(Wednesday, July 20; 11
a.m.)
As we entered Kaspar Kenting's
bedroom, Captain Dubois and Detective Bellamy were just preparing
to leave it.
"I don't think there's anything for
you, Sergeant," Dubois reported to Heath after his respectful
greetings to Markham. "Just the usual kind of marks and smudges
you'd find in any bedroom—and they all check up with the
finger-prints on the silver toilet set and the glass in the
bathroom. Can't be any one else's finger-prints except the guy what
lives here. Nothing new anywhere."
"And the window-sill?" asked Heath
with desperate hopefulness.
"Not a thing, Sarge,—absolutely not a
thing," Dubois replied. "And I sure went over it carefully. If any
one went out that window during the night, they certainly wiped it
clean, or else wore gloves and was mighty careful. And there's just
the kind of finish on that window-sill—that old polished ivory
finish—that'll take finger-prints like smoke-paper. . . . Anyhow, I
may have picked up a stray print here and there that'll check with
something we've got in the files. I'll let you know more about it,
of course, when we've developed and enlarged what we got."
The Sergeant seemed greatly
disappointed.
"I'll be wanting you later for the
ladder," he told Dubois, shifting the long black cigar from one
corner of his mouth to the other. "I'll get in touch with you when
we're ready."
"All right, Sergeant." Dubois picked
up his small black case. "That'll be a tough job though. Don't make
it too late in the afternoon—I'll want all the light I can get."
And he waved a friendly farewell to Heath and departed, followed by
Bellamy.
Kaspar Kenting's bedroom was
distinctly old-fashioned, and conventional in the extreme. The
furniture was shabby and worn. A wide Colonial bed of mahogany
stood against the south wall, and there was a mahogany chest of
drawers, with a hanging mirror over it, near the entrance to the
room. Several easy chairs stood here and there about the room, and
a faded flower-patterned carpet covered the floor. In one corner at
the front of the room was a small writing-table on which stood a
French telephone.
There were two windows in the room,
one at the front of the house, overlooking the street; the other
was in the east wall, and I recognized it at once as the window to
which Mrs. Kenting said she had run in her fright. It was thrown
wide open, with the Venetian blind drawn up to the top, and the
outside shutters were invisible from where we stood; whereas the
front window was half closed, with its blind drawn half-way down.
At the rear of the room, to the right of the bed, was a door, now
wide open. Beyond it another bedroom, similar to the one in which
we stood, was identifiable: it was obviously Mrs. Kenting's
boudoir. Between Kaspar Kenting's bed and the east wall two
narrower doors led into the bathroom and a closet
respectively.
The electric lights were still burning
with a sickly illumination in the old-fashioned crystal chandelier
hanging from the centre of the ceiling, and in the standard modern
fixture near the head of the bed.
Vance looked about him with seeming
indifference; but I knew that not a single detail of the setting
escaped him. His first words were directed to the missing man's
wife.
"When you came in here this morning,
Mrs. Kenting, was this hall door locked or bolted?"
The woman looked uncertain and
faltered in her answer.
"I—I—really, I can't remember. It must
have been unlocked, or else I would probably have noticed it. I
went out through the door when the coffee was ready, and I don't
recall unlocking it."
Vance nodded understandingly.
"Yes, yes; of course," he murmured. "A
deliberate act like unlocking a door would have made a definite
mental impression on you. Simple psychology. . . ."
"But I really don't know, Mr. Vance. .
. . You see," she added hurriedly, "I was so upset. . . . I wanted
to get out of this room."
"Oh, quite. Wholly natural. But it
really doesn't matter." Vance dismissed the subject. Then he went
to the open window and looked down at the ladder.
As he did so Heath took from his
pocket a knife such as boy scouts use, and pried loose the
thumbtack which held a soiled and wrinkled sheet of paper to the
broad window-sill. He picked up the paper gingerly and handed it to
Markham. The District Attorney took it and looked at it, his face
grim and troubled. I glanced over his shoulder as he read it. The
paper was of the ordinary typewriter quality and had been trimmed
irregularly at the edges to disguise its original size. On it were
pasted words and separate characters in different sizes and styles
of type, apparently cut from a newspaper. The uneven lines, crudely
put together, read:
If you want him back safe price will
be 50 thousands $ otherwise killed will let you no ware & when
to leave money later.
