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Rex Stout - Nero Wolfe 02

Page 27

by The League of Frightened Men


  “Now, Mr. Bowen, you made many mistakes, but none so idiotic as your sole reliance on Chapin’s obvious guilt, for that one was the father of all the others. Why in the name of heaven didn’t you turn on the light again as you went out? And why didn’t you wait until Chapin and Burton had talked a minute or two before you acted? You could have done just as well. Another inexcusable thing was your carelessness in leaving the gloves on the table. I know; you were so sure that they would be sure of Chapin that you thought nothing else mattered. You were worse than a tyro, you were a donkey. I tell you this, sir, your exposure is a credit to no one, least of all to me. Pfui!”

  Wolfe stopped, abruptly, and turned to ring for Fritz, for beer. Bowen’s fingers had been twisting in and out, but now they had stopped that and were locked together. He was shaking all over, just sitting in his chair shaking, with no nerve left, no savvy, no nothing; he was nothing but a gob of scared meat.

  Leopold Elkus came up and stood three feet from Bowen and stood staring at him; I had a feeling that he had a notion to cut him open and see what was inside. Mike Ayers appeared with another drink, but this time it wasn’t for Bowen, he held it out to me and I took it and drank it. Andrew Hibbard went to my desk and got the telephone and gave the operator the number of his home. Drummond was squeaking something to George Pratt. Nicholas Cabot passed around Bowen’s chair, went up to Wolfe and said to him in a tone not low enough for me not to hear:

  “I’m going, Mr. Wolfe. I have an appointment. I want to say, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t get that twelve hundred dollars from Bowen. It’s a legal obligation. If you’d like me to handle the collection I’d be glad to do it and expect no fee. Let me know.”

  That lawyer was tough.

  Chapter 22

  Three days later, Thursday around noon, we had a caller. I had just got back from taking a vast and voluminous deposit to the bank, and was sitting at my desk bending my thoughts towards a little relaxation in the shape of an afternoon movie. Wolfe was in his chair, leaning back with his eyes shut, still and silent as a mountain, probably considering the adequacy of the plans for lunch.

  Fritz came to the door and said: “A man to see you, sir. Mr. Paul Chapin.”

  Wolfe opened his eyes to a slit, and nodded. I whirled my chair around, and stood up.

  The cripple hobbled in. It was a bright day outside, and the strong light from the windows gave me a better look at him than I had ever had. I saw that his eyes weren’t quite as light-colored as I had thought; they were about the shade of dull aluminum; and his skin wasn’t dead pale, it was more like bleached leather, it looked tough. He gave me only half a glance as he thumped across to Wolfe’s desk. I moved a chair around for him.

  “Good morning, Mr. Chapin.” Wolfe nearly opened his eyes. “You won’t be seated? I beg you … thanks. It gives me genuine discomfort to see people stand. Allow me to congratulate you on your appearance. If I had spent three days in the Tombs prison, as you did, I would be nothing but a wraith, a tattered remnant. How were the meals? I presume, unspeakable?”

  The cripple lifted his shoulders, and dropped them. He didn’t appear to be settling down for a chat; he had lowered himself onto the edge of the chair I had placed for him, and perched there with his stick upright in front and both his hands resting on the crook. His aluminum eyes had the same amount of expression in them that aluminum usually has. He said:

  “I sit for courtesy. To relieve you of discomfort. For a moment only. I came for the pair of gloves which you removed from my box.”

  “Ah!” Wolfe’s eyes opened the rest of the way. “So your blessings are numbered. Indeed!”

  Chapin nodded. “Luckily. May I have them?”

  “Another disappointment.” Wolfe sighed. “I was thinking you had taken the trouble to call to convey your gratitude for my saving you from the electric chair. You are, of course, grateful?”

  Chapin’s lips twisted. “I am as grateful as you would expect me to be. So we needn’t waste time on that. May I have the gloves?”

  “You may.—Archie, if you please. To me.”

  I got the gloves from a drawer of my desk and handed them across to Wolfe. He came forward in his chair to place them in front of him on his own desk, one neatly on top of the other, and to smooth them out. Chapin’s gaze was fastened on the gloves. Wolfe leaned back and sighed again.

  “You know, Mr. Chapin, I never got to use them. I retained them, from your box, to demonstrate a point Monday evening by showing how nearly they fitted Mr. Bowen, thus explaining how Dora Chapin—your wife—could mistake Mr. Bowen’s gloves for a pair of Mrs. Burton’s; but since he wilted like a Dendrobium with root-rot there was no occasion for it. Now”— Wolfe wiggled a finger—“I don’t expect you to believe this, but it is nevertheless true that I halfway suspected that your knowledge of the contents of your box was intimate enough to make you aware of the absence of any fraction of the inventory; so I did not return these. I kept them. I wanted to see you.”

  Paul Chapin, saying nothing, took a hand from his walking-stick and reached out for the gloves. Wolfe shook his head and pulled them back a little. The cripple tossed his head up.

