(Saturday, October 13; 9
a.m.)
At nine o'clock the following morning
Vance called at the offices of the American Kennel Club, at 221
Fourth Avenue, and explained to the genial and accommodating
secretary, Mr. Perry B. Rice, the nature of the information he
sought. Mr. Rice was sympathetic and offered to do everything he
could to help with the investigation.
"The officially marked catalogue of
the Englewood show would give you what data you desire," he
said.
He led us down the corridor and into a
large room, and introduced us to Mrs. Del Campo, the head of the
show department. The room was over forty feet long, with windows
across the entire west wall. Great rows of steel filing cabinets
lined the side walls, and near the windows was an enormous bookcase
with glass doors, lined with red morocco-bound catalogues of all
the official shows during nearly half a century. Beside the door
was a large tier of open shelves holding all of the judges' books
and entry blanks.[29]
Near these open shelves was a series of filing cabinets containing
the cards of every registered dog of every breed, showing all the
wins each dog had made. A score of silent and efficient girls were
at work in this room, filing cards, adding to the records, and
checking the innumerable items that arise after every official
show. About the walls were framed pictures of famous dogs of the
various breeds.
Mrs. Del Campo, when Mr. Rice
explained to her what Vance wanted, found the marked Englewood
catalogue on which one of the girls was working. Turning to the
Scottish terrier section, she ran her finger down the list of Puppy
Bitch entries until she came to the winner of the class. The
owner's name was given as Julius Higginbottom, and the name of the
dog itself as Miss MacTavish. Then followed the A.K.C. Stud Book
number and the date of birth—November 20 of the preceding year. The
sire of the bitch was given as Champion Ornsay Autocrat, and the
dam as Laurieston Lovelace. The breeder was Henry D. Bixby.
Vance made a note of these data, and
while he was jotting them down, Mrs. Del Campo said:
"This catalogue hasn't yet been
checked with the judges' book. . . . Just a minute and I'll compare
them."
She procured the Scottish terrier
judges' book from one of the desks and, opening it to the page
headed Puppy Bitches, looked beside the printed numeral 1. There
was a pencilled numeral—258. She compared this with the printed
numeral in the catalogue in front of Miss MacTavish's name; and it
was the same.
"And that's final?" asked Vance.
"No, not final," Mr. Rice told him.
"Those data in the catalogue should be checked with the official
pedigree card." And he made a note of the A.K.C. number which
appeared after Miss MacTavish's name in the catalogue.
He then took us into the room next
door—a room similar to the one we had just left. In this room there
was also a great series of steel filing cases filled with cards
bearing the official pedigrees and all information concerning every
dog registered with the A.K.C, as well as a complete file of nearly
five thousand registered kennel names.
Miss Dora Makin, the head of the
registration department, took the number that Mr. Rice gave her
and, going to a large steel cabinet at the left of the door, pulled
out a drawer containing a double row of small cards. These cards
were arranged in numerical order under each of the separate breeds.
There were white cards for dogs and salmon-colored cards for
bitches.
After a moment's search, Miss Makin
drew forth Miss MacTavish's card. At the top of it appeared the
bitch's name and breed and A.K.C. number. Then came the names of
her sire and dam, the date she was whelped, the name of the
breeder, and the name and address of the owner. All this
information tallied accurately with the data contained in the
official catalogue; but there was one added item, namely, the
address of Julius Higginbottom, which was Mount Vernon, New
York.
"Now, that's final, Mr. Vance," Mr.
Rice said. "You may rest assured that the information is correct.
We go through that process with every entry in every show. Dog
people don't realize the enormous amount of detail work which goes
on at the A.K.C. in order to keep the hundreds of thousands of
records correct and to insure every one in the dog game an almost
absolute protection."
After dropping into an office across
the hall to pay his respects to Mr. Louis de Casanova, the editor
of The American Kennel Gazette, Vance
took his departure, and instructed his chauffeur to drive
immediately to the Criminal Courts Building on the corner of
Franklin and Centre Streets.
On our way downtown Vance expressed
his admiration for the A.K.C. system.
"It's amazin', Van. An entire
institution based on the ideal of accuracy. It has no commodity to
sell: it's purely managerial in essence. It sells only accuracy and
protection to the many thousands of sportsmen and dog lovers
throughout the country. A unique and astonishin'
institution."
