in the legal sense, when I assumed it. As for the
record of adoption, I would prefer, if you don't mind – but that's probably Mr.
Cramer. Unless it's Madame Zorka."
"Zorka!" exclaimed Carla Lovchen in surprise.
But it was Cramer, ushered in by Fritz. He glanced sharply
around, offered a curt collective greeting, and, finding his usual chair
occupied by Neya Tormic, took one at the left of Carla Lovchen.
"Where's the Zorka woman?" he demanded.
"Not here yet," I told him.
"Where's Stebbins?"
"In the kitchen eating our food."
He grunted and looked at Carla, "I told him to bring
Miss Tormic."
Carla said, "I came along" in a tone that
indicated an intention to stay.
"I see you did. Well, Mr. Wolfe?"
"We'll wait for Madame Zorka. In the meantime, what did
the commissioner learn from the consul general?"
Cramer glowered at him.
"Oh, come," Wolfe said testily, "don't degrade
discretion into secretiveness. If either of these girls killed Mr. Ludlow, they
certainly knew who he was. The fact that you have found that out might frighten
them into betraying something. If they didn't kill him, what's the
difference?"
Cramer growled, "Tomorrow's papers will have it anyway.
I suppose. They always do. Ludlow was a confidential agent of the British
government."
"Indeed. What was he doing at the fencing studio?
Working or playing?"
"The consul doesn't know. Ludlow reported direct to
London. They're trying to get someone in London now. It's five o'clock in the
morning there. I told you before that this looks –"
He stopped to let me answer the phone. It was a call for
him, and I made room for him to take it at my desk.
After he had listened a while he used profanity again. That
made it evident he had got more than a minor irritation, since he had
old-fashioned ideas about swearing in front of ladies, and he had strong
principles to which he steadfastly adhered when they didn't interfere with his
work. Finally he cut the connection, banging the thing into the cradle, went
back and sat down, and sighed clear to his belt.
He glared at Wolfe and demanded, "What was the big idea
of getting this Zorka down here? Spill it!"
Wolfe shook his head. "Wait till she gets here. Was
that her on the phone? Isn't she coming?"
"Coming hell. She's skipped!"
"Skipped?"
"Gone! Left! Departed! And you knew she was going to!
You had me send a man up there on a run-around! Damn you, Wolfe, I've told you
twenty times that some day –"
"Please, Mr. Cramer." Wolfe was frowning in
distaste. "I beg you, sir. I don't make a game of run sheep run out of a
murder. I hadn't the faintest notion that Madame Zorka intended to skip. She
telephoned here – what time, Archie?"
I glanced at my pad. "11:21."
"Thank you. And told us something. Archie told her he
would get Miss Tormic and call on her at her apartment, from where she was
talking. Then we made a brief investigation and decided it would be better to
have the matter discussed with you present. As you know, I never go out on
business, so we asked you to bring them here. Since her phoning here was by her
own volition, and since she expected Archie and Miss Tormic to call, it is odd
that she should leave her apartment."
"Yeah. Especially with a bag and a suitcase."
Wolfe's brows went up. "But I presume you were having
her followed?"
"No! Why should we? Have I got a million men on the
squad to tail everybody on the premises every time there's a homicide? Nuts! I
sent a man to get her and bring her here. She wasn't there. Downstairs they
told him that she went out with a bag and suitcase ten minutes before he
arrived."
"Any trail?"
"They're after it."
"Pfui." Wolfe looked around at us. "Well.
Here we are. Under the circumstances, the best thing we can do is to proceed
without her."
"Go ahead," Cramer said grimly.
Wolfe leaned back and half closed his eyes and Miss Tormic
was possibly unaware that he was watching her like a hawk. "As I say,
Madame Zorka phoned here at 11:21. She stated that shortly after the murder was
discovered, when everyone was together up there in the office, she saw Miss Tormic
put something into the pocket of Mr. Goodwin's coat, which was hanging on a
rack. She hadn't mentioned the incident to the police and her conscience was
bothering her because she thinks murder is terrible. So she had decided to
phone Mr. Goodwin and tell him that she intended to inform the police at once
–"
Cramer barked at Neya, "What did you put in Goodwin's
pocket?"
She kept her eyes leveled at Wolfe and paid no attention to
him.
Wolfe said in his tone of authority, "Just a moment. I
arranged this meeting and I'm handling it. Archie told Madame Zorka he would
get Miss Tormic and go to see her. Of course he was stalling. He went to the
hall to investigate, and there was something in the pocket of his overcoat
which he had not put there. He didn't take it out. He left it there
undisturbed, and it was decided to phone you and get Miss Tormic and Madame
Zorka down here. That's all so far. Archie, go get the coat."
I went to the hall and removed it from the hanger and took
it back and laid it on Wolfe's desk, with the guilty pocket uppermost.
Wolfe said, "Please, Mr. Cramer. It seemed preferable
that you should have the first look at it."
Even when he said that he didn't look at Cramer, but kept
watching Neya. Cramer advanced and stuck his hand in the pocket and pulled the
thing out. I was right at his elbow, beside myself with curiosity as to what it
might be. He stared at the rolled-up bunch of canvas clenched in his fist, then
put it down on the desk and unrolled it. The stains were now the color of dark
mahogany. As the little metal doodad was disclosed to our gaze I permitted
myself an ejaculation of astonishment.
Wolfe said, "I suspected that. Your two missing
objects, Mr. Cramer. Aren't they?"
Cramer said to me through his teeth, "So that's why you
took a powder."
I gave him a cold hard eye. "Guess again. You heard
what Mr. Wolfe said –"
He wheeled on Neya. "You!" he said with his jaw
still clamped. "Let's have it." He grabbed the glove, with the col
de mort nested in the palm, and stuck it under her nose. "Did you put
that in Goodwin's pocket?"
She nodded her head. "Yes, I did."
That unclamped his jaw. He goggled at her and I guess I
joined him. She was all right. Her hands were clasped tight on her lap and she
sat stiff, but she certainly showed no signs of hysteria. Cramer opened his
mouth to speak, then shut it again, tramped to the door and pulled it open and
bellowed:
"Stebbins! Come here!"
Purley came trotting, with a startled and embarrassed look
on his big face because he was trying to chew and swallow at the same time.
Cramer motioned to the chair he had been occupying and growled, "Sit down
there and take your notebook."
"Wait a minute," Wolfe put in. "Are you
charging Miss Tormic?"
"No." Cramer didn't look at him. "I'm asking
her. Any objections? If so, I can take her downtown."
"None at all. I prefer it here. We're four to
two."
"I don't care if you're a hundred to two." Cramer
exhibited the objects to the sergeant. "Put down that I showed her this
canvas gauntlet and this steel thing with a point and asked her if she put them
in Goodwin's overcoat pocket and she replied, 'Yes, I did.'" He confronted
Neya Tormic. "Now. You state that you put these two things into Goodwin's
overcoat pocket while it was hanging on a rack in the office of Miltan's studio
not long after Ludlow's dead body was discovered. Is that right?"
"Yes."
"Did you kill Percy Ludlow?"
She said in a good clear voice, "You've asked me that
before and I said no."
Carla Lovchen blurted, "She can explain –"
"Shut up please! – Do you still say no?"
"Yes."
"Did you take this steel thing off of the end of the йpйe
after it had gone through Ludlow's chest?"
"No."
"Did you take it off the йpйe with this glove on your
hand and then discover there was blood on the glove and you would have to get
rid of both of them?"
"No. I never –"
"When did you take this thing out of the cabinet in
Miltan's office?"
"I didn't take it out."
"You put these two things in Goodwin's pocket, didn't
you?"
"Yes."
"You had them then, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Where did you get them?"
"I found them in the pocket of my robe – the green robe
I put on over my fencing costume."
"What do you mean, you found them?"
"I just mean that. Isn't that a good word? Found?"
"Sure, it's a swell word. It's a beaut. How and when
and why did you find them?"
"Just a moment, Mr. Cramer." It was Wolfe, in a
tone that meant business. "Miss Tormic is a stranger in this country.
Either I advise her to say nothing whatever and I get a lawyer for her, or I
will tell her one or two things myself. At this point."
"What do you want to tell her?"
"You will hear it." Wolfe wiggled a finger.
"Miss Tormic. It is unlikely that you will be charged with murder as long
as the alibi furnished by Mr. Faber is unimpeached. That is, remains good. You
can, however, be put under arrest as a material witness – a device to prevent
you from running away – and then be released under a bond to appear when
needed. You have been asked to give a circumstantial account of your connection
with the instrument of murder, which you have admitted was in your possession
shortly after the crime was committed. Your words are being taken down by a
stenographer. If you give that account, you will be committed to it as the
truth, so it had better be the truth. If you refuse to give it, you will
probably be arrested as a material witness. You must decide for yourself. Have
I made it clear?"
"Yes," she said, and smiled at him. "I think
I understand that all right. There's no reason why I shouldn't tell the truth –
it's the only thing I can do, now." She shifted her eyes to Cramer.
"It was in the office when we were all in there, waiting for the police to
come. I put my hand in the pocket of my robe and there was something in there.
It's a big pocket, quite big. I started to pull it out to see what it was, but
the feel of it told me it must be a fencing glove. I tried to think what to do.
I knew it shouldn't be there – I mean I knew I hadn't put it there. For a
minute I was scared, but I made myself think. Mr. Ludlow had been killed in the
fencing room where I had been fencing with him, and there I was with a
wadded-up glove in my pocket, and if we were searched …" She upturned a
palm. "I looked around for a place to put it and saw Mr. Goodwin's coat. I
knew it must be his, because the others were all upstairs in their lockers, and
I knew he had come there anyway to get me out of trouble – so I went over to it
and when I thought no one was looking I took it out of my pocket and put it in
his."
"Very much obliged –"
"Shut up, Goodwin! Do you realize what you're trying to
tell me, Miss Tormic?"
"I … I think I do."
"You're trying to tell me that you had a bulky thing
like that in your pocket and didn't know it."
"So am I," I put in. "The same goes for
me."
"I know damn well it does! Did I ask you to close your
trap? What about it, Miss Tormic?"
She shook her head. "I don't know – of course I was
excited. It's a loose robe and it's a big pocket. I had it on – you saw
it."
"Yeah, I saw it. So you admit you concealed evidence of
a crime?"
"Is that … wrong?"
"Hell, no. Oh, my, no. And do you know who put it in
your pocket?"
"No."
"Of course you don't. Or when?"
"No." Neya frowned. "I have thought about
that. I left the robe in the locker room, lying on a bench, when I went to the
end room to fence. After I left Mr. Ludlow there and met Mr. Faber in the hall,
I stopped in the locker room to leave my pad and glove and mask, and put on the
robe and went with Mr. Faber to the alcove. Whoever put the glove in my pocket,
I don't think they did it until afterwards, because I think I would have
noticed it. After the porter started to yell, we were all running around and
jostling against each other – and I suppose someone did it then … that's the
only way I can explain how it might have happened –"
"And you knew nothing about it."
"I knew nothing about it until I felt something in my
pocket there in the office."
"And you were scared. You were just simply perfectly
innocent."
"Yes. I was. I am."
"Sure. But though you were perfectly innocent, you
didn't tell the police about it, and you weren't going to tell about it, and
you never would have told about it, if Madame Zorka hadn't reported that she
saw you do it and you were afraid to deny it!" He was yapping into her
face at a range of thirty inches. "Huh?"
"I –" She swallowed. "I think I might. But
the way I thought about it, I thought Mr. Goodwin would find it in his pocket
and turn it over to you, and it wouldn't matter whether you knew it had ever
been in my pocket or not."
"Then you thought wrong. Mr. Goodwin doesn't turn
things over to the police. Mr. Goodwin climbs a fence and runs home to papa and
says see what I got, and papa says –"
"Nonsense!" Wolfe cut in sharply. "We'll
dispose of that point now. You know what I told you; I don't need to repeat it.
Granted that your supposititious assumption is correct, that Archie knew it was
in his pocket and ran away with it, and that we concealed it from you, you
can't possibly establish it as a fact, so why the devil waste time harping on
it? Especially in view of a fact that is established, that when Madame Zorka's
phone call caused us to investigate the overcoat pocket, we immediately
communicated with you."
"You had to!"
Wolfe grimaced. "I don't know. Had to? Ingenuity can
nearly always create an alternative if none exists. Anyway, we did. And if we
hadn't, but had proceeded without you, your two missing objects would still be
missing, for when Archie and Miss Tormic called on Madame Zorka she would have
been gone, and the compulsion of her threatened exposure would have been
removed. So you owe your possession of those two objects to us. You owe your
knowledge of a suspicious circumstance, Madame Zorka's flight with a bag and
suitcase, to us. And you owe your knowledge of the manner in which the criminal
disposed of the glove and col de mort to the courageous candor of my
client."
Cramer, standing, stared down at him, and as far as I could
see his face was not glowing with gratitude.
He said, "So she's your client, is she?"
"I told you so."
"You said tentatively. You said you'd decide when you
had met her."
"I have met her."
"All right, you've met her. Is she your client?"
"She is."
Cramer hesitated, then turned slowly and looked down at
Neya. His gaze had concentration, but no acute hostility; and I suppressed a
grin. I knew what was eating him. He was well aware that the time had yet to
come when he would successfully pin a murder charge on any man, woman or child
whom Nero Wolfe had accepted as a client, and he was strongly tempted to call
it a day then and there as far as Neya Tormic was concerned and throw in
another line. He even, half unconsciously, favored Carla Lovchen with a sidewise
suspicious glance, but he returned to Neya and, after a moment, wheeled again
to Wolfe.
"Faber gives her an alibi. Okay. But you don't need to
be told that an alibi works both ways. What if Faber thought she needed one and
so he provided it? And she thought she needed it to, and accepted it and
confirmed it? Without maybe realizing that while Faber was giving her an alibi,
what he was really doing was arranging one for himself?"
Wolfe nodded. "An old trick, but still a good one.
That's quite possible, of course. Will you have some beer?"
"No."
"You, Miss Tormic, Miss Lovchen?"
He got their declinations, pressed the button and went on.
"This thing's messy, Mr. Cramer. It looks as if I'm going to have to find
out who killed Mr. Ludlow, unless you do it first yourself. You certainly
aren't going to get anywhere badgering my client. Look at her. I'll have a
little talk with her after you leave, and one thing I shall tell her is to hang
onto the Faber alibi, for the present, even if it was fabricated by him. True,
it protects Faber, but it also protects her. If and when you can point a
suspicion at Faber, especially a motive, let me know and we'll discuss the
alibi business."
"You suspect her of lying yourself!"
"Not specifically. Anyone would tell a lie, at least by
acquiescence, rather than stand trial for murder. By the way, about this Mr.
Faber. You are entirely wrong in your suspicion that he wasn't a stranger to
me. I never saw him or heard of him in my life before today. Is he by any
chance another confidential government agent?"
Cramer eyed him. "How did you know that if he was such
a stranger to you?"
"I didn't. Mere conjecture. If I had known it I
wouldn't have asked. Not British, is he?"
"No."
"Of course not. He might as well display an emblem on an
arm band. Archie and I don't like him. It's a pity my client's alibi depends on
him; I would prefer to establish her innocence without that. Do you suppose the
attack on Ludlow was the eagle clawing the lion?"
"I don't suppose. It was a human being murdering a
man."
"Yes, it was that, all right." Wolfe glanced up at
the clock. "It's well past midnight, and I want to have a little talk with
Miss Tormic. Is there anything else you want to ask her?"
"She's an alien. I ought to have her under bond."
"She won't skip, at least not tonight, and we can
arrange for the bond tomorrow if you insist on it."
Cramer grunted. "She's important. She had the murder
weapon in her possession. I'd like to have her come to my office tomorrow
morning at nine o'clock and see Lieutenant Rowcliff."
Wolfe frowned. "Mr. Rowcliff is the officer who came
here once with a warrant and searched my house."
"Yeah. You don't forget that, do you?"
"No. Neither do you – Come in … Yes, Fritz?" On
account of the barricade of chairs, Fritz had to talk over the top of Neya
Tormic's head. He was stiffly formal, as was his invariable custom when there
were ladies present, not from any sense of propriety but from fear. Whenever
any female, no matter what her age or appearance, got inside the house, he was
apprehensive and ill at ease until she got out again.
"A gentleman to see you, sir. Mr. Stahl. He was here
this afternoon."
Wolfe said to show him in.
The G-man was wearing the same
suit and the same manners, and the only visible change was that he had had his
shoes shined. Cramer took one look at him, let out a grunt, and propped himself
against the edge of my desk.
The G-man apologized in his educated voice. "I didn't
know you were engaged, Mr. Wolfe … I don't want to interrupt –"
"I'll be engaged for some time. Do you need to see me
alone?"
That seemed to stump him. He frowned and took a quick survey
of the crowd. "Perhaps not," he decided. "It's only … about that
statute requiring the registration of agents of foreign principals."
"What about it?"
"Well – it is necessary to make sure that you
understand the requirements."
"I think I do understand them."
"Perhaps. Section 5 of the Act says, 'Any person who
willfully fails to file any statement required to be filed under this act, or,
in complying with the provisions of this act, makes a false statement of a
material fact, or willfully omits to state any material fact required to be
stated therein, shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by a fine of not more
than $1000 or imprisonment for not more than two years, or both.'"
"Yes, I understand that."
"Perhaps. Another section of the Act defines an agent
of a foreign principal to mean any individual, partnership, association or
corporation who acts or engages as agent or representative for a foreign
principal, and a foreign principal is defined to mean the government of a
foreign country, a person domiciled abroad, or any foreign business,
partnership, association, corporation, or political organization."
"Say it again."
He repeated it.
Wolfe shook his head. "I don't know. I don't think I
need to register under the act. I am agent for a young woman named Neya Tormic.
She is foreign. But she is not a business, partnership, association,
corporation, or political organization, nor is she at present domiciled
abroad."
"Where is she?"
"Right there."
The G-man looked at Neya; in fact, he studied her. Then he
switched to Wolfe and studied him. Finally he slowly shook his head. "I
don't know either," he declared. "It's a situation I haven't met.
I'll have to get an opinion from the attorney general. I'll let you know."
He bowed with perfect aplomb, turned, and departed.
I tittered.
Cramer threw up both hands, pawed the air, and headed for
the door. Halfway across he turned to announce, "I heard every word of
that and I don't believe it. If I had it on a phonograph record and played it
all day I still wouldn't believe it. And in spite of that, I believe in law enforcement.
Come on, Stebbins. Bring that glove and that thing. Miss Tormic, there'll be a
man at your apartment at 8:30 in the morning to bring you to my office. You'll
be there?"
She said she would, and went out with the sergeant at his
heels.
Wolfe poured beer and drank. I covered a yawn.
Neya Tormic asked, with her forehead wrinkled, "Was it
silly of me to admit it like that? I thought – it seemed to be the only thing I
could do."
Wolfe wiped his lips, leaned back, and looked at her.
"Anyhow, it was one thing to do, and you did it. Was it the truth?"
"Yes."
"Is Faber's story, which you have confirmed, and which
gives you both an alibi, also true?"
"Yes."
"You realize, I suppose, that without that alibi you
would probably now be under arrest, charged with murder."
"Yes."
"Did you know that Ludlow was an agent of the British
government?"
"Yes."
"And that Faber is an agent of the German
government?"
"Yes."
"Are you a government agent, or is Miss Lovchen?"
"No."
"Do you know who killed Ludlow?"
"No."
"Have you any idea?"
"No."
His eyes darted aside. "Did you kill Ludlow, Miss
Lovchen?"
"No, sir."
"Have you any idea who did?"
"No, sir."
Wolfe sighed. "Now. Take those orders. Mr. and Mrs.
Miltan, Driscoll, Gill, Barrett, Miss Reade, Madame Zorka. Do you know whether
they were involved with Ludlow, either politically or personally?"
Neya's eyes shifted to Carla and then returned to Wolfe. She
opened her mouth, closed it, and then spoke. "I don't know how much
involved. They all knew each other. We haven't been there very long
ourselves."
"Did you first meet Ludlow and Faber at Miltan's?"
"Yes."
"How did you learn they were government agents?"
"Why … they told me."
"Indeed. Just told you to make conversation?"
"They … well, they told me." She smiled at him. "Under
certain conditions – I mean, a man is apt to tell a girl things if the
conditions are such that he feels like it."
"Were you intimate with Mr. Ludlow? Are you intimate
with Mr. Faber?"
"Oh, no." Her nose seemed to go up. "Not
intimate."
"Yet they told you – never mind. You say you are not a
government agent. Are you a political agent? Did you come to this country on a
political mission?"
"No."
"Did you, Miss Lovchen?"
"No, sir."
"You're both lying."
They stared at him. Neya's chin went up. Carla's eyes
narrowed, which left them still wide enough for ordinary purposes.
Wolfe snapped, "As an intrigante, Miss Lovchen, you are
incredibly maladroit. Twice since you entered this room you have glanced at the
place on the bookshelves where my copy of United Yugoslavia stands. I
know you put that paper there. I've removed it and put it somewhere else."
Neya merely continued to stare, but Carla jumped up, with
her face white, and started to sputter at him, "But I – I only meant
–"
"I know." He showed her a palm. "You only
meant to leave it there a while for safekeeping. It's even safer where I put
it. The reason I mention it –"
"Where is it?" Neya Tormic's eyes were two йpйes
going through him and her tone was a dagger whizzing at him. She was up and at
the edge of his desk in one swift movement that reminded me of the lunge Miltan
had made with his championship sticker to show me how it was done. She threw
the dagger again, at short range: "Where is it?"
She turned, because Carla was up too and had grabbed her
arm. She shook herself loose, but Carla seized her elbow again and told her
sharply, "Neya – Neya! Sit down! Neya – you know –"
Neya spouted a torrent at her that I would have had no
symbols for if I had been at my notebook. Carla returned it, but not in a
torrent; she was cool and controlled.
Wolfe said, "I understand Serbo-Croat."
They both said, "Oh!"
He nodded. "I used to knock around. I did some work for
the Austrian government when I was too young to know better. And I was in your
country in 1921, and adopted a daughter –"
"I want that paper."
"I know you do, Miss Lovchen. But I won't even discuss
it, let alone return it to you, unless you children sit down and behave
yourselves. None of this jumping up and caterwauling; I don't like it; besides,
it won't do you any good. Sit down!"
They sat.
"That's better. I mentioned that paper only to show you
how I knew you were lying when you said you aren't in this country on a
political mission – and by the way, I suppose you lied to the police too? Of
course you did. Now that the paper's been mentioned – where did you get it,
Miss Lovchen?"
"I …" She fingered her skirt. "I got
it."
"Where and how? Is it yours?"
"I stole it."
Neya snapped, "You did not! I stole it myself!"
Wolfe shrugged. "Split the honors. Who did you steal it
from?"
"From the person who had it."
"From the Princess Vladanka Donevitch?"
"I won't tell you."
"Good. That's better than trying to lie. Is the
princess in New York now?"
"I won't tell you anything about that paper."
"You are in danger. You are actually in peril of your
life. Faber's unsupported alibi is the only thing between you and an indictment
for murder. Do you want my assistance in the removal of that danger?"
"Yes." It looked for an instant as if she were
going to smile at him, but she didn't. "Yes," she repeated, "I
do."
"Are you prepared to pay me? My usual fee? Several
thousand dollars, for instance?"
"My God, no." She glanced at Carla and back at
him. "But … I might."
"But when you sent Miss Lovchen here in the first
place, you expected me to help you because you are my adopted daughter, didn't
you?"
She nodded. "I thought you might feel –"
"I carry this fat to insulate my feelings. They got too
strong for me once or twice and I had that idea. If I had stayed lean and kept
moving around I would have been dead long ago. You are aware that I have no
proof that you are my daughter. You sent Miss Lovchen here with that record of
adoption bearing my signature. Another paper. Did you steal that too?"
Carla ejaculated something indignant. Neya was on her feet,
with her eyes flashing. "If you think I did that, there's no use –"
"I don't think you did that. I just don't know. I asked
you to stop jumping up. Please sit down, Miss Tormic. Thank you. I used to be
idiotically romantic. I still am, but I've got it in hand. I thought it
romantic, when I was a boy, twenty-five years ago, to be a secret agent of the
Austrian government. My progress toward maturity got interrupted by the World
War and my experience with it. War doesn't mature men; it merely pickles them
in the brine of disgust and dread. Pfui! After the war I was still lean and I
moved around. In Montenegro I assumed responsibility for the sustenance and
mental and physical thrift of a three-year-old orphan girl by adopting her. I
did something else there too, which advanced my maturity, but that has nothing
to do with you. I saw that girl's ribs. The something else I did finished
Montenegro for me, and I left the girl, I thought, in good hands, and returned
to America."
Wolfe leaned back and let his lids down a little. "You
go on from there, please."
Neya said, "You left me in Zagreb with Pero Brovnik and
his wife."
"That's right. Your name?"
"My name was Anna. When I was eight years old they were
arrested as revolutionaries and shot. I don't remember that very well, but I
know all about it."
