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Philo Vance 12 Novels Complete Bundle

Page 176

by S. S. Van Dine


  Markham studied him for a few moments without replying. He knew Vance well enough to realize that his desire to accede to the Sergeant's request was inspired by a much deeper reason than the patently frivolous one he gave. And he also knew that no amount of questioning would make Vance elucidate his true attitude just then.

  After a minute Markham also rose. He glanced at his watch and shrugged.

  "Past midnight," he commented disgustedly. "The perfect hour, of course, to inspect fish! . . . Shall we drive out in the Sergeant's car or take yours?"

  "Oh, mine, by all means. We'll follow the Sergeant." And Vance rang for Currie to bring him his hat and stick.

  CHAPTER II

  A STARTLING ACCUSATION

  (Sunday, August 12; 12.30 a. m.)

  A few minutes later we were headed up Broadway. Sergeant Heath led the way in his small police car and Markham and Vance and I followed in Vance's Hispano-Suiza. Reaching Dyckman Street, we went west to Payson Avenue and turned up the steep winding Bolton Road.* When we had reached the highest point of the road we swung into a wide private driveway with two tall square stone posts at the entrance, and circled upward round a mass of evergreen trees until we reached the apex of the hill. It was on this site that the famous old Stamm residence had been built nearly a century before.

  * This is not to be confused with Lower Bolton Road, otherwise known as River Road, which turns off Dyckman Street near the New York Central Hudson River railroad tracks and passes below the Memorial Hospital.

  It was a wooded estate, abounding in cedar, oak, and spruce trees, with patches of rough lawn and rock gardens. From this vantage point could be seen, to the north, the dark Gothic turrets of the House of Mercy, silhouetted against a clearing sky which seemed to have sucked up the ghostly lights of Marble Hill a mile distant across the waters of Spuyten Duyvil. To the south, through the trees, the faintly flickering glow of Manhattan cast an uncanny spell. Eastward, on either side of the black mass of the Stamm residence, a few tall buildings along Seaman Avenue and Broadway reached up over the hazy horizon like black giant fingers. Behind and below us, to the west, the Hudson River moved sluggishly, a dark opaque mass flecked with the moving lights of boats.

  But although on every side we could see evidences of the modern busy life of New York, a feeling of isolation and mystery crept over me. I seemed infinitely removed from all the busy activities of the world; and I realized then, for the first time, how strange an anachronism Inwood was. Though this historic spot--with its great trees, its crumbling houses, its ancient associations, its rugged wildness, and its rustic quietude--was actually a part of Manhattan, it nevertheless seemed like some hidden fastness set away in a remote coign of the world.

  As we turned into the small parking space at the head of the private driveway, we noticed an old-fashioned Ford coupe parked about fifty yards from the wide balustraded stone steps that led to the house.

  "That's the doctor's car," Heath explained to us, as he hopped down from his machine. "The garage is on the lower road on the east side of the house."

  He led the way up the steps to the massive bronze front door over which a dim light was burning; and we were met by Detective Snitkin in the narrow panelled vestibule.

  "I'm glad you're back, Sergeant," the detective said, after saluting Markham respectfully.

  "Don't you like the situation either, Snitkin?" Vance asked lightly.

  "Not me, sir," the other returned, going toward the inner front door. "It's got me worried."

  "Anything else happen?" Heath inquired abruptly.

  "Nothing except that Stamm has begun to sit up and take notice."

  He gave three taps on the door which was immediately opened by a liveried butler who regarded us suspiciously.

  "Is this really necessary, officer?" he asked Heath in a suave voice, as he reluctantly held the door open for us. "You see, sir, Mr. Stamm--"

  "I'm running this show," Heath interrupted curtly. "You're here to take orders, not to ask questions."

  The butler bowed with a sleek, obsequious smile, and closed the door after us.

  "What are your orders, sir?"

  "You stay here at the front door," Heath replied brusquely, "and don't let any one in." He then turned to Snitkin, who had followed us into the spacious lower hallway. "Where's the gang and what are they doing?"