When we arrived at the District
Attorney's office on the fourth floor of the Criminal Courts
Building, Markham was in conference with Sergeant Heath. Swacker,
the District Attorney's secretary, ushered us immediately into
Markham's private office.
"Things are moving." Vance sat down
and took out his cigarette case. "I have just come from the
American Kennel Club and have discovered a bit of most interestin'
information. The wounded Scottie, Markham, belongs to none other
than Julius Higginbottom."
"And who might he be, Vance? And why
does the fact interest you?"
Vance lighted his cigarette
leisurely.
"I have met Higginbottom. He's a
member of the Crestview Country Club, and he has a large country
estate at Mount Vernon, where he spends his entire time living what
he imagines to be the life of a country gentleman—"
Heath sat forward in his chair.
"It was the Crestview Country Club at
Mount Vernon," he interjected, "where Miss Lake and Grassi went to
a dance Wednesday night."
"And that's not all, Sergeant." Vance
sprawled luxuriously in his chair and took a deep inhalation on his
Régie. "Higginbottom knew Archer Coe
pretty well. Several years ago Higginbottom inherited, from an
aunt, a very fine collection of early Chinese paintings, many of
which Coe bought from him at a preposterously low price.
Higginbottom is something of a gay bird—the sporting type of
man—and knew nothing of the value of the paintings. After he had
sold them to Coe he learned from a dealer that they were very
valuable, and there was consequent talk, in certain New York art
circles, to the effect that Coe had put over a shrewd and somewhat
unethical deal on Higginbottom. Higginbottom, as I know, took the
matter up with Coe, but without any success, and there has been a
certain amount of bad blood between them ever since. Higginbottom
was a major in the World War and is a hot-headed sort of a
chap."
Markham beat a nervous tattoo on the
desk.
"Well, where does that get us?" he
asked. "Are you implying that Higginbottom came down from Mount
Vernon with his dog and murdered Coe?"
"Good Lord, no!" Vance made a slight
gesture of annoyance. "I'm not implyin' anything. I am merely
reportin' my findings. But I must confess that I find the
relationship between the Scottie and Major Higginbottom and Archer
Coe a bit satisfyin'."
"It appears to me," grumbled Markham,
"that it merely adds a new and more complicated angle to the
situation."
"Don't be discouragin'," sighed Vance.
"At least there's food for thought in the combination."
"My mind is already glutted." Markham
rose irritably and walked to the window overlooking the Tombs.
"What do you propose to do now?"
Vance also rose.
"I'm taking a bit of a jaunt into the
country. I am motoring immediately to Mount Vernon, where I hope to
have polite and serious—and, I trust, illuminatin'—intercourse with
the major concerning Miss MacTavish. . . . Would you care to hear
the result of my social endeavors?"
Markham turned from the window and
sank heavily into his chair.
"I'll be here all afternoon," he
answered glumly.
It was a pleasant drive to Mount
Vernon, in the brisk October air. We had little difficulty in
finding the Higginbottom estate, and we were lucky enough to find
the major sitting on the big colonial front porch.
He was a rotund man of medium height,
with a partly bald head and a florid complexion. There was a look
of dissipation about his small, beady gray eyes, which no amount of
outdoor country living could disguise. But there was a likable
joviality about him.
He welcomed Vance effusively and
invited us to sit down and have a highball.
"To what do I owe the honor of this
call, sir?" He spoke with hospitable good-nature. "I am really
delighted. You should come oftener."
"I'd be charmed." Vance sat down
beside a small glass table. "But today, Major, d' ye see, I hopped
out here on a little matter of business. . . . The truth is, I'm
dashed interested in a Scottie bitch belonging to you—Miss
MacTavish—who was shown at Englewood. . . ."
At the mention of the dog's name
Higginbottom gave a loud cough, pushed his chair back with a
scraping sound, and glanced over his shoulder to the open window
leading into the house. The man seemed deeply perturbed, and his
tone of voice and his manner, when he answered, struck me as most
peculiar.
"Yes, yes; of course," he blustered,
rising and walking toward the front steps. "I rarely go to dog
shows any more. By the way, Mr. Vance, I want to show you my roses.
