“It’s not of any importance,” the professor returned with a lackadaisical gesture of his hand. “It’s a convenience, however, and saves many trips up and down the stairs.”
“We may as well let the man attend to it, since he’s here. It won’t disturb us.” Vance stood up. “And I say, doctor, would you mind joining the others downstairs? We’ll be down presently, too.”
The professor inclined his head in silent acquiescence and, without a word, went from the room.
Presently a tall, pale, youthful man appeared at the door to the study. He carried a small black tool-kit.
“I was sent here to look over a buzzer,” he announced with surly indifference. “I didn’t find the trouble downstairs.”
“Maybe the difficulty is at this end,” suggested Vance. “There’s the buzzer behind the desk.” And he pointed to the small black box with the push-button.
The man went over to it, opened his case of tools and, taking out a flashlight and a small screwdriver, removed the outer shell of the box. Fingering the connecting wires for a moment, he looked up at Vance with an expression of contempt.
“You can’t expect the buzzer to work when the wires ain’t connected,” he commented.
Vance became suddenly interested. Adjusting his monocle, he knelt down and looked at the box.
“They’re both disconnected—eh, what?” he remarked.
“Sure they are,” the man grumbled. “And it don’t look to me like they worked themselves loose, either.”
“You think they were deliberately disconnected?” asked Vance.
“Well, it looks that way.” The man was busy reconnecting the wires. “Both screws are loose, and the wires aren’t bent—they look like they been pulled out.”
“That’s most interestin’.” Vance stood up, and returned the monocle to his pocket meditatively. “It might be, of course. But I can’t see why anyone should have done it… Sorry for your trouble.”
“Oh, that’s all in the day’s work,” the man muttered, readjusting the cover of the box. “I wish all my jobs were as easy as this one.” After a few moments he stood up. “Let’s see if the buzzer will work now. Anyone downstairs who’ll answer if I press this?”
“I’ll take care of that,” Heath interposed, and turned to Snitkin. “Hop down to the den, and if you hear the buzzer down there, ring back.”
Snitkin hurried out, and a few moments later, when the button was pressed, there came two short answering signals.
“It’s all right now,” the repair man said, packing up his tools and going toward the door. “So long.” And he disappeared down the passageway.
Markham had been scrutinizing Vance closely tor several minutes.
“There’s something on your mind,” he said seriously. “What’s the point of this disconnected buzzer?”
Vance smoked for a moment in silence, looking down at the floor. Then he walked to the north window and looked out meditatively into the garden.
“I don’t know, Markham. It’s dashed mystifyin’. But I have a notion that the same person who fired the shot we heard disconnected those wires…”
Suddenly he stepped to one side behind the draperies and crouched down, his eyes still peering out cautiously into the garden. He raised a warning hand to us to keep back out of sight.
“Deuced queer,” he said tensely. “That gate in the far end of the fence is slowly opening… Oh, my aunt!” And he swung swiftly into the passageway leading to the garden, beckoning to us to follow.
CHAPTER NINE
Two Cigarette Stubs
(Saturday, April 14; 6 p. m.)
VANCE RAN PAST the covered body of Swift on the settee, and crossed to the garden gate. As he reached it he was confronted by the haughty and majestic figure of Madge Weatherby. Evidently her intention was to step into the garden, but she drew back abruptly when she saw us. Our presence, however, seemed neither to surprise nor to embarrass her.
“Charmin’ of you to come up, Miss Weatherby,” said Vance. “But I gave orders that everyone was to remain downstairs.”
“I had a right to come here!” she returned, drawing herself up with almost regal dignity.
“Ah!” murmured Vance. “Yes, of course. It might be, don’t y’ know. But would you mind explainin’?”
“Not at all.” Her expression remained unchanged, and her voice was hollow and artificial. “I wished to ascertain if he could have done it.”
“And who,” asked Vance, “is this mysterious ‘he’?”
“Who?” she repeated, throwing her head back sarcastically. “Why, Cecil Kroon!”