This ominous communication was signed
with a cabalistic signature consisting of two interlocking uneven
squares which were outlined with black ink. (I am herewith
including a copy of the ransom note which was found that morning at
the Kenting home.)

Vance had turned back to the room, and
Markham handed him the note. Vance glanced at it, as if it were of
little interest to him, and read it through quickly, with the faint
suggestion of a cynical smile.
"Really, y' know, Markham old dear, it
isn't what you could possibly term original. It's been done so many
times before."
He was about to return the paper to
Markham when he suddenly drew his hand back and made a new
examination of the note. His eyes grew serious and clouded, and the
smile faded from his lips.
"Interestin' signature," he murmured.
He took out his monocle and, carefully adjusting it, scrutinized
the paper closely. "Made with a Chinese pencil," he announced, "—a
Chinese brush—held vertically—and with China ink. . . . And those
small squares . . ." His voice trailed off.
"Sure!" Sergeant Heath slapped his
thigh and puffed vigorously at his cigar. "Same as the holes like
I've seen in Chinese money."
"Quite so, Sergeant." Vance was still
studying the cryptic signature. "Not illuminatin', however. But
worth remembering." He returned his monocle to his waistcoat pocket
and gave the paper back to Markham. "Not an upliftin' case, old
dear. . . . Let's stagger about a bit. . . ."
He moved to the chest of drawers and
adjusted his cravat before the mirror: then he smoothed back his
hair and flicked an imaginary speck of dust from the left lapel of
his coat. Markham glowered, and Heath made an expressive grimace of
disgust.
"By the by, Mrs. Kenting," Vance asked
casually, "is your husband, by any chance, bald?"
"Of course not," she answered
indignantly. "What makes you ask that?"
"Queer—very queer," murmured Vance.
"All the necess'ry toilet articles are in place on the top of this
low-boy except a comb."
"I—don't understand," the woman
returned in amazement. She moved swiftly across the room and stood
beside Vance. "Why, the comb is gone!"
she exclaimed in a tone of bewilderment. "Kaspar always kept it
right here." And she pointed to a vacant place on the faded silk
covering of what had obviously served Kaspar Kenting as a
dresser.
"Most extr'ordin'ry. Let's see whether
your husband's toothbrush is also missing. Do you know where he
kept it?"
"In the bathroom, of course,"—Mrs.
Kenting seemed frightened and breathless—"in a little rack beside
the medicine cabinet. I'll see." As she spoke she turned and went
quickly toward the door nearest the east wall. She pushed it open
and stepped into the bathroom. After a moment she rejoined
us.
"It's not there," she remarked
dejectedly. "It isn't where it should be—and I've looked in the
cabinet for it too."
"That's quite all right," Vance
returned. "Do you remember what clothes your husband was wearing
last night when he went to the opening of the casino in New Jersey
with Mr. Quaggy?"
"Why, he wore evening dress, of
course," the woman answered without hesitation. "I mean, he wore a
tuxedo."
Vance walked quickly across the room
and, opening the door beside the bathroom, looked into the narrow
clothes closet. After a brief inspection of its contents he turned
and again addressed Mrs. Kenting who now stood near the open east
window, her hands clasped on her breast, and her eyes wide with
apprehension.
"But his dinner jacket is hanging here
in the closet, Mrs. Kenting. Has he more than one? . . ."
The woman shook her head
vaguely.
"And I say, I suppose that Mr. Kenting
wore the appropriate evening oxfords with his dinner coat."
"Naturally," the woman said.
"Amazin'," murmured Vance. "There are
a pair of evening oxfords standin' neatly on the floor of the
closet, and the soles are dampish—it was rather wet out last night,
don't y' know, after the rain."
Mrs. Kenting moved slowly across the
room to where Kenyon Kenting was standing and put her arm through
his, seeming to lean against him. Then she said in a low voice, "I
really don't understand, Mr. Vance."
Vance gave the woman and her
brother-in-law a thoughtful glance and stepped inside the closet.
But he turned back to the room in a moment and once more addressed
Mrs. Kenting.