. . ." And he walked down the stairs toward a small rose garden at
the right.
Vance lifted his eyebrows in mild
astonishment and followed his host. When we were out of hearing of
the house, the major placed his hand on Vance's shoulder and spoke
confidentially:
"By gad, sir! I hope my wife didn't
hear that question of yours. She's generally in the drawing-room
during the mornings, and the windows were open." He appeared
troubled. "Yes, sir, it would be most annoying if she heard it. I
didn't mean to be impolite, sir—no, sir, by gad!—but you startled
me for a moment. . . . A most trying and delicate situation." He
put his head a little closer to Vance. "Where did you hear of that
little bitch of mine?—were you at the Englewood show?—and why
should you be interested?" He glanced again over his shoulder
toward the porch. "George! I hope your question didn't reach my
wife's ears."
Vance looked at the man
quizzically.
"Come, come, Major," he said
pleasantly. "It really can't be so serious. I was not at Englewood,
and I never saw Miss MacTavish till the day before yesterday. The
fact of the matter is, Major, your little bitch is now in my
apartment in New York."
"You don't say!—In your apartment?"
Higginbottom seemed vastly astonished. "How did she get there?—I
don't understand at all. This is most peculiar, Mr. Vance. Pray
enlighten me."
"But she is your dog, is she not, Major?" Vance asked
quietly.
"Well . . . well—the fact is—that is
to say—"
Higginbottom was spluttering with
embarrassment. "Yes—yes, I suppose you would say that I am the
technical owner of her. But I haven't had her at my kennels here
for over six months. . . . You see, Mr. Vance, it's this way—I gave
Miss MacTavish away to a friend of mine—a very dear friend, y'
understand—in New York."
"Ah," breathed Vance, looking up at
the cerulean sky. "And who, Major, might this friend be?"
Higginbottom began to splutter again,
with an added show of indignation.
"By gad, Mr. Vance! I can't
see—really, I can't see—what possible concern that is of any one
but myself—and, of course, the recipient. . . . It was a purely
private transaction—I might say a personal transaction." He cleared
his throat pompously. "Even though you may have the dog in your
possession now, I can hardly see—that is, I fail to
understand—"
"Major," Vance interrupted brusquely,
"I am not prying into your private affairs. But a rather serious
matter has arisen, and it will be much better for you to confide in
me than to have the District Attorney summon you to his
office."
Higginbottom's little eyes opened very
wide and he fumbled with the ashes in his pipe.
"Well, well, of course, if the matter
is as serious as that, I suppose I can trust you. . . . But, for
Heaven's sake, man," he added appealingly, "don't let this go any
further."
Again he glanced around to make sure
that no one was listening.
"The fact is, Mr. Vance, I have a very
dear friend in New York—a young woman—a very charming young woman,
I might say—"
"A blonde?" asked Vance
casually.
"Yes, yes, the young woman is a
blonde. Do you know her by any chance?"
Vance shook his head
regretfully.
"No, I haven't had the pleasure. But
pray continue, Major."
"Well, you see, it's like this, Mr.
Vance. I come to the city quite often—on business, y'
understand—and I enjoy a night-club and the theatre now and then,
and—you know how it is—I don't care to go alone, and Mrs.
Higginbottom has no interest in such frivolous things—"
"Pray don't make apologies, Major,"
Vance put in. "What did you say the young lady's name was?"
"Miss Doris Delafield—and a very fine
young woman she is. Comes of an excellent family—"
"And it was Miss Delafield to whom you
gave the dog six months ago?"
"That's right. But I'm most anxious to
keep the matter a secret. You see, Mr. Vance, I wouldn't care to
have Mrs. Higginbottom know of it, as she might not understand
exactly."
"I'm sure she wouldn't," Vance
murmured. "And I quite sympathize with your predicament. . . . And
where does Miss Delafield live, Major?"
"At the Belle Maison apartments at 90
West 71st Street."
Vance's eyes flickered very slightly
as he took out a cigarette and lighted it slowly.
"That's the small apartment house just
across the vacant lot from Archer Coe's residence, isn't it?"
