Classic Audiobook Collection - Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells ~ Full Audiobook [romance]
Episode Date: September 14, 2023Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells audiobook. Genre: romance Narrated in the first person by Raymond Sturgis, Anne's old high-school beau, the story opens with a lavish house party hosted by the Van W...ycks. David Van Wyck has suddenly decided to become a philanthropist and proposes to give away his entire fortune to the building of a new library in the community, thus leaving his family penniless. The morning following his late meeting with the library committee, David is found dead in his locked study. The Van Wyck pearls are missing as is the deed giving away the fortune. But is it murder or suicide? A detective is hired but when he fails to solve the mystery Fleming Stone is called in to wrap things up. The characters are diverse & interesting, not to mention that a few of the men are extremely anxious to become Anne's next husband For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:34:46) Chapter 02 (01:11:56) Chapter 03 (01:49:58) Chapter 04 (02:28:16) Chapter 05 (03:01:31) Chapter 06 (03:39:10) Chapter 07 (04:18:00) Chapter 08 (05:04:02) Chapter 09 (05:42:41) Chapter 10 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells
1. Buttonwood Terrace
The letter I had just read was signed Anne Mansfield Van Wick,
and the first two names gave my memory such a Philip that I sat for a long time, motionless,
while my thoughts raised back ten years and reached their goal in a little suburban town.
The picture which memory so obligingly showed me in definite detail
was that of two young people saying goodbye, somewhat a few few years.
one of these was an immature version of my present self and the other was a pigtailed schoolgirl who now signed herself anne mansfield van wick at the time of that dramatic parting she had been anne mansfield and i raymond sturgis was leaving her to go to college
our farewell promises though made in all good faith were never fulfilled and the barrier of circumstances that time raised between us had kept us from sight of each other for ten years
i assumed when i thought of it at all that anne had forgotten me and though i had not forgotten her i remembered her only casually and at long intervals i had heard of her marriage to david van wick without poignant regret but with a feeling of resentment that she should throw herself away on a man so old and eccentric
though a well-known capitalist.
And now, all unexpectedly, I had received an invitation to one of her house parties.
It expressed pleasantly enough a desire to renew our old-time acquaintance and asked me to come on
Friday for the weekend.
The stationery was correct and rather elegant, the handwriting, fashionable and sophisticated,
not at all like the sprawling schoolgirl hand of ten years ago.
My curiosity was roused to know what Anne would be like as Mrs. Van Wick.
and I accepted the invitation with a pleased sense of regaining an old friend.
As my train swayed swiftly through New England,
toward the village of Crescent Falls,
where the Van Wicks had their summer residence,
I tried to picture to myself the pretty little Anne Mansfield
that I had known as the Chate-Elein of a great estate,
with an elderly husband and two grown-up stepchildren.
The picture was so incongruous that I gave it up
and awaited first impressions with unbiased opinions.
And I may well have done so,
for though I knew of his wealth,
I knew nothing of the taste and judgment
that had led David Van Wick
to select for his summer home
a most beautiful country estate,
whose century-old mansion
was surrounded by equally old buttonwood trees,
a species rapidly growing extinct in New England.
The motor-car which brought me from the station
swung into the broad avenue that led to the house,
and I marveled that such a home
could have been found in America.
For it was like an English park.
The green lawns rolling off in velvet
sweeps toward the distances of woodland, which betokened flowery dells and picturesque ravines.
No one had met me at the railroad station, save the chauffeur and footmen, so I assumed that
the Van Wick household was conducted on formal lines. I held my mind open for informing impressions,
and suddenly rounding a curve we came within sight of the house. I knew the Van Wick home was called
Buttonwood Terrace, but when I saw it, I felt a whimsical impulse to call it all gall, for it was so
definitely divided into three parts.
The enormous rectangle that had originally formed the main dwelling
had later received the addition of two also rectangular wings.
But these were not attached in the usual fashion.
They were jauntily caught by their corners to the two rear corners of the main house.
These lapping walls impinged but a few feet or just enough for communicating doors.
Thus, the wings, with the back or southern side of the house,
formed three sides of a delightful terrace,
from which marble steps and grassy paths
led to formal gardens beyond,
where one could wander among fountains, statues,
and rare and beautiful plants.
The West Wing held the many kitchens
and other servants' quarters,
and the East Wing,
a judge from its long, almost church-like windows,
was a great hall of some sort.
For some reason, the car circled the house
before pausing at the front entrance,
and, enthralled by the beauty and wonder of the place,
I was ready to forgive Anne Mansfield
her much-criticized marriage.
The door was opened to me
by an obsequious personage in livery,
and I was at once shown to my room.
This was on the second floor
at the front of the house and on the east side.
It was a marvel of good taste
and comfortable, even luxurious appointments,
but I scarcely noticed it
as I caught sight of the view from my windows.
The Berkshire Hills rolled above
and beyond one another
in what seemed a very riot of mountain
glee. The spring green had appeared early, and the tender verger of the young leaves
contrasted with the deep greens and purples of the mountain forests. It was nearly sunset,
and a red-gold glow added a theatrical effect to the glorious landscape. I leaned out of my
east window and glanced toward the back of the house. I saw again that Great East wing,
so peculiarly attached to the corner of the main dwelling, and concluded it had been built later.
had almost the appearance of a chapel, for the long windows were of stained glass with
arched tops and ornate casings. The fact that these windows reached from the roof nearly to the
ground proved the wing apartment to be a lofty one, fully the height of two ordinary stories.
So interested in the matter was I, that I asked the man who was unpacking my things if the
East Wing might be a chapel. No, sir, he answered. It's Mr. Van Wick's study. He volunteered. He
volunteered the further information that tea was now being served there and that I was to go down as
soon as I was ready. Shortly after, I followed my guide through the halls and rooms of the
enormous house. Drawing rooms and reception rooms were furnished with quiet elegance, and the
heavy hangings, though, of brocades and tapestries, were never obtrusive in coloring or design.
Through the halls we went, until we reached the doorway that formed the sole connection between the
main house and the East Wing.
Here, after a murmured announcement of my name, the servant left me and I found myself in the study
of David Van Wick.
I think I have never seen a more impressive room than this study at Buttonwood Terrace.
Its domed ceiling of lead and glass was perhaps thirty feet high, but so large was the room
and so graceful its lines that the architecture gave the effect of perfect proportion.
The walls were paneled between the stained glass.
windows, and at the west end of the room was a small balcony, like a musician's gallery,
reached by a spiral staircase. At the same end of the room under the balcony and opening on the terrace
were large double doors, and there was no other entrance save the single door that connected
with the main house through the lapped corners. There were perhaps a dozen people present, and though
of course I recognized my hostess, I went to greet her with a face that I am sure showed an
expression of incredulity.
Anne Van Wick laughed outright.
It's really I, she said.
You seem unable to believe it.
But even before I could reply, she turned to welcome another newcomer,
and I stood alone a moment, waiting for her to turn back to me.
The scene was a picturesque one.
The contrast of the modern garbed society people,
their light laughter and gay chatter,
with the dignity and grandeur of the old room and its antique furnishings
made an interesting picture.
Everywhere the eye rested on carvings and tapestries
worthy of a baronial hall,
and yet the gay occupation of afternoon tea
seemed not amiss in this setting.
It was late in May,
and though the great doors stood open to the terrace,
the blaze of an open fire was not ungrateful.
My hostess did not herself presided the tea-table,
but left that to her stepdaughter Barbara,
while she graciously dispensed charming smiles
of greeting or farewell to the guest who came or went.
after a few moments came a lull in her duties and with a fascinating smile she invited me to sit beside her and talk over old times remembering our schoolmate days may i call you anne i asked taking my place by her on a divan
i suppose i really oughtn't to allow it but it is pleasant to feel you are an old friend she smiled it is though a bit hard to realize that the little school girl i used to know is now mistress of all this grandeur
"'It is a fine old place, isn't it?' she returned, evading the personal equation.
And, perhaps because of its picturesque possibilities, I pride myself on my house parties.
I adore having guests, and I invite them with an eye to their fitting into this environment.
"'Thank you for the implied compliment,' I murmured, but I brought back my gaze from my surroundings
to look more attentively at Anne's face.
It seemed to me I had caught a plaintive note in her voice, and I looked for a correspondence,
expression in her eyes. But she dropped her long lashes after a swift glance that was a little
roguish, a little wistful, and entirely fascinating. Suddenly, I wondered if she were happy.
My vague impression of her husband was that he was tyrannical and possibly cruel. I felt
intuitively that Anne's lightheartedness was assumed and covered a disappointed life.
But meantime, she was chatting on gaily. Yes, she declared, I select my
house parties with the utmost care. I have an exactly proper
admixture of married people and unmarried, of serious-minded and frivolous,
of geniuses and featherheads. In which class am I? I asked
more for the sake of making her look at me than for a desire for information.
It's so long since we last met that I shall have to study you a bit before I can
classify you. But please be as frivolous as you can, for I want you to offset a very
serious guest.
I know, I said, following Anne's glance
across the room, the long girl in pale green.
I shall have to be a veritable buffoon
to average up with that serious-minded siren.
She looks like a study of a wailing soul.
Yes, isn't she burn Jonesy?
That's Beth Fordy, and she's the dearest thing in the world,
but she has a sort of aesthetic pose
and goes in a little for the occult and such ridiculous things.
But you'll like her, for she's a dear when she forgets her fat.
Does she ever forget it?
Yes, when she's thinking of clothes.
Indeed, sometimes I think she prefers clothes to soulfulness,
but she's terribly devoted to both.
She certainly makes a success of her raiment,
I observed looking at the long, sweeping lines of Miss Fordyce's misty green draperies.
I suppose it was only a touch of the eternal feminine,
but Anne seemed to resent my compliment to the gleeve.
green gown and quickly turned the subject.
The frizzy blonde lady next her is Mrs. Stelton, she went on.
She's a young widow who's terribly in love with Morland, my stepson.
To tell the truth, I invited her because I want him to find out that he really doesn't
care for her after all.
Then Barbara, at the tea-table, is my stepdaughter.
She's exactly like her father, and when I married him, Barbara was determined not to like me.
But I am determined she shall.
and of course I shall win out, though I haven't made any startling success as yet.
So much for the women, I said, now tell me of your men.
Well, you know my husband, he's distinguished-looking, isn't he?
And though he's nearly sixty, that little alert air of his makes him seem younger.
Morland looks like him, but they are not at all alike otherwise.
Morland is handsome, but he is puffy-minded, and any woman can lead him by a string.
for the moment he thinks mrs stelton is his ideal but i intend that beth fordice shall dethrone her that tall man talking to beth now is connie archer he's a dear thing but a little difficult mr van wick doesn't like him but then my husband likes so few people
"'Do you like Mr. Archer?' I asked, looking directly at her.
She flashed me a glance of surprise and then answered coolly.
"'I like him, but not as much as he likes me.'
"'Anne Mansfield Van Wick,' I said looking at her sternly.
"'Don't tell me you've developed into a coquette.'
"'Developed,' she repeated with a gay little laugh.
"'I was always a coquette.
"'I used to flirt with you, way back in high school days.'
that you did i agreed you purposely kept jim lucas and me in a fever of jealousy toward one another of course i did you were both so susceptible if i let one of you carry my school-books the other promptly went off in a sulk
anne laughed merrily at the recollection and i gazed at her thinking how beautiful she had grown and wondering why she had married van wick and do you remember i went on a little diffidently the last time we met
did i do she replied without a trace of embarrassment you were going off to college and you kissed my hand as we parted that was a very graceful act for a schoolboy and i've never forgotten how well you did
did it. Yes, said I lightly. One must be a born cavalier to get away with a hand-kiss
successfully. When I get a real good chance, I'm going to see if your right hand has lost its cunning.
Nonsense, she returned laughingly. I'm not allowed to permit anything of that sort. I'm a perfect
Griselda of a wife, and my husband rules me with a rod of iron. Indeed I do, said Van Wick
himself as he came toward us, and really,
and speech had been made at him rather than to me.
And as so you knew my wife as a child.
He asked after Anne had conventionally introduced us.
As a girl, I corrected him.
We were acquainted during our high school days
when I was an awkward cub and she was standing with reluctant feet.
Hmm.
And was she then, as now, a self-willed insistent creature,
determined to have her own way in everything?
my blood boiled at his tone even more than at his words.
But I felt sure it was better to keep the light key, so I said,
Yes, indeed, like all other women.
And even as boys, we men are only too glad to give the blessed sex their own way.
Anne flashed me a glance that distinctly betokened approval.
I felt she had wondered how I would meet her husband's ill-chosen speech,
and I felt annihilation at having passed through the ordeal successfully in her eyes.
david van wick glowered at me as anne had said he was distinguished-looking but his drawn brows and straight thin lips showed habitual surliness his thick tossing hair was almost white and his acutely black eyes gleamed from beneath heavy gray eyebrows
He was tall and well-proportioned, with an alert air that made him seem less than the sixty years his wife had ascribed to him.
He was handsome. His manners, though superficial, were correct, and yet he roused in me a spirit of antagonism such as no stranger had ever done before.
After a few moments more conversation, he said quite abruptly,
I will take your place beside my wife, and do you go and make yourself charming to the other ladies?
Two. The Van Wick household.
Presently, I returned equally. But first, let me congratulate you on the find of this delightful old place.
This room itself is a marvel. It might have been brought over from some English castle.
David Van Wick looked round appreciatively.
It is a fine room, he agreed. It was built later than the main house, and was originally
intended, I imagine, for a ballroom.
It has a specially fine floor, and that musician's gallery at the end seems to indicate festivities on a big scale.
To be sure, the whole scheme of decoration is too massive and over-arnate for these days,
but it is all in harmony, and the gorgeousness of coloring has been toned down by time.
This was true. The lofty walls were topped by a wide and heavy cornice,
with an enormous cartouche in each corner, massive enough for a cathedral.
but the coloring was dimmed by the years and the gilding was tarnished to a soft bronze.
Most of the furniture consisted of choice old pieces collected by Van Wick for this especial use,
and it was plain to be seen that he took pride in these, and in his rare and valuable pictures and curios.
It is my room, he was saying as he smiled benigningly on his wife,
but I let Anne have her fallowl teas here, because she thinks it's picturesque.
But except at the tea hour, this is my exclusion.
domain. You call it your study, I inquired casually. I call it my study, yes,
although I'm not a studious man by any means. It is really my office, I suppose, but such a name
would never fit this 18th century atmosphere. I have my desk here, and my secretaries and lawyers
come when I call them, and I have even profaned the place with the telephone, so that I'm always
in touch with what the poets call, the busy mart.
Moreover, I confess I'm subject to short-lived fads and fancies, and this good-sized room
gives me space to indulge my interest of the moment.
He is, indeed, said Anne, laughing. Last summer, he was a naturalist, and this room was
full of stuffed birds and dried beetles and all sorts of awful things. But that's all over
now, and this year? What are you this year, David? Van Wicks' face hardened.
A steely look came into his eyes, and his square jaw set itself more firmly as he replied in a dry,
curt tone, I am a philanthropist. The word seemed simple enough, and yet Anne's face also became
suddenly serious, and unless I was mistaken, a flash of anger shot from her dark eyes to her husband's
grim face. But just then, Archer and Miss Fordyce joined us, and Anne's smiles returned instantly.
"'What mood, Beth?' she cried gaily.
you see honey i've been telling mr sturgis that your aesthetic and lanky-minded and all the rest of it and you must live up to your reputation if i can murmured miss fordice rolling a pair of soulful blue eyes at me
but i'm only a beginner a disciple of the wonderful mysticism of the there there beth cut it short broke in archer we know the mysticism of the the theosophical value of the occult as applied to the hyperestheticism of the hyperesthetic
the stethicism of the soul, by whichever great high, muck-a-muck you've been reading last.
The others laughed, but Miss Fordyce gave the speaker a reproachful glance, which, however, utterly
failed to wither him.
"'You'd be a real nice girl, Beth,' he went on, if you'd chuck mysticism and go in for
athletics.
"'You don't understand, Mr. Archer,' began Miss Fordyce in her soft, melodious voice,
but Archer interrupted her.
don't come the misunderstood racket on me. I won't stand for it. Practice your wiles on Mr. Sturgis.
Take him over there and show him Mr. Van Wicks' Buddha and tell him what you know about
buddying as a fine art. I walked away with the pale-haired Miss Fordyce, but instead of talking
about Buddha, we naturally fell into conversation about our fellow guests. I can well understand,
I said slowly, that the occult would scarcely appeal to such a
practical specimen of manhood as archer.
Who is he, and what is he?
To begin with, he's a supreme egotist.
Oh, I don't mean his character, but what does he do?
I don't know exactly.
I believe he's a mining engineer or something,
but he's terribly in love with Anne,
and he's clever enough not to let Mr. Van Wick know it.
But Anne knows it.
Of course, yes.
and she doesn't care
too sense for him.
But she's a born coquette,
and she leads him on
for nothing but an idle amusement.
I don't think a woman ought to do that.
Doubtless you are right,
Miss Fordyce.
But is it your experience
that women always do what they ought to do?
Very rarely,
returned Miss Fordyce laughing,
and I began to realize
that when the girl dropped her silly pose
she really was charming.
and especially anne she went on she's one of my dearest friends but that doesn't blind me to her faults and it is a fault to be attractive
to be as attractive as anne van wick is a crime miss fordy smiled as she spoke but there was a ring of earnestness in her tone she is a siren and her charm is of the sort that boils men over before they know what they're about i'm glad you warned me
I returned. I'll be on my guard against her fatal glances.
You've known her a long time, haven't you? Oh, no. I knew her ten years ago as a schoolgirl,
but she doesn't seem to be the same Anne now.
She's a dear, exclaimed Miss Fordyce warm-heartedly, and I have done wrong and even seeming
to censure her. But she does lead men a dance. Isn't she afraid of her husband?
Anne is afraid of nobody on earth.
Well, with one exception,
but the exception is not her husband.
Who is it, then, you?
Oh, goodness, no.
Why should she be afraid of me?
But she is afraid of Mrs. Carstairs, the housekeeper.
The housekeeper?
How curious?
Why is it?
I don't know, but Mrs. Carstairs is really a most peculiar person.
she was housekeeper for Mr. Van Wick before Anne married him.
Her son is Mr. Van Wick's valet.
Well, Anne would be glad to see them both packing mother and son,
but her husband won't let her.
Why not?
Oh, he is accustomed to their ways,
and they are both remarkably capable.
But why is Anne afraid of them?
I don't think she's afraid of car stairs.
But the mother is so queer.
Anne says she has the evil eye.
Aren't you and Anne imagining these things?
