(Wednesday, July 20; 12:45
p.m.)
Kenyon Kenting followed us into the
den and, closing the door, stepped to a large leather armchair, and
sat down uneasily on the edge of it.
"I will be very glad to tell you
anything I know," he assured us. Then he added, "But I'm afraid I
can be of little help."
"That, of course, remains to be seen,"
murmured Vance. He had gone to the small bay window and stood
looking out with his hands deep in his coat pockets. "First of all,
we wish to know just what the financial arrangement is between you
and your brother. I understand that when your father died the
estate was all left at your disposal, and that whatever money
Kaspar Kenting should receive would be subject to your
discretion."
Kenting nodded his head repeatedly, as
if agreeing; but it was evident that he was thinking the matter
over. Finally he said:
"That is quite right. Fleel, however,
was appointed the custodian, so to speak, of the estate. And I wish
to assure you that not only have I maintained this house for
Kaspar, but have given him even more money than I thought was good
for him."
"Your brother is a bit of a
spendthrift—eh, what?"
"He is very wasteful—and very fond of
gambling." Kenting spoke in a guarded semi-resentful tone. "He is
constantly making demands on me for his gambling debts. I've paid a
great many of them, but I had to draw the line somewhere. He has a
remarkable facility for getting into trouble. He drinks far too
much. He has always been a very difficult problem—especially in
view of the fact that Madelaine, his wife, has to be
considered."
"Did you always decide these monet'ry
matters entirely by yourself?" Vance asked the man casually. "Or
did you confer with Mr. Fleel about them?"
Kenting shot Vance a quick look and
then glanced down again.
"I naturally consulted Mr. Fleel on
any matters of importance regarding the estate. He is co-executor,
appointed by my father. In minor matters this is not necessary, of
course; but I do not have a free hand, as the distribution of the
money is a matter of joint responsibility; and, as I say, Mr. Fleel
has, in a way, complete legal charge of it. But I can assure you
that there were never any clashes of opinion on the subject,—Fleel
is wholly reasonable and understands the situation thoroughly. I
find it an ideal arrangement."
Vance smoked for several moments in
silence, while the other man looked vaguely before him. Then Vance
turned from the window and sat down in the swivel chair before the
old-fashioned roll-top desk of oak at one side of the window.
"When was the last time you saw your
brother?" he asked, busying himself with his cigarette.
"The day before yesterday," the man
answered promptly. "I generally see him at least three times a
week—either here or at my office downtown—there are always minor
matters of one kind or another to decide on, and he naturally
depends a great deal on my judgment. In fact, the situation is such
that even the ordinary household expenses have always been referred
to me."
Vance nodded without looking up.
"And did your brother bring up the
subject of finances on Monday?"
Kenyon Kenting fidgeted a bit and
shifted his position in the chair. He did not answer at once. But
at length he said, in a half-hearted tone, "I would prefer not to
go into that, inasmuch as I regard it as a personal matter, and I
cannot see that it has any bearing on the present situation."
Vance studied the man for a
moment.
"That is a point for us to decide, I
believe," he said in a peculiarly hard voice. "We should like you
to answer the question."
Kenting looked again at Vance and then
fixed his eyes on the wall ahead of him.
"If you deem it necessary, of course—"
he began. "But I would much prefer to say nothing about it."
"I'm afraid, sir," put in Markham, in
his most aggressive official manner, "we must insist that you
answer the question."
Kenting shrugged reluctantly and
settled back in his chair, joining the tips of his fingers.
"Very well," he said resignedly. "If
you insist. On Monday my brother asked me for a large sum of
money—in fact, he was persistent about it, and became somewhat
hysterical when I refused him."
"Did he state what he required this
money for?" asked Vance.
"Oh, yes," the man said angrily. "The
usual thing—gambling and unwarranted debts connected with some
woman."
"Would you be more specific as to the
gambling debts?" pursued Vance.
"Well, you know the sort of thing."