"That's right." The major nodded
vindictively. "Coe—the old swindler! It served him right, what
happened to him the other night. I'll warrant he was killed by
somebody he bilked. . . . But, after all," he added more
tolerantly, "I couldn't dislike the old chap altogether. And of
course we shouldn't say anything but good about the dead. That's
the sporting attitude, isn't it?"
"So I understand," nodded Vance. . . .
"You've been reading the newspapers, eh, Major?"
"Naturally, sir." Higginbottom seemed
a little surprised at the question. "I was interested. The fact is,
Mr. Vance, I was calling on Miss Delafield the very night he was
murdered."
"Indeed, Major! That's most
interestin'." Vance leaned over and snapped off a dead leaf from
one of the Talisman bushes. "By the by, Major," he went on in an
offhand tone, "little Miss MacTavish was found in the Coe house the
next morning, with a rather vicious wound across her head."
The major's pipe fell from his mouth
to the lawn, and was ignored. He stared at Vance like a man
transfixed, and the blood went from his face.
"I—I—really. . . . Are you—sure?" he
stammered.
"Oh, quite. Quite. As I told you, I
have Miss MacTavish in my apartment now. I found her in the
house—in the lower hall. I took her to Doctor Blamey,—she's coming
round in first-class shape. . . . But how do you account for the
fact, Major,"—Vance looked at the man squarely—"that your dog was
in the murder house at the time the crime was committed?"
"Account for it!" the man blustered
excitedly. "I can't account for it. . . . Good gad! This is
incredible! I'm completely bowled over—"
"But how does it happen, Major," Vance
cut in placidly, "that you haven't heard of the dog's absence from
Miss Delafield's apartment—?"
"Oh, I forgot to tell you," said the
major, and hesitated.
"Ah, what did you forget to tell
me?"
The major shifted his eyes.
"I omitted to mention the fact that
Miss Delafield sailed for Europe on Wednesday night."
"The night Mr. Archer Coe was
murdered," Vance said slowly.
"Just so," the major returned
aggressively. "The reason I happened to be at her apartment that
night was because we were having a farewell dinner, and I was to
see her off on the boat."
"And how does it happen, Major, that
your dog was not returned to your kennels here when Miss Delafield
sailed for Europe?"
"The fact of the matter
is"—Higginbottom became apologetic—"Doris—that is, Miss
Delafield—on my advice, left the dog in the care of her maid, who
was to look after the apartment during her absence."
"On your advice? . . . Why?"
"I thought it best," the major
explained weakly. "You see, sir, if I brought the dog here it might
involve the situation a bit, as I would have to give explanations
to my wife when Doris—Miss Delafield—returned from Europe and
wished to have the dog back. And, of course—"
"Ah, yes. I quite understand," nodded
Vance.
"You see," Higginbottom continued, "I
had expected my wife to go to Europe this fall, but she decided to
remain here, and one or two matters of a—ah—confidential nature
arose, which made it advisable for me to let Miss Delafield sail to
Europe for a short while—until certain little gossip blew over. . .
. I'm sure, Mr. Vance, you can comprehend the situation."
"Oh, quite. And what time did Miss
Delafield sail Wednesday night?"
"On the Olympic—at midnight."
"And you were in the apartment at what
time?"
"I called about six o'clock and we
went out immediately. We had dinner—let me see—at a little
restaurant—I suppose you might call it a speakeasy—and we remained
there until it was time to go to the boat."
"What little restaurant was it?"
Higginbottom knit his brow.
"Really, Mr. Vance, I can't remember."
He hesitated. "You know, I'm not certain that it even had a name.
It was a small place in the West Fifties—or was it the Forties? It
was a place that had been recommended to Miss Delafield by a
friend."
"A bit vague—eh, what?" Vance let his
eyes come to rest mildly on the major. "But thank you just the
same. I think I'll stagger back to New York and have a chat with
Miss Delafield's maid. I'm sure you won't mind. What, by the by, is
her name?"
The major looked a bit startled.
"Annie Cochrane," he said, and then
hurried on: "But I say, Mr. Vance, this thing sounds rather
serious. Would you mind if I accompanied you to the city? I myself
would like to know why Annie didn't report to me the absence of the
dog."
"I'd be delighted," Vance told
him.
