The Fourth Deadly Sin exd-4
Page 37
Las Vegas did all right.
When he came to his brownstone, the lights were on, the Christmas wreath still on the door. And inside was the companionship of a loving woman, a tot of brandy, a good cigar.
And later, a warm bed and blessed sleep.
"Thank you, God," he said aloud, and started up the steps.
Delaney didn't want the girls to go out on New Year's Eve.
"It's amateur night," he told Monica.
"People who haven't had a drink all year suddenly think they've got to get sloshed.
Then they throw up on you or get in their cars and commit mayhem. The safest place for all of us is right here, with the doorlocked."
Wails and tears from Mary and Sylvia.
Finally a compromise was devised: They would have a New Year's Eve party at the brownstone, with Peter and Jeffrey invited. The rug would be rolled up and there would be dancing. Formal dress: The ladies would wear party gowns and the men dinner jackets.
"There I draw the line," Delaney protested.
"My tux is in the attic, and probably mildewed. Even if I can find it, I probably won't be able to get into it; I've put on a few ounces, you know."
"No tux, no party," Monica said firmly.
"And the girls go out."
So, grumbling, he trudged up to the attic and dug out his tuxedo from a grave of mothballs. It was rusty and wrinkled, but Monica sponged and brushed it. He could wear the jacket unbuttoned, and Monica assured him that with his black, pleated cummerbund in place, no one would know that the top button of his trousers was, by necessity, yawning.
Still grousing, he left the brownstone and marched out to purchase party supplies and food for a light midnight supper.
He dragged along a wheeled shopping cart and thought he cut an undignified figure with his cart and black homburg. But he met no one he knew, so that was all right.
He returned home two hours later to find numerous messages waiting for him.
He went into the study to return the calls. He phoned Abner Boone first.
"How did it go, Sergeant?" he asked.
"Just about the way you told her it would, sir. She's out now, back in her townhouse."
"A lot of reporters?"
"And photographers and television crews. She cracked UP."
"Cracked up? How do you mean?"
"A crying fit. Close to hysteria."
"Sorry to hear that. I thought she had more spine."
"Well, she just dissolved, and we had our hands full. Fortunately, when her lawyer showed up, he brought along Doctor Samuelson, and the doc gave her something that quieted her down. She didn't look so beautiful when she left."
"No," Delaney said grimly, "and her husband didn't look so beautiful on the floor of his office. Thank you for all your help, Sergeant, and please convey my thanks to Jason and all the others."
"I'll do that, sir, and a Happy New Year."
"Thank you. And to you and Rebecca. Give her our love."
"Will do. I hope we get a chance to work together again."
"I wouldn't be a bit surprised," Delaney said.
His next call was to First Deputy Commissioner Ivar Thorsen, who sounded very ebullient and maybe a wee bit smashed.
"Everything's coming up roses, Edward," he reported exuberantly.
"We didn't make the first editions this morning, but we'll be in the afternoon papers. Four TV news programs so far, and more to come. The phone is ringing off the hook with calls from out-of-town papers and news magazines.
It looks like the press thinks we've solved the case."
"That's what you wanted, isn't it?' "Oh, hell, yes! The Commish is grinning like a Cheshire cat, and even the Chief of Operations has congratulated Suarez. I think Riordan knows he's lost. It looks good for Suarez to get the permanent appointment."
"Glad to hear it; I like the man. Ivar, Happy New Year to you and yours."
"Same to you, Edward. Give Monica a kiss for me. You'll be getting your case of Glenfiddich, but that doesn't begin to express my gratitude."
"All right, then," Delaney said, "send two cases."
They hung up laughing.
On impulse, he phoned Dr. Samuelson. He was unable to reach him at his apartment or office. Thinking Samuelson might still be attending Diane Ellerbee, he called her number.
He was prepared to hang up immediately if she answered, but he got a busy signal.
He phoned repeatedly for almost a half-hour, but couldn't get through.
He thought perhaps Diane had taken the phone off the hook, or perhaps she was being bedeviled by calls from the media. But finally his call was answered.
"Yes? Who is this?"
He recognized the high-pitched, squeaky voice.
"Doctor Samuelson? Edward X. Delaney here."
"Ah."
"How is Doctor Ellerbee?"
"At the moment she is sleeping. I prescribed something.
She is destroyed by this."
"I can imagine. Doctor, I have one question for you. You can answer or tell me to go to hell. Did you know, or guess, what she did?"
