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The Dragon Murder Case

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by S. S. Van Dine




  THE DRAGON

  MURDER CASE

  S. S. Van Dine

  FELONY & MAYHEM PRESS • NEW YORK

  Sometime we see a cloud that’s dragonish.

  —Antony and Cleopatra.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE The Tragedy (Saturday, August 11; 11.45 p.m.)

  CHAPTER TWO A Startling Accusation (Sunday, August 12; 12.30 a.m.)

  CHAPTER THREE The Splash in the Pool (Sunday, August 12; 1.15 a.m.)

  CHAPTER FOUR An Interruption (Sunday, August 12; 1.35 a.m.)

  CHAPTER FIVE The Water-Monster (Sunday, August 12; 2 a.m.)

  CHAPTER SIX A Contretemps (Sunday, August 12; 2.20 a.m.)

  CHAPTER SEVEN The Bottom of the Pool (Sunday, August 12; 9.30 a.m.)

  CHAPTER EIGHT Mysterious Footprints (Sunday, August 12; 11.30 a.m.)

  CHAPTER NINE A New Discovery (Sunday, August 12; 12.30 p.m.)

  CHAPTER TEN The Missing Man (Sunday, August 12; 1 p.m.)

  CHAPTER ELEVEN A Sinister Prophecy (Sunday, August 12; 2.30 p.m.)

  CHAPTER TWELVE Interrogations (Sunday, August 12; 3 p.m.)

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN Three Women (Sunday, August 12; 3.30 p.m.)

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN An Unexpected Development (Sunday, August 12; 5.30 p.m.)

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN Noises in the Night (Monday, August 13; 9.30 a.m.)

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN Blood and a Gardenia (Monday, August 13; 10.15 a.m.)

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN The Duplicated Death (Monday, August 13; 11.15 a.m.)

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Piscatorial Lore (Monday, August 13; 12.15 p.m.)

  CHAPTER NINETEEN The Dragon’s Tracks (Monday, August 13; 1 p.m.)

  CHAPTER TWENTY The Final Link (Monday, August 13; 5 p.m.)

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE The End of the Case (Monday, August 13; 10 p.m.)

  Copyright

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  Guide

  Cover

  Title

  Contents

  Start of Content

  Copyright

  CHAPTER ONE

  The Tragedy (Saturday, August 11; 11.45 p.m.)

  THAT SINISTER AND terrifying crime, which came to be known as the dragon murder case, will always be associated in my mind with one of the hottest summers I have ever experienced in New York.

  Philo Vance, who stood aloof from the eschatological and supernatural implications of the case, and was therefore able to solve the problem on a purely rationalistic basis, had planned a fishing trip to Norway that August, but an intellectual whim had caused him to cancel his arrangements and to remain in America. Since the influx of post-war, nouveau-riche Americans along the French and It
alian Rivieras, he had forgone his custom of spending his summers on the Mediterranean, and had gone after salmon and trout in the streams of North Bergenhus. But late in July of this particular year his interest in the Menander fragments found in Egypt during the early years of this century, had revived, and he set himself to complete their translation—a work which, you may recall, had been interrupted by that amazing series of Mother-Goose murders in West 75th Street.*

  However, once again this task of research and love was rudely intruded upon by one of the most baffling murder mysteries in which Vance ever participated; and the lost comedies of Menander were again pigeon-holed for the intricate ratiocination of crime. Personally I think Vance’s criminal investigations were closer to his heart than the scholastic enterprises on which he was constantly embarking, for though his mind was ever seeking out abstruse facts in the realm of cultural lore, he found his greatest mental recreation in intricate problems wholly unrelated to pure learning. Criminology satisfied this yearning in his nature, for it not only stimulated his analytical processes but brought into play his knowledge of recondite facts and his uncanny instinct for the subtleties of human nature.

  Shortly after his student days at Harvard he asked me to officiate as his legal adviser and monetary steward; and my liking and admiration for him were such that I resigned from my father’s firm of Van Dine, Davis and Van Dine to take up the duties he had outlined. I have never regretted that decision; and it is because of the resultant association with him that I have been able to set down an accurate and semi-official account of the various criminal investigations in which he participated. He was drawn into these investigations as a result of his friendship with John F.-X. Markham during the latter’s four years’ incumbency as District Attorney of New York County.