Isn't it one of your occult notions?
Wait till you see, Mrs. Carstairs.
You'll realize at once she's queer.
I thought a housekeeper was always a portly placid
middle-aged woman in a black silk dress.
Beth Fordyce laughed.
You couldn't guess farther from the mark.
Mrs. Scarstairs is not middle-aged.
Indeed, she's.
She seems extremely young to be the mother of the valet.
He must be over twenty.
Then she is very good-looking with a dark, subtle sort of beauty.
She's small and slender, and she glides about so softly she seems to appear from nowhere.
Why, there she is now.
I looked across the room and saw Mrs. Carstairs speaking to Anne.
She wore black silk, it is true, but of modish cut and long graceful lines.
Indeed, she seemed to have more of an air of distinction than any of the other women present
excepting Anne.
She had no touch of apology or obsequiousness in her manner, and stood quietly talking,
until she had finished her errand, and then moved away and left the room without embarrassment.
Her self-poise was marvellous, and I felt a flash of regret that such a woman should
have to pursue what was after all a menial occupation.
She looks interesting, I remarked to Miss Fordy,
She is, was the emphatic reply.
Of course, it's an open secret that she hoped to marry Mr. Van Wick.
She was housekeeper here when he was a widower.
Then when he married Anne, he insisted that Mrs. Carstair should stay on
to relieve Anne of all housekeeping boredom.
And Anne doesn't want her.
Not a bit, but she can't persuade Mr. Van Wick to discharge her.
The valet is most satisfactory, I believe.
and the mother and son refused to be separated.
So they're both here.
But Anne is afraid of her.
How absurd.
I don't know.
Mrs. Scarstairs hates Anne,
and though she is never openly disrespectful,
she finds hundreds of little ways to annoy her.
And Anne's stepchildren.
How does she get along with them?
Oh, right enough.
Morland adores her,
and though Barbara was office
at first. She is coming round.
Anne has shown great tact
in managing Barbara, and I think
they'll get to be chums.
I hadn't yet had opportunity
to converse with Barbara Van Wick,
and under pretense of a quest of fresh tea,
I led Miss Fordyce toward the tea table.
Miss Van Wick was cordial, but not effusive,
and struck me as being what is
sometimes called strong-minded.
She was a striking-looking girl
with a pale face and large, dark eyes,
but she had no such charm as Anne, nor had she the gentle softness of Beth Fordice.
She managed the tea things with a graceful air of being accustomed to it,
and included us at once in a conversation she was carrying on with some other callers.
It seemed the Van Wick Tea Hour was something of an institution,
and neighbours and village people were always in greater or less attendance.
The discussion was concerning a new public library in the town,
and as it was of slight interest to me,
I permitted my attention to wander about the room
and began to plan some way
by which I could unobtrusively make my way back to my hostess.
But just then a motor-car arrived
and a group of callers came in
through the great portals of the study.
The general confusion of introductions and greetings followed,
and when it was over I somehow found myself standing beside Mrs. Stelton,
the pretty young widow from whose toils Anne hoped
to rescue Morland Van Wick.
She was attractive in her way, but commonly.
place compared to Beth Fordyce or Anne.
She chatted pleasantly, but her conversation was of the sort that makes a man's mind wander.
Are you here for the weekend, Mr. Sturgis?
She rattled on.
You'll have a heavenly time.
It's the dearest place to visit.
And they are all such lovely people.
The beautiful Mrs. Van Wick is a perfect hostess, and Mr. Van Wick is an old dear,
though a bit of a curmudgeon now and then.
"'You're speaking of Mr. Morland Van Wick,' I teased.
"'You naughty man, of course not. I mean our host. Morley isn't in the least curmudgeonish.'
She tapped my arm with her lorlornian in a playful manner.
"'As if anyone could be, to you,' I returned knowing her type.
"'Nice gentlemen,' she babbled on.
"'I admit I like a compliment now and then. I'm glad you're here. We're such a pleasant house-party.'
"'Who is that striking-looking man standing by the window?' I asked.
"'We were introduced as he came in, but I didn't catch his name.'
"'Stone,' she replied.
"'Flemingstone. They say he is a detective.'
"'Stone?' I exclaimed.
"'Is it really?'
"'Detective.
I should think he was.
Why, he's probably the greatest real detective who ever lived.
"'What is he doing here?'
"'His home is in Crescent Falls,' Mrs. Stelton informed me.
That is, his mother has recently come here to live in the village, and he naturally visits her.
He is staying with her now.
Is he a friend of Van Wicks?
No, he has never been here before.
He came with Mr. and Mrs. Davidson, Crescent Falls Village People, and I think he came principally
to see the house.
This room, you know, is famous.
Not as famous as he is, I said, gazing at the man I so much admired but had never before
seen.
Fleming Stone.
was a man who would have compelled notice anywhere, and yet his appearance was entirely quiet and
unostentatious. He was slightly above average height, of a strong, well-set-up figure and a
forceful expression of face. His hair was slightly grey at the temples, and his dark, deep-set
eyes gave a strangely blended effect of unerring vision and kindly judgment. His manner was
marked by a gentle courtesy, and his personal magnetism was apparent in every tone and gesture.
I longed to get away from the uninteresting widow and talk or at least listen to Mr. Stone.
As this was not possible, I suggested that we both stroll across the room and join the group that surrounded him.
Though apparently not over-anxious, Mrs. Stelton agreed to this, and we became a part of the small circle that had formed around the great detective.
Great detective I knew him to be, for his fame was worldwide, and yet, as he stood there drinking his tea with a careless grace, he gave only the impression of the
of a cultured society man, ready to lend himself to the polite idle chatter of the moment.
He was looking at Anne Van Wick, and though not staring, not even gazing intently,
I could see that his interest centred in her.
But this was not at all astonishing.
I think few men were ever in Anne Van Wick's presence without centering their interest upon her.
Her slender figure was exquisitely proportioned, and her small head, with its masses of soft,
dark hair, was set upon her shoulders.
with a marvelous grace.
Her deep gray eyes, with long, curling dark lashes,
were full of fascination,
and her small, pale face was capable of expressing
such receptiveness and such responsiveness
that one's eyes were drawn to it irresistibly.
Anne's face was mysterious, purposely so maybe,
for she was intensely clever,
but mysterious with the weird fascination of the Sphinx.
And as Flemingstone's own deep eyes
met those of Anne Van Wick in a glance
that caught and held, it seemed as
as if two similar natures experienced
a mutual recognition.
I may have been over-fantiful,
but I looked upon Flemingstone
as almost superhuman,
and though before my arrival at Buttonwood Terrace
I had felt no special interest in Mrs. David Van Wick,
I was now conscious of a dawning
realization that the Anne Mansfield I used to know
had grown into a wonderful woman.
It was part of Anne Manseville,
beautiful tact that she made no reference to Flemingstone's profession or to his celebrity.
She smiled graciously and opened the conversation with a bit of banter.
It is a great pleasure to welcome you under our roof tree, Mr. Stone, she was saying,
but it is also a surprise, for I am told you are a confirmed a woman hater.
Aren't a woman haters always confirmed, Mrs. Van Wick? He parried. I never heard of one that wasn't.
"'Nor I,' said Anne, laughing at the quip,
"'but you evade my question. Do you hate all women?'
"'No,' said Stone.
"'I do not. But if I did, I should say I did not,
out of common politeness.'
"'How baffling!' cried Anne.
"'Now I can form no idea of your attitude toward our sex.'
"'Oh, I have no reason to conceal that,' said Stone lightly.
"'It is merely the attitude of civilized man
toward civilized woman.
Taken collectively, women are delightful.
But any one of them alone nearly scares me out of my wits.
I'd like to try it, said Anne, with a daring sweep of her long lashes as she half
closed her eyes and looked at him.
You wouldn't have to try.
I admit I'm afraid of you already.
I'm afraid of any woman.
One never knows what they mean by what they say.
They rarely know that themselves.
and flung back at him. And Condon Archer, who stood near, added,
or if they do, they know wrong. These are cryptic utterances, I put in laughingly.
Are you good people sure you know what you're talking about?
We're sure we don't, said Anne gaily, and that's just as good. But if we're really achieving
cryptic remarks, we'll refer them to Beth. She knows all about crypticism, or whatever you
call it, and mysticism, and occultism.
Oh, good gracious, Anne, don't, cried Miss Fordyce.
I don't mind people who understand talking about those things, but you are not only
ignorant but intolerant of them.
Nonsense, girly, said Anne, smiling at Miss Fordice.
I love you, and so I love all those crazy notions of yours.
I'm sure Mr. Stone understands, Beth Fordyce.
went on looking at him with earnest eyes it may have been my imagination but it seemed to me
that Flemingstone had to wrench his attention away from Anne by force and compel himself
to reply to Miss Fordyce's remark end of chapters one and two chapters three and four
of anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells this Librevox recording is in the public domain
3
All About a Fan
You are sure I understand what, Miss Fordyce, he asked.
I assure you my understanding is not limitless.
Oh, understand clairvoyance and all that sort of thing.
You must, you know, with all your wonderful detective ability.
Please tell us all about yourself, won't you?
I never saw a real detective before,
and they're awfully different from what I am at.
I thought they were more, more unwashed, put in Archer bluntly.
I am not myself acquainted with many of them, but those I have met are not in Mr. Stone's class
socially by any means. They're not in his class professionally either, I declared,
anxious to have Flemingstone aware of my appreciation of his genius. Mr. Stone is in a class
by himself. His work is art. That's what it is. Thank you, said Flemingston.
but in the smile he gave me there was a slight tinge of that boredness that masters always feel at compliments from tyros my art as you call it is my life he went on simply i do not study it i simply practice it as it comes along
and after all any success i may have had is merely the rational outcome of logical observation oh don't depreciate yourself mr stone said mrs telton shaking a silly finger at him you know you are
the greatest detective ever? Mr. Sturgis told me so. And now you must. You simply must tell us
just how you do it and give us an example. Here, take my fan, and deduce my whole mental
caliber from it. Although Flemingstone looked at the speaker pleasantly, I was convinced that he
felt as I did, that it would be perfectly easy to deduce the lady's mental caliber without
the assistance of her lace fan. Yes, do. What fun! exclaimed Morse.
morland van wick who was standing at the elbow of the fair widow who had enslaved him before flemingstone could reply anne spoke that wouldn't be a fair test she said flashing a smile at stone and then her eyes curiously deepened with earnestness as she went on
but i do wish mr stone that you would do something like that for us i have heard that you can tell all about anyone just from seeing some article that they have used that is not a difficult thing to do mrs van wick
said Stone. You yourself could probably gather a great deal of information from any personal
belonging of a stranger. Oh, yes, returned Anne gaily. If I saw a thimble, I might deduce a sewing
woman, or a pipe a man who smoked, but I don't mean that. I mean the sort of thing you do. Please
give us an example. I fairly cringed at the thought of Flemingstone being stood up to do
parlor tricks like a society circus, and so incensed was I that the line,
butchered to make a Roman holiday, vaguely passed through my mind.
But as I saw Anne's vivid glowing face and her entreating eyes,
I felt sure that no man on earth could deny her anything.
Stone appeared to take it casually.
Certainly, Mrs. Van Wick, he said,
If it will please you, I have never done such a thing except in the interest of my work,
but if you will give me a personal belonging
of someone unknown to me,
I will repeat to you whatever it may tell me
concerning its owner.
Though Beth Fordyce had said nothing
during this latter conversation,
I think she had never once moved her eyes
from Stone's face.
Her large and light blue eyes
looked at him with an absorbed gaze
and she spoke tranquilly
but with a positive air.
I will provide the article, she said.
I have with me just the very thing.
Excuse me, I will get you.
get it. She glided away, for no other verb of motion expresses her peculiar walk,
and disappeared through the door that led into the main part of the house.
How lovely, cried Mrs. Stelton, clasping her hands in delight.
And then, Mr. Stone, will you tell us how you catch robbers by their footprints?
Alas, madam, said Stone, robbers are rarely considerate enough to leave their footprints
for my benefit. I know they have the reputation of doing so, but they are sadly
remiss in the matter, and show a surprising negligence of their duty to me.
A sort of criminal negligence, murmured Archer, and Stone grinned appreciatively.
Miss Fordyce returned, and as she crossed the room her pale green gown trailing, she came
toward Stone with a rapt expression.
"'I can help you,' she said, because I can evolve a mental picture of my friend,
and projected to your mind by willpower.
"'Pray, don't trouble to do that, Miss Fordice,' said Stone,
unable to keep a quizzical smile entirely suppressed.
"'You force me to confess that I have no knowledge of the occult
and depend entirely upon my own very practical common sense and logic.
What have you brought me?'
"'A fan,' answered Miss Fordyce, handing him one.
"'When I came up in the train this afternoon,
a friend was with me during part of the journey.
she lent me this fan, and I carelessly forgot to return it.
As I know my friend very well, and you do not know her at all, it is a fair test.
Fine, said Anne Van Wick, her intense eyes darkening with interest.
Beth, that is just the thing.
Now, Mr. Stone, tell us of the fan's owner.
In her interest Anne had moved nearer to Stone and was breathlessly awaiting his words.
The magnetic fascination of the woman is
indescribable. I am positive that nothing on earth would have induced Fleming Stone to such an
exhibition of his special powers of deduction, except Anne's compelling desire that he should.
I saw, too, though it was almost imperceptible, the effort Stone was obliged to make to detach his
attention from her and concentrate it on the fan he was holding. To approach this matter in my
usual way, he said quietly, I shall have to ask permission to examine this fan.
under a magnifying glass. Have you one at hand?
Here is one, said Morland, bringing a fine one from his father's desk,
at which action I fancied I saw a shade of annoyance pass over David Van Wick's face.
For a few moments, Flemingstone examined the fan through the glass.
In idle curiosity I looked at the faces of those grouped about.
Mr. Van Wick was clearly annoyed at the whole performance,
though Morland, under the influence of Mrs. Stelton, waited and delighted
anticipation. Condren Archer looked supercilious and even murmured to me that he doubted the
detective's powers in such a test. Miss Fordyce wore the exalted air usual to people who affect
the mystic. But Anne, the center of the group, was surely enough to inspire Stone's latent powers
to the utmost. She waited with a suppressed eagerness that seemed to show implicit faith in the result,
and she even touched the fan as she too scanned it for any enlightening details.
Flemingstone returned the glass to Morland and the fan to Miss Fordice.
But it was Anne whom he addressed.
The fan, he said in a quiet narrative way, belongs to a lady with dark hair and eyes and rosy cheeks
and a very perfect set of small white teeth.
She is healthy and rather robust, of a vigorous but not an athletic type.
She is strong of muscle but of rather a nervous temperament.
She is thrifty and economical by nature.
but proud and fastidious. Usually of decorous habits but likes occasionally a gayer experience.
She is refined in her personal taste and artistic and dressing, though fond of bright colors.
She is kind and generous-hearted, unmarried and past her first youth. She lives in or near
the West 80s in New York City, and her telephone number has recently been changed to
9863 Schuller. She is fond of embroidering with colored silks. She possesses, and
is a gown decorated with black-spangled trimming, and she wears a very heavy ring on the
little finger of her right hand. Stone finished as quietly as he had begun, but his listeners
were more excited. "'I don't believe a word of it,' Mrs. Stelton was saying, and of course
Morland agreed with her. But Beth Fordice was speaking almost as if in a trance.
"'It is every word true,' she said with a far-away look in her eyes.
"'If you had known, Lila, you could not.
have described her more perfectly. Don't try to make me believe you are not occult.
You are positively clairvoyant.
Nonsense, Beth, said Anne impatiently. Don't talk such rubbish.
No, said I, occultism isn't in it with this kind of work. Mr. Stone, that is the real thing.
Are you going to tell your processes of reasoning?
Of course he is, cried Anne. That will be the delightful part of it.
David, did you ever hear anything like it?
Though Anne turned her lovely flushed face toward her husband, she received no answering smile.
It doesn't interest me, he said coldly, and it is a tribute to Anne's tact and cleverness
that she quickly recovered this awkward speech by turning to Stone, saying with utmost charm of
manner, tell me all about it at once. I can't wait another minute.
My dear Mrs. Van Wick, said Stone seeming to address her only.
I am very glad to explain if it interests you.
You see, it's very simple, for this fan has been used a good deal
and naturally bears the impress of the lady who has used it.
To begin with, it is a souvenir fan that was given to the lady
when she dined in the restaurant of one of the larger hotels in New York.
It is of the inexpensive paper sort that is used for that purpose.
But the name of the restaurant has been carefully scratched out,
showing that the lady desired to keep and use it,
but did not care to have her friends know where she obtained it.
This shows that the lady is not amply provided with fans,
and shows, too, that she does not often frequent the gay restaurants.
The fan is bright scarlet and gold,
and since she liked it well enough to keep it,
I assume that it suited her brunette coloring,
and also that she is fond of bright hues.
She is nervous, because the fan shows that she has often picked at it,
both its edge and its tassel, and has even frequently bitten it with her small sharp teeth.
You see, these lacquered sticks show clearly all marks and scratches,
and this bar of metal that holds the tassel is much bent, showing a vigorous and healthy type.
The fact that the fan has been used a great deal shows a robust and rosy-cheeked young woman,
though not athletic, for athletic girls never use the fan.
She is refined and fastidious in her tastes, for I notice a faint perfume of orange.
and Violet.
She is generous, for she gave away a fan that she found useful,
and I think neither a very young girl nor a married lady would so long preserve a fan of this sort.
But how did you know where she lives? demanded Miss Fordyce.
That argues a lack of observation on your part, said Stone, smiling.
On this light corner of the fan is written, though faintly,
new, number nine 863, Schuller.
The people living in the vicinity of the,
of West 83rd Street have recently had a change in their telephone numbers.
And when she noted a new number on her fan, I assumed it to be her own.
It is, said Miss Fordyce.
But how did you know about her spangled dress and that curious ring she wears?
The ring left a decided impression on the outer sticks of the fan near the end,
in such a position that it could only come from the abrasion of a heavy ring worn on the little finger.
then you see, this tassel, as is usual on this sort of a fan, is of a fine silk floss.
It is much fluffed and tangled and has a tendency to catch anything it may.
In it I find a portion of a small black spangle and two or three threads of fine embroidery floss pink and green.
Surely it is easy to infer that the lady uses embroidery silks frequently and that the spangle is from one of her gowns.
"'Don't take it so casually,' cried Anne with an imperious nod at him.
"'You shall not so belittle your great powers.
Supposing it is only logic and careful observation, no one else could do it.
That fan could not have spoken to one of us, because our logic cannot understand its language.
