The Rubber Band/The Red Box 2-In-1

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The Rubber Band/The Red Box 2-In-1 Page 25

by Rex Stout


  Miss Frost spoke without swallowing. “I don’t remember. I just had had cocktails, and I didn’t want any.”

  The blonde nodded. “Something like that. Then Molly took a piece and I took a piece—”

  “Please.” Wolfe wiggled a finger at her. “You were holding the box?”

  “Yes. Molly had handed it to me.”

  “Miss Frost didn’t have it in her hands at all?”

  “No, I told you, she said she didn’t want any. She didn’t even look at it.”

  “And you and Miss Lauck each took a piece—”

  “Yes. I took candied pineapple. It was a mixture; chocolates, bonbons, nuts, candied fruits, everything. I ate it. Molly put her piece in her mouth, all of it, and after she bit into it she said—she said it was strong—”

  “Words, please.”

  “Well, she said, let’s see: ‘My God, it’s 200 proof, but not so bad, I can take it.’ She made a face, but she chewed it and swallowed it. Then … well … you wouldn’t believe how quick it was—”

  “I’ll try to. Tell me.”

  “Not more than half a minute, I’m sure it wasn’t. I took another piece and was eating it, and Molly was looking into the box, saying something about taking the taste out of her mouth—”

  She stopped because the door popped open. Llewellyn Frost appeared, carrying a paper bag. I got up and took it from him, and extracted from it the opener and glass and bottles and arranged them in front of Wolfe. Wolfe picked up the opener and felt of a bottle.

  “Umph. Schreirer’s. It’s too cold.”

  I sat down again. “It’ll make a bead. Try it.” He poured. Helen Frost was saying to her cousin:

  “So that’s what you went for. Your detective wants to know exactly what I said, my exact words, and he asks Thelma if I handled the box of candy …”

  Frost patted her on the shoulder. “Now, Helen. Take it easy. He knows what he’s doing …”

  One bottle was empty, and the glass. Frost sat down. Wolfe wiped his lips.

  “You were saying, Miss Mitchell, Miss Lauck spoke of taking the taste out of her mouth.”

  The blonde nodded. “Yes. And then—well—all of a sudden she straightened up and made a noise. She didn’t scream, it was just a noise, a horrible noise. She got off the table and then leaned back against it and her face was all twisted … it was … twisted. She looked at me with her eyes staring, and her mouth went open and shut but she couldn’t say anything, and suddenly she shook all over and grabbed for me and got hold of my hair … and … and …”

  “Yes, Miss Mitchell.”

  The blonde gulped. “Well, when she went down she took me with her because she had hold of my hair. Then of course I was scared. I jerked away. Later, when the doctor … when people came, she had a bunch of my hair gripped in her fingers.”

  Wolfe eyed her. “You have good nerves, Miss Mitchell.”

  “I’m not a softy. I had a good cry after I got home that night, I cried it out. But I didn’t cry then. Helen stood against the wall and trembled and stared and couldn’t move, she’ll tell you that herself. I ran to the elevator and yelled for help, and then I ran back and put the lid on the box of candy and held onto it until Mr. McNair came and then I gave it to him. Molly was dead. I could see that. She was crumpled up. She fell down dead.” She gulped again. “Maybe you could tell me. The doctor said it was some kind of acid, and it said in the paper potassium cyanide.”

  Lew Frost put in, “Hydrocyanic. The police say—it’s the same thing. I told you that. Didn’t I?”

  Wolfe wiggled a finger at him. “Please, Mr. Frost. It is I who am to earn the fee, you to pay it. —Then Miss Mitchell, you felt no discomfort from your two pieces, and Miss Lauck ate only one.”

  “That’s all.” The blonde shivered. “It’s terrible, to think there’s something that can kill you that quick. She couldn’t even speak. You could see it go right through her, when she shook all over. I held onto the box, but I got rid of it as soon as I saw Mr. McNair.”

  “Then, I understand, you ran away.”

  She nodded. “I ran to the washroom.” She made a face. “I had to throw up. I had eaten two pieces.”

  “Indeed. Most efficient.” Wolfe had opened another bottle, and was pouring. “To go back a little. You had not seen that box of candy before Miss Lauck took it from under the coat?”