We drove back to New York with Major
Higginbottom, stopping at the Riviera for a hurried luncheon, and
went direct to the Belle Maison.
Annie Cochrane was a young dark-haired
woman in her early thirties, obviously of Irish descent, and when,
on opening the door to our ring, she saw Major Higginbottom, she
appeared frightened and flustered.
"Listen here, Annie," the major began
aggressively. "Why didn't you let me know that Miss Delafield's dog
had disappeared?"
Annie explained stumblingly that she
had been afraid to say anything about the dog's disappearance, as
she considered it her fault that the dog was gone, and that she had
hoped from day to day that it would return. The woman was patently
frightened.
"Just when did the dog disappear,
Annie?" asked Vance in a consoling tone.
The woman looked up at him gratefully.
"I missed her, sir," she said, "just after Major Higginbottom and
Miss Doris went out Wednesday night, at about nine o'clock,
sir."
Vance turned to Higginbottom with a
faint smile. "Didn't I understand you to say that you went out at
six o'clock, Major?"
Before Higginbottom could answer, the
maid blurted: "Oh, no; it wasn't six o'clock. It wasn't until nine
o'clock. I got dinner for them here a little after eight."
The major looked down and stroked his
chin cogitatingly.
"Yes, yes." He nodded. "That's right.
I'd thought it was six o'clock, but now I remember. And an
excellent dinner you prepared that night, Annie." He looked up at
Vance with a smile of nonchalant frankness. "Sorry to have
misinformed you, Mr. Vance. The—ah—incident rather slipped my
memory. . . . I had intended to take Miss Delafield out to dinner.
But when I arrived Annie had prepared everything for us, so we
changed our plans."
Vance appeared to accept his
explanation without question.
"And what time did you arrive here
that evening, Major?"
Higginbottom seemed to ponder the
question; but before he could speak Annie supplied the
information.
"You arrived about six o'clock, sir,"
she informed him with a respectful naïveté. "And Miss Doris came in
at half-past seven."
"Ah, yes. Quite right, Annie." The
major pretended to be grateful for having this moot point recalled
to his memory. "Miss Delafield," he explained blandly to Vance,
"said she had been shopping."
"Well, well," murmured Vance. "I
didn't know the shops were open so late. . . . Astonishin'."
The major squinted his small eyes and
glanced quickly in Vance's direction.
"Oh, I'm quite sure," he supplied,
"that a number of the smaller Madison Avenue shops are open
late."
Vance apparently did not hear this
explanation. He had already turned to the maid.
"By the by, Annie," he asked, "was the
dog here during dinner?"
"Oh, yes, sir," the woman assured him.
"She always gets under my feet when I'm serving."
"And how do you account for the fact
that she disappeared immediately after Major Higginbottom and Miss
Delafield had gone?"
"I don't know, sir—honest I don't. I
looked for her everywhere. I looked out in the back yard and in the
court, and I went through every rear hallway in the house. But she
wasn't anywhere."
"Why didn't you look in the street?"
Vance asked.
"Oh, she couldn't have got into the
street," the maid explained. "She was in the kitchen and the
dining-room here, sir; and only the front door of the living-room
leads into the main hall. But that was closed and locked after Miss
Doris and Mr. Higginbottom went out."
"Then, as I understand it, the dog
could only have gone into the rear yard?"
"Yes, sir; that's all. And that's the
strange thing about it, sir; for if she had been in the rear yard,
I would have found her."
"Did you look in the vacant lot next
door, between this house and Mr. Coe's residence?"
"I looked there too, sir, though I
knew it wouldn't do any good. There's no way she could have gotten
through the gate, for it's always kept locked."
"Miss MacTavish was allowed, however,
to run in the rear yard, wasn't she?"
"Oh, yes, sir. Being as we are on the
first floor, it was most convenient, and I always left the kitchen
door open so she could come and go when she wanted to."
Vance did not speak for a moment; then
he asked with unwonted seriousness:
"At just what time, Annie, did you
start your search for the dog? It is quite important that you be
accurate."
"I can tell you almost exactly, sir,"
the woman answered, without hesitation. "It was when I was through
with my dishes and the housework. Miss Doris and Mr. Higginbottom
went out at nine o'clock, and when I had straightened everything
up, it was exactly half-past ten."
