Three at Wolfe's Door Read online
Three at Wolfe's Door
Rex Stout
Three at Wolfe's Door Rex Stout Series: Nero Wolfe [33] Published: 1995 Tags: Vintage Mystery
Vintage Mysteryttt
SUMMARY:
Joining Bantam's successful republications of Rex Stout's classic Nero Wolfe novels comes this amazing triple-play, including a deadly dinner party where five femmes fatales come under suspicion; a wandering cabbie with a comely corpse as a passenger; and a rodeo complete with cowboys, cowgirls and a dead millionaire with a fancy lariat for a necktie.
Three at Wolfe's DoorRex StoutSeries: Nero Wolfe [33] Published: 1995 Tags: Vintage Mystery
Vintage Mysteryttt
SUMMARY:
Joining Bantam's successful republications of Rex Stout's classic Nero Wolfe novels comes this amazing triple-play, including a deadly dinner party where five femmes fatales come under suspicion; a wandering cabbie with a comely corpse as a passenger; and a rodeo complete with cowboys, cowgirls and a dead millionaire with a fancy lariat for a necktie.
3 at wolfe's door
^/;
3 at Wolfe's Door
A NERO WOLFE THREESOME
WV^
by REX STOUT
new york The Viking Press
COPYRIGHT � 1960 BY REX STOUT
PUBLISHED IN 1960 BY THE VIKING PRESS, INC. 625 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 2,2, N.Y.
PUBLISHED IN CANADA BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED
"Method Three for Murder" appeared serially
in The Saturday Evening Post. � 1960
The Curtis Publishing Company
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Contents
POISON A LA CARTE 3
METHOD THREE FOR MURDER 61
THE RODEO MURDER 125
uooq spsnofa iv g
POISON A LA CARTE
I slanted my eyes down to meet her big brown ones, which were slanted up. "No," I said, "I'm neither a producer nor an agent. My name's Archie Goodwin, and I'm here because I'm a friend of the cook. My reason for wanting it is purely personal."
"I know," she said, "it's my dimples. Men often swoon."
I shook my head. "It's your earrings. They remind me of a girl I Mice loved in vain. Perha if I get to know you well enough-- who can tell?"
"Not me," she declared. "Let me alone. I'm nervous, and I don'r want to spill the soup. The name is Nora Jaret, without an H, and the number is Stanhope five, six-six-two-one. The earrings were a present from Sir Laurence Olivier. I was sitting on his knee."
I wrote the number down in my notebook, thanked her, and looked around. Most of the collection of attractive young females were gathered in an alcove between two cupboards, but one was over by a table watching Felix stir something in a bowl. Her profile was fine and her hair was the color of corn silk just before it starts to turn. I crossed to her, and when she turned her head I spoke. "Good evening, Miss-Miss?"
"Annis," she said. "Carol Annis."
I wrote it down, and told her my name. "I am not blunt by nature," I said, "but you're busy, or soon will be, and there isn't time to talk, up to it. I was standing watching you, and all of a
4 3 at Wolfe's Door
sudden I had an impulse to ask you for your phone number, and I'm no good at fighting impulses. Now that you're dose up it's even stronger, and I guess we'll have to humor it."
But I may be giving a wrong impression. Actually I had no special hankering that Tuesday evening for new telephone numbers; I was doing it for Fritz. But that could give a wrong impression too, so I'll have to explain.
One day in February, Lewis Hewitt, the milh'onaire and orchid fancier for whom Nero Wolfe had once handled a tough problem, had told Wolfe that the Ten for Aristology wanted Fritz Brenner to cook their annual dinner, to be given as usual on April first, Brillat-Savarin's birthday. When Wolfe said he had never heard of the Ten for Aristology, and Hewitt explained that it was a group of ten men pursuing the ideal of perfection in food and drink, and he was one of them, Wolfe had swiveled to the dictionary on its stand at a corner of his desk, and after consulting it had declared that "aristology" meant the science of dining, and therefore the Ten were witlings, since dining was not a science but an art. After a long argument Hewitt had admitted he was licked and had agreed that the name should be changed, and Wolfe had given him permission to ask Fritz to cook the dinner.
