Rex Stout - Nero Wolfe - Final Deduction

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Rex Stout - Nero Wolfe - Final Deduction Page 11

by Final Deduction (lit)


  So Noel had broached it. "Your son asked you again yesterday," I said, "and you said yes again. Didn't you?"

  "I suppose I did. Nothing matters now, certainly that money doesn't- No, I'm wrong, something does matter. If you can't tell me why Nero Wolfe says my husband was murdered, then he will. If I have to go there, I will. I shouldn't, my doctor has ordered me to stay in bed, but I will."

  I could see her tottering into the office supported by me, and Wolfe, after one look at her, getting up and marching out. He has done that more than once. "I can't tell you why Mr Wolfe says it," I said, "but I can tell you why he thinks it." I might as well, since if I didn't Noel could. "Your husband was asleep on the couch when the rest of you left the room, leaving a light on. Right?"

  "Yes."

  "And the idea is that later he woke up, realized where he was, stood up, started for the door, lost his balance, grabbed at the statue, and pulled it down on him. Right?"

  "Yes."

  "That's what Mr Wolfe won't take. He doesn't believe that a man awake enough to walk would be so befuddled that he couldn't dodge a falling statue. He realizes that he couldn't have been merely asleep when someone hauled him off the couch and over to the statue; he must have been unconscious. Since the autopsy found no sign that he had been slugged, he must have been doped. You had all been having drinks in the library, he had bourbon and water, so there had been opportunity to dope him. Therefore Mr Wolfe deduces that he was murdered."

  Her eyes were straight at me through the surrounding puffs. "That's absolutely ridiculous," she said.

  I nodded. "Sure it is, to you. If Mr Wolfe is right, then your daughter or your son or your brother or your lawyer, or you yourself, murdered Jimmy Vail. I think he's right, but I work for him. Granting that it wasn't you, you're up against a tough one. Naturally you would want whoever killed your husband to get what was coming to him, but naturally you wouldn't want your son or daughter or brother to get tagged for murder, and maybe not your lawyer. I admit that's tough, and I don't wonder that you say it's ridiculous. I wasn't trying to convince you of anything; I was just telling you why Mr Wolfe thinks your husband was murdered. What else would you want to ask him if he was here?"

  "I'd tell him he's a fool. A stupid fool."

  "I'll deliver the message. What else?"

  "I'd tell him that I have told my son that I'm taking back what I told him about the money, that he can have it if he finds it. He can't. I didn't know he would go to Nero Wolfe."

  "You went to Nero Wolfe."

  "That was different. I would have gone to the devil himself to get my husband back."

  I gave my intelligence three seconds to be guided by experience before I spoke. "I'll deliver that message too," I said, "but I can tell you now what his reaction will be. He's stubborn and he's conceited, and he not only likes money, he needs it. Your son came to him and offered a deal, and he accepted it, and he won't let go just because you've changed your mind. If he can find that money he will, and he'll take his share. In my private opinion the chance of his finding it is about one in a million, but he won't stop trying. On the contrary. He's very sensitive. This attitude you're taking will make him try harder, and he might even do something peevish like writing a piece for a newspaper explaining why he has deduced that Jimmy Vail was murdered. That would be just like him. If you want some free advice, I suggest that you have your son in, here and now, and tell him you're not taking it back. I'll report it to Mr Wolfe, and he'll decide if he wants to risk his time and money on a wild-goose chase."

  It didn't work. As I spoke her lips kept getting tighter, and when I stopped she snapped, "He wouldn't get any share. Even if he found it. It's my money."

  "That would be one for the lawyers. He would claim that his agreement with your son was based on an agreement your son had with you, made before witnesses. It would be the kind of mix-up lawyers love; they can juggle it around for years."

  "You may go," she said.

  "Sure." I rose. "But you understand-"

  "Get out!"

  I can take a hint. I walked out, shutting the door behind me, and proceeded to the elevator. When I emerged on the ground floor, there was Noel. He came to me.

  "What did she say?" he squeaked.

  "This and that." I caught a glimpse of someone through an arch. "She's a little upset. How about a little walk? If there's a bar handy, I could buy you a drink, provided it's not champagne."