"Yes." Wolfe looked grim. "And for three
years the money I continued to send to Zagreb was appropriated by someone in
Brovnik's name, and when I got suspicious and went over there, in spite of the
fact that I was no longer lean, I got nowhere. I couldn't find the girl. I got
no satisfaction about the money. I got put in jail, and the American consul got
me out and I was given ten hours to leave the country." He made a face.
"I have not been in Europe, nor in jail, since. Where were you?"
"I was eleven years old then."
"Yes. I can add. Where were you?"
She looked at him a while before she spoke. "I can't
tell you that."
"You'll either tell me that or march on out of here and
not come back. And I have the paper which you stole and your friend left in my
book for safekeeping. Now don't start caterwauling."
Carla said, "Tell him, Neya."
"But Carla! Then he'll know –"
"Tell him."
"And tell the truth," Wolfe advised, "or I'll
know that, and I'll know it even better after I've cabled Europe."
She told him. "When the Brovniks were arrested I was
sent to an institution. A year later I was taken out by a woman named Mrs.
Campbell."
"Who was she?"
"She was the English secretary of Prince Peter
Donevitch."
"What did she want with you?"
"She visited the institution and she took a liking to
me. My ribs didn't show then. She wanted to adopt me, but she couldn't,
legally, on account of you."
"Why didn't she communicate with me?"
"Because … her connection with Prince Donevitch. The
kind of friends you had had in Yugoslavia, like the Brovniks. They knew you
would make trouble, and they didn't want trouble from an American."
"No. You can't take an American out and shoot him. So
she just stole the money I sent for three years."
"I don't know anything about that."
"Where is she now?"
"She died four years ago."
"Where did you go then?"
"I continued to live there."
"With Donevitch?"
"In that house."
"Did young Prince Stefan live there?"
"Yes, he – he and his sisters."
"And his wife?"
"After – of course. When he was married, two years
ago."
"Were you treated as one of the family?"
"No." She hesitated and then said more
emphatically, "No, I wasn't."
Wolfe turned abruptly to Carla Lovchen and snapped at her,
"Are you Stefan's wife? The Princess Vladanka?"
Her eyes popped open. "Me? Boga ti! No!"
"You had that paper which you put in my book."
Neya said, "I told you I stole that paper. I don't
always lie."
"Where did you steal it, Zagreb or New York?"
She shook her head. "I can't tell about that paper. Not
even – no matter what you do."
He grunted. "Your secret political mission. I know. Die
first. I used to play that silly dirty game myself. But since you lived in the
same house with the Princess Vladanka, you must know her pretty well. Are you
and she friends?"
"Friends?" Neya's forehead showed a crease.
"No."
"What's she like?"
"She is clever, beautiful, selfish and
treacherous."
"Indeed. What does she look like?"
"Well … she is tall. Her arms move like snakes. Her
face is like this." Neya described an oval with her fingers. "Her
eyes are as black as mine – sometimes blacker."
"Is she in Zagreb now?"
"She was when I left. It was said she was going to
Paris to see old Prince Peter and then to America."
"You're lying."
She looked straight at him. "Sometimes it is necessary
to lie. There are some things I can't tell."
"Ha, over your dead body. The curlicues of some old
bandit's trademark engraved on your heart, and what do you get out of it? When
do you expect to finish this political errand you're working on?"
She looked at him, at Carla, back at him, and said nothing.
"Come, come," he insisted impatiently. "I
merely ask when. Is the end in sight?"
"I think so," she admitted. "I think it will
be … Tomorrow."
"It's past midnight. Do you mean this day?"
"Yes. But I must have that paper. You have no right to
keep it. When that imbecile, that Driscoll, made the trouble about his diamonds
being stolen, I thought the police might come and search everything, even my
room where I live. I thought of you, the American who had adopted me when I was
a baby; I had brought the record of adoption with me when I left Zagreb; Mrs.
Campbell had given it to me before she died. So Carla and I decided the paper
would be safer with you than anywhere else, and we decided how to do it so she
could easily get it again. Then you refused to help me and she had to return
and let you know who I am." She stopped and smiled at him, but she was so
anxious that the effort was a little cockeyed. "I must have that paper
now! I must!"
"We'll see. You admit you stole it. So you expect to
accomplish your mission this day."
"Yes."
"You realize, of course, that the police won't let you
leave New York until they're satisfied their murder case is solved."
"But I … you said yourself my alibi –"
"That doesn't solve the case. Don't you do anything
silly. If you do complete your errand, don't try sneaking aboard a ship
disguised as a Nereid. Who is Madame Zorka?"
They both stared at him in surprise.
"Well?" Wolfe demanded. "You know her, don't
you?"
Carla laughed. It sounded quite natural, as though something
really had struck her as funny. Neya said:
"Why … she's nobody. She's a dressmaker."
"So I understand. Where did she get that name? The name
of the daughter of King Nikita of Montenegro."
"But Queen Zorka has been dead –"
"I know that. Where did this dressmaker get the
name?"
Carla laughed again. "She must have found it in a
book."
"Who is she?"
Neya shrugged and upturned her palms. "We know nothing
about her."
Wolfe eyed them a moment and then sighed. "All right.
It's late and you ought to be in bed, since you have to get up early to visit
Mr. Rowcliff. That smile ought to help with him. When you are through there,
come here, and I'll see you at eleven o'clock and give you that paper."
"I want it now!"
"You can't have it now. It isn't here. I will –"
Neya jumped up. "What did you – where is it?"
"Stop screaming at me. It's safe. I'll give it to you
at eleven o'clock. Sit down – no, don't bother to sit down; you're going.
Remember now, don't do anything silly. As for you, Miss Lovchen, I would advise
you to do nothing whatever except eat and sleep. I say that on account of your
performance yesterday when you hid that paper in my book – asking Mr. Goodwin
if I had read it and did I study it and was he reading it. Unbelievable!"
Carla flushed. "I thought … I was casual –"
"Good heavens! Casual? I still suspect you meant us to
find it, though I can't imagine what for. Well, good night – By the way, Miss
Tormic, about your being my client. I'll return that adoption paper to you in
the morning along with the other; it seems likely that it belongs to you; but I
am cautious and skeptical and I don't like misunderstandings. You are my client
only so long as it remains established that you are the girl whose ribs I saw
in 1921. I am your protector, but if it turns out that you have duped me on
that, I shall be your enemy. I don't like to be fooled."
"I doubt if I could fool you if I wanted to." She
met his eye and suddenly smiled at him. "You can feel my ribs if you want
to, but as for looking at them –"
"Oh, no. No, thank you. Good night. Good night, Miss
Lovchen."
I went with them and extended the courtesies of the hall,
and when they were out I shot the night bolt on the door. Then I went back to
the office and stood and looked down at Wolfe's colossal countenance, immobile
with closed eyes, and treated myself to an unrestricted stretch and yawn.
"Hvala Bogu," I declared. "I like
Montenegrin girls, but it's time to go to bed. They're all right. I offered to
take them home and they refused to let me. In spite of which, I have to run up
to 48th Street before I turn in, to get the damn roadster I left there. This is
a very peculiar case. I've got a feeling in my bones that there is going to be
a strange romantic twist to it by the time we get through. I have an inner
conviction that when the full moon comes I'll be standing right here in this
office asking you formally for the hand of your daughter in marriage. You've
got something there, gospodar. Only you'll have to help me break her of
lying."
"Shut up."
"Shall I go up for the roadster?"
"I suppose you'll have to." Wolfe shuddered. Out into
the night like that. "What time will Saul be here in the morning?"
"Nine o'clock."
"Phone him and tell him to bring that envelope."
"Yes, sir. Are you really going to hand it over to
her?"
"I am. I want to see what she is going to do with it.
Will Fred and Orrie also be here at nine?"
"Yes, sir. Who do you want to tail whom?"
"Tailing may not be necessary. On the other hand it may
be, for her protection. Mr. Faber wanted that paper."
"Not only did he want it, he knew where to look for
it." I yawned. "And since Carla put it there, did she tell him about
it? Or did he learn it from a member of your family?"
"I have no family."
"A daughter is commonly considered to be a member of
one's family. In this case it would hardly be too much to say that a daughter
is a family." I made my voice grave and respectful. "When I marry her
I guess it will be unavoidable for me to call you Dad."
"Archie, I swear by all –"
"And I would be your heir in case you die. I would be
the beneficiary on your life insurance. We could play in father and son golf
tournaments. Later on you could hold the baby. Babies. When the time comes for
the divorce – now what the hell!"
The doorbell was ringing.
At half past one in the morning,
with me yawning my head off and an outside errand still to do, the doorbell
should ring.
I went to the front and unlocked, leaving the chain bolt on
so that the door only opened to a five-inch crack, and peered through at the
male figure standing there.
"Well?"
"I want to see Nero Wolfe."
"Name, please?"
"Open the door!" He was a bit peremptory.
"Tut tut," I said. "It's after office hours.
If you don't like your own name, make up one. But it had better be a good one,
at this time of night."
"My name is Donald Barrett."
"Oh. Okay. Hold that pose. I'll be back."
I went to the office and told Wolfe. He opened his eyes,
frowned, muttered something, and nodded. I returned to the front and let the
nightwalker in, flunkeyed for him, and escorted him to the office. In the
bright light he looked handsome and harassed, with his white tie somewhat
crooked and his hair disarranged. He blinked at Wolfe and said he was Donald
Barrett.
"So I understand. Sit down."
"Thanks." He lodged his sitter on the edge of a
chair in a temporary manner. "This is a frightful stink, this thing."
Wolfe's brows went slightly up. "This thing?"
"This – up at Miltan's. Ludlow. It's murder, you
know."
"I believe it is. You were among those present."
"Yes, I was, damn it. Of course you got that from this
fellow you sent up there."
"Excuse me," Wolfe murmured. "I thought you
two had met. Mr. Barrett, this is Mr. Goodwin, my assistant."
"Oh, we met. We spoke a few words. He was guarding the
door and I asked him to let a young lady through to keep an important
appointment and he wouldn't do it."
Wolfe nodded. "That was Miss Reade."
"Oh? He told you that too?"
"Mr. Goodwin tells me everything."
"I suppose he would. Naturally. He was damn bullheaded
about letting Miss Reade out. He said the worst thing she could do was to leave
the place and start the cops looking for her, and then, by God, he gets out
himself somehow and starts them looking for him!"
"I know. He goes by whim." Wolfe was sympathetic.
"Is that what you came to see me for? To reproach me for Mr. Goodwin's
behavior?"
Barrett looked at him suspiciously, but Wolfe's expression
was bland. "No," he said, "I just mentioned it. He was damn
bullheaded. There was no reason in the world why Miss Reade should have been
kept there. As far as I myself was concerned, I was perfectly willing to stand
the inconvenience. But I came to see you regarding another … well, another
angle. This fellow that you sent up there – you sent him to represent Miss
Tormic, didn't you?"
"What fellow?"
"Your assistant, damn it!" His head went sidewise
in my direction. "Goodwin."
"Yes. I'm not really obtuse, Mr. Barrett, only I like
the custom of designating people by their names; it's so handy. Yes, Mr.
Goodwin was there in the interest of Miss Tormic."
"That's what he said."
"She agreed, didn't she?"
"Sure. That was all right. But that was about that
business of Driscoll's diamonds – the damn fool. What I want to know is, are
you still representing her? I mean, in connection with the murder."
"Do you ask that question as a curious friend?"
"Why, I – a friend, yes. It's not just curiosity."
"Well, I am representing Miss Tormic. What moved you
besides curiosity?"
"Oh, just …" He hesitated. He put his hand up to
smooth his straggled hair, shifted in his chair, and cleared his throat.
"Frankly, just that I'm a little interested in Miss Tormic and I should
hate it … you know? Such a frightful stink? I only met her a couple of months
ago, and I got her and Miss Lovchen their jobs at Miltan's – and I feel some
responsibility about that too. She's a stranger in New York, and I wanted to be
sure she has proper and competent advice. Of course, if you're representing her
…"
"I am."
"That ought to settle it."
"Thank you."
"Provided you …" He smoothed his hair, and cleared
his throat again. It was plain that he was having trouble getting the cork out.
"Provided you appreciate that it's important that she shouldn't be tangled
up in the thing at all. For instance, take that rumor that she was seen putting
something in that fellow – in Goodwin's overcoat pocket. If that got to the
police it would start a hell of a row. Although I don't believe she did any
such thing. I doubt if anybody did." He turned to me. "You ought to
know. Did you find anything in your overcoat pocket?"
"Sure." I grinned at him. "Driscoll's
diamonds."
"No, damn it –"
"Permit me," Wolfe said brusquely. "If we are
in possession of any secrets which we think should remain secret in the
interest of Miss Tormic, we certainly aren't going to disclose them. Neither to
the police nor to anyone else. Including you, sir. If you came here for
information of that kind you may expect a famine."
"I am a friend of Miss Tormic."
"Then you should be glad that she has discreet
advisers."
"That's all right. Certainly. But sometimes you fellows
like to stand in with the police. You know? And it would be bad if they got
hold of that talk about her putting something in Goodwin's pocket. They'd go
after her plenty and they'd turn her inside out. It was bad enough that she had
been in there fencing with Ludlow, and this would make it ten times worse. I
wanted to be sure you appreciate –"
"We do, Mr. Barrett. We haven't much native subtlety,
but a long experience has taught us things – for instance, never to toss
ammunition to the enemy except under compulsion or in exchange for something
better." Wolfe's tone was a soothing purr, which made me wonder when and
why he was getting ready to pounce. He went on with it: "By the way, I
don't suppose you happened to meet Miss Tormic on your way down here just
now?"
"No, I didn't. Why? Where was she?"
"She was here for a little talk. She and her friend,
Miss Lovchen. They left shortly before you arrived and I wondered if by any
chance you had seen them."
"No."
"Have you had an opportunity to talk this thing over
with her in much detail?"
"Not much of one. You might say none, really. They
questioned the men first up there, and they let me go around eight o'clock. She
was still there. I don't know how long they kept her."
"Indeed. Since you are a sufficiently good friend of
hers to bother to come down here, it might be thought that you wouldn't have
gone off and left her there."
"I couldn't get at her. The place was full of cops and
there was one for everybody. Anyway, that's my business. Meaning it's none of
yours. You know?"
"Yes, excuse me. You're quite right." Then Wolfe
pounced. As usual, there was no change whatever in his tone as his forefinger
traced a tiny circle on the polished mahogany of his chair arm. "But I
think you'll have to concede that this is my business: where have you hid
Madame Zorka?"
Donald Barrett wasn't especially
good; not much above the average man when he is suddenly and abruptly faced
with a question which he isn't supposed to know the answer to but does. His jaw
loosened, his eyes widened, and his breathing stopped. The first two may be the
result of innocent surprise, but not the third. But he was fairly quick on the
recovery. He stared at Wolfe and made folds in his smooth handsome brow and
demanded:
"Where have I hid who?"
"Madame Zorka."
He shook his head. "If it's a joke you'll have to
explain it to me. I don't get it."
Wolfe said patiently, "I'll explain it. Madame Zorka
phoned here this evening and said she saw Miss Tormic put something in Mr.
Goodwin's pocket and she was going to report it to the police
immediately."
"The devil she did!"
"Please don't interrupt. It's wasted. Mr. Goodwin
persuaded her to postpone informing the police until he could take Miss Tormic
to Madame Zorka's apartment for a discussion of the matter. When he and Miss
Tormic arrived some time later, they found the apartment empty; and they
learned that Madame Zorka had departed fifteen minutes previously, in a hurry,
with a bag and suitcase. Mr. Goodwin then brought Miss Tormic and Miss Lovchen
here to see me."
"Well, that –"
"Please. The two young ladies have a talk with me and
leave. Soon you arrive. You reveal that you possess knowledge of three facts:
that someone says that Miss Tormic was seen putting something in Mr. Goodwin's
pocket, that that information has not yet reached the police, and that it has
reached me. The first two you might have got hold of in several conceivable
ways, but not the third. You couldn't possibly have known that the information
had reached me unless Madame Zorka communicated with you after she phoned
here."
Barrett was standing up, apparently with the idea that it
was time to go. "Rubbish," he snorted. "If that's the kind of
deduction –"
Wolfe shook his head and his tone got sharp. "I won't
have it, sir. I won't spend an hour working it into your skull that I know what
I know. Madame Zorka told you what she had told me. Don't try dodging; you'll
only annoy me."
"It would be too damn bad if I annoyed you." He
looked and sounded nasty. "What if Zorka did tell me about it? What if
that's why I came down here? What's wrong with that?"
"Did she?"
"What if she did?"
"Did she?"
"Yes!"
"On the telephone?"
"Yes."
"And you, being a friend of Miss Tormic, saw that the
only way to make sure that her story would not reach the police was to hustle
her away somewhere – and you somehow persuaded her. Then you thought of the
possibility that I might pass it on to the police, and came here to plug that
hole. Where is Madame Zorka, Mr. Barrett?"
"I don't know. I supposed she was at home until you
said Goodwin was told she had gone with her bag and suitcase. I'll tell you
something. I don't like the way you're handling this and I'm going to tell Miss
Tormic so. She ought to have a good lawyer, anyway, and I'll see that she gets
one. If she lets you out, how much cash will you take not to peddle this fairy
tale to the police about her putting something in Goodwin's pocket?"
I got up and took a step toward him, but Wolfe shook his
head at me. "No, Archie. Let me –"
I said, "Excuse me. There are times when you get mad
and there are times when I get mad. I'll make a concession. I was going to hit
him and then talk, but I'll talk first."
I put my face fourteen inches from Barrett's. "You. I
am restraining myself. You have implied that this office has a stooling
department. What evidence have you got to back that up? Talk like a man whether
you are one or not. I warn you I'm mad. Have you got any evidence?"
"I … I didn't mean –"
"Have you?"
"No."
"Are you sorry you said it?"
"Yes."
"Don't say it to oblige me. I'd rather you refused to
say it. You are sorry?"
"Yes."
"Marshmallows," I muttered, and went back to my
chair.
Wolfe said, "You'll have to learn to control that,
Archie. Physical duress, unless carried to an intolerable extreme, is a
miserable weapon." He wiggled a finger at Barrett. "Not that I object
to duress when it's necessary, as it is now. It doesn't matter what it was that
moved Madame Zorka to tell you about her phone call to me; the fact is that she
did so; nor does it matter what form of persuasion you used on her. It's
obvious that you hid her, or at least you know where she is, since it was you
who got her to pack up and go –"
Barrett started off. I circled around him on the lope to
head him off at the door. Wolfe snapped at his back:
"Come back here! Unless you want everyone sniffing on
the trail of Bosnian forest concessions and Yugoslav credits –"
I admit that Wolfe's form of duress was more effective than
mine. Mine had made him eat a bite of crow, but Wolfe's apparently drained him
of his blood. Three steps from the door he stopped and stiffened, and his
cheeks went pasty. He turned slowly then, to face Wolfe. I went back to my
chair and sat and enjoyed looking at him.
He wet his lips with his tongue, twice. Then he moved, clear
to the corner of Wolfe's desk, and squeaked down at him: "What are you
talking about? Do you know what you're talking about?"
"Certainly. About banditry. A euphemism for it is
international finance. In this case represented by the well-known firm of
Barrett & De Russy."
"And what about it?"
Wolfe shook his head. "I furnish no details, Mr.
Barrett. You know them better than I do. The precise amount of the credits held
by your firm, for instance, and the extent of its relations with the Donevitch
gang. I don't need to supply details in order to blackmail you, which is all
I'm after. I merely want to see Madame Zorka, and I'm sure you'll help me on
that rather than have this Yugoslav foray exposed to a lot of disconcerting
curiosity."
Barrett, motionless and silent, gazed at him. Southwest of
his ear, above the edge of his starched white collar, I could see the tendons
on his neck standing out. Finally he squeaked again:
"Who are you working for?"
"For Miss Tormic."
"I asked you, who are you working for? Rome?"
"I am working on a murder case. My client is Neya
Tormic. My only interest –"
"Oh, skip it. Do you think I'm a boob?" The
international financier put the tips of eight fingers on the desk and gave them
some weight. "Look here. I understand perfectly that no matter who you're
working for, you wouldn't be tipping me off just for your health. If you'll put
this damn pet gorilla of yours on a leash, I'm quite willing to discuss details
and terms – subject of course to consultation with my associates –"
"Pfui." Wolfe was disgusted. "I might have
known it would make you ugly. Now how the devil am I going to convince you that
my only concern is the welfare of my client?"
"I don't know. If I were you I wouldn't try."
Barrett's voice had lost its squeak and assumed a tone that might have sold me
on the idea he was really tough if I hadn't already caught a glimpse of the
yellow. "I don't know how far you're in, but I presume you know what
you're doing. If you do, I don't need to tell you that it's too dangerous a
game for anybody to try any private hijacking."
"I said blackmail."
"All right, blackmail. Who are you selling out and
what's your price?"
I let it pass. If he was going to wholesale his insults, it
would save trouble to wait till he was finished and then collect in a lump sum.
Wolfe leaned back and sighed. "Will you sit down,
sir?"
"I'm all right standing."
"Then please back up. I'm not comfortable with my head
tilted. Now listen. Get it out of your head that I represent any interest,
either friendly or hostile to you, in your Balkan enterprise. I don't. Then,
you wonder, how did I learn of it? What's the difference? I did. Next you must
somehow manage to believe that I do not want a slice of the loot. Incredible
and even immoral as that must seem to a man of your instinct and training, I
don't. I want just one thing. I want you to conduct Mr. Goodwin to Madame
Zorka, wherever you have put her, and he will bring her here. That's all.
Unless you do that, I shall send information at once, to three different
quarters, of your firm's projected raid on the property of the people of
Yugoslavia. You know better than I do the sort of hullabaloo that would start.
Don't complicate matters by assuming for me a cupidity and corruption beyond
the limits I have set for myself. You're suffering from an occupational
disease. When an international financier is confronted by a holdup man with a
gun, he automatically hands over not only his money and jewelry but also his
shirt and pants, because it doesn't occur to him that a robber might draw the
line somewhere. I beg you, understand that I want Madame Zorka and nothing
else. Beyond that I do not and shall not represent any threat to you – unless,
of course, it should turn out that it was you who murdered Percy Ludlow."
Wolfe shifted his eyes to me. "Archie, I'm afraid
there's no help for it. Mr. Barrett will take you to Madame Zorka. You will
bring her here."
"What if she's skipped town?"
"I doubt it. She can't have got far. Take the roadster
and go after her. Hang onto Mr. Barrett."
"That's the part I don't like, hanging onto
Barrett."
"I know. You'll have to put up with it. It may be only
–" He switched to Barrett. "Where is she? How far away?"
The financier was standing there trying to concentrate, with
his gaze fastened on Wolfe and his lips working. He made them function:
"Damn you, if you let this out –"
Wolfe said curtly, "I've told you what I want, and
that's all I want. Where is she?"
"She's – I think – not far away."
"In the city?"
"I think so."
"Good. Don't try any tricks with Mr. Goodwin. They make
him lose his temper."
"I'm coming back with them. I want to talk –"
"No. Not tonight. Tomorrow perhaps. Don't let him in,
Archie."
"Okay." I was on my feet. "For God's sake,
let's step on it, or my bed will think I'm having an affair with the couch. I
only wish I was."
He didn't like going, leaving Wolfe there within three feet
of a telephone and all that intimate knowledge of Bosnian forests buzzing in
his head, but I eased him into the hall and on out into the November night.
I had rather expected to find a Minerva town car waiting at
the curb, considering his category, but there wasn't anything there at all, and
we had to hoof it to Eighth Avenue before we could ambush a taxi at that
ungodly hour. We piled in, me last, and he told the driver Times Square.
As we jolted off I surveyed him disapprovingly. "Don't
tell me you left her standing on the sidewalk."
Disregarding that, he twisted himself on the cushion to face
me in a confidential manner. "See here, Goodwin," he demanded,
"you've got to help me. I'm in a bad hole. It wouldn't have done any good
to try to persuade Wolfe that I don't know where Zorka is, because he was
convinced that I do. But the fact is, I don't know."
"That's too bad."
"Yes. I'm in one hell of a fix. If you go back and say
I told you I couldn't take you to her because I don't know where she is, he'll
do what he threatened to do."
"He sure will. So I won't go back and say that."
"No, that wouldn't do. If I couldn't persuade him I
don't know, I can't expect you to. But we could work it this way. We can drop
in somewhere and have a couple of drinks. Then, say in half an hour or so, you
go back and tell him I took you to an address – pick out any likely address – and
we went in expecting to find Zorka and she wasn't there. You can describe how
astonished and upset I was – you know, make it vivid."
"Sure, I'm good at that. But you haven't –"
"Wait a minute." The taxi swerved into 42nd Street,
and he lurched against me and got straight again. "I know you'll get the
devil for going back without Zorka, but you can't help that anyway, because I
don't know where she is. I wouldn't expect you to help me out of this just for
the hell of it. Why should you? You know? How about fifty dollars?"