Mr. Stone, I thank you for doing that. I know you didn't want to.'
"'It isn't my custom to deduce for social entertainments,' said Stone.
smiling at her. But it is
my custom to exceed to the wishes
of my hostess. Thank you
for that then, and Anne smiled
back at him. Now,
as a small return favour, may I
show you over the house? Mrs. Davidson
tells me you want to see it.
Yes, I'm interested.
I understand it is very old
and was built by an eccentric.
Yes, it was, though we
bought it from its second owner.
Mr. Sturgis, will you go with us?
I was glad to
accept the invitation, and as we started we were joined by Miss Fordice and Archer,
and also by Mrs. Stelton and Marlon Van Wick. So it was quite a party which followed Anne
through the doorway in the corner. We found ourselves in a corridor that ran along the south
side of the house. We passed a branch corridor bearing to the right, but Anne laughingly
remarked that those were the apartments of herself and her husband and we might not enter.
We went on into a beautiful music room through stately reception and drawing.
rooms and into a delightful library.
There were billiard and smoking rooms nearby,
and through the dining room and sunny breakfast room,
we passed out to the terrace and down into the gardens.
I thought Stone seemed disappointed that though the house was old,
it gave no hint of secret passages or dark staircases,
no dungeons or anything that savored of mystery or crime.
I chanced to be walking by his side and I rallied him on this.
It is so, he confessed, from what I had heard of the house,
house, I had fancied it more complicated in structure. It is very four-square.
Yes, it is, said I, as we looked at it from across the wide expanse of lawn and garden.
Curious construction, though, mused tone, and yet, perfectly simple, one large rectangle with
smaller rectangles attached at its two back corners. Usually wings are built entirely across the
ends, I observed. Oh, of course it was done to get the advantage of light.
Wings at the ends would have darkened many of the rooms,
but attached so at the corners,
there are windows all round each part of the house.
This was true, and as I now recollected,
every room was flooded with daylight.
I must join my hostess now, said Stone,
and make my adieu.
I am leaving to-night for Kansas City,
where I'm about to investigate a most important case.
I longed to ask him about it,
but I didn't feel privileged to do so.
I did, however, express my pleasure in knowing him and hope that we might meet again.
He very courteously gave me his card, bearing an address that he said would always reach him,
an attention that I prized highly, though it might never fulfill its purpose.
We all returned to this study, and after the departure of the Davidson's and their distinguished friend,
the talk naturally turned to Flemingstone and his work.
"'It's uncanny, that's what it is,' declared Mr. Van Wick.
and it gives me the fidgets to have the man around.
I feel that way, too, said Connie Archer.
Why, I'm perfectly sure that he could see straight through my coat into my pocket
and read a letter there that I wouldn't have anybody know about, not anybody.
Is it one I wrote you? asked Anne so roguishly that it was most apparent fooling,
but her husband looked up and scowled.
Yes, returned Archer, with the most obvious intent of teasing his host.
that last delightful missive of yours.
At this David Van Wick frowned angrily and Anne said,
Nonsense, Connie, such jokes aren't funny.
What is the letter about, really?
It's a tailor's done, said Archer, taking his cue.
But I wouldn't have Stone know it for anything.
I expect he pays his bills before they're due.
Of course he does, said Morland,
deduces the exact amount they're going to be
and sends off a check without seeing him.
Well, don't ask him here again, Anne, said her husband.
I don't like him.
He won't come again very soon, I volunteered.
He's off tonight for Kansas City.
Good thing, too, growled Mr. Van Wick.
And now you people may seek some other pasture.
I expect some callers tonight,
and I want to get this place into some semblance of a gentleman's study
instead of a picnic ground.
"'Oh, David,' said his wife,
"'are they coming to-night?'
"'Yes, they are.
"'My mind is made up, Anne,
"'and I'd rather you wouldn't refer to the subject.'
"'It's an outrage,' said Morland,
under his breath.
"'He spoke to Anne, but his father heard it and said,
"'None of that, boy.
"'I suppose I have a right to do as I choose with my own.
"'And if you know when you're well off,
"'you'll accept the situation gracefully.
"'It'll be better for you in the long run.'
morland turned away looking obstinate and sullen i had no idea what it was all about but when i looked at anne her face was so tragic in its utter despair that i was startled surely i had been right in thinking her light-hearted manner was a cloak for some desperate heart-breaking trouble
but in obedience to mr van wick's command we all left the study it was not quite time to dress for dinner so we strolled out through the great doors on to the terrace and even as we left the footmen were already clearing the study it was not quite time to dress for dinner so we strolled out through the great doors on to the terrace and even as we left the footmen were already clearing
away the tea things.
4. The Decision of David Van Wick.
From a certain terrace landing which Anne called her sunset view, we watched the last glowing
clouds dull and darkened in the West. A sort of depression had fallen on the party because,
as was perfectly evident, of Anne's mood. She was distray and preoccupied, though now and then
her dark eyes flashed with what was unmistakably anger.
What's it all about, Anne, dear?
said Archer, who let himself go a little when Mr. Van Wick wasn't present.
Instead of evading or parrying his question, Anne spoke out frankly.
It's just this, she said. David is going to give away all his fortune.
He's going to build and endow a magnificent library for Crescent Falls Village,
a library out of all proportion to a tiny little place like this.
All his fortune? I exclaimed astounded. You can't mean that, Anne.
but I do mean just that.
He calls it philanthropy.
That's his fad this year.
If we were really philanthropic, it would be different.
But he has become deeply absorbed in this ridiculous hobby for no reason at all,
except that he's always dashing into some new and crazy scheme.
And he's so determined.
He'll give away all his money, and then afterward he'll be sorry,
but he can't get it back.
He has had fads and foibles before, but though sometimes they were trying.
They never involved such an amount of money as this.
But Anne, I went on, you can't mean that he's going to give away all his money.
How will he provide for you and his two children?
He says I've got to strike out for myself, growled Morland, who had been listening moodily,
as with his hands in his pockets he leaned against the terrace rail.
Well, he's going to give nearly a million to the library, said Anne despondently,
and that's just about all he possesses.
He says it's right to practice for.
philanthropy, and give away one's fortune while one's alive.
Other good and great men have pursued that same plan, said Beth Fordyce with one of her
exalted looks.
Yes, spoke Barbara Van Wick angrily, but the other good and great men had many millions to
start with.
Father's going to give away all he has, except just enough for us to live on in a very small way.
It isn't fair to us, and he has no right to do it, but he is simply immovable in the matter.
I feel as Anne does, said Archer seriously.
If it were real true philanthropy, it would be a noble deed.
But I know Mr. Van Wick, and he is always rushing suddenly and madly into some new project,
which he has quickly abandons and regrets.
Ah, Connie, said Anne, if there were only a hope of his abandoning this.
But when he regrets it, it will be too late.
Yes, the committee men are coming to-night for the final acceptance of the deed of gift,
or whatever you call it.
said Barbara in a tone of blended rage and despair.
I had thought Barbara Van Wick was colorless,
but in the intensity of her feelings,
her eyes flashed and the red rose to her pale cheeks
until she looked like a veritable avenging angel.
I hadn't known she possessed so much energy
and I turned to her saying, hopefully,
Can't you persuade your father at least to delay it?
No, I've tried every argument I know of,
and so have Morland and Anne.
If Anne can't persuade him,
nobody can.
Though this praise was grudgingly given,
it was unmistakably earnest,
and it was clear to be seen that,
though Anne and her step-children
were not congenial and not even friendly,
they had common cause in this impending catastrophe.
And I could not blame them.
Such ill-advised and misplaced generosity
was absurd, and seemed to me
to argue Mr. Van Wicks' mind somewhat unbalanced.
But as a comparative stranger,
I didn't like to offer suggestions
or even comment very emphatically.
Mrs. Tilton, however, felt no such restraint.
It's outrageous, she cried.
It's contemptible.
I never heard of such a performance.
If I were you, Morland, I should have my father adjudged insane.
He is insane on that subject, muttered Morland.
But what can I do about it?
If you knew my father as I do, you'd know that insane or not,
he will have his own way.
Yes, he will.
said Anne, sighing and looking so adorably pathetic
that it didn't seem possible anyone could disappoint her as Van Wick proposed to do.
Won't he listen to you, Anne? I asked.
Doesn't he care for your comfort and happiness?
No, said Anne, and though she looked the picture of utter hopelessness,
she showed also a cool reserve that warned me not to intrude too far upon her personal affairs.
Of course he cares for Anne, broke in Archer,
but I tell you he's out of his head.
He doesn't know what he's doing.
He isn't out of his head, Connie, returned Anne gently, and he does know what he's doing.
I'm going to try once more before the committee comes to make him change his mind, but I haven't much hope.
Come people, we must go and dress for dinner.
Archer threw discretion to the winds and gazed frankly at Anne, as he said,
How can he refuse you anything?
No man could, I know.
Anne, though her color rose a little, didn't even glance at Archer, but turning to me, walked by my side toward the house chatting lightly on trivial subjects.
Later, as we gathered around the dinner table, one could scarcely believe there was such an undercurrent of trouble among the Van Wicks.
Our host was unusually bland and affable, Barbara was placid, and Morland was the debonair man of the world that society requires.
As to Anne, she was a marvel.
In a dinner gown of pale yellow satin which suited especially well her exquisite coloring,
her wonderful hair coiled low and her great eyes shining. She seemed animated by some unusual
energy. She was roguish and dictatorial by turns. She was dignified one moment and a softly
pathetic the next. I couldn't make her out. Either she had persuaded her husband to abandon his
plan or the matter was still undecided. At any rate she could not have to have to
tried and failed and still have shown this vivacity.
But I did not yet know my Anne. I sat next her, and dinner was not half over before she confided
to me the news of her total failure.
Not only did David refuse to listen to me, she said, but he forbade me to speak to him again
on the subject, and he spoke to me in such a way and in such language that I can never
forgive him. Anne, I exclaimed, for those smiling her smile was assumed for
the other's benefit, and her low tones heard only by me were full of bitterness and desperate
grief. Anne, I murmured involuntarily, let me help you. What can I do? Nothing, she replied,
no one can help me. Perhaps it was the pathos of the situation, perhaps it was her marvelous
beauty enhanced by the dramatic moment, or perhaps it was inevitable, but I fell in love with Anne Van Wick
then and there.
Or rather, it was an awakening to the fact that I had always loved her, even when we were school-time friends.
Naturally, I had sufficient self-control not to disclose this secret even by a glance,
but repeated in carefully modulated tones my desire and willingness to help her if possible.
And then, with an effort, I turned to talk to my neighbor on the other side.
It proved to be Beth Fordyce, and her pale blue eyes lighted as she began to talk eagerly to me.
Let us make a pact, Mr. Sturgis, she said.
I, too, want to help, Anne, and surely together we can do something.
It was quite evident that she had overheard my words and this annoyed me,
and I answered that, with all the willingness in the world I failed to see how Mrs. Van
Van Wicks' guests could do anything in this matter.
She took the hint and changed the subject, but almost immediately after Mrs. Stelton's
shrill voice was heard addressing the table at large.
"'Well, I think you're perfectly horrid, Mr. Van Wick,'
she exclaimed, shaking a be-ringed hand at him.
"'To give away all that lovely money that ought to belong to Anne and Barbie and Mr. Morland?'
The last name was accompanied by a coquettish glance in Morland's direction,
but she went on addressing her host.
"'Why, if a husband of mine did that, I'd—I'd shut him up on bread and water for a week.'
"'Perhaps he would enjoy the rest, Mrs. Stelton,' said Van
Wick, gazing at her blandly.
The man had a way of saying these things which, though rude, was rather enjoyable to
disinterested hearers.
Good-natured Mrs. Stelton laughed.
Oh, what waggery, she cried.
But if it brought him to his senses, I shouldn't mind.
I've a notion to shut you up for a week, Mr. Van Wick, and let you think this matter over.
Though I always enjoy your witty chat, my dear Mrs. Stelton, I must beg of you to drop
this subject.
and this time Mr. Van Wick's air of finality brought us a respite for Mrs. Stelton's silly observations.
But Morland gave one parting shaft.
If you do this thing, Dad, he growled. You'll be mighty sorry.
A silence fell. It was not so much what Morland said, but the quiet intensity of his tone which seemed to convey a definite threat.
Indeed, his father must have felt it for he looked up quickly at his son, but he only
only said sarcastically,
I thank you for your warning,
and then the subject really was dropped.
Anne resumed her gaiety,
though I now knew for a certainty
was all a pretense.
Con Archer nobly helped her out,
and chatted lightly and gracefully.
Barbara continued to sulk in silence,
but all the rest rose to the occasion,
and only appropriate dinner-table talk was heard.
Coffee was served in the drawing-room
for the ladies while the men remained at table.
Perhaps, from a sense of duty, Archer made one more effort.
I say, Van Wick, he began,
I know it's none of my business, but mayn't I suggest as man to man,
that you think this matter over a bit longer before making your decision?
You know to a disinterested observer, the gift you proposed to make seems out of all proportion
to its object, and I can't help thinking that on second thoughts you would agree to this
yourself.
Mr. Archer, said Van Wick.
coldly, the only one of your remarks to which I agree is your first one,
that it is none of your business.
Condren Archer flushed, but as David Van Wicks' guests were not unused to his
scathing speeches, this one was not openly resented, and Archer said nothing further.
And then seemingly unable to control himself, Morland blurted out,
I say, Dad, you just can't do it.
Can't?
And the elder Van Wick raised his eyebrows at his son.
"'No, can't,' Morland went on blindly angry now.
"'It's heathenish. It's a crime against your wife and daughter to say nothing of me.
I tell you you can't.'
David Van Wick's clear-cutting tones fell like icicles.
"'If you will be present, Morland, at the meeting this evening, I shall take pleasure in
showing you that I can.'
"'You bet I'll be there,' and Morland looked almost like a belligerent boy as he met the cold stare
of his father's eyes.
I'm glad you accept my invitation, and now shall we join the ladies.
Rising from the table, we crossed the hall to the drawing-room,
and perhaps poor angrier men never wore the smiling mask of politeness.
Anne, seated in a carved high-backed chair, made an exquisite picture,
and she turned her beautiful, appealing eyes to her husband as he entered.
David Van Wick crossed the room straight to her,
placing his hands on the two carved griffons' heads,
that formed the arms of the chair.
He leaned over the beautiful face upturned to his
and whispered a few words in Anne's ear.
Then he lightly kissed her on the cheek
and, without a word to anyone else,
strolled out of the room toward the study.
What he said to her nobody knew,
but Anne turned deathly white
and grasped the carved chair-arms
as if an extremist agony.
I was uncertain whether to notice this
and go to her assistance,
or whether to keep up the farce of gay conversation
in an endeavor to cover her agitation.
"'Morland gave his stepmother one glance,
"'clenched his teeth, and muttering, brute,
"'strowed off after his father.
"'Without hesitation, Archer drew a chair to Anne's side
"'and sitting down took her hand in his.
"'But he erred, for Anne drew away her hand
"'with a freezing dignity, and rising came over
"'and sat by Mrs. Telton.
"'And then I was surprised by another of Anne's
"'absolutely inexplicable changes of mood.
"'What a heavenly brooch,' she said,
smiling at Mrs. Stelton.
Florentine work, isn't it?
I perfectly adore those things.
I have one something like it,
but a more conventional design.
Don't you just love to buy things in Florence,
or in Naples, or indeed any part of Italy?
Italy is lovely, isn't it?
Mrs. Stelton stared at this flow of insane talk,
and I suddenly wondered if Anne were hysterical.
I saw Archer move as if to approach her,
and then turn on his heel again,
doubtless fearing rebuff.
So I dared to venture myself.
Mrs. Van Wick, I said,
won't you come with me for a little walk on the terrace?
I'm sure the cool air will be refreshing.
Thank you, said Anne simply,
and she went with me at once,
draping the long train of her gown over her arm
as we passed through the hall.
You are very good, she said a little wearily
as we stepped out onto the terrace.
How did you know I wanted to get away?
I stifled an impulse to tell her that love
helped me to read her thoughts and said quietly i know you're troubled about that plan of your
husbands but let us hope for the best there is no longer room for hope she said dully come let us
look in at the window of course i followed her along the terrace to the windows of the great
study we could easily look in and the deep colors of the stained glass prevented our being seen
by those inside and anyway there was surely no harm in it we saw mr van wick and mornland
and three other men who doubtless represented the committee.
Yes, murmured Anne musingly.
There they are.
Mr. Miller, Mr. Brandt, and Mr. Garson.
I do not blame them.
Of course, if David offers them this money,
they'd be foolish not to take it.
Mr. Brandt is the only one who has really over-urged in the matter.
In fact, he suggested it to David first.
Oh, Raymond, isn't it too bad?
It was the first time she had called me by my
first name, and I felt a thrill that blotted out all thought of Van Wick or his money.
And you mustn't think, she went on, that I'm selfish or ungenerous.
If David were honestly a philanthropist, or if I weren't so sure that he'd regret this later,
as he does all his erratic impulses, I'd feel different about it.
But you see how it is, don't you, Raymond?
Yes, Anne, I see how it is.
And though I spoke quietly, my heart was in a tumult.
"'Oh, look!' she cried.
"'Morland is getting angry.
He is quarreling with his father.
"'Don't be alarmed,' I said.
"'Morland can never get the better of that man.
His father will not mind anything he says.'
But it was evident that Morland had said something
that his father did mind,
for the elder man's temper was roused
and the two were certainly in deadly earnest.
We could hear no word that was spoken,
but the three visitors looked appalled,
and were evidently trying to pacify
the combatants.
Come away, Anne, I said, sick at heart over the whole matter.
You can do nothing.
Why torture yourself by looking on?
Let me tell you what I bought you for a gift.
What? she asked, but without interest.
I led her back across the terrace as I told her of a beautiful piece of Venetian glass
that I had brought for her.
It was a gem, rare and valuable, but I would not have lauded it as I did except in
an endeavor to distract her mind from the sight she had just seen.
Where is it? she asked at last, faintly interested.
I gave it to a footman when I came in, I replied.
Then he will have given it to my maid, and it will be in my room, she said.
Then, hesitatingly, don't think it's strange, will you, if, if I don't tell David
that you gave it to me?
He is, he is peculiar, you know.
Jealous, you mean?
I said, laughing.
"'That doesn't surprise me, and truly,
"'I'm glad of the fact that I can make him jealous.'
"'But I'm not sure that Anne heard this,
"'so preoccupied was she with her own thoughts.
"'We returned to the drawing-room,
"'but it was not long before we all went to our rooms.
"'Anne bade me good-night on the stair-landing.
