Authors: Frances Lockridge
It was, Weigand thought after Mullins had gone, probably foolish to waste Mullins' time. But it might be useful to have everybody placed, even those on the outskirts. He got an assistant of the city toxicologist and listened. Knowing what to look for and being prodded, they had hurried. It was now official that Lois Winston had died of a heavy dose of atropine sulphate. Things were thus kept in order as they went along, Weigand told himself. He picked up two typewritten sheets, dictated by Detective Stein, who had found an encyclopædia.
“Subjoined,” wrote Detective Stein, “is a partial list of subject headings from Volume 11 of the Encyclopædia Britannica, Pages 199 to 810. This is approximately the center one-half of the volume.”
Detective Stein was thorough, Weigand decided. And he liked nice words. “Subjoined,” Weigand read over, pleased. He went on with the list.
It began with “Hawkweed” which was a “troublesome weed” native to the British Isles and North America. It included Haworth, which was in Yorkshire and “hawser” which was a thick rope. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, was fully dealt with. Weigand read on:
Hay. (Grass dried in the sun. Two and one half pages.)
Haydn, Franz Joseph.
Hay Fever.
Head-dress.
Health.
Heat. (Thirty-one pages.)
Hebrew. (Nineteen pages.)
Heir.
(Weigand paused at this one and made a note. It might be worthwhile, eventually, to discover what the Encyclopædia had to say about heirs.)
Heligoland Bight. (Two pages.)
Helium. (Colorless and odorless gas for balloons. Two pages.)
Henryâ
(The Henrys ran on indefinitely, by number.)
Hepatoscopy. (Method of divining the future.)
(Weigand appreciated Detective Stein's explanatory notes. Otherwise, he feared, curiosity would have driven him to looking up “hepatoscopy.”)
Hepplewhite.
Heraldry.
Heredity. (Resemblance between an organism and its ancestors.)
Herring.
Hibernation. (The more or less comatose condition in which certain animals pass the winter in cold latitudes.)
Hieroglyphs.
Hindenburg.
Hindustani.
Histology. (Science of study of the tissues.)
Hittites.
Hockey.
Holland.
Hollywood.
Homicide. (The “general and neutral term for the killing of one human being by another.”)
“Well,” said Weigand. “Why neutral?”
There was nobody in the office to answer him and he read on.
Hormones. (Discussion of adrenalin under this heading.)
Houses.
Underneath, apparently after he had read over the transcription, Detective Stein had written in longhand:
“These looked most promising. Might be something in hormones, do you think?”
Weigand read the list over, slowly. Here and there he crossed out. If Lois Winston had been reading about Hittites or Hollywood the previous afternoon it was hard to see that it meant anything. Perhaps she had merely read herself to sleep in the encyclopædia; Weigand knew a man, he reminded himself, who read the encyclopædia whenever opportunity offered, purely as a relaxation. It was difficult to think of any circumstances under which Holland or hockey or Hindenburg might apply. He crossed them off, shortening the list. Hay and Haydn went. Finally he ended and looked at the words remaining:
“Healthâheatâheirâheliumâhepatoscopyâheredityâhibernationâhieroglyphsâhistologyâhomicideâhormones.”
He looked it over again and scratched off “hibernation.” Then he wondered where he was, and couldn't decide. Chasing wild geese again, probably. He sighed. The chances were, he thought, wiping his forehead, that Miss Winston had merely been reading up on heat. That would have been appropriate, if tautological. He stuck Stein's report in his pocket and looked at his watch. It was, he was surprised to note, after five. The Norths had said “any time” and he could hope they meant it. About now, he decided, Mr. North would be crushing ice for cocktails, using that short wooden mallet at which they had all looked, once, with so much widening surprise. The thought of cocktails was pleasant. And perhaps Dorian would be early. Then he had another thought, and called Dorian's apartment.
It was fine to hear her voice; to hear, or imagine, a new note in it when she heard his. She was, she said, going to the Norths'âjust dressing. And it would be nice if Bill would drive by for herâvery nice. Cradling the telephone, Weigand felt much better. What he needed was a drink and some conversation, and then he could come back with his mind rested and put two and two together. A picture of Dorian rose unexpectedly in his mind and he smiled at it. Well, he thought, call it “a drink and some conversation,” anyway.
