it.' His jaw muscles moved, but not through loss of control. 'It's like this. We got a wire two weeks ago Saturday that Joan was dead. We drove to Chicago and took a plane to New York. We saw her body.

The car wheels had ran over the middle of her, and there was a big lump on her head over her right ear. I talked to the police and the medical examiner.'

Wellman was being efficient now. 'I do not believe Joan was walking in that secluded spot in that park, not a main road, on a cold evening in the middle of winter, and neither does my wife. How did she get the lump on her head? The car didn't hit her head. The medical examiner says it's possible she fell on her head, but he's careful how he says it, and I don't believe it. The police claim they're working on it, doing all they can, but I don't believe that either. I think they think, it was just a hit-and-run driver, and all they're doing is to try to find the car. I think my daughter was murdered, and I think I know the name of the man that killed her.'

'Indeed.' Wolfe's brows went up a little. 'Have you told them so?'

'I certainly have, and they just nod and say they're working on it. They haven't got anywhere and they're not going to. So I decided to come to you-'

'Have you any evidence?'

'I call it evidence, but I guess they don't.' He took an enve-lope from his breast pocket. 'Joan wrote home every week, hardly ever missed.' He removed a sheet of paper from the envelope and unfolded it. 'This is a copy I had typed, I let the police have the original. It's dated February first, which was a Thursday. I'll read only part of it.

'Oh, I must tell you, I have a new kind of date to-morrow evening. As you know, since Mr. Hanna decided that our rejections of manuscripts must have the per-sonal touch, except when it's just tripe, which I must say most of it is, I return quite a lot of stuff with a typed note with my name signed, and so do the other readers. Well, last fall sometime I did that with the manuscript of a novel by a man named Baird Archer, only I had forgotten all about it, until yesterday there was a phone call for me, at the office, and a man's voice said he was Baird Archer, and did I remember the note I had sent him returning his manuscript, and I said I did. He asked if anyone else had read it, and I said no, and then he propositioned me! He said he would pay me twenty dollars an hour to discuss the novel with him and make suggestions to improve it! How do you like that? Even if it's only five hours, that will

be an extra hundred dollars for the exchequer, only it won't stay in the exchequer very long, as you know, my darling and doting parents, if you know me, and you ought to, I'm to meet him tomorrow right after office hours.'

Wellman waggled the paper. 'Now she wrote that on-'

'May I see it, please?' Wolfe was leaning forward with a gleam in his eye. Apparently something about Joan Well-man's letter home had given him a kick, but when Wellman handed it to him he gave it only a brief glance before passing it to me. I read it clear through with my eyes while my ears recorded their talk for the notebook.

'She wrote that,' Wellman said, 'on Thursday, February first. Her appointment with that man was the next day, Friday, right after office hours. Early Saturday morning her body was found on that out-of-the-way road in Van Gortlandt Park. What's wrong with thinking that that man killed her?'

Wolfe was leaning back again. 'Was there any evidence of assault? Assault as a euphemism for rape?'

'No.' Wellman's eyes went shut, and his hands closed into fists. After a moment the eyes opened again. 'Nothing like that. No sign at all of that.'

'What do the police say?'

'They say they're still trying to find that man Archer and can't. No trace of him. I think-'

'Nonsense. Of course there's a trace. Publishers must keep records. He submitted a manuscript of a novel last fall, and it was returned to him with a note from your daughter. Re-turned how and where?'

'It was returned by mail to the only address he gave, Gen-eral Delivery, Clinton Station. That's on West Tenth Street.' Wellman's fists became hands again, and he turned a palm up. 'I'm not saying the police have just laid down on the job. Maybe they've even done the best they can, but the fact remains that it's been seventeen days now and they haven't got anywhere, and I don't like the way they talked yesterday and this morning. It looks to me like they don't want it to be an unsolved murder, and they want to call it manslaughter, and that's all it would be if it was a hit-and-run accident. I don't know about these New York police, but you tell me, they might do a thing like that, mightn't they?'

Wolfe grunted. 'It is conceivable. And you want me to

prove it was murder and find the murderer, with evidence?'

'Yes.' Wellman hesitated, opening his mouth and closing it again. He glanced at me and returned to Wolfe. 'I tell you, Mr. Wolfe, I am willing to admit that what I am doing is vin-dictive and wicked. My wife thinks it is, and so does the pastor of my church. I was home one day last week, and they both said so. It is sinful to be vindictive, but here I am, and I'm going through with it. Even if it was just a hit-and-run acci-dent I don't think the police are going to find him, and what-ever it was I'm not going back to Peoria and sell groceries until he's found and made to pay for it. I've got a good paying business, and I own some property, and I never figured on dying a pauper, but I will if I have to, to get the murderous criminal that killed my daughter. Maybe I shouldn't say that. I don't know you too well, I only know you by reputation, and maybe you won't want to work for a man who can say an unchristian thing like that, so maybe it's a mistake to say it, but I want to be honest about it.'

Wellman took his glasses off and started wiping them with a handkerchief. That showed his better side. He didn't want to embarrass Wolfe by keeping his eyes on him while Wolfe was deciding whether to take on a job for such an implacable bastard as John R. Wellman of Peoria, Illinois.

'I'll be honest too,' Wolfe said dryly. 'The morality of vengenance is not a factor in my acceptance or refusal of a case. But it was a mistake for you to say it, because I would have asked for a retainer of two thousand dollars and now I'll make it five thousand. Not merely to gouge you, though. Since the police have turned up nothing in seventeen days, it will probably take a lot of Work and money. With a few more facts I'll have enough to start on.'

'I wanted to be honest about it,' Wellman insisted.

Вы читаете Murder by the Book
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