Kenting again shifted in his chair. "Roulette, black-jack, the
bird-cage, cards—but principally horses. He owed several
book-makers some preposterous amount."
"Do you happen to know the names of
any of these book-makers?"
"No, I don't." Once more the man
glanced momentarily at Vance then lowered his eyes. "Wait—I think
one of them had a name something like Hannix."[16]
"Ah! Hannix, eh?" Vance contemplated
his cigarette for a few moments. "What was so urgent about this as
to produce hysterics?"
"The fact is," the other went on,
"Kaspar told me the men were unscrupulous and dangerous, and that
he feared for himself if he did not pay them off immediately. He
said he had already been threatened."
"That doesn't sound like Hannix,"
mused Vance. "Hannix looks pretty hard, I know, but he's really a
babe at heart. He's a shrewd gentleman, but hardly a vicious one. .
. . And I say, Mr. Kenting, what was the nature of your brother's
debts in connection with the mysterious lady you mentioned?
Jewelry, perhaps?"
The man nodded vigorously.
"Yes, that's just it," he said
emphatically.
"Well, well. Everything seems to be
running true to form. Your brother's position was not in the least
original—what? Gamblin' debts, liquor, and ladies cravin' precious
gems. Most conventional, don't y' know." A faint smile played over
Vance's lips. "And you denied your brother the money?"
"I had to," asserted Kenting. "The
amount would almost have beggared the estate, what with so much
tied up in what we've come to call 'frozen assets.' It was far more
than I could readily get together at the time, and anyway, I would
have had to take the matter up with Fleel, even if I had been
inclined to comply with Kaspar's demands. And I knew perfectly well
that Fleel would not approve my doing so. He has a moral as well as
legal responsibility, you understand."
Vance took several deep inhalations on
his Régie and sent a succession of
ribbons of blue smoke toward the old discolored Queen-Anne
ceiling.
"Did your brother approach Mr. Fleel
about the matter?"
"Yes, he did," the other returned.
"Whenever I refuse him anything he goes immediately to Fleel. As a
matter of fact, Fleel has always been more sympathetic with Kaspar
than I have. But Kaspar's demand this time was too utterly
outrageous, and Fleel turned him down as definitely as I did.
And—although I don't like to say so—I really think Kaspar was
grossly exaggerating his needs. Fleel got the same impression, and
mentioned to me over the phone the next morning that he was very
angry with Kaspar. He told me, too, that legally he was quite
helpless in the matter and could not accommodate Kaspar, even if he
had personally wanted to."
"Has Mrs. Kenting any money of her
own?" Vance asked unexpectedly.
"Nothing—absolutely nothing!" the man
assured him. "She is entirely dependent upon what Kaspar gives
her—which, of course, means some part of what I allow him from the
estate. Often I think that he does not do the right thing by her
and deprives her of many of the things she should have, so that he
himself can fritter the money away." A scowl came over the man's
face. "But there's nothing I can do about it. I have tried to
remonstrate with him, but it's worse than useless."
"In view of this morning's
occurrence," suggested Vance, "it may be that your brother was not
unduly exaggerating about the necessity for this money."
Kenting became suddenly serious, and
his eyes wandered unhappily about the room.
"That is a horrible thought, sir," he
said, half under his breath. "But it is one that occurred to me
immediately when I arrived here early this morning. And you can be
sure it left me uncomfortable."
Vance regarded the man dubiously as he
addressed him again.
"When you receive further instructions
regarding the ransom money, what do you intend to do about it—that
is to say, just what is your feeling in the matter?"
Kenting rose from his chair and stood
looking down at the floor. He appeared deeply troubled.
"As a brother," he said slowly, "what
can I do? I suppose I must manage somehow to get the money and pay
it. I can't let Kaspar be murdered. . . . It's a frightful
situation."
"Yes—quite," agreed Vance.
"And then there's Madelaine. I could
never forgive myself. . . . I say again, it's a frightful
situation."