"'David and Morland I still shut up with that committee,' she said,
"'and I am going at once in search of the gift you brought me.
"'I know I shall love it.'
"'For the sake of my.
of the giver, I interrupted with a gay foolery that sounded as if I didn't mean it, but I did.
Not at all, said Anne saucily. I shall love it only for its beauty and intrinsic worth.
And if it's Venetian glass, it must have both. I hope to goodness it isn't smashed.
I think not I had it packed carefully. Good night, Anne. Good night, she said. Her long lashes
sweeping her cheeks and then added as an afterthought,
Raymond. And as she disappeared, I wondered whether she had spoken my name from pure
coquetry or what. End of chapters three and four.
Chapters five and six of anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells. This Librevox recording is in the
public domain. Five. The Crime in the Study
There are few things to my mind. There are few things to my
mind more delightful than being wakened soon after daybreak on a perfect spring morning by the
songs of birds. As I was thus brought to my senses, it took me a moment to realize just where I was,
but a glance from my window reminded me. I sprang up and threw aside the curtains and reveled in
the flowery breath of the morning air. Again the view enchanted me. The distant hills, the nearer
rolling fields and bits of woods, and closer yet, the wonderful park that saw the
surrounded the home of the Van Wicks.
Surely I thought,
Anne Mansfield was justified in marrying for a home,
when one considered the home.
And that that was Anne's reason
for accepting David Van Wick,
I hadn't the slightest doubt.
Anne had been uncomfortably poor as a girl,
and I knew how she had always craved
luxurious surroundings.
I didn't for a moment believe she loved her husband,
but I knew her well enough
to be sure that her sense of honor and loyalty
would keep her a true and devour
and devoted wife to him.
If she flirted with Archer,
if she even coquetted with me,
it was only the natural amusement
of a beautiful woman
who was frankly fond of admiration.
And thus I made excuses for her
as I stood looking out of my east window,
and the sun grew more and more dazzling
in its early morning splendor.
Beneath me spread the beautiful lawn
that would have done credit
to an English ancestral castle.
Here and there I saw a gardener
or other servant moving
about, and I concluded the place was under good discipline.
I looked backward to the east wing.
Since I had been inside the study, I could judge better of its noble proportions and
impressive lines.
Yet it looked forbidding, not exactly sinister, but grim and rather awesome.
The long, narrow windows gave it a gloomy air, and as there was no entrance visible
from where I looked, it seemed almost like a prison.
Ivy trailed over its casements, and the birds flew in and out.
of the vines, twittering.
It was really too early to dress and go downstairs,
but I suddenly became possessed of a wild hope
that Anne might be in the habit of strolling in the gardens
before breakfast.
I had not the least reason to suppose this,
but a strange impatience urged me to go down and see.
So, completing a leisurely toilet,
I went downstairs and threw the great hall to the front door.
A parlor maid who was dusting about opened the door for me,
and though I thought an expression of surprise showed for her,
a moment on her face, she quickly suppressed it.
I stepped out into the beautiful morning with a feeling of gladness that I had come down,
even if I were doomed to solitude.
I saw no sign of Anne, nor of anyone else, save a few caretakers, and I started off
for a long ramble through the grounds.
Their interest and beauty well repaid me, and as I returned toward the house, I sat down
upon a stone seat overlooking a picturesque ravine.
Not far away, I could see the stables.
and garage, but there was no one stirring in their vicinity.
Late risers here, I thought to myself, surprised that the stableman should not yet be about.
And then I saw a woman peering in at the window of one of the buildings.
My heart gave a leap hoping that it might be Anne, but it was not.
I saw in a moment that it was the housekeeper Mrs. Carr stairs.
She wore a smart white linen morning gown so trig of appearance that she looked like some Parisienne
dressed for an outing.
The skirt was short, showing dainty white shoes and stockings, and altogether she looked as little
like an English housekeeper as could be imagined. And then I recollected, no one had told me she
was English. The valet had been called so, and doubtless his father was an Englishman, but this
mysterious mother of his was certainly French, or I never saw a Frenchwoman. Then my musing
concerning her nationality gave way to an interest in her present occupation, for surely she
was acting strangely.
She went around the garage, peering in at each window, now and then, casting furtive glances
as if in fear of being observed.
She could not see me as I was hidden by some foliage plants.
Then leaving the garage, she walked back along the driveway toward the house her eyes
on the ground, as if looking for something.
Natural chivalry prompting me to assist her, I rose and walked rapidly toward her.
May I help you in your search, Mrs. Carstairs?
I said in my most Chesterfield in tones.
Apparently she had not heard my approach,
for she turned as if greatly startled
and said fairly gasping for breath.
Oh, oh, I thought you were...
You were someone else.
No, I'm myself, I said smiling,
for we had met for a few moments the evening before,
and I was not at all unwilling to speak to her again.
Have you lost something?
Only myself, possession.
She returned with such apt repartee
that I said impulsively.
you are French, aren't you?
Partly, she replied
looking at me in surprise at my evident
interest in the matter.
And you haven't lost anything else,
not so easily replaced.
She caught my illusion and smiled.
Then, as if recollecting herself,
she assumed a severely correct manner
and said,
No, thank you. I have lost nothing.
But you've been studying the ground
all the way from the garage.
She turned on me like a fury.
Nothing of the sort.
She exclaimed, with
flashing eyes. How dare you say so? Why should I study the ground?
Good heavens, I cried. It isn't a crime to study the ground, is it?
Why shouldn't you if you choose to? I don't choose to. I have no interest in the ground.
I was, I was looking at the sky. I won't contradict you, I said politely, though aghast at this
whopper. Have you perhaps lost something in the sky then?
"'Yes, a couple of pleads,' she replied with an irrepressible laugh,
and I marveled afresh to hear a housekeeper talk in this strain.
"'I am certainly destined to get no lost and found information,' I said,
though uncertain as to whether I ought to talk to her in this companionable way.
"'Are you out for information this morning?'
"'I'm really out to see if the poets sing true about the delights of early rising,
but I'm always glad to absorb information if it comes in my way.
Do you want it on any special subject?
Yes, I returned daringly.
I want to know why you detest Mrs. Van Wick so intensely.
It was interesting to watch Mrs. Carstairs' face after this.
First, she gave me a stare of blank amazement,
then a flash of indignation burst from her stormy eyes.
Then, like a ray of sunlight, she smiled sweetly and said,
I don't detest her. I adore her.
And then she turned from me and walked swiftly down a by-path.
I looked after her. She walked beautifully without haste, but with a rapid, graceful movement.
I knew perfectly well she had told me an untruth. She did detest Anne, and she had chosen
a most clever way to deny it, and to close the conversation at the same time.
The path she took led toward the kitchen quarters.
and she soon disappeared inside, while I went on, across the terrace and in at the rear
door of the great hall. A footman showed me to the breakfast room, a cheery, sunny place, much
cozier than the big room where we had dined the night before. I followed him with a comfortable
sense of having a healthy, hearty appetite. When I entered the breakfast room, Archer and Morland
Van Wick were already at the table. The ladies, Morland informed me, breakfasted in their own rooms.
"'And your father?' I asked as I seated myself.
"'Oh, Dad's usually the earliest bird about.
His interview with that precious committee last night
"'must have worn him out and he's sleeping late.'
"'Then the committee succeeded in their fell design,' asked Archer.
"'Yes, they succeeded, but you mustn't say fell design.
"'Dad was in no way coerced by those men.
"'In fact, he—'
"'He coerced them to take his money,' I asked, smiling.
"'Not quite that,' returned Morland,
"'but they were very fair about it.
"'They put it to him squarely
"'that he was doing injustice to his family
"'by such a gift.
"'You know what Dad is?
"'The more they objected,
"'the more determined he was to have his way.
"'If they had seemed eager for the money,'
"'observed Archer,
"'Mr. Van Wick might have reconsidered.
"'Exactly that,' agreed Morland.
"'Father's very perversity
"'made him insist on carrying out his plan.
So he made out a deed of gift, and though the whole matter wasn't entirely settled up,
yet it is practically decided, and we Van Wicks are no longer rich people.
It's an outrage, I cried, thinking of Anne's deprivation.
Is Mr. Van Wick a socialist?
Oh, no, said Morland, not a bit of that.
Mrs. Carstairs is the only socialist in this household.
Father's idea is philanthropy.
And he suddenly took a notion that the time to practice that,
is during one's lifetime and not by a will.
Is Mrs. Carr's stares a socialist?
I inquired, my mind going back to her strange, almost weird personality.
She's everything that's queer, said Marland with a grim smile.
I don't profess to understand her,
but I do know she has some peculiar influence over my father.
I'm not sure she persuaded him to give this library to the town,
but I know she had a hand in it.
Why should she want him to do such a child?
a thing? I asked in surprise.
Morland glanced about, and as there seemed to be no servant in hearing, he said in a low voice.
She hates Anne, and she wants Dad's money to go anywhere, rather than to his family.
Does she hate the rest of you? I asked in a whisper.
She's indifferent to Barb and me, but she's actively hostile to Anne. Of course the presumption
is that she hoped to catch Dad in her own net, and failing resented his marriage to another
woman. She doesn't seem to show any especial interest in your father, commented Archer.
You can't judge, Morland said. She's a deep one. I never saw such a woman. She must be over 40 and
she looks like a girl. I steer clear of her always. She's too many for me. She certainly has a
strange manner, I began, and then paused as I heard a step behind me.
"'Morland,' said a low voice from the hall,
and I looked up to see Anne standing in the doorway.
She wore a rose-colored boudoir gown and a lacy cap.
She was pale and her small white hand grasped nervously at the portire.
"'What is it, Anne?' said Morland as we all rose.
"'Your father, he hasn't been in his room all night.
He's locked in the study and car-stairs can't get in.'
"'Car-stairs, the young English valet, was behind Anne,
and though his expression was the conventional blank,
his face was white and his eyes showed a vague fear.
"'Hugh!' exclaimed Morland.
"'Stayed there all night.
Must have fallen asleep after his committee meeting.'
"'But Carstairs has pounded on the door and I've called and called,' said Anne nervously.
"'Won't you come?'
Morland went at once, and Archer and I hesitatingly followed.
We paused as we passed through the drawing-room,
but then hearing Morland's loud calls with apparently no response,
we went on through the corridor that led to the study.
Nothing doing, said Morland as we approached,
and though his tone was light I saw that he was seriously alarmed.
Can't we get in the other door, I suggested, and Archer added,
or a window?
Not through the windows, sir, said Carstairs.
They're all fastened inside.
The outside door, then, said I,
and Archer followed me.
as we went back through the corridor, out on the terrace, and tried to open the massive doors of the
study. But we might as well have attempted to enter a locked cathedral. We tried to peer in at the
windows, but the inner blinds were drawn and we could see nothing. We returned to the house where
Anne and Morland were still endeavouring to get a response to their repeated calls.
Looks queer, said Morland, shaking his head. I'm afraid old dad has had a stroke or something.
His tone seemed to me altogether too careless for the possibility he was suggesting,
but my interest and attention were centered on Anne.
She was trembling violently, her face was white and drawn,
and her eyes had a haunted look as of a terrible fear.
We must get in, she whispered.
Something must have happened.
Shall we break down the door? I asked.
Impossible, said Archer.
I doubt if six men could break in that door.
That's right.
said Morland.
These old doors are not the flimsy sort they make nowadays.
We must pick the lock.
Car stairs go for Ranny, the garage mechanician.
He can manage it.
Tell him to bring tools.
The valet made a queer,
unintelligible sound in his throat,
and trembling greatly leaned against the wall.
I...
Can't, sir, he said,
and really the man seemed on the verge of collapse.
What? cried Morland.
You must.
No nonsense.
Go at once for Ranny.
I'll go, I volunteered, for car stairs was positively unable to move.
I ran to the garage and called Ranny making as little fuss as possible,
for I didn't want a panic among the stableman.
I felt sure that David Van Wick had suffered an apoplectic or paralytic stroke
and the immediate necessity was to get to him.
What is it, sir? said Ranny, touching his cap as he came forward.
Bring some tools, I said, to force open a little.
locked door, and then come on to the study with no questions.
Very good, sir.
In a moment I had rejoined the group of people clustered at the study door.
I wish you would go to your room, Anne, Archer was saying gently.
I'm sure it would be better.
Yes, do, said Morland.
Where's your maid?
Here, Jeanette.
And as the frightened maid appeared, Marlon said,
Take care of Mrs. Van Wick.
Take her to her room, stay with her, and don't
chattered to her. The suite of rooms occupied by Anne and her husband were close at hand,
and as maid and mistress disappeared, Ranny came.
"'Get to work and open that door,' ordered Marland.
"'Pick the lock or cut it out whichever is necessary, but get us in.'
Ranny picked the lock skillfully and rapidly, but still the door refused to open.
"'It's bolt,' he said.
"'Cut out the bolt,' said Morland, on whom the suspense was beginning to tell.
Ranny obeyed, and though marring and spoiling the beautiful door,
he succeeded at last in throwing it back on its hinges and we went in.
David Van Wick sat in his desk chair, motionless,
with a stain of blood on his shirt-front and waistcoat.
Murdered, exclaimed Morland, springing forward.
By some of that blamed committee!
I'll be revenged for this.
As he spoke he was feeling for his father's heart and pulse,
though there was no possible doubt that the man was
dead. As we all stood in horror-stricken silence, my mind worked rapidly.
Hold on, Morland, I said. It can't be murder with this room locked up as it was.
Your father did this himself. Morland turned from his father and stared at me.
Suicide, he exclaimed. Absurd. Why should Dad want to kill himself?
I don't know, I'm sure, I replied. But as we couldn't get into this locked room, how
could a murderer have done so?
I tell you it was one of that committee, declared Morland.
My father had no reason and no desire to kill himself.
As to that, put in Archer, why should those men of the committee want to kill him?
He was about to give them his money.
And as Sturgis says, no one could have murdered him and got away, leaving this room entirely
locked on the inside.
But something ought to be done.
You ought to send for a doctor or something.
"'What good could a doctor do now?' said Morland, looking a little dazed.
"'But I suppose it is the right thing to do.
"'Carstairs. Telephone for Dr. Mason and tell him to come at once.
"'Don't tell him what for. There's no use of this getting all over
"'until we know something more about it ourselves.
"' Use this telephone here on the desk.'
"'With difficulty, Carstairs controlled himself sufficiently to obey orders.
"'Morland strode about the room.
It's so, he declared, every window is fastened with these enormous bolts that are more than
burglar-proof. And this outside door, as you see, is bolted like a barricade, there is no other
possible entrance except the door at which we came in, and you all know how secure that was.
Consequently, it must be that my father killed himself. But why should he? And how did he do it,
said I, suddenly realizing that there was no weapon lying about.
I don't know, don't ask me.
And with a groan, Morland flung himself into a chair and buried his face in his hands.
He seemed like a man who had utterly collapsed after passing through a terrible ordeal,
and I said to Archer, let's leave him alone and do what we can ourselves.
What can we do? said Archer.
We mustn't touch anything, you know, until the coroner comes.
Coroner, I exclaimed.
good gracious does he have to come isn't he always called in case of a mysterious death well this is certainly a mysterious death if ever there was one i declared but i don't believe that about not touching anything until the coroner gets here i've heard it's a mistaken notion
well do as you like on your own responsibility said archer if you think you can discover a clue to the mystery go ahead six surmises
but i could discover nothing except to confirm the fact that there was no possible way for an intruder to have left that room locked up as it was and that consequently it must have been either accident or intentional self-destruction
but i looked in vain for a weapon there was no revolver on the desk or on the floor near the dead man i scrutinized carefully the soft thick rug and was rewarded at last by finding a clue without disturbing morland who still sat
with hidden face, I went to Archer and spoke in a low voice.
At any rate, I know what killed him.
What?
And Archer looked amazed.
He was shot.
I said trying to hide my pride in my own discovery.
How do you know?
Look on the floor.
There, near his chair, are five or six small shot.
See them?
Archer stared at the floor and saw the shot almost at Van Wicks' very feet.
But how on earth?
He began, when Dr. Mason.
came into the room.
His professional calm a little upset by this tragedy,
the doctor's hand trembled as he examined the body of David Van Wick.
It took but a few moments for the red stain on the white shirt bosom told its own story.
Suicide?
He inquired as he completed his task.
Must have been, said Archer, as he was locked in here alone.
How was he killed?
What is the wound?
I don't know, said Dr. Mason looking puzzled.
He may have been shot by a very small caliber pistol,
or he may have been stabbed by some sharp instrument.
You see, the small hole in his shirt bosom is perfectly round,
but there are no powder marks.
I called the doctor's attention to the shot on the floor,
and he looked more puzzled still.
But he wasn't shot with a shotgun, he said.
In fact, I inclined to the opinion that he was stabbed
with some sharp round instrument.
A hat-pin, I suggested.
No, said the doctor impatiently.
There isn't one hat-pin out of a hundred made
that could go through a stiff shirt bosom without bending.
But something like that, only rather thicker.
You see the size of the hole.
But may it and be a bullet hole? said Archer.
It may be.
At any rate, we must send for the coroner.
"'Wake up, Morland.'
The doctor had crossed the room and laid his hand
not unkindly on Morland Van Wick's shoulder.
He shook him slightly, and Morland raised his white-drawn face.
"'Must we have the coroner?' he asked.
"'Can't we call it a stroke or something and not have any publicity?
"'It's going to be awful hard on—on Anne.'
Something in his tone made me realize
Morland's feeling for his father's beautiful young wife.
doubtless he had concealed and even tried to overcome it,
but now in his hour of trial his first thoughts flew to her.
This explained, to my mind, his sudden collapse
after his earlier attitude of bravado.
I had thought he resented his father's second marriage,
but now I believe that he himself had succumbed to Anne's irresistible fascination.
I too felt it would be desirable to spare Anne the horrors of publicity of possible,
so I said,
can the matter be hushed up and made to appear an accident or a natural death?
No, said Dr. Mason bluntly.
I could not give my professional sanction to any such course.
And I think Mrs. Van Wick should be told of this matter at once.
Just then, Anne came into the study.
She had seen Dr. Mason arrive and considered it her right to know what had happened to her husband.
She wore a simple morning gown, and her maid Jeanette hovered behind her with a vinaigrant
of smelling salts.
What has happened, said Anne, advancing steadily into the room.
And then, as she saw the still figure of David Van Wick, she looked at each of us in turn.
Seeming to make a choice, she went to Dr. Mason, and putting her hands on his arm said simply,
Tell me.
Mrs. Van Wick, said the old doctor straightforwardly,
Your husband is dead.
