The Bughouse Affair q-2

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The Bughouse Affair q-2 Page 9

by Bill Pronzini


  “I want you to see to it that we’re not victimized. Hire you to keep watch on my home tonight and every night until you’ve caught this man Brown.”

  Quincannon said, “There are other alternatives, you know, which would cost you nothing.”

  “Yes, yes, I know. Move our valuables to a safe place and simply stay home nights until the threat is ended. But we have too many possessions to haul away willy-nilly and too little time to undertake the chore. Even if we did remove everything of value, Brown might still break in and if he found nothing worth stealing, vandalize the premises. That has been known to happen, hasn’t it?”

  “It has, though not very often.”

  “I don’t like the idea of my home being invaded in any case,” Costain said. “And it well could be since it’s on that list of yours. My wife and I have separate appointments tonight and a joint one tomorrow evening that we’re loath to cancel. The house will be empty and fair game from seven until midnight or later both nights.”

  “You have no servants?”

  “None that live in. And it would be useless to ask for help from the city police without certain knowledge of a crime to be committed.”

  Quincannon nodded, considering. If Costain wanted to pay him for the same work he had been engaged to do by Great Western Insurance, there was neither conflict of interest nor any other reasonable argument against it. The notion of another night or two hiding in shrubbery and risking pneumonia had no appeal, but minor hardships were part and parcel of the detective game.

  “You’ll accept the job, then?”

  “I will,” Quincannon said blandly, “provided you’re willing to pay the standard rate for my time plus an additional fee.”

  “What’s that? Additional fee for what?”

  “Surveillance on your home is a job for two men.”

  “Why? You were by yourself at the Truesdales’.”

  “The Truesdale house has front and side entrances that could be watched by one man alone. Yours has front and rear entrances, therefore requiring a second operative.”

  “How is it you know my house?”

  “I tabbed it up, along with the others on the list, the day I was hired by Great Western.”

  “Tabbed it up?”

  “Crook’s argot. Paid visits and scrutinized the properties, the same as the housebreaker would have done to size up the lay.”

  Costain continued to twitch, but he didn’t argue. “Very well,” he said. “How much will it cost me?”

  Quincannon named a per diem figure, only slightly higher than his usual for a two-detective operation. His dislike for the bibulous lawyer was not sufficient to warrant gouging him unduly.

  The amount induced Costain to mutter, “That’s damned close to extortion,” then to reopen his desk drawer and help himself to another “small libation.”

  “Hardly.”

  “I suppose the figure is nonnegotiable?”

  “I don’t haggle,” Quincannon said.

  “All right. How much in advance?”

  “One day’s fee in full.”

  “For services not yet rendered? No, by God. Half, and not a penny more.”

  Quincannon shrugged. Half in advance was more than he usually requested from his clients.

  “You’ll take a check, I assume?”

  “Of course.” As long as it wasn’t made of rubber.

  “You had better not fail me, Quincannon,” Costain said as he wrote out the check. “If there is a repeat of your bungling at the Truesdales’, you’ll regret it. I promise you that.”

  Quincannon bit back an oath, scowled his displeasure instead, and managed an even-toned reply. “I did not bungle at the Truesdales’. What happened two nights ago-”

  “-wasn’t your fault. Yes, yes, I know. And if anything similar happens it won’t be your fault again, no doubt.”

  “You’ll have your money’s worth.”

  “I had better.”

  And I’ll have my money’s worth, and then some, Quincannon thought. He tucked the check into a waistcoat pocket and left Costain to stew in his alcoholic juices.

  The Geary Street address was not far from his bank or the agency offices. He went first to the Miner’s Bank, where he made sure Costain had sufficient funds in his account before depositing the check. Then he set off for the agency at a brisk pace.

  San Francisco was a fine city, he reflected as he walked, the more so on a nippy but sun-bright day such as this one. The fresh salt smell from the bay, the rumble and clang of cable cars on Market Street, the stately presence of the Ferry Building in the distance-he had yet to tire of any of it. It had been a banner day when he was reassigned here during his days with the United States Secret Service. The nation’s capital had not been the same for him after his father succumbed to the assassin’s bullet on the Baltimore waterfront; he had been ready for a change. His new home suited him as Washington, D.C., had suited Thomas Quincannon. The same was true of the business of private investigation, a much more lucrative and satisfying profession than that of an underpaid and overworked government operative.

  When he arrived at the building that housed Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services, he was in a cheerful mood. Temperance songs were among his favorite tunes, not because of his vow of sobriety but because he found them as exaggerated and amusing as temperance tracts; he whistled “Lips that Touch Liquor Will Never Touch Mine” as he climbed to the second floor and approached the agency’s door. But he came to an abrupt halt when he saw that the door stood ajar by a few inches, and heard the voice that came from within.

  “I consider that a man’s brain originally is like a little empty attic,” the voice was declaiming, “and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose. A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best is jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has a difficulty in laying his hands upon it. Now the skillful workman is very careful indeed as to what he takes in to his brain attic. He will have nothing but the tools which may help him in doing his work, but of these he has a large assortment, and all in the most perfect order. It is a mistake to think that little room has elastic walls and can distend to any extent. There comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you knew before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the useful ones.”