  Of all the cases I have thus far recorded none was as exciting, as weird, as apparently unrelated to all rational thinking, as the dragon murder. Here was a crime that seemed to transcend all the ordinary scientific knowledge of man and to carry the police and the investigators into an obfuscous and unreal realm of demonology and folk-lore—a realm fraught with dim racial memories of legendary terrors.

  The dragon has ever entered into the emotional imaginings of primitive religions, throwing over its conceivers a spell of sinister and terrifying superstition. And here in the city of New York, in the twentieth century, the police were plunged into a criminal investigation which resuscitated all the dark passages in those dim forgotten times when the superstitious children of the earth believed in malignant monsters and the retributive horrors which these monsters visited upon man.

  The darkest chapters in the ethnological records of the human race were reviewed within sight of the skyscrapers of modern Manhattan; and so powerful was the effect of these resuscitations that even scientists searched for some biological explanation of the grotesque phenomena that held the country enthralled during the days following the uncanny and incomprehensible death of Sanford Montague. The survival of prehistoric monsters—the development of subterranean Ichthyopsida—the unclean and darksome matings of earth and sea creatures—were advanced as possible scientific explanations of the extraordinary and hideous facts with which the police and the District Attorney’s office were faced.

  Even the practical and hard-headed Sergeant Ernest Heath of the Homicide Bureau was affected by the mysterious and incalculable elements of the case. During the preliminary investigation—when there was no actual evidence of murder—the unimaginative Sergeant sensed hidden and ominous things, as if a miasmatic emanation had arisen from the seemingly commonplace circumstances surrounding the situation. In fact, had it not been for the fears that arose in him when he was first called to take charge of the tragic episode, the dragon murder might never have come to the attention of the authorities. It would, in all probability, have been recorded conventionally in the archives of the New York Police Department as another “disappearance,” accounted for along various obvious lines and with a cynical wink.

  This hypothetical eventuality was, no doubt, what the murderer intended; but the perpetrator of that extraordinary crime—a crime, as far as I know, unparalleled in the annals of violent homicide—had failed to count on the effect of the sinister atmosphere which enveloped his unholy act. The fact that the imaginative aboriginal fears of man have largely developed from the inherent mysteries enshrouded in the dark hidden depths of water, was overlooked by the murderer. And it was this oversight that roused the Sergeant’s vague misgivings and turned a superficially commonplace episode into one of the most spectacular and diabolical murder cases of modern times.

  Sergeant Heath was the first official to go to the scene of the crime—although, at the time, he was not aware that a crime had been committed; and it was he who stammered out his unidentifiable fears to Markham and Vance.

  It was nearly midnight on August 11. Markham had dined with Vance at the latter’s roof-garden apartment in East 38th Street, and the three of us had spent the evening in a desultory discussion of various topics. There had been a lackadaisical atmosphere over our gathering, and the periods of silence had increased as the night wore on, for the weather was both hot and sultry, and the leaves of the tree-tops which rose from the rear yard were as still as those on a painted canvas. Moreover, it had rained for hours, the downpour ceasing only at ten o’clock, and a heavy breathless pall seemed to have settled over the city.

  Vance had just mixed a second champagne cup for us when Currie, Vance’s butler and major-domo, appeared at the door to the roof-garden carrying a portable telephone.

  “There is an urgent call for Mr. Markham,” he announced; “and I took the liberty of bringing the telephone... It’s Sergeant Heath, sir.”

  Markham looked nettled and a bit surprised, but he nodded and took the instrument. His conversation with the Sergeant was a brief one, and when he replaced the receiver he was frowning.

  “That’s queer,” he commented. “Unlike the Sergeant. He’s worried about something—wants to see me. He didn’t give any hint of the matter, and I didn’t press the point. Said he found out at my home that I was here... I didn’t like the suppressed tone of his voice, and told him he might come here. I hope you don’t mind, Vance.”

