The Almost Perfect Murder - Hulbert Footner (highly illogical behavior .TXT) 📗
- Author: Hulbert Footner
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Mme. Storey sent for Jarboe, and Mr. Henry was locked in his bedroom.
The windows looked out upon a stone paved well or court about thirty
feet below, and there was no way he could have escaped short of wings.
However, the house was full of the young man’s friends, and my mistress
telephoned to Inspector Rumsey for a guard to be sent. This man,
Manby, was posted in the outer room of the suite. Jarboe was
heartbroken by this turn of affairs. We took nobody else into our
confidence. When Mrs. Varick learned her son was a prisoner we
expected the devil to pay.
Mme. Storey and I slept in the house. Early next morning the body of
Commodore Varick was privately removed to the family vault in Woodlawn
cemetery, there to await further orders from the police. There had
been no official reading of the will, but everybody in the house now
seemed to know what it contained. The Commodore had created a great
trust fund of which his wife was to be sole beneficiary during her
lifetime. Upon her death the fortune was to be divided into three
equal parts, of which one was to go to the New York Hospital, one to
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and one to Yale University. Mr.
Henry’s worst fear was not realized inasmuch as Mr. Theodore Varick’s
name did not appear.
In describing the dramatic scenes that took place inside the house, I
must not omit mention of the efficient, but quite unspectacular spade
work that was going on outside. There was a small army of operatives
engaged on the case. To ensure secrecy, Inspector Rumsey had agreed
that, at any rate for the first twenty-four hours, our men should be
principally used on this work. Every move of Dr. Slingluff’s and Miss
Priestley’s was shadowed. On Miss Gilsey we could get no line because
she lived in the house, and had never left it since the murder. The
valet, Gabbitt, and indeed, all the servants in the house were picked
up whenever they went out. Frequent reports from these operatives
reached Mme. Storey under cover to Mrs. Varick.
In addition to these outside men, our best operative, Crider, was
installed as a footman inside the house. Crider’s work however,
resulted in nothing. He complained that from the very first, every
servant in the house was aware of who he was, and became mum in his
presence. This looked as if Jarboe had played us false, since none but
he knew where Crider had come from. By a clever piece of detective
work the police had established that the first anonymous letter (the
one addressed to Inspector Rumsey) had been mailed in a pillar box on
Lexington Avenue somewhere between 36th and 42nd Streets shortly before
eleven on Tuesday night; whereas the second letter (addressed to Mme.
Storey) had been dropped in a chute at the branch post office in the
Grand Central Station at 3.30 on Wednesday afternoon. The peculiarly
formed characters had aided in the tracing of these letters.
A report had been received from the chemists to whom Commodore Varick’s
medicines had been sent the day before. It was to the effect that they
contained nothing but what was represented on the labels; the first, a
tincture of digitalis of the usual strength; the second, capsules
containing a simple compound of pepsin and bismuth.
Mme. Storey and I established ourselves in Commodore Varick’s office.
My mistress dictated to me some notes she had taken of an examination
of one of the maids while I was busy elsewhere. This maid, Nellie
Hannaford by name, had removed the tea things from the Commodore’s
study. Hannaford said she met nobody in the Commodore’s suite. She
said that Gabbitt had already been sent for to come to his master, but
there were three doors between her and the Commodore’s bedroom, and she
saw nothing, or heard nothing that led her to suppose the master had
been taken sick. In fact, she hadn’t heard anything about his sickness
until after he was dead.
She said she found on the study table two empty cups that had contained
tea, and another cup in the service pantry full of tea that had been
made and not drunk. Four of the tea balls had been used, indicating
that four cups of tea had been made. The cups belonged to a tea
service that was kept in the Commodore’s suite, and it was her duty to
wash them in the pantry, and return them to the shelves. She denied
having found a glass that had contained whisky and soda. (In making
this statement we supposed she was lying.)
“Who could the third cup of tea have been for?” I asked involuntarily.
“Think, Bella,” said my employer with a smile. “Surely it was obvious
when we questioned Henry Varick last night, that he did not go to his
father’s study alone. Mrs. Varick was out of the house, remember.”
The picture of a lovely blue-eyed face rose before my mind’s eye, a
face stony with distress. Estelle Gilsey! I thought in amazement.
Another one! Good Heavens! this young man was entangled amongst women
like a horseman in a thicket! While we were still engaged in routine
work Miss Priestley entered the room. The tall dark girl still had
faintly the look of one suffering from shock. Her curious parrot-like
utterance carried out the idea. What she said seemed to have no
relation to the remote, sombre glance of her dark eyes. It was her
room that we were working in, and Mme. Storey apologised politely.