Vance nodded. "How do you account for
the dog's disappearance, Annie?"
"I can't account for it, sir. At
first, when I couldn't find her, I thought that maybe some delivery
boy, or one of the expressmen, had stolen her. She's a sly little
devil, she is. And very sweet. And she has a lovable nature. Almost
any one could get her to follow them. But no one had been here
after seven o'clock that evening."
She turned to the major
beseechingly.
"I'm terrible sorry, sir, honest I am.
I loved little Miss MacTavish—"
"That's quite all right, Annie," Vance
said in a kindly tone. "Miss MacTavish is well and happy." He
turned to Higginbottom.
"By the by," he asked, "where did you
get Miss MacTavish, Major?"
"I bought her from Mr. Henry Bixby,
when she was five months old, and I turned her over immediately to
Miss Delafield," the major said regretfully. "Doris became attached
to her and insisted upon showing her. I tried to discourage
her—"
"She was quite worthy of being shown,"
said Vance. . . . "So you drove out to Mr. William Prentice's and
had him trim her for the ring—eh, what? . . . But why did you enter
her under your own name at Englewood?"
"By gad, I don't know." The major
seemed thoroughly disgusted with himself. "One of those foolish
things we all do." He looked appealingly at Vance, who nodded
sympathetically. "Mr. Bixby made out the papers in my name," the
major continued, "and I never took the trouble to have the dog
re-transferred. It never occurred to me that Doris would want to
show her. So I filled out the blank—and there you are. Trouble,
trouble, trouble. . . . Is there anything else, Mr. Vance?"
"No, I think not. . . . Only, I'd like
to ask Annie another question." He turned to the maid. "Annie," he
said, "what kind of lip-stick does Miss Delafield use?"
The maid seemed greatly surprised at
this question and stared at Vance. Then she shot a quick glance at
Higginbottom.
"Well, do you know, or don't you,
Annie?" the major asked her severely.
"Yes, sir, I know. Miss Doris sent me
to Broadway to the drug-store only Wednesday morning to buy her a
lip-stick."
"Well, tell Mr. Vance what kind it
was."
"It was a Duplex Carmine—or something
like that; Miss Doris wrote it out for me," she said.
"Thanks awfully, Annie. That will be
all."
As we emerged into 71st Street, the
major expressed his curiosity in a question: "What about that
lip-stick, sir?"
"Nothing serious—I hope," Vance
returned casually. "I just wanted to clear up a little point. An
empty holder of Duplaix's Carmine lip-stick was found in the
waste-paper basket in Mr. Coe's library Thursday morning."
"By gad! You don't say!" The major,
however, did not seem particularly perturbed. "Doris must have
dropped in on Archer Coe to say good-bye."
"Oh, she knew him, then?"
The major nodded sourly.
"I introduced him to her about a year
ago. She visited him occasionally, I understand—though, I might
add, I didn't encourage these little visits. Fact is, I told her
quite frankly I'd prefer she didn't see him."
"Did Miss Delafield know of the way
Coe had treated you in connection with your Chinese
paintings?"
"Oh, yes." The major was candor
itself. "I told her about it. But she didn't see how that could
make any difference. You know how women are. No sense of business
ethics."
"No doubt—no doubt," Vance returned
vaguely.
Then he held out his hand.
"Well, Major, I want to thank you for
your help. I'll let you know of any developments in connection with
the little Scottie. In the meantime you may rest assured she is
being taken good care of."
"What should I do now?" asked the
major.
"Well," returned Vance cheerfully, "if
I were you, I'd go home and get a good night's rest."
"Not me," declared the major. "I'm
going to the club and dive into my locker—I never needed Scotch as
I do at this minute."
When he had gone, Vance entered his
car, which was waiting outside the Belle Maison, and gave orders to
be driven at once to the Criminal Courts Building. As soon as we
were shown into Markham's office, Vance threw himself into a chair
and, lying back, closed his eyes.
"I have a bit of news, Markham, old
dear," he announced.
"I'm most grateful." Markham reached
into a drawer for a fresh cigar. "What might it be?"
Vance sank even deeper into his
chair.
"I think I know who killed the Coe
brothers."