"Are you familiar with your husband's
wardrobe?" he asked.
"Of course, I am," she returned with
an undertone of resentment. "I help him select the materials for
all his clothes."
"In that case," Vance said politely,
"you can be of great assistance to me if you will glance through
this closet and tell me whether anything is missing."
Mrs. Kenting withdrew her arm from
that of her brother-in-law and, with a dazed and slightly startled
expression, joined Vance at the clothes closet. As he took a step
to one side, she turned her back to him and gave her attention to
the row of hangers. Then she faced him with a puzzled frown.
"His Glen Urquhart suit is missing,"
she said. "It's the one he generally wears when he goes away for a
week-end or a short trip."
"Very interestin'," Vance murmured.
"And is it possible for you to tell me what shoes he may have
substituted for his evening oxfords?"
The woman's eyes narrowed, and she
looked at Vance with dawning comprehension.
"Yes!" she said, and immediately swung
about to inspect the shoe rack in the closet. After a moment she
again turned to Vance with a look of bewilderment in her eyes. "One
pair of his heavy tan bluchers are not here," she announced in a
hollow, monotonous tone. "That's what Kaspar generally wears with
his Glen Urquhart."
Vance bowed graciously and muttered a
conventional "thank-you," as Mrs. Kenting returned slowly to Kenyon
Kenting and stood rigid and wide-eyed beside him.
Vance turned back into the closet and
it was but a minute before he came out and walked to the window.
Between his thumb and forefinger he held a small cut gem—a ruby, I
thought—which he examined against the light.
"Not a genuine ruby," he murmured.
"Merely a balas-ruby—the two are often confused. A necess'ry item,
to be sure, for a representative collection of gem-stones, but of
little worth in itself. . . . By the by, Mrs. Kenting, I found this
in the outer side-pocket of your husband's dinner jacket. I took
the liberty of ascertaining whether he had transferred the contents
of his pockets when he changed his clothes after returning home
last night. This bit of balas-ruby was all I found. . . ."
He looked at the stone again and
placed it carefully in his waistcoat pocket. Then he took out
another cigarette and lighted it slowly and thoughtfully.
"Another thing that would interest me
mildly," he remarked, looking vaguely before him, "is what kind of
pajamas Mr. Kenting wears."
"Shantung silk," Mrs. Kenting
asserted, stepping suddenly forward. "I just gave him a new supply
on his birthday." She was looking directly at Vance, but now her
eyes shifted quickly to the bed.
"There's a pair on—" She left the
sentence unfinished, and her pale eyes opened still wider. "They're
not there!" she exclaimed excitedly.
"No. As you say. Bed neatly turned
down. Slippers in place. Glass of orange juice on the night-stand.
But no pajamas laid out. I did notice the omission. A bit curious.
But it may have been an oversight . . ."
"No," the woman interrupted
emphatically. "It was not an oversight. I placed his pajamas at the
foot of the bed myself, as I always do."
"Thin Shantung?" Vance asked, without
looking at her.
"Yes—the sheerest
summer-weight."
"Might easily be rolled up and placed
in a pocket?"
The woman nodded vaguely. She was now
staring at Vance.
"What do you mean?" she asked. "Tell
me, what is it?"
"I really don't know." Vance spoke
with kindliness. "I'm merely observing things. There is no answer
as yet. It's most puzzlin'."
Markham had been standing in silence
near the door, watching Vance with grim curiosity. Now he
spoke.
"I see what you're getting at, Vance,"
he said. "The situation is damnably peculiar. I don't know just how
to take it. But, at any rate, if the indications are correct, I
think we can safely assume that we are not dealing with inhuman
criminals. When they came here and took Mr. Kenting to be held for
ransom, they at least permitted him to get dressed, and to take
with him two or three of the things a man misses most when he's
away from home."
"Yes, yes. Of course." Vance spoke
without enthusiasm. "Most kind of them—eh, what? If true."
"If true?" repeated Markham
aggressively. "What else have you in mind?"
"My dear Markham!" protested Vance
mildly. "Nothing whatever. Mind an utter blank. Evidence points in
various directions. Whither go we?"
"Well, anyway," put in Sergeant Heath,
"I don't see that there's any reason to worry about any harm coming
to the fella. It looks to me like the guys who did the job were
only after the money."