He left word that Mullins, when he returned, was to come on to the Norths'. He went out into Centre Street. The clouds were halfway up the sky now; it was strange, and somehow forbidding, that the storm was taking so long to gather. There was an odd, disturbing light on the streets and buildings as he drove uptown for Dorian Hunt.
11
W
EDNESDAY
7:30
P.M. TO
9:20
P.M.
The storm broke while they were finishing dinner at the Norths', and it was a great relief to everyone. The strange, coppery light had held for almost an hour and then it had grown dark, an hour and more before it was time to grow dark. For a long while then, they could hear thunder rumbling off across the Hudson and Mr. North, staring out of the window, had seemed nervous and irritable.
“For God's sake, get on with it,” he instructed nature. But it was still a quarter of an hour before nature obliged. Then nature got on with it in a rather surprising fashion, hurling noise at the city, rolling thunder along the streets, splitting the false darkness with lightning. Then a wind raced through the apartment and rain rattled angrily against quickly closed windows.
“Well,” Mrs. North told her husband, “you asked for it.”
It was intermittently too noisy, then, for conversation. They were sitting around the room with coffee cups balanced before it was worth the trouble to talk of more than subjects which came conveniently in snatches. And then none of them said anything for a time, but presently they were all looking at Weigand expectantly. He looked back at them, one by one.
“Does it ever occur to any of you good people that I am a public servant, sworn to secrecy?” he inquired.
Pam laughed openly at him, and the others smiled.
“That's a good one, Loot,” Mullins said. “That's sure a good one.”
Weigand looked at him darkly and then he shrugged.
“You can't keep us out of them, Bill,” Mrs. North told him. “You ought to know that by this time. And we're all very confidential.”
“And,” said Weigand, “very confident. Too confident by half. But what do you want to know?”
“Why,” Mrs. North said, “who did it, of course.”
Weigand shook his head. So, he said, did he.
“It's in all the papers,” Mrs. North pointed out. “About David McIntosh and the girl's brother and his girl and everything. Even about Michael and the Foundation. Everything. So there's no harm in telling us the rest.
“And,” she added, “it will be clearer to you after you talk. It always is.”
There was, Weigand admitted, that. He looked at Mullins speculatively.
“This isn't happening, Mullins,” he said. “Not officially. Right?”
Mullins merely looked hurt.
“Right,” Weigand said. “And, by the way, what about John Graham, for a starter?”
“O.K.,” Mullins said. “I talked to him. Up where he works.”
He was, Mullins said, office manager for some place where they made perfume. He got out a notebook. “Henry et Paulette,” he said.
Mrs. North looked puzzled. Then her face cleared.
“Oh,” she said. “I see. It soundedâlike a cannibal, somehow.”
Mullins was puzzled and waited, but she did not clarify.
“Well,” he said, “he's got a pretty good job there, apparently. Sort of in charge of things.” He had a private office and a secretary and Mullins had just caught him before he went home.
“He was worried,” Mullins said. “Seems like there's a nurse out there and she had called up and said the missus wasn't feeling goodâshe'd been hysterical or something. So he was about to close up and go home.”
“Hysterical?” Weigand said. “She seemed all rightâ” He let the words trail off. “That's interesting,” he continued, after a pause. “All right, Mullins. How about last night?”
“Well, Loot,” Mullins said. “This is a good one. He was at the Ritz-Plaza roof. With the girl in his officeâthe secretary. What do you think of that?”
A large silence developed. The Norths and Dorian looked at Mullins; then they looked at Weigand and waited.
“I think,” Weigand said, at length, “that it was a good idea to send you up there, sergeant. And then?”
John Graham had, Mullins indicated, been frank about it. He was at the roof for dinner, with his secretary. They had been working late and both had to eat. He had planned at first to go to a restaurant nearby; had, in fact, sent Miss Hand, who was the secretary, along to the restaurant to wait. He had had to make a detour on the way, conferring with the advertising manager. “And,” Mullins commented, “he probably thought there was no use in people seeing him and the girl going out together.”
