Iris hesitated, shrugged her firm young shoulders, and then walked out of the room in a reasonably good imitation of Miss Tallulah Bankhead making an exit from a stage overcrowded with bit players.
Natalie Rowan said firmly, “I really have no statement whatever for the press.” She pointedly did not sit down.
Miss Withers found that in spite of herself she liked the woman. She was always drawn to lame dogs and beggars, and here was a soul in desperate trouble but keeping a stiff upper lip. Besides, it was a little flattering to be taken for a member of the Fourth Estate. “Goodness, I’m not a reporter,” confessed the dowdy middle-aged schoolma’am. “Though I’m being mistaken for one so often these days I’m beginning to think I should take out a card in the Newspaper Guild. Mrs. Rowan—”
“And if you don’t mind, I prefer to use the name of my first husband at this time. To avoid as much unpleasant notoriety as possible. You cannot imagine how heartless the photographers and so on can be!”
For all her assurance, the woman was tense and afraid; pulled up taut as an Estring. But Miss Withers was already over her quota on mercy that day. “Never mind your first husband,” she probed briskly. “Your present husband has barely seven more days to live.”
Another hit, below the belt. Twisting her rings, Natalie whispered, “And—and just what is that to you?”
“I’m glad you asked me that question,” said the schoolteacher with a wry smile. “Because I’ve been asking it of myself for some time, without finding an answer. However, there’s always this. Shouldn’t any good citizen be interested in preventing a possible miscarriage of justice, especially when the regularly constituted authorities are simply sitting around like bumps on a log?”
It was all a little over Natalie’s head. “You’re not from the police, then?”
“Far from them indeed at the moment,” said Miss Withers with a disarming frankness. “Though I am perfectly willing to admit that I may have been of some slight assistance to Inspector Piper once or twice in the past.” The schoolteacher introduced herself, and gave a rather sketchy explanation of how she had come to be interested in the affair. She even went so far as to mention the will.
“Andy did that?” cried the woman blankly. “I don’t understand. Why didn’t he leave it to—not that I need the money at all, only—”
“Only your pride has taken a considerable beating already, is that it? Shall we forget that angle for a moment? Your husband has made a will which seems to be aimed at clearing his name of the taint of murder, posthumously. That proves he still loves you.”
“It—it does?” Natalie looked doubtful.
“Of course. He wants to have you remember him as an innocent man, as he may well be. But the time to do something about it is now, not after the execution. This is an unusual situation and requires unusual measures, of which I have a complete set or so the Inspector often tells me. To come right down to cases, steps have to be taken—and you have to help. You can’t just sit here and wash your hands of the man you married.”
“Why, I—”
“And I have an idea that, even while you refused to stand by your husband at the trial, you still must have cared enough about him to pay his lawyers—or else he wouldn’t have $3500 left in his bank account after the costs of the trial and appeal. Wasn’t that because you still had a sneaking fondness for him?”
The woman dropped into a chair, soft and helpless as an opened oyster. She nodded slowly. “Yes,” she whispered, “I arranged for his defense. It was a firm who used to represent my first husband, Emil Fogel.” Her eyes flickered toward the portrait on the wall. “He manufactured cotter pins, you know. I still think the lawyers did their best for Andy, but he was a very noncooperative client. Anyway, I did all I could for him, just as any woman would have.”
“But you didn’t show up to sit beside him at the trial, even though the lawyers must have told you that it might help him considerably. You kept aloof from him all through his ordeal—”
Natalie cried, in a tortured voice, “But he had told me that girl meant nothing to him, that she was only a client, and all the time—” She gulped. “All the time they were having secret trysts right here in our—in my house, where we’d been so happy!”
“My dear woman,” said Miss Withers, “a man may be a liar and a philanderer, but still be innocent of murder.”
