The Greatest Murder Mysteries of S. S. Van Dine - 12 Titles in One Volume (Illustrated Edition). S.S. Van Dine

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The Greatest Murder Mysteries of S. S. Van Dine - 12 Titles in One Volume (Illustrated Edition) - S.S. Van Dine

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about these rich and precious stones that accompanied your tea with Mr. Benson?”

      “Bribes,” she answered; and her contemptuous smile was a more eloquent condemnation of Benson than if she had resorted to the bitterest castigation. “The gentleman sought to turn my head with them. I was offered a string of pearls to wear to dinner; but I declined them. And I was told that, if I saw things in the right light—or some such charming phrase—I could have jewels just like them for my very, very own—perhaps even those identical ones, on the twenty-first.”

      “Of course—the twenty-first,” grinned Vance. “Markham, are you listening? On the twenty-first Leander’s note falls due, and if it’s not paid the jewels are forfeited.”

      He addressed himself again to Miss St. Clair.

      “Did Mr. Benson have the jewels with him at dinner?”

      “Oh, no! I think my refusal of the pearls rather discouraged him.”

      Vance paused, looking at her with ingratiating cordiality.

      “Tell us now, please, of the gun episode—in your own words, as the lawyers say, hoping to entangle you later.”

      But she evidently feared no entanglement.

      “The morning after the murder Captain Leacock came here and said he had gone to Mr. Benson’s house about half past twelve with the intention of shooting him. But he had seen Mr. Pfyfe outside and, assuming he was calling, had given up the idea and gone home. I feared that Mr. Pfyfe had seen him, and I told him it would be safer to bring his pistol to me and to say, if questioned, that he’d lost it in France. . . . You see, I really thought he had shot Mr. Benson and was—well, lying like a gentleman, to spare my feelings. Then, when he took the pistol from me with the purpose of throwing it away altogether, I was even more certain of it.”

      She smiled faintly at Markham.

      “That was why I refused to answer your questions. I wanted you to think that maybe I had done it, so you’d not suspect Captain Leacock.”

      “But he wasn’t lying at all,” said Vance.

      “I know now that he wasn’t. And I should have known it before. He’d never have brought the pistol to me if he’d been guilty.”

      A film came over her eyes.

      “And—poor boy!—he confessed because he thought that I was guilty.”

      “That’s precisely the harrowin’ situation,” nodded Vance. “But where did he think you had obtained a weapon?”

      “I know many army men—friends of his and of Major Benson’s. And last summer at the mountains I did considerable pistol practice for the fun of it. Oh, the idea was reasonable enough.”

      Vance rose and made a courtly bow.

      “You’ve been most gracious—and most helpful,” he said. “Y’ see, Mr. Markham had various theories about the murder. The first, I believe, was that you alone were the Madam Borgia. The second was that you and the Captain did the deed together—à quatre mains, as it were. The third was that the Captain pulled the trigger a cappella. And the legal mind is so exquisitely developed that it can believe in several conflicting theories at the same time. The sad thing about the present case is that Mr. Markham still leans toward the belief that both of you are guilty, individually and collectively. I tried to reason with him before coming here; but I failed. Therefore, I insisted upon his hearing from your own charming lips your story of the affair.”

      He went up to Markham who sat glaring at him with lips compressed.

      “Well, old chap,” he remarked pleasantly, “surely you are not going to persist in your obsession that either Miss St. Clair or Captain Leacock is guilty, what? . . . And won’t you relent and unshackle the Captain as I begged you to?”

      He extended his arms in a theatrical gesture of supplication.

      Markham’s wrath was at the breaking-point, but he got up deliberately and, going to the woman, held out his hand.

      “Miss St. Clair,” he said kindly—and again I was impressed by the bigness of the man—, “I wish to assure you that I have dismissed the idea of your guilt, and also Captain Leacock’s, from what Mr. Vance terms my incredibly rigid and unreceptive mind. . . . I forgive him, however, because he has saved me from doing you a very grave injustice. And I will see that you have your Captain back as soon as the papers can be signed for his release.”

      As we walked out onto Riverside Drive, Markham turned savagely on Vance.

      “So! I was keeping her precious Captain locked up, and you were pleading with me to let him go! You know damned well I didn’t think either one of them was guilty—you—you lounge lizard!”

      Vance sighed.

      “Dear me! Don’t you want to be of any help at all in this case?” he asked sadly.

      “What good did it do you to make an ass of me in front of that woman?” spluttered Markham. “I can’t see that you got anywhere, with all your tomfoolery.”

      “What!” Vance registered utter amazement. “The testimony you’ve heard to-day is going to help immeasurably in convicting the culprit. Furthermore, we now know about the gloves and hand-bag, and who the lady was that called at Benson’s office, and what Miss St. Clair did between twelve and one, and why she dined alone with Alvin, and why she first had tea with him, and how the jewels came to be there, and why the Captain took her his gun and then threw it away, and why he confessed. . . . My word! Doesn’t all this knowledge soothe you? It rids the situation of so much débris.”

      He stopped and lit a cigarette.

      “The really important thing the lady told us was that her friends knew she invariably departed at midnight when she went out of an evening. Don’t overlook or belittle that point, old dear; it’s most pert’nent. I told you long ago that the person who shot Benson knew she was dining with him that night.”

      “You’ll be telling me next you know who killed him,” Markham scoffed.

      Vance sent a ring of smoke circling upward.

      “I’ve known all along who shot the blighter.”

      Markham snorted derisively.

      “Indeed! And when did this revelation burst upon you?”

      “Oh, not more than five minutes after I entered Benson’s house that first morning,” replied Vance.

      “Well, well! Why didn’t you confide in me, and avoid all these trying activities?”

      “Quite impossible,” Vance explained jocularly. “You were not ready to receive my apocryphal knowledge. It was first necess’ry to lead you patiently by the hand out of the various dark forests and morasses into which you insisted upon straying. You’re so dev’lishly unimag’native, don’t y’ know.”

      A taxicab was passing, and he hailed it.

      “Eighty-seven West Forty-eighth Street,” he directed.

      Then

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