We do not know exactly the means of his death, and I'm not.
afraid it will be necessary to put the matter into the hands of the coroner and's
slender figure swayed a little but she did not faint and dr. Mason gently steadied her as he
went on talking there is nothing you can do mrs. Van Wick and as your physician I advise
you to go to your room and lie down no I will not go to my room and lie down and
declared who killed my husband she was strangely calm
so calm that I knew she was straining every nerve to preserve her poise and I feared her sudden breakdown.
That is yet to be discovered, said Dr. Mason. If indeed we do not find out that he took his own life.
He did not do that, said Anne. He never would do that. Her voice was almost inaudible and her face was white as death.
She still clutched the old doctor's arm as if unable to stand alone. We three men stood the
looking at her. I felt sure all three loved her, Archer, Morland, and I. It was a strange situation
for a subtle sense told me that we all wanted to go to her assistance, but none dared to do so.
We seemed almost to be waiting till she should make a choice of one of us. But she did not heed us.
Addressing herself entirely to the doctor, she rambled on, not hysterically, but with a far-away
look as if only half-conscious of what she was saying.
no david would not commit suicide of that i am sure somebody killed him murdered him but who could it have been
her voice died away in an unintelligible murmur and she fainted dr mason held her in his arms as we all sprang forward morland said the doctor making his own choice help me carry mrs van wick to her room where is her maid
they took anne away and i turned to archer her bedroom is on this floor i asked yes van wick used to have his rooms on the second floor but when he married his present wife he had a magnificent suite of apartments furnished for them on this floor
partly because they are beautiful rooms and partly to be nearer this study it seems strangely appropriate that he should die in this room i said glancing toward the still figure it seems appropriate that he should die in this room i said glancing toward the still figure it seems appropriate that
that he should die anywhere.
Archer muttered in a savage undertone.
And in answer to my look of surprise at this outburst, he added.
He was a brute to his wife.
I'm sorry his death occurred in this horrible way,
but I am not sorry he's gone.
I could make no reply,
for though I never should have put it into words,
my feeling was the same.
But the death had occurred in a horrible way,
and the exigencies and consequences of it must be met.
dr mason reappeared and in response to our inquiries he said that mrs van wick had regained consciousness and was being looked after by her maid and by mrs carstairs
i shall now telephone for the coroner he went on i assume that morland will take charge of his father's affairs and i think that miss barbara should be told at once what has happened i couldn't help admiring the poise and practical good sense of dr mason he had been the family
physician of the Van Wicks for many years, and whatever his personal feeling toward the head of the
house, he now remembered only his professional responsibility and acted accordingly.
While he was telephoning the coroner, a young man came into the study who was a stranger to me.
Is that you, Lasseter, said Morland, looking up, a tragedy has occurred, and my father has been killed,
by himself or another, we don't know.
Morland spoke mechanically, almost as if he felt it incumbent upon him to explain the situation.
I soon discovered that Barclay Lasseter was Mr. Van Wick's secretary. He did not live in the house
but came every morning to the study. He was the tallest man I had ever seen, of slight build
with a dark somewhat sinister face. I couldn't help wondering if he were in any way implicated
in the tragedy. Like the rest of us he was self-possessed, and though he should
shocked, seemed anxious principally to do anything he might to help.
Could it have been the work of burglars? he said. Has anything been stolen?
I don't know, I replied as no one else spoke. Do you miss anything?
Lasseter glanced over the desk, and, taking some keys from his pocket, opened one or two drawers.
Checkbook and petticoash all right, he said briefly. Haven't you looked in the safe?
No, said Morland, but he made no move to.
follow up Lasseter's suggestion.
I heard no sound at the doorway, but seeing Dr. Mason's eyes turned from the telephone in that direction,
I looked to and saw Mrs. Carstairs come in.
She entered noiselessly as she always moved, and though she was wearing the same white gown
I had admired earlier that morning, she appeared altogether different.
No longer was the smartness of her costume as chief characteristic.
But, and it must have been owing to the woman's wonderful dramatic
ability. Her white linen garb had the effect of the uniform of a trained nurse.
With a swift, comprehending glance, she looked in every one of our faces, and then, without a
word, glided to the chair where sat the still figure of David Van Wick.
She betrayed no sense of self-consciousness. Indeed, she seemed unaware of our presence as she
stood looking at the dead man's face. Then she spoke. It was suicide, she said with an air of certainty.
Mr. Van Wick was an unhappy man, and he sought refuge in death.
For the first time, she assumed a melodramatic pose and stood looking at us all as if to challenge contradiction.
I know what you mean, began Morland hotly, but it is not true. My father was not an unhappy man.
Mrs. Carstairs merely gave a French shrug of her well-formed shoulders and said nothing.
With her hanging hands lightly clasped in front of her,
she stood cool and self-possessed while Moreland went on irately.
Since you have said that, Mrs. Carstairs, please explain yourself.
Why do you say my father was unhappy?
I speak of what I know, she returned her gaze at him not flinching,
but I deny your right to question me concerning my knowledge.
If you know anything that can help to throw any light on this sad occurrence,
it is your duty to tell it, Mrs. Garstairs, said Dr. Mason, speaking rather sternly.
When I am questioned by authority, it will be time for me to speak, she returned calmly.
Her manner and voice, even her words, seemed to be betoken that she was in possession of
great secrets, but I had an intuitive conviction that it was only pretense. I felt sure
she wanted to appear sensationally important, and I wondered if she meant in any way to make trouble
for Anne. I think the same notion was an archer's mind, for he said,
any facts you may know Mrs. Carstairs must be told at the inquest,
but opinions or fancies carry no weight. She gave him a glance that seemed tinged with mockery,
but she only said, Mine is not a nature to exploit opinions or fancies.
Then she turned to Dr. Mason, and speaking in her capacity of housekeeper, asked him
concerning the removal of the body to another room.
not until the coroner gives permission he replied he will be here shortly and until then we can make no changes or definite plans barbara came to the study door accompanied by mrs stelton and beth fordice
mrs carstairs moved swiftly to meet them but though she admitted barbara she refused entrance to the others i did not hear her words as she spoke with them but they seemed willing to accept her dictum and turned away together
i couldn't help admiring her wisdom and tact in keeping them out for they were emotional women and their exclamations would have jarred the overwrought nerves of us all mrs carstairs was charming she told barbara in a few words all that we knew and clasped her arm in an unobtrusive but helpful sympathy
but barbara shook her off almost rudely and going straight to her father's side looked at him long and silently then she went over and sat down by morland and they conversed in whispers
mrs carstairs was apparently not at all offended by barbara's manner and placidly continued her role of general director of affairs she straightened a small rug emptied an ashtray into a waste-basket and was about to tidy up the desk when condron archer said it would be wiser mrs carstairs not to be wise her not to-o'rash-anded a waste-basket and was about to tidy up the desk when condron archer said it would be wiser mrs carstairs not to
to move anything before the coroner arrives.
He must see the room as it is.
There may be clues to the...
The intruder.
There was no intruder, said the housekeeper, in a tone of quiet assurance.
Mr. Van Wick died by his own hand.
But she seats passing among the desk appointments and sat down near the door.
She leaned her head back and closed her eyes,
looking the picture of Sphinx-like inscrutability.
But she was alert enough to be at the door as the coroner entered a moment.
later. She ushered him in and seemed about to lead him toward the desk when Dr. Mason rather
peremptorily took matters in charge himself. The coroner whose name was Melon was a brisk and somewhat
aggressive man. He went at once to the body of the dead man and began his examination. He agreed with
the doctor that it was difficult to tell what had caused death, except by an autopsy, but he at once
began a search for the weapon. At his request, Archer and I joined him, but in the whole
whole great room we could find no pistol nor any instrument of the nature of a stiletto.
Then it must be the work of an intruder, declared the coroner, who took the weapon away with him.
But that's impossible, I said, for this room was absolutely secure in its locks and bolts against
any intruder. Nobody could possibly have gotten in. But it is equally impossible that a man could
have killed himself and left no trace of the weapon, said Mr. Mellon doggedly.
could he have stabbed or shot himself and then thrown the weapon far from him asked archer looking deeply thoughtful death was almost instantaneous said dr mason but i suppose that by a spasmodic muscular effort he could have done that however the relaxed position of his hands and arms does not make it seem probable but it is the only explanation said i eagerly come on archer let us make a more thorough
search. Perhaps Mr. Lasseter will help us. Barkley Lasseter agreed, though he seemed rather half-hearted about it.
Barbara and Morland looked at us but made no offer of help. The search was fruitless. Neither floor nor walls
showed any bullet holes or powder marks. There was no weapon to be found. Though I produced the few
small shot I had found on the floor, they seemed meaningless in the absence of any gun.
The very absence of a weapon precludes all idea of suicide, said Coroner Mellon at last.
And though I'm not prepared to say how the murderer got in or out of this room, I believe that he did so,
and that David Van Wick did not die by his own hand. Has anything been stolen?
Lasseter opened the safe door, and I expressed surprise that it was unlocked.
Often is, returned the secretary carelessly.
Most of the valuable things.
are in inner compartments with complicated locks of their own.
And two, there never are burglaries in this peaceful village, and a man grows careless.
But I can't see that any securities are missing.
All these papers seem undisturbed.
The pearls, cried Morland starting up suddenly.
Are they there?
Here is the box, said Lasseter, handing a jewel case to Morland.
Open it yourself.
Morland opened it and gave a cry of despair for the satin line
case was empty.
The Pearl's gone, said Barbara
with an awe-stricken look.
Then it was a burglar after all.
But it couldn't be, I began
when the coroner cut me short.
If pearls have been stolen, of course it was a burglar,
he said.
And a professional cracksman, if he could get into
this room and out again?
But he couldn't, I declared emphatically
glancing at the windows and doors.
Still the coroner refused to
heed me and said abruptly, what were they worth?
They were practically priceless, Morland stated.
My father had been collecting and matching them for years.
It was a triple necklace composed of three strands of the finest and largest pearls he could procure.
$100,000 would be a conservative estimate of their value.
And a man kept such jewels as that in an unlocked safe, said the coroner incredulously.
They must have been there temporarily.
said morland as if puzzling the matter out himself and two i have no doubt my father intended to lock the safe before he left the study but he was murdered first
have you any theory mr van wick how a murder could have been affected no said morland i haven't i know even better than the rest of you how absolutely this room is protected against forcible entrance and that is one reason why my father was sometimes careless about locking the safe
he knew no one could get into this room from outside of course upon leaving it at night he always locked the door that communicates with the house and kept the key himself
there is no duplicate key asked mr mellon none said morland positively then barbara van wick made a suggestion if father did kill himself she said hesitatingly possibly he himself had taken the pearls from the case and hidden them
I realized at once what she meant.
If David Van Wick had taken his own life,
it would have been quite in keeping with his cruel nature
to hide the pearls where his family might not easily find them.
End of chapters 5 and 6.
Chapter 7 and 8 of Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells.
This Libre Fox recording is in the public domain.
7. The Mysterious Motor Car
"'No,' cried Mrs. Carstairs impetuously.
"'David Van Wick would not do that.'
"'You seem very certain,' said Marland, looking at her coldly.
"'I am certain,' she retorted with a flush of her dark eyes.
"'Do you suppose I have lived under David Van Wicks' roof all these years
without learning his nature fairly well?'
"'He was a hard man and severe, but he was just,
and above such meanness as you ascribe to him.
But, said I, you have already expressed an opinion that Mr. Van Wick died by his own hand.
Now, if the pearls were stolen by a burglar, it is a strange coincidence that the two crimes should occur the same night.
Mrs. Carstairs looked at me with her face full of baffled rage. Her theories were indeed at variance.
If an intruder took the pearls, undoubtedly David Van Wick had been murdered.
If, on the other hand, he had committed suicide, he would seem to be himself responsible.
for the disappearance of the jewels.
For a moment Mrs. Carstairs sat motionless,
though it was evident her mind was working rapidly.
The rest of us sat watching her,
and I, at any rate, began to feel a dawning hope
that what she might say next would throw a little light on the mystery.
At last she burst out in a voice low but tense with feeling.
I am sure David Van Wick killed himself.
I am sure that if before his death he secreted that valuable pearl necklace,
"'He was entirely justified in doing so.'
"'Just what do you mean by that?' demanded Archer angrily.
"'I think you all know without being told,' returned Mrs. Carstairs,
and her lips curled unpleasantly.
"'Nevertheless, you shall tell,'
and Archer's voice fairly quivered with indignation.
"'Speak out before us all, and say what you mean by your insinuation.'
Mrs. Carstairs looked at him with an air half supercilious and half amused.
"'Who are you, Mr. Archer?' she said.
"'That you should arraign me in this manner.'
"'And who are you?' thundered Archer.
"'That you should presume to cast aspersions at any of the Van Wick family.'
Mr. Mellon broke in upon this controversy.
"'What position do you hold in this house, Mrs. Garstairs?'
He inquired in a tone of such authority that it compelled a respectful answer.
"'I have been Mr. Van Wicks' housekeeper for seven years.'
you were here then before he was married to the present mrs van wick five years before the very tones of the housekeeper's voice the reminiscent look in her beautiful mysterious eyes and the almost insolent toss of her well-poised head fully confirmed my previous thought that she had deeply resented the advent of anne
coroner mellon looked at her a moment and then said as if dismissing her you will of course be called upon to give your testimony at the inquest his
Kurt nod of dismissal was sufficient to send Mrs. Carstairs from the room,
but she paid no heed to it, and remained sitting in her chair without a trace of embarrassment
or self-consciousness.
I couldn't help admiring her aplomb, her wonderful self-poise, nor could I help wondering whether
she knew anything about the tragedy, or whether her sensational nature made her wish to
appear mysterious.
I began to like the coroner.
He was not prepossessing an appearance, being extremely young for his position, and
a sandy-haired, freckled face type that made him look like a blushing schoolboy.
But his blue eyes showed a quick intelligence, and I jumped to the conclusion that he was
bright and intuitive but inexperienced.
I must ask a few preliminary questions, he said, and there was a little nervous hesitation
in his manner, and I will hold my inquest this afternoon.
Dr. Mason, can you tell me at what time the death of Mr. Van Wick probably occurred?
He has been dead fully not.
or ten hours, replied the doctor.
It is probable that he was killed about or after midnight.
I refuse to accept the theory of suicide.
Was death instantaneous?
went on Mr. Mellon.
It was, though I shall make further examination,
I am already convinced that Mr. Van Wick was stabbed
with a sharp weapon by someone with murderous intent.
But nobody could get in,
exclaimed Mrs. Garstair's, and she said,
forward grasping the arms of her chair and gazing intently at the doctor as if she would hypnotize him although I had begun to dislike the woman I was forced to admit to myself her marvelous charm every pose she assumed seemed more graceful more picturesque than the one before and yet I couldn't help thinking that her effects were all carefully premeditated she showed no self-consciousness but her self-reliance and self-sufficiency were so marked that I believed her a consummate actress
"'We are not considering that now,' said Mr. Mellon looking at her keenly,
and then turning to Morland, he said.
"'Who discovered your father's body?'
Morland told briefly the circumstances of breaking in the door,
and the coroner listened attentively and thoughtfully.
"'Summon the valet,' he said abruptly.
Mrs. Carstairs rose with a sudden start and exclaimed,
"'Why do you want him?'
"'He is in no way implicated in this matter.
He did not attend his master last evening.
"'Good heavens, madam,' said the coroner, amazed at this outbreak.
"'Nobody has accused him. Pray, calm yourself. Why do you object to his presence here?'
"'He is my son,' said Mrs. Carstairs. "'And if he is, that is no reason he should not be questioned.'
Mr. Mellon gave a grim smile and shook his head slightly, as if to imply that Mrs. Carstairs was a woman beyond his skin.
Morland had touched a bell in response to which the valet appeared. He had looked at
little to tell save to corroborate Morland's story of the morning,
but had he himself been guilty of crime he could not have acted more frightened?
I remembered, however, that he had shown the same behavior when the alarm was first raised,
and I concluded that it was merely a natural horror of death,
and perhaps he had inherited his mother's emotional disposition.
But whatever Mrs. Carstairs' attitude toward David Van Wick or his family,
I now perceived that the woman's all-absorbing passion was her son.
She watched him with intensity.
Her mobile face
unconsciously followed the expressions
of his countenance.
She prompted his speech when he hesitated,
and she interrupted and spoke for him
so frequently that Mr. Mellon was obliged
to reprimand her.
But between the trembling valet
and his anxious and apprehensive mother,
nothing was learned that seemed to be
of the least importance.
It seemed that as Mr. Van Wick
expected to be up late with the committee men,
yet excused Scarstairs from
attending him when he retired, and the valet had had the evening to himself.
When he went to his master's bedroom that morning, he found it had been unoccupied
through the night, and he had raised an alarm. The rest of his story was exactly the same as
Morlins. I could not see why his mother should be so wrought up over the matter of his
appearance, but I set it down to an excess of maternal solicitude, lest he should be suspected
of implication in the tragedy. This committee, went on Mr. Mellon, his brows bent and perplexation.
Who were they?
Three gentlemen from the village, said Morland.
They met with my father last night to discuss a business matter.
They all went away before I left this room.
Suddenly Lasseter made an announcement.
He had been looking over the papers that lay on the desk, and he said abruptly,
The deed of gift is gone.
What do you mean?
asked Coroner Mellon, alert for further information.
Last night, said Lassiter,
I was here during the conference of the general.
gentleman from the village and Mr. Van Wick. He made out to them a deed of gift of a large
sum of money. However, he retained this paper after his visitors had left. He may have put it
away after I left myself, but so far I cannot find it. At what time did you leave? asked the
coroner. Almost exactly at midnight, returned the secretary. And where was the deed you speak of
then? Lying on this desk in front of Mr. Van Wick? Who was here when you left, besides?
Mr. Van Wick.
Only his son, Morland.
That's a lie, exclaimed
Morland springing up.
When I left this room at midnight,
you were here alone with my father.
To my surprise, the coroner did not question
these contradictory statements.
He looked at the two men without speaking,
though his sharp blue eyes
showed that he had understood what they said.
The case is most mysterious, he declared,
and I think it wiser to have no further
discussion or investigation
until I can hold the inquest and hear definite testimony.
The facts of the absolutely inaccessible room
and the entire absence of the fatal weapon
are so irreconcilable that I confess I am baffled.
I think the only course to pursue
is to engage the services of a clever and experienced detective.
There is no occasion for such a thing,
said Mrs. Carstairs, quite as if she were an authority.
I object to it very decidedly.
The coroner looked at her appraisingly,
and then turned to more.
"'Morland Van Wick.'