"It could be, of course, Sergeant."
Vance nodded. "But I think it is a bit early to jump to
conclusions." He gave Heath a significant look under drooped
eyelids, and the Sergeant merely shrugged his shoulders and said no
more.
Fleel had been watching and listening
attentively, with a shrewd, judicial air.
"I think, Mr. Vance," he said, "I know
what is in your mind. Knowing the Kentings as well as I do, and
knowing the circumstances in this household for a great number of
years, I can assure you that it would be no shock to either of them
if you were to state exactly what you think regarding this
situation."
Vance looked at the man for several
seconds with the suggestion of an amused smile. At length he said:
"Really, y' know, Mr. Fleel, I don't know exactly what I do
think."
"I beg to differ with you, sir," the
lawyer returned in a court-room manner. "And from my personal
knowledge—the result of my many years of association with the
Kenting family—I know that it would be heartening—I might even say,
an act of mercy—if you stated frankly that you believe, as I am
convinced you do, that Kaspar planned this coup himself for reasons that are only too
obvious."
Vance looked at the man with a
slightly puzzled expression and then said noncommittally: "If you
believe that to be the case, Mr. Fleel, what procedure would you
suggest be followed? You have known the young man for a long time
and are possibly in a position to know how best to handle
him."
"Personally," answered Fleel, "I think
it is about time Kaspar should be taught a rigorous lesson. And I
think we shall never have a better opportunity. If Kenyon agrees,
and is able to provide this preposterous sum, I would be heartily
in favor of following whatever further instructions are received,
and then letting the law take its course on the ground's of
extortion. Kaspar must be taught his lesson." He turned to Kenting.
"Don't you agree with me, Kenyon?"
"I don't know just what to say,"
Kenting returned in an obvious quandary. "But somehow I feel that
you are right. However, remember that we have Madelaine to
consider."
Mrs. Kenting began crying softly and
dabbing her eyes.
"Still," she demurred, "Kaspar may not
have done this terrible thing at all. But if he did . . ."
Fleel swung round again to Vance.
"Don't you see what I meant when I asked you to state frankly your
belief? It would, I am sure, greatly relieve Mrs. Kenting's
anxiety, even though she thought her husband was guilty of having
planned this whole frightful affair."
"My dear sir!" returned Vance. "I
would be glad to say anything which might relieve Mrs. Kenting's
anxiety regarding the fate of her husband. But I assure you that at
the present moment the evidence does not warrant extending the
comfort of any such belief, either to you or to any member of the
Kenting family. . . ."
At this moment there was an
interruption. At the hall door appeared a short, middle-aged man
with a sallow moon-like face, sullen in expression. Scant,
colorless blond hair lay in straight long strands across his
bulging pate, in an unsuccessful effort to cover up his partial
baldness. He wore thick-lensed rimless glasses through which one of
his watery blue eyes looked somehow different from the other, and
he stared at us as if he resented our presence. He had on a shabby
butler's livery which was too big for him and emphasized his
awkward posture. A cringing and subservient self-effacement marked
his general attitude despite his air of insolence.
"What is it, Weem?" Mrs. Kenting
asked, with no more than a glance in the man's direction.
"There is a gentleman—an officer—at
the front door," the butler answered in a surly tone, "who says he
wants to see Sergeant Heath."
"What's his name?" snapped Heath,
eyeing the butler with belligerent suspicion.
The man looked at Heath morosely and
answered, "He says his name is McLaughlin."
Heath nodded curtly and looked up at
Markham.
"That's all right, Chief," he said.
"McLaughlin was the man on this beat last night, and I left word at
the Bureau to send him up here as soon as they could locate him. I
thought he might know something, or maybe he saw something, that
would give us a line on what happened here last night." Then he
turned back to the butler. "Tell the officer to wait for me. I'll
be down in a few minutes."
"Just a moment, Weem,—have I the name
right?" Vance put in. "You're the butler here, I understand."
The man inclined his head.
"Yes, sir," he said, in a low rumbling
voice.
"And your wife is the cook, I
believe?"
"Yes, sir."
"What time," asked Vance, "did you and
your wife go to bed last night?"