Graham had joined Miss Hand at the restaurant in, as it turned out, about half an hour. The conference had taken longer than he had expected. And he was tired and hot and discovered that the air-conditioning in the restaurant they had picked had broken downâor, at any rate, wasn't cooling the restaurant.
“âAnd so,'” Mullins read from his notes, â“I thought it would be good for both Miss Hand and myself to go to some really decent place, considering the weather and the work we had to do later and everything. So I suggested the roof.'
“That,” Mullins said, “is what he says. Do we have to believe him, Loot? Or was he just showing the girl friend a good time?”
Weigand said he wouldn't know. What did the girl say?
“Just what he says,” Mullins admitted. “So what?”
“Right,” Weigand said. “Did you check it?”
Mullins had partly checked it, at any rate. Graham had conferred with the advertising manager. Miss Hand had gone first to a restaurant nearby, on her own story. There hadn't been time to verify at the restaurant. There had been time, however, to telephone and ask about the cooling system.
“It didn't break down,” Mullins said. “On the other hand, the man said, when I sorta got tough, that maybe it hadn't been working as well as usual.”
Weigand drummed with his fingers on the coffee table. It would all, he decided, be worth looking into. With an inquiring glance, which brought a nod from Mr. North, Weigand picked up the telephone. He got Detective Stein and sent him forth to look into things. He replaced the telephone and sat for a moment looking at it. He started as if to pick it up again and then apparently thought better of it.
“Well,” he said, “that's the newest bit. Nowâ”
Rapidly, he sketched the case as it stood, amplifying little but suppressing nothing which seemed of importance. He told of Mrs. Halstead and her hints of knowledge not divulged; of Mrs. Graham and her odd father-in-law; of Madge Ormondâbut not of the baptismal name which “Madge Ormond” overlay. He showed them the list he had made from Detective Stein's longer list from the encyclopædia, and of the apparent disappearance of Michael's father.
“That wasn't much of a surprise,” he added. “I never fell particularly for the mysterious man. It looked like a dodge to get rid of the child, all along. Although I don't know what Miss Crane could have done, even if she had suspected.”
Dorian read over the list and passed it to Mr. North, who looked at it and gave it to Pam. Mrs. North made sounds of discovery.
“Heir!” she said, triumphantly. “That's what she was looking upâheirs. Orâwhat's hepatoscopy?”
Weigand told her. She shook her head.
“Heirs almost certainly,” she said. “Orâor heat, of course. Because she wanted to know why it was so.”
“Was so?” Mr. North echoed.
“Hot, of course,” Mrs. North told him. “Only in that case it doesn't fit in, does it? It must have been heirs, only that doesn't fit in with my theory. And I'm pretty sure about my theory.”
Everybody looked at her in surprise, and she nodded firmly.
“I'm pretty sure,” she said. “Ever since I knew it started with Michael.”
“Which,” Weigand told her, “you of course only think you know.”
She shook her head. She was, she said, sure as anything that it was Michael.
“And,” she said, “he was kidnaped, of course.”
“What?” said Mr. North, anxiously. Weigand said, “What?” at almost the same time, and with almost the same tone. Mrs. North looked at them triumphantly.
“Of course,” she said. “Don't tell me you missed that. By Mrs. Halstead, or by somebody Mrs. Halstead wasâwell, was in with. And the man who brought Michael to the agency was a Federal agent.”
“A what?” Mr. North said. “A Federal agent? Listen, Pam, I don't thinkâ”
Mrs. North waved a stop signal at him.
“He had
re
-kidnaped him,” Mrs. North said. “But he didn't want to do it officially because they were still looking for the rest of the gang. So he pretended
not
to be a Federal agent and brought him to the Foundation. Andâ” She stopped suddenly, her eyes rounding. “Listen,” she said, “I'll bet I know something else.
It's David McIntosh's son!
”
They all looked at her.
“My God, Pam!” Jerry North said, in slow awe. “How did you everâI mean, how did you?”