Authors: Ellery Queen
22
Council of War
The whole week end stood between them and Monday. So on Saturday night Nora invited Roberta Roberts and Judge Eli Martin to dinner to âtalk things over' with the family. Hermione wanted Nora to stay in bed, because of her âcondition'; but Nora said: âOh, Mother, it will do me lots more good to be up on my feet and going through some motions!' So Hermy wisely did not press the point.
Nora was beginning to thicken noticeably about the waist; her cheeks were puffy and unhealthy-looking suddenly, and she walked about the house as if her legs were stuffed with lead. When Hermione questioned Dr Willoughby anxiously, he said that âNora's getting along about as well as we can expect, Hermy.' Hermy didn't dare ask him any more questions. But she rarely left Nora's side, and she would go white if she saw Nora try to lift so much as a long biography.
After dinner, which was tasteless and uneasy, they all went into the living room. Ludie had tightly flapped the blinds and lit a fire. They sat before it with the uncomfortable stiffness of people who know they should say something, but cannot think of what. There was no solace anywhere, not even in the friendly flames. It was impossible to relaxâNora was too much there. âMr Smith, you haven't said much tonight,' remarked Roberta Roberts at last.
Nora looked at Ellery beseechingly; but he avoided her eyes. âThere hasn't been too much to say, has there?'
âNo,' the newspaper woman murmured. âI suppose not.'
âAs I see the problem before us, it's not intellectual, or emotional, but legal. Faith isn't going to acquit Jim, although it may bolster his spirits. Only facts can get him off.'
âAnd there aren't any!' cried Nora.
âNora dearest,' moaned Hermy. âPlease. You heard what Dr Willoughby said about getting upset.'
âI know, Mother, I know.' Nora glanced eagerly at Judge Eli Martin, whose long fingers were bridged before his nose as he glowered at the fire. âHow does it look, Uncle Eli?'
âI wouldn't want to deceive you, Nora.' The old jurist shook his head. âIt looks just as bad as it possibly can.'
âYou mean Jim hasn't got a chance?' she wailed.
âThere's always a chance, Nora,' said Roberta Roberts.
âYes,' sighed the Judge. âYou never can tell about a jury.'
âIf there was only something we could
do
,' said Hermy helplessly.
John F. burrowed more deeply into his smoking jacket.
âOh, you people!' cried Lola Wright. âMoaning the blues! I'm sick of this sitting around, wringing our handsâ' Lola flung her cigarette into the flames with disgust.
âSo am I,' said Pat between her teeth. âSick as the devil.'
âPatricia darling,' said Hermy, âI'm sure you'd better stay out of this discussion.'
âOf course, Momsy,' said Lola with a grimace. â
Your
baby. You'll never see Pat as anything but a long-legged brat who wouldn't drink her nice milk and kept climbing Emmy DuPré's cherry tree!'
Pat shrugged. Mr Ellery Queen regarded her with suspicion. Miss Patricia Wright had been acting peculiarly since Thursday. Too quiet. Over-thoughtful for a healthy extrovert. As if she were brewing something in that fetching skullpan of hers. He started to say something to her, but lit a cigarette instead. The Gold Rush of '49, he thought, started with a battered pan in a muddy trickle of water. Who knows where the Fact may be found?
âEllery, what
do
you think?' pleaded Nora.
âEllery's been mulling over the case looking for a loophole,' Pat explained to Judge Martin.
âNot legally,' Ellery hastened to explain as the Judge's brows went up. âBut I've been handling crime facts so long in fiction that I'veâuhâacquired a certain dexterity in handling them in real life.'
âIf you juggle
these
with any success,' growled the old lawyer, âyou're a magician.'
âIsn't there
anything?
' Nora cried.
âLet's face it, Nora,' said Ellery grimly. âJim's in a hopeless position. You'd better prepare yourselfâ¦I've gone over the whole case. I've sifted every grain of evidence in the hopper, I've weighed every known fact. I've re-examined each incident a dozen times. And I haven't found a loophole. There's never been so one-sided a case against a defendant. Carter Bradford and Chief Dakin have built a giant, and it will take a miracle to topple it over.'
âAnd I,' said Judge Eli dryly, âam no Goliath.'
