(Tuesday, September 11;
afternoon)
On our way downtown that morning we
were delayed for a considerable time in the traffic congestion just
north of Madison Square, and Markham anxiously looked at his
watch.
"It's past noon," he said. "I think
I'll stop at the club and have a bite of lunch. . . . I presume
that eating at this early hour would be too plebeian for so
exquisite a hothouse flower as you."
Vance considered the invitation.
"Since you deprived me of my
breakfast," he decided, "I'll permit you to buy me some eggs
Bénédictine."
A few minutes later we entered the
almost empty grill of the Stuyvesant Club and took a table near one
of the windows looking southward over the treetops of Madison
Square.
Shortly after we had given our order a
uniformed attendant entered and, bowing deferentially at the
district attorney's elbow, held out an unaddressed communication
sealed in one of the club's envelopes. Markham read it with an
expression of growing curiosity, and as he studied the signature a
look of mild surprise came into his eyes. At length he looked up
and nodded to the waiting attendant. Then, excusing himself, he
left us abruptly. It was fully twenty minutes before he
returned.
"Funny thing," he said. "That note was
from the man who took the Odell woman to dinner and the theater
last night. . . . A small world," he mused. "He's staying here at
the club—he's a nonresident member and makes it his headquarters
when he's in town."
"You know him?" Vance put the question
disinterestedly.
"I've met him several times—chap named
Spotswoode." Markham seemed perplexed. "He's a man of family, lives
in a country house on Long Island, and is regarded generally as a
highly respectable member of society—one of the last persons I'd
suspect of being mixed up with the Odell girl. But, according to
his own confession, he played around a good deal with her during
his visits to New York—'sowing a few belated wild oats,' as he
expressed it—and last night took her to Francelle's for dinner and
to the Winter Garden afterwards."
"Not my idea of an intellectual, or
even edifyin', evening," commented Vance. "And he selected a deuced
unlucky day for it I say, imagine opening the morning paper and
learning that your petite dame of the
preceding evening had been strangled! Disconcertin', what?"
"He's certainly disconcerted," said
Markham. "The early afternoon papers were out about an hour ago,
and he'd been phoning my office every ten minutes, when I suddenly
walked in here. He's afraid his connection with the girl will leak
out and disgrace him."
"And won't it?"
"I hardly see the necessity. No one
knows who her escort was last evening; and since he obviously had
nothing to do with the crime, what's to be gained by dragging him
into it? He told me the whole story, and offered to stay in the
city as long as I wanted him to."
"I infer, from the cloud of
disappointment that enveloped you when you returned just now, that
his story held nothing hopeful for you in the way of clues."
"No," Markham admitted. "The girl
apparently never spoke to him of her intimate affairs; and he
couldn't give me a single helpful suggestion. His account of what
happened last night agreed perfectly with Jessup's. He called for
the girl at seven, brought her home at about eleven, stayed with
her half an hour or so, and then left her. When he heard her call
for help, he was frightened, but on being assured by her there was
nothing wrong, he concluded she had dozed off into a nightmare, and
thought no more of it. He drove direct to the club here, arriving
about ten minutes to twelve. Judge Redfern, who saw him descend
from the taxi, insisted on his coming upstairs and playing poker
with some men who were waiting in the judge's rooms for him. They
played until three o'clock this morning."
"Your Long Island Don Juan has
certainly not supplied you with any footprints in the snow."
"Anyway, his coming forward at this
time closes one line of inquiry over which we might have wasted
considerable time."
"If many more lines of inquiry are
closed," remarked Vance dryly, "you'll be in a distressin' dilemma,
don't y' know."
"There are enough still open to keep
me busy," said Markham, pushing back his plate and calling for the
check. He rose; then pausing, regarded Vance meditatingly. "Are you
sufficiently interested to want to come along?"
"Eh, what? My word! . . . Charmed, I'm
sure. But, I say, sit down just a moment—there's a good
fellow!—till I finish my coffee."
I was considerably astonished at
Vance's ready acceptance, careless and bantering though it was, for
there was an exhibition of old Chinese prints at the Montross
Galleries that afternoon, which he had planned to attend. A Riokai
and a Moyeki, said to be very fine examples of Sung painting, were
to be shown; and Vance was particularly eager to acquire them for
his collection.
We rode with Markham to the Criminal
Courts building and, entering by the Franklin Street door, took the
private elevator to the district attorney's spacious but dingy
private office, which overlooked the gray-stone ramparts of the
Tombs. Vance seated himself in one of the heavy leather-upholstered
chairs near the carved oak table on the right of the desk and
lighted a cigarette with an air of cynical amusement.
"I await with anticipat'ry delight the
grinding of the wheels of justice," he confided, leaning back
lazily.