I have never seen a worse case of briber's itch.
I made a scornful sound. "Now, brother! Fifty lousy
bucks with a big deal in international finance trembling in the balance? A
century at least."
The driver called back, "Which corner?"
Barrett told him to stop at the curb and leave his meter on.
Then he stretched out a leg to get into his trouser pocket, and extracted a
modest roll. "I don't know if I happen to have that much with me." He
peered and counted in the dim light. Glancing through the window, I saw an old
woman in a shawl headed for us with a box of chewing gum. I wouldn't even have
to leave the cab.
"I've got it," Barrett said.
"Good. Gimme, please. I can concentrate on the details
better with the jack in my jeans."
He handed it over. Without bothering to count it, I shoved
it through the window at the old woman and told her, "Here, grandma, two
packets and keep the change." She passed them in, took the currency and
gave it a look, gave me a swift startled glance from bleary old eyes and
shuffled off double-quick. I offered a packet of gum to Barrett and said,
"Here, one apiece."
Instead of taking it he sputtered, "You goddam
lunatic!"
I shook my head. "Nope, wrong again. You sure do make a
lot of mistakes, mister. That little gesture I just made, that wasn't original
– I first had the idea upstate in a cow barn and the beneficiary was a guy in
overalls with a pitchfork." I stuck a piece of gum in my mouth.
"Maybe this will keep me awake. That's enough horseplay and, besides, Mr.
Wolfe is waiting. Lead me to Zorka."
"Why you dirty cheap –"
"Oh, can it! What's the address?"
"I don't know. I don't know where she is."
"Okay." I leaned forward to the driver. "Go
to 48th Street, east of Lexington."
He nodded and got in gear.
Barrett demanded, "What are you going to do? What are
you going to Miltan's for?"
"I left my car there. I'm going to get it and drive it
home, and tell Mr. Wolfe the sad news, and then, I suppose, help him until dawn
with phone calls and so on. He never puts off till tomorrow what I can do
today."
"Do you mean to say that after taking my money and
giving it to that hag –"
"I mean to say exactly that. Either you quit stalling
and squirming and take me to Zorka, or I go back to Nero Wolfe and watch him
throw the switch. I ought to be asleep right now. You claim you don't know
where Zorka is. My employer claims you do. I have no opinion. My mind is open,
but I follow instructions blindly. Take me to Zorka or pop goes the
weasel."
The taxi bumped across Sixth Avenue and scooted ahead for
Fifth, along Bryant Park. Nearing the library, he called to the driver:
"Stop at the curb and leave the meter on." As we rolled to a
standstill I said, "You'd better keep the rest of your dough to pay the
fare with."
He sat and glared at me in silence. Finally he blurted,
"Look here, I can't take you to her. I can't do that. I'll tell you what
I'll do. You wait right here, and I'll take another cab and be back here with
her inside of twenty minutes."
I stared at him. "The reason I don't talk," I told
him, "is because I'm speechless. Holy heaven!"
"What's wrong with that? I give you my word –"
"I don't want it. Cut the comedy and let's go."
He glared some more. I permitted it for a full minute and
then got impatient. "I'll count up to twenty-nine," I said, "one
for each year of my life and one to grow on and one to get married on, and then
–"
"Wait a minute." He was approaching the pleading
stage. "The reason I can't take you to her is a personal reason. I don't
intend to try any deception, I can't. You know damn well the hole I'm in. What
about this? You go with me to a phone booth, and I'll call her up and tell her
to meet us –"
I shook my head emphatically. "No. A thousand times no.
Quit trying to wiggle off the hook. How do I know but what you've got a code
with her to use in emergencies? Remember I'm ignorant. I don't even know but
what Wolfe has got it figured out that she killed Ludlow and, in that case
–" I shrugged. "I'm only a puppet and I'm under orders. For God's
sake, shut up and let's go."
He curled his fingers to make fists. "I can just open
this door and beat it. You know?"
"Go ahead. Don't let me stop you. Then I could phone
Wolfe and go on home."
"But goddam it, if you hear me phone –"
"Shut up. I'm bored stiff."
He gave me one more good long glare and then leaned forward
and gave the driver an address on Madison Avenue, not ten blocks away. The
driver nodded and got going again.
He had enough left to pay the fare. It wasn't a modern apartment
house we stopped in front of, but an older building whose days of pride were in
the past. The ground floor was a trinket shop, dark of course. Barrett got out
a key and unlocked a door that let us into a small public corridor, went to the
rear of it, and with another key admitted us into a miniature elevator of the
drive-it-yourself variety. That took us up five stories, and then we had to
climb a flight of stairs. The layout wasn't exactly shabby, though it was far
from ostentatious. From the top of the stairs he preceded me through a sort of
vestibule and used a third key on a wide solid-looking door. I followed him in
and he shut the door and turned to call out:
"Yoohoo!"
An answer came: "Back here, Donnybonny!"
I could already smell perfume, and the temperature even
there in the foyer must have been close to ninety. I copied his example when he
took off his coat, but when he scowled at me and said, "Wait here a
minute," I disregarded it and went along behind him into a large and
dazzling room full of heat, synthetic smells, thick rugs, divans and cushions,
miscellaneous stuff, and a pair of damsels. They were sprawled out, one on a
divan and the other on a chaise lounge.
Zorka, a loose red thing around her, started a wave of
greeting at Barrett and then halted it in mid-air as she saw me. Belinda Reade,
nothing at all around her, called, "How's my Donny – Oh!" And
grabbed for a pale blue negligee that was draped over the back of the divan.
Barrett growled at me, "Didn't
I ask you to wait?"
"It doesn't matter," I soothed him. "When my
mind is on business –"
"Why!" Belinda Reade cried in innocent delight,
"it's the detective man! Have a drink?"
She was working on one herself, and the ingredients for
plenty more were handy on a little table. Zorka was having one too; she had
raised herself to her elbow on the chaise longue and was smiling at me
foolishly, without any intention, apparently, of saying anything.
Barrett said, "Be quiet, Bel. This fellow came …"
He turned to Zorka. "He came for you. My God, look at you. Both of
you." He frowned at her and switched to me: "You explain it to
her."
"Thees ess no time," Zorka declared in an injured
tone, "for explanations."
"Have a drink," Miss Reade insisted. "I have
never had a drink with a detective, and especially such a darned good-looking
detective." She patted the divan and tugged at the negligee to cover a
knee. "Sit here by me and have a drink."
"Don't be a damned fool," Barrett told her.
Zorka tittered. "She only wants to make you jealous,
Donald. Because you make her jealous of the Tormic girl."
"Bah," said Miss Reade. "Have a drink! What's
your name?"
"Call me Archie." It struck me that a little
reinforcement might help, so I stretched for the bottle and a glass. Then I
drew back and turned to Barrett. "But excuse me. If you're the host …"
"This is Miss Reade's apartment," he said stiffly.
"But you came here –"
"Please have a drink," the lady begged me.
"Thanks, I will." I poured a good one and tossed
it off, and then advised Barrett, "You ought to have a shot yourself.
You're under a strain." I confronted Zorka. "The idea is this. After
you phoned me at Nero Wolfe's office and told me –"
"What? After what?"
I went closer so she could focus easier. "After you
phoned and told me you saw Miss Tormic putting something in my overcoat pocket
–"
"But I didn't! I? I phoned you?" She waved her
glass at Belinda, spilling a drop or two on the rug, and said in a hurt tone,
"Don't let him have another drink! He says I phoned him!"
"Maybe you did, darling. You phone so many men. I
wouldn't blame you for phoning him. I like him."
"But I didn't!"
"Well, you should have." Belinda used the blue
eyes on me. "Have a drink, Percy."
"Not Percy, Archie. Percy was the one that got
murdered."
"Oh." She frowned at me. "That's right.
That's why we started drinking, to forget about it. Brrrh." She shivered.
"And I called you Percy! How funny! Don't you think that's funny,
Donnyhoney?"
"No," Barrett declared curtly. "This fellow
–"
"But of course it's funny! I like Archie, and
why should I call him Percy?" She shivered again. "It was perfectly
terrible! Simply awful! The porter yelling and Percy lying there on the floor,
and the police and –" She stopped and stared at me with her lips parted.
"Why! I forgot! You son-of-a-gun! It was you that wouldn't let me out of
that door! You dirty bum!"
Barrett tapped me on the shoulder. "You know, you came
–"
"Yeah, I know." I faced Zorka. She had the fixed
smile on again. I would have given an hour's sleep to know how many drinks she
had had. "About your phoning me," I said. "Maybe I was just
trying to brag. It's my one weakness, bragging about women phoning me. The fact
is, I came along with Donald Barrett to save him some trouble. I had to come to
48th Street anyway, to get my car. He told me he had asked you to come and
spend the night with Miss Reade, but after the talk we had that wasn't
necessary, so he supposed you would want to go home. Isn't that right,
Barrett?"
"I didn't agree –"
"Isn't that right?"
"Well … yes."
"Sure it is. So if you'll just put on a coat – you
don't need to bother to dress – we can take your bag and suitcase –"
"What for?" she demanded.
"Why, if you're going home you'll want your luggage
–"
"I'm not going home."
"My God, it's nearly daylight –"
"I'm not going home. Am I going home, Belinda?"
"You are not. Even if you were, you wouldn't go with
him. I don't like him. Didn't you hear me say I remembered that I don't like
him?"
I poured myself another drink, drank it, sat down on the end
of the chaise longue next to Zorka's feet and considered the situation. It had
various aspects, the basic problem being whether she was or was not honestly
stoozled. If she was, she wouldn't be worth a damn to Wolfe even if I got her
there. But I had my reputation to consider. Over a period of years Wolfe had
sent me many places many times, to bring him everything from a spool of thread
to a Wall Street broker, and I had batted mighty close to a thousand. Besides
that, if I went back without her I knew what Wolfe would say: and in addition
to that, her silly smile aggravated me.
I stood up and told Barrett in a cold inflexible tone,
"It's up to you, brother. You got her here, now you can get her out."
"He didn't get me here," Zorka said. "I came
here myself."
"How do you expect me to get her out?" Barrett
demanded. "Carry her?"
Zorka said, "Nobody had better touch anybody.
Especially you, you good-looking bum."
Barrett said, "I brought you here. That's all I agreed
to do. I didn't agree – what's the idea?"
I ignored him and continued on around the head of the divan
to where a red-enameled phone was resting on a long narrow table. He scowled at
me while I dialed a number. Belinda commanded him, "Tackle him,
Donnydarling. Knock him down and walk on him. Don't let him use my phone. Don't
let him use anything –"
A voice sounded in my ear: "This is Nero Wolfe."
I said, "Hello, Police Headquarters? Give me Inspector
Cramer of the homicide squad."
Wolfe's voice said, "Indeed. Go ahead."
Barrett leaned across the divan at me and started to
expostulate. I waved a hand at him to subside, and talked again:
"Hello, Homicide Division? I want to talk to Inspector
Cramer. Oh, he has. Who is this talking? Sergeant Finkle? I guess you'll do.
This is Archie Goodwin of Nero Wolfe's office. I want to report a development
in the Ludlow mur –"
Barrett's hand shot out and pushed the cradle down and held
it.
"Don't be a sap," I told him politely. "Even
if I don't want to start a roughhouse –"
"What are you going to tell him?"
"Where he can find a woman who says she saw Miss Tormic
put something in my pocket and is now saying she didn't say it."
"You're a goddam fool. You're supposed to be protecting
Miss Tormic."
"I know I am. But in the long run the truth is the best
protection against –"
"Truth, hell. Do you realize they can trace that
call?"
I shrugged. "I presume so. If they do they'll ring
back. Then, if they don't get satisfaction, I presume they'll send somebody
here and it would be bad tactics not to let them in. And of course if they find
Zorka and me here –"
He had his jaw clamped. "You dirty treacherous –"
I shrugged Miss Reade said, "I am darned sick and tired
of hearing about that Tormic! As far as I'm concerned, Archie –"
"Be quiet!" Barrett told her savagely. "You
know damn well –" He bit it off and wheeled to Zorka. "You'll have to
go, and go quick! Get a move on!"
"But," she protested, "you told me –"
"I don't care what I told you! This double-crossing
–" He grabbed her shoulder and got her upright. He was pretty masterful in
a real emergency. "Where's your coat? Where's your shoes and stockings? To
hell with stockings. Shoes!"
He raced to the far end of the room and through a door. I
went in the opposite direction, to the foyer, and got my hat and coat and put
them on. Then I opened the closet door, thinking to help, but stood bewildered
at the array of furbearing animals hanging there. I thought what's the
difference, and reached for one, but felt my elbow seized from behind and heard
Belinda's voice:
"Hey, no you don't, that's my mink! Get out of the
way!"
She pushed past me, her open negligee doing practically
nothing to conceal distractions, and emerged with a mink coat that looked all
the same to me. I took it and trotted back in. Zorka, shod, was on her feet,
and Barrett was tying the girdle of the red gown. She swayed a little while we
got the coat on her and buttoned it up to her chin, but navigated well enough
when I hooked onto her arm and escorted her to the foyer. Miss Reade was
standing there holding the outer door open. As we passed through Barrett told
her, "I'll have to take them down. If the phone rings, don't answer it.
I'll be right back."
She stumbled on the stairs, but I had a good hold and we got
her into the elevator without mishap. Barrett pushed the button and we
descended. At the ground floor he preceded us along the corridor and opened the
street door.
"Do you want me to help –"
"No, thanks. If they trace that call, my advice –"
"Go to hell."
The door shut and I was alone on the sidewalk with my booty.
She was clinging to my arm and at intervals was saying something that sounded
like "Oops." I squeezed her hand reassuringly and started to convey
her gently in the direction of Grand Central, but had negotiated less than half
a block when a taxi appeared and I flagged it. Getting her in was more a matter
of strength than strategy. She was floppy on the cushion, and I held her
against me as we bounced along and around a corner towards Lexington Avenue.
She was now murmuring something like "Urpees."
The roadster was still there, like a faithful dog waiting
for its master. The taxi driver was sympathetic and helpful, and with his
assistance it was an easy matter to make the transfer. As we were boosting her
in she started to kick, but with a firm tone and a firm hand I got her onto the
seat and the door closed. The driver nodded his thanks for the moderate tip I
gave him and offered advice: "Taking her out, if she gets nasty, work from
behind. That way she can't reach your face and she's not so apt to bite."
"Okay. Much obliged."
I climbed in and started the engine and rolled. As I rounded
the corner to head downtown she said, "Gribblezook." I replied, "Hvala
Bogu." Apparently it was satisfactory, for she relaxed into the corner
and shut up. A couple of times en route I opened my mouth to inform her where
we were bound for and what she had to look forward to, but a glance at her made
me decide I'd be wasting my breath. The traffic was at home in bed where it
belonged, and I made good time down to 35th and then cross-town.
I stopped at the curb in front of the house, grabbed her
shoulder and straightened her up, and called her name. No response and her eyes
were shut. I shook her. I turned her loose and she flopped in the corner as
runny as mush. I pinched her thigh, a good one, and she didn't flinch. I pulled
her up straight and shook her again, and her head bounced onto my shoulder and
stayed there, and then rolled off. "Hell," I muttered, "it's
only ten yards to a touchdown," and I climbed out, pulled her across to my
side, got my shoulder under her, and hoisted her up. She was as dead as a bag
of oats. I distributed her weight better, something around 120, and crossed the
sidewalk, staggered up the steps, and rang the bell two shorts and a long. In a
minute the door opened as far as the chain and Fritz's voice came through:
"Archie?"
"Yeah. Open up."
The door swung open and I entered. After one glance at my
cargo Fritz staggered back a step.
"Grand Dieu! Is she dead?"
"Naw, she's not even sick. Lock the door."
The door to the office was standing open and I went through
sidewise to keep from knocking her head against the jamb. Wolfe was there
reading a book. He looked up and saw what I had, made a face, dog-eared a page and
closed the book, and sat and shook his head. A glance at the couch showed me
that it was still covered with the maps which he had spread all over it three
days previously with instructions that they were not to be touched, so I put
her down on the floor, in the middle of the rug, straightened my back to remove
a kink, pointed an unwavering finger at her, and said casually: "Madame
Zorka."
He folded his arms. "What's the matter with her?"
"Nothing."
"Did you hit her?"
"No."
"Don't be an ass. You don't carry women around and lay
them on the floor when there's nothing wrong with them. Is she
unconscious?"
"I don't think so. Her contention is that she is in a
drunken stupor, but I think she's playing charades. I found her in a penthouse
love nest on Madison Avenue. Barrett furnishes the nest and Belinda Reade the
love. You know? Belinda was there and Zorka was her guest. Zorka denied that
she had made any phone call to this office and she refused to leave. I made a
phone call to work up pressure and she came. She is almost certainly listening
carefully to what we are saying. She'll smother in here with that fur coat
buttoned up."
I stooped and unfastened the coat and flung it open. Wolfe
got to his feet, walked around the desk, and stood frowning down at her.
"She has no stockings on."
"Right."
"What's that thing she wearing? A dress?"
"Oh, heavens, no. I think it's a drinking gown."
"And you think she's shamming?"
"I do."
"Well." He turned and called, "Fritz!"
Fritz was right there. Wolfe told him, "Bring a dozen ice cubes."
I knelt down beside the patient and felt her pulse, and then
pried open her eyelid and took a look at the iris, and announced that it would
be perfectly safe to proceed with the experiment. Wolfe, looking down at me,
nodded gravely. Fritz appeared with the dish of ice cubes and Wolfe told him to
give them to me. I took a cube and laid it on her cheek and it slid off. I
picked it up and carefully placed it at the base of her neck, in the little
depression where the shoulder began, and it stayed nicely. Then I gently but
firmly lifted her arm, held it up with my left hand, and with my right hand got
another cube and as modestly as possible worked it under the edge of the red
robe until it was snug in her arm pit; and let the arm down.
The reaction was so sudden and violent it startled me into
spilling the rest of the cubes all over the rug, and her knees in my belly
nearly spilled me too. She didn't stop at sitting up, but scrambled to her
feet, with Wolfe retreating to make room for her. She shook herself, more of a
spasm than a shake, and the ice cube emerged from under the hem of the gown to
the floor. She goggled around at us, perceived a chair, and sank into it.
"What – what –" she stammered.
"Wrong line," I told her. "Say, 'Where am
I?'"
She groaned and pressed both palms against her forehead.
Wolfe, having waited until Fritz had retrieved all the cubes, moved back to his
chair and lowered his fundament. He regarded her sourly for a full minute of
silence and then spoke to me.
"And what," he demanded resentfully, "would
you suggest that we do with her?"
"Search me. It was you that wanted her."
"I don't want her like that."
"Send her home." I added emphatically, "In a
taxi."
"We can't send her home. The police are looking for
her, and one will be posted at her door, and I want to talk to her first."
"Go ahead and talk to her."
"I want to ask her some questions. Is she capable of
coherence?"
"Capable, yes. But I doubt if she'll cohere, with ice
or without. Go on and try it."
He looked at her. "Madame Zorka, I am Nero Wolfe. I
would like to discuss something with you. When were you last in
Yugoslavia?"
With her face covered with her hands, she shook her head,
moaned, and muttered something not even as intelligible as gribblezook.
"But, madame," Wolfe said patiently. "I'm
sorry you don't feel well, but that is a very simple question." Then he
spouted some lingo at her, a couple of sentences, that may have been words but
not to me. She didn't even shake her head.
"Don't you understand Serbo-Croat?" he demanded.
"No," she muttered. "Zat I do not
onderstand."
He kept at it for a solid hour. When he wanted to be, he
could be as patient as he was big, and apparently on that occasion he wanted to
be. I took it all down in my notebook, and I never filled as many pages with
less dependable information. There was no telling, when he got through, whether
she had ever been in Yugoslavia, how and when she had acquired the name Zorka,
or whether she had actually ever been born or not. It seemed to be tentatively
established that she had once resided in a hotel in Paris, at least for one
night, that her couturiere enterprise had been installed within the year on the
street floor of the Churchill with the help of outside capital, that her native
tongue was not Serbo-Croat, that she was not on intimate terms with Neya Tormic
or Carla Lovchen, that she had known Percy Ludlow only slightly, and that she
had taken up fencing to keep her weight down and was not an expert. Wolfe did
succeed in extorting an admission that she had made the phone call to our
office, but it was an empty triumph; she couldn't remember what she had said!
She just simply couldn't remember.
At twenty minutes past four Wolfe arose from his chair with
a sigh and said to me: "Put her to bed in the south room, above mine, and
lock the door."
She rose too, steadying herself with her hand on the edge of
his desk, and declared, "I want to go home."
"The police are there laying for you. As I told you, I
have informed them of your phone call. They'll take you to headquarters and be
much more insistent than I have been. Well?"
"All right." She groaned.
"Good night, madame. Good night, Archie." He
stalked out.
It was two flights to the floor above his, and I was in no
mood to elevate her that far by brute force, so I trotted up and got the
elevator after he had ascended, and took it down and got her. Fritz, half
asleep and half displeased, went along to make sure that the bed was habitable
and that towels and accessories were at hand; and for the honor of the house he
brought with him the vase of cattleyas from Wolfe's desk. She may have had no
nightie or slippers or toothbrush, but by golly she had orchids. Fritz turned
the bed down and, me steering her, she got seated on the edge of it.
Fritz said, "She's forlorn."
"Yep." I asked her, "Do you want me to help
you off with your coat or anything?"
She shook her head.
"Shall I open the window?"
Another shake.
We left her there. From the outside I locked the door and
put the key in my pocket. It was ten to five, and a dingy November dawn was
feebly whimpering "Let there be light," at my windows when I finally
hit the mattress.
At eight o'clock in the morning, bathed and dressed but
bleary-eyed and grouchy, I took a pot of coffee up to her. When my third and
loudest knock got no response, I used the key and went in. She wasn't there.
The bed was just as Fritz had turned it down. The window on the left, the one
that opened onto the fire escape, was standing wide-open.
I descended a flight to Wolfe's
room, tapped on the door, and entered. He was in bed, propped up against three
pillows, just ready to attack the provender on the breakfast table which
straddled his mountainous ridge under the black silk coverlet. There was orange
juice, eggs an beurre noir, two slices of broiled Georgia ham, hashed
brown potatoes, hot blueberry muffins, and a pot of steaming cocoa.
He snapped at me, "I haven't eaten!"
"Neither have I," I said bitterly. "I'm in no
better humor than you are, so let's call it a tie. I just went up to take our
guest some coffee –"
"How is she?"
"I don't know."
"Is she asleep?"
"I don't know."
"What the devil –"
"I was starting to tell you and you interrupted me.
Please don't interrupt. She's gone. She didn't even lie down. She went by the
window and the fire escape, and presumably found her way to 34th Street by the
passage we use sometimes. Since she descended the fire escape, she went right
past that window" – I pointed – "facing you, and it must have been
daylight."
"I was asleep."
"So it seems. I thought maybe with a woman in the
house, and possibly a murderess, you might have been on the qui vive –"
"Shut up."
He took some of the orange juice, frowned at me half a
minute, and took some more.
"Phone Mr. Cramer. Give him everything."
"Including my trip to the love nest?"
He grimaced. "Don't use terms like that when my
stomach's empty. Including everything about Madame Zorka, Mr. Barrett, and Miss
Reade, except the subject of my threat to Mr. Barrett."
"Bosnian forests."
"All of that to be deleted. If he wants a transcript of
our talk with Madame Zorka, furnish it; he's welcome to it. He has resources
for investigating those people and for finding Madame Zorka. If he wants to see
me, eleven o'clock."
"Your daughter's coming at eleven."
"Then noon for Mr. Cramer if he wants it." He
swallowed more orange juice. "Phone Seven Seas Radio and ask if they have
anything for me. If they haven't, tell them to rush it to me when it comes.
Make an appointment for me to talk with Mr. Hitchcock in London at nine
o'clock."
"Do you want a record –"
"No. Who is downstairs?"
"No one has come yet. They ought to be here any
minute."
"When Saul comes, put the envelope in the safe. I'll
see them as soon as I'm through talking to Mr.
Hitchcock. Send Saul up first, then Fred, then Orrie. Have
you had your breakfast?"
"You know damn well I haven't."
"Good heavens. Get it."
I went down to the kitchen and did that, after first calling
Seven Seas Radio and arranging for a wire to London at nine. With my breakfast
I consumed portions of the Times, specializing on the report of the
Ludlow murder. They had my name spelled wrong, and they were pretty stale for a
paper that had gone to press at midnight, for they said that the police were
looking for me. As Cramer had predicted, they had the low-down on Ludlow's
being an agent of the British government, but there wasn't any hint of
Montenegro or Bosnian forests or Balkan princesses. On an inside page there was
a spread of pictures and a two-column piece about the murder in Paris that the col
de mort had figured in some years before.
