as a kid named Archie, years ago out in Ohio, got a bigger kick climbing to the top of the tree if a girl was there watching. Or fifteen or twenty girls. When I was through and he had asked a few questions, he told the client about the caller we had had earlier in the evening, Ernst Hausman, her godfather?not verbatim, but the gist of it. The end of that was for me too, since the phone call from Sally had come just as Wolfe was conjecturing that Hausman had put the arsenic in the chocolate himself. He had not broken down and confessed. After a few rude remarks he had got up and gone. Wolfe had had no instructions and no comments before going up to bed. The Times had a two-inch paragraph on Page twenty-seven, saying that Archie Godwin had told a Times reporter that Nero Wolfe had been retained in connection with the 75 Jerin murder case, but that Daniel Kalmus Matthew Blount's attorney, had stated that he had not engaged Wolfe's services and he doubted if anyone had. At breakfast Sally and I had decided a) that it was desirable for her mother to know where she was, b) that she would phone to tell her, c) that she would go out and around at will but would be in her room at eleven o'clock, in case Wolfe wanted her when he came down from the plant rooms, d) that she would help herself to any of the books on the shelves in the office except African Genesis, e) that she would not go along when I walked to the bank to deposit the twenty-two grand, and if) that she would join us in the dining room for lunch at 1:15. I was at my desk at eleven o'clock when the sound came of the elevator, which Wolfe always uses and I never do. He entered, with the day's desk orchids as usual, said good morning, went and put the branch of Laelia gouldiana in the vase, sat, glanced through the morning mail, focused on me and demanded, 'Where is she?' I swiveled. 'In her room. Breakfast with me in the kitchen. Good table manners. She phoned her mother to tell her where she is, went to Eighth Avenue to buy facial tissues because she doesn't like the brand we have, returned, and took three books from the shelves with my permission. I have been to the bank.' 76 He left his chair and went across to the shelves for a look. I doubt if he could really tell, from the vacant spaces among the twelve hundred or so books, which ones she had taken, but I wouldn't have bet on it either way. He went back to his desk, sat, narrowed his eyes at me, and spoke. 'Not another coup for you. Not this time.' 'Maybe not,' I conceded. 'But when Mrs Blount said you could keep whatever her daughter had paid you it looked ticklish, so I spilled it. Or do you mean my telling Kalmus?' 'Neither one. I mean your bringing her here. You did it, of course, to press me. Pfui. Knowing I would sooner have a tiger in my house than a woman, you thought I would?' 'No, sir. Not guilty.' I was emphatic. 'I start pressing, or trying to, only when you're soldiering, and you've had this only twentyfour hours. I brought her because if she went to a hotel there was no telling what might happen. She might cave in. She might even lam. I told Mrs Blount you only keep money you earn. It would be embarrassing not to have the client available to return the fee to when you decide you can't earn it, I admit you have stirred up some dust by having me toss it to Lon Cohen, you even got an offer of fifty grand from maybe the murderer, but what next? Hope for a better ?ffer from one of the others?' He made a face. 'I'll speak with Miss Blount ^ter lunch. I must first see them?Mr Yerkes, ? Mr Farrow, Dr Avery, and if possible, Mr Kalmus. It may not be?' 'Avery wasn't a messenger.' 'But he was at the hospital with Jerin until he died. He told Mr Blount that even at the Gambit Club he had considered the possibility of poison and looked around; he had gone down to the kitchen. If there is any hope of getting?' The doorbell rang. I rose and went to the hall for a look through the one-way glass panel in the front door, stepped back into the office, and said, 'More dust. Cramer.' He grunted. 'Why? He has his murderer.' 'Yeah. Maybe for Miss Blount. To take her as an accessory.' 'Pah. Bring him.' Going to the front, I took a couple of seconds to observe him through the one- way glass before opening the door. With Inspector Cramer of Homicide West there are signs I am familiar with?the set of his broad burly shoulders, the redness of his big round face, the angle of his old felt hat. When it's obvious, as it often is, that he intends to dingdong, I open the door a crack and say something with a point to it, such as, 'A man's house is his castle.' But that time he looked fairly human, so I swung the door wide and greeted him without prejudice, and, entering, he let me take his coat and hat, and even made a remark about the weather before proceeding to the office. Yo11 78 might have thought we had signed up for peaceful coexistence. In the office, of course he didn't offer Wolfe a hand, since he knows how he feels about shaking, but, as he lowered his big fanny onto the red leather chair, he said, 'I suppose I should have phoned, but you're always here. I wish to God I could always be somewhere. What I want to ask, the Jerin case. Matthew Blount. According to the papers, you've been hired to work on it. According to Goodwin.' 'Yes,' Wolfe said. 'But according to Blount's attorney you haven't been hired. Who's right?' 'Possibly both of us.' Wolfe turned a palm up. 'Mr Cramer. There are alternatives. Mr Kalmus has hired me but prefers not to avow it, or Mr Blount has hired me independently of his attorney, or someone else had hired me. In any case, I have been hired.' 