Read Rex Stout - Nero Wolfe 41 Online
Authors: The Doorbell Rang
Tags: #Private Investigators, #Mystery & Detective, #Private Investigators - New York (State) - New York, #New York (N.Y.), #Political, #Fiction, #Literary Criticism, #Mystery Fiction, #Wolfe; Nero (Fictitious Character), #General
“No. But evidently you have. Look, Mr. Wolfe. Strictly off the record, who wants to hire you? If I knew that, I might be able to furnish a fact or two.”
Wolfe refilled his cup and put the pot down. “I may not be hired,” he said. “If I am, it’s quite possible that you will never know who hired me. As for facts, I know
what I need. I need a list of all the cases on which FBI agents have recently worked, and are now working, in and around New York. Can you supply that?”
“Hell no.” Lon smiled. “I’ll be damned. I was thinking—it was incredible, but I was thinking, or rather I was asking if it was possible that Hoover wanted you to work on Mrs. Bruner. That
would
be an item. But if you—I’ll be damned.” His eyes narrowed. “Are
you
going to perform a public service?”
“No. Nor, it may be, a private one. I’m considering it. Do you know how I can get such a list?”
“You can’t. Of course some of their jobs are public knowledge, like the jewel snatch at the Natural History Museum and the bank truck at that church in Jersey—half a million in small bills. But some of them are far from public. You read that book. Of course there’s talk, there’s always talk, not for print. Would that help?”
“It might, especially if it was of something questionable, possibly extralegal. Is it?”
“Certainly. It’s no fun talking about something that isn’t questionable.” He glanced at his watch. “I have twenty minutes. If I may have another small ration of brandy, and if it is understood that this is private, and if you’re headed where you seem to be, I’ll be glad to chip in.” He looked at me. “You’ll need your notebook, Archie.”
Twenty minutes later his brandy glass was empty again, I had filled five pages of my notebook, and he was gone. I won’t report on the contents of the five pages because very little of it was ever used, and also because some of the people named wouldn’t appreciate it. At the time, as I returned to the office after seeing Lon out, my mind was on Wolfe, not the notebook. Was he actually considering it? No. Impossible. He had merely been passing the time, and of course trying to get a rise
out of me. The question was how to handle it. He would be expecting me to blow my top. So I walked in and to my desk, grinned at him, said, “That was fun,” yanked the five pages from the notebook, tore them in half, and was going to tear again but he bellowed, “Stop that!”
I raised one eyebrow, something he can’t do. “Sorry,” I said, perfectly friendly. “A souvenir?”
“No. Please sit down.”
I sat. “Have I missed something?”
“I doubt it. You seldom do. A hypothetical question: If I told you that I have decided to keep that hundred thousand dollars, what would you say?”
“What you said. Preposterous.”
“That’s understood. But go on.”
“In full?”
“Yes.”
“I would say that you should sell the house and contents and go live in a nursing home, since you’re obviously cracked. Unless you intend to gyp her, just sit on it.”
“No.”
“Then you’re cracked. You’ve read that book. We couldn’t even get started. The idea would be to work it so you could say to the FBI, ‘Lay off,’ and make it stick. Nuts. Merely raising a stink wouldn’t do it. They would have to be actually cornered, the whole damn outfit. Out on a limb. All right, say we try to start. We pick one of these affairs”—I tapped the torn sheets from the notebook—“and make some kind of a stab at it. From then on, whenever I left the house I’d spend all my time ditching tails, and good ones. Everyone connected with that affair would be pegged. Our phone would be tapped. So would other phones—for instance, Miss Rowan’s, and Saul’s and Fred’s and Orrie’s, whether we got them
in or not. And of course Parker’s. They might or might not try a frame, probably they wouldn’t have to, but if they did it would be good. I’d have to sleep here in the office. Windows and doors, even one with a chain bolt, are pie for them. They could monitor our mail. I am not piling it on. How many of those things they would do would depend, but they
can
do all of them. They have all the gimmicks there are, including some I have never heard of.”
I crossed my legs. “We’d never get to first base. But say we did, say we actually got a wedge started in some kind of a crack, then they would really operate. They have six thousand trained men, some of them as good as they come, and three hundred million dollars a year. I would like to borrow the dictionary to look up a stronger word than ‘preposterous.’”