Vance’s eyelids drooped, and he studied the woman narrowly for a brief moment. Then he said lightly:
“Most interestin’. But let that wait a moment. How did you get up here?”
“That was very simple.” She tossed her head negligently. “I pretended to be faint and told your minion I was going into the butler’s pantry to get a drink of water. I went out through the pantry door into the public hallway, came up the main stairs, and out on this terrace.”
“But how did you know that you could reach the garden by this route?”
“I didn’t know.” She smiled enigmatically. “I was merely reconnoitering. I was anxious to prove to myself that Cecil Kroon could have shot poor Woody.”
“And are you satisfied that he could have?” asked Vance quietly.
“Oh, yes,” the woman replied with bitterness. “Beyond a doubt. I’ve known for a long time that Cecil would kill him sooner or later. And I was quite certain when you said that Woody had been murdered that Cecil had done it. But I did not understand how he could have gotten up here, after leaving us this afternoon. So I endeavored to find out.”
“And why, may I ask,” said Vance, “would Mr. Kroon desire to dispose of Swift?”
The woman clasped her hands theatrically against her breast. Taking a step forward, she said in a histrionically sepulchral voice:
“Cecil was jealous—frightfully jealous. He’s madly in love with me. He has tortured me with his attentions…” One of her hands went to her forehead in a gesture of desperation. “There has been nothing I could do. And when he learned that I cared for Woody, he became desperate. He threatened me. I was horribly frightened. I didn’t dare break everything off with him—I didn’t know what he might do. So I humored him: I went about with him, hoping, hoping that this madness of his would subside. For a time I thought he was becoming more normal and rational. And then—today—this terrible crime!…” Her voice trailed off in an exaggerated sigh.
Vance’s keen regard showed neither the sympathy her pompous recital called for, nor the cynicism which I knew he felt. There was only a studied interest in his gaze.
“Sad—very sad,” he mumbled.
Miss Weatherby jerked her head up and her eyes flashed.
“I came up here to see if it were possible that Cecil could have done this thing. I came up in the cause of justice!”
“Very accommodatin’.” Vance’s manner had suddenly changed. “We’re most appreciative, and all that sort of thing. But I must insist, don’t y’ know, that you return downstairs and wait there with the others. And you will be so good as to come through the garden and go down the apartment stairs.”
He was brutally matter-of-fact as he drew the gate shut and directed the woman to the passageway door. She hesitated a moment and then followed his indicating finger. As she passed the wicker settee she stopped suddenly and sank to her knees.
“Oh, Woody, Woody!” she wailed dramatically. “It was all my fault!” She covered her face with her hands and bent her head far forward in an attitude of abject misery.
Vance heaved a deep sigh, threw away his cigarette and, taking her firmly by one arm, lifted her to her feet.
“Really, y’ know, Miss Weatherby,” he said brusquely, leading her toward the door, “this is not a melodrama.”
She straightened up with a stifled sob and went down the passageway toward the s
tairs.
Vance turned to the detective and nodded toward the entrance.
“Snitkin,” he said wearily, “go downstairs and tell Hennessey to keep an eye on Sarah Bernhardt till we need her.”
Snitkin grinned and followed Miss Weatherby below.
When we were back in the study Vance sank into a chair and yawned.
“My word!” he complained. “The case is difficult enough without these amateur theatricals.”
Markham, I could see, had been both impressed and puzzled by the incident.
“Maybe it’s not all dramatics,” he suggested. “The woman made some very definite statements.”
“Oh, yes. She would. She’s the type.” Vance took out his cigarette case. “Definite statements, yes. And misleadin’. Really, y’ know, I don’t for a moment believe she regards Kroon as the culprit.”
“Well, what then?” snapped Markham.
“Nothing—really nothing.” Vance sighed. “Vanity and futility. The lady is vanity—we’re futility. Neither leads anywhere.”
“But she certainly has something on her mind,” protested Markham.