âOh, I'm prepared all right,' said Nora with a bitter laugh. She twisted about violently in her chair and dropped her face on her arms.
âSudden movements!' said Hermy in an alarmed voice. âNora, you've
got
to be careful!' Nora nodded without raising her head. And silence entered, to fill the room to bursting.
âLook here,' said Ellery at last. He was a black man against the flames. âMiss Roberts, I want to know something.'
The newspaper woman said slowly: âYes, Mr Smith?'
âYou've lost your column because you chose to buck public opinion and fight for Jim Haight.'
âThis is still a free country, thank God,' said Roberta lightly. But she was sitting very still.
âWhy have you taken such a remarkable interest in this caseâeven to the point of sacrificing your job?'
âI happen to believe Jim Haight is innocent.'
âIn the face of all the evidence against him?'
She smiled. âI'm a woman. I'm psychic. That's two reasons.'
âNo,' said Ellery.
Roberta got to her feet. âI'm not sure I like that,' she said clearly. âWhat are you trying to say?' The others were frowning. There was something in the room that crackled more loudly than the burning logs.
âIt's too beautiful,' mocked Mr Queen. âToo, too beautiful. Hard-boiled newspaper woman renounces livelihood to defend total stranger whoâall the facts and all the world agreeâis guilty as Cain. There's an excuse for Noraâshe's in love with the man. There's an excuse for the Wrightsâthey want their son-in-law cleared for the sake of their daughter and grandchild. But what's yours?'
âI've told you!'
âI don't believe you.'
âYou don't. What am I supposed to doâcare?'
âMiss Roberts,' said Ellery in a hard voice, âwhat are you concealing?'
âI refuse to submit to this third degree.'
âSorry! But it's plain you do know something. You've known something from the time you came to Wrightsville. What you know has
forced
you to come to Jim's defense.
What is it?
'
The newspaper woman gathered her gloves and silver-fox coat and bag. âThere are times, Mr Smith,' she said, âwhen I dislike you very muchâ¦No, please, Mrs Wright. Don't bother.' She went out with a quick step.
Mr Queen stared at the space she had just vacated. âI thought,' he said apologetically, âI might be able to irritate it out of her.'
âI think,' said Judge Martin reflectively, âI'll have a heart-to-heart talk with that female.'
Ellery shrugged. âLola.'
âMe?' said Lola surprised. âWhat did I do, teacher?'
âYou've concealed something, too.'
Lola stared. Then she laughed and lit a cigarette. âYou
are
in a Scotland Yard mood tonight, aren't you?'
âDon't you think the time has come,' smiled Mr Queen, âto tell Judge Martin about your visit to the back door of Nora's house just before midnight New Year's Eve?'
âLola!' gasped Hermy. âYou were
there?
'
âOh, it's nothing at all, Mother,' said Lola impatiently. âIt hasn't a thing to do with the case. Of course, Judge, I'll tell you. But as long as we're being constructive, how about the eminent Mr Smith getting to work?'
âAt what?' asked the eminent Mr Smith.
âMy dear Smarty-Pants, you know a lot more than you've let on!'
âLola,' said Nora, in despair. âOh, all this wranglingâ'
âDon't you think,' cried Pat, âthat if there were something Ellery could do, he'd do it?'
âI dunno,' said Lola critically, squinting at the culprit through her cigarette smoke. âHe's a tough âun to figure.'
âJust a minute,' said Judge Martin. âSmith, if you know anything at all, I want to put you on the stand!'
âIf I thought going on the stand for you would help, Judge,' protested Ellery, âI'd do it. But it won't. On the contrary, it would hurtâa lot.'
âHurt Jim's case?'
âIt would just about cement his conviction.'
John F. spoke for the first time. âYou mean you
know
Jim is guilty, young man?'
âI didn't say that,' growled Ellery. âBut my testimony would make things look so black against himâit would establish so clearly that no one but Jim could have poisoned that cocktailâthat you wouldn't be able to shake it with the Supreme Court to help you.
I mustn't take the stand
.'
âMr Smith.' Chief Dakin, aloneâ¦âSorry to bust in this way, folks,' said the police chief gruffly, âbut this was one subpoena I had to serve myself.'
âSubpoena? On me?' asked Ellery.
