Hildegarde Withers Makes the Scene (23 page)

BOOK: Hildegarde Withers Makes the Scene
2.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Thank you, no.” Captain Kelso, feeling uncomfortably uncertain, was exceptionally brusque. “I’m afraid that I must ask you to come along with me.”

“May I ask why?”

“Aletha Westering, I am arresting you for the murder of your husband. You need say nothing, of course, until you have consulted an attorney.”

19.

F
ORTY-EIGHT HOURS LATER,
almost to the dot, Miss Withers crawled out of the sidecar of the Hog. The simple action, completed with as much dignity as was possible, filled her with a vague sadness, an abortive nostalgia. She had actually grown irrationally attached to the treacherous vehicle, and more than a little fond of the freckled young man who jockeyed it. Now that the time had almost come when she would have no further need of either, she was beginning already to miss both it and him.

“Al,” she said, “stay at hand. I don’t anticipate that I shall be long.”

Turning away, she entered the Royal Edward. The velvet rope did not now block the way into the dining room, where patrons sat at snowy tables set with gleaming silver and cat-footed waiters moved soundlessly across a maroon carpet. In the bar, soft canned music was an accompaniment to soft live conversation. Behind the bar, a pair of bartenders in dark red mess jackets moved efficiently to serve a row of drinkers on stools and a pair of waitresses, dressed in dark red uniforms, who brought orders from other drinkers at booths and tables. Behind and above the bar, nude in oils, Alura O’Higgins surveyed the scene. At the end of the bar, sidewise on the stool that was her observation point, sat Alura for real. She was wearing a long dark red gown. Red was obviously Alura’s color. Miss Withers approached her.

“Good evening, Miss Withers,” Alura said. “Thank you for coming.”

Miss Withers inclined her head, saying nothing. Alura sat quietly, an untouched martini on the bar beside her, watching the room and smiling faintly.

“You see that you find me,” she said, “where you found me before. I like to sit here and watch over things. It gives me pride and pleasure.”

“As well it should,” said Miss Withers.

“Yes. But I musn’t delay you. I suppose you are wondering why I called and asked you to see me here.”

“I have speculated. I have no official position. Why not Captain Kelso?”

“You’ll understand soon enough. Anyhow, other considerations aside, I simply prefer you. Perhaps it’s because your taste in painting is sound. But never mind. If you will come with me, we will find a more private place to talk.”

She led the way along the bar and around the far end and through a gold door into a red and gold room. With the door closed behind them, the sounds of the bar diminished, receding, it seemed, to a remote world. Across the room was a polished mahogany desk. Alura O’Higgins moved to the desk and sat down in a chair behind it. She nodded toward another chair in front of the desk and a little aside, a high-backed chair with padded seat covered in red plush, and Miss Withers occupied it obediently, her back erect and her feet planted firmly together.

“I understand,” Alura said, “that Aletha has confessed to the murder of her husband.”

“That is so,” Miss Withers said.

“You must know that the confession is utterly false.”

“What I know, or suspect, is of no consequence. The police accept it, and that’s all that counts. Why not? It has the ring of truth.”

“I think you know better, Miss Withers. You are, I believe, an unusually perceptive person. Aletha is a child. An abnormal child, if you wish, but still a child. She believes sincerely that she talks with the dead. She believed that her husband, one of the most flagrant and conscienceless frauds who ever lived, was a man of exalted character and inestimable worth, misunderstood and hounded by his inferiors. Dead, he is a martyr, and now she is convinced, by the action of the police, that it is her destiny to share his martyrdom. She is, in brief, incredibly susceptible to the power of suggestion. She
believes
. Is it any wonder that her confession has the ring of truth? It would deceive a lie detector.
But it does not deceive you
.”

“What makes you so sure?”

“Because, otherwise, you would not be here. Because you knew before you came what it is I have to say.”

“That it was you who murdered Captain Westering?”

For a long while Alura O’Higgins did not speak or reply. She sat looking beyond Miss Withers, her dark head canted in an attitude of listening, and when she did speak at last, it was not to answer but to ask a question of her own.

“Why do you think I did?”

“In the beginning I didn’t. I was diverted from the truth by a mistaken belief that was suggested by circumstances. As soon as I had finally corrected that error, I saw at once that you were the most probable suspect.”