  He twisted his neck to glance up the stairs, brought his face back to me, said, "That's an idea," and went and opened the door. I passed through and onto the sidewalk, and he joined me. I suggested Barney's, at 78th and Madison, and we turned downtown.

  A booth in a bar and grill is not an ideal spot for a private conversation. You can see if there is anyone in the booth in front of you curious enough to listen in, but you have to leave the one behind to luck or keep interrupting to look back. Noel and I got a break at Barney's. As we entered, a couple was leaving the booth at the far end, and we grabbed it, and I had a wall behind me. A white apron came and removed glasses and gave the table a swipe, and we ordered.

  "So it's off," Noel said. "You couldn't budge her." I had told him en route how it stood.

  "Not an inch." I was regretful, even gloomy. "You know why I wanted to buy you a drink? Because I wanted one myself. That talk with your mother took me back, back years ago, in Ohio. My mother. How old are you?"

  "Twenty-three."

  "I was only seventeen, just out of high school. But of course the situation was different; it was easier for me than it would be for you. My mother wasn't wealthy like yours. I couldn't hit her for a hundred or a thousand or whatever I happened to need."

  "Hell, neither can I. It's not that easy."

  "It may not be easy, but the fact remains that she has it, and all you have to do is use the right approach. With me, with my mother, that wasn't the problem. She was a born female tyrant, and that was all there was to it. There wasn't a single goddam thing, big or little, that I could decide on my own. While your mother was talking I couldn't help thinking it was just too bad you couldn't do what I did."

  The drinks came and we sampled them. Noel's sample was a gulp. "What did you do?" he asked.

  "I told her to go to hell. One nice hot June day, the day after I graduated from high school, I told her to go to hell, and beat it. Of course I don't mean it literally, that it's too bad you can't do what I did. It's a different situation. You wouldn't have to. Now that Jimmy Vail's dead, you're the man of the house. All you'd have to do is just make it clear that you've got two feet of your own. Not in general terms like that, not just tell her to her face, `Mother, I've got two feet of my own,' that wouldn't get you anywhere. It would have to be on a specific issue, and you couldn't ask for a better one than her taking back a definite promise she made you. That would be a beaut. You could tell her, `Mother, you said I could have that money if I found it, and on the strength of that I made a deal with Nero Wolfe, and he'll hold me to it, and I'm going to hold you to it.' "

  He took a swallow of gin and tonic. "She'd say it's her money."

  "But it isn't. Not after what she told you before witnesses. She has given it to you, with only one condition attached, that you find it, and therefore it's a gift and you wouldn't have to pay tax on it. Granting that there's a slim chance of finding it, if we do find it you'll have four hundred thousand dollars in the till after you give Nero Wolfe his cut-no tax, no nothing. And even if we don't find it, you'll have let your mother know that you've got your own two feet, not by telling her so but by standing on them on a specific issue. There's another point, but we'll skip it."

  "Why? What is it?"

  I took a sip of scotch and soda. "It will be important only if Mr Wolfe finds the money. If he does, one-fifth will be his, and don't think it won't. If your mother tries to keep him from getting it, or keeping it, the fur will fly, and some of it will be yours. If it gets to a court, you'll testify. For him."

  "It wouldn
't. It's not the money that's biting my mother, it's Jimmy. It's Wolfe's saying that Jimmy was murdered. Why the hell did he tell Uncle Ralph that?"

  "He told you too."

  "I had sense enough not to repeat it." He put his empty glass down. "Look, Goodwin, I don't give a damn. If Jimmy was murdered, someone that was there killed him, and I still don't give a damn. Of course it wasn't my mother, but even if it was, I'm not sure I'd give a damn even then. I'm supposed to be old enough to vote, but by God, the way I've had to knuckle under, you'd think I still wet the bed at night. You say I wouldn't have to do what you did, but if I had four hundred thousand dollars that's exactly what I'd do. I'd tell my mother to go to hell. I'm not as dumb as I look. I knew what I was doing Wednesday evening. I knew my mother was so glad her darling Jimmy was back she wouldn't stop to think, and I asked her about the money in front of witnesses, and I intended to go to Nero Wolfe the next morning, but the next morning Jimmy was dead, and that made it different. Now Wolfe has told Uncle Ralph Jimmy was murdered, I don't know why, and he has told my mother, and you tell me to show her I've got my own two feet. Balls. What if I haven't even got one foot?"