“So have we all. I wonder… But if we could read one person’s mind completely, we’d probably understand the universe. Akin to omniscience, and that sort of thing.”
“God Almighty!” Markham stood up and planted himself belligerently in front of Vance. “Can’t you be rational?”
“Oh, Markham—my dear Markham!” Vance shook his head sadly. “What is rationality? However… As you say. There is something back of the lady’s histrionics. She has ideas. But she’s circuitous. And she wants us to be like those Chinese gods who can’t proceed except in a straight line. Sad. But let’s try makin’ a turn. The situation is something like this: An unhappy lady slips out through the butler’s pantry and presents herself on the roof-garden, hopin’ to attract our attention. Having succeeded, she informs us that she has proved conclusively that a certain Mr. Kroon has done away with Swift because of amorous jealousy. That’s the straight line—the longest distance between two points.—Now for the curve. The lady herself, let us assume, is the spurned and not the spurner. She resents it. She has a temper and is vengeful—and she comes to the roof here for the sole purpose of convincing us that Kroon is guilty. She’s not beyond that sort of thing. She’d be jolly well glad to see Kroon suffer, guilty or not.”
“But her story is plausible enough,” said Markham aggressively. “Why try to find hidden meanings in obvious facts? Kroon could have done it. And your psychological theory regarding the woman’s motives eliminates him entirely.”
“My dear Markham—oh, my dear Markham! It doesn’t eliminate him at all. It merely tends to involve the lady in a rather unpleasant bit of chicanery. The fact is, her little drama here on the roof may prove most illuminatin’.”
Vance stretched his legs out before him and sank deeper into his chair.
“Curious situation. Y’ know, Markham, Kroon deserted the party about fifteen or twenty minutes before the big race—legal matters to attend to for a maiden aunt, he explained—and he didn’t appear again until after I had phoned you. Assumed immediately that Swift had shot himself. Also mentioned a couple of accurate details. All of which could have been either the result of actual knowledge or mere guesswork. Doubt inspired me to converse with the elevator boy. I learned that Kroon had not gone down or up in the elevator since his arrival here early in the afternoon…”
“What’s that!” Markham exclaimed. “That’s more than suspicious—taken with what we have just heard from this Miss Weatherby.”
“I dare say.” Vance was unimpressed. “The legal mind at work. But from my gropin’ amateur point of view, I’d want more—oh, much more. However,”—Vance rose and meditated a moment—“l admit that a bit of lovin’ communion with Mr. Kroon is definitely indicated.” He turned to Heath. “Send the chappie up, will you, Sergeant? And be sweet to him. Don’t annoy him. La politesse. No need to put him on his guard.”
Heath nodded and started toward the door.
“I get you, Mr. Vance.”
“And Sergeant,” Vance halted him; “you might question the elevator boy and find out if there is anyone else in the building whom Kroon is in the habit of calling on. If so, follow it up with a few discreet inquiries.”
Heath vanished down the stairs, and a minute or so later Kroon sauntered into the study with the air of a man who is bored and not a little annoyed.
“I suppose I’m in for some more tricky questions,” he commented, giving Markham and Snitkin a fleeting contemptuous glance and letting his eyes come to rest on Vance with a look of resentment. “Do I take the third-degree standing or sitting?”
“Just as you wish,” Vance returned mildly; and Kroon, after glancing about him, sat down leisurely at one end of the davenport. The man’s manner, I could see, infuriated Markham, who leaned forward and asked in cold anger:
“Have you any urgent reasons for objecting to give us what assistance you can in our investigation of this murder?”
Kroon raised his eyebrows and smoothed the waxed ends of his mustache.
“None whatever,” he said with calm superiority. “I might even be able to tell you who shot Woody.”
“That’s most interestin’,” murmured Vance, studying the man indifferently. “But we’d much rather find out for ourselves, don’t y’ know. Much more sportin’, what? And there’s always the possibility that our own findin’s might prove more accurate than the guesses of others.”
Kroon shrugged maliciously and said nothing.