I uncrossed my legs. “Also, what about her? I do not believe that she is merely being annoyed. One will get you twenty that she’s scared stiff. She knows there’s some dirt somewhere, if not on her then on her son or daughter or something that would really hurt, and that would take a lot of sting out of the book. As for the hundred grand, for her that’s peanuts, and anyway she’s in a tax bracket that makes it petty cash.”
I crossed my legs. “That’s what I would say.”
Wolfe grunted. “The last part was irrelevant.”
“I’m often irrelevant. It confuses people.”
“You keep waving your legs around.”
“That confuses them too.”
“Pfui. You’re fidgety, and no wonder. I thought I knew you, Archie, but this is a new facet.”
“It’s not new at all. It’s merely horse sense.”
“No. Dog sense. You are moving your legs around because your tail is between them. This is what you
said, in effect: I am offered a job with the largest retainer in my experience and no limit on expenses or fee, but I should decline it. I should decline it, not because it would be difficult and perhaps impossible—I have taken many jobs that seemed impossible—but because it would give offense to a certain man and his organization and he would retaliate. I decline it because I dare not take it; I would rather submit to a threat than—”
“I didn’t say that!”
“It was implicit. You are cowed. You are daunted. Not, I concede, without reason; the hands and voices of many highly placed men have been stayed by the same trepidation. Possibly mine would be too if it were merely a matter of declining or accepting a job. But I will not return that check for one hundred thousand dollars because I am afraid of a bully. My self-esteem won’t let me. I suggest that you take a vacation for an indefinite period. With pay; I can afford it.”
I uncrossed my legs. “Beginning now?”
“Yes.” He was grim.
“These notes are in my personal code. Shall I type them?”
“No. That would implicate you. I’ll see Mr. Cohen again.”
I clasped my hands behind my head and eyed him. “I still say you’re cracked,” I said, “and I deny that my tail was between my legs, since they were crossed, and it would be a ball to step aside and see how you went at it without me, but after all the years in the swim with you it would be lowdown to let you sink alone. If I get daunted along the way I’ll let you know.” I picked up the torn sheets. “You want this typed?”
“No. For our discussion you will translate as required.”
“Right. A suggestion. The mood you’re in, do you want to declare war by phoning the client? She left her unlisted number, and of course it’s tapped. Shall I get her?”
“Yes.”
I got at the phone and dialed.
G
oing to the kitchen before going up to bed, around midnight, to check that Fritz had bolted the back door, I was pleased to see that batter for sour-milk buckwheat cakes was there in a bowl on the range. In that situation nice crisp toast or flaky croissants would have been inadequate. So when I descended the two flights a little after nine o’clock Wednesday morning I knew I would be properly fueled. As I entered the kitchen Fritz turned up the flame under the griddle, and I told him good morning and got my orange juice from the refrigerator. Wolfe, who breakfasts in his room from a tray taken up by Fritz, had gone up to the plant rooms on the roof for his two morning hours with the orchids; I had heard the elevator as usual. As I went to the little table by the wall where I eat breakfast I asked Fritz if there was anything stirring.
“Yes,” he said, “and you are to tell what it is.”
“Oh, didn’t he tell you?”
“No. He said only that the doors are to be bolted and the windows locked at all times, that I am to be—what does ‘circumspect’ mean?”
“It means watch your step. Say nothing to anyone
on the phone that you wouldn’t want to see in the paper. When you go out, do nothing that you wouldn’t want to see on TV. For instance, girl friends. Stay away. Swear off. Suspect all strangers.”
Fritz wouldn’t, and didn’t, talk while cakes were getting to just the right shade of brown. When they were before me, the first two, and the sausage, and were being buttered, he said, “I want to know, Archie, and I have a right to know. He said you would explain.
Bien
. I demand it.”
I picked up the fork. “You know what the FBI is.”
“But certainly. Mr. Hoover.”
“That’s what he thinks. On behalf of a client we’re going to push his nose in. Just a routine chore, but he’s touchy and will try to stop us. So futile.” I put a bite of cake where it belonged.
“But he—he’s a great man. Yes?”
“Sure. But I suppose you’ve seen pictures of him.”
“Yes.”
“What do you think of his nose?”
“Not good. Not exactly
épaté
, but broad. Not
bien fait
.”
“Then it should be pushed,” I forked sausage.
