"Cheerio, Sergeant," he greeted Heath as he became fully aware of his presence. "I'm glad you came in. Thanks awfully for waitin', and all that. . . . I'm sure you've already read the note Kenting received. Here's the one Fleel brought in."
And he tossed it negligently to me with a nod of his head toward Heath. His eyes, a little strained and with an unwonted intensity in them, were still on Markham as I stepped across the room to Heath with the paper.
Vance now stood in the centre of the room, gazing down at the floor, deep in thought as he smoked. After a moment he raised his head slowly and let his eyes rest meditatively on Markham again.
"It could be--it could be," he murmured. And I felt that he was making an effort to control himself. "I want to see a detailed map of New York right away."
"On that wall--over there." Markham was watching him closely. "In the wooden frame. Just pull it down--it's on a roller."
Vance unrolled the black-and-white chart, with its red lines, and smoothed it against the wall. After a few minutes' search of the intersecting lines he turned back to Markham with a curious look on his face and heaved a sigh of relief.
"Let me see that yellow slip you had yesterday, with the official bound'ries of the Westchester Station post-office district."
Markham, still patiently silent, handed him the paper. Vance took it back to the map with him, glanced from the slip of paper to the chart and back again, and began to trace an imaginary zigzag line with his finger. I heard him enumerating, half to himself: "Pelham, Kingsland, Mace, Gunhill, Bushnell, Hutchinson River . . ."
Then his finger came to a stop, and he turned triumphantly.
"That's it! That's it!" His voice had a peculiar pitch. "I think I have found the meaning of that phrase."
"What in the name of Heaven do you mean?" Markham had half risen from his chair and was leaning forward with his hands on the desk.
"'This year of our Lord,' and the numerals. There's a Lord Street in that outlined section--up near Givans Basin--a section of open spaces and undeveloped highways. And the year 19--" and he gave the other two digits. "That's the house number--they run in the nineteen-hundreds over near the water on Lord Street. And, incidentally, I note that the only logical way to reach there is to take the Lexington Avenue subway uptown."
Markham sank slowly back into his chair without taking his eyes from Vance.
"I see what you mean," he said. "But--" He hesitated a moment. "That's merely a wild guess. A groundless assumption. It's too specious, too vague. It may not be an address at all. . . ." Then he added: "You may merely have stumbled on a coincidence--" He stopped abruptly. "Do you think we ought to send some men out there--on a chance?"
"My word, no!" Vance returned emphatically. "That might wreck everything, providin' we've really got something here. Your myrmidons would be sure to give warning and bungle things; and only a moment would be needed for a strategic move fatal to our plans. This matter must be handled differently."
His face darkened; his eyelids drooped menacingly; and I knew that some new and overpowering emotion had taken hold of him.
"I'm going myself," he said. "It may be a wild-goose chase, but it must be done, don't y' know. We can't leave any possible avenue of approach untried just now. There's something frightful and sinister going on. And I'm not at all certain as to what will be found there. I'm a helpless babe, cryin' for the light."
Markham was impressed and, I believe, a little concerned at his manner.
"I don't like it, Vance. I think you should have protection, in case of an emergency--"
Heath had come forward and stood solemnly at one end of the desk.
"I'm going with you, Mr. Vance," he said, in a voice that was both stolid and final. "I got a feeling you may be needin' me. An' I sorta like the idea of that address you figured out. Anyhow, I'll have something to tell my grandchildren about learnin' how wrong you were."
Vance looked at the man a while seriously, and then slowly nodded.
"That will be quite all right, Sergeant," he said calmly. "I may need your help. And as for finding me wrong: I'm willin', don't y' know--like Barkis. But how are you going to have grandchildren when you're not even a benedick?* . . . In the meantime, Sergeant," he went on, dropping his jocular manner, and jotting down something on a small piece of yellow paper he had torn from the scratch-pad on Markham's desk, "have this carefully attended to--constant observation. You understand?"