There was a silence so complete that the schoolteacher could hear Talley’s soft snoring beside her foot, and the ticking of a little ormolu clock across the room. Then Natalie Rowan drew a deep shuddering breath, like someone about to dive off the high board into cold water. “I know he’s innocent,” she whispered. “Now.”
“So that’s why you went up to the prison to see him? How splendid!” cried Miss Withers cheerily. “Now at long last we have something to go on. If you’ve run across anything in the line of proof—”
Natalie hesitated, looking across the room. “I’m afraid it isn’t anything the police, or even you, would take any stock in.”
“Don’t be too sure,” said Miss Withers, still confident. “In my time I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” Then she added, as the other woman stared at her blankly, “That’s from Alice.”
“Miss Withers, do you believe in the Hereafter?” Natalie asked suddenly.
“Why—as a member in good standing of the Parkway Unitarian Church, I suppose I must, though I couldn’t offer scientific proof of the fact.”
“I mean, do you believe in the supernormal, the supernatural as some call it?”
“Oh, come come! In this day and age, with extrasensory perception and flying saucers and H-bombs, where is one to draw the line? Please come to the point.”
“Well,” said Natalie, “since all this happened I’ve been dreadfully lonely and miserable. I tried all the isms and numerology and sedatives, but nothing seemed to help. Then a few months ago I remembered that a friend had told me about this wonderful little woman down on Ninety-sixth Street, called Marika. You must understand that she isn’t a medium or anything, no fakery about her. She just goes into trances and talks. And she doesn’t ever charge anything, though some people leave a free-will offering …”
“Oh, dear!” murmured Miss Withers, feeling rather as if she had sat herself down in a chair that wasn’t there. This sort of nonsense went out with Sir Oliver Lodge and Margery of Boston and the later writings of the bemused Conan Doyle. Nowadays silly women had psychiatry and canasta and existentialism to make fools of themselves about.
Natalie looked at her almost shrewdly. “I can maybe guess what you’re thinking. But I’m not exactly the gullible type. In some of her trances Marika told me things about my childhood that she simply couldn’t have faked. There was the time with a boy on the high school sleighride—and she also told me about my honeymoon, my second one I mean. I met and married Andy in Paree, you know. Ah, the Tooleries, the Bois, the Champs d’Elysées, Longchamps …”
“Champs, champs, champs the bois are marching,” Miss Withers said, almost aloud.
But Natalie Rowan was back on the topic of Marika again. “… and one night a few weeks ago she went into an unusually deep trance and suddenly I heard a different voice coming out of her throat. A voice that I couldn’t possibly be mistaken about, because it was Emil, my first husband. And he told me, plain as the nose on your face, that Andy didn’t kill the Harrington girl!”
“Oh,” said Miss Withers flatly.
“Maybe you don’t believe in voices from the Beyond? But I heard what I heard!”
The schoolteacher took it in her stride, and said, “The late Mr. Fogel would hardly be considered a pertinent witness to the murder, would he? Unless, of course, he happened to be haunting this house the evening of the murder.”
“But Marika says that the Departed are now all part of the Universal Mind, and know everything that ever was or will be.”
Miss Withers could have pointed out that if this were so, then it was odd
that most spirit messages were on the intellectual level of an eight-year-old child. “The dear departed didn’t happen to mention the name of the real murderer?”
Natalie shook her head. “The sitting was over—Marika couldn’t stand any more.”
“And you haven’t been back for another session?”
“I—I’ve been too busy trying to help Andy.”
“I understand. But you really have nothing else, except the message from the grave, to prove your husband’s innocence?”
“Nothing except—well, I talked with him in prison. He finally admitted that his original story about finding the girl’s body planted in his car wasn’t true.”
The schoolteacher sniffled a deep sniff. “Since the police found her fingerprints all over this living room, her cigarettes in the ashtrays, and the marks on the carpet of where her heels had been dragged out of the place after she was dead, it really wasn’t much of an admission, was it?”