“When you deserted the party this afternoon, Mr. Kroon,” Vance went on in an almost lackadaisical manner, “you gratuitously informed us that you were headed for a legal conference of some kind with a maiden aunt. I know we’ve been over this before, but I ask again: would you object to giving us, merely as a matter of record, the name and address of your aunt, and the nature of the legal documents which lured you so abruptly away from the Rivermont Handicap, after you had wagered five hundred dollars on the outcome?”
“I most certainly would object,” returned Kroon coolly. “I thought you were investigating a murder; and I assure you my aunt had nothing to do with it. I fail to see why you should be interested in my family affairs.”
“Life is full of surprises, don’t y’ know,” murmured Vance. “One never knows where family affairs and murder overlap.”
Kroon chuckled mirthlessly, but checked himself with a cough.
“In the present instance, I am happy to inform you that, so far as I am concerned, they do not overlap at all.”
Markham swung round toward the man.
“That’s for us to decide,” he snapped. “Do you intend to answer Mr. Vance’s question?”
Kroon shook his head.
“I do not! I regard that question as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. Also frivolous.”
“Yes, yes.” Vance smiled at Markham. “It could be, don’t y’ know. However, let it pass, Markham. Present status: Name and address of maiden aunt, unknown; nature of legal documents, unknown; reason for the gentleman’s reticence, also unknown.”
Markham resentfully mumbled a few unintelligible words and resumed smoking his cigar while Vance continued the interrogation.
“I say, Mr. Kroon, would you also consider it irrelevant—and the rest of the legal verbiage—if I asked you by what means you departed and returned to the Garden apartment?”
Kroon appeared highly amused.
“I’d consider it irrelevant, yes; but since there is only one sane way I could have gone and come back, I’m perfectly willing to confess to you that I took a taxicab to and from my aunt’s.”
Vance gazed up at the ceiling as he smoked.
“Suppose,” he said, “that the elevator boy should deny that he took you either down or up in the car since your first arrival here this afternoon. What would you say?”
Kroon jerked himself up to attention.
“I’d say that
he had lost his memory—or was lying.”
“Yes, of course. The obvious retort. Quite.” Vance’s eyes moved slowly to the man on the davenport. “You will probably have the opportunity of saying just that on the witness stand.”
Kroon’s eyes narrowed and his face reddened. Before he could speak, Vance went on.
“And you may also have the opportunity of officially giving or withholding your aunt’s name and address. The fact is, you may find yourself in the most distressin’ need of an alibi.”
Kroon sank back on the davenport with a supercilious smile.
“You’re very amusing,” he commented lightly. “What next? If you’ll ask me a reasonable question, I’ll be only too happy to answer. I’m a highly esteemed citizen of these States—always willing, not to say anxious, to assist the authorities—to aid in the cause of justice, and all that sort of rot.” There was an undercurrent of venom in his contumelious tone.
“Well, let’s see where we stand.” Vance suppressed an amused smile. “You left the apartment at approximately a quarter to four, took the elevator downstairs and then a taxi, went to your aunt’s to fuss a bit with legal documents, drove back in a taxi, and took the elevator upstairs. Bein’ gone a little over half an hour. During your absence Swift was shot. Is that correct?”
“Yes.” Kroon was curt.
“But how do you account for the fact that when I met you in the hall on your return, you seemed miraculously cognizant of the details of Swift’s passing?”
“We’ve been over that, too. I knew nothing about it. You told me Swift was dead, and I merely surmised the rest.”
“Yes—quite. No crime in accurate surmisals. Deuced queer coincidence, however. Taken with other facts. As likely as a five-horse win parlay. Extr’ordin’ry.”
“I’m listening with great interest.” Kroon had again assumed his air of superiority. “Why don’t you stop beating about the bush?”
“Worthwhile suggestion.” Vance crushed out his cigarette and, drawing himself up in his chair, leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees. “What I was leadin’ up to was the fact that someone has definitely accused you of murdering Swift.”
The Garden Murder Case Page 11