  Quincannon’s smile turned upside down as he elbowed inside. The voice belonged to the crackbrain masquerading as Sherlock Holmes.

  14

  SABINA

  The Englishman sat comfortably in the client’s chair in front of her desk, a gray cape draped over his shoulders and a deerstalker cap pulled down over his ears. Even though she had opened both windows, the office was blue with smoke from the long, curved clay pipe he was smoking. The tobacco was worse than the shag John preferred, a mixture that might have been made from floor sweepings.

  He had arrived at the agency twenty minutes earlier, shortly after her return. Sabina had had just enough time to transfer most of the valuables she’d gathered in Clara Wilds’s rooms from her bag into the office safe before he strolled in. Paying a call, he said, for a look at the offices of Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services, for he had a keen interest in learning how his American counterparts conducted their business.

  Sabina, suspecting an ulterior motive, was none too welcoming, but the Englishman didn’t appear to notice and made himself comfortable across from her. She was in no mood for his foolishness and anxious to confer with John about the death of Clara Wilds, so tried to tell the probable impostor she was busy and send him on his way. But he was persistent without being offensive-courtly and charming, in fact, if something of a bore once he began expounding on such arcane topics as brain attics.

  He may well have been the addlepate John and Ambrose Bierce believed him to be, but Sabina had to admit he seemed be
nign enough and extremely well educated, with knowledge of a variety of subjects. And his “parlor tricks,” of which she’d had a sampling, were certainly impressive-so much so that she felt he must have exhaustively studied the deductive methods utilized by the London detective he pretended or believed himself to be. Nonetheless she had had just about enough of him, and soon would have gotten rid of him, if necessary at the point of the derringer she kept in her reticule if her partner hadn’t finally returned.

  John sized up the situation from Sabina’s frustrated expression and was not gentle in closing the door, or gracious in his opening remark. He aimed one of his piratical scowls at their caller, and said to Sabina, “I seem to have walked in on a lecture.”

  A lecture was exactly what she had mentally termed it. If she’d wanted to hear one, she’d have sooner visited the Academy of Sciences or one of the city’s excellent art museums.

  The Englishman answered John before Sabina could. “Hardly that, sir. Hardly that. I was merely stating a portion of my methodology to the most engaging Mrs. Carpenter.”

  “And demonstrating your amazing powers of observation and deduction, no doubt.”

  Sabina waved away a plume of smoke from the clay pipe. “Oh, yes. He wasn’t here three minutes before he knew about Adam.”

  “Adam?” John said suspiciously. “Who the deuce is Adam?”

  “My roommate.”

  “Your … what?”

  “You needn’t look so horrified. Adam is a cat.”

  “A young cat, in point of fact,” the Englishman said. “No older than six months.”

  “Cat? You never told me you had a cat.”

  The look she gave him reaffirmed the fact that there were many things about herself and her personal life she had never told him. “Adam only recently came to live with me.”

  Sherlock Holmes, for want of another name, puffed out another great cloud of acrid smoke. “Rather a curious mix of Abyssinian and long-haired Siamese,” he announced.

  “Mr. Holmes was able to deduce that from a few wisps of fur on the hem of my skirt. Adam’s approximate age, as well.”

  “Remarkable fellow,” John said sourly. “Have you written a monograph on breeds of cat as well as tobacco ash?”

  “No, but perhaps one day I shall.” The Englishman once again assumed his pontifical air. “Remarkable creatures, felines. As one of our more famous philosophers once wrote, ‘God made the cat so that man could have the pleasure of caressing the tiger.’”

  Sabina had to admit that was an apt assessment, but John was not impressed. He demanded of Holmes, “What brought you here, pray tell?”

  “An abiding interest in the inner workings of an American private inquiry agency. As I told your charming associate, I occupied much of yesterday studying accounts of the various investigations you’ve conducted. Excellent detective work, sir and madam. Most commendable.”

  “You’ll find no better anywhere.”

  “No better anywhere in America, perhaps.”

  John bristled at that, but made no comment.

  Holmes adjusted his deerstalker at a rakish angle and leaned back comfortably in the chair. “May I ask how your investigation into the residential burglaries is progressing? Have you caught your pannyman yet?”

  “What business is that of yours?”

  “Now that I’ve finished my researches in your admirable city, I fear I’ve grown bored with conventional tourist activities. San Francisco is quite cosmopolitan for an American city in its infancy, but its geographical, cultural, and historical attractions have decidedly limited appeal in comparison to my native London.”

  “Bah. What researches?”

  “They are of an esoteric nature, of no interest to the average person or even to fellow sleuths.”

  John’s curled lip said he found that to be another addlepated statement. He shed his Chesterfield and went to sit glowering behind his desk.

  “The time of my self-imposed exile has almost ended,” Holmes was saying. “Soon I shall return to England and my former pursuits. Crime and the criminal mind challenge my intellect, give zest to my life. I’ve been away from the game too long.”

  “I can’t imagine leaving it in the first place.”

  “I daresay there were mitigating factors.”

  “Not for any reason, with or without mitigating factors.”

