Homicide Trinity by Rex Stout

It was a little odd, the four suspects coming uninvited

to empty the bag and being told to go almost before

they got started. Noel Ferris, his lip twisted, got up and

The Homicide Trinity 189

headed for the hall. Martha Kirk, getting no satisfaction

from Wolfe, appealed to me: didn’t I realize that Hattie

had been arrested for a murder she didn’t commit? Paul

Hannah sat and listened to us, chewing his lip, then got

up and touched her arm and said they might as well go.

Raymond Dell stood, lowered his chin, gazed at Wolfe

half a minute, registering indignation, wheeled, and

marched out. (Exit Dell, center.) I followed Martha and

Hannah to the hall, but she preferred to put on her

galoshes herself. When I opened the door for them a

few snowflakes danced in.

Back in the office, Wolfe was sitting again, leaning

back with his eyes closed. I asked if he wanted beer, got

a nod, and went to the kitchen and brought a bottle and

glass, and a glass of milk for me. He opened his eyes,

took in a bushel of air through his nose and let it out

through his mouth, straightened up, picked up the bot-

tle, and poured.

He spoke. “Saul and Fred and Orrie. At eight in the

morning in my room.”

My brows went up. Saul Panzer is the best operative

south of the North Pole. His rate is ten dollars an hour

and he is worth twenty. Fred Durkin’s rate is seven

dollars and he is worth seven-fifty. Orrie Gather’s rate

is also seven dollars and he is worth six-fifty.

“Oh.” I took a sip of milk. “Then you did get an

inkling?”

“I got a conclusion: that it would be futile to go on

pecking at them. Mr. Leach has been on their flanks for

three weeks, and now Mr. Cramer’s army has them

under siege. My only chance of priority is to surprise

him from the rear.”

The foam was down to the rim of his glass, and he

lifted it and drank, a healthy gulp. “It’s a forlorn chance,

certainly, but it’s worth trying for want of a better. I am

not familiar with the procedures of counterfeiters, but

it seems unlikely that an underling would be entrusted

with five hundred twenty-dollar bills. Ten thousand

dollars. We know he had that large supply; and that

permits the conjecture that his connection may be not

190 Rex Stout

with a mere go-between, but with the source. If so, the

quickest way to settle it would be to locate the source.”

“Yeah. It’s barely possible that Leach has had that

idea.”

“No doubt. I assume that when Miss Baxter took a

room in that house her primary mission was to search

the premises for counterfeiting equipment. Obviously

she found none. I also assume that, as you suggested, it

was known that one of the inhabitants of that house had

passed counterfeit money, but it was not known which

one, and they were all under surveillance—by Miss

Baxter in the house and by others outside. And if I were

a Secret Service agent assigned to keep an eye on

Raymond Dell I would suppose that any meeting he had

with a supplier of contraband would be clandestine.

That is how my mind would work. The first day I

followed him to an East Side tenement I would of

course make inquiries, with due caution, but when he

went there five days a week and I learned from Miss

Baxter what he did there, my attention would be di-

verted. But I am not a Secret Service agent. My atten-

tion is drawn to that tenement house, and specifically to

Max Eder, a painter. An artist. I shall send Orrie

Gather there tomorrow morning to reconnoiter. Fred

Durkin will go to the shop on First Avenue—by the

way, I want its address. Harry’s Zoo.” He made a face.

“Saul Panzer will go to the Mushroom Theater. As I

said, it’s a forlorn chance, but what better can we do

with tomorrow? Unless you have a suggestion?”

“I have,” I said emphatically. “I respectfully suggest

that you start thinking up something for day after

tomorrow.”

He grunted. He picked up his glass, took a gulp of

beer, swallowed it, licked his lips, and put the glass

down. “‘Forlorn’ was too strong a word,” he said. “I

have an expectation that is not wholly unreasonable.

Twelve hours of the time of those three men plus ex-

penses comes to more than three hundred dollars. I

don’t hazard that amount, even of a client’s money, on a

pig in a poke.”

The Homicide Trinity 191

“Then you did get an inkling.”

“Certainly.”

“Fine. I hope it’s not counterfeit.” I swiveled and got

the phone and dialed Saul Panzer’s number.

Chapter 7

I was there at the beginning of the briefing session in

Wolfe’s bedroom at eight o’clock Tuesday morning,

but when the phone interrupted us a second time

Wolfe told me to go down to the office and take it there.

The first time it was a Times reporter wanting to speak

with Wolfe, and when I told him Wolfe was busy and

would I do, he said no and hung up. The second call,

which I took in the office, was from Lon Cohen of the

Gazette, who preferred me to Wolfe any day. He

wanted to know when he could send a photographer to

take a picture of the dirt Wolfe was going to feed the

cops. Evidently one of the two who had carried Hattie

out knew a newspaperman. Lon had other questions,

naturally, but I told him the answers would have to

wait until I found out what they were.

I was considering whether to rejoin the briefing ses-

sion when the phone rang again. It was Nathaniel

Parker. He was sorry he hadn’t been able to spring our

client, but it had taken him three hours to find out

where she was, and he hadn’t got to see her until

midnight. He expected to have her out by noon.

At nine o’clock the trio came down. One of the rea-

sons they are better than most is that none of them

looks it. Saul Panzer, under-sized and wiry, with a big

nose, could be a hackie. Fred Durkin, broad and burly

and bald, could be a piano mover. Orrie Gather, tall and

trim and dressy, could be an automobile salesman. They

stepped into the office, and Saul said they had been told

192 Rex Stout

to take three hundred dollars apiece in used bills. I said

as I went to open the safe that even with inflation and

even with janitors promoted to building superinten-

dents, fifty bucks was the top price for one, and they

would please return the change. Orrie said that if they

had to buy clerks and elevator men and neighbors there

wouldn’t be any change. Saul said they would each give

me a ring every couple of hours or so.

When they had gone I went on with the morning

chores—opening the mail, dusting the desks, filing the

cards of propagation and performance records which

Theodore puts on my desk every evening. That was

just for my hands and eyes; my mind was busy with

something else. Of all the things I do to earn my pay,

from sharpening pencils to jumping a visitor before he

can get his gun up, the most important is riding Wolfe,

and he knows it. Sometimes it’s next to impossible to

tell whether he’s working or only pretending to. That

was the question that morning. If he was only stalling, if

he had sent for Saul and Fred and Orrie just to keep

from starting his brain going, the thing for me to do was

to go up to the plant rooms and go to work on him. It

was the same old problem, and the trouble was that

that time I would have nothing to say when he nar-

rowed his eyes at me, as he would, and inquired coldly,

“What would you suggest?”

That was what my mind was on, and was still on when

the doorbell rang a little after ten o’clock and I went to

the hall for a look. It was Albert Leach, with his snap-

brim hat down even closer to his ears than yesterday. I

went and opened the door.

“Good morning,” he said, and slipped his hand inside

his overcoat.

I supposed he was producing his credentials. “Don’t

bother,” I said, “I recognize you.”

But it wasn’t credentials. His name came out with a

folded paper. Extending it, he said, “Order of the Fed-

eral District Court.”

I took it, unfolded it, and read. I read it through. “You

know,” I said, “this is a new experience. I can’t remem-

The Homicide Trinity 193

ber that we have ever been served with an order from a

Federal court. Mr. Wolfe will be glad to add it to his

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