  “No. I hadn’t.”

  “What do you suppose she meant when she said she had swiped it?”

  “Why—she meant—she saw it somewhere and took it.”

  Wolfe turned. “Miss Frost. What do you suppose Miss Lauck meant by that?”

  “I suppose she meant what she said, that she swiped it. Stole it.”

  “Was that customary with her? Was she a thief?”

  “Of course not. She only took a box of candy. She did it for a joke, I suppose. She liked to play jokes—to do things like that.”

  “Had you seen the box before she produced it in that room?”

  “No.”

  Wolfe emptied his glass in five gulps, which was par, and wiped his lips. His half-shut eyes were on the blonde. “I believe you went to lunch that day with Miss Lauck. Tell us about that.”

  “Well—Molly and I went together about one o’clock. We were hungry because we had been working hard—the show had been going on since eleven o’clock—but we only went to the drug store around the corner because we had to be back in twenty minutes to give Helen and the extras a chance. The show was supposed to be from eleven to two, but we knew they’d keep dropping in. We ate sandwiches and custard and came straight back.”

  “Did you see Miss Lauck swipe the box of candy at the drug store?”

  “Of course I didn’t. She wouldn’t do that.”

  “Did you get it at the drug store yourself and bring it back with you?”

  Miss Mitchell stared at him. She said, disgusted, “For the Lord’s sake. No.”

  “You’re sure Miss Lauck didn’t get it somewhere while out for lunch?”

  “Of course I’m sure. I was right with her.”

  “And she didn’t go out again during the afternoon?”

  “No. We were working together until half past three, when there was a let-up and she left to go upstairs, and a little later Helen and I came up and found her here. There in the restroom.”

  “And she ate a piece of candy and died, and you ate two and didn’t.” Wolfe sighed. “There is of course the possibility that she had brought the box with her when she came to work that morning.”

  The blonde shook her head. “I’ve thought of that. We’ve all talked about it. She didn’t have any package. Anyway, where could it have been all morning? It wasn’t in the restroom, and there wasn’t anyplace else …”

  Wolfe nodded. “That’s the devil of it. It’s recorded history. You aren’t really telling me your fresh and direct memory of what happened last Monday, you’re merely repeating the talk it has been resolved into.—I beg you, no offense, you can’t help it. I should have been here last Monday afternoon—or rather, I shouldn’t have been here at all. I shouldn’t be here now.” He glared at Llewellyn Frost, then remembered the beer, filled his glass, and drank.

  He looked from one girl to the other. “You know, of course, what the problem is. Last Monday there were more than a hundred people here, mostly women but a few men, for that show. It was a cold March day and they all wore coats. Who brought that box of candy? The police have questioned everyone connected with this establishment. They have found no one who ever saw the box or will admit to any knowledge of it. No one who saw Miss Lauck with it or has any idea where she got it. An impossible situation!”

  He wiggled a finger at Frost. “I told you, sir, this case is not within my province. I can use a dart or a rapier, but I cannot set traps throughout the territory of the metropolitan district. Who brought the poison here? Whom was it intended for? God knows, but I am not prepared to make a call on Him, no matter how many orchid-growers are coerced into
signing idiotic letters. I doubt if it is worthwhile for me to try even for the second half of your fee, since your cousin—your ortho-cousin—refuses to become acquainted with me. As for the first half, the solution of Miss Lauck’s death, I could undertake that only through interviews with all of the persons who were in this place last Monday; and I doubt if you could persuade even the innocent ones to call at my office.”

  Lew Frost muttered, “It’s your job. You took it. If you’re not up to it—”

  “Nonsense. Does a bridge engineer dig ditches?” Wolfe opened the third bottle. “I believe I have not thanked you for this beer. I do thank you. I assure you, sir, this problem is well within my abilities in so far as it is possible to apply them. In so far—for instance, take Miss Mitchell here. Is she telling the truth? Did she murder Molly Lauck? Let us find out.” He turned and got sharp. “Miss Mitchell. Do you eat much candy?”

  She said, “You’re being smart.”

  “I’m begging your indulgence. It won’t hurt you, with nerves like yours. Do you eat much candy?”

  She drew her shoulders together, and released them. “Once in a while. I have to be careful. I’m a model, and I watch myself.”

