Homicide Trinity by Rex Stout

not a liar. I’m under her spell and I’m in her debt. She

made Cramer ask me a favor.”

Silence. Then, more growl. “Come home and report.

We’ll see.”

Chapter 5

One of the rules in that house is no business talk at

meals, ever, and another is no business in the

plant rooms except in emergencies. That winter

day the emergency was not that some sudden develop-

ment demanded immediate action or that an important

case had reached a crisis; it was that Wolfe had to

decide, to work or not to work, and he could get no

pleasure fiddling with orchids with that hanging over

him. He took my report not in one of the three plant

rooms, with their dazzle of color, but in the potting

room, perched on his made-to-order stool, at the bench.

Theodore was washing pots at the sink, and I used his

stool.

Wolfe keeps his eyes closed when I am reporting and

176 Rex Stout

rarely interrupts with questions. When I finished he

took in air clear down to his middle, let it out, opened his

eyes, and grunted. “Any comments or suggestions?”

“Yes, sir, plenty. First, Hattie Annis is out. She

couldn’t possibly have been faking it when we went in

and found the body. I wouldn’t try to predict what she’s

going to do, but I know what she didn’t do. She didn’t

kill Tammy Baxter. Second, their not asking if I knew

the money is counterfeit is an insult to my intelligence

and yours too. Leach had told Canner not to mention it

because what he wants is to find the source. He’d rather

catch a counterfeiter than a murderer any day, and if

counterfeiting was mentioned to me I might mention it

to a reporter. Evidently he thinks we can’t add two and

two. A T-man coming to ask me about a woman who had

left a package of bills with me, and the idea that they

might be counterfeit wouldn’t occur to me?”

“He didn’t know she had been here and left a pack-

age.”

“He did when I was being questioned. He heard me

tell Cramer. Cramer must have been biting nails. He’d

love to get us for being in possession of a stack of the

queer. Ten to one Leach didn’t know he sent Stebbins

here to get it. Third, Tammy Baxter was a T-woman.”

Wolfe made a face. “That mean something?”

“It does now. If there are T-men there can be a

T-woman, though I’ve never heard of one. This morning

Leach asked if she was here, and when I told him she

had been and gone he asked if she had been back or

phoned and then switched to Hattie Annis. Why didn’t

he ask what Tammy Baxter had said? Because he knew;

she had reported to him. Also he knew the phone num-

ber of that house. Also Cramer. Why wasn’t he more

interested in my talk with Tammy Baxter only an hour

or so before she was murdered? Because he already

knew about it from Leach.”

“Then she had been posted in that house by the

Secret Service?”

“Sure. A good guess is that they knew someone who

lived there had passed bad money. I doubt if they knew

The Homicide Trinity 177

which one, because if so they know who killed Tammy

Baxter, and I don’t think they would dare not to tell

Cramer—but it’s possible. Their big play isn’t for the

passers, it’s for the plant. Four, one of the four roomers

is it, on account of the knife. It came from that kitchen.

Raymond Dell, Noel Ferris, Paul Hannah, Martha

Kirk. If one or more of them have been crossed off by

alibis that would narrow it. Five, if Hattie Annis is your

client you probably want to speak to Parker, since you

are against leaving a client in the coop. I’ll ring him.”

“I haven’t told you to.”

“Do you tell me not to?”

He tightened his lips. He took a deep breath. “Con-

found you. Call him.”

“Right. But first one more. Six, I see no reason why I

shouldn’t try the package for prints, since it hasn’t

occurred to us that the bills may be phony. I’m assum-

ing that you don’t intend to let loose of your client’s

property unless a court orders you to.”

“Certainly not. But there will be other prints than

yours. Hers.”

“I’ve got hers.”

“You have.”

“Yes, sir. In case.”

“So.” He got off the stool. “So you make the decisions.

Let me know if you wish to confer. Go.”

I went. It isn’t easy to pass down the aisles of those

three rooms without stopping, even in an emergency,

but that time I stopped only once, where a group of

Miltonia roezlis were sporting more than fifty racemes

on four feet of bench. It was the best crop of Miltonias

Wolfe (and Theodore) had ever had. The display is

always harder to believe when snow is dancing on the

sloping glass overhead.

Since it was after office hours I dialed the home

number of Nathaniel Parker, the lawyer, got him, put

him through to Wolfe, and listened in, as I am supposed

to when not told to get off. He was a little doubtful

about springing our client before morning, since they

had had to smash a door to get to her and she wasn’t

178 Rex Stout

talking, but he said he would get on it immediately and

do his best. That done, I went to the safe and got the

wrapping paper and bills.

It was a two-hour job, and I took an hour out for

dinner, so it was after nine o’clock when I finished. It

took so long because (a) wrapping paper is a mean

surface to lift prints from, (b) I had to check and double-

check every print with Hattie’s and mine, and (c) I had

to be darned careful to leave the evidence intact if there

was any there. During the last hour, after dinner, Wolfe

was there at his desk in the only chair he really likes,

reading his current book. Now and then he shot me a

glance, of course hoping that I would announce that we

had him, and his job would be simple. But at a quarter

past nine I swiveled and spoke. “No. Positively. Seven

good prints, twelve fair ones, and fourteen smudges.

The only ones that can be identified are Hattie’s and

mine. Either he never handled it without gloves or he

wiped it.”

I’ll say this for him, he never asks silly questions like

Are you sure, or Have you tried the bills too. He merely

growled, “It was too much to expect.” He picked up his

bookmark, a thin strip of gold that had been given him

by a client in spite of the size of his bill, inserted it, and

put the book down. “What do you suggest?”

Ignoring the sarcasm, I took the bills and wrapping

paper, still handling them with care, and went to the

safe and put them in. “Now,” I said, returning, “it will

take a brain, and you know where one is. I only run

errands. I know you never leave the house on business,

but if you—”

The doorbell rang. I offered myself three to one that

it was Cramer, probably with Leach for company,

stepped to the hall, and flipped the switch for the stoop

light. It had been a bad bet. I stepped back in and told

Wolfe, “All four of them. Dell, Ferris, Hannah, and

Martha Kirk.”

He glared at me. “You invited them?”

“No, sir. It’s a surprise party. People have no consid-

eration. They might at least have phoned.”

The Homicide Trinity 179

“It’s impossible! I’m not ready. I haven’t prepared

my mind.” He ran his fingers through his hair. “It’s

impossible. Bring them in.”

I went to the front and opened the door, and invited

them to enter. Martha Kirk, first in, did not curtsy, and

Raymond Dell didn’t bow. When I turned after shut-

ting the door she was sitting on the bench pulling off her

galoshes and the men were removing their coats.

“Have you written your piece?” Dell demanded.

That had been so long ago, eight whole hours, that for

a second I didn’t get him. “Oh,” I said. “I had forgotten

I was doing one. I got interrupted.”

“We want to see Nero Wolfe,” Martha Kirk said.

“And you.”

“Then you might as well have us together. This way.”

I went to the office door and stood aside, and they filed

in. Wolfe arose, inclined his head an eighth of an inch as

I pronounced each name, and sat. He never shakes

hands with strangers. I was going to put Martha Kirk in

the red leather chair, but Dell beat us to it, so I moved

up a yellow one for her, next to me, and Ferris and

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