by Frances
“Children,” Pamela North said. “Be good cats.” She explained to Dorian. “They’re showing off, now,” she said.
“Please,” Jerry said from the telephone. “I can’t—Oh, Weigand. Yes, he’s here.”
He beckoned with the telephone and Bill took it. He said, “yes” and “yes.”
“All right,” he said, “we’ll just have to keep after him. I’ll be along after awhile. Anything else?”
He listened.
“What difference it can possibly make,” he said. “However—”
He listened again.
“We knew that,” he said. He listened further.
“And that,” he said. “But thank the good doctor. Tell him he’s very thorough.” He started to cradle the telephone. He thought better of it.
“Mullins!” he said. “Hold it. Don’t tell him that last.” He waited. “Right,” he said. “In a couple of hours. I’ll be here, meanwhile.”
He cradled the telephone this time and crossed back to his seat on the sofa. They looked at him, enquiringly.
“Mullins,” he said. “The boy’s still holding out. The M. E. says she died about an hour before his man saw her, which would make it about a quarter of one. He knew what she had to eat. But so did we. Bacon and tomato sandwich, coffee, a—”
Suddenly he broke off, with an odd expression in his eyes. And then, softly, he said that he would be damned. He said it slowly and with some surprise. Then he was back at the telephone and dialing; then he was speaking into the telephone with a new tone in his voice.
“Weigand,” he said. “Get me Mullins.” There was a moment’s pause. Then Bill Weigand spoke again. “Mullins?” he said. “Read me that again.” He waited. “Are they sure?” he asked. He did not wait to be answered. “Don’t ask them that, Mullins. Of course they’re sure.” He held the telephone for a moment at a little distance from his ear and tapped on the table with the fingers of his free hand. Then he made up his mind.
“Mullins,” he said. “Let up on the boy. Hold him; put him in storage somewhere. And give him a cigarette and something to eat.” He listened. “Right,” he said. “Screwy is the word for it, Sergeant. I’ll be along.”
He put the telephone down and turned and looked at the others, but not as if he saw them clearly.
They waited for him to speak and when he did not, Pam spoke.
“What’s the matter, Bill?” she said. “Is it blowing up on you? Didn’t the boy do it?”
Weigand shook his head, slowly.
“I don’t know,” he said. “Mullins says it’s screwy. You see—she’d eaten a baked apple.”
He looked at the others, who looked back at him, evidently unenlightened. He gave them time. Then he explained.
“It’s a catch,” he said. “I told you we knew everything, even what she had to eat. Maybe we knew too damned much. You see, she didn’t have any baked apple. She wanted one, and there weren’t any. So she took a custard. And now the M.E.’s office finds out she had a baked apple. Where’d she get it?”
“Probably,” Dorian said, reasonably, “she went back to the counter and had another try and got a baked apple. I don’t see—”
“Right,” Weigand said. “I don’t either. Not certainly. Maybe she did just that. And maybe somebody else was there and brought her a baked apple. Because the kid—this Franklin Martinelli—swears she didn’t leave the table while he was there, and he’s confirmed—a dozen times, probably, that she had a sandwich and a cup of custard and coffee.”
“But,” Jerry said, “you didn’t believe him before. Why believe him now?”
Weigand nodded, and said it was a point. Maybe the Martinelli boy was a very bright boy; maybe he’d figured something out. But he would have to be very bright to know that it would matter whether Frances McCalley had a baked apple with her lunch.
“It would take figuring,” Bill said. “I doubt whether the kid figures that way—figures that if she didn’t have a baked apple with her regular lunch, didn’t leave the table during the time he was there, showed up with a baked apple in her stomach—that all this would mean maybe he didn’t do it after all.” He paused, considering. “It’s funny,” he said. “Where did she get the apple?”
“Somebody brought it to her,” Pam said. “Maybe the person who killed her. Maybe somebody else. Or did she leave the table, but perhaps after the boy had gone, and got the apple herself. Could she see the counter? Where the things were, I mean? From where she sat?”