"You are doomed not to hear the first
turn of those wheels," retorted Markham. "The initial revolution
will take place outside of this office." And he disappeared through
a swinging door which led to the judge's chambers.
Five minutes later he returned and sat
down in the high-backed swivel chair at his desk, with his back to
the four tall narrow windows in the south wall of the office.
"I just saw Judge Redfern," he
explained—"it happened to be the midday recess—and he verified
Spotswoode's statement in regard to the poker game. The judge met
him outside of the club at ten minutes before midnight, and was
with him until three in the morning. He noted the time because he
had promised his guests to be back at half past eleven and was
twenty minutes late."
"Why all this substantiation of an
obviously unimportant fact?" asked Vance.
"A matter of routine," Markham told
him, slightly impatient. "In a case of this kind every factor,
however seemingly remote to the main issue, must be checked."
"Really, y' know, Markham"—Vance laid
his head back on the chair and gazed dreamily at the ceiling—"one
would think that this eternal routine, which you lawyer chaps
worship so devoutly, actually got one somewhere occasionally;
whereas it never gets one anywhere. Remember the Red Queen in
'Through the Looking-Glass—'"
"I'm too busy at present to debate the
question of routine versus
inspiration," Markham answered brusquely, pressing a button beneath
the edge of his desk.
Swacker, his youthful and energetic
secretary, appeared at the door which communicated with a narrow
inner chamber between the district attorney's office and the main
waiting room.
"Yes, Chief?" The secretary's eyes
gleamed expectantly behind his enormous horn-rimmed glasses.
"Tell Ben to send me in a man at
once."[11]
Swacker went out through the corridor
door, and a minute or two later a suave, rotund man, dressed
immaculately and wearing a pince-nez, entered, and stood before
Markham with an ingratiating smile.
"Morning, Tracy." Markham's tone was
pleasant but curt. "Here's a list of four witnesses in connection
with the Odell case that I want brought down here at once—the two
phone operators, the maid, and the janitor. You'll find them at 184
West 71st Street. Sergeant Heath is holding them there."
"Right, sir." Tracy took the
memorandum, and with a priggish, but by no means inelegant, bow
went out.
During the next hour Markham plunged
into the general work that had accumulated during the forenoon, and
I was amazed at the man's tremendous vitality and efficiency. He
disposed of as many important matters as would have occupied the
ordinary businessman for an entire day. Swacker bobbed in and out
with electric energy, and various clerks appeared at the touch of a
buzzer, took their orders, and were gone with breathless rapidity.
Vance, who had sought diversion in a tome of famous arson trials,
looked up admiringly from time to time and shook his head in mild
reproach at such spirited activity.
It was just half past two when Swacker
announced the return of Tracy with the four witnesses; and for two
hours Markham questioned and cross-questioned them with a
thoroughness and an insight that even I, as a lawyer, had rarely
seen equaled. His interrogation of the two phone operators was
quite different from his casual questioning of them earlier in the
day; and if there had been a single relevant omission in their
former testimony, it would certainly have been caught now by
Markham's grueling catechism. But when, at last, they were told
they could go, no new information had been brought to light. Their
stories now stood firmly grounded: no one—with the exception of the
girl herself and her escort, and the disappointed visitor at half
past nine—had entered the front door and passed down the hall to
the Odell apartment from seven o'clock on; and no one had passed
out that way. The janitor reiterated stubbornly that he had bolted
the side door a little after six, and no amount of wheedling or
aggression could shake his dogged certainty on that point. Amy
Gibson, the maid, could add nothing to her former testimony.
Markham's intensive examination of her produced only repetitions of
what she had already told him.
Not one new possibility—not one new
suggestion—was brought out. In fact, the two hours' interlocutory
proceedings resulted only in closing up every loophole in a
seemingly incredible situation. When, at half past four, Markham
sat back in his chair with a weary sigh, the chance of unearthing a
promising means of approach to the astonishing problem seemed more
remote than ever.
Vance closed his treatise on arson and
threw away his cigarette.
"I tell you, Markham old chap"—he
grinned—"this case requires umbilicular contemplation, not routine.
Why not call in an Egyptian seeress with a flair for crystal-gazing?"
"If this sort of thing goes on much
longer," returned Markham dispiritedly, "I'll be tempted to take
your advice."
Just then Swacker looked in through
the door to say that Inspector Brenner was on the wire. Markham
picked up the telephone receiver, and as he listened he jotted down
some notes on a pad. When the call had ended, he turned to
Vance.
"You seemed disturbed over the
condition of the steel jewel case we found in the bedroom. Well,
the expert on burglar tools just called up; and he verifies his
opinion of this morning. The case was pried open with a
specially-made cold chisel such as only a professional burglar
would carry or would know how to use. It had an
inch-and-three-eighths beveled bit and a one-inch flat handle. It
was an old instrument—there was a peculiar nick in the blade—and is
the same one that was used in a successful housebreak on upper Park
Avenue early last summer. . . . Does that highly exciting
information ameliorate your anxiety?"
