Homicide Trinity by Rex Stout

question is, what are you here for? To oblige a friend or

parade your conceit?”

“I’m here because of what Hattie said to Martha and

I wanted to hear what you had to say. And you asked if

I’ve paid my room rent, for God’s sake. All right, I have.

I’ve been there four months and I’ve paid every week.

That proves something?”

“Obviously. That you are not a pauper. You have an

income?”

“No. I have money that I saved.”

“So. That point is covered.” Wolfe’s eyes went to

Martha. “Now, Miss Kirk, for what you have told the

police—at least one detail. Your movements this mom-

ing, say from ten-thirty until one o’clock. Where were

you?”

“I was in my room,” she said, “until about a quarter

after twelve. The police wanted to know exactly, but I

couldn’t tell them. I got in late last night, and I always

do exercises for an hour when I get up. About a quarter

after twelve I went down to the kitchen. There were no

oranges and I went out and got some. I wasn’t gone

more than ten minutes. I was cooking bacon and eggs

when Mr. Dell came in, and Hattie with Mr. Goodwin,

and Hattie said he was going to do a piece for a maga-

zine, and they went—”

“That’s far enough. Which room is yours?”

“The third floor front, above Hattie’s.”

“And the others? Their rooms?”

The Homicide Trinity 185

“Ray’s is the second floor rear—Raymond Dell’s. The

rear room on my floor, the third, is Tammy Baxter’s.

The one above mine, on the fourth floor, is Noel Fer-

ris’s, and the rear one on that floor is Paul Hannah’s.”

“Did you see any of them this morning?”

“No. Not until Ray came to the kitchen, and that was

afternoon.”

“Did you hear any of them moving or speaking?”

“No.”

“Not even Mr. Ferris in the room above you?”

“No. I suppose he was up and gone before I woke up.”

“Did you hear or see anything at all that might be of

significance?”

She shook her head. “The police thought I must have,

when I was in the kitchen, but I didn’t.”

Wolfe’s head went left, to Raymond Dell in the red

leather chair. “Mr. Dell. I know you came downstairs

when Miss Annis entered the house with Mr. Goodwin

shortly after one o’clock. Before that?”

“Nothing,” Dell rumbled.

“Nothing?”

“Nothing. That was when I left my room for the first

time. Until then I had seen no one, heard nothing, and

seen nothing. I had been asleep.”

“Then how did you know there were no oranges?”

Dell’s chin jerked up. “What’s that? Oh.” He ges-

tured. “That man Goodwin. I knew because there had

been none when I went down for some in the early

hours—the late hours. I don’t sleep at night; I read. I

was reading Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, and when I fin-

ished it, at five o’clock perhaps, or six, I wanted or-

anges. I always do around that hour. Finding none, I

returned to my room and finally dozed.”

“So that was customary? You rarely stir before

twelve?”

“I never do.”

“And at night you read. How do you spend your

afternoons?”

Dell frowned. “Could that conceivably apply?”

“Yes. Conceivably.”

186 Rex Stout

“I want to be present when you apply it. That would

be a revelation worthy of the Cumaean sybil. I baby-

sit ”

“You what?”

“The current abhorrent term is ‘baby-sit.’ I have a

friend who is a painter, by name Max Eder, who lives in

an East Side tenement. His wife is dead. He has a son

and daughter aged three and four, and five days a week

I am their keeper for five hours, fi-om two till seven. For

a stipend. Mondays and Tuesdays I am free to roam the

market if I am so inclined. You frown. To offer my

talents in television dens. I am so inclined only by

necessity.”

“What is Mr. Elder’s address?”

Dell shrugged, an actor’s shrug. “This approaches

lunacy. However, it’s in the phone book. Three-

fourteen Mission Street.”

“How long have you been—uh—performing this ser-

vice for him?”

“Something over a year.”

Wolfe left him. “Mr. Hannah. Since I am now merely

asking for what you have already told the police, your

whereabouts today from ten-thirty to one, I hope you

won’t be provoked.”

