'We are. I'll get either the murderer or the damages. Do you want to harp on that?'
'No.'
'You've cooled off, and no wonder, in this hurricane. My hair will go next. I'm going in. If you come along it must be under the condition as stated. Are you coming?'
'Yes.'
'You accept the condition?'
'Yes.'
Wolfe headed for the steps. I passed him to go ahead and unlock the door. When they were inside I closed it and put the bolt back on. They hung up their coats, and Wolfe took Cramer down the hall and around the corner to the nook. I brought a stool from the kitchen, but Cramer shook his head. Wolfe slid the panel aside, making no sound, looked through, and nodded to Cramer. Cramer took a look and nodded back, and we left him. At the door to the office Wolfe muttered about his hair, and I let him use my pocket comb.
From the way they looked at us as we entered you might have thought they suspected we had been in the cellar fusing a bomb, but one more suspicion wouldn't make it any harder. I circled to my desk and sat. Wolfe got himself back in place, took a deep breath, and passed his eyes over them.
'I'm sorry,' he said politely, 'but that was unavoidable. Suppose we start over'?he looked at Koven?'say with your surmise to the police that Getz was shot by Mr. Goodwin accidentally in a scuffle. That's absurd. Getz was shot with a cartridge that had been taken from your gun and put into Goodwin's gun. Manifestly Goodwin couldn't have done that, since when he first saw your gun Getz was already dead. Therefore?'
'That's not true!' Koven cut in. 'He had seen it before, when he came to my office. He could have gone back later and got the cartridges.'
Wolfe glared at him in astonishment. 'Do you really dare, sir, in front of me, to my face, to cling to that fantastic tale you told the police? That rigmarole?' 176
'You're damn right I do!'
'Pfui.' Wolfe was disgusted. 'I had hoped, here together, we were prepared to get down to reality. It would have been better to adopt your suggestion to take my information to the police. Perhaps--'
'I made no such suggestion!'
'In this room, Mr. Koven, some fifteen minutes ago?'
'No!'
Wolfe made a face. 'I see,' he said quietly. 'It's impossible to get on solid ground with a man like you, but I still have to try. Archie, bring the tape from the kitchen, please?'
I went. I didn't like it. I thought he was rushing it. Granting that he had been jostled off his stride by Cramer's arrival, I felt that it was far from one of his best performances, and this looked like a situation where nothing less than his best would do. So I went to the kitchen, passing Cramer in his nook without a glance, told Fritz to stop the machine and wind, and stood and scowled at it turning. When it stopped I removed the wheel and slipped it into a carton and, carton in hand, returned to the office.
'We're waiting,' Wolfe said curtly.
That hurried me. There was a stack of similar cartons on my desk, and in my haste I knocked them over as I was putting down the one I had brought. It was embarrassing with all eyes on me, and I gave them a cold look as I crossed to the cabinet to get the player. It needed a whole corner of my desk, and I had to shove the tumbled cartons aside to make room. Finally I had the player in position and connected, and the wheel of tape, taken from the carton, in place.
'All right?' I asked Wolfe.
'Go ahead.'
I flipped the switch. There was a crackle and a little spitting, and then Wolfe's voice came:
'It's not that, Mr. Koven, not at all. I only doubt if it's worth it to you, considering the size of my minimum fee, to hire me for anything so trivial as finding a stolen gun, or even discovering the thief. 1 should think--'
177
'No!' Wolfe bellowed.
I switched it off. I was flustered. 'Excuse it,' I said. 'The wrong one.'
'Must I do it myself?' Wolfe asked sarcastically.
I muttered something, turning the wheel to rewind. I removed it, pawed among the cartons, picked one, took out the wheel, put it on, and turned the switch. This time the voice that came on was not Wolfe's but Koven's--loud and clear.
'This time you can't cook up a fancy lie with Goodwin. There are witnesses.'
Then Wolfe's: 'We won't get anywhere that way, Mr. Koven. We're all tangled up, and it will take more than blather to get us loose. You don't want to pay me a million dollars. 1 don't want to lose my license. The police don't want to add another unsolved murder to the long list. The central and dominant factor is the violent death of Mr. Getz, and 1 propose to deal with that at length. If we can get that settled'
Koven's: 'You told Miss Lowell you know who killed him. If so, why don't you tell the police? That ought to settle it.'
Wolfe: 'You don't mean that, Mr. Koven--'
Koven: 'You're damn right I mean it!'
Wolfe: 'Then there's a misunderstanding. I heard Miss Lowell's talk with you on the phone, both ends of it. 1 got the impression that my threat to inform the police--'