Weigand shook his head. He admitted he hadn’t noticed.
“Because,” Pam amplified, “maybe she saw somebody bring the apples in. And went and got one. Anyway, it isn’t so routine as it was, is it? Perhaps it wasn’t the Martinelli boy.”
“Right,” Weigand said. “So we’re giving him a rest. And instead of sitting here, basking comfortably, telling sad stories of the death of gangsters, I’ve got to go around and get to work. Tracing a baked apple from—from the counter to the morgue.”
“Bill!” Dorian said, firmly. “For heaven’s sake, darling!”
Bill smiled.
“Nevertheless,” he began. Then the telephone rang again. He looked quickly at Jerry, who waved a hand; he said, “Lieut. Weigand speaking” into the telephone. He looked pained and held the receiving end a couple of inches from his ear.
He looked at the others and made the word “Inspector” with his lips. He said, “Yes, Inspector?”
He listened. He whistled softly. He said, “Right.” He listened again.
“Right away, Inspector,” he said. “But how about the McCalley case? In the Greystone’s coffee shop.” He listened. “No,” he said, “I’m not sure it is. Something else has come up. A question of a baked apple.”
Across the room they could hear the telephone splutter. Grinning slightly, Weigand held it farther from his ear.
“Right,” he said. “But I’m not joking. I’m not sure it’s the Martinelli boy, and the reason is a baked apple. However—”
He listened further, said, “Right” again, and replaced the telephone in its holder. He stood up.
“Inspector O’Malley,” he said. “In person. From a house on Gramercy Park. They found Miss Ann Lawrence dead there. Somebody hit her with a poker. A brass poker, O’Malley says.”
“Lawrence?” Pam said. “Ann Lawrence? Ought we—”
Weigand shrugged. He said the Inspector seemed to think so. Apparently she had been important, since the Inspector went around in person; apparently she had money, since she lived in a house—her own house—on Gramercy Park. And apparently the Inspector was now ready to turn it over to Weigand.
“To assist,” Weigand explained, gravely. “To do the routine. And after I get there, our O’Malley will decide he has already done the important thinking, got everything well in hand, and had better leave detail to me. So he will go and play poker with the boys.”
Weigand was amused, not aggrieved.
“He’s got a right,” Dorian said.
“Sure he’s got a right,” Bill told her and both of them smiled.
“And the other one—the girl in the cafeteria?” Pam asked. “What about her?”
Mullins, for the time being, Weigand said. After the time being they would see.
“And now,” he said, “I’ve got to join the Inspector.”
Pam said it was too bad. She said she had been thinking of a rubber of bridge. But she did not, and Weigand was a little surprised by this, suggest that they all go along and help. She said they would see Dorian got home and to come back right away if somebody confessed, or Inspector O’Malley had it all solved, and that it was nice that the department had let him come at all.
After he had gone, Pam stood for a moment with her back to the closed door, and found Jerry looking at her speculatively. He was, she decided, puzzled. She waited for him to mention it.
But after looking at her, he apparently decided to let sleeping issues lie, because when he spoke he seemed to be skirting murd
er rather elaborately, and to be about to return to the subject of Dan Beck, as if he had never left it. Pam waited, politely, until he reached what might be the end of a sentence. Then she spoke.
“I think,” she said, “that we’d better all help Sergeant Mullins. About the baked apple. Because it’s going to confuse him dreadfully, without Bill. And because—because the girl was just a baby, really. Don’t you think?”
“No,” Jerry said, firmly.
“I do,” Pam said. “I think we ought to.”
II. Tuesday, 8:10 P.M. to 8:55 P.M.
It had begun to snow, which was discouraging, because already there had been enough snow; because, against all evidence, one persisted in thinking of March as one of the months of spring. It was not cold, which was something; you might think of the large, stolidly falling flakes as a spring snow. There were a great many of the flakes and they were falling heavily, but without hurry; it was a tired snow. It was forming slush on the sidewalks and streets; it had plastered on the top of Weigand’s car, and on the cold hood and on the windshield. Weigand flicked snow from the windshield with heavy gloves and got into the car. The motor started, with no enthusiasm, and the snow on the hood almost at once began to melt.
