The Commissioner says we’ve got to find out damned quick or it’s possible we’ll have a first-rate mess on our hands.
It’s already been bungled a little.
Like a dumb flatfoot rookie, Captain Devore went to see the Marquis of Clivers this evening without first consulting headquarters.”
“Indeed.
Will you have some beer, Mr. Cramer?”
“No.
The marquis just stared at Devore as if he was one of the lower animals, which he was, and said that possibly the dead man was an insurance salesman and the paper was a list of prospects.
Later on the Commissioner himself telephoned the marquis, and by that time the marquis had remembered that a week ago today a woman by the name of Clara Fox had called on him with some kind of a wild tale, trying to get money, and he had had her put out.
So there’s a tie-up.
It’s some kind of a plot, no doubt about it, and since it’s interesting enough so that someone took the trouble to bump off this Harlan Scovil, you couldn’t call it tiddly-winks.
Your name was on that paper.
I know what you told Foltz.
Okay.
What I’ve got to do is find those other three, and I should have been in bed two hours ago.
First let me ask you a plain straight question: What do you know about the connection between Clara Fox, Hilda Lindquist, Michael Walsh, and the Marquis of Clivers?”
Wolfe shook his head, slowly.
“That won’t do, Mr. Cramer.”
“It’ll do me.
Will you answer it?” Cramer stuck his cigar in his mouth and tilted it up.
Wolfe shook his head again.
“Certainly not. Permit me, please.
Let us frame the question differently, like this: What have I been told regarding the relations between those four people which would either solve the problem of the murder of Harlan Scovil, or would threaten the personal safety of the Marquis of Clivers or subject him to undeserved or illegal annoyance?
Will you accept that as your question?”
Cramer scowled at him.
“Say it again.’
Wolte repeated it.
Cramer said,
“Well … answer it.”
“The answer is, nothing.”
“Huh? Bellywash.
I’m asking you, Wolfe—” Wolfe’s palm stopped him, and Wolfe’s tone was snappy.
“No more.
I’ve finished with that.
I admit your right to call on me, as a citizen enjoying the opportunities and privileges of the City of New York, not to hinder—even to some extent assist—your efforts to defend a distinguished foreign guest against jeopardy and improper molestation.
Also your efforts to solve a murder.
But here are two facts for you.
First, it is possible that your two worthy enterprises will prove to be incompatible.
Second, as far as I am concerned, for the present at least, that question and answer are final.
You may have other questions that I may be disposed to reply to.
Shall we try?”
Cramer, chewing his cigar, looked at him.
“You know something, Wolfe?
Someday you’re going to fall off and get hurt.”
“You said those very words to me, in this room, eight years ago.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised if I did.” Cramer put his dead half-chewed cigar in the ash tray, took out a fresh one, and sat back. “Here’s a question.
What do you mean about incompatible?
I suppose it was the Marquis of Clivers that pumped the lead in Harlan Scovil.
There’s a thought.”
“I’ve already had it.
It might very well have been.