"Nasty mess. Rather. Still, I have a
groggy notion," Vance went on, "that you won't be called upon to
pay the ransom money at all. . . . And, by the by, Mr. Kenting, you
didn't mention the amount that your brother asked for when you last
saw him. Tell me: how much did he want to get him out of his
imagin'ry difficulties?"
Kenting raised his head sharply and
looked at Vance with a shrewdness he had not hitherto displayed
during the interview. Withal, he seemed ill at ease and took a few
nervous steps back and forth before replying.
"I was hoping you wouldn't ask me that
question," he said regretfully. "I avoided it purposely, for I am
afraid it might create an erroneous impression."
"How much was it?" snapped Markham.
"We must get on with this."
"Well, the truth is," Kenting
stammered with evident reluctance, "Kaspar wanted fifty thousand
dollars. Sounds incredible, doesn't it?" he added
apologetically.
Vance leaned back in the swivel chair
and looked unseeingly at one of the old etchings over the
desk.
"I imagined that was the figure," he
murmured. "Thanks awfully, Mr. Kenting. We sha'n't bother you any
more just now, except that I should like to know whether Mrs.
Kenting's mother, Mrs. Falloway, still lives here in the Purple
House."
Kenting seemed surprised at the
question.
"Oh, yes," he said with disgruntled
emphasis. "She still occupies the front suite on the third floor
with her son, Mrs. Kenting's brother. But the woman is crippled now
and can get about only with a cane. She rarely is able to come
downstairs, and she almost never goes outdoors."
"What about the son?" asked
Vance.
"He's the most incompetent young
whippersnapper I've ever known. He always seems to be sickly and
has never earned so much as a penny. He's perfectly content to live
here with his mother at the expense of the Kenting estate." The
man's manner now had something of resentment and venom in it.
"Most unpleasant and annoyin'
situation—what?" Vance rose and put out his cigarette. "Does Mrs.
Falloway or her son know about what happened here last
night?"
"Oh, yes," the man told him. "Both
Madelaine and I spoke to them about it this morning, as we saw no
point in keeping the matter a secret."
"And we, too, should like to speak to
them," said Vance. "Would you be so good as to take us
upstairs?"
Kenting seemed greatly relieved.
"I'll be glad to," he said, and
started for the door. We followed him upstairs.
Mrs. Falloway was a woman between
sixty and sixty-five years old. She was of heavy build and seemed
to possess a corresponding aggressiveness. Her skin was somewhat
wrinkled, but her thick hair was almost black, despite her years.
There was an unmistakable masculinity about her, and her hands were
large and bony, like those of a man. She had an intelligent and
canny expression, and her features were large and striking. Withal,
there was a wistful feminine look in her eyes. She impressed me as
a woman with an iron will, but also with an innate sense of loyalty
and sympathy.
When we entered her room that morning
Mrs. Falloway was sitting placidly in a wicker armchair in front of
the large bay window. She wore an antiquated black alpaca dress
which fell in voluminous folds about her and completely hid her
feet. An old-fashioned hand-crocheted afghan was thrown over her
shoulders. On the floor beside her chair lay a long heavy Malakka
cane with a shepherd's-crook gold handle.
At an old and somewhat dilapidated
walnut secretary sat a thin, sickly youth, with straight dark hair
which fell forward over his forehead, and large, prominent
features. There was no mistaking mother and son. The pale youth
held a magnifying glass in one hand and was moving it back and
forth over a page of exhibits in a stamp album which was propped up
at an angle facing the light.
"These gentlemen wish to speak to you,
Mrs. Falloway," Kenyon Kenting said in an unfriendly tone. (It was
obvious that an antagonism of some kind existed between the woman
and this man on whose bounty she depended.) "I won't remain,"
Kenting added. "I think I'd better join Madelaine." He went to the
door and opened it. "I'll be downstairs if you should need me."
This last remark was addressed to Vance.
When he had gone, Vance took a few
steps toward the woman with an air of solicitation.
"Perhaps you remember me, Mrs.
