“Not by him or me. If I should ask for information on Birch, it will be because you dragged him in yourself.”
“Okay, hold everything. I want to catch the early.”
He left the room. I sat and tried to argue Wolfe into letting Lon have the juicy item about the flap from Matthew Birch’s pocket being found on the car that had killed Pete, but since Wolfe wasn’t there I made no progress. Before long Lon came back, and after he had crossed to his desk and got his big feet under it I told him, “I still need an hour.”
“We’ll see. There’s not much nourishment in that crumb.”
It didn’t take a full hour, but a big hunk of one. He gave me nearly everything I wanted without consulting any documents and with only two phone calls to shopmates.
Mrs. Fromm had had lunch Friday at the Churchill with Miss Angela Wright, Executive Secretary of Assadip-the Association for the Aid of Displaced Persons. Presumably she had gone to the Churchill upon leaving Wolfe’s office, but I didn’t go into that with Lon. After lunch, around two-thirty, the two women had gone together to the office of Assadip, where Mrs. Fromm signed some papers and made some phone calls. The
A little before seven o’clock Mrs. Fromm had left home, alone, to go out to dinner, driving one of her cars, a Cadillac convertible. The dinner was at the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Horan on Gramercy Park. It wasn’t known where she had parked the car, but in that neighborhood in the evening there are always spaces. There had been six people at the dinner:
Dennis Horan, the host
Claire Horan, his wife
Laura Fromm
Angela Wright
Paul Kuffner, public-relations expert
Vincent Lipscomb, magazine publisher
The party had broken up a little after eleven, and the guests had gone their ways separately. Mrs. Fromm had been the last to leave. The
Just a few minutes before I reached the
As far as the
I made an objection. “But if you want to fit in Pete Drossos and Matthew Birch, that’s no good. Unless you can make it good. Who was Matthew Birch?”
Lon snorted. “On your way out buy a Wednesday
“I’ve got one at home and I’ve read it. But that was three days ago.”
“He hasn’t changed any. He was a special agent of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, had been for twenty years, with a wife and three children. He had only twenty-one teeth, looked like a careworn statesman, dressed beyond his station, wasn’t any too popular in his circle, and bet on the races through Danny Pincus.”
“You said you counted Birch in because of the pattern. Was there any other reason?”
“No.”
“Just to your old and trusted friend Goodwin. Any at all?”
“No.”
“Then I’ll do you a favor, expecting it back with interest at your earliest convenience. It’s triple classified. The cops have it sewed up that the car that killed Pete Drossos was the one that killed Birch.”
His eyes widened. “No!”
“Yes.”
“Sewed up how?”
“Sorry, I’ve forgotten. But it’s absolutely tight.”
“I’ll be damned.” Lon rubbed his palms together. “This is sweet, Archie. This is very sweet. Pete and