âYes, sir. Mr Smith, you're summoned to appear in court Monday morning to testify for the People in the case of People Against James Haight.'
Part Five
23
Lola and the Check
âI got one, too,' murmured Lola to Ellery Queen in the courtroom Monday morning.
âGot one what?'
âA summons to testify today for the beloved People.'
âStrange,' muttered Mr Queen.
âThe pup's got something up his sleeve,' said Judge Martin. âAnd what's J.C. doing in court?'
âWho?' Ellery looked about.
âJ.C. Pettigrew, the real estate man. There's Bradford whispering to him. J.C. can't know anything about this case.'
Lola said in a strangled voice: âOh, nuts,' and they stared at her. She was very pale.
âWhat's the matter, Lola?' asked Pat.
âNothing. I'm sure it can't possiblyâ'
âHere's Newbold,' said Judge Martin, hastily standing up. âRemember, Lola, just answer Carter's questions. Don't volunteer information. Maybe,' he whispered grimly as the bailiff shouted to the courtroom to rise, âmaybe I've got a trick or two myself on cross-examination!'
* * *
J.C. Pettigrew sat down in the witness chair shaking and swabbing his face with a blue polka-dot handkerchief, such as the farmers around Wrightsville use. Yes, his name is J.C. Pettigrew, he is in the real estate business in Wrightsville, he's been a friend of the Wrights for many yearsâhis daughter Carmel is Patricia Wright's best friend. (Patricia Wright compresses her lips. Her âbest friend' has not telephoned since January first.)
There was an aqueous triumph about Carter Bradford this morning. His own brow was slick with perspiration, and he and J.C. kept up a duet of handkerchiefs.
Q
.âI hand you this cancelled check, Mr Pettigrew. Do you recognize it?
A
.âYep.
Q
.âRead what it says.
A
.âThe dateâDecember thirty-first, nineteen-forty. Then it says: pay to the order of cash, one hundred dollars. Signed J.C. Pettigrew.
Q
.âDid you make out this check, Mr Pettigrew?
A
.âI did.
Q
.âOn the date specifiedâthe last day of last year, the day of New Year's Eve?
A
.âYes, sir.
Q
.âTo whom did you give this check, Mr Pettigrew?
A
.âTo Lola Wright.
Q
.âTell us the circumstances of your giving Miss Lola Wright this check for a hundred dollars, please.
A
.âI sort of feel funny aboutâ¦I mean, I can't help itâ¦Well, last day of the year, I was just cleaning up at my office in High Village when Lola came in. Said she was in a bad spot, and she'd known me all her life, and could I let her have a hundred dollars. I saw she was worriedâ
Q
.âJust tell us what she said and you said.
A
.âWell, that's all, I guess. I gave it to her. Oh, yes. She asked for cash. I said I didn't have any cash to spare, and it was past banking hours, so I'd give her a check. She said: âWell, if it can't be helped, it can't be helped.' So I made out a check, she said thanks, and that's all. Can I go now?
Q
.âDid Miss Wright tell you what she wanted the money for?
A
.âNo, sir, and I didn't ask her.
The check was placed in evidence, and when Judge Martin, who had been about to demand the deletion of all J.C.'s remarks, turned the check over and saw what was written on the other side, he blanched and bit his lip. Then he waved his hand magnanimously and declined to cross-examine. J.C. stumbled and almost fell, he was so anxious to get off the stand. He sent Hermy a sickly smile. His face was steaming, and he kept swabbing it.
Lola Wright was nervous as she took the oath, but her gaze was defiant, and it made Carter Bradford flush. He showed her the check in evidence. âMiss Wright, what did you do with this check when you first received it from J.C. Pettigrew on December thirty-first last?'
âI put it in my purse,' said Lola. There were titters. But Judge Martin frowned, so Lola sat up straighter.
âYes I know,' said Carter, âbut to whom did you give it?'
âI don't remember.'
Foolish girl, thought Ellery. He's got you. Don't make things worse by being difficult. Bradford held the check up before her. âMiss Wright, perhaps this will refresh your memory. Read the endorsement on the back, please.'
Lola swallowed. Then she said in a low voice: â“James Haight.”' At the defense table James Haight unaccountably seized that instant to smile. It was the weariest smile imaginable. Then he sank into apathy again.