* Sergeant Ernest Heath was what is popularly known as a confirmed bachelor. Even when he retired from the Homicide Bureau at fifty, he devoted himself not to a wife, but to raising wyandottes on his farm in the Mohawk valley.
Heath took the yellow slip, looked at it in utter amazement, and then stuffed it into his pocket. His eyes were wide and a look of skepticism and incredulity came into them.
"I don't like to say so, Mr. Vance, but I think you're daffy, sir."
"I don't in the least mind, Sergeant." Vance spoke almost affectionately. "But I want you to see to it, nevertheless." And he met the other's gaze coldly and steadily.
Heath moved his head up and down, his lips hanging open in disbelief.
"If you say so, sir," he mumbled. "But I still think--"
"Never mind making the effort, Sergeant." There was an irresistibly imperious note in Vance's tone. "But if you disobey that order--which, incidentally, is the first I've ever given you--I cannot proceed with the case."
Heath tried to grin but failed.
"I'll take care of it," he said. Though he was still awestricken, his tone was subdued. "When do we go?"
"After dark, of course," Vance replied, relaxing perceptibly. "It's misty and somewhat overcast today. . . . Be at my apartment at half-past eight. We'll drive up in my car."
Again the Sergeant moved his head up and down slowly.
"God Almighty!" he said. "I can't believe it: it don't make sense. Anyway," he added, "I'll string along with you, Mr. Vance. I'll be there at eight-thirty--heeled plenty."
"So you really believe I may be right," said Vance with a smile.
"Well, I ain't taking any chances--come what may."
CHAPTER XVII
SHOTS IN THE DARK
(Friday, July 22; noon.)
Vance remained in Markham's office only a short time after his enigmatic talk with Heath. (I did not regard that brief conversation as particularly momentous at the time, but within a few hours I learned that it was actually one of the most important conversations that had ever passed between these two widely disparate, but mutually sympathetic, men.)
Markham attempted repeatedly, with both cajolery and brusqueness, to draw Vance out. The District Attorney wished particularly to hear what significance Vance attached to the missing alexandrite, and what import he had sensed in the two notes which Kenting and Fleel had brought in. Vance, however, was unusually grave and adamant. He would give no excuse for not expressing freely his theory regarding the case; but his manner was such that Markham realized, as did I, that Vance had an excellent reason for temporarily withholding his suspicions from the District Attorney--and, I might add, from me as well.
In the end Markham was highly annoyed and, I think, somewhat resentful.
"I trust you know, Vance," he said in a tone intended to be coldly formal, but which did not entirely disguise his deep-rooted respect for the peculiar methods Vance followed in his investigation of a case, "that, as official head of the Police Department, I can compel Sergeant Heath here to show me that slip of paper you handed him."
"I fully appreciate that fact," Vance replied in a tone equally as frigid as Markham's. "But I also know you will not do it." Only once, during the investigation of the Bishop murder case, had I seen so serious an expression in Vance's eyes. "I know I can trust you to do nothing of the kind, and to forgo your technical rights in this instance." His voice suddenly softened and a look of genuine affection overspread his face as he added: "I want your confidence until tonight--I want you to believe that I have good and s
pecific reasons for my seemingly boorish obstinacy."
Markham kept his eyes on Vance for several moments and then glanced away as he busied himself a little ostentatiously with a cigar.
"You're a damned nuisance," he mumbled, with simulated anger. "I wish I had never seen you."
"Do you flatter yourself, for one minute, Markham," retorted Vance, "that I have particularly enjoyed your acquaintance during the past fifteen years?"
And then Vance did something I had never seen him do before. He took a step toward Markham and held out his hand. Markham turned to him without any show of surprise and grasped his hand with sincere cordiality.
"After all," said Vance lightly, "you're only a District Attorney, don't y' know. I'll make due allowances." And he went from the room without another word, leaving the Sergeant and Markham in the room together.
