Death and Letters

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Death and Letters Page 1

by Elizabeth Daly




  DEATH

  AND LETTERS

  Elizabeth Daly

  FELONY & MAYHEM PRESS • NEW YORK

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER ONE Crossword

  CHAPTER TWO Urgent

  CHAPTER THREE Letter Answered

  CHAPTER FOUR Keep It Simple

  CHAPTER FIVE Why?

  CHAPTER SIX Peculiar Shade of Blue

  CHAPTER SEVEN Inside Stuff

  CHAPTER EIGHT Miracle

  CHAPTER NINE Frustrated

  CHAPTER TEN Serene

  CHAPTER ELEVEN Wrong Side of the Tracks

  CHAPTER TWELVE Report

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN Person to Person

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN No Deal

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN Ten Thousand

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN Warning

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Pathology

  CHAPTER ONECrossword

  THERE WAS A ROW of narrow casement windows across the east end of the bedroom, and a sash window, broad and high, in the north wall. The middle casement window was partly open, the sash window shut tightly and screwed down.

  To the north old trees, barely in leaf, screened the view up-river; to the east the grounds were cut sharply off where the cliff ended. A pale, cold April light, subdued by grey skies, came into the room bleakly. It was a comfortable, almost a luxurious room, but it had a clumsy, cluttered look to modern eyes; it was old-fashioned in an unfashionable way. It had an oriental rug on the floor, a gilt-framed oil landscape over the chimney piece, thick silk curtains, pottery lamps with silk shades, ornate wooden furniture, a double bed. Logs burned in the fireplace—it was a cold afternoon.

  A nurse in uniform sat beside the north window, doing a jigsaw puzzle. She was a squat, dark woman, and the sharp lights from her cap and dress brought out greenish tints in her sallow skin. She had the bulging forehead of obstinacy, and there was strength in every motion of her short arms. She must have known that she was not much to look at, and perhaps she thought that that was why her patient sat with her back turned; perhaps that was why she cast a sour look at the patient’s back, now and then.

  The patient had moved her little bandy-legged desk from under the casement windows to the corner next to them on the right; it was now under a looking-glass in a painted velvet frame. The patient had said she got the light better that way, and certainly she must have needed all the light there was for her eternal crossword puzzles. She was doing one now, out of a little paperbound book. There were printed forms and business envelopes on the desk-flap, but she had pushed them and the ink and pentray aside.

  She seemed to be making heavy work of her puzzle just now. She filled in squares, rubbed out letters, consulted other diagrams in the book, sat in thought, looked up often at the mirror, which reflected the top of the nurse’s cap.

  She was perhaps forty years old, and she might once have been a beautiful woman; now she looked pale and worn. She was very thin. Undoubtedly she had had an illness. But her dark hair was carefully dressed, and she was very neat and smart in plain black, with thin black silk stockings and black suède shoes.

  The nurse said: “Don’t tire yourself out, now, Mrs. Coldfield.”

  “No.”

  Mrs. Coldfield watched the cap in the looking-glass, but it wasn’t moving. She filled in the last blanks of her puzzle; with dots substituting for the black squares, it looked like this:

  THEMA.PLESCLIFF

  S.I.D.E.T.H.I.R

  DFLOO.RBACKFROM

  W.H.A.TCFENWAYH

  ASTOLDMEITHOUGH

  T.Y.O.U.M.I....

  GHTIMAGI.NESOME

  W.A.Y.T.O.G.E.T.

  MEOUTO.FTHISPLA

  ....C.E.Q.U.I.E

  TLYIDONOTSEETHE

  E.N.D.A.N.D.S.H

  ALLNEVERH.AVEAN

  Y.O.T.H.E.R.C.H

  ANCETOCOM.MUNIC

  She turned the thin page, and the nurse spoke again: “You going to do another? How they coming?”

  The cap in the looking-glass was rising. Mrs. Coldfield turned another page to a half-finished diagram. She said: “Not very well. They’re rather hard—for me.”

  The nurse had come across the room and was looking over her shoulder. She said: “I’d go crazy.”

  “They rest me.”

  “Only trouble, they’re not sociable. How’d you like to help me with this jigsaw I’m doing? You can talk and do jigsaws.”