“You do like hell,” Hannah blurted. “Parading my

conceit, huh? I’m sticking only because I told Martha I

would. I left the house a little after nine o’clock and

spent a couple of hours around the West Side docks, and

then I took a bus downtown and got to the Mushroom

Theater a little before twelve. We start rehearsal at

noon. Around two o’clock a man came and flashed a

badge and said I was wanted for questioning and took

me to Forty-seventh Street.”

“What were you doing around the docks?”

“I was looking and listening. In the play we’re doing,

Do As Thou Wilt, I’m a longshoreman, and I want to get

it right.”

“Where is the Mushroom Theater?”

“Bowie Street. Near Houston Street.”

“Do you have a leading role in the play?”

The Homicide Trinity 187

“No. Not leading.”

“How many lines have you?”

“Not many. It’s not a big part. I’m young and I’m

learning.”

“How long have you been rehearsing?”

“About a month.”

“Have you appeared at that theater before?”

“Once, last fall. I had a walk-on in The Pleasure Is

Mine.”

“How long did it run?”

“Six weeks. Pretty good for off-Broadway.”

“Do you favor any particular spot when you visit the

docks?”

“No. I just move around and look and listen.”

“Do you do that every day?”

“Hell, no.”

“How many times in the past month?”

“Only once before today. A couple of times when I got

the part, in November.”

I was thinking that at least he had one of the basic

qualifications for an actor. He was ready and willing to

answer any and all questions about his career, with or

without a dare, whether they applied or not. If Wolfe

thought it would help to have the plot of Do As Thou

Wilt described in detail all he had to do was ask.

But apparently he didn’t need it. His head moved.

“And you, Mr. Fen-is?”

“I’m feeling a lot better,” Noel Ferris said. “When

the questions they asked made me realize that I was

actually suspected of murder, and I also realized that I

had no alibi, it looked pretty dark. Believe me. What if

the others had all been somewhere else and could prove

it? So I thank you, Mr. Wolfe. I feel a lot better. As for

me, I left the house a little after ten and called at four

agencies. Two of them would remember I was there,

but probably not the exact time. When I got hungry I

went back to the house to eat. I can’t afford five-dollar

lunches, and I can’t eat eighty-cent ones. When I entered

the house a man was at the phone telling someone that

188 Rex Stout

Tammy Baxter had been murdered and her body was in

the parlor.”

“What kind of agencies?”

“Casting. Theater and television.”

“Do you visit them daily?”

“No. About twice a week.”

“And the other five days? How do you pass the

time?”

“I don’t. It passes me. Two days, sometimes three, I

make horses and kangaroos and other animals. I go to a

workroom and model them and make molds. Something

on the order of Cellini. I get eight dollars for a squirrel.

Twenty for a giraffe.”

“Where is the workroom?”

“In the rear of a shop on First Avenue. The name of

the shop is Harry’s Zoo. The name of the owner is

Harry Arkazy. He has a sixteen-year-old daughter

as beautiful as a rosy dawn, but she lisps. Her name is

Ilonka. His son’s name—”

“This is not a comedy, Mr. Ferris,” Wolfe snapped.

He twisted his neck to look at the wall clock. “I engaged

to act for Miss Annis only five hours ago and I haven’t

arranged my mind, so my questions may be at random,

but they are not frivolous.” His eyes moved to take

them in. “Now that I have seen you and heard you I am

better prepared, and I can consider how to proceed. I

will leave it to Miss Annis to thank you—three of you—

for coming.” He arose. “I expect to see you again.”

Martha was gawking at him. “But Hattie said to tell

you everything we told the cops!”

He nodded. “I know. It would take all night. I’ll go to

that extreme only by compulsion; and if you told them

anything indicative they are hours ahead of me and I

would only breathe their dust.”

Dell boomed. “You call this investigating a murder?

Asking me if I had paid my room rent and how I spend

my afternoons?”

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