  "Stamm's in the library--that room over there--with the doctor." Snitkin jerked his thumb toward a pair of heavy tapestry portières at the rear of the hall. "I sent the rest of the bunch to their rooms, like you told me. Burke is sitting out on the rear doorstep, and Hennessey is down by the pool."

  Heath grunted.

  "That's all right." He turned to Markham. "What do you want to do first, Chief? Shall I show you the lay of the land and how the swimming pool is constructed? Or do you want to ask these babies some questions?"

  Markham hesitated, and Vance spoke languidly.

  "Really, Markham, I'm rather inclined to think we should first do a bit of what you call probing. I'd jolly well like to know what preceded this alfresco bathing party, and I'd like to view the participants. The pool will keep till later; and--one can't tell, can one?--it may take on a different significance once we have established a sort of social background for the unfortunate escapade."

  "It doesn't matter to me." Markham was plainly impatient and skeptical. "The sooner we find out why we're here at all, the better pleased I'll be."

  Vance's eyes were roving desultorily about the hallway. It was panelled in Tudor style, and the furniture was dark and massive. Life-sized, faded oil portraits hung about the walls, and all the doors were heavily draped. It was a gloomy place, filled with shadows, and with a musty odor which accentuated its inherent unmodernity.

  "A perfect setting for your fears, Sergeant," Vance mused. "There are few of these old houses left, and I'm trying to decide whether or not I'm grateful."

  "In the meantime," snapped Markham, "suppose we go to the drawing-room. . . . Where is it, Sergeant?"

  Heath pointed to a curtained archway on the right, and we were about to proceed when there came the sound of soft descending footsteps on the stairs, and a voice spoke to us from the shadows.

  "Can I be of any assistance, gentlemen?"

  The tall figure of a man approached us. When he had come within the radius of flickering light thrown by the old-fashioned crystal chandelier, we discerned an unusual and, as I thought at the time, sinister person.

  He was over six feet tall, slender and wiry, and gave the impression of steely strength. He had a dark, almost swarthy, complexion, with keen calm black eyes which had something of the look of an eagle in them. His nose was markedly Roman and very narrow. His cheek-bones were high, and there were slight hollows under them. Only his mouth and chin were Nordic: his lips were thin and met in a straight line; and his deeply cleft chin was heavy and powerful. His hair, brushed straight back from a low broad forehead, seemed very black in the dim light of the hallway. His clothes were in the best of taste, subdued and well-cut, but there was a carelessness in the way he wore them which made me feel that he regarded them as a sort of compromise with an unnecessary convention.

  "My name is Leland," he explained, when he had reached us. "I am a friend of long standing in this household, and I was a guest tonight at the time of the most unfortunate accident."

  He spoke with peculiar precision, and I understood exactly the impression which the Sergeant had received over the telephone when Leland had first communicated with him.

  Vance had been regarding the man critically.

  "Do you live in Inwood, Mr. Leland?" he asked casually.

  The other gave a barely perceptible nod.

  "I live in a cottage in Shorakapkok, the site of the ancient Indian village, on the hillside which overlooks the old Spuyten Duyvil Creek."

  "Near the Indian caves?"

  "Yes, just across what they now call the Shell Bed."

  "And you have known Mr. Stamm a long time?"<
br />
  "For fifteen years." The man hesitated. "I have accompanied him on many of his expeditions in search of tropical fish."

  Vance kept his gaze steadily upon the strange figure.

  "And perhaps also," he said, with a coldness which I did not then understand, "you accompanied Mr. Stamm on his expedition for lost treasure in the Caribbean? It seems I recall your name being mentioned in connection with those romantic adventures."

  "You are right," Leland admitted without change of expression.

  Vance turned away.

  "Quite--oh, quite. I think you may be just the person to help us with the present problem. Suppose we stagger into the drawing-room for a little chat."

  He drew apart the heavy curtains, and the butler came swiftly forward to switch on the electric lights.

  We found ourselves in an enormous room, the ceiling of which was at least twenty feet high. A large Aubusson carpet covered the floor; and the heavy and ornate Louis-Quinze furniture, now somewhat dilapidated and faded, had been set about the walls with formal precision. The whole room had a fusty and tarnished air of desuetude and antiquity.