"Can't say that it does." Vance had
again become serious and perplexed. "In fact, it makes the
situation still more fantastic. . . . I could see a glimmer of
light—eerie and unearthly, perhaps, but still a perceptible
illumination—in all this murkiness if it wasn't for that jewel case
and the steel chisel."
Markham was about to answer when
Swacker again looked in and informed him that Sergeant Heath had
arrived and wanted to see him.
Heath's manner was far less depressed
than when we had taken leave of him that morning. He accepted the
cigar Markham offered him, and seating himself at the conference
table in front of the district attorney's desk, drew out a battered
notebook.
"We've had a little good luck," he
began. "Burke and Emery—two of the men I put on the case—got a line
on Odell at the first place they made inquiries. From what they
learned, she didn't run around with many men—limited herself to a
few live wires, and played the game with what you'd call
finesse. . . . The principal one—the
man who's been seen most with her—is Charles Cleaver."
Markham sat up. "I know Cleaver—if
it's the same one."
"It's him, all right," declared Heath.
"Former Brooklyn Tax Commissioner; been interested in a poolroom
for pony-betting over in Jersey City ever since. Hangs out at the
Stuyvesant Club, where he can hobnob with his old Tammany Hall
cronies."
"That's the one," nodded Markham.
"He's a kind of professional gay dog—known as Pop, I
believe."
Vance gazed into space.
"Well, well," he murmured. "So old Pop
Cleaver was also entangled with our subtle and sanguine Dolores.
She certainly couldn't have loved him for his beaux yeux."
"I thought, sir," went on Heath,
"that, seeing as how Cleaver is always in and out of the Stuyvesant
Club, you might ask him some questions about Odell. He ought to
know something."
"Glad to, Sergeant." Markham made a
note on his pad. "I'll try to get in touch with him tonight. . . .
Anyone else on your list?"
"There's a fellow named Mannix—Louis
Mannix—who met Odell when she was in the 'Follies'; but she chucked
him over a year ago, and they haven't been seen together since.
He's got another girl now. He's the head of the firm of Mannix and
Levine, fur importers, and is one of your nightclub rounders—a
heavy spender. But I don't see much use of barking up that tree—his
affair with Odell went cold too long ago."
"Yes," agreed Markham; "I think we can
eliminate him."
"I say, if you keep up this
elimination much longer," observed Vance, "you won't have anything
left but the lady's corpse."
"And then, there's the man who took
her out last night," pursued Heath. "Nobody seems to know his
name—he must've been one of those discreet, careful old boys. I
thought at first he might have been Cleaver, but the descriptions
don't tally. . . . And by the way, sir, here's a funny thing: when
he left Odell last night he took the taxi down to the Stuyvesant
Club and got out there."
Markham nodded. "I know all about
that, Sergeant. And I know who the man was; and it wasn't
Cleaver."
Vance was chuckling. "The Stuyvesant
Club seems to be well in the forefront of this case," he said. "I
do hope it doesn't suffer the sad fate of the Knickerbocker
Athletic."[12]
Heath was intent on the main
issue.
"Who was the man, Mr. Markham?"
Markham hesitated, as if pondering the
advisability of taking the other into his confidence. Then he said:
"I'll tell you his name, but in strict confidence. The man was
Kenneth Spotswoode."
He then recounted the story of his
being called away from lunch, and of his failure to elicit any
helpful suggestions from Spotswoode. He also informed Heath of his
verification of the man's statements regarding his movements after
meeting Judge Redfern at the club.
"And," added Markham, "since he
obviously left the girl before she was murdered, there's no
necessity to bother him. In fact, I gave him my word I'd keep him
out of it for his family's sake."
"If you're satisfied, sir, I am."
Heath closed his notebook and put it away. "There's just one other
little thing. Odell used to live on 110th Street, and Emery dug up
her former landlady and learned that this fancy guy the maid told
us about used to call on her regularly."
"That reminds me, Sergeant." Markham
picked up the memorandum he had made during Inspector Brenner's
phone call. "Here's some data the Professor gave me about the
forcing of the jewel case."
Heath studied the paper with
considerable eagerness. "Just as I thought!" He nodded his head
with satisfaction. "Clear-cut professional job, by somebody who's
been in the line of work before."
Vance roused himself. "Still, if such
is the case," he said, "why did this experienced burglar first use
the insufficient poker? And why did he overlook the living room
clothes press?"
"I'll find all that out, Mr. Vance,
when I get my hands on him," asserted Heath, with a hard look in
his eyes. "And the guy I want to have a nice quiet little chat with
is the one with the pleated silk shirt and the chamois
gloves."
"Chacun à son goût," sighed Vance.