When Saul and Fred and Orrie came I shooed them into the
front room to wait, since I had jobs to do. After my second cup of coffee and
what preceded it, I felt better and was almost cheerful by the time I got
Inspector Cramer on the wire to relate the sad story. He hadn't had much more
sleep than me, and was naturally disgruntled when he learned that we had had
Zorka in our clutches for a couple of hours without bothering him about it, and
he got rude and vulgar at the news that she had left before breakfast, but I
applied the salve by reminding him how many presents he was getting absolutely
gratis. He had no news to speak of himself, or if he had he wasn't handing it
out, but he said he would drop in around noon if he could make it, and in the
meantime he would like me to type a report, not only of our session with Zorka,
but also of the one with Barrett and of my visit on Madison Avenue. That was
sweet of him. I felt a lot like a hard morning at the alphabet piano, no I
didn't.
As it turned out, I didn't get much typing done. The talk
with Hitchcock in London took place at nine o'clock as scheduled, and of course
I didn't listen in, since Wolfe had said no record. Then I sent Saul up to meet
Wolfe in the plant rooms, having first procured the envelope and stowed it away
in the safe. The instructions for Saul must have been complicated, for fifteen
minutes passed before he came back down and calmly requested fifty bucks
expense money. I whistled and asked who he was going to bribe and he said the
District Attorney. Wolfe rang me on the house phone and said to keep Fred in
storage for the present and to send Orrie Cather up. Orrie's schedule must have
been a simple one, for he returned in no time at all, marched over to me and
said:
"Give me about three thousand dollars in threes."
"With pleasure. I'm busy. How much in cold cash?"
"Nothing, my dear fellow."
"Nothing?"
"Right. And please don't disturb me. I shall be
spending the day on research at the public library. Hold yourself in readiness
–"
He dodged the notebook I threw, and danced out.
I put a sheet in the typewriter and started, without any
enthusiasm, on the report for Cramer, but had only filled a third of a page
when it occurred to me that it would be fun to locate Zorka without moving from
my desk. I pulled the phone over and dialed a number. The ringing signal was in
my ear a long while before there was a voice. It sounded disconsolate.
"Hullohullohullo!"
I made mine vigorous but musical. "Hello,
Belinda?"
"Yes. Who is this?"
"Guess."
"I'm in no condition to guess."
"It's Archie. Archie the good-looking bum. I want to
warn –"
"How did you get this number? It's private and it's not
listed."
"I know, but I can read, can't I? I saw it on your
phone when I used it. I want to say three things. First, that I think you're
very very beautiful and if you ever ask me to come and read aloud to you I
will. Second, I forgot to thank you for the drinks. Third, I want to warn you
about Zorka. About a thousand cops are looking for her, and if they come and
find her there it will get you in a lot of trouble, and I'd be glad to –"
"What are you talking about? How are they going to find
her here when you took her away?"
"But she went back there."
"She did not. Where is she?"
"She started for your place about five o'clock."
"Well, she didn't get here."
"That's funny. What do you suppose happened to
her?"
"I have no idea."
A click in my ear ended it. So much for that. It sounded
very much as if Zorka had not returned to Madison Avenue. I wrote three more
lines of the report and the doorbell rang and I went up to the front and opened
up.
It was Rudolph Faber.
I admit it was Wolfe's house and I was employed there, and
courtesy is courtesy, but he hung up his coat himself. That was the effect that
guy had on me. I let him precede me into the office because I didn't want him
behind me, and he required no invitation to take a chair. I had explained in
the hall that Mr. Wolfe was never available in the morning until eleven
o'clock, but I seated myself at my desk and rang up the plant rooms, and in a
moment Wolfe answered.
I told him, "Mr. Rudolph Faber is here."
"Indeed. What does he want?"
"To see you. He says he'll wait."
"I doubt if I can see him before lunch."
"I told him so."
"Well. Let's see." A pause. "Come up here.
Better still, call on Mr. Green. Before leaving, give him a good book to read,
and see what happens."
"A really good book?"
"The best you can find."
I hung up and swiveled to face the caller. "Mr. Wolfe
needs me upstairs, and he suggested that I should give you a book to amuse
yourself with while I'm gone."
I went to the shelves and got down United Yugoslavia and
returned and handed it to him. "I think you'll find it very interesting,
especially –"
He stood up and threw the book on the floor and started for
the exit.
I trotted around and got between him and the door, faced
him, and said urgently, "Pick it up!" I knew at the time that it was
childish, but in the first place the impulse to make some kind of alteration on
the supercilious look of his face was absolutely irresistible, and in the
second place I had been permanently impressed by what I had been reading in the
papers about certain things being done by certain people in certain parts of
the world. I did give him a second chance by telling him again to pick it up,
but he kept right on coming, apparently expecting me to melt into a grease
spot. I said calmly, "Look out, here it is," and put it there. I
didn't aim for the chin because there wasn't any and I didn't want to pay a
hospital bill. Instead, I took his left eye with a right hook and most of me
behind it.
The door connecting with the front room opened a crack and
Fred Durkin stuck his head in.
"Hey, need any help?"
"Come on in. What do you think?"
He walked over and stood looking down at Faber. "I'll
be darned. How many times did you hit him?"
"Once."
"I'll be darned. And you with a name like Goodwin.
Sometimes I'm inclined to think – was your mother ever in Ireland?"
"Go suck an orange. Stand back and give him room."
Faber got up by degrees. First on his hands, then on his
hands and knees, and then slow but sure on up. He turned slowly, and looked at
me, and I looked away on account of the expression in his eyes. It embarrassed
me so much it damn near scared me, to see such an expression in the eyes of a
man who had merely been knocked down. Naturally, it had been my intention to
request him to pick the book up when he got upright again, but I didn't do it.
When he got under headway towards the door I stepped aside and let him go, and
asked Fred to go to the hall and let him out. I picked up the book and put it
away and sat down and rubbed my knuckles and worked my fingers open and shut a
few times, and then phoned Wolfe a communiquй. All he did was grunt.
I worked my fingers limber enough so I could resume at the
typewriter, but that report was hoeing a hard row. In addition to my
deep-seated reluctance to spoiling white paper just to furnish a cop with
reading matter, there were constant interruptions. A phone call from Miltan the
йpйe champion. All he wanted was information and I had none to give him. One
from a guy in town from St. Louis who wanted to discuss orchids with Wolfe, and
an appointment was made for next day. One from Orrie Cather for Wolfe and, a
little later, one from Saul Panzer, both of which I was invited to keep out of.
Towards eleven o'clock there was a phone call from the
Emperor of Japan. At least it might as well have been. First a woman asked for
Mr. Wolfe, and I asked who was it and she said Mr. Barrett and I said put him
on and she said hold the wire. I waited a while. Then a man said he wanted Mr.
Wolfe, and I said is this Mr. Barrett, and he said authoritatively, no, it
isn't, put Mr. Wolfe on, please, and I asked who it was that wanted to talk to
Mr. Wolfe, and he said Mr. Barrett, and I said put him on and he said hold the
wire. That kind of a shenanigan. There was more to it than that, but after a
terrific and exhausting struggle I finally heard something definite, in a
leisurely cultivated male voice:
"This is Barrett. Mr. Wolfe?"
"Donald Barrett?"
"No, no, John P. Barrett."
"Oh, Donald's father. Of Barrett & De Russy?"
"That's right. Mr. Wolfe, could you –"
"Hold it. This is Archie Goodwin, Mr. Wolfe's
confidential assistant."
"I thought I had Wolfe."
"Nope. I wore 'em out. Mr. Wolfe will be engaged until
eleven o'clock. I'll take any message."
"Well." Hesitation. "That will do, I suppose.
I would like to have Mr. Wolfe call at my office as soon after eleven as
possible."
"No, sir. I'm sorry. He never makes calls."
"But this is important. In fact, urgent. It will be
well worth his while –"
"No, sir. There's no use prolonging it. Mr. Wolfe
transacts business only at his office. He wouldn't go across the street to
receive the keys to the Bank of England."
"That's ridiculous!"
"Yes, sir. I've always said so. But there's no use
discussing it, except as an interesting case of cussedness."
For ten seconds I heard nothing. Then, "Where is your
office?"
"506 West 35th Street."
"Mr. Wolfe is there throughout the day?"
"And night. Office and home."
"Well … I'll see. Thank you."
Wolfe came down from the plant rooms a few minutes later,
and after he had run through the mail, tested his pen, rung for beer, and
glanced at the three pages of the report I had managed to finish, I told him
about it. He listened impressively and thanked me with a disinterested nod.
Thinking a little prodding was in order, I observed that he was in the case
anyway, on account of family obligations, spending money right and left, and
that it was therefore short-sighted and unintelligent not to permit Miss Tormic
to have a co-client, when the co-client was of the nature of John P. Barrett,
obviously anxious to join in the fun and ready to ante. I told him about the
hundred bucks of Barrett dough which had already passed through our hands and
said what a pity it would be to stop there, but before I could really get
worked up about it I was interrupted by the arrival of the client herself.
Fritz announced Miss Neya Tormic and escorted her in.
She greeted Wolfe in a hurry and me not at all, and without
taking time to sit down demanded of him: "The paper? Have you got the
paper?"
She looked drawn and she acted jerky.
Wolfe said, "Yes, it's here. Please sit down, won't
you?"
"I … the paper!"
"Give it to her, Archie."
I went to the safe and got it. It was still in the envelope
addressed to Saul Panzer. I removed it, tossed the envelope into the
wastebasket, and handed the paper to her. She unfolded it and inspected it.
Wolfe said, extending his hand, "Let me see it,
please."
That didn't appeal to her. She made no move to comply. He
frowned at her and repeated his request in a crisper tone, and she handed it
over but kept her eyes glued to it. He gave it a glance, folded it up, and
asked her:
"Where is Miss Lovchen?"
"I suppose she's at the studio. She said she was going
there."
"Surely there'll be no fencing lessons there
today."
"I don't know. That's what she said."
"You saw her this morning?"
"Of course. We live together in a little flat on 38th
Street." She put her hand out. "Give me –"
"Wait a minute. I don't know why I assumed that Miss Lovchen
would accompany you here this morning – it was stupid of me to do so, but I
did. Anyway, it was she who left this paper here, and I'd rather return it to
her. If she –"
"I'll take it to her."
"No, I think not. Here, Archie. Go along with Miss
Tormic to Miltan's and deliver this to Miss Lovchen. I like it better that way
–"
"That's absurd!" the client protested.
"What's the difference whether it's me or Carla?"
"None, perhaps. But this suits me better. It's
neater." He handed the thing to me and then regarded her gloomily. "I
hope you know what you're doing. I hope you have some idea of what's going on.
I haven't. Mr. Faber has come here twice for the purpose of getting hold of
that paper."
"Oh." She compressed her lips. "He has?"
"Yes. The second time was only a little more than an
hour ago, and Mr. Goodwin lost his temper and hit him in the eye. So … I
presume you girls realize that possession of that document –"
"We realize it."
"Very well. Do you still expect to complete your … errand
… today?"
"Yes."
"When and where."
She shook her head.
He shrugged. "Did you keep your appointment with Mr.
Cramer this morning?"
"Yes, but not with Mr. Cramer. A man came and took me
down there, and two men talked with me. That's where I came from, here."
"You told about finding those things in your pocket and
so on."
"Yes."
"Did they ask about your political mission – anything
of that sort?"
"Why, no, they don't know anything about that."
"Were you followed when you left there?"
"I –" She bit it off. In a moment she said,
"I don't think so." Her head jerked at me and back at him. "If
you're going to insist – I haven't much time. I must see Carla anyway, but if
he's going –"
Wolfe nodded. "All right. Pfui. Archie, give that paper
to Miss Lovchen in the presence of Miss Tormic."
I suggested, "Fred's in the front room –"
"No. You do it."
"Cramer's due in half an hour."
"I know. Hurry back."
I ushered her out. The roadster was still at the curb in
front where I had left it. We climbed in and I warmed up the engine a minute,
and rolled. She was completely don't-touch-me. Whatever her mind was on, it
certainly wasn't on me, and during the short ride to 48th Street I accepted
that as the status quo.
Across the street from Miltan's a little group was collected
on the sidewalk, and in front of the entrance a flatfoot was pacing a short
beat. He gave us an eye as we went in, but made no attempt to interfere. Inside
was no sign of life in the hall or reception room, but a murmur came from the
rear and we went back there to the large office. Jeanne Miltan was in a chair
at a desk, with two squad dicks, each with a notebook, seated facing her. Her
husband, looking haggard and hopeless, was pacing the floor, shaking his head
at himself. As we entered one of the dicks looked up and barked:
"What do you want?"
I waved a friendly hand. "Okay, private business."
Neya intercepted Miltan and asked, "Is Miss Lovchen
upstairs?"
He groaned. "No one is upstairs. We are deserted. We
are ruined. Mr. Goodwin, can you tell me –"
"I'm sorry, I can't tell you a darned thing. Has Miss
Lovchen been here this morning?"
"She came and stayed a while, but she left."
"How long ago?"
"Oh, my God, I don't know – half an hour." He
clapped a hand to his head and stared at Neya. "She said to tell you
something if you came –"
Jeanne Miltan's voice sounded: "She went home, Miss
Tormic."
"That's it," Miltan agreed. "She said to tell
you she went home. That was all. She went home."
"What do you want with her?" a dick demanded.
"Sell her a chance on a turkey raffle. Come on, Miss
Tormic."
We went back out to the sidewalk. Halting there, I asked
her, "You said 38th Street? East or west?"
She smiled at me. "It's silly for you to go. It's so
silly. Why don't you just give it to me?"
"I'd love to," I assured her. I didn't see any
sense in antagonizing her if she was my future wife. "I really
would." We were moving along to the roadster. "But here's my car and
I have to go downtown anyway. Besides, if I don't follow instructions I'll get
fired. What's the address?"
"404 East 38th."
"Okay, that'll only take – excuse me a minute." I
had caught a glimpse of something comical. "Climb in," I told her,
"I'll be right back."
I left her and went down the sidewalk to where a taxi had
parked twenty feet behind the roadster. My glimpse had been of the passenger
inside ducking out of our sight. As I lifted a foot to the running board the
driver said:
"Busy."
"Yeah, so I see." I stretched my neck to get a
better view of Fred Durkin huddled on the seat. So Wolfe was putting a tail on
his own client. "I just wanted to save you some trouble. 404 East 38th
Street."
I returned to the roadster and got in and started off,
telling Neya that I had merely exchanged the time of day with a Russian nobleman
friend of mine who was driving a taxicab for his health. She said nothing.
Apparently she was concentrating again on Balkan history, or whatever kind it
was she was making. I retaliated by concentrating on my driving.
There was space for me directly in front of 404. It was an
old house, one of a row, that had been done over into inexpensive flats by
blocking off the stairs and sticking in some partitions. Eight steps up to the
stoop, then a vestibule with mailboxes and bell buttons, then the door into the
narrow hall. It wasn't even necessary for Neya to use her key on the door,
because it had stopped an inch short of closing and all I had to do was push it
open. I let her go ahead. She led me up two flights of stairs with just enough
light to keep you from groping, went to a door towards the front, and opened
her bag and started fishing for a key. Then she thought better of that and
pushed the button, and I could hear a bell ringing inside. But nothing else was
heard, though after an interval she rang the bell again, and then again.
She muttered, "He said she was coming home."
"So he did. Got a key?"
She opened her bag again, and this time produced the key.
She used it herself, pushed the door open, went in four paces with me on her
heels, and stopped in her tracks, jerking her head up and freezing there. Over
her shoulder I could see what she saw: the body of a man sprawled on the floor
in a very unlikely attitude; and the face, which was the one I had undertaken
to alter with my fist two hours previously.
Before I could stop her she jerked her head up higher and
yowled into space:
"Carla!"
I said resentfully, "Will
you kindly close your trap?"
She didn't move. I got in front of her and took a look at
her face. She didn't seem to be prepared for more clamor, so I went and
squatted for a quick survey of the corpus. A quick one was enough. I glanced up
at her again and saw that she was breathing through her nose. I rocked on my
heels for half a minute, gazing at the chinless wonder and using my brain up to
capacity. Then I stood up and said:
"The first and worse thing seems to be that I've got
that goddam paper in my pocket."
She met my eye and said with her lips barely moving,
"Give it to me."
"Sure. That'd be swell."
I walked around a table to get at one of the windows, which
fronted on 38th Street, and opened it and poked my head out, and saw what I
hoped to see. I pulled my head in and asked her, "How's your nerve?"
"My nerve's all right."
"Then come over here."
She came, nice and steady, and I told her to look out the
window with me.
"See that gray and white taxicab at the curb in the
middle of the block?"
"Yes."
"Go down there and you'll find a man inside. Ask him if
his name is Fred Durkin and he'll say it is. Tell him I want him up here quick,
but no more than that because the driver will hear you. Come back up with him
and use your keys. I'll be watching from the window, and if you get an impulse
to scoot off –"
"I won't."
"Okay. Step on it. You're a good brave girl."
She went. In a few seconds, from my post at the window, I
saw her descend the stoop, trot to the taxi, open the door and speak to its
inhabitant, and come back with Fred. Not sure of what a Montenegrin female
might do under stress, I stayed at the window until they both entered the room.
Fred stopped short at sight of the casualty on the floor.
"I'll be damned," he said, and looked at me.
"No," I said, "not guilty this time. Nobody
will ever sock him again." I pulled the paper from my pocket. "Here's
something important. I discovered this corpse and I can't leave it, and after
certain events that happened yesterday they're apt to frisk me to the skin when
they come. Take this – hey, you little devil!"
Neya had lunged like a champion with an йpйe, grabbed the
paper from my fingers and sprung back. She stood there clutching it.
"Jesus," I said, "you're like a streak of
lightning! But you're dumb. You've got to stay here too and I'll see that you
do. When the cops come they'll go through this place, including us, extra
special for today considering yesterday. They would love to have that paper and
they'll have it. Hand it to Fred. Well?"
Her breast heaved.
"Don't be dumb, damn it! The only chance of getting it
out of here is for him to take it! Hand it over!"
Fred stuck out a hand. "Gimme, lady."
"What will he do with it?"
"Take care of it." She didn't move. I stepped over
and yanked it out of her fingers and passed it to Fred. "Go down and
dismiss your taxi," I told him, "and take the roadster and go to the
office. If Wolfe's alone, give him that paper. If he isn't, go to the kitchen
and have Fritz bring Wolfe to the kitchen and give him the paper there."
"Do I tell him –"
"I'll phone him. If and when you're questioned, tell
them just what happened, leaving out the paper. I'm sending you to the office
because I know I'll be held up here God knows how long, and with me absent
Wolfe will need you. Okay?"
"Okay." He turned to go.
"Hold it. Stay there by the door a minute." I
began darting around. I took a look behind a sofa and even under it, and opened
a closet door for a glance inside, and had my hand on the knob of another door
leading to the rear of the flat when Fred growled:
"Hey, what about prints?"
"To hell with prints. I've got a right to look for a murderer,
haven't I?" I went on through, and kept moving, bothering only with places
big enough to hide a man or woman. It didn't take long, since there was only a
bath, a kitchenette, and two small bedrooms. I trotted back to the front and
told Fred, "All right, one two three go," and he beat it.
I looked at Neya. "You're starting to tremble. You'd
better sit down."
She shook her head. "I'm all right. But I … I … Carla.
Where is she?"
"Search me." I had gone around the table to where
the phone was and lifted it from its cradle.
"But wait – please! Why can't we … just leave? Just go
and find her?"
"Sure. Splendid." I started dialing. "You
certainly get charming ideas. Like the one yesterday, stuffing that junk in my
pocket. Just lock up and go, huh? With those babies at Miltan's knowing we
started for here and Fred's taxi driver –"
The phone told me, "This is Nero Wolfe."
I kept my voice down. "Hullo, boss. Let's be
discreet."
"Oh, yes."
"Cramer there?"
"Yes."
"Well, leave it open so that if you want to you can say
it was the Salvation Army. We went to Miltan's and Carla had been there but
left for home. We came on here, 404 East 38th. Got the address?"
"Yes."
"Old house, walk-up, two flights. Neya let us in with
her key. Rudolph Faber was lying on the floor dead. Hole through his coat, left
breast. Shirt soaked with blood inside. No weapon. Carla not around on quick
inspection. I'm phoning from right here, this room, and Neya is standing here
–"
"One moment. I was empowered with reservation –"
"That's all right. Fred was tailing us and Neya went
down for him and I gave it to him and he's on his way with it now. He can be
traced here easy and so can we. The place has been frisked by someone in a
hurry – drawers standing open, things scattered on the floor and so on. The
number of this phone is Hammond 3-4505. Do you want me to keep on
talking?"
"No."
"Do you want to ring off and let your genius work and
I'll call again in three minutes?"
"No. You had better stay there, both of you. Mr. Cramer
is here and I'll tell him about it. Hold the wire."
I heard him telling Cramer, and I heard noises which were
presumably the inspector turning somersaults. Then a voice in my ear not
Wolfe's.
"Goodwin!" Cramer yapped.
"Yes, sir, speaking."
"You stay there, hear me?"
"Yes, sir."
That was all, except the click. I hung up and walked to
Neya, took her elbow and steered her to a chair, and put her in it.
"They'll be here in five minutes. Or less. This time
Inspector Cramer will get here first. And this time you're connected up. Here
in your own front room. What are you going to tell him?"
Her eyes met mine. They didn't waver, but she was having
trouble with her chin. She shook her head. "What can I tell him?"
"I don't know. What can you?"
"Nothing."
"Not enough. Under the circumstances. Did your friend
Carla do it?"
"I don't know."
"Did you?"
"You know I didn't!"
"I do not. Is there a lot of stuff around here about
Bosnian forests and Barrett & De Russy and secret codes –"
"No, nothing. I am very careful."
"Yeah, this looks like it. All I'm saying, if you try
telling Cramer that you know nothing about Faber and you can't imagine why in
the world he came here to get killed, you'll find yourself out on a limb. If
you tell the truth, that won't be it, and if you decide on lies, you'll have to
do a lot better than that. One little fact is that whoever killed Faber
deprived you of your alibi for the murder of Ludlow. I'm not trying to scare
you, I'm only trying to make you grab hold –"
The phone rang and I went and got it.
"This is Hammond 3-45 –"
"Archie. Mr. Cramer will be there shortly."
"Goody!"
"How is Miss Tormic?"
"She's all right. She says her mind's a blank?"
"Shock?"
"No, just ignorance."
"When she is questioned about anything except her
movements since ten o'clock this morning – which is the time Mr. Faber left
this house alive – she will decline to reply except in the presence of her
attorney. That is amply justified in the circumstances."
"I'll tell her that."
"Do so. I'll arrange for Mr. Parker to represent her.
What does she say about Miss Lovchen?"
"More ignorance. The first thing she did when she
entered the room and looked at the floor was let out a yell for Carla."
"I see. That's too bad. By the way, where did you put
those germination records on the oncidium hybrids? I want to check them
over."
"Christ almighty," I said bitterly. "Here's your
daughter sizzling on a spot, and here am I with blood on my fingers off of
Faber's shirt, and you prate – why don't you try doing a little work for a
change –"
"I can't work with nothing to work on. Get away as soon
as you can. Where did you put those records?"
I told him. He thanked me and rang off. I looked at Neya,
sitting there with her jaw clamped and her fingers twisted, and observed
grimly, "You certainly picked a lulu for an adopted daddy. Do you know
what he's doing? Checking up on orchid seeds he planted a year ago!
Incidentally, he says you are to answer any questions the cops ask about your
movements since ten o'clock this morning. All other questions, refuse to answer
until you see a lawyer. He's getting one."
"A lawyer for me?"
"Yes."
A police siren sounded through the window I had left open.
At five minutes past two Wolfe
sipped the last drop of his luncheon coffee, put down his cup, and made two
distinct and separate oral noises. The first was meant to express his pleasure
and satisfaction in the immediate past, the hour spent at table; the second was
a grunt of resigned dismay at the prospect of the immediate future, which was
embodied in the bulky figure of Inspector Cramer, planted in a chair in the
office. He had arrived on the stroke of two and was waiting.
Wolfe and I went in and sat down. The end of the unlighted
cigar in Cramer's mouth described a figure 8.
"I hate to hurry your meal," he said
sarcastically.
Wolfe eructed.
The inspector turned the sarcasm on me. "Have you had
any new ideas about the purpose of your going there with Miss Tormic?"
I shook my head. "No, sir. As I told you, we merely
went there to get Miss Lovchen."
"And what were you going to do with her?"
"We were going to bring her to see Mr. Wolfe. To go
over things."
"Had she suddenly developed paralysis of the
legs?"
"Please, Mr. Cramer," Wolfe murmured. "That's
childish and you know it is. Flopping your arms around is no way to discuss
anything. If Archie and Miss Tormic were engaged on a mysterious errand, you
don't suppose you're going to squeeze it out of him, do you?"
With his fingers entwined, Cramer rubbed his thumb tips
together, back and forth, with the cigar in his mouth aimed at the ceiling.
Finally he said, "I've been sitting here
thinking."
Wolfe nodded sympathetically. "It's a good room to
think in. The faint sounds from the street are just right."
Silence.