  “I’d like to go on with this for a while.”

  The patient spoke politely, but without expression. The nurse, disgusted, went down the long room and through a communicating bath to another bedroom beyond. The patient’s eyes followed her. She came back with an open box of candy.

  “Have one?”

  “Not before tea, thank you.”

  The nurse went back to her jigsaw. Irritating, she thought, how she never calls a person by name; as if you didn’t have a name or weren’t there. But you couldn’t irritate her…not if you tried.

  The patient turned a leaf to an untouched diagram. She worked faster now:

  ..ATECONSULTDRD

  A.L.G.R.E.N.F.O

  RCASE.HISTORYON

  L.Y.M.R.S.Y.E.A.

  BLAGDONFO.RBACK

  G...R.O.U...N.D.

  ONLYNUR.SEHASSU

  P.P.E.....R.A.T

  EIGHTSY.LVIACOL

  D.F....I.E.L..D

  She glanced up at the mirror, carefully removed the two pages from the book, folded them once, and slipped a stamped, addressed envelope out from under the business papers on the desk. She put the crossword pages in the envelope, sealed it, folded it into one of the printed forms, and fitted both into a long envelope which was addressed in bold type to an industrial company in New York. Then she looked at her wrist watch. Still looking at it, she said in her quiet, expressionless way, “I had no idea it was so late.”

  “Late?” The nurse looked at her wrist watch. “Late for what?” she asked comically.

  “The postman will be coming. I must sign these proxies and get them off. Date them, too; it says so.” She picked up a card. “Date them. What’s the date, I wonder?”

  “It’s Easter Monday,” said the nurse, “April the eighteenth.” She got up and came over. “You shouldn’t be bothered with business.”

  “You heard my brother-in-law ask me to do them.” The patient was signing busily.

  “Is there any rush?”

  “There is, by what they say.”

  The nurse was not likely to read the fine print on those mysterious cards and letter-sheets, and she accepted the probability that rush was a part of business. She stood while her patient blotted the forms and put them in their envelopes. When they were ready she picked them up and licked the flaps. The patient sat without looking at her, motionless—entirely motionless; she was holding her breath.

  When they were all sealed, Mrs. Coldfield suddenly leaned forward with her elbows on the desk-flap and her head in her hands. The nurse stood looking at her sharply.

  “You tired yourself out, just like I said. Now don’t do another thing before tea.”

  “I hear him on the gravel.”

  “Such ears I never—you can’t hear him all the way around to the front.”

  The nurse walked over to the door, was about to push the button of a bell, glanced back at the figure bowed over the desk, and raised and dropped her shoulders in a skeptical kind of shrug. She looked at the casement—a cat could get through that half-opening, nothing much bigger would make it. She went out, locked the bedroom door behind her, and descended two flights of stairs. When she came back the patient was sitting in an armchair, her head back, her eyes closed. She looked quite peaceful.

  “Mustn’t brood, you know,” said the nurse brightly.

  The patient
opened her eyes slowly and looked at the other woman.

  “Have to be cheerful to get well.” The nurse switched on two of the lamps. “Tea’s coming.”

  “Doctor Dalgren said I was well.”

  The nurse frowned heavily. “It’s Doctor Smyth’s case now.”

  “Of course. Silly of me.”

  “How about tea downstairs? Make a change.” She added: “They’re all out, every last one of ’em.”

  The patient smiled. “Yes, I know.”

  “That party at the Watertons’, that ought to be something! Too bad you had to miss that.”

  “In any case I couldn’t have gone. I’m in mourning.”

  The nurse, taken aback a little, said after a pause: “Well, it’s only a family party after all. It’s all right for them to go to that.”

  “It’s all right to go to anything, if you feel like going.”

  “That’s what I say. Come on now, take an interest; let’s go downstairs for tea, and then out for a walk.”

  Mrs. Coldfield said as if in slight surprise: “But what if callers came?”

  This was in bad taste, execrable taste. The nurse said stiffly: “They won’t come in the library—Mr. Ira’s little library.” She added: “You’re not well enough to see strangers.”

  “I can see that it wouldn’t do.”

  “Now don’t be naughty. I want to tell the doctor that you’re ever so much better.”