Vance and I had luncheon at the Caviar Restaurant, and he lingered unconscionably long over his favorite brandy, which they always kept for him and brought out ceremoniously when he appeared at that restaurant. During the meal he spoke but infrequently--and then about subjects far removed from the Kenting case.
We went directly home after he had finished sipping his cognac, and Vance spent the entire afternoon in desultory reading in the library. I went into the room for some papers around four o'clock and noticed that he was engrossed in Erasmus' Encomium Moriæ.
As I stood for a moment behind him, looking discreetly over his shoulder, he looked up with a serious expression: he had settled into a studious mood.
"After all, Van," he commented, "what would the world be without folly? Nothing matters vitally--does it? Listen to this comfortin' thought:"--he ran his finger along the Erasmus passage before him and translated the words slowly--"'So likewise all this life of mortal man, what is it but a certain kind of stage play?' . . . Same like Shakespeare wrote in As You Like It, which came a century later--what?"
Vance was in a peculiar humor, and I knew he was endeavoring to cover up what was actually in his mind; and for some reason, which I could not understand, I was prompted to quote to him, in answer, the famous line from Horace's Epistles: Nec lusisse pudet, sed non incidere ludum. However, I refrained, and went on about my work as Vance took up his book again.
A little before six o'clock Markham came in unexpectedly.
"Well, Vance," he said banteringly, "I suppose you're still indulging your flair for melodramatic reticence, and are still playing the part of l'homme de mystère. However, I'll respect your idiosyncrasies--with tongue in cheek, of course."
"Most generous of you," murmured Vance. "I'm overwhelmed. . . . What do you wish to tell me? I know full well you didn't come all the way to my humble diggin's without some sad message for me."
Markham sobered and sat down near Vance.
"I haven't heard yet from either Fleel or Kenting. . . ." he began.
"I rather expected that bit of news." Vance rose and, ringing for Currie, ordered Dubonnet. Then, as he resumed his seat, he went on. "Really, there's nothing to worry about. They have probably decided to proceed without the bunglin' assistance of the police this time--those last notes were pretty insistent on that point. Kenting undoubtedly has received his instructions. . . . By the by, have you tried to communicate with him?"
Markham nodded gravely.
"I tried to reach him at his office an hour ago, and was told he had gone home. I called him there, but the butler told me he had come in and had just gone out without leaving any instructions except that he would not be home for dinner."
"Not what you'd call a highly cooperative johnnie--what?"
The Dubonnet was served, and Vance sipped the wine placidly.
"Of course, you tried to reach him at the Purple House?"
"Of course I did," Markham answered. "But he wasn't there either and wasn't expected there."
"Very interestin'," murmured Vance. "Elusive chap. Food for thought, Markham. Think it over."
"I also tried to get in touch with Fleel," Markham continued doggedly. "But he, like Kenting it seems, had left his office earlier than usual today; nor was I able to reach him at his home."
"Two missin' men," commented Vance. "Very sad. But no need to be upset. Just a private matter being handled privately, I fear. District Attorney's office and the police not bein' trusted. Not entirely unintelligent." He set down his Dubonnet glass. "But there's business afoot, or else I'm horribly mistaken. And what can you do? The actors in the tragic drama refuse to make an appearance. Most disconcertin', from the official point of view. The only thing left for you is to ring down the curtain temporarily, and bide your time. C'est la fin de la pauvre Manon--or words to that effect. Abominable opera. Incidentally, what are your plans for the evening?"
"I have to get dressed and attend a damned silly banquet tonight," grumbled Markham.
"It'll probably do you good," said Vance. "And when you make your speech, you can solemnly assure your bored listeners that the situation is under control, and that developments are expected very soon--or golden words to that effect."
Markham remained a short time longer and then went out. Vance resumed his interrupted reading.
Shortly after seven we had a simple home dinner which Currie served to us in the library, consisting of gigot, rissoulées potatoes, fresh mint jelly, asparagus hollandaise, and savarins à la Medicis.
Promptly at half-past eight the Sergeant arrived.