From inside the car, looking out through the smeared glass, the snow seemed heavier than it had before. It was a soft, moving, implacable wall around the car. When Weigand switched on his dim lights, their faint radiance bounced off the snow. It seemed improbable that a car could move through the white wall. For a moment, Bill Weigand felt shut off from everything, in a new, strange world. Then he switched on the windshield wipers. They floundered against the snow, pushed it aside. They began to clear spaces on the glass, each space looking—Weigand decided—like the amount of the national income spent for the war effort.
Starting, the car skidded in the slush. Weigand coaxed it to a straight line and eased it through the half-melted snow, not hurrying. He turned up Fifth Avenue and, after a few blocks, crossed to Fourth. At Nineteenth he turned east and, when he reached the park, groped slowly around it. The snow was heavier than ever when the car moved; the soft white wall turned into a maelstrom, sweeping and twisting toward him, swirling up in front of the windshield and over the car. It was dizzying. Weigand did not look for street numbers, but watched for a small cluster of cars. On the north side of the square, east of Lexington, he found it and nosed the Buick in. A uniformed patrolman started forward, identified the car and made a gesture which was, in its fashion, a salute.
Weigand stopped on the sidewalk for a moment and looked up at the house. It was a small house, as New York houses went—narrow, three-stories, sedate. Brass rails, which probably glistened under more favorable conditions, curved on either side of the few steps which led up to the door, off-center in the façade. It was a pretty little house, Weigand thought, and went up the steps. He pushed against the door and it opened quietly, softly resisting against its pneumatic check. There was another uniformed man just inside, much drier and more contented. He saluted with more spirit and said, “Hello, Lieutenant. The inspector’s upstairs.”
The entrance hall was wider than he would have expected. Off it, on the left, was a small room which was, he decided, dedicated to the Capehart which seemed almost to fill it. Ahead, the entrance hall ended in a large room which occupied what remained of the first floor of the house. It was a comfortable room and there was a man in it, sitting in a chair and staring at the carpet. A third uniformed man stood beside him, watching him and not saying anything. Weigand’s eyebrows went up slightly.
At his left, just inside the big room, Weigand found a stairway, curving delicately upward. He curved up with it, as delicately as seemed appropriate. It conducted him into a hall between two rooms and then he followed his ears. Deputy Chief Inspector Artemus O’Malley was in the larger of the rooms, which fronted on the street. He was supported, and attended, by several men. One was, Bill Weigand recognized, the precinct homicide man and another was a sergeant on his staff. There were two more men from the headquarters squad and Detective Stein was on the floor, measuring something with the folding rule. The distance from somewhere to the chalked outline which was, roughly, the outline of a human body. Not a large body, evidently. Stein was marking the spot.
“Well, Lieutenant, where the hell have you been?” O’Malley said. O’Malley was large in all dimensions and red-faced and emphatic. “Not,” he added, “that it matters a damn. All cleaned up.”
“Good,” Bill said. “Congratulations, Inspector.”
O’Malley looked at him and there was a momentary doubt in the inspector’s unmelting blue eyes. He saw nothing in Weigand’s face to support suspicion.
“Open and shut,” Inspector O’Malley said, driving it home. “None of this fooling around. None of this fancy stuff. Routine, Lieutenant.”
Weigand, involuntarily, said “Oh.” Inspector O’Malley said “Huh?” with great emphasis.
“Nothing,” Weigand said. “It was good work, Inspector.”
“Nothing to it,” the inspector said, his tone indicating that there had been, particularly, nothing to it for him. What Weigand would have done with it, the tone indicated, was another matter. “A set-up. Guy who was going to marry her did it. They had a quarrel and—slosh! Hit her with a poker. Brass poker, stuck in one of those gadgets.”
He pointed at the gadget, a rack for fireplace tools. There was a shovel in it and a bellows dangling from a hook and what was, evidently, intended to be a hearth brush. There was no poker. That would be because the lab boys had it, checking the prints; setting them for photographs. There was no body, either. Dr. Francis, assistant medical examiner—or another—would have that.