“What error?”

“The conviction that the poison had been intended for Lenore Gregory.”

“No, no. If the girl had died because of me, I should have been sorry. The decanter was there. I assumed that it was the captain’s. The use of hemlock was quite a good idea, I thought, because it couldn’t be traced. I know something about poisonous plants. A little research gave me all else that I needed to know. But you haven’t answered my question. What convinced you that I poisoned the captain?”

“You had the strongest motive, once the true circumstances were clear. To be precise you had two motives. You never intended to help finance this insane voyage, of course. You are far too hard-headed and practical for that. A woman who can parlay the profit from an early affair into a prosperous restaurant like this is simply not the type. However, for your own purpose, you pretended to be interested. Your purpose, actually, was to give yourself a chance to kill Captain Westering in your own time and your own way. You knew him for what he was, and knew that the only way you could rid your sister of him was to rid the world of him. Perhaps you hesitated to take the risk at first. Perhaps that’s why you delayed. But then something else happened. Leslie Fitzgerald fell under the influence, shall we say, of the insidious captain. She also was touched by the corruption. You admire Leslie Fitzgerald very much, do you not?”

“She is a great artist. It was bad enough to know that she degraded herself with such a man, but it was infinitely worse to think that she might destroy herself by going off on an incredible voyage from which she would almost certainly never return. Her place was here, in her studio, with her work. I didn’t really believe that the
Karma
would ever sail, but Captain Westering, in his way, was an ingenious man. He might have found a way.”

“Well, there were your two motives. Aletha Westering and Leslie Fitzgerald. And then there was another factor besides the corruption of Leslie, as you regarded it, that drove you at last to precipitate action. I refer to the man who called himself, among other things, Bruno Wagner. He showed up at your home some time before the murder of the captain, full of accusations and threats. You were present. You heard him. And it was to you a dreadful revelation. For the first time you got a full look into the depths of the captain’s character. His depravity, if you please. You knew, after that, that you had to act. From that time the captain was a dead man.”

Alura O’Higgins smiled. She looked down at her hands, which were holding each other on the desk before her, and smiled. In the smile there was no amusement.

“You are a very clever woman, Miss Withers. I have thought so from the moment I first saw you. There is a communication between some women in such matters. Bruno Wagner, unfortunately, created a problem. The trouble was, I didn’t know that he was hanging around the
Karma
disguised as a hippie. As I learned later, he had known the Gregory girl back East, and remained to spy on her, as he did on the captain. He slipped aboard whenever he chose, and must have become quite familiar with the vessel. Someone aboard, I’m sure, knew about him and acted as his informant. From what he said to me later, I believe it was the man named Silversmith. But that’s aside. The point is, when I put the hemlock poison in the decanter, the afternoon of the day before the captain drank it, Bruno Wagner had come up into the cabin through the hatch from the hold before I entered. He was hiding in the head while I was there and saw everything I did. When the captain died the next night, he was on the vessel again. As a matter of fact, he had come to see the captain, I suppose to threaten him again about the old business of the Vigilantes, and found him dying. It did not take much intelligence, of course, to connect my actions and the captain’s death. Too bad for Bruno Wagner. He thought that he could blackmail me, and he’s dead.”

“And you killed him.”

“Yes. I went to that shabby little room of his in North Beach, prepared to kill him if the opportunity arose. As luck had it, he wasn’t in his room, but the door was unlocked. I went in and waited in the dark and stabbed him when he returned before he could cross the room and turn on the light beside his bed. I turned it on myself, to make certain he was dead, and left. It was really quite simple.”

“Not so simple if you have to pay for it.”

“Well, that’s something else. I have a notion that it will not, after all, be so hard. You realize, of course, that we are quite alone here. If I choose, I can deny every word I’ve said to you.”

“You can, but you won’t.”

“How can you be sure?”

“If you planned to deny all this later, you would not have called me here to listen to it now. And if you denied it, you would be permitting what you want to prevent. Your sister would stand trial. In view of her confession, she would surely be convicted. The wives of philandering husbands who get murdered are invariably, as the saying goes, sitting ducks.”

“Would you permit that, knowing that she is innocent?”

“Would
you
?”

