The Philo Vance Megapack. S.S. Van Dine
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Название: The Philo Vance Megapack

Автор: S.S. Van Dine

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9781434443120

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      “I was going to suggest that you could do that better than I could,” Heath rejoined. “We ought to run into something pretty quick that’ll give us a line to go on. And I’ve got an idea that when we locate the lady he took to dinner last night and brought back here, we’ll know a lot more than we do now.”

      “Or a lot less,” murmured Vance.

      Heath looked up quickly and grunted with an air of massive petulance.

      “Let me tell you something, Mr. Vance,” he said, “since I understand you want to learn something about these affairs: when anything goes seriously wrong in this world, it’s pretty safe to look for a woman in the case.”

      “Ah, yes,” smiled Vance. “Cherchez la femme—an aged notion. Even the Romans labored under the superstition. They expressed it with Dux femina facti.”

      “However they expressed it,” retorted Heath, “they had the right idea. And don’t let ’em tell you different.”

      Again Markham diplomatically intervened.

      “That point will be settled very soon, I hope.… And now, Sergeant, if you’ve nothing else to suggest, I’ll be getting along. I told Major Benson I’d see him at lunchtime; and I may have some news for you by tonight.”

      “Right,” assented Heath. “I’m going to stick around here awhile and see if there’s anything I overlooked. I’ll arrange for a guard outside and also for a man inside to keep an eye on the Platz woman. Then I’ll see the reporters and let them in on the disappearing Cadillac and Mr. Vance’s mysterious revolver in the secret drawer. I guess that ought to hold ’em. If I find out anything, I’ll phone you.”

      When he had shaken hands with the district attorney, he turned to Vance. “Good-bye, sir,” he said pleasantly, much to my surprise, and to Markham’s, too, I imagine. “I hope you learned something this morning.”

      “You’d be pos’tively dumfounded, Sergeant, at all I did learn,” Vance answered carelessly.

      Again I noted the look of shrewd scrutiny in Heath’s eyes; but in a second it was gone. “Well, I’m glad of that,” was his perfunctory reply.

      Markham, Vance, and I went out, and the patrolman on duty hailed a taxicab for us.

      “So that’s the way our lofty gendarmerie approaches the mysterious wherefores of criminal enterprise—eh?” mused Vance, as we started on our way across town. “Markham, old dear, how do those robust lads ever succeed in running down a culprit?”

      “You have witnessed only the barest preliminaries,” Markham explained. “There are certain things that must be done as a matter of routine—ex abundantia cautelae, as we lawyers say.”

      “But, my word!—such technique!” sighed Vance. “Ah, well, quantum est in rubus inane! as we laymen say.”

      “You don’t think much of Heath’s capacity, I know”—Markham’s voice was patient—“but he’s a clever man and one that it’s very easy to underestimate.”

      “I daresay,” murmured Vance. “Anyway, I’m deuced grateful to you, and all that, for letting me behold the solemn proceedings. I’ve been vastly amused, even if not uplifted. Your official Aesculapius rather appealed to me, y’ know—such a brisk, unemotional chap, and utterly unimpressed with the corpse. He really should have taken up crime in a serious way, instead of studying medicine.”

      Markham lapsed into gloomy silence and sat looking out of the window in troubled meditation until we reached Vance’s house.

      “I don’t like the looks of things,” he remarked, as we drew up to the curb. “I have a curious feeling about this case.”

      Vance regarded him a moment from the corner of his eye. “See here, Markham,” he said with unwonted seriousness; “haven’t you any idea who shot Benson?”

      Markham forced a faint smile, “I wish I had. Crimes of willful murder are not so easily solved. And this case strikes me as a particularly complex one.”

      “Fancy, now!” said Vance, as he stepped out of the machine. “And I thought it extr’ordin’rily simple.”

      CHAPTER 5

      GATHERING INFORMATION

      (Saturday, June 15; forenoon.)

      You will remember the sensation caused by Alvin Benson’s murder. It was one of those crimes that appeal irresistibly to the popular imagination. Mystery is the basis of all romance, and about the Benson case there hung an impenetrable aura of mystery. It was many days before any definite light was shed on the circumstances surrounding the shooting; but numerous ignes fatui arose to beguile the public’s imagination, and wild speculations were heard on all sides.

      Alvin Benson, while not a romantic figure in any respect, had been well known; and his personality had been a colorful and spectacular one. He had been a member of New York’s wealthy bohemian social set—an avid sportsman, a rash gambler, and professional man-about-town; and his life, led on the borderland of the demimonde, had contained many highlights. His exploits in the nightclubs and cabarets had long supplied the subject matter for exaggerated stories and comments in the various local papers and magazines which batten on Broadway’s scandalmongers.

      Benson and his brother, Anthony, had, at the time of the former’s sudden death, been running a brokerage office at 21 Wall Street, under the name of Benson and Benson. Both were regarded by the other brokers of the Street as shrewd businessmen, though perhaps a shade unethical when gauged by the constitution and bylaws of the New York Stock Exchange. They were markedly contrasted as to temperament and taste and saw little of each other outside the office. Alvin Benson devoted his entire leisure to pleasure-seeking and was a regular patron of the city’s leading cafés; whereas Anthony Benson, who was the older and had served as a major in the late war, followed a sedate and conventional existence, spending most of his evenings quietly at his clubs. Both, however, were popular in their respective circles, and between them they had built up a large clientele.

      In all the news stories the gray Cadillac and the pearl-handled Smith and Wesson were featured. There were pictures of Cadillac cars, “touched up” and reconstructed to accord with Patrolman McLaughlin’s description, some of them even showing the fishing tackle protruding from the tonneau. A photograph of Benson’s center table had been taken, with the secret drawer enlarged and reproduced in an “inset.” One Sunday magazine went so far as to hire an expert cabinetmaker to write a dissertation on secret compartments in furniture.

      The Benson case from the outset had proved a trying and difficult one from the police standpoint. Within an hour of the time that Vance and СКАЧАТЬ