It was barely half past eight on that momentous morning of
September the 11th when Markham brought word to us of the
event.
I was living temporarily with Vance at his home in East 38th
Street—a large remodeled apartment occupying the two top floors of
a beautiful mansion. For several years I had been Vance's personal
legal representative and adviser, having resigned from my father's
law firm of Van Dine, Davis, and Van Dine to devote myself to his
needs and interests. His affairs were by no means voluminous, but
his personal finances, together with his numerous purchases of
paintings and objets d'art, occupied my full time without
burdening me. This monetary and legal stewardship was eminently
congenial to my tastes; and my friendship with Vance, which had
dated from our undergraduate days at Harvard, supplied the social
and human element in an arrangement which otherwise might easily
have degenerated into one of mere drab routine.
On this particular morning I had risen early and was working in
the library when Currie, Vance's valet and majordomo, announced
Markham's presence in the living room. I was considerably
astonished at this early morning visit, for Markham well knew that
Vance, who rarely rose before noon, resented any intrusion upon his
matutinal slumbers. And in that moment I received the curious
impression that something unusual and portentous was toward.
I found Markham pacing restlessly up and down, his hat and
gloves thrown carelessly on the center table. As I entered he
halted and looked at me with harassed eyes. He was a moderately
tall man, clean-shaven, gray-haired, and firmly set up. His
appearance was distinguished, and his manner courteous and kindly.
But beneath his gracious exterior there was an aggressive
sternness, an indomitable, grim strength, that gave one the sense
of dogged efficiency and untiring capability.
"Good morning, Van," he greeted me, with impatient
perfunctoriness. "There's been another half-world murder—the worst
and ugliest thus far… ." He hesitated and regarded me searchingly.
"You recall my chat with Vance at the club the other night? There
was something damned prophetic in his remarks. And you remember I
half promised to take him along on the next important case. Well,
the case has broken—with a vengeance. Margaret Odell, whom they
called the Canary, has been strangled in her apartment; and from
what I just got over the phone, it looks like another nightclub
affair. I'm headed for the Odell apartment now… . What about
rousing out the sybarite?"
"By all means," I agreed, with an alacrity which, I fear, was in
large measure prompted by purely selfish motives. The Canary! If
one had sought the city over for a victim whose murder would stir
up excitement, there could have been but few selections better
calculated to produce this result.
Hastening to the door, I summoned Currie and told him to call
Vance at once.
"I'm afraid, sir—" began Currie, politely hesitant.
"Calm your fears," cut in Markham. "I'll take all responsibility
for waking him at this indecent hour."
Currie sensed an emergency and departed.
A minute or two later Vance, in an elaborately embroidered silk
kimono and sandals, appeared at the living room door.
"My word!" he greeted us, in mild astonishment, glancing at the
clock. "Haven't you chaps gone to bed yet?"
He strolled to the mantel and selected a gold-tipped Régie
cigarette from a small Florentine humidor.
Markham's eyes narrowed; he was in no mood for levity.
"The Canary has been murdered," I blurted out.
Vance held his wax vesta poised and gave me a look of indolent
inquisitiveness. "Whose canary?"
"Margaret Odell was found strangled this morning," amended
Markham brusquely. "Even you, wrapped in your scented
cotton-wool, have heard of her. And you can realize the
significance of the crime. I'm personally going to look for those
footprints in the snow; and if you want to come along, as you
intimated the other night, you'll have to get a move on."
Vance crushed out his cigarette.
"Margaret Odell, eh?—Broadway's blond Aspasia—or was it Phryne
who had the coiffure d'or? . . . Most distressin'!"
Despite his offhand manner, I could see he was deeply interested.
"The base enemies of law and order are determined to chivvy you
most horribly, aren't they, old dear? Deuced inconsiderate of
'em! … Excuse me while I seek habiliments suitable to the
occasion."
He disappeared into his bedroom, while Markham took out a large
cigar and resolutely prepared it for smoking, and I returned to the
library to put away the papers on which I had been working.
In less than ten minutes Vance reappeared, dressed for the
street.
"Bien, mon vieux," he announced gaily, as Currie handed
him his hat and gloves and a malacca cane. "Allons-y!"