  “Just a morsel of patience, Mr. Chapin. I wanted to see you because I had an apology to make. I am hoping that you will accept it.”

  “I came for my gloves. You may keep the apology.”

  “But, my dear sir!” Wolfe wiggled a finger again. “Permit me at least to describe my offense. I wish to apologize for forging your name.”

  Chapin lifted his brows. Wolfe turned to me:

  “A copy of the confession, Archie.”

  I went to the safe and got it and gave it to him. He unfolded it and handed it across to the cripple. I sat down and grinned at Wolfe, but he pretended not to notice; he leaned back with his eyes half closed, laced his fingers at his belly, and sighed.

  Chapin read the confession twice. He first glanced at it indifferently and ran through it rapidly, then took a squint at Wolfe, twisted his lips a little, and read the confession all over again, not nearly so fast.

  He tossed it over to the desk. “Fantastic,” he declared. “Set down that way, prosaically, baldly, it sounds fantastic. Doesn’t it?”

  Wolfe nodded. “It struck me, Mr. Chapin, that you went to a great deal of trouble for a pitifully meager result. Of course, you understand that I required this document for the impression it would make on your friends, and knowing the impossibility of persuading you to sign it for me, I was compelled to write your name myself. That is what I wish to apologize for. Here are your gloves, sir. I take it that my apology is accepted.”

  The cripple took the gloves, felt them, put them in his inside breast pocket, grabbed the arms of his chair and raised himself. He stood leaning on his stick.

  “You knew I wouldn’t sign such a document? How did you know that?”

  “Because I had read your books. I had seen you. I was acquainted with your—let us say, your indomitable spirit.”

  “You have another name for it?”

  “Many. Your appalling infantile contumacy. It got you a crippled leg. It got you a wife. It very nearly got you two thousand volts of electricity.”

  Chapin smiled. “So you read my books. Read the next one. I’m putting you in it—a leading character.”

  “Naturally.” Wolfe opened his eyes. “And of course I die violently. I warn you, Mr. Chapin, I resent that. I actively resent it. I have a deep repugnance for violence in all its forms. I would go to any length in an effort to persuade you—”

  He was talking to no one; or at least, merely to the back of a cripple who was hobbling to the door.

  At the threshold Chapin turned for a moment, long enough for us to see him smile and hear him say: “You will die, sir, in the most abhorrent manner conceivable to an appalling infantile imagination. I promise you.”

  He went.

  Wolfe leaned back and shut his eyes. I sat down. Later I could permit myself a grin at the thought of the a
wful fate in store for Nero Wolfe, but for that moment I had my mind back on Monday afternoon, examining details of various events. I remembered that when I had left to call on Mrs. Burton Wolfe had been there discussing soda water with Fritz, and when I returned he had gone, and so had the sedan. But not to the Tombs to see Paul Chapin. He had never left the house. The sedan had gone to the garage, and Wolfe to his room, with his coat and hat and stick and gloves, to drink beer in his easy chair. And at a quarter to four it was from his room that he had telephoned me to take the box to Mrs. Chapin, to give him a chance to fake a return. Of course Fritz had been in on it, so he had fooled me too. And Hibbard shooed off to the third floor for the afternoon …

  They had made a monkey of me all right.

  I said to Wolfe: “I had intended to go to a movie after lunch, but now I can’t. I’ve got work ahead. I’ve got to figure out certain suggestions to make to Paul Chapin for his next book. My head is full of ideas.”

  “Indeed,” Wolfe’s bulk came forward to permit him to ring for beer. “Archie.” He nodded at me gravely. “Your head full of ideas? Even my death by violence is not too high a price for so rare and happy a phenomenon as that.”

  The World of

  Rex Stout

  Now, for the first time ever, enjoy a peek into the life of Nero Wolfe’s creator, Rex Stout, courtesy of the Stout estate. Pulled from Rex Stout’s own archives, here is rarely seen, never-before-published memorabilia. Each title in the Rex Stout Library will offer an exclusive look into the life of the man who gave Nero Wolfe life.

  The League of Frightened Men

  Nero Wolfe goes Hollywood! A movie poster from 1937, featuring Walter Connelly as the famous Nero Wolfe.

  The continuing adventures of Nero Wolfe. From the week of November 26, 1956, this comic strip picks up where the panel in Fer-de-lance ended.

  THE LEAGUE OF FRIGHTENED MEN

  A Bantam Crime Line Book / published by arrangement with the estate of the author

  CRIME LINE and the portrayal of a boxed “cl” are trademarks of

  Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing

  Group, Inc.

  All rights reserved.

  Copyright 1935 by Rex Stout.

  Copyright renewed © 1963 by Rex Stout.

  Introduction copyright © 1992 by Robert Goldsborough.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  For information address: Bantam Books.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-75602-2

  Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words “Bantam Books” and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540 Broadway, New York, New York 10036.

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