"'Though he said no word, it was quite evident he was inquiring from whom he should take orders.
"'My liking for Mr. Mellon deepened.
"'He showed brains and common sense, two qualities not always found together,
"'and not universally the attributes of coroners.'
"'Your opinion is not wanted, Mrs. Carstairs,' Morland said pettishly,
"'but I noticed he did not look at her.
"'I too think we should have a detective.
"'What do you say, Barbara?'
Miss Van Wick hesitated.
I hate the publicity of it, she said,
but I think we ought to find the pearls.
I looked at her in surprise.
Were her thoughts all for the jewels,
and had she no desire to find
and bring to justice the murderer of her father?
Then I remembered that her theory was
that David Van Wick had secreted the pearls
and then killed himself.
Not only the pearls,
Morland was saying,
we must lay bare the whole mystery.
I cannot live not knowing how my father met his death.
If some villain killed him, the murderer must be brought to justice.
Morland strode up and down the room as he talked,
and I thought I had never seen him look more manly.
I felt a new respect for him,
and a willingness to help him in any way I might.
Of course, Marland went on,
we must not make definite arrangements without consulting my—
Mrs. Van Wick.
It is for her to say whether we shall engage a detainee.
detective. He flashed a defiant glance at Mrs. Carstairs as he spoke, but it did not ruffle
the calm of that self-reliant personage. Barbara went away to confer with Anne on the subject,
and soon returned saying that her stepmother expressed entire indifference in the matter.
She was perfectly willing that the detective should be engaged if Barbara and Morland wished
it.
Do you know of a good detective, Mr. Mellon? I asked, while my thoughts flew to Fleming Stone and
his marvelous ability. But that good good.
great detective was far away and so unavailable.
I know of none in Crescent Falls Village, returned the coroner,
but I can send for a very good man from the city.
His name is Markham, and I have reason to know he is exceedingly clever and successful,
and though not a low-priced man, his fees are not exorbitant.
Thank you, Mr. Mellon, said Barbara simply.
That is the kind of man I should like to investigate this case.
I am sure I am correct in my beliefs, and I think a detective can find the
pearls for us. There is no other crime to be discovered.
That is what I think. And moved by a sympathy of opinions, Mrs. Carstairs glided up to Barbara and took
her hands. But she found herself coldly repulsed, as Miss Van Wick said curtly,
Do you? And drawing her hands from the clasp of the housekeeper, she moved slowly toward the
door with a backward glance at the still figure of her father. And then came the undertaker and his
men, and the coroner dismissed all of us except Dr. Mason.
As we all walked silently through the corridor, Morland and Barbara turned aside into Anne's
room. I asked them to assure Mrs. Van wake of my sympathy, and to tell her how glad I would
be if I might do anything for her. The message sounded perfunctory, but I think I had never said
sincere words. The rest of us went various ways, Archer going off to his own room and
Mrs. Carstairs toward the servants' wing. I went to the library.
and after a short time,
Morland joined me there.
How is Mrs. Van Wick? I inquired.
She's composed, he answered briefly,
but exhausted from the shock.
She is entirely unable to discuss details of arrangements
and says for Barbara and myself to manage things as we choose.
She sends thanks for your kind message
and hopes to see you later in the day.
My heart gave a throb at this,
for though I was longing to see Anne,
I wanted the suggestion to come from her.
"'Then, of course, you will take complete authority,' I said to Morland,
who sat on the edge of a table, moodily swinging one foot back and forth.
"'Yes,' he said angrily,
"'if I can circumvent that carstairs, woman.'
I had resolved to be very discreet on this subject, so I only said,
"'She is a strange personality.'
"'She's a serpent,' Morland muttered, and just then Mrs. Stelton and Miss Fordyce
appeared at the doorway.
"'Mayn't we come in?'
begged Mrs. Stelton in her pouting childish way.
We're so frightened and lonesome.
Beth Fordyce said nothing,
but her big blue eyes were full of tears
as she looked at Morland.
Certainly, I said, rising,
please come in and talk to me.
The latter's speech seemed necessary,
for at their entrance Marland walked out of the room
without a word.
Poor Mr. Marland,
said Mrs. Stalton,
wringing her little hands fuzzily,
I am so sorry for him.
I wish I could
comfort him? I think he likes best to be let alone, I said. Aside from his natural sorrow,
he is suddenly loaded with grave responsibilities, enough to overwhelm any man. They will not overwhelm
him. It was Miss Fordyce who spoke, and her eyes had the faraway look that always showed
in them when her mood was occult. I shall care for his spirit and sustain him in his hour.
Now, Beth, led up on that rubbish, and Mrs. Stelton was so in earnest that she forgot to
flutter.
You tell Mr. Sturgis what you have to tell him.
I've nothing to tell, and Miss Fordyce looked positively dreamy.
Yes, you have, and Mrs. Stelton took her arm and shook her slightly.
Wake up now and stop your nonsense.
Tell Mr. Sturgis what you saw last night.
Was it a vision?
I asked, resigning myself to one of her youth.
usual psychic experiences.
I did have a vision, the girl began, but Mrs. Stelton interrupted her again.
Never mind your vision. Stick to plain facts. You tell Mr. Sturgis the story, just exactly as
you told it to me. What is it? I asked, interested now and hoping it might be something of
real importance. Please tell me at once, Miss Fordyce, for someone may come in here at any moment.
As she frequently did, Miss Fordyce changed her.
manner suddenly, and spoke with alert energy.
It's only this.
I was awake last night, and I rose and sat by my window for a long time.
The moon was bright, and everything looked so beautiful it did my soul good.
Well, as I sat there...
Excuse me a moment, Miss Fordyce.
Which is your room?
Directly over this, she replied, on the second floor.
I have the front room on the other side of the second floor.
I said, Realize.
that she could not see the east wing from her window.
Yes, I know, said Mrs. Stelton.
You have the room directly over Anne's.
Mr. Archer's room is over Mr. Van Wick's bedroom.
Mr. Van Wick used to have the room Mr. Archer has now,
before he married Anne.
Then he had the first-floor suite done up,
and, positively, the rooms are of regal splendor.
Why, Anne's dressing-room?
Go on with your story, please, Miss Fordyce.
I said, taking advantage of one of Mrs. Stelton's
for breath. As I sat by my window, the girl went on, I saw a very large motor car come slowly
along the main road. It halted now and then, not as if because of any mechanical trouble,
but as if its driver hesitated about proceeding. After stopping two or three times,
it finally came into the grounds and up our main road. But it continued to pause now and then
until at last it made a mad dash round the house, passing right to.
under my window. I didn't see the car again, but a few moments later, I saw some person wrapped
in a large coat walk stealthily by my window. I don't know whether it was a man or a woman,
but whoever it was seemed afraid of being seen. For the dark figure hit twice behind trees,
and then suddenly ran swiftly away in the same direction the motor car had gone.
At what time did all this happen? I asked. I'm not sure.
but it was not far from midnight at any rate between twelve and one miss fordice i said as you know a great mystery at present surrounds the death of mr van wick this incident you saw may have a bearing on the matter and it may not
but won't you promise me not to speak of it to any one else and at the coroner's inquest which will be held this afternoon won't you tell this story simply and straightforwardly as you have told it to me
at the inquest miss fordice exclaimed oh i just couldn't yes you can i answered her sternly and you must if you do it rightly you may be of great help to the whole van wick family while if you are foolish about it you may impede justice and cause untold trouble
there i told you so cried mrs stelton i knew it was important now beth you come along with me i'll see to it mr sturgis there-i'll see to it mr sturgis there-i'll see to it mr sturgis there-i'll see to it mr sturgis there
that this girl tells her story and tells it right when she is called upon to do so.
Thank you, Mrs. Telton, I said heartily, and I had never liked the little lady so well before.
Keep Miss Fordyce up to the mark, and don't let her slip away into her dreams and visions.
The two went away together, and I started off for a stroll by myself to see what a little fresh air would do
towards straightening out the complex questions that were baffling my brain.
8. Enter a detective.
I walked along the path, my eyes cast down and my hands behind me while I brooded over the situation.
I had the grace to be utterly ashamed of the fact that beneath all other considerations,
I was conscious of a realization that Anne was now free.
I would not allow myself to put this thought into words. I tried to evade and ignore it,
but it brought a peace to my soul that shone steadily through all the disturbing problems.
problems that filled my consciousness. First was the great problem of Van Wick's death.
Was it suicide or murder? And then I thought, how futile even to wonder about that until the
inquest, when unexpected disclosures might immediately solve the mystery. Next was the problem of what
Anne would do. But that, it seemed to me, was an indelicacy even to think about at present. So I
resolutely put it away from me and turned my thoughts to the story Beth Fordyce had told.
It was certainly strange that a motor should come into the Van Wick estate at midnight,
and that it should alternately halt and proceed in such a mysterious manner.
Also that its entrance and disappearance should be followed by the presence of a stealthy-cloaked figure.
But again, was Beth Fordice's word reliable?
I had no doubt of her integrity, but the girl had such strange fancies and such a vivid imagination
that I could not place implicit reliance on the story as she had told it.
To her distorted mental vision, a belated pedestrian might assume the mystery of a prowling marauder.
And yet, she had said the figure passed under her window, which would of course mean someone
intending either rightly or wrongfully to enter the house.
And two, the strange proceedings of the motor-car, though perhaps exaggerated by her,
could scarcely be all imagination, unless the girl had willfully made up this story, which I did
not believe.
But again, if the occupant of the motor-car had indeed been a criminal, a thief and a murderer,
with fell intent against David Van Wick, how had he entered the study, committed his crimes,
and departed again, leaving every outlet of the room securely fastened on the inside?
This question proved unanswerable, so I gave it up and began to retrace my steps toward the house.
As I neared the stables, I noticed a man coming along the same road that I had seen Mrs. Carstairs slowly fall,
following early that same morning.
I paused a moment to watch him,
and I saw that it was carstairs, the valet.
To my surprise, he repeated exactly the procedure of his mother.
He stepped along slowly, carefully examining the ground,
and had every appearance of a man searching for some small lost article.
He had a stick in his hand and even scraped the dirt of the road now and then,
peering closely, as if in a desperate search.
I determined to come upon him suddenly as I had surprised his mother
and see if he were as apt at explaining himself as she had been.
I approached very quietly, and as I was just at his elbow, I said,
What have you lost?
The man dropped his stick and raised a white startled face.
Nothing, sir.
I assure you, I have lost nothing.
What are you looking for, then?
I will help you find it.
I picked up the stick he had dropped and began poking in the dust myself.
but he said stammering and with a pleading expression.
No, no, I have not lost anything, sir.
Give me back my stick, I beg of you.
Look here, carstairs, it's no crime to lose anything.
But to be so secret about it and so rattled betokens a guilty conscience of some sort.
Yes, sir, very good, sir.
I'm not rattled, sir.
And indeed, indeed, sir, I have not lost anything.
clearly the man had not his mother's faculty for rising to a situation.
Without a doubt they had both been searching for the same thing,
as I saw them both closely examining the ground in the same place.
But she had tossed off my questions with Witty Repartee,
while he was the embodiment of agonized embarrassment.
I went on toward the house with a new problem added to my brain collection.
The problem of the two searchers who both denied having lost anything
and who were mother and son.
Collusion and secrecy were certainly shown here.
I had no clue to the solution of this mystery
and thought that very likely it was a matter of no importance anyway.
When I reached the house,
Barbara met me with the welcome news that Anne desired to see me.
I was conducted to her dressing room,
and as I entered, I realized the truth of what I had been told
regarding the Van Wicks apartments.
A more exquisite gem of a room I never saw.
It was furnished entirely in Louis-Sais's effects, and was a miracle of gilded carving and rose-colored brocade.
"'And you call this a dressing-room?' I said, endeavoring to be casual.
I think boudoir a more appropriate term.
Anne smiled.
"'I hate a French word,' she said,
"'when English will do as well.
And I especially dislike the term sitting-room, so what could I do?
And it is my dressing-room, as you see.'
she waved her hand toward a daintily appointed toilette table glittering with glass and gold i scarcely knew whether to continue the conversation on trivial matters or whether to speak of the tragedy anne herself was perfectly composed though pale and with an air of forcing herself to be quiet and natural
but after a few moments of beating time i said let's not evade the subject that fills both our minds may we not speak of it how nice you are said anne
and her eyes beamed with gratitude.
You always do the right thing, Raymond.
My heart is bursting to talk of these things,
yet everyone thinks I don't want to.
Talk to me, I said gently.
Just as you will.
Say anything that is in your heart.
I was on dangerous ground, and I knew it,
but I held myself well in hand.
Anne looked lovelier than ever
in a white, lacy sort of boudoir gown
and a lace cap on her beautiful hair.
also she looked pathetic and as if greatly in need of someone to lean on for sympathy and counsel.
Let us talk it over freely, I said. You cannot be brave and courageous, Anne, as you must be,
if you are afraid to face the facts. You don't think your husband took his own life, do you?
I'm sure he did not. David had no reason for such an act. He was a man fond of life,
and beside he had this project of the library in mind, and, and, he had this project of the library in mind,
and he was more than anxious to carry it through.
There is no reason.
There can be no reason why he should kill himself.
But Raymond, and her white brows drew tensely.
How could anyone kill him and get away afterward, leaving the study locked?
I've thought over that until I'm nearly crazy.
You see, I know how perfectly impossible it is to get into the room when the door is locked.
Because...
Because what?
I gently prompted her.
A look of pain came into her eyes, followed by a sudden determination, and she went on.
I may as well tell you, because my husband and I have had some fearful quarrels.
Invariably, he would go and shut himself in the study afterward.
I knew it was my duty to try to make peace with him, and often I have tried to get into the
study in spite of him.
I have even tried to get in at a window, while he would sit inside and smile at me in mockery.
What do you have been through with that?
that man, I exclaimed.
Yes, and yet
he was often very good to me.
At times he was a perfect
brute, but it was because of his
really ungovernable temper.
Then again he would fairly spoil
me with kindness.
But of late his kindness had become
more and more rare, and he was
sarcastic and cruel much of the time.
I tell you this, Raymond,
because I want you to understand
that, while I respected and admired
David in many ways, I can't
cannot mourn him as I would mourn a man I loved.
This admission brought joy to my own heart,
but I knew this was no time or place to let it be known,
and as a matter of precaution I hurriedly changed the subject.
What a strange woman Mrs. Carstairs is, I said.
Had she in a special interest in Mr. Van Wick?
Oh, she adored him!
And Anne spoke carelessly,
as if it were a matter of no moment to her.
At one time she hoped to marry him,
but David had no such intention.
So, of course, she resented my presence here
and has never been nice to me.
It didn't bother me much, though she is annoying.
I tried to have her dismissed,
but Garstairs is such a perfect valet.
David would not give him up, so they both remained.
Now they can both go.
Anne spoke with a sudden vindictiveness,
and just at that moment,
Mrs. Garstairs appeared in the open doorway.
Her arrival was so opportune that I felt positive
she had been listening outside the door.
She did not seem angry,
but there was a feline note in her voice as she said.
You are speaking of me, Mrs. Van Wick?
It is a tribute to Anne's wonderful poise
that she was in no way ruffled.
She spoke quietly as she replied.
Yes, Mrs. Carstairs,
since you chance to overhear,
I am quite willing to repeat what I said.
As there is no longer any occasion for your son's services,
you will doubtless prefer to go away with him.
but I beg you will consult your own pleasure as to the time of your departure
and not feel obliged to make inconvenient haste.
It was a clash of superior forces.
If Anne showed self-control, the housekeeper was even more absolutely at ease.
Thank you, Mrs. Van Wick.
She returned in silvery tones.
I shall take advantage of your kind permission and remain here,
at least until we have discovered, the solution of the mystery.
that surrounds the death of Mr. Van Wick.
It may be that I can be of assistance to you.
I scarcely think that,
and Anne's slight smile would have rasped a saint,
but you are at liberty to stay as long as you choose.
The latter part of the speech was almost patronizing,
and distinctly in the manner of a mistress to a servant,
and it scored.
Mrs. Carstairs's eyes flashed,
and she winced as if flicked with a whip,
but in an instant she had dropped her eyes.
and though she merely said,
Thank you, and left the room,
her air was so unvankished, even victorious,
that she really had the final word.
You see, said Anne, spreading her hands deprecatingly,
one cannot contend with that sort of thing,
except between equals.
I appreciate that perfectly,
I returned very seriously,
but you must realize Anne that she is a dangerous woman.
You are no match for her,
because though you have marvelous perceptions and mental powers, yet you are innocent and right-minded.
That woman is all wrong. I don't know in what respects. I don't know anything about her.
But she is capable of crime. To my consternation, Anne turned white to the very lips.
She put her hands before her eyes as if to shut out some dreadful sight, and she moaned in a whisper.
Oh, Raymond, I am capable of crime, too.
"'There, there,' I said soothingly.
"'That woman has wrought on your nerves.
"'For that matter, child, everybody is capable of crime.
"'I had no business to say what I did.
"'I'm a churl, a mischief-maker.'
Anne lifted her eyes and almost smiled at myself abasement,
and then as her maid entered the room, she said,
"'What is it, Jeanette?'
"'Mr. Archer, madame, he wishes to see you.'
"'Tell him to come in,' said Anne graciously,
and then herself added,
Come on in, Connie.
There's no one here but Mr. Sturgis.
Archer came in looking preoccupied.
With scant ceremony he threw himself into a chair
and said abruptly,
Now look here, Anne.
How about this detective?
Do you want him to come?
No, said Anne simply.
I thought so.
Now Mellon has sent for him,
and unless we telephone contrary orders or something,
he'll be here today.
Why don't you want to be?
him, Anne, I asked in astonishment. I think it is necessary to have him. The mystery must be
cleared up, and two the missing pearls must be found. Surely a detective could help.
Well, then, let him come, Anne spoke almost pettishly, and I suddenly realized that her
composure was forced, and her self-control was beginning to give way.
I think, said Archer to me, that Mrs. Van Wicks' wishes should be law in this matter.
Of course, I agreed.
But perhaps Mrs. Van Wick doesn't realize how customary it is
and how necessary it is to employ a detective in such a case as this.
I needed see him, need I? asked Anne, raising imploring eyes to mine.
No, I began when Archer interrupted.
Of course you'll have to see him, and he'll ask you all sorts of questions,
and tangle you up so that you won't know what you're saying.
As usual, Anne did the unexpected.
She suddenly assumed a dignified even haughty air and said,
Let him come. Let him question me as much as he likes.
I'm not afraid of such questioning.
When will he arrive?
I don't know, said Archer, probably this afternoon or perhaps before luncheon.