We rode uptown along Madison Avenue, turned into Central Park,
and came out by the West 72d Street entrance. Margaret Odell's
apartment was at 184 West 71st Street, near Broadway; and as we
drew up to the curb, it was necessary for the patrolman on duty to
make a passage for us through the crowd that had already gathered
as a result of the arrival of the police.
Feathergill, an assistant district attorney, was waiting in the
main hall for his chief's arrival.
"It's too bad, sir," he lamented. "A rotten show all round. And
just at this time! … " He shrugged his shoulders
discouragingly.
"It may collapse quickly," said Markham, shaking the other's
hand. "How are things going? Sergeant Heath phoned me right after
you called, and said that, at first glance, the case looked a bit
stubborn."
"Stubborn?" repeated Feathergill lugubriously. "It's downright
impervious. Heath is spinning round like a turbine. He was called
off the Boyle case, by the way, to devote his talents to this new
shocker. Inspector Moran arrived ten minutes ago and gave him the
official imprimatur."
"Well, Heath's a good man," declared Markham. "We'll work it
out… . Which is the apartment?"
Feathergill led the way to a door at the rear of the main hall.
"Here you are, sir," he announced. "I'll be running along now. I
need sleep. Good luck!" And he was gone.
It will be necessary to give a brief description of the house
and its interior arrangement, for the somewhat peculiar structure
of the building played a vital part in the seemingly insoluble
problem posed by the murder.
The house, which was a four-story stone structure originally
built as a residence, had been remodeled, both inside and outside,
to meet the requirements of an exclusive individual apartment
dwelling. There were, I believe, three or four separate suites on
each floor; but the quarters upstairs need not concern us. The main
floor was the scene of the crime, and here there were three
apartments and a dentist's office.
The main entrance to the building was directly on the street,
and extending straight back from the front door was a wide hallway.
Directly at the rear of this hallway, and facing the entrance, was
the door to the Odell apartment, which bore the numeral "3." About
halfway down the front hall, on the right-hand side, was the
stairway leading to the floors above; and directly beyond the
stairway, also on the right, was a small reception room with a wide
archway instead of a door. Directly opposite to the stairway, in a
small recess, stood the telephone switchboard. There was no
elevator in the house.
Another important feature of this ground-floor plan was a small
passageway at the rear of the main hall and at right angles to it,
which led past the front walls of the Odell apartment to a door
opening on a court at the west side of the building. This court was
connected with the street by an alley four feet wide.
In the accompanying diagram this arrangement of the ground floor
can be easily visualized, and I suggest that the reader fix it in
his mind; for I doubt if ever before so simple and obvious an
architectural design played such an important part in a criminal
mystery. By its very simplicity and almost conventional
familiarity—indeed, by its total lack of any puzzling
complications—it proved so baffling to the investigators that the
case threatened, for many days, to remain forever insoluble.
As Markham entered the Odell apartment that morning Sergeant
Ernest Heath came forward at once and extended his hand. A look of
relief passed over his broad, pugnacious features and it was
obvious that the animosity and rivalry which always exist between
the detective division and the district attorney's office during
the investigation of any criminal case had no place in his attitude
on this occasion.
"I'm glad you've come, sir," he said, and meant it.
He then turned to Vance with a cordial smile, and held out his
hand.
"So the amachoor sleuth is with us again!" His tone held a
friendly banter.
"Oh, quite," murmured Vance. "How's your induction coil working
this beautiful September morning, Sergeant?"
"I'd hate to tell you!" Then Heath's face grew suddenly grave,
and he turned to Markham. "It's a raw deal, sir. Why in hell
couldn't they have picked someone besides the Canary for their
dirty work? There's plenty of Janes on Broadway who coulda faded
from the picture without causing a second alarm; but they gotta go
and bump off the Queen of Sheba!"
As he spoke, William M. Moran, the commanding officer of the
detective bureau, came into the little foyer and performed the
usual handshaking ceremony. Though he had met Vance and me but once
before, and then casually, he remembered us both and addressed us
courteously by name.
"Your arrival," he said to Markham, in a well-bred, modulated
voice, "is very welcome. Sergeant Heath will give you what
preliminary information you want. I'm still pretty much in the dark
myself—only just arrived."
"A lot of information I've got to give," grumbled
Heath, as he led the way into the living room.