'By whom?' 'By someone with a legitimate interest.' 'Who?' 'No.' 'You're working on it?' Tes.' Tou refuse to tell me who hired you?' Yes. That has no bearing on your performance of your duty or the demands of Justice.' Cramer got a cigar from a pocket, rolled it between his palms, and stuck it in his mouth. 79 Since he never lights one, the palm-rollirg is irrelevant and immaterial. He looked at me went back to Wolfe, and said, 'I think I know you as well as anybody else, except maybe Goodwin. I don't believe Kalmus would hire you and then say he hadn't. What possible reason could he have to deny it? I don't believe Blount would hire you without his lawyer's approval. What the hell, if it was like that he'd get another lawyer. As for someone else, who? The wife or daughter or nephew wouldn't unless Blount and Kalmus approved, and neither would anyone else. I don't believe it. Nobody has hired you.' A corner of Wolfe's mouth was up. 'Then why bother to pay me a call?' 'Because I know you. Because you may be on to something. You had Goodwin pass that to his friend Lon Cohen, that you had been hired, to start something that would result in your being hired and getting a fee. I don't know what you expected to start, I don't know why you played it like that instead of going to Kalmus with it, whatever you've got, but the point is that you've got something or you wouldn't have played it at all. You've got something that you think will get you a fat fee, and the only way to get a fat fee would be to spring Blount. So what have you got?' Wolfe's brows were up. 'You actually believe that, don't you?' 'You're damn right I do. I think you k i0v 80 something that you think will get Blount out, or at least that there's a good chance. Understand me, I don't object to your copping a fee. But if there's any reason to think Blount didn't murder Paul Jerin I want to know it. We got the evidence that put him in, and if there's anything wrong with it I have a right to know it. Do you have any kind of an idea that I would like to see an innocent man take a murder rap?' That you would like to, no.' 'Well, I wouldn't.' Cramer pointed the cigar at Wolfe and waggled it. 'I'll be frank. Do you know that Blount went down to the kitchen for the chocolate and took it up to Jerin?' 'Yes.' 'Do you know that when Jerin drank most of it and got sick Blount went and got the pot and cup and took them down to the kitchen and rinsed them out, and got fresh chocolate and took it up?' 'Yes.' 'Then is he the biggest goddam fool on earth?' 'I haven't met him. Is he?' 'No. He's a very intelligent man. He's anything but a fool. And he's levelheaded. Some men fixed like him, men of wealth and handing, have the idea that they can do anything they please, and get away with it, 'ecause they're above suspicion, but not him. ^e s not like that, not at all. So I took it E 81 easy?or rather, I didn't. It was hard to bc^ve that such a man had put poison in the chocolate and took it to Jerin and then went and got the cup and pot and rinsed them out. I don't have to spell that out.' 'No.' 'So we covered it good, every angle. We eliminated the possibility that the arsenic had been in something else, not in the chocolate, and I mean eliminated. We established that no one besides Blount and those four men, the messengers, had entered that room, the library, after the chess games started, and the games had been going for about seven minutes when Blount went to see about the chocolate?and I mean established. So that left it absolutely that the arsenic had been put in the chocolate by one of seven men: the four messengers, the cook, the steward, and Blount. Okay. Which one of them, or which ones, had some kind of connection with Jerin? I put eleven of my men on that angle, and the District Attorney put eight from the Homicide Bureau. For that kind of job there are no better men anywhere. You know that.' 'They're competent,' Wolfe conceded. 'They're better than competent. We got Blount's connection right away, from Blount himself. Of course you know about that. The daughter.' 'Yes.' 'But we kept the nineteen men on the oiher 82 six. In four days and nights they didn't get a smell- Even after the District Attorney decided it had to be Blount and charged him, I kept nine of my men on the others. A full week. Okay. You know how it is with negatives, you can't nail it down, but I'll bet a years's pay to one of the flowers in that vase that none of those six men had ever met Paul Jerin or had any connection with him or his.' 'I won't risk the flower,' Wolfe said. 'You won't?' 'No.' 'Then do you think one of them happened to have arsenic with him and put it in the chocolate just because he didn't like the way Jerin played chess?' 'No.' 'Then what kind of game are you playing? What can you possibly have that makes you think you can spring Blount?' 'I haven't said I have anything.' 'Nuts. Damn it, I know you!' Wolfe cleared his throat. 'Mr Cramer. I admit that I know something you don't know about one aspect of this matter. I know who hired me and why. You have concluded that no one had hired me, that, having somehow learned of a circumstance not known to you, I ^ arranging to use it for my private gain. You're wrong; you are incomparably better ^quainted than I am with all the ^rcumstances?all of them?surrounding the 83 death of Paul Jerin. But you don't believe rp' 'I do not.' 'Then there's nothing more to
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