  “What is your favorite kind?”

  “Candied fruits. I like nuts too.”

  “You removed the lid from that box last Monday. What color was it?”

  “Brown. A kind of gold-brown.”

  “What kind was it? What did it say on the lid?”

  “It said … it said Medley. Some kind of a medley.”

  Wolfe snapped, “ ‘Some kind?’ Do you mean to say you don’t remember what name was on the lid?”

  She frowned at him. “No … I don’t. That’s funny. I would have thought—”

  “So would I. You looked at it and took the lid off, and later replaced the lid and held onto the box, knowing there was deadly poison in it, and you weren’t even curious enough—”

  “Now wait a minute. You’re not so smart. Molly was dead on the floor, and everybody was crowding into the room, and I was looking for Mr. McNair to give him the box, I didn’t want the damn thing, and certainly I wasn’t trying to think of things to be curious about.” She frowned again. “At that, it is funny I didn’t really see the name.”

  Wolfe nodded. He turned abruptly to Lew Frost. “You see, sir, how it is done. What is to be deduced from Miss Mitchell’s performance? Is she cleverly pretending that she does not know what was on that lid, or is it credible that she really failed to notice it? I am merely demonstrating. For another example, take your cousin.” He switched his eyes and shot at her, “You, Miss Frost. Do you eat candy?”

  She looked at her cousin. “Is this necessary, Lew?”

  Frost flushed. He opened his mouth, but Wolfe was in ahead:

  “Miss Mitchell didn’t beg off. Of course, she has good nerves.”

  The sylph leveled her eyes at him. “There’s nothing wrong with my nerves. But this cheap—oh, well. I eat candy. I much prefer caramels, and since I work as a model and have to be careful too, I confine myself to them.”

  “Chocolate caramels? Nut caramels?”

  “Any kind. Caramels. I like to chew them.”

  “How often do you eat them?”

  “Maybe once a week.”

  “Do you buy them yourself?”

  “No. I don’t get a chance to. My cousin knows my preference, and he sends me boxes of Carlatti’s. Too often. I have to give most of them away.”

  “You are very fond of them?”

  She nodded. “Very.”

  “You find it hard to resist them when offered?”

  “Sometimes, yes.”

  “Monday afternoon you had been working hard? You were tired? You had had a short and unsatisfactory lunch?”

  She was tolerating it. “Yes.”

  “Then, when Miss Lauck offered you caramels, why didn’t you take one?”

  “She didn’t offer me caramels. There weren’t any in that—” She stopped. She glanced aside, at her cousin, and then put her eyes at Wolfe again. “That is, I didn’t suppose—”

  “Suppose?” Wolfe’s voice suddenly softened. “Miss Mitchell couldn’t remember what was on the lid of that box. Can you, Miss Frost?”

  “No. I don’t know.”

  “Miss Mitchell has said that you didn’t handle the box. You were at the mirror, fixing your hair; you didn’t even look at it. Is that correct?”

  She was staring at him. “Yes.”

  “Miss Mitchell has also said that she replaced the lid on the box and kept it under her arm until she handed it to Mr. McNair. Is that correct?”

  “I don’t know. I … I didn’t notice.”

  “No. Naturally, under the circumstances. But after the box was given to Mr. McNair, from that time until he turned it over to the police, did you see it at all? Did you have an opportunity to inspect it?”

  “I didn’t see it. No.”

  “Just one more, Miss Frost—this finishes the demonstration: you are sure you don’t know what was on that lid? It was not a brand you were familiar with?”

  She shook her head. “I have no idea.”

  Wolfe leaned back and sighed. He picked up the third bottle and filled his glass and watched the foam work. No one spoke; we just looked at him, while he drank. He put the glass down and wiped his lips, and opened his eyes on his client.

  “There you are, Mr. Frost,” he said quietly. “Even in a brief demonstration, where no results were expected, something is upturned. By her own testimony, your cousin never saw the contents of that box after Miss Lauck swiped it. She doesn’t know what brand it was, so she could not have been familiar with its contents. And yet, she knew, quite positively, that there were no caramels in it. Therefore: she saw the contents of the box, somewhere, sometime, before Miss Lauck swiped it. That, sir, is deduction. That is what I meant when I spoke of interviews with all of the persons who were at this place last Monday.”