“No. Nor can I accept the prospect for myself. That is why, among lesser reasons, I asked you here to listen. As you said, you have no official position. You cannot arrest me and take me away with you.”

“I might make a citizen’s arrest.”

Alura O’Higgins stood up. Opening the belly drawer of the desk, she removed a long envelope and held it in front of her in both hands. Tall and strong, just under six feet, she stood like a proud goddess of twilight, a denizen of lingering dusk, and a trace of amusement, this time, was in her smile.

“You might try.” She held out the envelope across the desk. “It’s all in here. You may deliver it to Captain Kelso. Take it, please, and go.”

Miss Withers, rising, took it and went.

20.

“H
ANKY-PANKY!” SAID CAPTAIN
Kelso. “Pure hanky-panky!”

“Conceded,” said Miss Withers.

“Not only hanky-panky,” said Captain Kelso, “but very
dangerous
hanky-panky!”

“Nothing ventured,” said Miss Withers, “nothing gained.”

Captain Kelso looked apoplectic. His face and bald head shone like a stoplight. Miss Withers looked smug. Her expression betrayed some slight concern for the captain’s heart and digestion.

“Look,” said Captain Kelso with mighty and heroic calm, “I’ll admit it
worked
. Even if it did end in suicide. I won’t even accuse you of finagling it that way, although I have my suspicions. But I still say there was no way you could have
known
it would work.”

“It was possible, all things considered, to make a calculated guess.”

“All right.
All right
. Call it a guess. Call it insight. Call it woman’s intuition. By God, you can call it revelation if you want to. Do I care? Not I. Not by a jugful. I’m just a plain cop. I’ve got no special gifts. I just plod along looking for fingerprints and cigarette butts. But do me one favor. Just one more. Tell me again what these things were that you considered. Go over them slowly. After all, if anyone ever asks me, I’ve got to be able to tell them how I figured this case.”

They were, the three of them, Miss Withers and the captain and Inspector Piper, bellied up to a table, with red-and-white-checked bibs tied around their necks. On the table were rosy lobsters and fragrant pots of drawn butter, of which they were making, despite the captain’s threatened indigestion, a zestful mess. Miss Withers speared a generous bite of succulent tail, dunked it in her pot, and lifted it dripping to her mouth. Minding her manners, she chewed and swallowed before she spoke.

“Gladly,” she said. “First, however, I must grant that you were right on a crucial point. The intended victim
was
Captain Westering.”

“Thanks. That helps. It makes me feel useful.”

“Yes. Well, when I reluctantly accepted that at last, the solution was quite clear. It leaped, so to speak, to the mind’s eye. Alura O’Higgins, of course. She suffered no delusions, as the other women did, concerning the character of Captain Westering. She saw him clearly for what he was—a monstrous fraud capable of infinite corruption. And she stood to lose, from his current fantastic venture, the two people she cherished most in this world. Aletha, her sister, whom she loved and pitied, and Leslie Fitzgerald, her protégée, whom she loved and admired. Even if these two had gone on the pilgrimage they contemplated, and had by some miracle returned safely from it, the captain would still have been there, like a lingering infection in their lives, and to Alura O’Higgins there was only one cure. In many ways she was a remarkable woman. She was tough, direct, ruthless when necessary. The captain had to be eliminated. The use of hemlock, the instrument of execution among the ancient Greeks, was probably incidental, selected for the reasons we have already noted, but it suggests, nevertheless, a kind of poetic justice. Captain Westering was indeed executed as an almost impersonal judgment. Just as Hoffman-Wagner was disposed of when he was rash enough to try to blackmail her.

“But there was one great danger from the beginning, and Alura O’Higgins recognized it. The danger, in brief, that Aletha Westering would be accused of the murder. She appraised the danger and took the risk, knowing that she would never let her sister pay the penalty if it came down to it. In my evaluation of the character of Alura, I was certain that this was so, for there was nothing false in her devotion to those she took to herself. And so, inasmuch as there was no tangible evidence on which to arrest Alura herself, I argued you into arresting Aletha as a way of getting Alura indirectly.”

Other books

Run by Blake Crouch
Capitalism by Roy, Arundhati
Night Resurrected by Joss Ware
Chain Reaction by Zoe Archer
Hero for Hire by Pratt, C. B.