Homicide Trinity by Rex Stout

there, and I should have come with her. We all feel

responsible for her. Her house is an awful dump, but

anybody in show business, or even trying to be, can

have a room for five dollars a week, and it doesn’t have

to be every week. So we feel responsible. I certainly

hope—” She stood up, letting it hang. “If she comes will

you phone me?”

“Sure.” She gave me the number and I jotted it down,

and then went to hold her coat. My feelings were mixed.

It would have been a pleasure to relieve her mind, but

of what? What if her real worry was about the Hope

diamond, which she had had under her mattress, and

she knew or suspected that Hattie Annis had snitched

it? I would have liked to put her in the front room,

supplied with magazines, to wait until her landlady

arrived, but you can’t afford to be sentimental when the

fate of a million-dollar diamond is at stake, so I let her

go. Another consideration was that it would be enough

of a job to sell Wolfe on seeing Hattie Annis without

also accounting for the presence of another female in

the front room. He can stand having one woman under

his roof temporarily if he has to, but not two at once.

At eleven o’clock on the nose the sound of the eleva-

tor came, and its usual clang as it jolted to a stop at the

bottom, and he entered, told me good morning, went to

his desk, got his seventh of a ton deposited in the

oversized custom-built chair, fingered through the

mail, glanced at his desk calendar, and spoke.

“No check from Brigham?”

“Yes, sir, it came.” I swiveled to face him. “Without

comment. I took it to the bank. Also my weakness has

cropped up again, but with a new slant.”

He grunted. “Which weakness?”

“Women. One came, a stranger, and I told her to

come back at eleven-fifteen. The trouble is, she’s a type

that never appealed to me before. I hope to goodness

my taste hasn’t shifted. I want your opinion.”

“Pfui. Flummery.”

“No, sir. It’s a real problem. Wait till you see her.”

“I’m not going to see her.”

“Then I’m stuck. She has a strange fascination. No-

body believes in witches casting spells any more. I

certainly don’t, but I don’t know. As for what she wants

to see you about, that’s simple. She has got something

that she thinks is good for a reward, and she’s coming to

you instead of the police because she hates cops. I don’t

know what it is or where she got it. That part’s easy,

you can deal with that in two minutes, but what about

me? Have I got a screw loose?”

“Yes.” He picked up the top item from the little pile

of mail, an airmail letter from an orchid hunter in Ven-

ezuela, and started to read it. I swung my chair around

and started sharpening pencils that didn’t need it. The

noise of the sharpener gets on his nerves. I was on the

fourth pencil when his voice came.

“Stop that,” he growled. “A witch?”

“She must be.”

“I’ll give her two minutes.”

You can appreciate what I had accomplished only if

you know how allergic he is to strangers, especially

women, and how much he hates to work, especially

when a respectable check has just been deposited. Be-

sides that satisfaction I had something to look forward

to, seeing his expression when I escorted Hattie Annis

in. I thought I might as well go and retrieve the pack-

age from under the couch and put it in my desk drawer,

but vetoed it. It could stay put till she came. Wolfe

finished the letter from the orchid hunter and started

on a circular from a manufacturer of an automatic hu-

midifier.

Eleven-seventeen and the bell didn’t ring. At 11:20

Wolfe looked up to say that he had some letters to give

me but didn’t like to be interrupted, and I said neither

did I. At 11:25 he got up and went to the kitchen,

probably to sample the chestnut soup, in which he and

Fritz had decided to include tarragon for the first time.

At 11:30 I went to the front room and got the package.

Nuts to her, if she couldn’t be punctual for an appoint-

148 Rex Stout

ment. She would get her package back, at the door, and

that would be all. I was straightening up after fishing it

from under the couch when the bell rang, and had it in

my hand when I went to the hall.

It was her all right, but through the one-way glass

panel I noticed a couple of changes as I stepped to the

door: there was a button on her coat where one had

been been missing, and her face needed washing even

more than it had before. Her whole right cheek was a

dark smudge. Touched by the button, I decided to hear

her excuse for being late, if any, but as I opened the

door she collapsed. No moan, no sound at all, she just

crumpled. I jumped and grabbed her, so she didn’t go

clear down, but she was out, dead weight. I tightened

my right arm around her to free my left to toss the

package into the hall and then gathered her up, crossed

the sill, and kicked the door shut.

As I was turning to the front room Wolfe’s voice

came. “What the devil is that?”

“A woman,” I said, and kept going. On her feet I

would have guessed her at not more than a hundred and

fifteen pounds, but loose and sagging she was a good

deal heavier. I put her on the couch, on her back,

straightened her legs, and took a look. She was breath-

ing shallow, but no gasping. I slipped a hand under her

middle and lifted, and stuffed a couple of cushions be-

neath her hips. As I took her wrist and put a finger on

her pulse Wolfe’s voice came at my back.

“Get Doctor Vollmer.”

I turned my head. He had meant it for Fritz, who had

appeared at the door. “Hold it,” I said. “I think she just

fainted.”

“Nonsense,” Wolfe snapped. “Women do not faint.”

I had heard that one before. His basis for it was not

medical but personal; he is convinced that unless she

has a really good excuse, like being slugged with a club,

any woman who passes out is merely putting on an

act—a subhead under his fundamental principle that

every woman is always putting on an act. Ignoring it, I

checked her pulse, which was weak and slow but not too

The Homicide Trinity 149

bad, asked Fritz to bring my overcoat and open a win-

dow, and went to the lavatory for the smelling salts. I

was waving the bottle under her nose and Fritz was

spreading the coat over her when her eyes opened. She

blinked at me and started to lift her head, and I put my

hand on her brow.

“I know you,” she said, barely audible. “I must have

made it.”

“Only to the door,” I told her. “You flopped on the

stoop and I carried you in. Lie still. Shut your eyes and

catch up on your breathing.”

“Brandy?” Fritz asked me.

“I don’t like brandy,” she said.

“Tea?”

“I don’t like tea. Where’s my bag?”

“Coffee,” I told Fritz. “She must like something.” He

went. Wolfe had disappeared. “Sniff this,” I told her,

handing her the bottle, and went to the hall. The pack-

age was over by the rack, and her handbag was on the

floor near the wall. I didn’t know how it got there, and I

still don’t, but since I reject Wolfe’s fundamental prin-

ciple I assume that a fainting woman can hang onto

something. Returning to the patient, I was just in time

to keep her from rolling off the couch. She was trying to

pull the cushions out from under her middle. When I

put a hand on her shoulder she protested, “Pillows are

for heads, Buster. Can’t you tell my head from my

fanny? Give me the bag.”

I handed it to her and she turned onto her side,

propping on her elbow, to open it. Apparently her con-

cern was for a particular item, for after a brief glance

inside she was closing it, but I said, “Here, put this in,”

and offered the package.

She didn’t take it. “So I’m still alive,” she said. “I’m

froze stiff, but I’m alive. Don’t Nero Wolfe believe in

heat?”

“It’s seventy in here,” I told her. “When you faint

your blood does something. Here’s your package.”

“Did you open it?”

“No.”

150 Rex Stout

“I knew you wouldn’t. I’m still dizzy.” Her head went

back down. “You’re such a detective, maybe you can tell

me what he was going to do if he killed me. He would

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