  Vance looked about him and shuddered.

  "Evidently not a popular rendezvous," he commented as if to himself.

  Leland glanced at him shrewdly.

  "No," he vouchsafed. "The room is rarely used. The household has lived in the less formal rooms at the rear ever since Joshua Stamm died. The most popular quarters are the library and the vivarium which Stamm added to the house ten years ago. He spends most of his time there."

  "With the fish, of course," remarked Vance.

  "They are an absorbing hobby," Leland explained without enthusiasm.

  Vance nodded abstractedly, sat down and lighted a cigarette.

  "Since you have been so kind as to offer your assistance, Mr. Leland," he began, "suppose you tell us just what the conditions were in the house tonight, and the various incidents that preceded the tragedy." Then, before the other could reply, he added: "I understand from Sergeant Heath that you were rather insistent that he should take the matter in hand. Is that correct?"

  "Quite correct," Leland replied, without the faintest trace of uneasiness. "The failure of young Montague to come to the surface after diving into the pool struck me as most peculiar. He is an excellent swimmer and an adept at various athletic sports. Furthermore, he knows every square foot of the pool; and there is practically no chance whatever that he could have struck his head on the bottom. The other side of the pool is somewhat shallow and has a sloping wall, but the near side, where the cabañas and the diving-board are, is at least twenty-five feet deep."

  "Still," suggested Vance, "the man may have had a cramp or a sudden concussion from the dive. Such things have happened, don't y' know." His eyes were fixed languidly but appraisingly on Leland. "Just what was your object in urging a member of the Homicide Bureau to investigate the situation?"

  "Merely a question of precaution--" Leland began, but Vance interrupted him.

  "Yes, yes, to be sure. But why should you feel that caution was necess'ry in the circumstances?"

  A cynical smile appeared at the corners of the man's mouth.

  "This is not a household," he replied, "where life runs normally. The Stamms, as you may know, are an intensely inbred line. Joshua Stamm and his wife were first cousins, and both pairs of grandparents were also related by blood. Paresis runs in the family. There has been nothing fixed or permanent in the natures of the last two generations of Stamms, and life in this household is always pushing out at unexpected angles. The ordinary family diagrams are constantly being broken up. There is little stabilization, either physical or intellectual."

  "Even so"--Vance, I could see, had become deeply interested in the man--"how would these facts of heredity have any bearing on Montague's disappearance?"

  "Montague," Leland returned in a flat voice, "was engaged to Stamm's sister, Bernice."

  "Ah!" Vance drew deeply on his cigarette. "You are inferring perhaps that Stamm was opposed to the engagement?"

  "I am making no inferences." Leland took out a long-stemmed briar pipe and a pouch of tobacco. "If Stamm objected to the alliance, he made no mention of it to me. He is not the kind of man who reveals his inner thoughts or feelings. But his nature is pregnant with potentialities, and he may have hated Montague." Deftly he filled his pipe and lighted it.

  "And are we to assume, then, that your calling in the police was based on--what shall we call it?--the Mendelian law of breeding as applied to the Stamms?"

  Again Leland smiled cynically.

  "No, not exactly--though it may have been a factor in rousing my suspicious curiosity."

  "And the other factors?"

  "There has been considerable drinking here in the last twenty-four hours."

  "Oh, yes; alcohol--that great releaser of inhibitions. . . . But let's forgo the academic for the time being."

  Leland moved to the centre-table and leaned against it.

  "The personages of this particular house-party," he said at length, "are not above gaining their ends at any cost."

  Vance inclined his head.

  "That remark is more promising," he commented. "Suppose you tell us briefly of these people."

  "There are few enough of them," Leland began. "Besides Stamm and his sister, there is a Mr. Alex Greeff, a reputed stock-broker, who unquestionably has some designs on the Stamm fortune. Then there is Kirwin Tatum, a dissipated and disreputable young ne'er-do-well, who, as far as I can make out, exists wholly by sponging on his friends. Incidentally, he has made something of an ass of himself over Bernice Stamm. . . ."