"I still think you're daffy, Mr. Vance," he said good-naturedly, as he took a long drink of Bourbon. "However, everything is being attended to."
"If I'm wrong, Sergeant," said Vance with pretended entreaty, "you must never divulge our little secret. The humiliation would be far too great. And I'm waxin' old and sensitive."
Heath chuckled and poured himself another glass of Bourbon. As he did so Vance went to the centre-table and, opening the drawer, brought out an automatic. He inspected it carefully, made sure the magazine was full, and then slipped it into his pocket.
I had risen and was now standing beside him. I reached out my hand for the other automatic in the drawer--the one I had carried in Central Park the night before--but Vance quickly closed the drawer and, turning to me, shook his head in negation.
"Sorry, Van," he said, "but I think you'd better bide at home tonight. This may be a very dangerous mission--or it may be an erroneous guess on my part. However, I rather anticipate trouble, and you'll be safer in your boudoir. . . ."
I became indignant and insisted that I go with him and share whatever danger the night might hold.
Again Vance shook his head.
"I think not, Van." He spoke in a strangely gentle tone. "No need whatever for you to take the risk. I'll tell you all about it when the Sergeant and I return."
He smiled with finality, but I became more insistent and more indignant, and told him frankly that, whether he gave me the gun or not, I intended to go along with him and Heath.
Vance studied me for several moments.
"All right, Van," he said at length. "But don't forget that I warned you." Without saying any more he swung about to the table, opened the drawer, and brought out the other automatic. "I suggest you keep it in your outside pocket this time," he advised, as he handed me the gun. "It's rather difficult to prophesy, don't y' know--though I'm hopin' you won't need the bally thing." Then, going to the window, he looked out for a moment. "It'll be dark by the time we get there." He turned slowly from the window and crossed the room to ring for Currie.
When the butler came into the room Vance looked at him for a while in silence, with a kindly smile.
"If you don't hear from me by eleven," he said, "go to bed. And schlafen Sie wohl! If I am not back in the morning, you will find some interesting legal documents in a blue envelope with your name on it, in the upper right-hand drawer of the secret'ry. And notify Mr. Markham." He turned round to Heath with an air of exaggerated nonchalance. "Come along, Sergeant," he said. "Let's be on our way. Duty calls, as the sayin' goes. Ich dien, and
all that sort of twaddle."
We went down to the street in silence--Vance's instructions to Currie had struck me as curiously portentous. We got into Vance's car, which was waiting outside, Heath and I in the tonneau and Vance at the wheel.
Vance was an expert driver, and he handled the Hispano-Suiza with a quiet efficiency and care that made the long, low-slung car seem almost something animate. There was never the slightest sound of enmeshing gears, never the slightest jerk, as he stopped and started the car in the flow of traffic.
We drove up Fifth Avenue to its northern end, and there crossed the Harlem River into the Bronx. At the far side of the bridge Vance stopped the car and drew a folded map from his pocket.
"No need to lose ourselves in this maze of crisscrossing avenues," he remarked to us over his shoulder. "Since we know where we're going, we might as well mark the route." He had unfolded the map and was tracing an itinerary at one side of it. "Westchester Avenue will take us at least half of the way to our destination; and then if I can work my way through to Bassett Avenue we should have no further difficulties."
He placed the map on the seat beside him and drove on. At the intersection of East 177th Street he made a sharp turn to the left, and we skirted the grounds of the New York Catholic Protectory. After a few more turns a street sign showed that we were on Bassett Avenue, and Vance continued to the north. At its upper end we found ourselves at a small stretch of water,* and Vance again stopped the car to consult his map.
* This, I later learned, was Givans Basin.
"I've gone a little too far," he informed us, as he took the wheel again and turned the car sharply to the left, at right angles with Bassett Avenue. "But I'll go through to the next avenue--Waring, I think it is--turn south there, and park the car just round the corner from Lord Street. The number we're looking for should be there or thereabouts."
Philo Vance 12 Novels Complete Bundle Page 236