Some Buried Caesar by Rex Stout

a question:

“So you don’t know when your brother left the house?

Left here to go to Pratt’s?”

“No.” She stirred a little, and was still again, and re-

peated, “No.”

“That’s a pity. Didn’t he tell you or your mother that he

was going to Pratt’s?”

“So far as I know, he told no one.”

There was an interruption, a knock at the door. I went to

it and took from Pug-nose a tray with three bottles of beer,

felt one and approved of the temperature, and taxied them

across to Wolfe. He, opening and pouring, asked Nancy if

she would have, and she declined with thanks. He drank,

put down the empty glass, and wiped his lips with his hand-

kerchief.

“Now Miss Osgood,” he said in a new tone.” “I have more

questions to ask of you, but this next is probably the most

material of all. When did your brother tell you how and why

he expected to win his bet with Mr. Pratt?”

She stared a second and said, “He didn’t tell me at all.

What makes you think he did?” It sounded straight to me.

“I thought it likely. Your father says that you and your

brother were very close to each other.”

“We were.”

“But he told you nothing of that wager?”

“He didn’t have to tell me he made it, I heard him. He

didn’t tell me how or why he expected to win it.”

“What was discussed as you rode home from Pratt’s yes-

terday?”

“I don’t know. Nothing in particular.”

“Remarkable. The bizarre wager which had just been

made wasn’t mentioned?”

“No. Mr. Bronson was … well, it only takes a couple of

minutes to drive here from Pratt’s—”

“Mr. Bronson was what?”

“Nothing. He was there, that’s all.”

“Is he an old friend of your brother’s?”

“He’s not—no. Not an old friend.”

“But a friend, I presume, since you and your brother

brought him here?”

“Yes.” She clipped it. She was terrible.

“Is he a friend of yours too?”

“No.” She raised her voice a little. “Why should you ask

me about Mr. Bronson?”

“My dear child.” Wolfe compressed his lips. ‘For heaven’s

sake don’t start that. I am a hired instrument of vengeance

…. hired by your father. Nowadays an Erinys wears a coat

and trousers and drinks beer and works for pay, but the

function is unaltered and should still be performed, if at all,

mercilessly. I am going to find out who killed your brother.

A part of the operation is to prick all available facts. I in-

tend to look into Mr. Bronson as well as everyone else un-

lucky enough to be within range. For example, take Miss

Pratt. Did you approve of your brother’s engagement to marry

Miss Caroline Pratt?”

She stared in consternation, opened her mouth, and closed

it.

Wolfe shook his head at her. “I’m not being wily, to dis-

concert you and corner you. I don’t think I need to; you

have made yourself too vulnerable. To give you an idea, here

are some questions I shall expect you to answer: Why, since

you regard Mr. Bronson with loathing, do you permit him

to remain as a guest in this house? I know you loathe him,

because when he happened to brush against you yesterday on

Mr. Pratt’s terrace you drew away as if slime had touched

your dress. Why would you prefer to have the mystery of

your brother’s death unsolved and to leave the onus to the

bull? I know you would, from the relief on your face this

afternoon when your father’s incivility started me to the

door. Why did you tell me that you didn’t see your brother

after dinner last evening? I know it was a lie, because I was

hearing and seeing you when you said it. You see how you

have exposed yourself?”

Nancy was standing up, and the line of her mouth was

thinner than ever. She took a step and said, “My father …

I’ll see if he wants-”

“Nonsense,” Wolfe snapped. “Please sit down. Why do

you think I had your father leave? Shall I send for him? He

intends to leam who murdered his son, and for the moment

all other considerations surrender to that, even his daughter’s

dignity and peace of mind. You won’t get peace of mind by

concealing things, anyway. You must give satisfactory and

complete answers to those questions, and the easiest way is

here, to me, at once.”

“You can’t do this.” She fluttered a hand. Her chin trembled,

and she steadied it. “Really you can’t. You can’t do this.”

She was beauty in distress if I ever saw it, and if the guy

harassing her had been anybody else I would have smacked

him cold and flung her behind my saddle.

Wolfe told her impatiently, “You see how it is. Sit down.

Confound it, do you want to turn it into a brawl, with

your father here too and both of us shouting at you? You’ll

have to tell these things, for we need to know them, whether

they prove useful or not. You can’t bury them. For example,

your dislike for Mr. Bronson. I can pick up that telephone and

call a man in New York named Saul Panzer, an able and in-

dustrious man, and tell him I want to know all he can dis-

cover about Bronson and you and your brother. You see

how silly it would be to force us to spend that time and

money. What about Mr. Bronson? Who is he?”

“If I told you about Bronson—” She stopped to control

her voice. “I can’t. I promised Clyde I wouldn’t.”

“Clyde is dead. Come, Miss Osgood. Well leam it any-

how, I assure you we will. You know that.”

“I suppose … you will.” She sat down abruptly, buried her

face in her hands, and was rigid. Her muffled voice came:

“Clyde! Clyde!”

“Come.” Wolfe was sharp. “Who is Bronson?”

She uncovered her face slowly, and lifted it. “He’s a

crook.”

“A professional? What’s his specialty?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know him. I only met him a few

days ago. I only know what Clyde—”

She stopped, and gazed at Wolfe’s face as if she was

hoping that something would blot it out but knew that nothing

would. “All right,” she said. “I thought I had enough guts,

but apparently I haven’t. What good will it do? What good

will it do you or Dad or anyone to know that Bronson killed

him?”

“Do you know it?”

“Yes.”

“Bronson murdered your brother?”

“Yes.”

“Indeed. Did you see it done?”

“No.”

“What was his motive?”

“I don’t know. It couldn’t have been to get the money,

because Clyde didn’t have it.”

Wolfe leaned back and heaved a sigh. “Well,” he murmured.

“I guess we must have it out. What money would Mr. Bron-

son have wanted to get, and why?”

“Money that Clyde owed him.”

“The amount being, I presume, $10,000. Don’t ask me

how I know that, please. And Bronson was insisting on pay-

ment?”

“Yes. That was why he came up here. It was why Clyde

came, too, to try to get the money from Father. He had to pay

it this week or—” She stopped, and stretched out a hand, and

let it fall again. “Please,” she said, pleading. “Please. That’s

what I promised Clyde I wouldn’t tell.”

“The promise died with him,” Wolfe told her. “Believe

me. Miss Osgood, if you weren’t bewildered by shock and

grief you wouldn’t get values confused like this. Was it money

that Clyde had borrowed from Mr. Bronson?”

“No. It was money that Bronson had paid him.”

“What had he paid it for?”

He pulled it out of her, patiently, in pieces. The gist of the

story was short and not very sweet. Clyde had shot his wad

on Lily Rowan, and had followed it with various other wads,

pried loose from his father, requisitioned from his sister,

borrowed from friends. Then he had invited luck to contribute

to the good cause, by sundry methods from crackaloo to

10-cent bridge, and learned too late that luck’s clock was

slow. At a time when he was in up to his nose, a Mr. Howard

Bronson permitted him to inspect a fistful of real money and

expressed a desire to be introduced into certain circles,

including the two most exclusive bridge clubs in New York;

Clyde, with his family connections, having the entree to

about everything from the aquarium up. But Clyde had

needed the dough not some time tomorrow, but now, and

Bronson had given it to him; whereupon Clyde had mollified

a few debts and slid the rest down his favorite chute, before

dawn. Following a lifelong habit, he had confided in his

sister, and her horror added to his own belated reflections

had shown him that in his desperation he had taken an

order which no Osgood could possibly fill. He had so notified

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