“Well,” Weigand said, “in that case, I’d better get back on the Greystone killing. There’s a funny sort of thing about—”
Inspector O’Malley, interrupting, told Weigand not to be a fool. He’d fooled around enough with that already.
“Twice as long as you needed to,” he said. “I got the reports. The kid did it. This—this—”
“Martinelli,” Bill told him. “Franklin. But—”
O’Malley said there were no buts about it. It was as simple as this one. “This one right here,” he specified. It was, further, small-time stuff. This wasn’t.
“Decided I’d better handle this myself,” O’Malley said. “Considering who she was, and everything. Thought it might be complicated. Screwy. Some of these—But as soon as I looked around and listened to the old gal downstairs I saw it was a set-up.”
“Does he admit it?” Bill asked. “The man who was going to marry her. Whoever he is. The guy downstairs, I suppose.”
O’Malley said, yeh, the guy downstairs. And no, he didn’t admit it. “Yet.” He would, though.
“I’ll leave that to you,” O’Malley said. “Nothing you can’t handle, with the boys. He’ll spill it, soon enough. I’ve got him softened up for you.” He looked at Weigand and was pleased. “Shows you how to do it, don’t it, Bill?” he said. “Couple of hours and it’s cleaned up. None of this fancy stuff. When I think of the way you young fellows—”
Bill Weigand, resigned, listened to the way of young fellows, as contrasted with the superior way of experienced policemen, here represented by Deputy Chief Inspector Artemus O’Malley. It was not unfamiliar. He nodded at intervals, said “Right,” once or twice, watched Stein measuring. He did not look at the faces of the other detectives from the precinct, and particularly not at Detective Lieutenant Armstrong, of the precinct. He suspected that Armstrong would be grinning; he suspected that, if he saw it, his own face might reflect the grin.
“So,” O’Malley finished, “there it is, Bill. In your lap.” He looked at his watch and seemed surprised by it. “Got to be getting along,” he said. “Can’t spend the night here. Nothing you boys can’t do now.”
“Right,” Weigand said. “If we need you, Inspector—?”
“You won’t,” O’Malley promised, and Bill Weigand thought it
probable. “Got to see a man at the club.”
“Right,” Weigand said again. “At the club.”
“Business,” O’Malley said, severely, and for a third time Weigand said “right.” Without inflection.
Inspector O’Malley went out; Lieutenant Armstrong and Bill Weigand considered his progress down the stairs, which creaked with it.
“Our only Artie,” Armstrong said, with tenderness not to be taken at its face value. “Our only Artie. The miracle man.”
“Right,” Weigand said. “Our only Artie. And so he’s cleaned it up?”
Lieutenant Armstrong of the precinct said it looked as if he had, at that. Except for a few details, like maybe a confession. Or some evidence. That part, Armstrong said, belonged to Bill Weigand. At the thought of what was left to Bill Weigand, Lieutenant Armstrong did not seem displeased. Weigand waited, and Armstrong said it was this way—
The body was found where the chalked outline near the fireplace showed. It was found at a little before four o’clock in the afternoon by the housekeeper, Mrs. Florence Pennock. It was clothed—
“Do you,” Weigand said, “have to call it it?”
Armstrong was willing to start over. “It” was Miss Ann Lawrence, twenty-three, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Lawrence, both of whom had been dead for several years. And both of whom had had money since man could remember. Money that the girl had had until—well, until twelve hours, perhaps, before her body was found. Hence the house, hence large property possessions and many stocks and bonds; hence the Social Register and membership on junior committees. A very lovely, lucky lady, she must have been.
“Not too lucky,” Weigand said.
Armstrong shrugged. Obviously, in the end, not too lucky. In the end her luck had run out. Some time the previous morning. When a heavy poker hit the back of her head and crushed it, so that blood and brains ran out and soaked into the gay rose carpet of her sitting room, or whatever she had called it. This room.