Natalie said quickly, “Andy’s telling the truth now, I think. But suppose I start at the beginning. It was a year ago this August, stifling hot night even up there in the country place near Darien I’d rented for the summer. Andy had been nervous and irritable at dinner, complaining about my cooking more even than usual. I wasn’t feeling well, so I went to bed early. I was half-asleep when I heard his car drive away, but I thought he was only going out for a breath of air, so I dozed off. It wasn’t until after midnight that I woke and started calling the police and hospitals. I finally decided he was out with that girl, and must have cried myself to sleep. A little before eight in the morning the maid woke me and told me that the police were downstairs. Then I was really frantic. It was hours later when I looked into the wall safe in the library and found he’d taken all the money.”
“Money?” Miss Withers perked up her ears. “Your money, or his?”
“Ours,” said Natalie loyally. “Around $5,000 or more. I kept that much around because sometimes in those days I used to go out buying antique furniture and old glass, and money talks louder than checks with those New Englanders. But don’t you see? If Andy had had murder in mind when he left he wouldn’t have taken the money. He took it along when he went to meet the girl only because he’d decided to pay her off if that was the only way to keep her from carrying out her threats to make trouble. She was bitter about not getting a chance to be Miss America, and she blamed Andy for her failure.”
“Just what did go wrong, do you know?”
“The girl had too purple a past, I think. Anyway, she knew that her backers had paid Andy a lot of money to give her a publicity build-up, and she wanted him to kick back part of it. Andy says she threatened to tell me a lot of awful lies about how he had led her astray with liquor and drugs when she was under the age of consent, and how she now was encientay …”
Miss Withers blinked. “I beg your pardon?”
“Oh, sorry. Since my trip to Paree I just can’t seem to help those Gaulish expressions creeping into my speech. I mean, that she was expecting.”
“I see.” The schoolteacher swallowed hard. “You know, Mrs. Rowan, all this sounds awfully wicked and out of character for a mere child of eighteen.”
“She was old in wickedness, that one! Oh, I know. Anyway, according to the story Andy tells now, he says he got into town around ten. He had a sort of date with the girl, at least she’d set that night—”
“A Thursday, was it?”
“Friday. She’d set it as a deadline. Andy was going to phone her from here and ask her to come up for a showdown, paying over the money as a last resort. But when he let himself into the house he turned on the lights and there was the Harrington girl dead in the middle of my Aubusson carpet!” She pointed, dramatically, to a spot near Miss Withers’ foot.
“Quiet, Talley,” ordered the schoolteacher. “This is more important than taking a walk.” She nodded thoughtfully. “Your husband may be telling the truth. Stranger things have happened—”
Words were fairly tumbling out of Natalie now, a torrent unloosed. “He says his first thought was to phone the police, so he rushed back into the hall where the instrument is.” She pointed. “As he was dialing, before they answered, he was hit over the head, and when he came to it was hours later.”
The Withers eyebrows went up suspiciously. “Pray how could he tell that?”
“The body, of course. It had been warm when he first touched her, and now it was cold. He realized that whatever alibi he had once had was gone. Andy lost his head, stripped the body to prevent identification, and somehow got her out into his car. Whoever hit him from behind had taken the envelope with the money, but he was too frightened and excited to discover that then. He drove around the rest of the night trying to find a place to leave her. That’s his story, but—”
“But there’s a catch to it, isn’t there?”
Natalie nodded. “Yes. I do so want to believe him. But you see, the phone here at the house had been disconnected for over a month.”
“The phone? That wasn’t what I meant at all. He may not have known. Even if he’d spent several evenings here with the girl they might not have had any reason to use the telephone. As for his call to the police, he may not even have waited for the dial tone, many people don’t when they’re in a hurry. But it was a worse flaw that occurred to me. Granted that his amended story is true, then just how did the girl—and her murderer—get inside?”
Natalie Rowan paused to comfort herself with a nip of cognac from the little bar disguised as a rosewood cabinet. “Ask me something hard,” she said bitterly. “Andy kept silent because he didn’t want me to know, but now he admits that early in their love affair he’d had a key made for her!”