Cramer said, "I'm not a fool."
Wolfe nodded again. "We all feel like that
occasionally. The poison of conceit. It's all right if you keep an antidote
handy."
"Hell, I'm not conceited." The inspector removed
the cigar. "What I chiefly meant about not being a fool, I meant that I'm
sitting here because I doubt very much if I'll get a start on this case
anywhere except right here in this room."
"Well, as I say, it's a good room to think in."
"Yeah. I'm not talking about thinking. I'm talking
about you. This case is a hush-hush and I don't know why, and as sure as God
made little apples you do know why. I don't expect you to blurt it out, but
you've given me a hint before and you might do it again. I wouldn't be
surprised if you know right now who killed Ludlow and who killed Faber."
"You're wrong. I don't."
"Well, you know something about it that I don't know.
Take your client, for instance. Why is that girl your client? Can she pay the
kind of fee you charge? She cannot. Then who's going to pay you? You know that,
don't you? You're damn right you do. You go in for fancy tricks only when
someone makes it well worth your while. For example, that Durkin that works for
you that was there in the taxi. And Goodwin admits he called him up to that
room and then sent him away in his car. Your car. I'm betting the Lovchen girl
went with him."
"Nonsense. Fred came directly here alone."
"You say."
"Well, ask Fritz, who opened the door –"
"Nuts. What good does it do to ask questions of anybody
who works for you? But we'll find Lovchen, and we'll find Zorka too, don't
think we won't."
"You've found no trace of them?"
"Not yet. We will. We had a tail on Lovchen, but he
hasn't reported and we don't know where he is. Another thing, you had Zorka
right here in this house, on the grill –"
"She was drunk."
"She wasn't too drunk to climb down a fire escape.
According to you." Cramer brandished the cigar at him. "Do you
realize that this time I could actually slap a charge of obstructing justice on
you?"
"I doubt it. Why don't you try?"
"For a damn good reason. Because the commissioner and
the district attorney are both on the soft pedal."
Wolfe's brows went up. "They are?"
"Yes. Didn't I say it's a hush-hush? It's exactly the
kind of thing that makes my guts turn over. I'm a cop. I am paid a salary to go
and look at dead people and decide if they died as the result of a crime and,
if they did, find the criminal and fasten it on him so it will stick. That's
the job I'm paid to do. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred I get official
cooperation as required, but once in a while a bunch of politicians or
influential citizens will try to rope me off. I don't like being roped off by
anyone whatever." He stuck the cigar in his mouth and laid his heavy fists
on the chair arms. "I do not like it."
"And you are being roped off from this case?"
"I am. The British consul phoned the commissioner to
express his deep concern at the violent death of a British subject, and his
earnest hope and so forth. The commissioner saw him at eleven o'clock last
night, and the consul was communicating with London as soon as possible. This
morning I ask the commissioner for the dope, and he says the consul can furnish
no information regarding Ludlow's activities, but of course it is to be hoped
that justice will be done. Like it is to be hoped we'll have a mild winter.
Then, a little later, talking with the district attorney, I suggested that he
might phone the British embassy in Washington, and he vetoes it and says he
doubts if it would be fruitful to pursue an investigation along that line. I
damn near went ahead and phoned Washington myself!"
"Why didn't you?"
"Because I'm too old to look for another job. Besides,
it wouldn't have been fruitful. But what I did this morning, within five
minutes after I got there on 38th Street, I phoned right from that room to the
German consul general and asked him about Faber, and he had the brass to tell
me that he hadn't the faintest notion what Faber was doing in New York! After
telling me last evening, in connection with Ludlow, that he could vouch for
Faber absolutely! I phoned the German embassy in Washington then and there, and
got the same run-around. What the hell right have countries got to send guys to
other countries to do things they're ashamed to talk about? Even when the guys
get murdered?"
Wolfe shook his head.
Cramer glared at him a while in silence and then announced
abruptly, "I sent a cable to a place in Yugoslavia called Zagreb."
Wolfe murmured, "Indeed."
"Yes, indeed. That's the town those two girls came
from. It's the address on their passports. They say they came over here because
America is the land of opportunity. They were asked, in that case why didn't
they enter on the quota instead of visitors' visas. They said they wanted to
see what it was like first."
"Cautious." Wolfe grunted. "You cabled, of
course, to learn if they might be suspected of a grudge against the British
Empire. I doubt if you'll get much. If they're working for the Yugoslav government,
of course you won't. If for someone else – Zagreb is the Croatian capital, and
the authorities there certainly wouldn't help you any. May I ask why you picked
on those two girls especially?"
"I didn't. I picked on everybody. But it isn't
surprising if I pick on 'em now, is it? With one of 'em evaporated? And Faber
stabbed to death right in their flat? Is Tormic still your client?"
"She is."
"If she's innocent it's a mistake not to let her
talk."
"I don't think so."
"I do." Cramer discarded his cigar and leaned
back. "I'll tell you frankly, I don't think she did it. Chiefly for two
reasons, and one is that she's your client. I admit that's a reason. The other
is that Faber's death takes away her alibi for Ludlow. She wouldn't be that
dumb.
But. She left headquarters at a quarter past ten this
morning and she was tailed. She took a taxi. At Canal Street she suddenly
hopped out of the taxi and into the subway. It was so unexpected that the tail
lost her in the shuffle because a train was just pulling in and she made it and
he didn't. So what did she do between then and the time she got to your office,
ten after eleven?"
"What does she say?"
"She says she told the taxi driver to take her to your
place, but she suddenly decided that she would have time to go to Miltan's and
see Miss Lovchen about something if she took the subway, so she did. Then she
decided she wouldn't have time after all, so she got out at Grand Central and
phoned Miss Lovchen instead, and then took a taxi here."
"She phoned Miss Lovchen where? Miltan's?"
"Yes. And she did. Miltan answered the phone himself
and recognized her voice and called Miss Lovchen. About a quarter to
eleven."
"What does she say she phoned Miss Lovchen about?"
"She says it's none of my business."
Wolfe sighed. "Well, disprove it."
"Sure. I know. I said frankly, I don't think she did
it."
"Who do you think did? Miss Lovchen?"
"How the hell do I know?" Cramer sat up and made
fists again. "Haven't I made it plain that I don't know a damn thing? I
can't even put anyone in that room between ten o'clock, the time that Faber
left here on his feet, and the time Goodwin and Miss Tormic went there and
found him. We can't find anyone that saw anybody go in or out of the building.
We're still trying it, but you know that game."
He banged a fist and demanded, "And what if we do? What
if I had stood there on the sidewalk myself and saw her go in with Faber and
come out again without him? What good would that do me? When the question comes
up, what did she kill him for, or Ludlow either, what do I say then? Huh? Or
anybody else! It is customary, before you turn a murder case over to a jury and
ask them for a conviction, to give them some slight hint of what the motivation
was. They like it better that way. And where it stands now, I could give just
as good a motive for Goodwin here, and say he did it with his jackknife when he
went there with Miss Tormic, as I could for anybody else."
I protested, "I don't carry a jackknife. A
penknife."
"Maybe your field's too narrow," Wolfe suggested.
"Have you considered –"
"I haven't got any field. As far as I'm concerned, it's
wide open. Naturally, we're checking up on everyone that was at Miltan's last
evening. Young Gill was at his office. One out. Miltan and his wife were at
their place. Three out. That leaves six in, of that bunch. Driscoll went for a
walk at half past ten and got to his office at eleven thirty. Donald Barrett
says he was at his office, Barrett & De Russy, but it hasn't been confirmed
yet to make it tight. Lovchen and Tormic and Zorka. Two of those disappeared.
Belinda Reade left her apartment shortly after ten o'clock to go shopping and
hasn't been located."
"The weapon?"
"Hasn't been found. He was stabbed in the left breast
with a blade long enough to reach the heart, and it was withdrawn in a few
minutes, but not immediately, judging from the amount of bleeding. He was also
struck a severe blow, before he was stabbed, on the left eye. A very hard blow
with something blunt and hard and heavy. Very unlikely that he could have got it
falling, and anyway, if it had happened at the moment he was stabbed to death
it wouldn't look the way it does. It indicates that there was a struggle – what's
the idea?"
I had doubled up my right fist and displayed it in front of
his nose.
"Blunt and hard and heavy," I declared.
"Huh? What –"
"Yes, sir. It was me. He got obnoxious here in this
office and I plugged him. I tell it because you may dig up someone who saw him
soon after, and I don't want to be accused of withholding evidence."
Cramer's chin slowly sunk to his breastbone. It looked like
a slow motion of Jack Dempsey preparing to wade in. Then, also slowly, he put
the tip of a forefinger to his nose and rubbed up and down, gently and
rhythmically, meanwhile surveying me through narrowed lids. It was quite a
while before he said thoughtfully:
"You wouldn't stab a guy."
"No, sir," I agreed brightly, "it wouldn't be
in character –"
"Shut up. But what if you and Tormic went there and
found him there going through things. You got mad and socked him. Tormic got
mad and stuck a knife in him. You sent for Durkin and made him a gift of the
knife and he left with it. You phoned here and I was here."
"It sounds pretty plausible," I conceded,
"but you're confronted with the question of motive again. What was it that
infuriated Tormic to the point of croaking him? Another trouble is that Fred
Durkin was here in the office when I plugged him." I shook my head.
"That theory is full of holes. I'm in favor of crossing it off –"
The phone interrupted me. It was a call for Cramer. I gave
him room to take it at my desk. He talked for a full ten minutes, everything
from noncommittal grunts to elaborate detailed instructions, and when it was
finished returned to his chair.
He regarded me with a cold eye. "You know, son,"
he said finally, "you have one or two good qualities. In a way I even like
you. In another way I could stand and watch your hide peeling off and not shed
any tears. You have undoubtedly got the goddamnedest nerve of anybody I know
except maybe Nero Wolfe. Tormic is down at headquarters, with that lawyer you
got for her, refusing to answer questions. I've got half a notion to try that
old gag on her. I think I'll phone Rowcliff to tell her that you have admitted
that Faber was on his feet when you and she got there, and you knocked him
down."
"Go ahead," I urged him. "It will be
interesting to see how it works out. But as far as my nerve is concerned, I
never have had, do not now have, and never will have, enough nerve to risk one
teeny-weeny chance of sitting in the frying-chair."
"Yesterday afternoon you fled the scene of a murder
with the weapon used for the crime."
"Not knowingly. To begin with, I didn't fled, I merely
went. And I did not know that culdymore was in my pocket."
Cramer leaned back, sighed, and began rubbing his nose
again.
The door opened. Fritz entered, approached, and said:
"Mr. Cather, sir."
Wolfe's chin went up. "Show him in."
I could tell from the tone of Wolfe's voice that there was a
possibility that Orrie was bringing home a chunk of important bacon, but a
glance at Orrie's face told me that he didn't have it. Wolfe obviously reached
the same conclusion, for he said, more a statement than a question:
"No result."
Orrie stood with his overcoat on and his hat in his hand.
"No, sir."
Wolfe grimaced. "Did you find the – things I
suggested?"
"Yes, sir. More too. There were mentions – I saw the
name – in a lot of articles and sometimes in headlines, but that was all. Of
course I couldn't read –"
"That wouldn't help any. No pictures."
"No, sir. I went through every possible thing at the
library, and I tried the other places. The Times thought they would have
one, but they didn't. I'm on my way now to the consulate and I just stopped by
here instead of phoning –"
"Don't go to the consulate. I phoned there and it's
hopeless. Mr. Cramer and I are both out of humor with consulates. Have you been
to Second Avenue?"
"No, I was going there last."
"Try it. You might find it there. It is possible that
Mr. Cramer has arranged that anyone leaving this house shall be followed. If
so, shake him. I don't want the police in on this. Not yet."
Orrie grinned. "That will be a pleasure." He
tramped out.
Cramer said in a tone of disgust, "Horse
feathers."
"It wouldn't be the first time you've tried that
stratagem," Wolfe observed mildly. "Anyway, it's not as annoying as
your former attempts at bulldozing. Thank heaven, you seem to have given that
up. Are you through amusing yourself with Archie?"
"Amusing myself? Good God!"
"You must have been. You couldn't very well have been
serious. Will you have some beer?"
"No, thanks – yes I will too. I'm thirsty."
"Good." Wolfe pushed the button. "Did I
understand you to say that you were having Miss Lovchen followed?"
"Yes. A double tail. One of them phoned in at ten forty
that she had left the house at 38th Street and gone to Miltan's, and was in
there then, and we haven't heard from them since. Their instructions are to
report in every two hours if they can do so without danger of losing
contact."
"I see. It's very handy to have so many men."
"Yeah. It would be if more of them were worth a damn.
There are over a hundred of them on this case right now. Sifting out up at 38th
Street. Looking for the thing he was stabbed with. Getting backgrounds.
Tailing. Looking for Lovchen and Zorka. Checking alibis. I'm expecting any
minute to be told to pull a bunch of them off. Hush-hush." The inspector
set his jaw. "But until I get direct orders to the contrary, I'm going to
proceed on the theory that the people who pay my salary don't want any kind of
a murderer to get any kind of a break. That's why I'm sitting here chinning
with you. This is the one place where I might get a line on whatever it is that
the goddam consuls and ambassadors are so bashful about … much obliged."
He took the beer Wolfe had poured for him, gulped, licked
the foam from his lips, and gulped again.
He sat back holding the half-filled glass. "Let me ask
you something. If you had your pick of everybody, everybody in or near New
York, to be brought in here right now, for you to ask questions of about this
case, who would it be?"
"Thank heaven," Wolfe declared, "I can answer
that unequivocally. Madame Zorka."
The phone rang. It was for Cramer again and he took it at my
desk. It was a short conversation this time, and when he disconnected and went
back to his chair he had a satisfied grin on his mug.
"Well, well," he said. "I call that pretty
good. No sooner asked for. They've got Zorka and I told them to bring her
here."
"Indeed." Wolfe was filling his glass again.
"Where did they find her?"
"In a room at the Brissenden. Registered phone. Arrived
at ten minutes past five this morning."
"I hope," Wolfe muttered, "that she has
something to wear besides that red thing she had on last night."
"Huh? I beg your pardon?"
"Nothing. Soliloquy – Yes, Fritz?"
Fritz was in again. He had the salver this time, and crossed
to Wolfe. Wolfe took the card, read it and frowned.
"The devil," he said. "Where is he?"
"In the hall, sir."
"Please put him in the front room, close the door, and
come back."
As Fritz went Wolfe addressed the inspector:
"I don't suppose you have an errand somewhere
else."
"Neither do I," Cramer said emphatically.
"I've told you ten times I like it here. If I once got out you might not
let me in again unless I brought a warrant."
"Very well. Then I'm afraid – Oh, Fritz. Will you
please take Mr. Cramer up in the elevator and ask Theodore to show him the
orchids?" He smiled at the inspector. "You haven't been up there for
a long while. I'm sure you'll enjoy it."
"I'll love it," Cramer declared, and got up and
followed Fritz out.
Wolfe handed me the card and I read, "John P.
Barrett."
The sound came of the elevator door clanging, and Wolfe
said, "Bring him in."
The appearance of Donnybonny's
father in the flesh fitted the sound of his voice on the telephone. He was the
kind many people call distinguished-looking and I call Headwaiter's Dream. He
was around fifty, smooth-shaven, with gray eyes that needed to look only once
at something, and was wearing $485 worth of quiet clothes. He shook hands with
Wolfe in a pleasant manner, as if there could never be any hurry or urgency
about anything in the world.
"You're over here by the river in a corner of your
own," he observed genially as he sat down.
Wolfe nodded. "Yes, I bought this place a long time ago
and I'm hard to move. You must excuse me, Mr. Barrett, if I say that I haven't
much time to spare. I'm wedging you in. Another caller kindly went up to my
plant rooms for an interlude. Mr. Cramer of the police."
"Cramer?"
"Inspector Cramer of the Homicide Bureau."
"Oh." Barrett's tone was nonchalant but his eyes,
for an instant, were not. "I came to see you on account of some remarks you
made last night to my son.
Regarding Bosnian forests, credits held by my firm, and the
Donevitch gang. That was your word, I believe – gang."
"I believe it was," Wolfe admitted. "Was
there something wrong with my remarks?"
"Oh, no. Nothing wrong. May I smoke?"
Permission received, he got a cigarette from a case which
boosted his freight loading from the $485 up to around eight hundred berries,
lit, and thanked me for the ash tray I provided.
"My son," he said in a tone of civilized
exasperation, "is a little bit green. It's unavoidable that youth should
arrange people in categories, it's the only way of handling the mass of
material at first to avoid hopeless confusion, but the sorting out should not
be too long delayed. My son seems to be pretty slow at it. He overrates some
people and underrates others. Perhaps I've tried to rush it by opening too many
doors for him. A father's conceit can be a very disastrous thing."
He tapped ashes from his cigarette. He asked abruptly but
not at all pugnaciously, "What is it you want, Mr. Wolfe?"
Wolfe shook his head. "Nothing right now. I wanted to
see Madame Zorka and your son kindly made that possible."
"Yes, he told me about that. But what else?"
"Nothing at present. Really."
"Well." Barrett smiled. "I understand that as
a private investigator you undertake almost any sort of job that promises a fee
proportionate to your abilities."
"Yes, sir, I do. Within certain boundaries I have set.
I try to keep my prejudices intact."
"Naturally." Barrett laughed sympathetically.
"We can't leave it to anyone else to defend our prejudices for us."
He tapped off ashes again. "My son also tells me that you are engaged in
the interests of a young woman named Tormic who is a friend of his. At least – hum
– an acquaintance. In connection with the murder of that man Ludlow."
"That's right," Wolfe agreed. "I was
originally engaged to clear her of a charge of stealing diamonds from a man
named Driscoll. Then Mr. Ludlow got killed, and Miss Tormic needed a little
help on that too because she was implicated by circumstances."
"And was it from this Miss Tormic that you received
information which enabled you to put pressure on my son? You did put pressure
on him, didn't you?"
"Certainly. I blackmailed him."
"Yes. With a threat to disclose certain facts. Did you
get those facts from Miss Tormic?"
"My dear sir." Wolfe wiggled a finger at him.
"You can't possibly be fatuous enough to expect me to tell you that."
Barrett smiled at him. "There's always a chance that
you might. Especially since there's no good reason why you shouldn't. Are you
under obligation to defend the interests of anyone except Miss Tormic?"
"Yes. My own. Always my own."
"That, of course. But anyone else? I should think there
would be no impropriety in your telling me if you represent any interest except
that of Miss Tormic. For instance, Madame Zorka?"
Wolfe frowned. "I am always reluctant to make a present
of information. Just as you are reluctant to make a present of money. You're a
banker and your business is selling money; I'm a detective and mine is selling
information. But I don't want to be churlish. In connection with the activities
we are speaking of, I represent no interest whatever except that of Miss
Tormic."
"And, always, your own."
"Always my own."
"Good." Barrett crushed his cigarette in the tray.
"That clears the way for us, I should think. Please don't think I'm
fatuous. I've made some inquiries and I find you have an enviable reputation
for good faith. I have a proposal to make regarding this little project my firm
is interested in. This – um – business you mentioned to my son. We need your
services. Nothing onerous, and certainly nothing to offend your
prejudices." He pulled a little leather fold from his pocket. "I'll
give you a check now as a retainer. Say ten thousand dollars?"
I thought to myself, what do you know about that;
Donny-darling got his briber's itch honestly, by direct inheritance. Then I
grinned, looking at Wolfe. One corner of his mouth was twisted a little out of
line, which mean that he was suffering acute pain. It was a situation he had
had to face fairly often during the years I had known him, and the torture
involved was in direct proportion to the number of ciphers. Ten thousand bucks
would have kept a good man, even Ray Borchers, in Central America for a full
year, hunting rare orchids, always with the possibility of finding one
absolutely new. Or 5000 cases of beer or 600 pounds of caviar…
He said bravely, but with somewhat more breath than the word
should require, "No."
"No?"
"No."
"If I assure you that you will be expected to do
nothing that will interfere with the interest you already represent? And in
case my assurance doesn't satisfy you, if at any time you find your engagements
in conflict you may merely return the ten thousand dollars –"
Wolfe's lip twitched. I turned my head away. But his voice
showed that he had it licked: "No, sir. To return that amount of money
would ruin my digestion for a week. If I could bring myself to do it, which is
doubtful. No, sir. Abandon the idea. I shall accept no commission or retainer
from you."
"Is that – urn – definite?"
"Irrevocable."
One little vertical crease showed in the middle of Barrett's
forehead. With no other sign of fits, he returned the leather fold to his
breast pocket, and then regarded Wolfe with what was probably as close to an
open stare as he ever got.
"The only recourse that leaves me," he said, with
no affability left in his tone at all, "is to draw my own
conclusions."
"If you find you must have a conclusion, yes,
sir."
"But I confess I'm puzzled. I'm not often puzzled, but
I am now. I'm not gullible enough to believe that your interest is only what
you profess it to be. I have very good reasons for not believing it besides the
fact that in that case there would be no explanation for your refusing my
proposal. My son thinks that you are representing either London or Rome, but
there are two objections to that: first, no contacts have been reported to us,
and second, if that were true why would you have exposed yourself as you did
last night? Is it any wonder that we regarded that as an invitation to
deal?"
"I'm sorry I misled you," Wolfe murmured.
"But you're not going to tell me whom you're tied up
with."
"I have no client but Miss Tormic."
"And you're not prepared to deal with us."
Wolfe shook his head, if not with enthusiasm, with finality.
John P. Barrett stood up. There was a vague sort of vexation
on his face, like a man with a feeling that he has gone off and left something
somewhere but unable to say either what it was or where he left it.
"I hope," he said, with an edge to his tone,
"for your own sake, that you don't happen to get in our way unwittingly.
We know who our opponents are, and we know how to handle them. If you're in
this on your own and you're trying to play for a haul –"
"Nonsense." Wolfe cut him off. "I'm a
detective working on a job. I am not apt to get in anyone's way, or perform any
other maneuver, unwittingly. I will say this. There is a possibility that in
finishing up my own business I'll be compelled to interfere with yours. If that
seems likely to occur, I'll let you know in advance."
Bang went another illusion. I wouldn't have supposed that a
man of Barrett's appearance and breeding, and especially with the clothes he
was wearing, could do or say anything mean. But the look in his eyes at that
moment, and the tone of his voice, were plain mean and you could even say
nasty. All he said was, "Don't try it, Mr. Wolfe. Don't try interfering
with my business."
He turned to go.
Fortunately I had noticed the sound of Fritz in the hall
and, passing Wolfe a signal to hold Barrett a moment, I bounced up and out,
shutting the office door behind me, not in Barrett's face, for he had turned at
a remark from Wolfe. As I trotted down the hall Fritz was holding the street
door open and three people were entering in the shape of a sandwich: a dick,
Zorka, and another dick. Without ceremony or apology I hustled them into the
front room and shut them in, then trotted back to the office and nearly knocked
Barrett off his pins swinging the door against him.
"Sorry, sir, I did it unwittingly."
He gave me a frosty eye and departed. I stayed there on the
threshold until I saw Fritz had got him accoutered and dispatched on his way,
and then told Wolfe who had come and asked him if he thought Cramer would
prefer to go on looking at orchids. He told me to phone up and tell Horstmann
to bring the inspector down, and I did so, and then returned to the front room
for Zorka. The two dicks started to come along, and I waved them back and said
I would take her to Inspector Cramer.
"We'll help you, buddy," they said as if they were
twins, and stayed as close to her as they could without being vulgar. Wolfe
frowned as the four of us cluttered into the office. In a minute we were a neat
half-dozen when Cramer joined us, five full-grown men against one dressmaker.
One of the dicks got out a notebook and I arranged myself at my desk with mine.
Wolfe leaned back with his clasped hands resting on his meal container, looking
at Zorka with his eyes half shut. Cramer was scowling at her.
I had remembered the name of the girl in the Bible she
resembled – Delilah. But right then she looked crumby, with puffs under her
eyes, scared and nervous, and altogether anything but carefree. I was glad to
notice, for Wolfe's sake, that she had snared a dark red woolen suit somewhere,
and some shoes and stockings, but it was just like Wolfe to pick on that as the
first means of harassing her. Naturally he was sore at her for using his fire
escape.
He growled at her, "Where did you get those
clothes?"
She looked at the skirt as if she hadn't realized she had it
on. "Zeeze –" She stopped, frowning at him.
"I mean the clothes you're wearing. When you left here
last night – this morning – all you had on was a red thing. Under your coat.
Those things you're wearing now were in the bag and suitcase you took to Miss
Reade's apartment. Is that right?"
"You say zey waire."
"Weren't they? Who took them to you at the Hotel
Brissenden? Mr. Barrett?"
She shrugged.
Cramer barked, "We can prove that and that's not all we
can prove! After those clothes were delivered to you this morning, you put them
on and left the hotel, and you were followed."