  I signaled the white apron for refills. "Let's try something," I said and got out my notebook and pen and started writing. I dated a blank page at the top and wrote:

  To Nero Wolfe: I hereby confirm the oral agreement we made yesterday. My mother, Mrs Althea Vail, told me on Wednesday, April 26, and repeated on Friday, April 28, that if I find the $500,000 she gave a kidnaper on Tuesday, April 25, or any part of it, I may keep it for my own. Therefore that money belongs to me if I find it. I have engaged you to help me find it, and I have agreed that if you do find it, or any part of it, you are to keep one-fifth of the amount you find as payment for your services. I hereby confirm that agreement.

  The refills had come, and I sampled mine as I read it over. Tearing the sheet out, I handed it to Noel and watched his face. He took his time, then looked up. "So what?"

  "So you'd have a foot. I don't really expect you to sign it, I doubt if you have the nerve, you've knuckled under too long, but if you did sign it, you wouldn't have to tell your mother you were going to do so-and-so and stick to it. You could tell her you had done so-and-so, you had come here with me and talked it over and confirmed your agreement with Mr Wolfe in writing. She couldn't send you to bed without any supper because you've already had your supper. Of course legally that thing isn't important, because you're already bound legally. Mr Wolfe has a witness to his oral agreement with you. Me."

  He started to read it over again, quit halfway, put his glass down, and extended his hand. "Give me that pen." I gave it to him, and he signed his name, pushed the paper across to me, picked up his glass, and raised it to eye level. "Excelsior! To freedom!" He put the glass to his mouth and drained it. A piece of ice slipped out and fell to the table, and he picked it up and threw it at the bartender across the room, missing by a yard. He shook his head, tittered, and asked me, "What did your mother do when you told her to go to hell?"

  Since I had what I wanted, it would have suited me all right if we had been bounced, but apparently Noel was not a stranger at Barney's. The barkeep took no action beyond occasional glances in our direction to see if more ice was coming. Noel wanted to talk. The idea seemed to be that I had made a hero of him, and he wanted to know who or what had made a hero of me at the early age of seventeen. I was willing to spend another half-hour and another drink on him, but I suspected that he didn't want to go home until it was late enough for him to go to bed without stopping in his mother's room to say good night, and that might mean a couple of hours. So I began looking at my watch and worrying about being late for a date, and at ten o'clock I paid for the drinks and left him.

  It was 10:26 when I mounted the stoop of the old brownstone and pushed the button. When Fritz opened the door he aimed a thumb to his rear, toward the office, signifying that there was company. I asked him who, and he told me in what he thinks is a whisper but is actually a kind of smothered croak, "Federal Bureau of Investigation." I told him, "Rub off all fingerprints and burn the papers," and went to the office.

  You don't have to believe me, but I would have known after one look at him, even if Fritz hadn't told me. It's mostly the eyes and the jaw. An FBI man spends so much time pretending he's looking somewhere else that his eyes get confused; they're never quite sure it's okay to admit they're focused on you. His jaw is even worse off. It is given to understand that it belongs to a man who is intrepid, daring, dauntless, cool, long-headed, quick-witted, and hard as nails, but it is cautioned that he is also modest, polite, reserved, patient, bland, and never to be noticed in a crowd. No jaw on earth could handle that order. The only question is how often it will twitch, and sideways or up and down.

  Wolfe said, "Mr Goodwin. Mr Draper."

  Mr Draper, having got to his feet, waited until my hand was unquestionably being offered, then extended his. Modest and reserved. His left hand went to a pocket, and I told him not to bother, but of course he did. An FBI man draws his credentials automatically, the way Paladin draws his gun. I glanced at it, not to hurt his feelings.

  "Mr Draper has been here a full hour," Wolfe said, with the accent on the `full.' "He has a copy of the statement we signed, and he has asked many questions about details. He has covered the ground thoroughly, but he wanted to see you."

  It looked like another full hour. I went to my desk and sat. Draper, back in the red leather chair, had his notebook out. "A few little questions, Mr Goodwin," he said. "If you don't mind?"

  "I like big ones better," I said, "but shoot."