Miss Withers said softly, “What a tangled web we weave—” She pondered. “If your husband had taken the witness stand and told about the key it might have saved his neck.” She looked down at the dog, and then rose suddenly, still talking, and moved across the room to jerk aside the draperies in the doorway. The pretty secretary-companion was lurking there, mouth open and ears almost flapping with curiosity—and some other less obvious emotion too.
“Well!” demanded the schoolteacher with some asperity. “Do you two girls take turns at eavesdropping?”
The young woman flushed beet-red, but Natalie Rowan said easily, “She’s interested, naturally. Miss Withers, this is Iris Dunn—”
“How do you—” Then Miss Withers gaped. “Not the Iris Dunn, the roommate who identified Midge Harrington’s body?”
Natalie nodded. “You may think it odd of me, but I looked her up. Iris has been trying to help me uncover something in the Harrington girl’s past which might lead us to the real murderer. Come in, dear, and sit down. Three heads are better than one, I always say. Iris, shake hands with our new ally. She has X-ray eyes.”
Miss Withers failed to mention that her hunch about someone being behind the curtain had been based on Talley’s looking toward the doorway and wagging his tail. Wasn’t it Sherlock Holmes who always explained his deductions only to have Dr. Watson say, “Oh, yes, of course, anybody could have seen that!”?
The schoolteacher listened patiently while Natalie Rowan, warmed a little by the brandy, went on to disclose the details of a pitiful and seemingly abortive campaign, two lone women engaged in a desperate lost cause. “But after I knew Andy was innocent I had to do something!” the woman said. “You too must believe him innocent, Miss Withers, or you wouldn’t be here.”
“I certainly feel that a man in Rowan’s position is entitled to the benefit of the doubt,” admitted the schoolteacher with native caution. “And even Inspector Piper admits there are weak links in the chain of evidence. What do you think of it all, Miss Dunn?”
Iris shrugged her shoulders, and smiled a surprisingly frank, little-girl smile. “I’m only here because Mrs. Rowan is paying me,” she admitted. “And show business is tougher than usual this season. Not, of course, that I couldn’t have got an ingénue lead with some road company, only—�
� She stopped and smiled as if an extremely pleasant thought had just flickered through her mind. Then she said abruptly, “About the murder, I know from nothing.”
“But she’s been very helpful, anyway,” Natalie said firmly. “Now isn’t it obvious that if Andy isn’t guilty then he was framed by somebody out of Midge’s past who wanted her dead and was willing to let an innocent man suffer for it?”
“Midge was hell on men, anybody’s men,” Iris put in suddenly. “You couldn’t let her get a whiff of your date’s shaving lotion or she’d try to climb in his pocket.”
“I see,” said Miss Withers. “Very enlightening. But apart from Andy Rowan, of course, just who were the men in Midge Harrington’s life?”
Iris studied her fingernails. “During the five months we roomed together Midge wasn’t exactly the confiding type about her romances. She had lots of dates, but not many men she went out with more than once or twice. I’ve told Mrs. Rowan all I can.”
“For this sort of investigation,” the schoolteacher admitted, “one should really have professional assistance.”
“But I did go to one of the best private agencies in town,” Natalie put in. “They said they would take my money if I insisted, but it was a lost cause.”
“The masculine mind,” sighed Miss Withers. “So you two started out alone.”
“I’m afraid we haven’t got very far. After over a year, the trail is cold. Iris and I are about at the end of our rope.”
“No clues, no leads at all?” pressed the schoolteacher hopefully.
Natalie said, “When Midge Harrington was sixteen she was named correspondent in a divorce case brought by the wife of her dancing teacher, a man named Nils Bruner. A year later she got mixed up with a swing trumpet-player known as Riff Sprott, who took veronal when she walked out on him, but he didn’t die.”
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