In fact Wolfe was pleased, though of course he wouldn't say so. It took a big slice of his income as a private detective to pay Fritz Brenner, chef and housekeeper in the old brownstone on West 35th Street--about the same as the slice that came to me as his assistant detective and man Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday--not to mention what it took to supply the kitchen with the raw materials of Fritz's productions. Since I am also the bookkeeper, I can certify that for the year 1957 the kitchen and Fritz cost only slightly less than the plant rooms on the roof bulging with orchids. So when Hewitt made it clear that the Ten, though they might be dubs at picking names, were true and trustworthy gourmets, that the dinner would be at the home of Benjamin Schriver, the shipping magnate, who wrote a letter to the Times every year on September first denouncing the use of horseradish on oysters, and that the cook would have a
Poison a la Carte 5
foe hand on the menu and the Ten would furnish whatever he desired, Wolfe pushed a button to summon Fritz. There was a little hitch when Fritz refused to commit himself until he had jeen the Schriver kitchen, but Hewitt settled that by escorting him oat front to his Heron town car and driving him down to Eleventh Street to inspect the kitchen.
That's where I was that Tuesday evening, April first, collecting phone numbers: in the kitchen of the four-story Schriver house oh Eleventh Street west of Fifth Avenue. Wolfe and I had been invited by Schriver, and though Wolfe dislikes eating with strangers and thinks that more than six at table spoils a meal, he knew Fritz's feelings would be hurt if he didn't go; and besides, if he stayed home who would cook his dinner? Even so, he would probably have balked if he had learned of one detail which Fritz and I knew about but had carefully kept from him: that the table was to be served by twelve young women, one for each guest.
When Hewitt had told me that, I had protested that I wouldn't be responsible for Wolfe's conduct when the orgy got under way, that he would certainly stamp out of the house when the girls started to squeal. Good lord, Hewitt said, nothing like that; that wasn't the idea at all. It was merely that the Ten had gone to ancient Greece not only for their name but also for other precedents. Hebe, the goddess of youth, had been cupbearer to the gods, so it was the custom of the Ten for Aristology to be waited en by maidens in appropriate dress. When I asked where they got the maidens he said through a theatrical agency, and added that at that time of year there were always hundreds of young actresses out of a job glad to grab at a chance to make fifty bucks, with a good meal thrown in, by spending an evening carrying food, one plate at a time. Originally they had hired experienced waitresses from an agency, but they had tripped on their stolas.
Wolfe and I had arrived at seven on the dot, and after we had fflet our host and the rest of the Ten, and had sampled oysters and our choice of five white wines, I had made my way to the kitchen to see how Fritz was making out. He was tasting from a pot on the range, with no more sign of fluster than if he had
6 3 at Wolfe's Door
been at home getting dinner for Wolfe and me. Felix and Zoltan, from Rusterman's, were there to help, so I didn't ask if I was needed.
And there were the Hebes, cupbearers to the gods, twelve of them, in their stolas, deep rich purple, flowing garments to their ankles. Very nice. It gave me an idea. Fritz likes to pretend that he has reason to b
elieve that no damsel is safe within a mile of me, which doesn't make sense since you can't tell much about them a mile off, and I thought it would do him good to see me operate at close quarters. Also it was a challenge and an interesting sociological experiment. The first two had been a cinch: one named Fern Faber, so she said, a tall self-made blonde with a wide lazy mouth, and Nora Jaret with the big brown eyes and dimples. Now I was after this Carol Annis with hair like corn silk.
"I have no sense of humor," she said, and turned back to watch Felix stir.
I stuck. "That's a different kind of humor and an impulse like mine isn't funny. It hurts. Maybe I can guess it. Is it Hebe one, oh-ohoh-oh?"
No reply.
"Apparently not. Plato two, three-fourfive-six?"
She said, without turning her head, "It's listed. Gorham eight, three-two^e-seven." Her head jerked to me. "Please?" It jerked back again.
It rather sounded as if she meant please go away, not please ring her as soon as possible, but I wrote it down anyway, for the record, and moved off. The rest of them were still grouped in the Alcove, an�F I crossed over. The deep purple of the stolas was a good contrast for their pretty young faces topped by nine different colors and styles of hairdos. As I came up the chatter stopped and the faces turned to me.