"For myself, I have no yearning whatever to hold converse with him.
Somehow, I can't just picture a professional looter trying to rend
a steel box with a cast iron poker."
"Forget the poker," Heath advised
gruffly. "He jimmied the box with a steel chisel; and that same
chisel was used last summer in another burglary on Park Avenue.
What about that?"
"Ah! That's what torments me,
Sergeant. If it wasn't for that disturbin' fact, d' ye see, I'd be
lightsome and sans souci this
afternoon, inviting my soul over a dish of tea at Claremont."
Detective Bellamy was announced, and
Heath sprang to his feet. "That'll mean news about those
fingerprints," he prophesied hopefully.
Bellamy entered unemotionally and
walked up to the district attorney's desk.
"Cap'n Dubois sent me over," he said.
"He thought you'd want the report on those Odell prints." He
reached into his pocket and drew out a small flat folder which, at
a sign from Markham, he handed to Heath. "We identified 'em. Both
made by the same hand, like Cap'n Dubois said: and that hand
belonged to Tony Skeel."
"'Dude' Skeel, eh?" The sergeant's
tone was vibrant with suppressed excitement. "Say, Mr. Markham,
that gets us somewhere. Skeel's an ex-convict and an artist in his
line."
He opened the folder and took out an
oblong card and a sheet of blue paper containing eight or ten lines
of typewriting. He studied the card, gave a satisfied grunt, and
handed it to Markham. Vance and I stepped up and looked at it. At
the top was the familiar rogues' gallery photograph showing the
full face and profile of a regular-featured youth with thick hair
and a square chin. His eyes were wide-set and pale, and he wore a
small, evenly trimmed moustache with waxed, needlepoint ends. Below
the double photograph was a brief tabulated description of its
sitter, giving his name, aliases, residence, and Bertillon
measurements, and designating the character of his illegal
profession. Underneath were ten little squares arranged in two
rows, each containing a fingerprint impress made in black ink—the
upper row being the impressions of the right hand, the lower row
those of the left.
"So that's the arbiter elegantiarum who introduced the silk shirt
for full-dress wear! My word!" Vance regarded the identification
card satirically. "I wish he'd start a craze for gaiters with
dinner jackets—these New York theaters are frightfully drafty in
winter."
Heath put the card back in the folder
and glanced over the typewritten paper that had accompanied
it.
"He's our man, and no mistake, Mr.
Markham. Listen to this: 'Tony (Dude) Skeel. Two years Elmira
Reformatory, 1902 to 1904. One year in the Baltimore County jail
for petit larceny, 1906. Three years in San Quentin for assault and
robbery, 1908 to 1911. Arrested Chicago for housebreaking, 1912;
case dismissed. Arrested and tried for burglary in Albany, 1913; no
conviction. Served two years and eight months in Sing-Sing for
housebreaking and burglary, 1914 to 1916.'" He folded the paper and
put it, with the card, into his breast pocket. "Sweet little
record."
"That dope what you wanted?" asked the
imperturbable Bellamy.
"I'll say!" Heath was almost
jovial.
Bellamy lingered expectantly with one
eye on the district attorney; and Markham, as if suddenly
remembering something, took out a box of cigars and held it
out.
"Much obliged, sir," said Bellamy,
helping himself to two Mi Favoritas; and putting them into his
waistcoat pocket with great care, he went out.
"I'll use your phone now, if you don't
mind, Mr. Markham," said Heath.
He called the Homicide Bureau.
"Look up Tony Skeel—Dude Skeel—pronto,
and bring him in as soon as you find him," were his orders to
Snitkin. "Get his address from the files and take Burke and Emery
with you. If he's hopped it, send out a general alarm and have him
picked up—some of the boys'll have a line on him. Lock him up
without booking him, see? . . . And, listen. Search his room for
burglar tools: he probably won't have any laying around, but I
specially want a one-and-three-eighths-inch chisel with a nick in
the blade. . . . I'll be at headquarters in half an hour."
He hung up the receiver and rubbed his
hands together.
"Now we're sailing," he
rejoiced.
Vance had gone to the window and stood
staring down on the "Bridge of Sighs," his hands thrust deep into
his pockets. Slowly he turned, and fixed Heath with a contemplative
eye.
"It simply won't do, don't y' know,"
he asserted. "Your friend, the Dude may have ripped open that bally
box, but his head isn't the right shape for the rest of last
evening's performance."
Heath was contemptuous. "Not being a
phrenologist, I'm going by the shape of his fingerprints."
"A woeful error in the technic of
criminal approach, sergente mio,"
replied Vance dulcetly. "The question of culpability in this case
isn't so simple as you imagine. It's deuced complicated. And this
glass of fashion and mold of form whose portrait you're carryin'
next to your heart has merely added to its intricacy."