Falloway—" he began.
"Oh, very well, Mr. Vance. It is very
pleasant to see you again. Do sit down in that armchair there, and
try to imagine that this meager room is a Louis-Seize salon." There
was a note of apology in her voice, accompanied by an unmistakable
undertone of rancor.
Vance bowed formally.
"Any room you grace, Mrs. Falloway,"
he said, "becomes the most charming of salons." He did not accept
her invitation to sit down, however, but remained standing
deferentially.
"What do you make of this situation?"
she went on. "And do you really think anything has happened to my
son-in-law?" Her voice was hard and low-pitched.
"I really cannot say just yet," Vance
answered. "We were hopin' you might be able to help us." He
casually presented the others of us, and the woman acknowledged the
introductions with dignified graciousness.
"This is my son, Fraim," she said,
waving with a bony hand toward the anæmic young man at the
secretary.
Fraim Falloway rose awkwardly and
inclined his head without a word; then he sank back listlessly into
his chair.
"Philatelist?" asked Vance, studying
the youth.
"I collect American stamps." There was
no enthusiasm in the lethargic voice, and Vance did not pursue the
subject.
"Did you hear anything in the house
early this morning?" Vance went on. "That is, did you hear Mr.
Kaspar Kenting come in—or any kind of a noise between three and six
o'clock?"
Fraim Falloway shook his head without
any show of interest.
"I didn't hear anything," he said. "I
was asleep."
Vance turned to the mother.
"Did you hear anything, Mrs.
Falloway?"
"I heard Kaspar come in—he woke me up
banging the front door shut." She spoke with bitterness. "But
that's nothing new. I went to sleep again, however, and didn't know
anything had happened until Madelaine and Mr. Kenyon Kenting
informed me of it this morning, after my breakfast."
"Could you suggest any reason," asked
Vance, "why any one should wish to kidnap Kaspar Kenting?"
The woman uttered a harsh, mirthless
chuckle.
"No. But I can give you many reasons
why any one should not wish to kidnap
him," she returned with a hard, intolerant look. "He is not an
admirable character," she went on, "nor a pleasant person to have
around. And I regret the day my daughter married him. However," she
added—and it seemed to me grudgingly—"I wouldn't wish to see any
harm come to the scamp."
"And why not, mater?" asked Fraim
Falloway with a whine. "You know perfectly well he has made us all
miserable, including Sis. Personally, I think it's good riddance."
The last words were barely audible.
"Don't be vindictive, son," the woman
reproved him with a sudden softening in her tone, as the youth
turned back to his stamps.
Vance sighed as if this interchange
between mother and son bored him.
"Then you are not able, Mrs. Falloway,
to suggest any reason for Mr. Kenting's sudden disappearance, or
tell us anything that might be at all helpful?"
"No. I know nothing, and have nothing
to tell you." Mrs. Falloway closed her lips with an audible
sound.
"In that case," Vance returned
politely, "I think we had better be going downstairs."
The woman picked up her cane and
struggled to her feet, despite Vance's protestations.
"I wish I could help you," she said
with sudden kindliness. "But I am so well isolated these days with
my infirmity. Walking, you know, is quite a painful process for me.
I'm afraid I'm growing old."
She limped beside us slowly to the
door, her son, who had risen, holding her tightly by one arm and
casting reproachful glances at us.
In the hall Vance waited till the door
was shut.
"An amusing old girl," he remarked.
"Her mind is as young and shrewd as it ever was. . . . Unpleasant
young citizen, Fraim. He's as ill as the old lady, but he doesn't
know it. Endocrine imbalance," Vance continued as we went
downstairs. "Needs medical attention. I wonder when he had a basal
metabolism taken last. I'd say his chart would read in the minus
thirties. May be thyroid. But it's more than possible, y' know, he
needs the suprarenal hormone."
Markham snorted.
"He simply looks like a weakling to
me."
"Oh, yes. Doubtless. As you say,
devoid of stamina. And full of resentment against his fellow-men
and especially against his brother-in-law. At any rate, an
unpleasant character, Markham."