"At ease," I told them. "I have no official standing. I am merely one of the guests, invited because I'm a friend of the cook, and I have a personal problem. I would prefer to discuss it with each of you separately and privately, but since there isn't time for that I am"
oison a la Carte 7
fl know who you are," one declared. "You're a detective and work for Nero Wolfe. You're Archie Goodwin."
She was a redhead with milky skin. "I don't deny it," I told tl^r, "but I'm not here professionally. I don't ask if I've met you feecause if I had I wouldn't have forgot--"
"You haven't met me. I've seen you and I've seen your picture. You like yourself. Don't you?"
'Certainly. I string along with the majority. We'll take a vote. How many of you like yourselves? Raise your hands."
A hand went up with a bare arm shooting out of the purple folds, then two more, then the rest of them, including the red lead.
"Okay," I said, "that's settled. Unanimous. My problem is that I decided to look you over and ask the most absolutely irresistibly beautiful and fascinating one of the bunch for her phone number, and I'm stalled. You are all it. In beauty and fascination you are all far beyond the wildest dreams of any poet, and I'm not a poet. So obviously I'm in a fix. How can I possibly pick on one of you, any one, when--"
"Nuts." It was the redhead. "Me, of course. Peggy Choate. Argyle two, three-three-four-eight. Don't call before noon."
"That's not fair," a throaty voice objected. It came from one who looked a little too old for Hebe, and just a shade too plump.. It went on, "Do I call you Archie?"
"Sure, that's my name."
"All right, Archie, have your eyes examined." She lifted an arm, baring it, to touch the shoulder of one beside her. "We admit we're all beautiful, but we're not in the same class as Helgn lacono., Look at her!"
I was doing so, and I must say that the throaty voice had a point Helen lacono, with deep dark eyes, dark velvet skin, and Wavy silky hair darker than either skin or eyes, was unquestionably rare and special. Her lips were parted enough to show the gleam Or white teeth, but she wasn't laughing. She wasn't reacting at all, which was remarkable for an actress.
"It may be," I conceded, "that I am so dazzled by the collective
8 3 �* WoZfe's Door
radiance that I am blind to the glory of any single star. Perhaps I'm a poet after all, I sound like one. My feeling that I must have the phone numbers of cdl of you is certainly no reflection on Helen lacono. I admit that that will not completely solve the problem, for tomorrow I must face the question which one to call first. If I feel as I do right now I would have to dial all the numbers simultaneously, and that's impossible. I hope to heaven it doesn't end in a stalemate. What if I can never decide which one to call first? What if it drives me mad? Or what if I gradually sink--" I turned to see who was tugging at my sleeve. It was Benjamin Schriver, the host, with a grin on his ruddy round face. He said, "I hate to interrupt your speech, but perhaps you can finish it later. We're ready to sit. Will you join us?"
n
The dining room, on the same floor as the kitchen, three feet or so below street level, would have been too gloomy for my taste if most of the dark wood paneling hadn't been covered with pictures of geese, pheasants, fish, fruit, vegetables, and other assorted edible objects; and also it helped that die tablecloth was white as snow, the wineglasses, seven of them at each place, glistened in the soft light from above, and the polished silver shone. In the center was a low gilt bowl, or maybe gold, two feet long, filled with clusters of Phalaenopsis Aphrodite, donated by Wolfe, cut by him that afternoon from some of his most treasured plants.
As he sat he was scowling at them, but the scowl was not for the orchids; it was for the chair, which, though a little fancy, was perfectly okay for you or me but not for his seventh of a ton. His fundament lapped over at both sides. He erased the scowl when Schriver, at the end of the table, complimented him on the flowers, and Hewitt, across from him, said he had never seen Phalaenopsis better grown, and the others joined in the chorus, all but the aristologist who sat between Wolfe and me. He was a Wall Street character and a well-known theatrical angel named
Poison ft la Carte 9
at Pyle, and was living up to his reputation as an original ig a dinner jacket, with tie to match, which looked black fl you had the light at a certain slant and then you saw that it green. He eyed the orchids with his head cocked and his puckered, and said, "I don't care for flowers with spots I streaks. They're messy."