  "And Greeff--what are his sentiments toward Miss Stamm?"

  "I cannot say. He poses as the family's financial adviser, and I know that Stamm has invested rather heavily at his suggestion. But whether or not he wishes to marry the Stamm fortune is problematical."

  "Thanks no end. . . . And now for the other members of the party."

  "Mrs. McAdam--they call her Teeny--is the usual type of widow, talkative, gay, and inclined to overindulgence. Her past is unknown. She is shrewd and worldly, and has a practical eye on Stamm--always making a great fuss over him, but obviously with some ulterior motive. Young Tatum whispered to me confidentially, in a moment of drunken laxity, that Montague and this McAdam woman once lived together."

  Vance clicked his tongue in mock disapproval.

  "I begin to sense the potentialities of the situation. Most allurin'. . . . Any one else to complicate this delightful social mélange?"

  "Yes, a Miss Steele. Ruby is her first name. She is an intense creature, of indeterminate age, who dresses fantastically and is always playing a part of some kind. She paints pictures and sings and talks of her 'art.' I believe she was once on the stage. . . . And that completes the roster--except for Montague and myself. Another woman was invited, so Stamm told me, but she sent in her regrets at the last minute."

  "Ah! Now that's most interestin'. Did Mr. Stamm mention her name?"

  "No, but you might ask him when the doctor gets him in shape."

  "What of Montague?" Vance asked. "A bit of gossip regarding his proclivities and background might prove illuminatin'."

  Leland hesitated. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and refilled it. When he had got it going again he answered with a show of reluctance:

  "Montague was what you might call a professional handsome-man. He was an actor by profession, but he never seemed to get very far--although he was featured in one or two motion pictures in Hollywood. He always lived well, at one of the fashionable and expensive hotels. He attended first nights and was a frequenter of the east-side night-clubs. He had a decidedly pleasant manner and was, I understand, most attractive to women. . . ." Leland paused, packed his pipe, and added: "I really know very little about the man."

  "I recognize the type." Vance regarded his cigarette. "However, I shouldn't say the gathering was altogether unusual, or that the elements involved were necess'rily indica
tive of deliberate tragedy."

  "No," Leland admitted. "But it impressed me as noteworthy that practically every one present at the party tonight might have had an excellent motive for putting Montague out of the way."

  Vance lifted his eyebrows interrogatively.

  "Yes?" he urged.

  "Well, to begin with, Stamm himself, as I have said, might have been violently opposed to Montague's marrying his sister. He is very fond of her, and he certainly has intelligence enough to realize that the match would have been a sorry misalliance.--Young Tatum is certainly in a state of mind to murder any rival for Miss Stamm's affections.--Greeff is a man who would stop at nothing, and Montague's marrying into the Stamm family might easily have wrecked his financial ambition to control the fortune. Or, perhaps he actually hoped to marry Bernice himself.--Then again, there was unquestionably something between Teeny McAdam and Montague--I noticed it quite plainly after Tatum had told me of their former relationship. She may have resented his deflection to another woman. Nor is she the kind that would tolerate being thrown over. Furthermore, if she really has any matrimonial designs on Stamm, she may have been afraid that Montague would spoil her prospects by telling Stamm of her past."

  "And what about the tense bohémienne, Miss Steele?"

  A hard look came into Leland's face as he hesitated. Then he said, with a certain sinister resolution:

  "I trust her least of them all. There was some definite friction between her and Montague. She was constantly making unpleasant remarks about him--in fact, she ridiculed him openly, and rarely addressed an ordinarily civil word to him. When Montague suggested the swim in the pool she walked with him to the cabañas, talking earnestly. I could not make out what was said, but I got a decided impression that she was berating him for something. When we came out in our bathing suits and Montague was about to take the first dive, she walked up to him with a leer and said, in a tone which I could not help overhearing, 'I hope you never come up.' And when Montague failed to appear her remark struck me as significant. . . . Perhaps now you can realize--"

 

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