  Lew Frost, glaring at him, blurted, “You call this—what the hell do you call this? My cousin—”

  “I told you, deduction.”

  The sylph sat, pale, and stared at him. She opened her mouth a couple of times, but closed it without speaking. Thelma Mitchell horned in:

  “She didn’t say she knew positively there were no caramels in it. She only said—”

  Wolfe put up a palm at her. “You being loyal, Miss Mitchell? For shame. The first loyalty here is to the dead. Mr. Frost dragged me here because Molly Lauck died. He hired me to find out how and why. —Well, sir? Didn’t you?”

  Frost sputtered, “I didn’t hire you to play damn fool tricks with a couple of nervous girls. You damn fat imbecile—listen! I already know more about this business than you’d ever find out in a hundred years! If you think I’m paying you—now what? Where you going? What’s the game now? You get back in that chair I say—”

  Wolfe had arisen, without haste, and moved around the table, going sideways past Thelma Mitchell’s feet, and Frost had jumped up and started the motions of a stiff arm at him.

  I got upright and stepped across. “Don’t shove, mister.” I would just as soon have plugged him, but he would have had to drop on a lady. “Subside, please. Come on, back up.”

  He gave me a bad eye, but let that do. Wolfe had sidled by, towards the door, and at that moment there was a knock on it and it opened, and the handsome woman in the black dress with white buttons appeared. She moved in.

  “Excuse me, please.” She glanced around, composed, and settled on me. “Can you spare Miss Frost? She is needed downstairs. And Mr. McNair says you wish to speak with me. I can give you a few minutes now.”

  I looked at Wolfe. He bowed to the woman, his head moving two inches. “Thank you, Mrs. Lamont. It won’t be necessary. We have made excellent progress; more than could reasonably have been expected—Archie. Did you pay for the beer? Give Mr. Frost a dollar. That should cover it.”

  I took out my wallet and extracted a buck and laid it on the t
able. A swift glance showed me that Helen Frost looked pale, Thelma Mitchell looked interested, and Llewellyn looked set for murder. Wolfe had left. I did likewise, and joined him outside where he was pushing the button for the elevator.

  I said, “That beer couldn’t have been more than two bits a throw, seventy-five cents for three.”

  He nodded. “Put the difference on his bill.”

  Downstairs we marched through the activity without halting. McNair was over at one side talking with a dark medium-sized woman with a straight back and a proud mouth, and I let my head turn for a second look, surmising it was Helen Frost’s mother. A goddess I hadn’t seen before was parading in a brown topcoat in front of a horsey jane with a dog, and three or four other people were scattered around. Just before we got to the street door it opened and a man entered, a big broad guy with a scar on his cheek. I knew all about that scar. I tossed him a nod.

  “Hi, Purley.”

  He stopped and stared, not at me, at Wolfe. “In the name of God! Did you shoot him out of a cannon?”

  I grinned and went on.

  On the way home I made attempts at friendly conversation over my shoulder, but without success. I tried:

  “Those models are pretty creatures. Huh?”

  No sale. I tried:

  “Did you recognize that gentleman we met coming out? Our old friend Purley Stebbins of the Homicide Squad. One of Cramer’s hirelings.”

  No response. I started looking ahead for a good hole.

  Chapter 3

  The first telephone call from Llewellyn Frost came around half-past one, while Wolfe and I were doing the right thing by some sausage with ten kinds of herbs in it, which he got several times every spring from a Swiss up near Chappaqua who prepared it himself from home-made pigs. Fritz Brenner, the chef and household pride, was instructed to tell Llewellyn that Mr. Wolfe was at table and might not be disturbed. I wanted to go and take it, but Wolfe nailed me down with a finger. The second call came a little after two, while Wolfe was leisurely sipping coffee, and I went to the office for it.

  Frost sounded concerned and aggravated. He wanted to know if he could expect to find Wolfe in at two-thirty, and I said yes, he would probably be in forevermore. After we hung up I stayed at my desk and fiddled around with some things, and in a few minutes Wolfe entered, peaceful and benign but ready to resent any attempt at turbulence, as he always was after a proper and unhurried meal.

 

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