I thought, but didn't say, Okay, drop dead. If I had known f'.fjlat that was what he was going to do in about three hours I ttight not even have thought it. He got a rise, not from Wolfe or pe, or Schriver or Hewitt, but from three others who thought flowers with spots and streaks were wonderful: Adrian Dart, the Actor who had turned down an offer of a million a week, more or less, from Hollywood; Emil Kreis, Chairman of the Board of Codex Press, book publishers; and Harvey M. Leacraft, corporation lawyer.
Actually, cupbearers was what the Hebes were not. The wines, beginning with the Montrachet with the first course, were poured by Felix; but the girls delivered the food, with different routines for different items. The first course, put on individual plates in the kitchen, with each girl bringing in a plate for her aristologist, was small Hints sprinkled with chopped chives, piled with caviar, and lopped with sour cream--the point, as far as Fritz was concerned, being that he had made the blinis, starting on them at eleven that morning, and also the sour cream, starting on that Sunday evening. Fritz's sour cream is very special, but Vincent Pyle had to get in a crack. After he had downed all of his blinis he remarked, loud enough to carry around the table, "A new idea, putting sand in. Clever. Good for chickens, since they need grit."
The man on my left, Emil Kreis, the publisher, muttered at my ear, "Ignore him. He backed three flops this season."
The girls, who had been coached by Fritz and Felix that afternoon, handled the green turtle soup without a splash. When they tad brought in the soup plates Felix brought the bowl, and each gjd ladled from it as Felix held it by the plate. I asked Pyle cor oiafly, "Any sand?" but he said no, it was delicious, and cleaned it up.
I was relieved when I saw that the girls wouldn't dish the fish--
IO
3 at Wolfe's Door
flounders poached in dry white wine, with a mussel-and-mush room sauce that was one of Fritz's specialties. Felix did the dishing at a side table, and the girls merely carried. With the first taste of the sauce there were murmurs of appreciation, and Adrian Dart, the actor, across from Wolfe, sang out, "Superb!" They were making various noises of satisfaction, and Leacraft, the lawyer, was asking Wolfe if Fritz would be willing to giv
e him the recipe, when Pyle, on my right, made a face and dropped his fork on his plate with a clatter. I thought he was putting on an act, and still thought so when his head drooped and I heard him gnash his teeth, but then his shoulders sagged and he clapped a hand to his mouth, and that seemed to be overdoing it. Two or three of them said something, and he pushed his chair back, got to his feet, said, "You must excuse me, I'm sorry," and headed for the door to the hall. Schriver arose and followed him out. The others exchanged words and glances.
Hewitt said, "A damn shame, but I'm going to finish this," and used his fork. Someone asked if Pyle had a bad heart, and someone else said no. They all resumed with the flounder, and the conversation, but the spirit wasn't the same.
When, at a signal from Felix, the maidens started removing the plates, Lewis Hewitt got up and left the room, came back in a couple of minutes, sat, and raised his voice. "Vincent is in considerable pain, and a doctor has come. There is nothing we can do, and Ben wishes us to proceed. He will rejoin us when--when he can."
'What is it?" someone asked.
Hewitt said the doctor didn't know. Zoltan entered bearing an enormous covered platter, and the Hebes gathered at the side table, and Felix lifted the cover and began serving the roast pheasant, which had been larded with strips of pork soaked for twenty hours in Tokay, and then--but no. What's the use? The annual dinner of the Ten for Aristology was a flop. Since for years I have been eating three meals a day cooked by Fritz Brenner I would like to show my appreciation by getting in print some idea of what he can do in the way of victuals, but it won't do here. Sure, the pheasant was good enough for gods if there*had been any around,
Poison a la Carte
ii
and so was the suckling pig, and the salad, with a dressing which Fritz calls Devil's Rain, and the chestnut croquettes, and the cheese--only the one kind, made in New Jersey by a man named Bill Thompson under Fritz's supervision; and they were all eaten, more or less. But Hewitt left the room three more times and the last time was gone a good ten minutes, and Schriver didn't rejoin the party at all, and while the salad was being served Emil Kreis went out and didn't come back.