So he was at ease when I finished and went to the office. The meals would be okay, at least for today. As I dusted the desks, tore sheets from the calendars, and opened the mail, which was mostly junk, I was considering an experiment. If I dialed a number, any number, say Parker’s, I might be able to tell if we were tapped. It would be interesting to know if they had already reacted to the call to Mrs. Bruner. I vetoed it. I intended to keep strictly to my instructions. Doing so, I got my pocket notebook and another item from a drawer of my desk, opened the safe to get the check, went to the kitchen to tell Fritz not to expect me for
lunch and to the hall rack for my hat and coat, and departed.
Heading east, I merely walked. It’s a cinch to spot a tail, even a good one, especially on a winter day when a cold, gusty wind is keeping the sidewalk traffic down, but presumably they knew where I was going, so why bother? At the bank, on Lexington Avenue, I had the pleasure of seeing the teller’s eyes widen a little as he gave the check a second glance. The simple pleasure of the rich. Outside again, I turned uptown. I had two miles to go, but it was only twenty after ten. I am a walker, and if I had a tail it would be good for his lungs and legs.
The four-story stone on Seventy-fourth Street between Madison and Park was at least twice as wide as Wolfe’s brownstone, but it wasn’t brown. The door to the vestibule, three steps down, was solid, but the inside one was a metal grille with glass. It was opened by a man in black with no lips who swung it wide only after he had my name. He led me down the hall to an open door on the left and motioned me in.
It was an office, not large—filing cabinets, a safe, two desks, shelves, a cluttered table. On the wall back of the table was a blow-up of the Bruner building. My quick glance around came to rest on a face, a face that rated a glance, belonging to the female seated at one of the desks. Her hazel eyes were meeting the glance.
“I’m Archie Goodwin,” I said.
She nodded. “I’m Sarah Dacos. Have a seat, Mr. Goodwin.” She lifted the receiver from a phone and pressed a button, in a moment told someone I was there, hung up, and told me Mrs. Bruner would be down soon. Sitting, I asked her, “How long have you been with Mrs. Bruner?”
She smiled. “I know you’re a detective, Mr. Goodwin, you don’t have to prove it.”
I smiled back. “I have to keep in practice.” She was easy to smile at. “How long?”
“Nearly three years. Do you want it exactly?”
“Later maybe. Shall I wait until Mrs. Bruner comes?”
“Not necessarily. She said you would ask me some questions.”
“Then I will. What did you do before?”
“I was a stenographer at the Bruner Corporation, and then Mr. Thompson’s secretary, the vice-president.”
“Have you ever worked for the government? For instance, for the FBI?”
She smiled. “No. Never. I was twenty-two years old when I started with the Bruner Corporation. I’m twenty-eight now. You’re not taking notes.”
“In here.” I touched my forehead. “What gave you the idea that the FBI is tailing you?”
“I don’t
know
it’s the FBI. But it must be, because nobody else would.”
“How sure are you you’re being tailed?”
“Oh, I’m positive. I don’t keep looking behind me, nothing like that, but my hours here are irregular, I leave at different times, but when I go to the bus stop a man always comes and gets on after me, and he gets off where I do. The same man.”
“Madison Avenue bus?”
“No, Fifth Avenue. I live in the Village.”
“When did it start?”
“I’m not sure. The first time I noticed him was the Monday after Christmas. He’s there in the morning, too. And in the evening, if I go out. I didn’t know it was done like that. I thought if you followed someone you didn’t want her to know it.”
“It depends. Sometimes you do want her to know. It’s called an open tail. Can you describe the man?”
“I certainly can. He’s six or seven inches taller than me, about thirty years old, maybe a little more, a long face with a square chin, a long thin nose, a small straight mouth. His eyes are a kind of greenish gray. He always has his hat on, so I don’t know about his hair.”
“Have you ever spoken to him?”
“Of course not.”
“Have you reported it to the police?”
“No, the lawyer said not to. Mrs. Bruner’s lawyer. He said that if it’s the FBI they can always say it’s a security check.”
“So they can. And do. By the way, did you suggest sending people copies of that book to Mrs. Bruner?”
Her brow went up. It was a nice smooth brow. “Why, no. I hadn’t read it. I only read it afterwards.”
“After you got a tail?”
“No, after she decided to send all those copies.”
“Do you know who did suggest it to her?”