"Go to hell," the little man said and hung up.
The four Delaneys had an early pickup dinner, mostly leftovers, and then finished decorating the living room, rolled up the rug, and swept and waxed the bare floor. They prepared the midnight supper. Then they all went upstairs to dress.
"Shaving is murder," Delaney said to Monica in their bathroom.
"She got me good."
"Want me to put on bandages or tape?"
"No. I'll leave them open to the air. I've been dabbing on hydrogen peroxide. They'll heal okay. Did you tell the girls what happened?"
"I just said you had assisted in the arrest of a mugger and had been attacked. They seemed satisfied with that."
"Good. When are the boys arriving?"
"They promised to be here by nine."
"What are you going to wear?"
"What would you like me to wear?" she asked coquettishly.
"The short black silk with no back and all the fringe," he said immediately.
"It makes you look like a flapper from the twenties."
"So shall it be," she said, touching his cheek softly.
"My,Poor wounded hero." While they were dressing, she said, not looking at him, "You're absolutely certain she did it, Edward?"
"Absolutely. But you're not?"
"It's so hard to believe-that lovely, intelligent, talented woman."
"Loeb and Leopold were geniuses. There's no contradiction between intelligence and an urge to kill."
"Well, if she's guilty, as you say, I still don't understand why she's not going to be tried for it."
"The law," he said shortly.
"We just don't have enough that'll stand up in court. But she'll pay."
"You think that's enough?" Monica said doubtfully.
"It's a compromise," he admitted.
"I agree with you; a long prison term would have been more fitting. But since that was impossible, I went for what I could get. We all settle, don't we? One way or another. Who gets what they dream? We all go stumbling along, hoping for the best but knowing we're going to have to live with confusion, sometimes winning, sometimes cutting a deal, occasionally just being defeated. It's a mess, no doubt about it, but it's the price we pay for being alive. I like to think the pluses outnumber the minuses. They do tonight. You look beautiful!"
Peter and Jeffrey arrived promptly at nine o'clock, bringing along a bottle of Darn Perignon, which everyone agreed would not be opened until the stroke of midnight. Meanwhile, there were six bottles of Delaney's Korbel brut, and the party got off to a noisy, laughing start.
It took three glasses of champagne before Delaney finally broke down and consented to dance with his wife and stepdaughters. He shuffled cautiously around the floor with all the grace of a gorilla on stilts, and after one dance with each of the ladies was allowed (Allowed?
Urged!) to retire to the side lines whe
re he stood beaming, watching the festivities and making certain glasses were filled.
At 11:30, dancing was temporarily halted while supper was served. There was caviar with chopped onions, grated hardboiled eggs, sour cream, capers, melba toast, quarters of fresh lemon-all on artfully contrived beds of Bibb lettuce.
Monica and Delaney balanced their plates on their laps, but the young people insisted on sprawling on the floor. The television set was turned on so they could watch the mob scene in Times Square.
At about ten minutes to twelve the phone rang. Monica and Delaney looked at each other.
"Now who the hell can that be?" he growled, set his plate aside, and rose heavily to his feet. He went into the study and closed the door.
"Mr. Delaney, this is Detective Brian Estrella. Sorry to bother you at this hour, sir, but something came up I thought you should know about as soon as possible."
"Oh?" Delaney said.
"What's that?"
"Well, right now I'm in Sylvia Otherton's apartment and we've been working on the Ouija board. You read about that in my previous reports, didn't you, sir?"
"Oh, yes," Delaney said, rolling his eyes upward.
"I read about the Ouija board."
"Well, the first question we asked, weeks ago, was who killed him. And the board spelled out "B-L-I-N-D.
Then, the second time, we asked if it was a stranger who killed him, and the board spelled out "NC N-U' "Yes, I recall," Delaney said patiently.
"Very interesting.
But what does it mean?"
"Well, get this, sir…" Estrella said.
"Tonight we asked the spirit of Simon Ellerbee whether it was a man or a woman who killed him, and the Ouija board spelled out "Wiman."
W-I-M-A-N. Now that didn't make much sense at first. But then I realized this board has a slight glitch and is pointing to "I' when it means '0."
If you follow that, you'll see that the killer was blond, not blind. And the board meant to say "No' instead of "Ni' when we asked if the murderer was a stranger.
And the final answer should have been "Woman' instead of "Wiman." So as I see it, sir, the person we're looking for is a blond woman who was not a stranger to the victim."
"Thank you very much," Delaney said gravely.
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