was the least moved.
One by one they were escorted from the room for a private talk and brought back again. It was when my turn came, not long after I had arrived, that I found
Lieutenant Noonan was around. He was in a smaller room down the hall, seated at a table, looking harassed. No doubt life was hard for him-born with the instincts of a Hitler or Stalin in a country where people are determined to do their own voting. The dick who took me in motioned me to a chair across the table.
“You again, Noonan said.
I nodded. “That's exactly what I was thinking. I haven't seen you since the time
I didn't run my car over Louis Rony.
I didn't expect him to wince, and he didn't. “You're here investigating that dog poisoning at Hillside Kennels.
I had no comment.
“Weren't you? he snapped. “If you're answering questions.
“Oh, I beg your pardon. I didn't know it was a question. It sounded more like a statement.
“You are investigating the dog poisoning?
“I started to. I spent an hour at it there with Leeds, before we came here to dinner.
“So he said. Make any progress?
“Nothing remarkable. For one thing, I had onlookers, which is no help. Mrs Frey and Mr Hammond.
“Did you all come over here together?
“No. Leeds and I came about an hour after Mrs Frey and Mr Hammond left.
“Did you drive?
“Walked. He walked and I ran.
“You ran? Why?
“To keep up with him.
Noonan smiled. He has the meanest smile I know of except maybe Boris Karloff.
“You get your comedy from the comics, don't you, Goodwin?
“Yes, sir.
“Tell me about the dinner here and afterwards. Make it as funny as you can.
I took ten minutes for it, as much as I had had for Wolfe, but getting interrupted with questions. I stuck to facts and gave them to him straight. When we came to the end he went back and concentrated on whether all of them had heard Mrs Rackham say she was going for a walk with the dog, as of course they had since she had issued a blanket invitation for company. Then I was sent back to the living-room, and it was Lina Darrow's turn in the preliminaries. I wondered if she would play dumb with him as she had with me.
It was as empty a stretch of hours as I have ever spent. I might as well have been a housebroken dog; no one seemed to think I mattered, and I was not in a position to tell them how wrong they were. At one point I made a serious effort to get into a conversation, making the rounds and offering remarks, but got nowhere. Dana Hammond merely gave me a look, without opening his trap. Oliver
Pierce didn't even look at me. Lina Darrow mumbled something and turned away.
Calvin Leeds asked me what they had done with Nobby's remains, nodded and frowned at my answer, and went to put another log on the fire. Annabel Frey asked me if I wanted more coffee, and when I said yes apparently didn't hear me.
Barry Rackham, whom I tackled at the far end of the room, was the most talkative. He wanted to know whether anyone had come from the District
Attorney's office. I said I didn't know. He wanted to know the name of the cop in the other room who was asking questions, and I told him Lieutenant Con
Noonan. That was my longest conversation, two whole questions and answers.
I did get in one piece of detection, somewhat later, when finally District
Attorney Cleveland Archer made an appearance. As he came into the room and made himself known and everybody moved to approach him, I took a look at his shoes and saw that he had undoubtedly been in the woods to inspect the spot where Mrs
Rackham's body was found. Likewise Ben Dykes, the dean of the Westchester County dicks, who was with him. That made me feel slightly better. It would have been a shame to stick there the whole night without detecting a single damn' thing.
After a few preliminary words to individuals Archer spoke to them collectively.
“This is a terrible thing, an awful thing. It is established that Mrs Rackham was stabbed to death out there in the woods-and the dog that was with her. We have the knife that was used, as you know-it has been shown to you-one of the steak knives that are kept in a drawer here in the dining-room-they were used by you at dinner last evening. We have statements from all of you, but of course
I'll have to talk further with you. I won't try to do that now. It's after three o'clock, and I'll come back