  "For the record," he said. "Of course you understand that; you're an experienced investigator. Mr Wolfe says you left the house around half past six Tuesday evening, but he doesn't know when you returned. When did you?"

  I permitted myself a grin, modest, polite, and bland. "Mr Draper," I said, "I appreciate the compliment. You think I may have tailed Mrs Vail Tuesday night, against her wishes and with or without Mr Wolfe's consent, and that I may even have got as far as Iron Mine Road without being spotted by one of the kidnapers. As you know, that would have been one for the books, a real honey, and I thank you for the compliment."

  "You're welcome. When did you return?"

  I gave it to him complete, from six-thirty until one o'clock, places, names, and times, going slow enough for him to get it down. When I finished he closed the notebook, then opened it again. "You drive a car, don't you?"

  "Mr Wolfe owns it, I drive it. Sixty-one Heron sedan."

  "Where is it garaged?"

  "Curran, Tenth Avenue between Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth."

  "Did you use the car Tuesday night?"

  "No. I believe I mentioned taxis."

  "Yes. You understand, Mr Goodwin, for the record." He pocketed the notebook, arose, and got his hat from the stand. "You've been very helpful, Mr Wolfe. Thank you very much. I doubt if we'll bother you again." He turned and went. I didn't get up, because an FBI man moves fast and I would have had to jump to get ahead of him to open the door. When I heard it close I went to the hall for a look, came back, got from my pocket the paper Noel had signed, and handed it to Wolfe.

  He read it and put it down. "This was called for?"

  "It seemed to be desirable. Would you like a report?"

  "Yes."

  I sat down and gave it to him-verbatim, all but the last half-hour with Noel, which wasn't material. When I was through he picked up the paper, read it again, nodded, and said, "Satisfactory." He put it down. "When your mother was in New York for a week last year, and dined here twice, and you spent some time taking her around, I saw no trace of the animus you described to Mr Tedder."

  "Neither did I. If we find enough of that five hundred grand to make it worth telling about, and it gets printed and she reads it, she won't mind. She understands that in this job, working for you, the more lies the merrier, even one about her. By the way, in a letter I got last week she mentioned the ches
tnut croquettes again."

  "Did you tell Fritz?"

  "Sure. Anything for the morning?"

  "No."

  "Are Saul and Fred and Orrie still on?"

  "Yes." He eyed me. "Archie. Your reply to Mr Draper's question. Could he have had any other reason for asking it than the chronic suspicion of an inquisitor?"

  "Certainly. They might have found the tire prints of your car at Iron Mine Road. I drove it there Wednesday."

  "Don't dodge. You have friends who would lie for you without question, and you named some of them in your reply. One particularly. How much of your reply was fact?"

  "All of it." I stood. "I'm going to bed. My ears are burning. First the FBI and now you. I wish I had tailed her, and Mr Knapp with the suitcase; then we'd know where the cabbage is."

  CHAPTER 11

  It's always possible that people who invite me to the country for a weekend will get a break; there's a chance that there will be a development that will keep me in town, and they will neither have to put me up nor put up with me. The lucky ones that last weekend in April were a couple in Easthampton who had me booked for Friday evening to Monday morning. I have reported the developments of Friday and Saturday, and Sunday I had to stick around in case a call for reinforcements came from Saul or Fred or Orrie.

  Wolfe's routine for Sunday is different. Theodore Horstmann, the orchid nurse, has the day off and goes to visit his married sister in Jersey, so there are no regular two-hour sessions in the plant rooms. Wolfe goes up once or twice to look around and do whatever chores the situation and the weather require, but there is no strict schedule. Usually he is down in the office by ten-thirty, at least the Sundays I am there, to settle down with the review-of-the-week section of the Sunday Times, which he goes right through.

  From nine o'clock on that Sunday morning I was half expecting a call from Noel Tedder to tell me that he had issued his Declaration of Independence, one hero to another, but it hadn't come by the time I turned on the radio for the ten-o'clock news. Nor had there been any word from any of the tailers, but I was soon to know where Saul Panzer was. As I was turning the radio off the doorbell rang, and I went to the hall and saw Andrew Frost. So Saul was near enough to see the door opening, no matter how Frost had got there. I swung the door wide and said good morning.

 

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