Margaret Odell's apartment was a suite of two fairly large rooms
connected by a wide archway draped with heavy damask portieres. The
entrance door from the main hall of the building led into a small
rectangular foyer about eight feet long and four feet deep, with
double Venetian-glass doors opening into the main room beyond.
There was no other entrance to the apartment, and the bedroom could
be reached only through the archway from the living room.
There was a large davenport, covered with brocaded silk, in
front of the fireplace in the left-hand wall of the living room,
with a long narrow library table of inlaid rosewood extending along
its back. On the opposite wall, between the foyer and the archway
into the bedroom, hung a triplicate Marie Antoinette mirror,
beneath which stood a mahogany gate-legged table. On the far side
of the archway, near the large oriel window, was a baby grand
Steinway piano with a beautifully designed and decorated case of
Louis-Seize ornamentation. In the corner to the right of the
fireplace was a spindle-legged escritoire and a square hand-painted
wastepaper basket of vellum. To the left of the fireplace stood one
of the loveliest Boule cabinets I have ever seen. Several excellent
reproductions of Boucher, Fragonard, and Watteau hung about the
walls. The bedroom contained a chest of drawers, a dressing table,
and several gold-leaf chairs. The whole apartment seemed eminently
in keeping with the Canary's fragile and evanescent
personality.
As we stepped from the little foyer into the living room and
stood for a moment looking about, a scene bordering on wreckage met
our eyes. The rooms had apparently been ransacked by someone in a
frenzy of haste, and the disorder of the place was appalling.
"They didn't exactly do the job in dainty fashion," remarked
Inspector Moran.
"I suppose we oughta be grateful they didn't blow the joint up
with dynamite," returned Heath acridly.
But it was not the general disorder that most attracted us. Our
gaze was almost immediately drawn and held by the body of the dead
girl, which rested in an unnatural, semirecumbent attitude in the
corner of the davenport nearest to where we stood. Her head was
turned backward, as if by force, over the silken tufted upholstery;
and her hair had come unfastened and lay beneath her head and over
her bare shoulder like a frozen cataract of liquid gold. Her face,
in violent death, was distorted and unlovely. Her skin was
discolored; her eyes were staring; her mouth was open, and her lips
were drawn back. Her neck, on either side of the thyroid cartilage,
showed ugly dark bruises. She was dressed in a flimsy evening gown
of black Chantilly lace over cream-colored chiffon, and across the
arm of the davenport had been thrown an evening cape of
cloth-of-gold trimmed with ermine.
There were evidences of her ineffectual struggle with the person
who had strangled her. Besides the disheveled condition of her
hair, one of the shoulder straps of her gown had been severed, and
there was a long rent in the fine lace across her breast. A small
corsage of artificial orchids had been torn from her bodice, and
lay crumpled in her lap. One satin slipper had fallen off, and her
right knee was twisted inward on the seat of the davenport, as if
she had sought to lift herself out of the suffocating clutches of
her antagonist. Her fingers were still flexed, no doubt as they had
been at the moment of her capitulation to death, when she had
relinquished her grip upon the murderer's wrists.
The spell of horror cast over us by the sight of the tortured
body was broken by the matter-of-fact tones of Heath.
"You see, Mr. Markham, she was evidently sitting in the corner
of this settee when she was grabbed suddenly from behind."
Markham nodded. "It must have taken a pretty strong man to
strangle her so easily."
"I'll say!" agreed Heath. He bent over and pointed to the girl's
fingers, on which showed several abrasions. "They stripped her
rings off, too; and they didn't go about it gentle, either." Then
he indicated a segment of fine platinum chain, set with tiny
pearls, which hung over one of her shoulders. "And they grabbed
whatever it was hanging around her neck, and broke the chain doing
it. They weren't overlooking anything, or losing any time… . A
swell, gentlemanly job. Nice and refined."
"Where's the medical examiner?" asked Markham.
"He's coming," Heath told him. "You can't get Doc Doremus to go
anywheres without his breakfast."
"He may find something else—something that doesn't show."
"There's plenty showing for me," declared Heath. "Look at this
apartment. It wouldn't be much worse if a Kansas cyclone had struck
it."
We turned from the depressing spectacle of the dead girl and
moved toward the center of the room.
"Be careful not to touch anything, Mr. Markham," warned Heath.
"I've sent for the fingerprint experts—they'll be here any minute
now."
Vance looked up in mock astonishment.