I'm glad you're getting your nerve back, Anne,
for the inquest will be held this afternoon and you will have to testify.
Now don't let yourself get rattled.
I shall not get rattled.
said slowly. But Connie, I don't want to testify, or whatever you call it. Why should I? I don't know
who killed David or anything about it. But you will be called on, said Archer, and you must keep your
head. Don't break down or anything. Answer the questions directly and shortly, and you'll soon be
let off. This was good, sound advice, and I was glad Archer gave it to her. I wish she would look to me
more for counsel or help, but she seemed to depend on Archer as an old friend.
Indeed, after a time, she said,
Run away now, will you, Raymond?
I have some things I want to talk over with Connie alone.
This summary dismissal nearly took my breath away,
but I rose and went off nonchalantly, hiding my chagrin as best I could.
Immediately after luncheon, the detective came.
Mr. Markham was a commonplace-looking man of a manner somewhat self-assured.
He was perhaps a perhaps.
even a trifle conceded, but he seemed to have common sense and a good grasp of the logical.
He was quick and alert of manner, and went about his work in a systematic and methodical way.
The household was divided as to the necessity for his presence.
Morland and Barbara seemed to want him, but Anne and Archer refused to see him unless absolutely
necessary. For some reason, Barclay Lasseter appeared deeply incensed at his presence.
Indeed, the secretary abruptly took his hat and went home when he was a man.
Mr. Markham arrived, saying he would return for the inquest.
For myself, I listened eagerly to the detective's opinions.
Of course he was allowed immediate access to the study, and of course he made a careful
examination of the whole room.
But he found nothing that would throw any light on the mystery, and I felt a little
disappointed at his non-committal attitude.
He spent much time examining locks and bolts and inquiring as to keys.
But he only proved what we had known before.
that the study was absolutely inaccessible to an intruder.
Then, of course, he declared it must have been a suicide.
Then, when he was convinced of the utter absence of any weapon,
and the practical impossibility of the wound being self-inflicted,
he returned to the theory of murder.
He was greatly enthused over the mystery of the case
and the contradictory evidence.
If I may say so, he observed pompously,
I have been especially fortunate and successful in the criminal case,
which I have undertaken. I have the instinct of a sleuth, and I discover clues where none seems
to exist. But I never before have had the kind of a case that depends upon proving the presence
of an intruder in a locked room. Now, we know that no one could have entered this room and left it
locked as it was, and yet, if not a case of suicide, someone did do so. It is for me to discover how.
Mr. Markham made this speech with such an air of having made a discovery.
that I was not surprised when Moreland said brusquely.
We knew already, Mr. Markham, that my father's death was either a suicide or a murder.
We knew, too, that this room was so securely barred and bolted that we had to force an entrance.
Now we have sent for you to learn, if possible, the truth of the matter.
But what we want is not the propounding of the problem, but its solution.
Mr. Markham did not appear at all offended by this and only said,
quite so, quite so, Mr. Van Wick.
Now, I must remind you that aside from the crime of murder, we have the loss of the
perils to consider. I must not only solve the mystery of your father's death, but I must
recover those valuable gems. Very well. I am not, of course, able to do these things in a
moment, but, by careful investigation and some shrewd deduction, I hope to succeed, in time.
Of course, Mr. Markham, said Marland, I didn't expect results at once.
Pursue your own methods and call on any of us for such information or help as you may desire.
Pray, consider the house at your disposal.
Interview the servants if you choose, and feel at liberty to do what you will, unquestioned.
I shall also, returned the detective.
Expect to be allowed to interview members of the family or guests.
That, of course, said Morland,
but I must ask of you to spare the feelings of the family as far as you possibly can,
and to intrude upon the guest as little as may.
I was not surprised at this from Moreland, for it seemed to me that the detective was of a
nature so zealous and so unheedful of others' feelings that he might easily prove an
annoying interviewer.
End of Chapter 7 and 8.
Chapters 9 and 10 of Anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
9. The Inquest
Luncheon was served informally.
The members of the household and guests drifted in and out of the dining-room,
where the footmen served them from a buffet.
It chanced that I sat down with Morland and Archer.
We all said little, but though Morland was quiet,
it seemed as though we were endeavouring not to talk, though he really wanted to.
Would you rather we went away?
Archer asked of him.
Perhaps you would prefer not to have any guests at present.
No, no, said Morland a little irritably.
You two fellows stay on, of course.
Perhaps you can help me, and Lord knows I need help.
As to the ladies, they must do as they choose.
Mrs. Stelton wants to remain,
but I fear these awful scenes will prove too much for the nerves of Miss Fordice.
She is so highly strung.
These scenes are enough to shake the nerves of anybody, I put in.
And you know, Morland, without being told,
that Archer and I stand ready to help you in any way we can,
but I confess I can't find anything to do by way of assistance.
nor I, said Archer, but if our presence here makes it any easier for you, here we stay as long as you wish.
At any rate, we can meet some of the visitors and save you or Mrs. Van Wick that annoyance.
Of course everyone in the village knew of the tragedy by this time, and flocks of curious people were gathering in and about the house.
Soon the whole place was in a turmoil.
Neighbors and village people were coming and going, and everybody was making suggestions
or propounding theories.
Barbara and Morland quarreled openly,
Anne refused to see anybody.
Archer stood around, Moody and Taciturn.
The languid figure of Beth Fordyce could be seen,
strolling about the gardens,
bringing her hands in picturesque despair,
while Mrs. Stelton fluttered about everywhere,
asking absurd questions and making herself a general nuisance.
I longed for a little talk with Anne,
but decided not to bother her,
so I employed myself answering
the questions of the curious visitors who came and went.
The whole village was up in arms, and yet nobody seemed to care very much that David Van Wick
was dead. Their all-absorbing interest was the mystery of the thing. They positively gloated over
the seemingly contradictory facts that a man had met his death in an inaccessible room and yet
apparently not by his own hand. Dozens of explanations were offered, some ingenious, some
ridiculous. But I listened to them all, hoping that perhaps a chance shot might hit the truth,
for I, too, was deeply interested in solving the mystery.
Quite apart from my personal connection with the matter, I felt a stirring of the detective
instinct to solve the problem. And not the least curious phase of it was that apparently
nobody accused or even suspected any individual. The whole argument seemed to be that it must
have been the work of an expert burglar, and yet that the entrance of such an intruder was
impossible. Buttonwood Terrace, hitherto so exclusive, was thrown open to all.
Beside the curiosity seekers from the village, many personal friends and some distant
relatives arrived at the house. As both Anne and Barbara declined to see anybody, Mrs. Carstairs
acted as hostess. She was serene and composed, but with an air of calm determination that made
me wonder what her thoughts might be. At one time I saw her in earnest colloquy with Mr. Markham.
I burned to know what she was talking about, and I asked him.
Oh, he said, she doesn't want to testify at the inquest, and she doesn't want her son to either,
but of course they'll have to.
Can he or they be implicated? I asked with interest.
Probably not. More likely it's a woman's natural instinct to dread such an experience
both for herself and for anyone dear to her.
I thought then of the peculiar circumstances of Carstairs and his mother, both hunting for
something in the road,
and both denying that they had lost anything.
I was about to tell this to Mr. Markham
when he was called away on some matter,
and I thought, too, perhaps it was better not to mention the subject,
until I should discover what developments might result from the inquest.
Coroner Mellon proved himself capable of conducting matters in a business-like way.
If he appeared hard and heartless,
it was probably necessary considering the work he had to do.
The inquest was to be held at half-past, too,
and there was much to be done by way of a matter of,
preparation. The jurymen were arriving, also several policemen and a number of reporters.
The incoming trains brought people from the city and many of the principal men of the village
were in attendance. Not everyone was allowed to enter the house, but the grounds were thronged
with curiosity seekers and idlers. As the time neared for the inquest, the Great Hall began to be
filled with people. A table had been placed in the center for the use of the coroner and the
reporters and a group of chairs nearby were intended for the jury.
Seats were reserved for the members of the household, and the rest of the room was quickly
filled by an interested, if horrified audience.
The coroner and the jurymen filed in and took their places, and as if by the touch of a
magic wand, the beautiful reception hall was transformed into a courtroom.
The arrival of the family upon the scene created a decided stir amongst the audience.
Anne came first, walking with Condren Archer.
Her beautiful face was white, but her eyes were not cast down.
Instead, she looked straight ahead of her, but with an unseeing gaze as if walking in sleep.
Archer led her to a chair and sat down beside her.
They were followed immediately by Barbara and Marland, who were whispering together as they came in.
This brother and sister were often at variance in their opinions, and apparently the present
occasion offered them opportunity for differing views.
Mrs. Chelton and Miss Fordyce followed them, both looking very much disturbed and embarrassed.
I myself came in with Markham, the detective, and behind us were Mrs. Carstairs and her son.
The other servants were congregated in a nearby room, but Mrs. Carstairs had insisted on having
her son by her side and it had been allowed.
Coroner Mellon was short and sharp in his speech and wasted little time in preliminaries.
His jury was sworn, and his first witness on the stand, all the time.
almost before I realized that the inquest had begun.
The valet carstairs was the first one questioned.
He answered the coroner in a nervous and agitated manner,
and it was clear to be seen that he was exceedingly ill at ease.
To me, however, this was only a natural result
of finding himself implicated in such a tragedy.
Tell the story in your own way, said Coroner Mellon,
speaking a little more kindly as he observed the man's demeanor.
I went to the master's room this morning.
"'Marning, sir, as I always do, and he wasn't there,
"'and his bed hadn't been slept in.
"'So as I couldn't think of any place he might be,
"'except in his study, I went there, sir,
"'and it was locked, and I couldn't get in.
"'I knocked several times, but nobody answered.
"'So I went and told Jeanette, and she told Mrs. Van Wick.
"'Who is Jeanette?' asked Mr. Mellon.
"'She's Mrs. Van Wick's maid, sir.
"'And then the gentleman came from the dining-room,
"'and they ordered the door broken in, sir.'
We called Ranny for that.
Never mind about that now.
Tell us of last evening.
When did you see Mr. Van Wick last?
When he was dressing for dinner, sir,
and he told me then that I needn't attend him when he retired.
He said he expected some visitors in the evening,
and as he should be up late I needn't wait up for him.
And didn't you?
No, sir.
Why did you hesitate at that reply?
I didn't, sir.
You did?
"'What time did you go to bed yourself last night?'
"'At about midnight, sir.'
"'And where were you all the evening?'
"'I was down in the village. I went to a ball there.'
"'And returned home about midnight.'
"'Why, yes, sir.'
The valet did seem disingenuous, and I felt sure that the coroner doubted his
truthfulness. But to my mind the man was merely confused by the questions shot at him.
During the examination Mrs. Garstair sat looking at her son.
Her hands were clasped in the intensity of her attention,
and I could see that she was controlling her agitation by sheer force of will.
I had no reason to think the valet had killed his master,
but I couldn't help surmising that either he or his mother or both
knew something of the mystery that the others did not.
I saw the coroner about to dismiss the witness,
and I scribbled a hasty line and passed it to Mr. Mellon,
advising him to ask the valet further questions about the evening before.
The coroner seemed a little at sea in the matter, but he followed my advice.
Did you see any of the members of the household on your return last night?
No, sir.
Either the man was actually scared out of his wits, or he was concealing something,
for a more stammering frightened witness I never saw.
Are you sure of this?
An affirmative nod was the only answer,
and the valet's fingers laced and interlaced until I feared he would injure them.
The servants, did you see any of them?
Why, yes, sir, and Carstairs's eyes rolled wildly as though he had made a terrifying admission.
Which ones?
Only Jeanette, sir.
Where did you see her?
In the servant's dining-room, sir.
What was she doing there at midnight?
She was about to go to attend on Mrs. Van Wick, sir.
i saw jeanette's white face peeping in from the next room and she looked about as terrified as the valet himself in an undertone i drew mr markham's attention to this fact but he seemed to think it unimportant and said that servants were always rattled at being made publicly conspicuous
i didn't entirely agree with him and i felt fully convinced that carstairs and janet had knowledge of some sort bearing on the tragedy i glanced at anne and found that she like mrs carstairs was simply holding herself together by strong will-power
the others were not so deeply affected the van wick brother and sister were quiet and composed though morland had that same effect of being ready to break out indignantly at any moment
mrs tleton was frankly interested in the proceedings and showed it in her eager countenance but miss fordice sat with closed eyes as if overcome by the whole affair archer looked grave but as he continually glanced toward anne i was certain that he felt even more solicitude for her well-being
than for the developments of the case.
Apparently, the coroner thought the valet's evidence not of crucial importance,
for he concluded by saying,
Did you see any of the members of the household on your return?
None but the servant, sir.
You didn't see Mr. Van Wick in his room or in his study?
No, sir, I did not.
This answer, at least, was given without hesitation
and apparently satisfied, the coroner dismissed the witness.
Ranny, the garage mechanician, was now.
next called his testimony was straightforward and he was entirely unembarrassed and indeed seemed almost uninterested mr morland called me he said and ordered me to pick the lock of the study door of course with my knowledge of mechanics i could do this
and as it was then bolted he ordered me to saw out the piece of wood containing the bolt this i did and we opened the door you live in the house asked mr mellon no sir i'm
I live in a cottage near the stables and garage.
What time did you retire last night?
Early, sir.
Between nine and ten o'clock.
Were you awake at or about midnight?
Before replying,
Rani gave a long, steady glance at Carstairs.
The valet returned it with a belligerent stare
that seemed to convey a threat.
I was surprised at the directness of this glance
after Carstairs' exhibition of nervousness.
Apparently it was entirely intelligible
to Ranny, for he set his jaw with grim determination and proceeded to answer the coroner.
I was wakeful on and off all night, sir. I can't say as I was awake at twelve o'clock,
and I can't say as I wasn't. I'm a light sleeper, sir. Then you would have heard if anything
unusual was taking place. Do you mean here at the house, sir? Because my cottage is too far away
for me to hear burglars or anything like that. Did you hear or see anything unusual at any time
during the night. Again, Ranny hesitated. Again he looked at carstairs, this time including
Mrs. Carstairs in his glance. To my surprise, while the valet still had a threatening aspect,
his mother smiled slightly at Ranny. It was a strange smile, a little coaxing and of a persuasive
charm. I don't know whether anyone else noticed this by-play, and the detective paid no
attention to it whatever, but it interested me. And I thoroughly believe that it was,
was in response to Mrs. Carstairs' beseeching glance that Ranny said firmly,
"'No, sir. Nothing did I hear or see all night long.'
"'I didn't believe him. To me it was a palpable untruth,
but I saw a quiet smile of satisfaction on Mrs. Carstairs' face
and a victorious gleam in the eyes of her son. What it all meant I didn't know,
and I began to think perhaps I was making too much of it,
when suddenly I remembered Miss Fordyce's account of the motor-car and the man she had
seen from her window.
Could Ranny or carstairs know anything about this, and did it bear on the mystery?
I glanced at Miss Fordyce, but she still sat with closed eyes and looked like one in a trance.
I doubted if she had even heard Ranny's evidence or that of the valet.
But I argued to myself that it would be wiser for me to say nothing, and to wait until
the testimony of Miss Fordyce should be called for.
When she would have to tell about the motor-car and I could then see if either of these
servants showed any guilty knowledge.
Next came the evidence of the doctor.
He deposed that he had been the Van Wick family physician for a great many years.
He told of being called that morning to Buttonwood Terrace and of his seeing the body of
David Van Wick.
It was his opinion after examination that Mr. Van Wick's death occurred about midnight.
From what caused? asked the coroner.
I frankly admit, said Dr. Mason, that I am puzzled as to the
the instrument which caused Mr. Van Wick's death.
I have made an examination of the body and I find no bullet or shot.
I conclude, therefore, that he was stabbed with some sharp pointed instrument which has left
a small circular hole in the clothing and the flesh.
Could it have been a hat-pin? asked the coroner.
No, it could not, declared the doctor a little shortly.
I don't know why people are so ready to assume a hat-pin.
as a matter of fact
a hat-pin is a most impracticable weapon
it would either bend double or break off
if used for such a purpose
nor was it a dagger
of any usual description
a dagger or a knife would leave a slit-like incision
and the mark in question is absolutely circular
I can only say that the weapon must
have been sharp-pointed and round
further than that I do not know
could the wound have been self-inflicted? asked the coroner.
So far as its position is concerned, yes,
but it is improbable that a man could have sufficient force of nerve
to stab himself in that manner,
for it meant a sure strong drive of the weapon.
Also, it is improbable that after that thrust
the victim could live long enough to draw out the weapon
and hide or dispose of it.
And I understand it has not been found.
"'No,' returned Mr. Mellon.
"'It has not yet been found,
"'but it may be eventually discovered.
"'It is your opinion, then, Dr. Mason,
"'that David Van Wick was not a suicide.'
"'That is my opinion,' returned to Dr. Mason positively.
"'Ten. Further evidence.'
"'Next came Barclay Lasseter, the secretary.
"'Your name and position?' asked the coroner curtly.
for some reason the young man showed rather a defiant attitude i am berkeley lassiter and my position was that of secretary to david van wick confidential secretary yes private and confidential secretary for how long have you held that position a little over a year what are your duties my duties have been to do whatever mr van wick required of me in the way of attention to his correspondence and business affairs
you live here no i board in the village but frequently at mr van wick's request i've stayed here overnight or for a few days at a time when were you last with mr van wick last evening when a committee of three gentlemen visited him in his study
for what purpose it was mr van wick's intention to make a gift of nearly a million dollars for a village library and three prominent men of the village were a committee to accept this gift and superintend its disposal as direct
This evidence caused a decided sensation in the audience.
The library plan had been a secret until now, and the village people were astounded at the news.
The coroner went on.
As confidential secretary, you must know all about the details of this plan for the library.
I only know that it was Mr. Van Wicks' positive intention to make the gift.
Papers were drawn up to that effect last evening, but they were not completed and not signed.
and those papers have been stolen.
They have disappeared,
meaning that Mr. Van Wick may have disposed of them himself before he died,
meaning nothing, but that the papers are missing,
and I have no way of ascertaining whether they were stolen or not.
And the Van Wick pearls, they are also missing.
They are.
They were always kept in the safe?
Not always, but usually.
When not in the safe, where were they?
in the possession of Mrs. Van Wick.
Did she prefer to keep them in her own possession?
This question seemed to me too personal,
and I noticed both Archer and Marland
showed frowning faces at the coroner's words.
But Lasseter answered decidedly,
she certainly did.
The possession of the pearls
was a constant source of disagreement between them.