  Mrs. Coldfield turned to look at the nurse steadily. She asked: “Well enough to travel?”

  The nurse returned the look. There was a question in her eyes, too. But after a moment she said loudly: “Doctor Smyth is a very experienced man, he has a big reputation in this vicinity. All the big people have him, and he has ten times the medical knowledge of these psychiatrists.”

  Mrs. Coldfield leaned back again. She said: “I’ll have tea upstairs, if you don’t mind.”

  “I won’t take hold of your arm.”

  There was a long silence. Then Mrs. Coldfield turned her head again, met the nurse’s eyes, and smiled. She said: “If you did I should understand.”

  The nurse thought: She’s a smart one. It’s none of my business, Smyth knows his job. But what did she do?

  CHAPTER TWOUrgent

  “YOU MEAN YOU THINK there’s anything crazy about that letter?”

  Gamadge’s tone was flat and incredulous. He had not taken the clients’ chair in his friend Macloud’s law office, but had pulled up a hard straight one, and was sitting on Macloud’s right, across the corner of the desk. He had taken his cigarette out of his mouth, and was pointing with it at some papers laid out on the blotter.

  There was an envelope that had been through the mails; it was addressed to Gamadge in a firm, clear hand. There were two crossword-diagrams, one entirely filled in with pencilled letters, the other partially so. There was a typed, punctuated transcript of their message. There was a sheet of notepaper, covered with Gamadge’s scrawled writing.

  “Fifty-fifty,” said Macloud, “but we have no evidence.”

  “No evidence…” Gamadge repeated the words without inflection. He put the cigarette back in his mouth and looked up at the ceiling, around the room, out of the window that gave him a large view of skyscrapers and April sky.

  Macloud, with a saturnine look at him, picked up the typed transcript of the message. He glanced over it, and said judicially: “I’ve changed my mind. There’s a distinct flavor of persecution mania—the odds from where I sit are two to one.” He added: “Why not wait until Hamish reports, before we bet on it? You say he’s calling this Dalgren for you. I’m willing to give you a break.”

  Gamadge said: “Just read it again.”

  “And you still have to see Mrs. Y. E. A. Blagdon, whoever she is. I’ll give you Mrs. Blagdon, too.” He added with amused curiosity: “I don’t know how you wangled the appointment, in the face of your client’s restrictions.”

  “I said Clara and I wanted news of Sylvia Coldfield.” Gamadge looked at him disgustedly. “My client has a little more imagination than you have. Why don’t you really read the thing?”

  Macloud did so, aloud:

  The Maples, Cliffside.

  Third floor back.

  From what C. Fenway has told me, I thought you might imagine some way to get me out of this place quietly. I do not see the end, and shall never have any other chance to communicate. Consult Dr. Dalgren for case history only, Mrs. Y. E. A. Blagdon for background only. Nurse has supper at eight.

  Sylvia Coldfield

  He put the paper down, leaned back, picked up his cigarette, reflected for a few moments in silence. Then he said: “Of course you did dig up a little something; but it’s all in favor of my theory. Want a summing up?”

  “Go to it. I’d like to hear it.”

  Macloud separated Gamadge’s scrawled notes from the other papers, bent over, and frowned heavily. “Wish you’d type everything. Let’s see. ‘Ames Coldfield, kind of a literary character from what the book says about his clubs. Ira Coldfield. Mrs. Ira, born Georgette Soames. Glendon Coldfield. Mrs. Glendon, born Sylvia Haynes. Miss Susan Coldfield, belongs to the Ira couple.’ All seem to live together at The Maples, Cliffside, which town as we all know is a little way up-river, west. This,” he looked around at Gamadge, “means that your client is married and living in the bosom of her family. Sounds as if she were comfortably circumstanced. And she can send out letters—if you call that piece of mystification there a letter.”

  “She has no writing paper,” remarked Gamadge, “and the envelope was mailed to me yesterday—Tuesday—in New York. From this neighborhood downtown.”

  “Somebody mailed it for her in New York,” said Macloud patiently. “As for the form of her message, it simulates a code or cryptogram; but it isn’t a code or a cryptogram, it’s clear. Just a childish attempt to mystify, an attempt to impress you. And by gum she succeeded.”