"A queer and unwholesome case,"
Markham commented, half to himself, and then lapsed into thoughtful
silence as he descended the stairs with Vance. When we had reached
the lower hall Vance went immediately toward the drawing-room and
stepped inside.
Mrs. Kenting, who seemed perturbed and
ill at ease, sat rigidly upright on the small sofa where we had
first seen her. Her brother-in-law sat beside her, looking at her
with a solicitous, comforting air. Fleel was leaning back in an
easy chair near the desk, smoking a cigar and endeavoring to
maintain a judicious and unconcerned mien.
Vance glanced about him casually and,
drawing up a small, straight-backed chair beside the sofa, sat down
and addressed himself to the obviously unhappy woman.
"I know you told us, Mrs. Kenting," he
began, "that you could not describe the men who called on your
husband several nights ago. I wish, however, you would make an
effort to give us at least a general description of them."
"It's strange that you should ask me
that," the woman said. "I was just speaking to Kenyon about them
and trying to recall what they looked like. The fact is, Mr. Vance,
I paid little attention to them, but I know that one of them was a
large man and seemed to me to have a very thick neck. And, as I
recall, there was a lot of grey in his hair; and he may have had a
clipped mustache—I really don't remember: it's all very vague. That
was the man who came twice. . . ."
"Your description, madam," remarked
Vance, nodding his head, "corresponds to the appearance of a
certain gentleman I have in mind; and if it is the same person,
your impression regarding the clipped mustache is quite
correct—"
"Oh, who was he, Mr. Vance?" The woman
leaned forward eagerly with a show of nervous animation. "Do you
think you know who is responsible for this terrible thing?"
Vance shook his head and smiled
sadly.
"No," he said, "I'm deuced sorry I
cannot offer any hope in that particular quarter. If this man who
called on your husband is the one I think it is, he is merely a
good-natured book-maker who is at times aroused to futile anger
when his clients fail to pay their debts. I'm quite sure, don't y'
know, that if he should pop in here again at the present moment,
you would find him inclined to exert his efforts in your behalf. I
fear that we must dismiss him as a possibility. . . . But, by the
by, Mrs. Kenting," Vance continued quickly, "can you tell me
anything definite about the second man that called on your
husband?"
The woman shook her head
vaguely.
"Almost nothing, Mr. Vance," she
returned. "I'm very sorry, but I caught only a glimpse of him.
However, I recall that he was much shorter than the first man, and
very dark. And my impression is that he was very well dressed. I
remember thinking at the time that he seemed far less dangerous
than his companion. But I do know that, in the fleeting glimpses I
had of both the men, they struck me as being undesirable and
untrustworthy characters. And I admit I worried about them on
Kaspar's account. . . . Oh, I do wish I could tell you more, but I
can't."
Vance thanked her with a slight
bow.
"I can understand just how you felt,
and how you feel now," he said in a kindly tone. "But I hardly
think that either of these two objectionable visitors are in any
way connected with your husband's disappearance. If they had really
contemplated anything, I seriously doubt that they would have come
here to their proposed victim's home and run the risk of being
identified later. The second man—whom you describe as short, dark,
and dapper—was probably a gambling-house keeper who had an account
against your husband for overenthusiastic wagering. I can easily
understand how he might be acquainted with the book-making
gentleman who makes his livelihood through the cupidity of persons
who persist in the belief that past-performance figures are an
indication of how any horse will run at a given time."
As Vance spoke he rose from his chair
and turned to Fleel, who had been listening intently to Vance's
brief interchange with Mrs. Kenting.
"Before we go, sir," Vance said, "we
wish to speak with you for a moment in the den. There are one or
two points with which I feel you may be able to help us. . . . Do
you mind?"
The lawyer rose with alacrity.
"I'll be very glad to do whatever I
can to be of assistance," he said. "But I'm of the opinion I can
tell you nothing more than you already know."