The butler hesitated a moment, and
then looked shiftily at Mrs. Kenting, but her back was to
him.
He transferred his weight from one
foot to the other before he answered Vance.
"About eleven o'clock. Mr. Kenting had
gone out, and Mrs. Kenting said she would not need me any more
after ten o'clock."
"Your quarters are at the rear of the
third floor, I believe?"
"Yes," the man returned with an
abrupt, stiff nod.
"I say, Weem," Vance went on, "did
either you or your wife hear anything unusual in the house, after
you had gone to your quarters?"
The man again shifted his
weight.
"No," he answered. "Everything was
quiet until I went to sleep—and I didn't wake up till Mrs. Kenting
rang for coffee around six."
"Then you didn't hear Mr. Kenting
return to the house—or any one else moving about the house between
eleven o'clock last night and six this morning?"
"No, nobody—I was asleep."
"That's all, Weem." Vance nodded
curtly and turned away. "You'd better take the Sergeant's message
to Officer McLaughlin."
The butler shuffled away
lackadaisically.
"I think," Vance said to Heath, "it
was a good idea to get McLaughlin. . . . There's really nothing
more to be done up here just now. Suppose we go down and find out
what he can tell us."
"Right!" And the Sergeant started
toward the door, followed by Vance, Markham, and myself.
Vance paused leisurely just before
reaching the door and turned to the small writing-table at the
front of the room, on which the telephone stood. He regarded it
contemplatively as he approached it. Opening the two shallow
drawers, he peered into them. He took up the bottle of ink which
stood at the rear of the table, just under the low stationery rack,
and read the label. Setting the ink-bottle back in its place, he
turned to the small wastepaper basket beside the table and bent
over it.
When he rose he asked Mrs.
Kenting:
"Does your husband do his writing at
this table?"
"Yes, always," the woman answered,
staring at Vance with a puzzled frown.
"And never anywhere else?"
The woman shook her head slowly.
"Never," she told him. "You see, he
has very little correspondence, and that writing-table was always
more than adequate for his needs."
"But did he never need any paste or
mucilage?" Vance asked. "I don't see any here."
"Paste?" Mrs. Kenting appeared still
more puzzled. "Why, no. As a matter of fact, I don't believe
there's any in the house. . . . But why—why do you ask?"
Vance looked up at the woman and
smiled at her somewhat sympathetically.
"I'm merely trying to learn the truth
about everything, and I beg that you forgive any questions which
seem irrelevant."
The woman made no reply, and Vance
again went toward the door where Markham and Heath and I were
waiting, and we all went out into the hall.
As we reached the narrow landing
half-way down the stairs, Markham suddenly stopped, letting Heath
proceed on his way. He took Vance by the arm, detaining him.
"See here, Vance," he said
aggressively, but in a subdued tone, so that no one in the room
from which we had just come should overhear him. "This kidnapping
doesn't strike me as being entirely on the level. And I don't
believe you yourself think that it is."
"Oh, my Markham!" deplored Vance. "Art
thou a mind-reader?"
"Drop that," continued Markham
angrily. "Either the kidnappers have no intention of harming young
Kenting, or else—as Fleel suggests—Kenting staged the whole affair
and kidnapped himself."
"I am waiting patiently for the
question I fear is en route," sighed
Vance with resignation.
"What I want to know," Markham went on
doggedly, "is why you refused to offer any hope, or to admit the
possibility of either of these hypotheses, when you know damn well
that the mere expression of such an opinion by you would have
mitigated the apprehensions of both Mrs. Kenting and the young
fellow's brother."
Vance heaved a deep sigh and gazed at
Markham a moment with a look of mock commiseration.
"Really, y' know, Markham," he said
lightly, but with a certain seriousness, "you're a most admirable
character, but you're far too naive for this unscrupulous world.
Both you and your legal friend, Fleel, are quite wrong in your
suppositions. I assure you, don't y' know, that I am not
sufficiently cruel to extend false hopes to any one."
"What do you mean by that, Vance?"
Markham demanded.
"My word, Markham! I can mean only one
thing."
Vance continued to gaze at the
District Attorney with sympathetic affection and lowered his
voice.
"The chappie, I fear, is already
dead."