  Their gazes locked, seemed to strike a spark or two. Sabina sighed, and said, “If you’ll excuse us now, Mr. Holmes, my partner and I have business to discuss.”

  “Pray, don’t let my presence stop you. Perhaps I might be of some assistance.”

  “Not likely,” John growled.

  The Englishman ignored this. He remained seated, his eyes agleam, and said through another cloud of smoke, “Doctor Axminster provided a brief tour of your infamous Barbary Coast shortly after my arrival, but it was superficial and hardly enlightening. I should like to see it as I’ve seen Limehouse in London, from the perspective of a consulting detective. Foul dives, foul deeds! My blood races at the prospect.”

  John rolled his eyes and fluffed his beard.

  “Would you permit me to join you on your next excursion? Introduce me to the district’s hidden intrigues, some of its more colorful denizens-the dance-hall queen known as The Galloping Cow, Emperor Norton, the odd fellow who allows himself to be assaulted for money?”

  “The Galloping Cow has slowed to a bovine walk. Emperor Norton is long dead, and Oofty Goofty soon will be if he allows one more thump on his cranium with a baseball bat. Besides, I’m a detective, not a tour guide.”

  “Tut, tut. It is knowledge I’m interested in, not sensation. In return, I offer the benefit of my experience in tracking down your pannyman and his ill-gotten gains.”

  “The only experience I need to call on is my own. I have no intention-”

  John broke off abruptly, and Sabina saw his expression alter and a wicked light brighten his hazel eyes. She knew that look all too well. It meant a devious notion had come to him and his wily brain was busy concocting mischief.

  He said through a wolfish smile, “I had a message from Andrew Costain this morning requesting a meeting. I’ve just come from his offices.”

  “Ah. A matter pertaining to the burglaries?”

  “Yes. He’s afraid of being the burglar’s next victim and wants his home put under surveillance until the yegg is caught.”

  Sabina said, “You didn’t accept?”

  “I did, and why not? There is no conflict of interest in accepting payment from more than one client to perform the same task, as Costain himself pointed out.”

  “Still, it’s not quite ethical.…”

  “Ethics be damned. A fee is a fee for services rendered, and that includes providing peace of mind to nervous citizens. Eh, Holmes?”

  “Indubitably.”

  “We’re to begin tonight. Costain’s home is near South Park, not as large a property as banker Truesdale’s but nonetheless substantial, and with both front and rear entrances. I explained to the lawyer that proper surveillance will require two operatives, and he agreed to the extra fee.”

  Now Sabina understood the nature of the mischief he’d hatched. She said his name warningly, but he pretended not to hear. He continued to address the Englishman.

  “There are a number of operatives I could call upon, but I wonder, given your interest in this case and your eagerness to return to the game, if you might be willing to join me at the task?”

  Another noxious cloud erupted from Holmes’s pipe. Sabina smothered a cough and turned her head toward the window for fresh air.

  “Splendid suggestion!” Holmes said. “I would be honored. In return for my services, I ask only that you acquaint me with the Barbary Coast as you know it.”

  “Agreed. You’ll see the Coast as few ever have.”

  Holmes smiled.

  John smiled.

  Sabina grimaced.

  The two men made arrangements to meet at Hoolihan’s Saloon a
t seven o’clock, after which Holmes finally departed. When she and John were alone, Sabina let her exasperation with his cavalier and less-than-scrupulous behavior bubble to the surface. “You’ve taken leave of your senses, John Quincannon. You’re as daft as the Englishman.”

  “Daft? Sly as a fox, you mean. Now there’s no need to pay another operative for the work of an evening or two. Andrew Costain’s fees belong entirely to us.”

  “Holmes only believes himself to be a trained detective. He could do more harm than good on a night’s surveillance.”

  “Poppycock. I’ll see to it he doesn’t interfere if Dodger Brown comes skulking again tonight.”

  “The way you didn’t let him interfere two nights ago?”

  John looked pained. “That won’t happen again.”

  “Don’t be too sure. Dodger Brown may be more dangerous than you think.”

  “A scrawny yegg like him? Faugh.”

  “Not only a yegg-possibly a murderer.”

  “What’s that? Who would he have murdered?”

  “Clara Wilds. I found her dead in her rooms earlier this afternoon. Stabbed in the throat with her hatpin.”

  Quickly she related her activities of the day, ending with her discovery of the hiding place of the pickpocket’s spoils and her removal of them to the security of their office safe. John listened without interruption, tugging at his whiskers as he considered the news.

  When she finished, he said, “Was there any evidence of who committed the deed?”

  “None of a specific nature. But it could have been Dodger Brown.”

  “Did you find anything to suggest he had been visiting Wilds in her rooms?”

  “No.”

  “None of the people you spoke to were able to verify whether or not she was still consorting with him?”

  “Not willingly, at least.”

  “Then he’s no more a suspect in her murder than anyone else.”

  “Except that he does have brown hair,” Sabina said. “Do you recall if it’s fine and on the curly side?”

  “I believe it is. We’ll know if he’s guilty when he’s found.”

  “I take it you failed to get a line on his whereabouts?”

 

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