  “Delighted,” Vance drawled, settling deeper into his wicker chair. “I haven’t seen the doughty Sergeant for months... Currie,” he called, “bring the Scotch and soda. Sergeant Heath is joining us.” Then he turned back to Markham. “I hope there’s nothing amiss... Maybe the heat has hallucinated the Sergeant.”

  Markham, still troubled, shook his head.

  “It would take more than hot weather to upset Heath’s equilibrium.” He shrugged. “Oh, well, we’ll know the worst soon enough.”

  It was about twenty minutes later when the Sergeant was announced. He came out on the terrace garden, wiping his brow with an enormous handkerchief. After he had greeted us somewhat abstractedly he dropped into a chair by the glass-topped table and helped himself to a long drink of the Scotch whisky which Vance moved toward him.

  “I’ve just come from Inwood, Chief,” he explained to Markham. “A guy has disappeared. And to tell you the truth, I don’t like it. There’s something phony somewhere.”

  Markham scowled.

  “Anything unusual about the case?”

  “No—nothing.” The Sergeant appeared embarrassed. “That’s the hell of it. Everything in order—the usual sort of thing. Routine. And yet...” His voice trailed off, and he lifted the glass to his lips.

  Vance gave an amused smile.

  “I fear, Markham,” he observed, “the Sergeant has become intuitive.”

  Heath set down his glass with a bang.

  “If you mean, Mr. Vance, that I’ve got a hunch about this case, you’re right!” And he thrust his jaw forward.

  Vance raised his eyebrows whimsically.

  “What case, Sergeant?”

  Heath gave him a dour look and then grinned.

  “I’m going to tell you—a
nd you can laugh all you want to... Listen, Chief.” He turned back to Markham. “Along about ten forty-five tonight a telephone call comes to the Homicide Bureau. A fellow, who says his name is Leland, tells me there’s been a tragedy out at the old Stamm estate in Inwood and that, if I have any sense, I better hop out...”

  “A perfect spot for a crime,” Vance interrupted musingly. “It’s one of the oldest estates in the city—built nearly a hundred years ago. It’s an anachronism today, but—my word!—it’s full of criminal possibilities. Legend’ry, in fact, with an amazin’ history.”

  Heath contemplated Vance shrewdly.

  “You got the idea, sir. I felt just that way when I got out there... Well, anyway, I naturally asked this fellow Leland what had happened and why I should come. And it seems that a bird named Montague had dived into the swimming pool on the estate, and hadn’t come up—”

  “Was it, by any chance, the old Dragon Pool?” inquired Vance, raising himself and reaching for his beloved Régie cigarettes.

  “That’s the one,” Heath told him; “though I never knew the name of it till I got there tonight... Well, I told him that wasn’t in my line, but he got persistent and said that the matter oughta be looked into, and the sooner I came the better. He talked in a funny tone—it sorta got to me. His English was all right—he didn’t have any foreign accent—but I got the idea he wasn’t an American. I asked him why he was calling up about something that had happened on the Stamm estate; and he said he was an old friend of the family and had witnessed the tragedy. He also said Stamm wasn’t able to telephone, and that he had temporarily taken charge of the situation... I couldn’t get any more out of him; but there was something about the way the fellow talked that made me leery.”

  “I see,” Markham murmured non-committally. “So you went out?”

  “Yeah, I went out.” Heath nodded sheepishly. “I got Hennessey and Burke and Snitkin, and we hopped a police car.”

  “What did you find?”

  “I didn’t find anything, sir,” Heath returned aggressively, “except what that guy told me over the phone. There was a week-end house-party on the estate, and one of the guests—this bird named Montague—had suggested they all go swimming in the pool. There’d probably been considerable drinking, so they all went down to the pool and put on bathing suits...”

  “Just a moment, Sergeant,” Vance interrupted. “Was Leland drunk, by any chance?”

  “Not him.” The Sergeant shook his head. “He was the coolest member of the lot. But there was something queer about him. He seemed greatly relieved when I got there; and he took me aside and told me to keep my eyes open. I naturally asked him what he meant, but right away he got casual, so to speak, and merely said that a lot of peculiar things had happened around those parts in the old days, and that maybe something peculiar had happened tonight.”

 

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