  “She succeeded.” Gamadge put out his cigarette and lighted a fresh one. He said: “She has a nurse on that third floor back, and you could fool a nurse pretending to do a crossword puzzle. The envelope is cheap grade paper, with no return address on it. Perhaps she stole it out of the nurse’s box.”

  “And who mailed it for her? Well, that doesn’t matter; we don’t even know that she’s sequestered up there. Dalgren, you tell me, is a top flight mental specialist, with a big rest home or institute up near Albany.”

  “Hamish told me when I rang him this morning. He knows all about Dalgren; he was perfectly willing to call him up for me.”

  “Speaking non-professionally, I’d say we didn’t even need his report. She’s been under Dalgren’s care, she’s back home and she’s had a relapse. Delusions. Don’t they always want to get away from wherever they are? It’s a symptom,” said

  Macloud cheerfully. “She heard about you from Caroline Fenway, and she’s elected you to help out with the charade. Speaking professionally, I wouldn’t touch it with a barge-pole. Family affair—keep away from them.”

  A diffident, fuzzy-haired, youngish woman with an intelligent face came in with a memorandum slip in her hand. She said: “There’s an Ira Coldfield in the telephone book, Mr. Gamadge; he’s a broker, firm of Coldfield and Wittemore.”

  “Thank you, Miss Murphy.” Gamadge looked at Macloud. “Hope you don’t mind, Bob? I stopped by on my way in and asked Miss Murphy to look for a Coldfield when she had time.”

  “Fine,” said Macloud. “That’s the way. Get us all working for you.”

  “There’s no Ames Coldfield listed, Mr. Gamadge, or Glendon either,” said Miss Murphy, “but here’s the Coldfield and Wittemore number.”

  “Oh, thanks,” said Gamadge, taking it, “but what I really want now is a word with Avery Bradlock. He’ll have all the information there is on brokerage firms of standing, and it wouldn’t embarrass me so much to ask him.”

  “We mustn’t embarrass the guy, Miss Murphy,” said Macloud. “Get him Bradlock.”

  “Right away,�
� said Miss Murphy, and went out wondering what was so attractive about that Gamadge anyhow, he wasn’t good-looking and he had a kind of a stoop in the shoulders too.

  The telephone buzzed in a minute or so, and Macloud gestured for Gamadge to take it. Avery Bradlock said it was very nice to hear from him, what could he do?

  “Something came up in the course of business, Mr. Bradlock; I wondered if you could give me a little information about Ira Coldfield, of Coldfield and—”

  “Wittemore.”

  “Yes. I wouldn’t bother you with anything I could get out of Bradstreet, of course…”

  Bradlock laughed. “I don’t know much more than that, but that everybody knows. It’s a very old well-established firm; Ira has a seat on the Exchange, and so did his father and grandfather before him. The grandfather—Deane Coldfield—was a sharp operator in the old days, but they’re conservative now. Steady people, they’ve weathered everything. I wouldn’t say they make a lot of money now, but who does? They get along. Ira’s liked on the street, but I always found him—this is confidential?”

  “Absolutely.”

  “Over-cautious man in every way. I suppose I don’t like it in him because I’m inclined to be that way myself. You can’t relax with Coldfield.”

  “What’s the brother like?”

  “Glendon? He’s dead.”

  “Oh.” Gamadge glanced at Macloud, who was listening in.

  “Quite recently, too; was there some accident or something? I could find out.”

  “Don’t think of it. So can I.”

  “He was a very nice fellow, not a bit like Ira. Easygoing, didn’t much care whether school kept or not. He was on salary in the firm. They all got something from the father’s estate, and I think his wife had a little money of her own, so he was more or less independent and didn’t have to dig at it.”

  “Well, I’m greatly obliged, Mr. Bradlock.”

  “Not at all. Hope we’ll be seeing you and Mrs. Gamadge.”

  Gamadge put the telephone down gently. He said: “She hasn’t quite as much family as we thought.”

  “No,” admitted Macloud, “but this cool cautious Ira doesn’t sound especially sinister to me. And whatever they’re doing or not doing to Glendon Coldfield’s widow, they’re evidently not going to get much money out of her.”

 

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