"Zat ees not true." She set her teeth on her lower
lip for a moment, and then went on, "For one sing, if you had me followed
you would know where I was and you would not wait so late to get me and bring
me here. For anozzer sing, I did not leave zee hotel, not once until zee men
came –"
"That won't get you anywhere! Now look here –"
"Please, Mr. Cramer?" Wolfe opened his eyes.
"If you don't mind? Remember what you said, that you'd be no better off if
you had stood across the street yourself and seen her go in with him and emerge
without him. There's no point in running her up a tree if you have no
ammunition to bring her down again."
"Have you?" the inspector demanded.
"I don't know, but I'd like to find out."
Cramer pulled out a cigar and stuck it between his teeth.
"Go ahead."
Wolfe cleared his throat and focused on her. "Madame
Zorka. Is that your name?"
"Of course eet ees."
"I know it's the name on your letterheads and in the
telephone book. But were you christened Zorka?"
"Eet ees my name."
"What's the rest of it?"
She fluttered a nervous hand. "Zorka."
"Now my dear young lady. Last night, inferentially at
least, you were drunk. But you're not drunk now, you're merely bedraggled. Do
you intend to tell us the rest of your name or not?"
"I …" She hesitated, and then said with sudden
determination, "No. I can't."
"Why can't you?"
"Because I – it would be dangerous."
"Dangerous to whom? To you?"
"No, not to me – as much as uzzer people." She
took a deep breath. "I am a refugee. I escaped."
"Where from?"
She shook her head.
"Come, come," Wolfe said brusquely. "Not the
place, the city, the village, if you think you can't. What country? Germany?
Russia? Italy? Yugoslavia?"
"All right. Zat much. Yugoslavia."
"I see. Croatia? Serbia? Montenegro?"
"I said, Yugoslavia."
"Yes, but – very well." Wolfe shrugged. "How
long ago did you escape?"
"About one year ago."
"And came to America? To New York?"
"First Paris. Paris some time, then America."
"Did you bring a lot of money with you?"
"Oh, no." She spread out her hands to reject an
absurdity. "No money. No refugee could have money."
"But I understand you have a business here in New York
which must have cost a good deal to set up."
She almost smiled at him. "I knew you would ask zat. A
friend was very kind to me."
"Is the friend's name Donald Barrett?"
She sat silent a moment, just looking at him, and then said,
"But I am foolish. Zaire is no disgrace. Anyway, eet ees known to a few
people, and you would ask and find out. Zee kind friend who lent me money ees
Mr. Barrett. He ees, what you call eet, silent partner."
"You're in debt to Mr. Barrett, then."
"Debt?" She frowned. "Oh, debt. Yes, very
much."
Wolfe nodded. "I sympathize with you, madame. I hate
being in debt. Some people don't seem to mind it. By the way, those people in
Yugoslavia – those who might be in danger if you told us the rest of your name
– are they relatives of yours?"
"Yes, some. Some relatives."
"Are you Jewish?"
"Oh, no. I am very old Yugoslavian family."
"Indeed. Nobility?"
"Well …" She pulled her shoulders up and together,
and released them again.
"I see. I won't press that. The danger to your
relatives – would that be on account of your activities in New York?"
"But I have no activities in New York, except my
business."
"Then I don't understand how revealing your name would
place your relatives in peril."
"Zat ees … eet would be suspect."
"What would be suspect?"
She shook her head.
Cramer growled, "We known damn well she's not normal. I
could have told you that much. When we went through her apartment this morning
–"
Zorka's head jerked around at him and she squeaked in
indignation, "You went through my apartment!"
"Yes, ma'am," he said calmly. "And your place
of business. Anybody that stages the kind of performance you did last night can
expect some unwelcome attention. You're lucky you're not down at headquarters
right now phoning for your kind friend to furnish bail for you, and that's
exactly where you'll be when we're through here maybe." He resumed to
Wolfe, "There's not a thing, not a scratch of anything, at her home or
office either, that takes you back further than a year ago, the time she came
to New York. That's why I say we already knew she wasn't normal."
"Did you find a passport?"
"No. That's another thing –"
"Where is your passport, madame?"
She looked at him. She wet her lips twice. "I am in
zees country legally," she declared.
"Then you must have a passport. Where is it?"
For the first time her eyes had a cornered look. "I
weel explain … to zee propaire officaire …"
"There's nothing improper about me," Cramer said
grimly.
Zorka spread out her hands. "I lost eet."
"I'm afraid the water's getting hot," said Wolfe.
"Now about last night. Why did you phone here and say that you saw Miss
Tormic putting something in Mr. Goodwin's pocket?"
"Because I did see eet."
"Then why hadn't you told the police about it?"
"Because I thought not to make trouble." She edged
forward in her chair. "Now look. Zat happen precisely zee way I say. I
thought not to make trouble. Zen I sink, murder ees so horrible, I have no
right. Zen I phone you and say I weel tell zee police. Zen I sink, Mr. Barrett
ees friend of Mees Tormic, so to be fair I should tell heem what I do, and I
phone heem. Of course he know how I am refugee, how I escape, how I must not
put people in danger –"
"By the way, where did you first meet Mr.
Barrett?"
"I meet heem in Paris."
"Go ahead."
"So he say, good God, zee police kestion me so much,
zey must know everysing about me, so dangerous to me and to so many people, so
why do I not go veesit Mees Reade, so I pack my bags –"
There was a knock at the door and Fritz entered. He advanced
and spoke over a dick's shoulder:
"Mr. Panzer, sir."
"Tell him I'm engaged with Madame Zorka and Mr.
Cramer."
"I did so, sir. He said he would like to see you."
"Send him in."
Cramer bellowed, "So it was Donald Barrett that got you
to take a powder –"
"Just a moment," Wolfe begged him. "I think
we're getting a reinforcement."
Nobody seeing Saul Panzer for the first time would have
regarded him as a valuable reinforcement for anything whatever, but they would
have been wrong. A lot of people had underrated him, and a lot of people had
paid for it. He had left his old brown cap and coat in the hall and, as he
stood there absorbing a couple of million details of the little group with one
quick glance, everything about him looked insignificant but his big nose.
Wolfe asked him, "Results, Saul?"
"Yes, sir."
"Definite?"
"Yes, sir."
"Indeed. Let us have them."
"I was going to bring her birth certificate along, but
I thought that might make trouble, so I took a copy –"
He retreated a step, because Zorka had leaped to her feet,
confronted him, and practically shrieked at him, "You didn't! You couldn't
–"
A dick reached for her elbow and Cramer bawled, "Sit
down!"
"But he – if he –"
"I said sit down!"
She backed up, stumbled on the other dick's foot, recovered
her balance, and dropped into her chair. Her shoulders sagged, and she sat that
way.
Saul said, "I didn't have to make any expenditures of
the kind you contemplated, but I spent three dollars and ninety cents on a
phone call. I thought it was justified."
"No doubt. Go ahead."
Saul took his step back. "First I went to Madame
Zorka's apartment. There were four city detectives there making a search, and
the maid was sitting in a bedroom crying. I had already decided what to do if I
found that, so I merely went in –"
He stopped, with a glance at Cramer and the dicks.
"Go on, don't mind them," Wolfe told him. "If
it ruins a modus operandi for you, you'll invent an even better one for next
time."
"Thank you, sir. I went in for a minute only,
establishing a friendly basis, and got the maid to look at me. Then I went to
Madame Zorka's place of business on 54th Street. There were more city
detectives there, but aside from that it didn't look promising, and I decided
to leave it as a last resort. From a certain source I got three leads on
friends and associates, and I spent nearly four hours on that line, counting
lunch, but got nothing at all.
"I then, at 2:15, returned to the apartment. I learned
downstairs that two of the detectives were still there, so I waited until they
left, which was at 2:35, and then went up. I rang the bell and the maid opened
the door and I went in. On account of the impression created at my visit in the
morning, she took it for granted that I was a city detective, though I did not
say so. I merely went in and started searching –"
Cramer growled, "By God, impersonating –"
"Oh, no, Inspector." Saul looked shocked. "I
wouldn't impersonate an officer. But I did suspect the maid made a mistake and
took me for one, for otherwise she might have objected to my searching the
place. I thought if she had it fixed in her mind that I was a city detective,
she probably wouldn't believe me anyway if I tried to tell her I wasn't, so I
didn't try. And if you won't regard it as impertinent, I'd like to compliment you
on the job your men did. You would hardly know the place had been touched, the
way they left things, and they must have gone through every inch. And the fact
that they had been over it made it unnecessary for me to do any of the
superficial things. I could concentrate on the long chance that there was some
trick they had missed. It wasn't much of a trick at that, only a false bottom
in a leather hatbox. Underneath it I found her birth certificate and a few
letters and things. I left it all there after taking a copy of the certificate,
and then I went out to a phone booth and made a long distance call to Ottumwa,
Iowa. To her mother. Just to make sure –"
Zorka blurted at him, "You – you phoned my mother …"
"Yes, ma'am, I did. It's all right, I didn't scare her
or anything, I made it all right. Having found out from the birth certificate
that your name is Pansy Bupp, and having read a letter –"
"What's that?" Wolfe demanded. "Her name is
what?"
"Pansy Bupp." He pulled a piece of paper from his
pocket. "P, A, N, S, Y, B, U, P, P. Her father is William O. Bupp. He runs
a feed store. She was born at Ottumwa on April 9, 1912 –"
"Give me that paper."
Saul handed it over. Wolfe glared at it, ate it with his
eyes, and transferred the glare to her, and it was one of the few times on
record that I would have called his tone a snarl as he shot at her:
"Why?"
She snarled back, "Why what?"
"Why that confounded drivel? That imbecile
flummery?"
She looked as if she would like to stick a knife through
him. "What do you think would happen," she demanded, "to a Fifth
Avenue couturiere if it came out that her name was Pansy Bupp?" Her voice
rose to an indignant wail. "What do you think will happen?"
Wolfe, beside himself with fury, wiggled a whole hand at her.
"Answer me!" he roared. "Is your name Pansy Bupp?"
"Yes."
"Were you born in Ottumwa, Iowa?"
"Yes."
"When did you leave there?"
"Why, I … I took trips to Denver –"
"I'm not speaking of trips to Denver! When did you
leave there?"
"Two years ago. Nearly. My father gave me money for a
trip to Paris – and I got a job there and learned to design – and I met Donald
Barrett and he suggested –"
"Where did you get the name Zorka?"
"I saw it somewhere –"
"Have you ever been in Yugoslavia?"
"No."
"Or anywhere in Europe besides Paris?"
"No."
"Is what you said last night – about the reason for
your phoning here and then running away to Miss Reade's place – is that the
truth?"
"Yes, it is. Like a fool, an utter fool" – she
gulped – "I let my conscience bother me because it was murder. If I hadn't
done that, none of this …" She flung out her hands. "Oh, can it be – can't
this be –" Her chin was quivering.
"Miss Bupp!" Wolfe thundered. "Don't you
dare! Archie, get her out of here! Get her out of the house!"
"Zat weel be a plaizhoore," I said.
Wolfe looked up at the wall
clock and said, "Ten minutes to four. I'll have to leave you pretty soon
to go up to my plants."
We were comparatively peaceful again. The two dicks had
departed with Miss Bupp, and Lieutenant Rowcliff had been phoned to expect her
at headquarters for a little talk.
Cramer said, "It could be a frame, you know.
We've tried some of her friends and associates too. We heard she was a Turk, a
Hungarian, a Russian Jew, and maybe part Jap. It won't hurt any to check it
up."
Wolfe shook his head, grimaced, and muttered, "Ottumwa,
Iowa."
"I guess so," the inspector admitted. "Does
that shove you off onto a siding?"
"No. It merely …" Wolfe shrugged.
"It merely leaves you still waiting at the station,
huh?" Getting no answer, he regarded Wolfe a moment and then went on,
"As far as I'm concerned, I'm still playing these. If you go up to your
plants, I go along. If you go to the kitchen to mix salad dressing –"
"You don't mix salad dressing in the kitchen. You do it
at the table and use it immediately."
"All right. No matter what you go to the kitchen for, I
go too. It's plainer than ever that you know where the kernel is in this nut
and I don't. Take the fact of Donald Barrett chasing this Zorka Bupp away so we
couldn't get at her. I would get fat trying to put the screws on Donald
Barrett, with both the commissioner and the district attorney having a bad
attack of bashfulness. Wouldn't I? But you don't even waste time with Donald.
You have his old man, John P., himself, coming right here and walking right
into your office. That goes to show."
Wolfe looked at me. "Archie. Find out if Theodore
failed to understand that when I send a gentleman to look at orchids –"
Cramer snorted. "Don't bother. I didn't sneak
downstairs and take a peek. Rowcliff told me on the phone that he had received
a report that John P. Barrett had been seen entering this address at 2:55 this
p.m."
"Were you having Mr. Barrett followed?"
"No."
"I see. You have a regiment watching this house."
"I wouldn't say a regiment. But I've said and I say
again that right now I'm more interested in this house than any other building
in the borough of Manhattan. If you want me out of it you'll have to call the
police. By the way, another thing Rowcliff told me, they've found Belinda
Reade. She's at a matinee at the Lincoln Theater. Do we want her in here?"
"I don't."
"Then I don't either. The boys'll take care of her. If
she can account satisfactorily for – is that for me?"
I nodded, and vacated my chair for him to take another phone
call. This was a comparatively short one. He emitted a few grunts and made a
few unilluminating remarks, and hung up and returned to his chair. No sooner
had I got back into mine than the house phone buzzed. As I pulled it over to me
I heard Wolfe asking Cramer if there was anything new and the inspector
replying that there was nothing worth mentioning and then, over the house
phone, in response to my hello, Fred Durkin's voice was in my ear:
"Archie? Come up here."
I said with irritation, "Damn it, Fritz, I'm
busy." Then I waited a minute and said, "Okay, okay, quit running off
your face," and got up and beat it to the hall, shutting the door behind
me. I went quickly but noiselessly up one flight of stairs, opened the door of
Wolfe's room, and entered. Fred Durkin was there on a chair beside the bed,
within reach of the phone, where he had been instructed to place himself two
hours previously.
He started to grumble, "This is one hell of a job
–"
"Don't crab, my boy. From each according to his
ability. What is it, Lovchen?"
He nodded. "I didn't call you when he got the report on
Zorka, because he told them to bring her here, but –"
"What about Lovchen?"
"Her tail phoned in to headquarters." Fred looked
at a pad of paper he had scribbled on. "They followed her to Miltan's this
morning, and she left there at 10:53 and went back to 404 East 38th Street
–"
"The hell she did. Anyone with her?"
"No, she was alone. She stayed in there only about ten
minutes. At 11:15 she came out and went to Second Avenue and took a taxi. She
got out at the Maidstone Building on 42nd Street. They were a little behind her
as she entered the building, and she popped into an elevator just as the door
was closing and they missed it. They couldn't find out from the elevator boy
what floor she got off at, and anyway, as you know and I know, that would be
bad tailing because she could have taken to the stairs and gone up or down.
There are four different rows of elevators to watch in that building, and they
were afraid to leave to go to a phone, but just now a cop passed by and they
flagged him and had him send in a report. They're sure she hasn't left the
building and they want help because the rush hour will be on at five
o'clock."
"Is that all?"
"That's the crop."
I made a face. "And Cramer, the louse, said there was
no news worth mentioning! He's going upstairs with Wolfe, to the roof. When you
hear the elevator go up, you go down to the office and stay there. Take all
calls. If anybody comes, tell Wolfe on the house phone. Write out a report of
what you've told me, and add to it that I've gone to the Maidstone Building,
and send it up to Wolfe by Fritz. If I call in and there's anyone in the
office, use code. Got it?"
"I've got it, but why not let me go –"
"No, my boy, this is a job for a master."
I left him there. Descending the stairs as fast as I could
without making a hubbub, I went to the kitchen and told Fritz:
"Go to the office and tell Wolfe the goose hasn't been
delivered and you've sent me to the Washington Market for it. Tell him I
protested and complain bitterly of the language I used. That is for the benefit
of Inspector Cramer. Fred has the low-down. Got it?"
"Yes," Fritz hissed.
I left by way of the front hall, grabbing my hat and coat.
Outside was no regiment, but there was a dick on the sidewalk not far from the
stoop, and another one across the street, and a taxi was parked fifty yards
east. Not to mention Cramer's police car, there nosing the hind end of my
roadster. I climbed in the roadster and started the engine, called to Cramer's
chauffeur, "Follow me to the scene of the crime!" and rolled. I
didn't go far, only around the corner and a couple of blocks on Tenth Avenue,
and then stopped at the curb, locked the ignition, got out, and stopped the
first taxi that came along. I waited a minute to see either the police car or
the taxi if they turned in from 35th Street, but apparently my invitation
hadn't been accepted, so I hopped in and told the driver 42nd and Lexington.
Entering the marble lobby of the fifty-story Maidstone
Building, I felt fairly sappy. I had come because Wolfe had instructed me that
if Fred copped any news about Carla Lovchen I was to follow it up, and the only
way I could follow it up was to go there. I felt sappy because, observing the
extent and complications of the lobby, with the four banks of elevators and the
twisting crowds, not to mention such things as stairways and possibly basement
exits, it seemed good for even money that she had moved out and on; and also,
even if she hadn't, I stood a fat chance of grabbing her and getting away with
her under the circumstances. Apparently the tails had already got their
reinforcements; I had easily spotted three of them on one quick survey. It was
obvious that the lobby was no place for me, even if she walked out of an
elevator right into my arms.
I had had one feeble idea on my way up in the taxi, and I
proceeded to use that up. The building directory board was in two sections, on
two sides of the lobby, one A to L and the other M to Z. I tackled the first
section and went over it thoroughly, a name at a time, hoping for a hint or a
hunch. I got neither, and moved across to the second section, and there,
nearing the end, I saw Wheeler & Driscoll 3259. It looked slim, but I went
to the information booth and told the guy, "I'm looking for a tenant and
don't know his firm. Nat Driscoll. Or maybe instead of Nat, Nathaniel."
He opened his book with weary hands and looked at it with
weary eyes and said in a weary voice, "Driscoll, Nathaniel, 3259,
thirty-second floor, elevators on the –"
I was gone. My heart had started to pump. I love the feeling
of a hunch.
I got out at the thirty-second and walked half a mile,
around three corners, to 3259. The lettering on the door said:
WHEELER & DRISCOLL
IMPORTERS AND BROKERS
I opened the door and went in, and right away, even in the
anteroom, found myself in the midst of prosperity, judging by the rugs and
furniture and the type of employee displayed. She was the kind who without any
visible effort conveys the impression that she got a job in an office only
because she was fed up with yachting and riding to hounds. Not wanting to
frighten anyone into scooting out of any other Wheeler & Driscoll doors
into the public corridor, I told her:
"My name is Goodwin and I would like to see Mr.
Nathaniel Driscoll."
"Have you an appointment?"
"Nope, I just dropped in. Have you heard about the
diamonds? The ones he thought had been stolen from him?"
"Oh, yes." Her lip twitched. "Yes,
indeed."
"Tell him my name is Goodwin and Miss Tormic sent me to
see him. I represent Miss Tormic."
"I'm sorry. Mr. Driscoll isn't in."
"Has he gone home?"
"He hasn't been here this afternoon."
In the first place, my hunch was still alive and kicking,
and in the second place, she wasn't a good liar, even with a common
conventional lie like that. I got out my memo pad and wrote on it:
If you don't want the cops busting in here in about two minutes
looking for your fencing teacher, let's have a little talk. And for God's sake,
don't let her show her face in the hall.
A.G.
I grinned at the employee to show there was no hard feeling,
and indeed there wasn't. "May I have an envelope?"
She got one and handed it to me, and I inserted the note and
licked the flap and sealed it. "Here," I said, "take this to Mr.
Driscoll, there's a good girl, and don't argue. Do I look like a man who would
come all this way to see him unless I knew he was here?"
Without saying a word, she pressed a button. A boy entered
from a door at the left, and she gave him the envelope and told him to deliver
it to Mr. Driscoll's desk. I said, "Deliver it to him," and
then, as the boy disappeared, I went to the entrance door and opened it and
stood there where I could see the hall in both directions. There were several
passers-by, but no sign of any frantic dash for freedom. I must have stood
there all of three minutes before I saw, about fifty feet down the hall, the
top of a head and then a pair of eyes protruding beyond the edge of a door
jamb. I called in a tone of authority:
"Hey, back in there!"
The head disappeared. It had not shown again when I heard
the employee's voice calling my name. I turned. The boy was there holding a
door open. He said, "This way, sir," and I followed him into an inner
corridor and past three doors to one at the end, which he opened.
The room I entered was at least five times as big as the
anteroom and six times as prosperous. I realized that in my one swift glance as
I started to where Nat Driscoll stood at the corner of a large and elegant
desk, telling him: "If you sneaked her out while I was coming in here, the
cops will have her inside of a minute."
With one hand gripping the edge of the desk hard enough to
bleach the knuckles, he said, "Unh." He looked as bewildered and
terrified as a corpulent uncle who had been inveigled into taking a ride on the
Ziparoo at Coney Island.
I looked around. "Where is she?"
He said, "Unh."
There were two doors besides the one I had entered by. I
trotted across and opened one, and saw only gleaming tiles and a washbowl and
sittery. I closed that and went and opened the other one, and looked into a
small room with filing cabinets, a bookcase, and a de luxe secretary's desk.
The secretary sat there staring at me with big round blue eyes, and a more
glittering stare was bestowed on me from a chair in a corner occupied by Carla
Lovchen.
She didn't say anything, just goggled at me. My elbow was
grabbed from behind, and I was agreeably surprised to find that Nat Driscoll
could grip like that.
I pulled away, and we were both inside the small room, and I
shut the door.
I demanded, "What did you figure on doing? Keeping her
here till after the funeral?"
Carla asked in a low tense voice, without altering her
stare, "Where's Neya?"
"She's all right. For a while anyhow. You were tailed
to this building –"
"Tailed?"
"Shadowed. Followed by policemen. There are a dozen of
them downstairs now, covering all the elevators and exits."
Driscoll dropped onto a chair and groaned. The blue-eyed
secretary inquired in a cool business-like tone:
"Are you Archie Goodwin of Nero Wolfe's office?"
"I am. Pleased to meet you." I met Carla's stare.
"Did you kill Rudolph Faber?"
"No." A shiver ran over her, and she controlled it
and sat rigid again.
Driscoll mumbled at me, "You mean Ludlow. Percy
Ludlow."
"Do I? I don't." I fired at the secretary,
"What time did Driscoll get here this morning?"
"Ask him," she said icily.
"I'm asking you. Let me tell you folks something. I may
not be your best and dearest friend, but I'm quite a pal compared to the guys
downstairs I mentioned. Otherwise I would have brought them up here. That can
be done at any moment. What time did Driscoll get here this morning?"
"About half past eleven."
"That was his first appearance here today?"
"Yes."
"What time did he leave?"
"He didn't leave at all. He had some lunch brought in
on account of Miss Lovchen."
"She got here at 11:20."
"Yes." The secretary was getting no warmer.
"How did you know that? How did you know she was here?"
"Intuition. I'm an intuitive genius." I shifted to
Driscoll. "So you didn't kill Faber, huh?"
He stammered, "You mean … you must mean Ludlow –"
"I mean Rudolph Faber. A little before noon today he
was found in the apartment occupied by Neya Tormic and Carla Lovchen, lying on
the floor dead. Stabbed. Miss Tormic and I went there looking for Miss Lovchen,
and found him."
The secretary looked impressed. Driscoll's eyes widened and
his mouth stood open. I snapped at Carla:
"He was there when you went there. Either alive or
dead, or alive and then dead."
"I didn't – I wasn't there –"
"Can it. What do you think this is, hide and seek? They
were tailing you. You went in there at 11:05 and came out again at 11:15. Faber
was there."
She shivered again. "I didn't kill him."
"Was he there?"
She shook her head and took a deep jerky breath. "I'm
not … going to say anything. I am going away, away from America." She
clasped her hands at me. "Pliz you must help me! Mr. Driscoll would help
me! Oh you must, you must –"
Driscoll demanded in an improved voice, "You say Faber
was there in her apartment stabbed to death?"
"Yes."
"And she had just been there?"
"She left there about thirty minutes before the body
was found."
"Good God." He stared at her. The secretary was
staring at her too.
I said briskly, "She says she didn't do it. I don't
know. The immediate point is that Nero Wolfe wants to see her before the cops
get hold of her. What were you going to do, help her get away?"
Driscoll nodded. Then he shook his head. "I don't know.
Good God – she didn't tell me about Faber. She said …" He flung out his
hands. "Damn it, she appealed to me! She swore she had nothing to do with
– Ludlow – but she didn't need to! She has been damn fine with me down there – that
fencing – greatest pleasure I ever had in my life – she has been damn fine and
understanding! She is a very fine young woman! I would be proud to have her for
a sister and I've told her so! Or daughter! Daughter would be better! She came
here and appealed to me to help her get away from trouble, and by God I was
doing it, and I didn't consult any lawyer either! And by God I'll still do it!
Do you realize that she appealed to me? I don't care if her apartment was as
full of dead bodies as the morgue, that young woman is no damn murderer!"