“Oh,” said Miss Priestley with a gesture, “I scarcely know what right
I have here now that the Commodore is gone. The bottom has fallen
out of everything. It is just a blind instinct that brings me back to
finish his work as far as I can…. I will carry it into the study if
I am in your way.”
“No, indeed!” said Mme. Storey. “If anybody moves, it shan’t be you.
At present we are only engaged in routine work.”
Lighting a cigarette, my employer leaned back in her chair, and started
chatting with the girl in offhand, friendly fashion. She told Miss
Priestley many of the details of the case that had come to light
overnight, but not the more important developments. And then,
characteristically, she graduated by insensible degrees from the act of
giving information into that of seeking it.
“I expect that will be a very interesting book,” she remarked, with a
nod towards the pile of typescript that the secretary had taken from a
drawer.
“Oh, yes!” said Miss Priestley; “the Commodore was acquainted with all
of the most eminent persons of his time.”
“And, of course, his end will give the book a tragic interest now.”
“Oh, don’t!” said the girl with one of her curious wooden gestures.
“It is too dreadful to reflect that what you say is true!”
“Is it nearly finished?” asked Mme. Storey.
“Yes. I shall be able to bring it up to the end of 1918. That will
include all the most interesting parts of the Commodore’s life.”
“How long had he been working on it?”
“Since last May. It is just a year since he engaged me to help him
with it.”
“A year!” said Mme. Storey. “Bless me! Isn’t that a long time to take
in writing a book? I understood that books were written overnight
nowadays.”
“Not this one,” said the girl patting the sheets. “The Commodore took
the greatest pains in polishing his style…. Besides, you must
remember that he was a man of many engagements. He could not spare
very much time to it.”
“Did he work on it when he was in Europe last winter?”
“No. He had no intention of doing so. The script was left at home.”
“What did you do during that time?”
“I stayed at home. The Commodore was good enough to pay me my salary
while he was away. I was so familiar with the work that he wished to
be sure of getting me to go on with it when he returned.”
“Was Mr. Henry interested in this work of his father’s?”
“I can hardly say that he was interested in it. Mr. Henry is not very
literary.”
“But he knew that it existed?”
“Oh, yes. He was in and out of the house all last summer at
Easthampton while we were working on it. A reconciliation took place
between Mr. Henry and his father in June, and he stayed a month with
us.”
The conversation was rudely broken off at this point. If my
description of the plan of the house was clear, it will be remembered
that the room beyond the Commodore’s office was Mr. Henry’s study.
There was a door between, but it was not used. I suppose it had been
locked when the rooms were first divided into suites. From the next
room we heard a suppressed shriek. Mme. Storey and I both jumped to
our feet, but Miss Priestley was before us. That strange girl, as if
electrified by the sound, was out of the door like a flash and in
through the next door, Mme. Storey and I making a bad second and third.
In Mr. Henry’s study the situation could be read at a glance. The
detective stood barring the way to the bedroom door. Facing him stood
Estelle Gilsey frozen with horror, one hand clapped over her mouth as
if to still an incontrollable need to shriek. A black dress emphasized
the fragility of her fair beauty. She turned to my mistress.
“He won’t let me in!” she gasped. “… He is a policeman! … Henry is
arrested…!”
Before my mistress could answer her Miss Priestley spoke. The dark
girl held herself like a very Juno then, her handsome face icy with
scorn. Her self-control was in very odd contrast to her mad dash out
of the room just now. Verily, as I knew to my cost, a woman’s
infatuation leads her to cut strange capers! I perceived in Julia
Priestley still another victim. She said with a superb air of scorn:
“What are you doing here?”
The blonde girl beyond half a glance paid no attention to her. She
repeated her agonised question of my mistress: “Is he arrested?”
“What are you doing in his room?” reiterated Miss Priestley. “In his
bedroom? Have you no shame?”
Miss Gilsey turned on her then. It appeared that the blue eyes could
flash sparks, too. “What business is it of yours?” she demanded.
“You would not have dared while the Commodore was alive!” cried the
other girl. “His body has scarcely been carried out of the house. You
are shameless!”
“Be quiet!” cried the blonde girl, stamping her foot. “Everybody knows
what’s the matter with you!”
What a scene! It appeared that the delicate little thing could show
her claws, too. We are indeed all alike under our skins. My mistress
was taking it all in with a sphinx-like regard. To add to the
confusion Mr. Henry began to pound on the other side of the bedroom
door. “Let me out! Let me out!”
Mme. Storey nodded to the detective, who thereupon opened the door.
Henry Varick seemed to catapult out of the inner room. He had eyes for
none of us except Miss Gilsey. He seized her in his arms. “Oh, my
darling!” he murmured.
She, too, forgot the world. Her arms wreathed themselves around his
neck. “Henry! … Henry…!” she murmured. I thought she was about
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