"Fingerprints? You don't say—really! How delightful!—Imagine a
johnnie in this enlightened day leaving his fingerprints for you to
find."
"All crooks aren't clever, Mr. Vance," declared Heath
combatively.
"Oh, dear, no! They'd never be apprehended if they were. But,
after all, Sergeant, even an authentic fingerprint merely means
that the person who made it was dallying around at some time or
other. It doesn't indicate guilt."
"Maybe so," conceded Heath doggedly. "But I'm here to tell you
that if I get any good honest-to-God fingerprints outa this
devastated area, it's not going so easy with the bird that made
'em."
Vance appeared to be shocked. "You positively terrify me,
Sergeant. Henceforth I shall adopt mittens as a permanent addition
to my attire. I'm always handling the furniture and the teacups and
the various knickknacks in the houses where I call, don't y'
know."
Markham interposed himself at this point and suggested they make
a tour of inspection while waiting for the medical examiner.
"They didn't add anything much to the usual methods," Heath
pointed out. "Killed the girl, and then ripped things wide
open."
The two rooms had apparently been thoroughly ransacked. Clothes
and various articles were strewn about the floor. The doors of both
clothes closets (there was one in each room) were open, and to
judge from the chaos in the bedroom closet, it had been hurriedly
searched; although the closet off the living room, which was given
over to the storage of infrequently used items, appeared to have
been ignored. The drawers of the dressing table and chest had been
partly emptied on to the floor, and the bedclothes had been
snatched away and the mattress turned back. Two chairs and a small
occasional table were upset; several vases were broken, as if they
had been searched and then thrown down in the wrath of
disappointment; and the Marie Antoinette mirror had been broken.
The escritoire was open, and its pigeonholes had been emptied in a
jumbled pile upon the blotter. The doors of the Boule cabinet swung
wide, and inside there was the same confusion of contents that
marked the interior of the escritoire. The bronze-and-porcelain
lamp on the end of the library table was lying on its side, its
satin shade torn where it had struck the sharp corner of a silver
bonbonniere.
Two objects in the general disarray particularly attracted my
attention—a black metal document box of the kind purchasable at any
stationery store, and a large jewel case of sheet steel with a
circular inset lock. The latter of these objects was destined to
play a curious and sinister part in the investigation to
follow.
The document box, which was now empty, had been placed on the
library table, next to the overturned lamp. Its lid was thrown
back, and the key was still in the lock. In all the litter and
disorganization of the room, this box seemed to be the one
outstanding indication of calm and orderly activity on the part of
the wrecker.
The jewel case, on the other hand, had been violently wrenched
open. It sat on the dressing table in the bedroom, dented and
twisted out of shape by the terrific leverage that had been
necessary to force it, and beside it lay a brass-handled, cast iron
poker which had evidently been brought from the living room and
used as a makeshift chisel with which to prize open the lock.
Vance had glanced but casually at the different objects in the
rooms as we made our rounds, but when he came to the dressing
table, he paused abruptly. Taking out his monocle, he adjusted it
carefully, and leaned over the broken jewel case.
"Most extr'ordin'ry!" he murmured, tapping the edge of the lid
with his gold pencil. "What do you make of that, Sergeant?"
Heath had been eyeing Vance with narrowed lids as the latter
bent over the dressing table.
"What's in your mind, Mr. Vance?" he, in turn, asked.
"Oh, more than you could ever guess," Vance answered lightly.
"But just at the moment I was toying with the idea that this steel
case was never torn open by that wholly inadequate iron poker,
what?"
Heath nodded his head approvingly. "So you, too, noticed that,
did you? … And you're dead right. That poker might've twisted
the box a little, but it never snapped that lock."
He turned to Inspector Moran.
"That's the puzzler I've sent for 'Prof' Brenner to clean
up—if he can. The jimmying of that jewel case looks to me
like a high-class professional job. No Sunday school superintendent
did it."
Vance continued for a while to study the box, but at length he
turned away with a perplexed frown.
"I say!" he commented. "Something devilish queer took place here
last night."
"Oh, not so queer," Heath amended. "It was a thorough job, all
right, but there's nothing mysterious about it."
Vance polished his monocle and put it away.
"If you go to work on that basis, Sergeant," he returned
carelessly, "I greatly fear you'll run aground on a reef. And may
kind Heaven bring you safe to shore!"