"I understand," said the secretary with ice still
in her voice box, "that it is perfectly legal to help anyone go anywhere
they want to, provided they have not committed a crime."
"I don't give a damn," Driscoll declared,
"whether it's legal or not! To hell with legal!"
"Okay." I pushed a palm at him. "Don't yell
so loud. The point –"
"I want you to understand –"
"Pipe down! I understand everything. You're a hero.
Skip it. Here's the way it stands. You can't go ahead and send her on a world
cruise, because to begin with you don't stand a chance of getting her out of
here and away, and to end with I won't let you. Nero Wolfe wants to see her.
Whatever Nero Wolfe wants he gets or he has a tantrum and I get fired. I have
no idea whether she's a very fine young woman or a murderer or what, but I do
know that the next thing on her program is a talk with Nero Wolfe, and I'm in
charge of the program."
"I suppose," said the secretary crushingly,
"that you stand a chance of getting her out of here."
"Chance is right," I agreed grimly. "May I
use your phone?"
She pushed it across the desk and I asked the anteroom
employee to get me a number. In a moment I had the connection.
"Hello, Hotel Alexander? Let me talk to Ernie Flint.
The house detective."
In two minutes I had him.
"Hello, Ernie? Archie Goodwin. That's right. How's
about things? Fine, thanks, everything rosy, I'm studying to be a detective.
Not on your life. Say, listen, I'm pulling a stunt and I want you to do me a
favor. Send a bellboy in uniform over to the Maidstone Building, Room 3259.
Wait, get this. A small one, about five foot three, and not a fat one. With a
cap on, don't forget the cap. With a dark complexion if you've got one like
that. Yep, dark hair and eyes. Good. Have him bring a parcel with him
containing all his own clothes, everything, including hat. Right. Oh, not long.
He can be back there within an hour, only you'll have to give him another
uniform. Oh, no. Just a stunt I'm pulling. I'm playing a trick on a feller.
I'll describe it when I see you. Make it snappy, will you, Ernie?"
I rang off, took the expense roll from my pocket, peeled off
a ten, and tendered it to the secretary. "Here, run down to the nearest
store and get a pair of black low-heeled oxfords that will fit her. Like what a
bellboy might wear. Step on it."
She looked critically at Carla's feet. "Five?"
Carla nodded. Driscoll told the secretary:
"Give him back that money." He got out his wallet
and produced a twenty-dollar bill. "Here. Get a good pair."
She took it, handed me mine, and went. She may have been
chilly, but she wasn't a goof.
Carla said, "I won't go."
"Oh." I looked at her. "You won't?"
"No."
"Would you rather go to police headquarters and
entertain the homicide squad?"
"I won't – I want to go away. I must go away.
Mr. Driscoll said he would help me."
"Yeah, well, he wasn't quick enough on his feet. Even
after all his fencing lessons. Anyway, you would have been nabbed downstairs.
Do you realize at all the kind of spot you're inhabiting right now?"
"I realize –" She stopped to make her voice work.
"I'm in a terrible fix. Oh – terrible! You don't know how terrible!"
"Wrong again. I do know. Would I be staging a damn fool
stunt like this to get you to Nero Wolfe if I didn't?"
"It won't do any good to take me to Nero Wolfe. I won't
talk to him. I won't talk to anybody."
Driscoll went over and stood in front of her. "Look
here, Miss Lovchen," he said, "I don't think that's a sensible
attitude. If you don't want to talk to the police, I can understand that. You
may have a reason that's absolutely commendable. But sooner or later you'll
have to talk to somebody, and if you're not careful it will be a lawyer, and
then you are up against it. From what I have heard of this Nero Wolfe …"
He was still jabbering away when the phone announced that
the bellboy was in the anteroom.
I shooed Driscoll and Carla into Driscoll's room and had the
bellboy sent in to me. He looked about right, maybe an inch taller than her,
but not too skinny or too husky. He was grinning because he could see it was a
good joke. I opened the parcel for him while he took his uniform off, and
handed him a couple of dollars and told him:
"Put your clothes on and sit here. It's a nice view
from the window. Maybe twenty minutes. A blue-eyed girl will come and tell you
when to go. Return to the hotel and they'll give you another uniform to work
in. That two bucks was just for your trouble. Here's a finif if its effect will
be to keep your trap entirely closed regarding the fun we're having.
Okay?"
He said it was, and sounded believable. I gave him the five-spot,
gathered up the uniform and cap and wrapping paper, and went to the other room,
shutting him in.
Carla, on the edge of the chair, and the secretary, kneeling
on the rug in front of her, were busy getting her shoes changed, while
Driscoll, with his lips screwed up and his hands in his pockets, gazed down at
the operation. Carla stood up and stamped, and said they were all right. I
handed the uniform to her and said go ahead but she would have to take off her
clothes or it would look bunchy, and told Driscoll:
"Turn your back."
He blushed rosy. "I … I can go in there –"
"I forgot you're modest. Suit yourself. Backturning
will do me."
He went and looked through a window, and I, facing the same
way, regarded him suspiciously. It was getting dark outdoors and the lights
were on in the room, and under those circumstances a windowpane is a fairly
good mirror. I admit I may have been doing him an injustice. I spread the
wrapping paper out on his desk and, when the secretary handed me Carla's
clothes, including coat and hat, made a bundle and got it tied up.
The secretary said, "Look, it's tight around under the
arms."
I looked. "Naturally. What would you expect? I think
it'll do. Walk to the door and back." Carla walked. I frowned. "The
hips are bad. I mean they're good, but you understand me. Put the cap on … No,
you'll have to stuff the hair under better than that. There by the left ear.
That's it. I believe we'll make it. What do you think?"
The secretary said coldly, "I hope so. It's your
idea."
Driscoll crabbed, "It's no good. I'd know her across
the street."
"Oh," I said sarcastically, "we wouldn't try
to fool you. There's hundreds of people going and coming in that lobby
and why should they be interested in a bellboy? Anyway, we'll take a shot at
it." I got the parcel under my arm and confronted Carla. "Now. We
have nothing to fear on this floor. We'll go down in the same elevator. You'll
leave the elevator before me at the main floor. Walk straight to the Lexington
Avenue entrance and on out, and don't look behind or around. I'll be following
you all right. Turn right and keep going on across 43rd Street. Between 43rd
and 42nd there'll be taxis at the curb. Hop into one and tell the driver to
take you to 37th Street and Tenth Avenue –"
The secretary put in an oar: "You'll be with her
–"
"I'll be behind her in another taxi. There's a chance
that one of those birds in the lobby knows me and will be curious enough to
follow me out, in which case I don't want to be seen going for a ride with a
bellboy, especially a bellboy with hips. 37th Street and Tenth Avenue. Got
that?"
Carla nodded.
"Okay. Stay there in the taxi till I come. I'll
probably be right behind you, but you stay there. If you try a trick, you're
done. Every cop in New York is looking for you. Understand?"
"Yes, but I want – I must –"
"What you want is a different matter entirely, like the
guy that fell out of the airplane. Will you go to that corner and stay there in
the taxi?"
"Yes."
"Right. Good-bye, folks. In ten minutes, not sooner,
send the bellboy home. I'll take you on with the йpйe some day, Driscoll."
He looked as if he was about ready to cry as he shook hands
with her. The secretary looked as arctic as ever, but I noticed her voice was a
little husky as she wished Carla good luck.
We departed. As she went along the corridor ahead of me on
the way to the elevator, she looked kind of preposterous, but of course I saw
not only what I saw but also what I knew. The other passengers in the elevator
gave her a glance or two, but nothing alarming. At the main floor she preceded
me out and marched through the lobby, dodging as necessary in the crowd, and it
began to look like everything was jake when a call came from my right:
"Hey, Goodwin! Archie!"
It was Sergeant Purley Stebbins
coming at me. The danger was Carla, but for once she acted as if she had some
brains. She certainly heard my name called, but she didn't scream or stop and
turn around or break into a run. She just kept on going to the entrance. I saw
that out of the corner of my eye as I greeted Purley with a hearty grin.
"Well, well, well!"
"It may be," he growled. "What are you doing
here?"
I looked around stealthily to guard against eavesdroppers,
put my mouth within two inches of his big red ear, and whispered into it,
"None of your goddam business."
He grunted, "It's quite a coincidence."
"What is?"
"Your being here in this building."
I tapped him on the chest. "Now that's funny."
"What's funny?"
"Your saying it's quite a coincidence. It's funny
because that's exactly what I was going to say. Mind if I say it? It's quite a
coincidence."
"Go to hell."
"Same to you and many of them. May I ask, what are you
doing in this building?" I glanced around. "You and all your
playmates."
"Go to hell."
"How's the roads?"
"Whatta you got in the bundle?"
"Revolvers, daggers, narcotics, smuggled jewels, and a
bottle of blood. Want to look at it?"
"Go to hell."
I shrugged politely, told him I'd meet him at the corner of
Fire and Brimstone, and left him.
That was okay. But the danger was, with Carla having such a
fixed idea about going away from America, that she might be keeping her promise
and she might not. Even so, I didn't jump into a taxi at the entrance. I hoofed
it to the corner and popped into Bigger's drugstore and stood there. Since it
had another exit on 43rd, anyone Purley sent on my tail would either have to
pop in after me or make it to the turn in a hurry where he could see both
doors. No one did that. I left by 43rd, crossed the street and entered Grand
Central the back way, did another maneuver in the smoking room to make doubly
sure, went out to Madison Avenue, jumped into a taxi, and sat on the edge of
the seat with my fingers crossed and sweat on my brow until we got to the
rendezvous and I saw she was there.
I dismissed my taxi, went to hers and opened the door and
beckoned her out, paid the driver and sent him off, and waited until he had
rounded the corner out of sight before I steered her down the sidewalk to where
I had parked the roadster. She wasn't having anything to say. I told her to
climb in and handed her the bundle.
It was only a matter of three minutes across to Ninth, down
to 34th, and west to the middle of the block. The day was gone and I stopped at
a distance from a street light, shut off the engine, and told her:
"There's an assortment of cops in front of Wolfe's
house, so we're going in the back way. Follow me and don't say anything after
we get inside the house. Just stay behind me."
"I must know …" Her voice quavered and she
stopped. In a moment she went on, "I must know one thing. Is Neya
there?"
"I don't know. She wasn't when I left."
"Where was she?"
"Police headquarters. Not under arrest, they were
questioning her and she wasn't answering. They may have brought her to Wolfe's
house or they may not. I don't know. Inspector Cramer is there with
Wolfe."
"But you said I would only have to see Mr. Wolfe
–"
"I said Wolfe wants to talk with you first. Come
on."
I got out and went around to her side and opened the door.
She had her teeth sunk into her lip. She sat that way a minute, then climbed
out and followed me. I led her down the sidewalk to the entrance to the
passageway between a warehouse building and a garage, and along the dark
passage until we came to the door in the board fence. It was the door Zorka had
used after her trip down the fire escape, only from the inside she had only
needed to turn the knob of the spring lock, whereas I had to use my key. I
guided her across the court and up the steps to the little porch, and used
another key, and entered the kitchen ahead of her. No one was in there but
Fritz.
He stared at me. "Now, Archie, you ought to tap –"
"Okay. I forgot. No cause for alarm. Keep Miss Lovchen
here on the quiet for about four minutes till I get back."
He stared again, at her. "Miss Lovchen?"
"Right. You'd better hide her in the pantry."
I put the parcel on a chair, went out the way I had come,
through the door in the fence and along the passage to 34th Street, got in the
roadster and drove around two corners into 35th Street, and rolled to the curb
in front of the house. The police car there had been joined by another one, and
the taxi was still parked down a ways, and as I crossed the sidewalk to the
stoop I saw the dick there with his foot on the running board, chinning with
Cramer's chauffeur. I was in too much of a hurry to toss them anything, because
I had one more lap to go. I let myself in, shed my coat and hat, and went to
the office.
"Oh," I said, "hello."
There was the explanation of the second police car. Over in
a corner was a dick looking bored, and on one of the yellow leather chairs sat
Neya Tormic, not looking bored. The way her eyes darted at me, I had to control
an impulse to side-step to get out of the line of fire.
The dart was a question and I knew what it was, but I
ignored it and spoke to Fred Durkin, who was seated at my desk:
"Get out of my chair, you big bum, and come out here
and help me a minute."
He arose and lumbered across, and I steered him into the
hall and shut the office door.
"Are Wolfe and Cramer upstairs?"
"Yes."
"Anyone in the front room?"
"No."
"Stand here and hold this doorknob, in case that dick
should get a sudden notion to stretch his legs."
He got his paw on it, and I went to the kitchen. Fritz put
down a pan he was stirring and came close to me and whispered, "In the
pantry." I pushed the swinging door and there she was, on a chair he had
put there for her, with the parcel at her feet. I got the parcel and told her
to follow me and keep quiet. In the hall Fred was hanging onto the doorknob and
I winked at him as we passed. Up one flight of stairs, down the hall six paces,
through a door – and I closed it behind us, turned on the light, put the parcel
on a table, and shut the window curtains.
"Hvala Bogu," I said. "This is Mr.
Wolfe's room. Don't leave it. If you open a window bells ring all over the
house. It's 5:35 and he will be here shortly after six. You might as well put
your own clothes on. That door there is a bathroom. Okay?"
She just looked at me, and I saw she was concentrating so
hard on keeping a stiff jaw that she couldn't even nod her head, so I went on
out. At the head of the stairs I called down, "All right, Fred, go back in
and try another chair," and then proceeded to the next flight up. Two of
them took me to the narrow door at the top which opened into the plant rooms. I
had to go all the way through to the potting room to find Wolfe. He was at the
bench with Theodore, inspecting some recent sprouts with a magnifying glass,
and Cramer was on a stool with his back propped against the wall, chewing on a
cigar.
I hoisted myself onto the free end of the bench and sat
swinging my legs. In a few minutes Wolfe came to a coma, shook his head
disapprovingly at something he saw through the glass, sighed, and muttered at
me, "Did you get the goose?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good."
He got busy with the glass again. I swung my legs. After a
while the phone rang. Theodore went to his desk to answer it and told Cramer it
was for him. The inspector went and grunted into it for three or four minutes,
then hung up and returned to the stool. I knew he was glaring at me, but I was
interested in the tips of my number nines swinging back and forth.
He said, and I knew what it must be costing him to restrain
himself like that, "You, Goodwin." There was even a suggestion of a
tremble in his voice. "When did they move the Washington Market to the
Maidstone Building?"
"Why," I said in a friendly tone, "that must
have been Sergeant Stebbins on the phone! How's that for deduction?"
"Fine." Cramer threw his cigar at the trash
basket, missed, went and picked it up and dropped it in, and returned to the
stool. "Don't think I'm going to blow up, because I'm not. I'm beyond
that. Ten minutes after you left I told Wolfe that Carla Lovchen was trailed to
the Maidstone Building this morning and was holed up there, but that was after
you left as I say. All I'm going to do is ask a simple question. Why did you go
to the Maidstone Building?"
I grinned at him. "Here's the first answer that occurs
to me. There was a phone call here at noon from a certain party, and it was
traced to a public phone at that building. All right?"
"No."
I shrugged. "Get Mr. Wolfe to tell you one."
Wolfe, going on with his work, paid no attention. Cramer
said, "I still am not going to blow up. I have planted myself here on two
assumptions. The first is that Wolfe has got something on this case that I
stand damn little chance of getting unless and until the break comes and he
loosens up. The second is, inasmuch as I have never yet found him picking up
the pieces for a murderer, that he's not doing that now. If my first assumption
is wrong, I'm just out of luck. If my second one is, you are. Both of you.
That's all. Now you can take the Maidstone Building and stick it up your
chimney. But in case you don't already know it, Carla Lovchen went in that
place on 38th Street at eleven o'clock this morning and came out again in ten
minutes. I want her, and I want her plenty. I'm telling you. So if it turns out
that she has actually pulled a getaway and you helped her do it …"
"The man's mad," I declared.
"Shut up. That's all."
I continued to admire my feet.
At five minutes to six Wolfe put the magnifying glass away
in the drawer, gave Theodore a few instructions regarding the sprouts, and
announced that it was time to descend. Never having felt full confidence in the
capacity of the elevator as posted on its wall, I left it to him and took to
the stairs, and Cramer joined me. Two flights down we saw that the elevator had
stopped there and Wolfe was emerging. We halted as he approached us.
"I'll go to my room and clean up a little. Archie, will
you come with me? We'll be with you in the office shortly, Mr. Cramer. Miss
Tormic is there, you know."
Cramer hesitated, looked at him suspiciously, and then
tramped to the stairs and started down. We waited till we heard the office door
close behind him and then went to the door of Wolfe's room and entered. Carla
was in a straight-backed chair by the wall, her shoulders hunched over, her
hands clenched in her lap, her chin down; but she was wearing her own clothes.
The bellboy's outfit, neatly folded, was on the table.
Wolfe stopped in front of her and said, "How do you do,
Miss Lovchen."
She looked up at him for an instant, then let her head fall
again and made no reply.
Wolfe said, "I have no time now because I am expected
downstairs. Mr. Goodwin told me he brought a goose. He did. Whether you killed
Mr. Ludlow and Mr. Faber or not, you are pure imbecile. Most people are, under
great stress, but that merely gives you company. I don't know how or where Mr.
Goodwin found you, but you must have been making an awful fool of yourself or
he wouldn't have found you at all. Even though he is fairly good at finding
things. If you think I am severe, it is because I have no sympathy to waste on
people who come and ask my help and tell me nothing but lies. For the present
you will stay in this room. I'll come back pretty soon and ask you some
questions."
Carla raised her head again, moved it once from side to
side, and said, "I won't answer any questions. I've decided that. I won't
say anything. Not to you or anybody."
"Oh. You won't?"
"No. Nothing. No matter what happens. If I don't say
anything, what can anybody do? What can they prove if I don't say anything?
Maybe you think I haven't enough will power for it, but I have."
"You might have, for a while. Try it, by all means. It
would be an improvement on your conduct so far." Wolfe turned to go.
"I'll be back to see you, anyway, or send for you. Come, Archie."
With his hand on the knob he asked, "Are you hungry?
Could you eat something?"
"No, thank you."
We went.
The trio in the office was now four; with us, six. The dick
was still bored. Fred, the bum, had reoccupied my chair against my expressed
orders, but as I entered he moved to another one. Cramer stood over by the big
globe, twirling it. Neya Tormic's eyes fastened on Wolfe as he appeared in the
door and followed him as he crossed to his desk, sat, and reached for the
button. I realized that he was in about as bad a humor as I could remember,
because he issued no invitation for anyone to have beer. Neya Tormic said, with
her eyes boring holes through him:
"I want to see you alone. To ask you something."
Wolfe nodded. "I know what you want. That will have to
wait. You didn't get to finish your errand. Isn't that it?"
"I –" She stopped and wet her lips. "You
promised."
"No, Miss Tormic, I didn't. I know you've had a hard
afternoon, but surely you remember why you and Mrs. Goodwin were looking for
Miss Lovchen. And you didn't find her."
"She's gone."
"How do you know that?"
"This – Inspector Cramer just told me they can't find
her."
"Where has she gone to?"
"I don't know."
Wolfe uncapped a bottle of beer and poured.
"Anyway," he declared, "that will have to wait. Confound it,
everything will have to wait!" He drank until the glass was empty.
"Mr. Cramer, you have been hanging around here since two o'clock. You have
shown admirable patience and restraint – for instance, regarding Archie's
presence at the Maidstone Building – and of course I know why. You want
something and you think you can get it here and nowhere else. I tell you
frankly, it isn't here. I don't suppose you contemplate spending the night in
my house …"
I didn't hear the rest of the build-up for sending the
inspector out into the night, because the doorbell rang and I went to answer
it. Usually I performed that service anyway from six to eight, when Fritz was
busy getting dinner, and on this occasion, considering the goose I had left in
Wolfe's room, I had a special interest in the possibility of invading hordes.
But what I found on the stoop wasn't a horde at all, but merely a youth in a
snappy uniform with a little flat package he wanted to deliver to Nero Wolfe. I
put out a hand for it, but he said he had instructions to put it into the hands
of Nero Wolfe and no one else's. So I took him to the office. He marched across
to the desk like a West Point cadet ready for his commission, stood with his
heels together and asked politely:
"Mr. Nero Wolfe?"
"Yes, sir."
"From Seven Seas Radio. Sign here, please. The bill,
sir. Twenty-six dollars, please."
Wolfe, reaching for his pen, told me to fork over the dough.
I did so. The youth uttered thanks, stowed away the cash and the receipt, and
preceded me to the hall. I let him out and put the chain on, and went back in.
Wolfe was undoing the package, and Cramer was standing
across from him, right against the desk, looking down at it. It certainly was
an exhibition of bad manners. Wolfe said:
"You make me nervous, Mr. Cramer. Sit down."
"I'm all right."
"But I'm not. Take a chair."
Cramer grunted, backed into the chair I had ready and
lowered himself. Wolfe got the wrapping paper opened up and helped himself to
an exclusive look at what was inside. Then he gave a little grunt, folded the
paper over it again, and handed it to me.
"Put it in the safe, Archie."
I did so, closed the door and spun the knob, and returned to
my chair.
Wolfe heaved a deep sigh and then muttered irritably,
"That was the break we were waiting for, Mr. Cramer."
The inspector growled, "The break?"
Wolfe nodded. "A minute ago I said that what you want
wasn't here. It is now."
Cramer, slowly and carefully as
if he wanted to be sure of not sitting on an egg, got more comfortable in his
chair, resting his back, and lifted a forefinger to rub the side of his nose.
Wolfe also was leaning back. His eyes were closed, and his lips began to work
in and out. In the silence, the dick in the corner suddenly coughed and I
glared at him.
"Hell," Cramer said mildly, "I'm in no
hurry."
Apparently everyone took him at his word, for the silence
continued for another three minutes, and then Wolfe said without opening his
eyes:
"Of your two assumptions, Mr. Cramer, the first at
least is correct. I doubt if you could get what I've got. Or, considering the
attitude of your official superiors, if you did get it I doubt if you'd be able
to use it."
"You'll get no argument from me on that," the
inspector asserted. "What have I been saying? And while I know you can
handle your affairs without the help of any gratitude from me, still and all
–"
"I know. You're being tactful and adroit. You're
dripping honey. Pfui. I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll give you what you want,
on the condition that you agree without reservation to let me do it my way,
without interference or protest."
"Well." Cramer regarded him with narrowed eyes, but
it was one-sided, because Wolfe's eyes were still shut. "That's sort of
vague. That you'll give me what I want. Who decides what I want?"
"Nonsense. I'm not quibbling. You want the identity of
the murderer and the motive. I'll give you those."
"Any evidence?"
"Enough to satisfy you. And some of it I don't think
you'll ever get unless you get it here and soon."
"Is it that thing in the safe?"
"Oh, no, you could get that yourself in about
twenty-four hours. It took me twenty-five. I'll have to pry off a lid to get
the evidence I'm speaking of."
Cramer eyed him a moment longer and said, "Shoot."
"Without reservation, no interference or protest from
you."
"Right. Shoot."
Wolfe opened his eyes at me. "Archie, get Mr. Barrett
on the phone."
"Donny or Dad?"
"Mr. Barrett Senior."
Neya Tormic blurted, "You mustn't –"
As I got at the phone Wolfe shushed her, and he had to keep
on shushing her while I fiddled around with three different numbers before I
finally reached the desired party at the Thistle Club. She subsided when Wolfe
got on the phone:
"Mr. Barrett? This is Nero Wolfe. I'm calling to
fulfill a promise. I told you that if I should find it necessary to interfere
with your business I'd let you know in advance. I'm afraid I'm not giving you
much notice; I'm going ahead now. No, please, please, that won't help matters
any. At my office. Yes. Yes, I'll consent to that. No! If your son is there
with you, you'd better bring him along. Yes. We'll be expecting you within
fifteen minutes."
He pushed the phone away and got to his feet, and moved in
the direction of the door.
Neya Tormic jumped up and grabbed at him. She got his
sleeve. "Where – I'll go with you –"
"No, Miss Tormic. I'll be back in a moment.
Archie!"
I rose and started over, but before I got there she let him
go, and he went on out. I had no idea what her status was, or her intentions
either, so I ambled to the door and stood there with my back against it. She
didn't go back and sit down, but stood pat, with her eyes leveled at me, or
maybe at the door since I don't like to flatter myself. We had held the tableau
perhaps three minutes, not more than four, when I felt the door pressing
against me and stood aside to let Wolfe re-enter. He halted to hand me an
envelope, sealed, with For Neya Tormic on it in his writing, and then
went on to his desk.
He looked at Cramer and indicated with a thumb the dick in
the corner. "What is that man's name?"
"That? Charlie Heath."
"Tell him to obey the instructions I give him."
Cramer twisted his neck. "Here, Heath. Follow
orders."
"Thank you." Wolfe regarded the dick, approaching.
"Have you a car, Mr. Heath?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good. Take that envelope from Mr. Goodwin and put it
in your pocket. No, your inside pocket. Take Miss Tormic in your car and drive
–"
Neya was at him: "No! I don't – I'm not going –"
"That will do," Wolfe snapped. "You are
going. I do this my way. Have you any cash with you?"
"But I won't –"
"You will! Confound it, how much cash have you?"
"I … have a little."
"How much?"
"A few dollars."
"Archie, give Miss Tormic a hundred dollars."
I produced the expense roll and peeled it off, making the
roll look pretty sick, and handed it to her and she took it.
Wolfe said to the dick, "Drive to the corner of Fifth
Avenue and 35th Street, let Miss Tormic out, give her the envelope, leave her
there, and return straight here immediately. You are not to loiter to see what
she does or which way she goes. Nor are you to communicate in any way with any
other person, either going or returning."
I said grimly, "Send Fred along or let me go."
"Will that be necessary, Mr. Cramer?"
"No. I'm not a complete damn fool. Follow instructions,
Heath."
"Yes, sir. I take her to Fifth, drop her, give her the
envelope, and come straight back."
Wolfe nodded. "Will you do that?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good." He turned. "Au revoir, Miss
Tormic."
"Ah," she said. Her black eyes were piercing him.
"You think so?"
"Well … a conjecture. It wouldn't surprise me
any."
"You … you fat fool!"
"Yes, I'm fat. And of course we're all fools. I'm sorry
you won't be here to see the end of this. A silly little victory, but it's
mine."
"Victory!"
"Yes."
Her lip curled. She turned and started off. I got to the
door and opened it, but before she passed through she halted to fling back at
him, "Teega mee bornie roosa," or at least that was what it
sounded like. Then she went on, don't-touch-me all over, with the dick at her
heels. I let them out, followed them into the November night air, and stood on
the stoop to overlook the departure. As well as I could see in the dim light,
the dick didn't pass any signal to any colleague, and when they rolled off in
the police car they certainly weren't followed.
I stayed on the stoop long enough to be absolutely sure of
that, knowing as I did the lengths a cop will sometimes go to on account of his
passion for law and order, and was about to check it off and go back in when a
big black town car rolled to the curb there below me. A chauffeur jumped out
and opened the door, and touched his cap when one of the two men who emerged
said something to him. They started up the steps, and I recrossed the threshold
and turned to welcome two generations of Barretts. I asked them to wait there a
minute and went to the office and told Wolfe:
"Father and son."
"Bring them in."
I did that. John P., who hadn't changed his clothes, took
the chair Neya had occupied. His face was all tightened up, and the glance that
he shot first at Cramer and then at Wolfe was not what I would call
conciliatory. I moved up another chair for Donald. He looked so fierce and
truculent that I had a notion to go get him a hunk of raw meat. Nobody had
seemed to have any inclination to shake hands like gentlemen.
Wolfe said, "Fred, wait in front."
Fred went.
"Archie, take your notebook."
I took it.
John P. asked, "Are you Police Inspector Cramer?"
"Yes, sir," Cramer told him. "Of the Homicide
Bureau."
John P. said to Wolfe, "That's ridiculous. This is a
confidential business matter. And telling your man to take his notebook."
Wolfe leaned back and pressed his five right finger tips
against his five left ones. "No," he said, "I wouldn't call it
ridiculous. Mr. Cramer's presence is surely appropriate, since one of the
things you'll want to do is to try to arrange it so that your son will escape
an indictment for first-degree murder."
Cramer's head jerked around. Donald gawked, and some of the
color leaving his face made him look a little less fierce. John P. betrayed no
sign whatever of having heard anything more provocative than a remark about the
weather. But he clipped off words and lunged with them:
"That's worse than ridiculous. And more dangerous.
That's actionable."
"So it is." Wolfe's tone sharpened. "I'm
coming right out with it, Mr. Barrett. My dinner's in an hour, and I don't want
to waste time flopping around in a mire of inanities. I hold the cards and I
don't have to finesse. Your deal with the Donevitch gang is done for. Accept
that. Swallow it. I want to go on from that –"
"I'd like to see you alone." John P. stood up.
"Get them out of here or take me –"
"No. Sit down."
"Sit down for what? You say the deal's done for.
Whether it is or isn't, I'm not talking on that basis. There's nothing to talk
about. Come, Donald."
He started off. Wolfe's words hit him in the back:
"Within an hour a warrant will issue charging your son
with murder! It will be too late to talk to me then!"
Donald was up and following his leader. But his leader
suddenly wheeled, strode back to confront Cramer, and demanded:
"You're a responsible police officer. This blackmailing
threat is made in your presence. Do you know who I am? … Well?"
That was a fizzle, in spite of the fact that Cramer hadn't
the faintest idea of what was going on. I wouldn't have given an unconditioned
guarantee on his brains, but there was nothing wrong with his guts.
"Yeah, I know who you are," he said calmly.
"Sit down and give him rope. He owns this house and about a million
dollars' worth of orchids. It's a good thing you've got me here as a witness in
case you try for damages."
Wolfe snorted irritably. "Get out if you want to and
take the consequences. You're acting like a schoolgirl in a pet. Can't you see
I've got something to say and the best of your alternatives is to sit down and
listen to it? Do you take me for a maudlin blatherskite?"
Donald blurted, "He's a goddam bluffer –"
A look from his father cut him off, and a jerk of his
father's head ordered him back to his chair. Donald sat down. John P. did the
same and told Wolfe curtly:
"Say it."
"That's better." Wolfe got his finger tips
together again. "I'll make it as brief as I can since you already know it
and all Mr. Cramer needs at present is the outline." He gave the inspector
his eyes. "You might as well have the name of the murderer to begin with.
I promised you that. The Princess Vladanka Donevitch."
Cramer grunted. "I don't know her."
"Yes you do. We'll get to that. Her home is in Zagreb,
Croatia – Yugoslavia. She is the wife of young Prince Stefan. They like the
Nazis. Most Croats don't. The Donevitch family agree with other Croats in their
hatred of Belgrade. Belgrade is trying to make up its mind whether to be
dominated by Germany, Italy, France, or England. Germany, Italy, France, and
England are doing all they can to hasten the process. The attitude of the
Croats is Germany's biggest obstacle. She is trying to buy them, with the
Donevitch gang as selling agents. The other countries are competing –"
Cramer growled, "I'm a New York cop."
"I know, and most of the money in the world is in New
York, or controlled from here. That's why people come here from all directions
with things like this." Wolfe reached in to his breast pocket, pulled out
a paper and extended it to Cramer. "Keep that; it's evidence. You can't
read it. It is signed by Prince Stefan Donevitch and it empowers the princess,
his wife, to conclude certain transactions in his name –"
John P.'s lips twitched. "Where did you get that?"
"That doesn't matter, Mr. Barrett. Not now." Wolfe
went on to Cramer, "Specifically, transactions regarding concessions of
Bosnian forests and the transfer of credits held by a firm of international
bankers, Barrett & De Russy. The princess came to New York incognito, under
an alias, and started negotiations. Because secrecy was essential on account of
American restrictions regarding the export of capital in the form of loans, and
I suspect other skullduggery besides the violation of those restrictions, she
even went to the trouble of pretending to be an immigrant and getting a job in
a fencing school. I don't suppose many persons were aware of her true identity,
but certainly three were: Mr. Barrett here and his son, and a man named Rudolph
Faber who was assisting in the negotiations as a secret agent of the Nazi
government. You see, Barrett & De Russy have financial relations with the
Nazis,"
Donald began explosively, "We merely act –" but a
glance from his father shut him up again.
Wolfe nodded. "I know. Money and morals don't speak …
But a British agent named Ludlow got onto it. He not only got onto the princess
and what she was up to, he even threatened – I don't know how, but possibly by
informing the American government – to ruin the deal. And that just at the
moment when all details had been decided and it was ready for consummation. So
she killed Ludlow. I want to make it plain that the princess did that herself.
A friend, another young woman, had come from Zagreb with her, also under an
alias, but she had no part in the murder. You understand that, Mr.
Cramer?"
Cramer muttered, "Go on."
"There isn't a lot to go on with. Rudolph Faber knew
what the princess had done and he blackmailed her. Up to last evening he had
been merely a negotiator, a bidder; that made him boss. He imposed terms on
her, and I imagine they weren't generous; he didn't strike me as a generous
man. He forced her to tell where that paper was and he tried to get it. The
paper was of course vital. I presume, Mr. Barrett, it was to be attached to the
agreement you were drawing up, to validate it?"
John P. didn't answer.
Wolfe shrugged. "So she killed Faber. She made an
appointment to meet him in her own apartment and stabbed him. God only knows
what she thought she was going to do next. There is no way of telling what goes
on in that kind of a head. She seems to be as heedless and harebrained as a
lunatic. She may have counted on the taciturnity of governments and
international financiers regarding their privy intrigues, but what the devil
did she take me for, a goat on a chain? A creature like that is outside the
realm of calculation. I wouldn't have been surprised if she had tried to stab
me. Were you able to deal with her on a rational basis, Mr. Barrett?"
John P. was regarding him steadily. "I'm waiting for
you to say something."
"That's about all there is."
"Bah. You've made a lot of loose accusations, with
nothing to support them."
"There's that paper."
"You stole it."
"I didn't, but what if I did? There it is, for
evidence."
"Damn flimsy evidence for two murders."
"I know." Wolfe wiggled a finger at him. "See
here, Mr. Barrett, you're making a blunder. I made a serious threat. I said
that a warrant would issue charging your son with murder. I meant, of course,
as accessory, which is the same thing. It's obvious that he knew the Princess
Vladanka had killed Ludlow. You probably knew it too, but I have no proof that
you tried actively to cheat the law. I have got proof that your son did, and
three witnesses: Belinda Reade, Madame Zorka, and Mr. Goodwin, my
assistant."
"That was only –"
"Quiet, son." John P. didn't move his eyes from
Wolfe. "What else?"
"Nothing to stun you with, I'm afraid. Frankly, sir, I
have no bomb to explode under you. But the point is this. Mr. Cramer here
doesn't like murder. He doesn't like to see it practiced with impunity under
any circumstances whatever, but in this case he was impeded by a wall of
reluctance which he couldn't possibly have breached. By luck I had made a hole
in the wall and I've let him through, and if you knew him as I do you would
realize that he can't be chased out again. He has it now and he'll hang onto
it, unless you can get him ditched, which I doubt. He has that paper and he'll
arrest the princess, so your deal's off anyway.
He has enough to take your son as a material witness. With
that paper, he can get a court order to examine your records and
correspondence. But you know as well as I do what this will mean if you try to
fight it. If you try to shield a murderer from the penalty she has earned. The
fact is –"
I missed some then because I had to answer the doorbell. It
was Charlie Heath. He started for the office as if he owned the place, but I
blocked him off and demanded, "Would you mind explaining what it was that
took so long?"
"I'll report to the inspector."
"He's busy and you'll wait in here." I opened the
door to the front room, where Fred Durkin was sitting with a magazine.
"What used up all the time?"
"Nothing used it up. I mean I got back ten minutes ago.
I've been out front."
"You have."
"I have."
"Okay. Wait here."
I went back to the office and ran into a scowling match, and
took advantage of it to report the return of Heath. All Cramer did was to favor
me with five seconds of his share of the scowl. Wolfe didn't even look at me.
Apparently he was still trying to undermine Barrett without a bomb and was
finding it hard digging.
"No," he said, "I wouldn't expect that. We
don't expect much from you, Mr. Barrett, in any event. But you seem to have
overlooked one thing, at least. You seem to be ignoring the existence of a
person who knows as much about all this as the princess herself does. Including
your part in it, and your son's part. I mean, of course, the friend who came
here with the princess from Zagreb."
"Maybe he's ignoring it," Cramer put in, "but
I'm not. And you let her go, and gave her money to go with. That was cute."
"No," Wolfe asserted, "I did not."
Cramer stared. Wolfe said, "Archie, get that package
from the safe and give it to Mr. Cramer."
I went and got it and handed it over. Cramer started to
unfold it.
"That," Wolfe said, "is the photograph of the
Princess Vladanka Donevitch, radioed from London. If I had only got it this
morning –"
Cramer jumped up, sputtering, "What kind of a goddam
run-around – this is that Tormic –"
"Now, please!" Wolfe pushed a palm at him.
"Yes, it is Miss Tormic. I agreed –"
"And she's – and by God, you had one of my men
take her and turn her loose –"
"I did. What else could I do? She was sitting here in
my office, thinking she was my client, under my protection. I didn't agree to catch
the murderer for you, I agreed to disclose the identity and the motive. If
you'll take my advice, the simplest way to get her –"
But Cramer wasn't taking advice. He nearly knocked me out of
my chair, getting at the phone. Father and son sat tight. Wolfe looked up at
the clock and heaved a sigh. Cramer got his number and began spouting orders to
someone. I picked up the radiophoto of the princess and laid it on Wolfe's
desk, and gathered up the wrapping paper and put it in the wastebasket.
Cramer finished and stood up and yapped at Wolfe, "If
we don't get her I'll –"
"It was a bargain," Wolfe snapped.
"One hell of a bargain." He moved for the door,
turned, and spoke to the Barretts, "I'll want to see you. If you try
setting a fire under me, I'll give you all I've got." He went and I was
right behind him. While he grabbed his coat and hat I got Heath from the front
room, always glad to get cops out of the house, from flatfoots on up. I
followed them out to the stoop, leaving the door ajar, and watched the army
that had been surrounding the house being called into action. Cramer waved them
in and gave them curt and crackling orders. His own car had to back up a few
feet before it could nose around the rear of the Barrett town car. The taxi
down the street rolled up, then it and Heath's car sped away. Cramer's car
started, then stopped, and my name was called:
"Hey, Goodwin, come here!"
I trotted down the steps and past Barrett's car on over to
him. Cramer leaned from the window:
"I want that picture. Understand?"
"Sure we're through with it," I told him
obligingly, and stood at the curb and watched their tail light as they headed
for the corner.
I watched them too long.
What happened, happened quick, but even so I might have
headed her off if I had turned two seconds sooner. She came from inside the
tonneau of Barrett's car, leaping out, and went like a bat out of hell across
the sidewalk, up the steps and through the door I had left ajar. I was after
her, and I am not old enough to be incapable of rapid movement. I was starting
up the steps as she hurtled through the door, and by the light in the hall I
saw a glittering streak from something she had in her hand. I gave it all I had
then, but I couldn't catch lightning. When I was at the door she was swerving into
the office. As I made the office she was halfway across it and her hand was up
with the shining blade, and Wolfe was there in his chair with no time to move,
and I had no gun, and all I could do was yell and keep going.
I do not know how Wolfe did it and I never will know, though
he has kindly explained it to me several times. He says that when he heard the
commotion in the hall he stiffened into attention, which is the most incredible
part of it; that when he saw her leaping in with the dagger flashing he grabbed
a beer bottle with each hand; that when she was upon him he struck
simultaneously with both hands, with his left at her descending wrist and with
his right at anything at all. I don't know. I do know that something broke her
right wrist and something cracked her skull.
When I reached them he was still sitting in his chair with a
beer bottle in each hand and she was on the floor back of his chair, flat on
the floor, with her legs twitching spasmodically. I looked at him for blood and
didn't see any. Fred Durkin busted in from the front room. Fritz came running
from the kitchen. Father and son stood there white and speechless. I couldn't
see anything wrong with Wolfe, but I asked him in a voice that sounded funny to
me:
"Did she get you?"
"No!" he bellowed. He couldn't get up because her
body against his chair kept him from shoving it back to make room.
I knelt down to take a look at her. Her legs had stopped
twitching. I couldn't feel any heart. It was close quarters, with her there
between Wolfe's chair and the wall, and I squirmed around to get on the other
side of her. As I did so I heard a voice from the middle of the room:
"Excuse me for walking right in, Mr. Wolfe, but the
door was standing open. I was on my way uptown and I dropped in to say that we
may expect a ruling from the attorney general on that point in about a week – the
matter of registration as the agent of a foreign principal when the –"
I raised myself up enough to see the face of Stahl the G-man
looking polite but stern. Then I sat back on my heels and howled with laughter.
Wolfe said in a tone of
exasperation, "Fritz tells me nothing on your tray was touched. Confound
it, you have to eat something!"
Carla shook her head. "I can't. I'm sorry. I
can't."
I had brought her down to the office. The clock on the wall
said 11:20. The chairs were back in place.
Wolfe sighed. "It's nearly midnight. Mr. Goodwin is
yawning. You may go now whenever you want to. Or I'll ask one or two questions
if you feel like telling the truth."
"I can tell the truth – now."
"It would have been just as well …" His massive
shoulders went up a sixteenth of an inch and down again. "I would like to
know if you were aware that that woman was a maniac."
"But she wasn't –" Carla stopped for repairs to
her voice. "I never had any idea …" Her hand fluttered and dropped
again to her lap.
"Were you in fact her friend?"
"Not – no, not her friend. It wasn't like that. When
Mrs. Campbell died I was left dependent on the Donevitch family. Then Prince
Stefan married her and she came there and in no time she was head of things.
She treated me as well as I could expect, since I was not a
Donevitch. I didn't dislike her. I was a little afraid of her and so was
everybody else, even Prince Stefan. When she decided to come to America she
selected me to come with her, and I thought then that the reason she did that
was because she knew about you and she thought she might need to use you. One
reason I thought that was because she told me to bring that adoption paper
along –"
"Yes. Excuse me. Get it, Archie."
I went to the safe and dug it out and handed it to him. He
unfolded it to glance at it, folded it up again, and passed it over to her. She
looked at it a second as if she was afraid it might bite, and then reached out
and took it.
"I came with her because I had to – and anyway I wanted
to," she went on in a better voice. "It was an adventure to come to
America. I knew all about – what she was coming for. She trusted me. I knew she
would do dangerous things – but I never thought of anything like murder as a
thing she would do. When Ludlow was killed I suspected she had done it, but I
didn't know. I asked her last night, and she told me I was a fool. Then when I
went there this morning and saw Faber, of course I knew she had done that and
the other one too. I was frightened and I couldn't think. I couldn't answer
questions about her – I couldn't betray her – but I couldn't lie for her any
more either. I tried to run away – and I couldn't use my head – and in a
strange country – and I was stupid –"
She stopped, and her hand fluttered and fell to her lap
again.
In a moment Wolfe said gruffly, "It is faintly
encouraging that you are aware that you were stupid."
She offered no comment. He demanded:
"What are you going to do?"
"I …" She shook her head. "I don't
know."
"Well, I suppose you are legally my daughter. That puts
some responsibility on me."
Her chin went up. "I'm not asking any –"
"Pfui! Don't. I know. Confound it, you've been
dependent on someone all your life, haven't you? Are you going back to
Yugoslavia?"
"No."
"Oh. You're not."
"No."
"What do you want to do, stay in America?"
"Yes."
"As a spy for the Donevitch gang?"
There was a flash in her eye. "No!"
"Where are you going to sleep tonight? In that
apartment on 38th Street?"
"Why, I …" A shiver went over her. "No,"
she said, "I … I don't think I could. I couldn't go back there. Somewhere
else. Anywhere. I have a little money." She got to her feet. "I can
go –"
"Nonsense. You'd get run over or fall into a hole. You
haven't eaten anything and your brain isn't working. I hope it turns out that
you've got one. I'll have Fritz fix up another tray for you –"
"No, I couldn't, really I couldn't …"
"Well, you must sleep and in the morning you must eat.
You are in no condition now, anyway, to make any sort of intelligent decision.
We'll discuss it tomorrow. If you decide to stay in America and not to tear
that paper up I suppose your name will be Carla Wolfe. In that case – Archie,
what the devil are you grinning about? Baboon! Take Miss – take my – take her
upstairs to the south room! And tell her if she undertakes to use the fire
escape not to tumble through my window as she goes by!"
I arose. "Come on, Miss my Carla."
Ten minutes later I went back to the office. I hadn't heard
the elevator so I knew he was still there. Not only was he still there but he
had just received a fresh consignment of beer.
I took a good stretch accompanied by a yawn.
"Well," I observed good-naturedly, "that was a damn profitable
case. You turned loose of about four centuries not counting loss of brain
tissue, and what you got out of it was one shapely responsibility and nothing
else."
He put down his empty glass and said nothing.
"There is one thing," I announced, "that I
would like to have cleared up now, once and for all. I was at fault in one
respect and only one. I should not have left the front door ajar when I went
down to the sidewalk when Cramer called me. Aside from that, I couldn't help
it. The nervy little devil had come along to the Barretts' chauffeur five
minutes before we went out and told him she was supposed to meet his employer
there, and he opened the door for her so she could wait inside the car. Two
dicks saw it, though they didn't recognize her in the dim light, and they
kindly said nothing about it. She was out of the car, behind my back, and starting
up the steps before I knew she was there. There wasn't a chance in the world of
catching her."
Wolfe shrugged. "I managed without you," he
murmured in an absolutely insufferable tone.
I gritted my teeth, and as soon as I had got it swallowed,
yawned. "Okay," I said sleepily. "There are, however, one or two
little questions. What was in the envelope you gave that dick to give
her?"
"Nothing. Only a sentence saying that she was not my
client, and, under the terms as stated, never had been."
"And what was it she said as she went out? 'Teega
mee bornie roosa,' or something like that."
"That was her native tongue."
"Yeah. What does it mean?"
"'Over my dead body.'"
"Is that so." I humphed. "She called the turn
then. I guess that's all I need, except maybe one thing. Such items as her
claiming your help by using Carla's adoption paper for herself – I get all
that. But I'll be darned if I can see why Ludlow said she went to the locker
room to get his cigarettes. Him a British spy and her a Balkan princess? Why
did he –"
"He didn't. She went to the locker room to steal
something from his coat. Probably that paper which she sent here the next
morning to be hid in a safe place, because he had previously stolen it from
her. And he was letting her know that he knew that."
Wolfe sighed, pushed back his chair, and manipulated himself
to his feet. "I'm going to bed." He got halfway to the door, but
stopped again. "By the way, remind me tomorrow to ask Mr. Cramer for that
hundred dollars. I wish I could cure myself of those idiotic romantic
gestures."
"Oh, that hundred?" I patted my pocket. "I've
already got it. That was the first thing I did."
Rex Stout, the creator of Nero
Wolfe, was born in Noblesville, Indiana, in 1886, the sixth of nine children of
John and Lucetta Todhunter Stout, both Quakers. Shortly after his birth the
family moved to Wakarusa, Kansas. He was educated in a country school, but by
the age of nine he was recognized throughout the state as a prodigy in
arithmetic. Mr. Stout briefly attended the University of Kansas but he left to
enlist in the Navy and spent the next two years as a warrant officer on board
President Theodore Roosevelt's yacht. When he left the Navy in 1908, Rex Stout
began to write free-lance articles and worked as a sightseeing guide and an
itinerant bookkeeper. Later he devised and implemented a school banking system
that was installed in four hundred cities and towns throughout the country. In
1927 Mr. Stout retired from the world of finance and, with the proceeds from
his banking scheme, left for Paris to write serious fiction. He wrote three
novels that received favorable reviews before turning to detective fiction. His
first Nero Wolfe novel, Fer-de-Lance, appeared in 1934. It was followed
by many others, among them, Too Many Cooks, The Silent Speaker, If
Death Ever Slept, The Doorbell Rang, and Please Pass the Guilt,
which established Nero Wolfe as a leading character on a par with Erie Stanley
Gardner's famous protagonist, Perry Mason. During World War II Rex Stout waged
a personal campaign against Nazism as chairman of the War Writers' Board,
master of ceremonies of the radio program "Speaking of Liberty," and
member of several national committees. After the war he turned, his attention
to mobilizing public opinion against the wartime use of thermonuclear devices,
was an active leader in the Authors Guild, and resumed writing his Nero Wolfe
novels. Rex Stout died in 1975 at the age of eighty-eight. A month before his
death he published his seventy-second Nero Wolfe mystery, A Family Affair.
Ten years later, a seventy-third Nero Wolfe mystery was discovered and
published in Death Times Three.
Fer-de-Lance
The League of Frightened Men
The Rubber Band
The Red Box
Too Many Cooks
Some Buried Caesar
Over My Dead Body
Where There's a Will
Black Orchids
Not Quite Dead Enough
The Silent Speaker
Too Many Women
And Be a Villain
The Second Confession
Trouble in Triplicate
In the Best Families
Three Doors to Death
Murder by the Book
Curtains for Three
Prisoner's Base
Triple Jeopardy
The Golden Spiders
The Black Mountain
Three Men Out
Before Midnight
Might As Well Be Dead
Three Witnesses
If Death Ever Slept
Three for the Chair
Champagne for One
And Four to Go
Plot It Yourself
Too Many Clients
Three at Wolfe's Door
The Final Deduction
Gambit
Homicide Trinity
The Mother Hunt
A Right to Die
Trio for Blunt Instruments
The Doorbell Rang
Death of a Doxy
The Father Hunt
Death of a Dude
Please Pass the Guilt
A Family Affair
Death Times Three