This roused me to extreme indignation,
but as I looked at Anne
and saw the calm, even supercilious expression
on her face, I concluded I was too sensitive in the matter, and probably it was necessary that
these things should come out in the evidence. I knew David Van Wick's disposition, and it was not
at all astonishing that he and Anne should have quarreled about the pearls. I knew they were hers in the
sense that he had given them to her, but I knew, too, that he claimed the ownership of all and
any of her property. However, it was very ungracious of Lasseter to volunteer the information as
to marital disagreements.
When did you last see Mr. Van Wick alive?
Mr. Mellon next inquired of the witness.
I was present at his conference with a committee.
Those gentlemen stayed until well after eleven.
I then remained with Mr. Van Wick until very nearly twelve,
leaving for home, I should say, at about ten minutes before midnight.
You left Mr. Van Wick's study and went directly to your home.
I did, returned Lassiter, and though the answer was prompt,
there was something about the man's voice that made me doubt his integrity.
I had no reason to question the truth of his statement, but his wandering eye, a certain nervous
working of his features, and his restless clasping and unclasping of his hands made me wonder
whether or not he had anything to conceal. But I also realized that the curt, almost aggressive
manner of coroner Mellon was enough to disturb the poise of the most innocent witness.
You left Mr. Van Wick alone in his study. Not so.
his son morland was with him i was not declared morland starting up from his seat not far from me lassiter paid no attention to this interruption and the coroner said why does mr morland van wick contradict you mr lassiter
i don't know said the secretary i repeat that when i left the study i left mr van wick and his son there and i said good-night to both as i went out of the door did they respond to your good-night the good-night the elder
Mr. Van Wick said, good-night, Lasseter, in his off-hand way, and immediately followed it with a
remark to his son. What was the remark? He said,
You see, Morland, I have proved that I could carry out my intention after all. And did Mr.
Morland Van Wick reply to this? That I cannot say, as I was by that time outside the door
and I closed it behind me. And you know nothing more of this matter? The next time I saw Mr. Van Wick
was when I arrived here this morning and found him dead.
You are positive that when you left last night,
Mr. Morland Van Wick was in the study with his father.
I am positive.
There was a breathless silence.
It was quite evident from the expressions on the faces of the audience
that they had leaped to the conclusion that Morland Van Wick
had killed his father because of the plan for endowing a library.
The villagers had become aware of the situation so suddenly
and had been so astonished at the munificence of the gift
that it seemed to them but natural that the Van Wick family should resent this disposal of a fortune.
But the thought of Morland committing a crime because of it appalled them
and looks of horror could be seen on every face.
Morland Van Wick was next called as a witness.
The sight of his livid, angry face seemed to render the coroner incapable of definite questions.
What have you to say for yourself? he said.
I have this to say.
thundered morland.
Berkeley Lasseter lies when he says he left me with my father.
The truth is, I left the study before Lasseter did.
I left him there with my father, and if he states the contrary,
he has his own reason for doing so.
You are implying, began the coroner.
I'm implying nothing, Morland stormed on.
I am stating that I left my father and his secretary alone in the study,
and I am stating nothing but that.
He threw a defiant look at the secretary,
who returned it in kind.
Coroner Mellon was decidedly
nonplussed. He seemed to
fear an outbreak of personal hostilities
between these two and he said hastily.
Let us not pursue this further.
One of you gentlemen must be mistaken.
Mr. Van Wick, have you any opinion
or theory as to the cause of your father's death?
I thought this rather clever of the coroner,
for it would bring forth either an accusation
of the secretary or a tacit implication
of freedom from suspicion.
My opinion is the only one possible to hold.
My father was murdered by some evil-minded intruder,
presumably an expert burglar,
because valuable jewels and valuable papers have been stolen.
But how, in your opinion,
could this intruder commit his crimes and get away,
leaving the room securely locked and bolted on the inside
with no possible means of ingress or egress?
I'm not prepared to say how he did it.
The fact remains that he did do it.
At this point a juryman made a remark.
He was a shrewd-faced young fellow and seemed imbued with a sense of his own importance.
I wish to say, he began, that we should like at least a suggestion as to how the murderer
could have escaped from a room which we may call hermetically sealed.
Morland turned on him with an impatient gesture.
I hate that term hermetically sealed.
It is absurd to begin with.
That my father's murderer did get out of the room is proved by the fact that
the instrument of death cannot be found. Therefore, since the murderer did get out, the room cannot
be hermetically sealed, however much it may appear so. Can there be any secret or concealed entrance?
asked the alert juryman. No, replied Morland. There is nothing of that sort in the house,
and the study is really a separate building only attached at one corner. Moreover, a burglar,
however, enterprising, could hardly know of a secret entrance of which we did not know ourselves.
i tell you mr coroner the murderer got away after the clever fashion of a cracksman who knows his business how he did it i cannot tell you but he killed my father stole the van wick pearls stole also the deed of gift which had been drawn up for the village library and then escaped
escaped mr coroner and is therefore still at large but he must be found and no effort must be spared to find him i looked at morland in astonishment he had assumed a rather pompous attitude and seemed to be giving orders instead of giving evidence
coroner mellon looked greatly disturbed i felt sure that he was beginning to realize that the case was more than he could cope with his limited intelligence could not grapple with the mysteries and contradictions
that confronted him.
Also, he began to realize that
Morland had a high temper, and that
if aggravated much further, he might create
an unpleasant scene.
We are even now using our best
efforts to discover the criminal, Mr. Van Wick,
Mr. Mellon went on,
and I count upon you for assistance
in the matter.
How can I assist you?
Morland blazed.
If I knew anything at all about the matter,
I should volunteer the information
without having it dragged out of me.
You must hold your inquest,
of course, but it will tell you nothing, for the problem is too deep and too mysterious to be solved
easily. We have engaged a detective in whom I have confidence, but the truth cannot be learned by
questioning witnesses. However, Mr. Coroner, proceed with your duties and get them over as soon as may be.
That is what I am doing, said Mr. Mellon with a sudden accession of dignity, and in order to
proceed properly, I must insist upon asking you some further questions, even at the risk.
of being considered personal.
Were you on good terms with your father at the time of his death?
What?
Thundered Morland.
Of course I was.
I have never been on anything but good terms with my father.
To be sure we've had differences of opinion,
and we never hesitated to state plainly our views to each other,
but I don't call that being on bad terms with him.
In case of a disagreement, we fought it out as man to man.
naturally I objected to his foolish plan of founding a library of proportions and values altogether too great for a tiny village like Crescent Falls.
Naturally I told him so.
As he was very determined in the matter we had high words on various occasions, and last night matters came to a climax.
What do you mean by came to a climax?
The coroner fairly pounced on this phrase.
I mean what I say.
The climax of my father's plan was reached when he called the commons.
to meet him and accept his absurd gift. I do not blame these gentlemen. They would have been
foolish indeed to refuse a gift so freely offered to them. I was present myself at the interview,
and I used every argument I could think of to dissuade my father from his project. But I think I may
say, and I think the gentleman of the committee will bear me out on this, that every objection
I raised only made my father more determined to have his own way. The three men who had represented the
committee were all present, and they nodded their heads in confirmation of Morland's statement.
I looked at Morland thoughtfully. At one moment I would feel convinced that he was really a good
son, and that it was beyond belief that he should have raised his hand against his own father.
And then I realized his ungovernable temper and his uncontrollable fits of passion, and knowing
that last night had been indeed the climax of the whole subject, I wondered if a sudden
spasm of passion could have made
Morland so beside himself with rage
that he was almost irresponsible
and had in a frenzy committed
the awful deed.
And then rose in my mind
the old question. Even supposing
he had, how did he get out of
the locked room? It seemed
to me that the theory of murder was impossible
unless we could discover
some means of exit from that sealed study.
Mr. Mellon looked very much perturbed.
He seemed unwilling to accuse Morland,
and he had no evidence whatever against him.
There was a breathless silence in the room,
and I could not blind myself to the fact
that there was a hostile atmosphere toward young Van Wick.
It was quite evident, too,
that he noticed this himself
and assumed a defiant air in consequence.
His whole nature was touchy,
and it was characteristic of him
to show bravado when an accusation was even implied.
Coroner Mellon looked at him intently,
and seemed uncertain what to do next.
but he must proceed, and so with a baffled air
he dismissed Morland and called Barbara Van Wick.
The girl took the stand with no apparent trepidation
and calmly awaited questioning.
What can you tell us of this affair? asked the coroner briefly.
I can tell you no facts that you do not already know,
returned Barbara in even tones and with perfect poise of manner.
But I wish to advance a theory totally different from my brothers.
To repeat the phrase already used,
my father's study was hermetically sealed. It was impossible for an intruder to get in and out again,
leaving the room as we found it this morning. I myself examined the windows and doors, and I assure you
that not only are the locks and bolts especially strong, but they are so complicated as to make
it impossible to manipulate them from the outside. I hold, therefore, that my father was not
murdered, but that he took his own life. And the robberies, suggested the coroner.
There were no robberies.
The pearls have disappeared,
but I am positive that my father hid them
and that they will yet be discovered.
The deed of gift he doubtless destroyed himself
and then took his own life.
My father was a very eccentric man,
and it is my opinion that at the last his brain gave way,
and for what he did he was not mentally or morally responsible.
There was something in the girl's words and manner
that carried conviction.
Her quiet, dignified composure was so different from Marlin's belligerent insistence
that the sympathy of all presents seemed to go out to her.
All over the room heads were nodding approval of her theory,
and it seemed quite in keeping with the erratic career of David Van Wick.
But Miss Van Wick, said the coroner, and he seemed to speak with a certain diffidence.
If your theory is right, what became of the weapon used by your father?
I do not know, nor do I know what that weapon could have been.
But I hold that that may yet be discovered, and I hold, too, that the absence of that weapon is not so inexplicable a mystery as is the question of how a burglar could escape from that room.
This was true so far as it went.
We were confronted by two seeming impossibilities.
If a suicide, the weapon could not have disappeared.
If a murderer, the murderer could not have made his exit from that sealed room.
As theories, one might take one's choice.
"'You think then,' Mr. Mellon was saying,
"'the missing pearls will yet be found.'
"'I do not know,' replied Barbara.
"'I think that my father hid them
"'with the unnatural cunning of a diseased mind,
"'for I am perfectly certain
"'that my father was not sane
"'when he took his own life.
"'And if the same ingenuity
"'which marked the manner of his death
"'prompted his hiding of the pearls,
"'it may well be possible
"'that we shall never find them.'
"'I looked at Miss Van Wick in amazement.
the girl I had thought so colorless and inane was proving possessed of an unsuspected strength of character.
Her simple logical statements carried a great weight, and though she left unsolved a principal point,
many of her listeners showed a decided willingness to subscribe to her theories.
End of chapters 9 and 10.
Chapter 11 and 12 of Anybody But Ann by Carolyn Wells.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
11
Archer's Theory
For some reason best known to himself,
the coroner next called upon the three men
who formed the village committee.
These were Mr. Miller, Mr. Brant,
and Mr. Garson.
As he had been chairman of the committee,
Mr. Brant was chosen to speak with the three.
The witness was a middle-aged
and dignified-looking man of a fine presence.
He told in a straightforward manner
of the proposed gift from Mr. Van Wick to the village.
He said,
that the committee thought the project was extravagant, and they felt much hesitation on accepting
the library. But he said the more they demurred, the more insistent Mr. Van Wick became.
And he finally persuaded them that they had no right to refuse so valuable an institution for their village,
and so, he concluded, they had decided to accept it, and had come the night before to attend
to the formalities. It was clearly impossible to connect these gentlemen in any way with the
crime, but I surmise that Mr. Mellon hoped to get some important evidence from them.
He questioned Mr. Brant closely as to the attitude and behavior of Morland Van Wick during
the evening, and also inquired concerning the secretary.
But Mr. Brant said nothing enlightening.
He admitted that the Van Wicks' father and son had discussed the project hotly.
He even admitted that the discussion could properly be called a quarrel.
Of the secretary, he had nothing to say, as he had merely performed clerical duties and took
no part in the actual business of the meeting.
The necessary papers constituting the deed of gift had been drawn but not signed.
For technical reasons, they had been left overnight in the possession of Mr. Van Wick,
who had said he would put them in his safe.
Mr. Brandt further testified that the three committee men had left at about quarter after
eleven, and that Mr. Van Wick had bidden them a hearty and pleasant good-night.
Mr. Brandt spoke for his committee in expressing regret that the deed of gift was missing,
and indeed it was quite evident that the regret occupied the minds of the three men almost to the entire exclusion of the more tragic happening.
This shocked me, until I remembered that they were only slightly acquainted with David Van Wick,
and even that acquaintance was not of a friendly character.
Perhaps then it was not to be wondered at that they felt more keenly the loss of the projected gift than the loss of its giver.
I was secretly glad that the deed of gift was lost, although being unsigned is,
was probably valueless.
But since David Van Wick was dead,
I felt a decided satisfaction
that his fortune must necessarily
remain in his own family
instead of being given away.
Next to give evidence
were the guests of the house.
Mrs. Stelton seemed almost to enjoy
the importance of being questioned as a witness
and answered volubly
and with an evident intention
of making a good impression on the audience.
She spoke to them rather than to the coroner
and showed a certain personal interest
that was clearly meant to imply
that she was or would sometime be a
permanent member of the Van Wick household.
And yet, though she cast
frequent glances at Marland,
they were not always responded to,
nor did he seem absorbedly interested
in what she was saying.
Then, too, her testimony was of no
importance whatever.
She could tell nothing that was not already known
and her opinions were absolutely valueless.
She was soon dismissed,
and Beth Fordyce took her place.
As she read,
rose from her seat and went slowly forward to the chair indicated for her.
She looked so listless and distracted that I wondered if she would be able to repeat the story she
had told me.
I think Mr. Mellon gathered from her appearance that her evidence would not be of much importance,
for after a few preliminary details he said in a most uninterested way.
Can you tell us, Miss Fordyce, of any circumstance or evidence bearing on the case that we
have not already heard?
I certainly can.
and Beth Fordyce's blue eyes lighted up as if with a realization of her own self-importance.
And then in a manner which amazed me, she gave a clear and definite account of the motor-car
and the strange man she had seen the night before.
And I am not sure it was a man, she said as she came to that part of her story.
I saw only a medium-sized person with a long coat on, and as the figure crawled stealthily
along in the shadow of the house, I could not discern if it might be a man or
a woman. This is indeed most important, Miss Fordyce, said the coroner, evidently pleased to find
something to work on. It is extremely probable that the figure you saw was that of the criminal we are
seeking. But what good does that do? inquired Miss Fordyce earnestly, since you have no idea who
the person could have been. But we may be able to find out. At least we have a tangible clue to work
upon. The clue seemed to me a most intangible one, and I couldn't help thinking that any
story of Beth Fordyces would have to be corroborated by someone else before it could have much weight
with me. I glanced at Markham and saw that he was intently studying the face of the witness as he made
a few notes on a bit of paper. Without a doubt he meant to interview her alone later. Of course,
the appearance of a strange motor at midnight was exceedingly important if true. But who could say it
was not one of the hallucinations or visions to which Miss Fordyce was unfortunately subject.
I looked at the others. Barbara and Morland looked frankly incredulous. They knew the girl,
and I know they thought her story might be true and might not. Anne looked eager, as if
hoping that here was at least a beginning of the solution of this mystery. Archer looked
uninterested and kept his eyes on Anne as if trying to read her thoughts. Mrs. Carstairs and her
son were greatly agitated.
Mrs. Carstairs controlled it, and the valet did not.
But as they had been agitated during most of the inquest, I could not tell whether Miss
Fordyce's story had made any special impression on them or not.
And then again, I remembered their search in the road.
Could there be any connection between their mysterious searching and the mysterious motor-car?
But Miss Fordyce was still on the witness stand.
The coroner evidently thought that she was an important witness after all.
and questioned her on many subjects.
In response to one of his inquiries,
she repeated a remark which Morland had made to his father at dinner the night before.
This speech was to the effect that Mr. Van Wick would be sorry if he carried out his plan.
I couldn't believe that Beth intended even to cast a shadow of suspicion in Morland's direction,
but to the eager crowd waiting for a straw to show which way the wind blew,
this speech was indicative.
And yet, quite unconscious, apparently, of having some sort of having
said anything by way of suggestion,
Beth took her seat, placid, and unruffled.
But to Morland, evidently the shaft had struck home.
He remembered he had said that to his father.
He realized that it might react against him.
I thought of this, too, and then I remembered
that Lasseter had sworn that he had left Morland alone with his father,
and Morland had given him the lie.
But already Archer was testifying.
The gist of his evidence was practically the same as the others,
but he related it in a concise, straightforward way that held the attention of his hearers.
He said that he had said good-night to the ladies at about half-past ten the night before,
and that then, in company with me, he had gone to the smoking-room,
where we stayed for perhaps half an hour, both going to our rooms at about eleven o'clock.
He then told of our meeting again at the breakfast-table,
and of Anne's coming to the dining-room to tell us of Mr. Van Wicks' non-appearance.
Of course, the rest of his story was practically a repetition of the other,
Have you any theory regarding the crime? asked Mr. Mellon, and the oft-repeated question took on a new interest, as Archer said thoughtfully.
It's hardly a theory, but I should like to suggest an idea that may or may not be plausible.
What is it? asked the coroner with interest.
I'm afraid it will sound absurd, said Archer slowly and seriously.
But it is the only explanation I can think of, which would be even a possible solution of the mystery.
Though I'm not a detective, nor can I deduce facts from circumstantial evidence or clues,
yet this possibility I speak of is merely an adaptation of a story I once read.
In this story, a well-known work of fiction, a young woman was found murdered,
and the weapon could not be discovered although it had left a small round hole.
Intense interest was manifest all over the room.
Necks were craned to get a better view of the speaker.
The listeners fairly hung on his words.
and many felt that the mystery was about to be solved.
In a word, went on Archer,
the weapon used was a sharp, slender icicle.
As you may readily understand,
it performed its fatal deed and then melted,
leaving no trace.
As you can see, this is not only possible,
but credible and plausible.
At this season there are no icicles,
but I offer merely as a suggestion
that if Mr. Van Wicks' death is a suicide,
may it not be that the weapon was,
an icicle, shaped, let us say, by his own hand, from a piece of ice taken from the water-pitcher.
By Jove!
The whispered exclamation came from Lasseter, the secretary.
He was staring at Archer and muttering beneath his breath.
He struck it, he declared.
That's the only solution and it must be the right one.
Clever fellow.
He didn't deduce it, I whispered back to the secretary, for to tell the truth I was a little jealous
that I hadn't thought of it myself.
for I too had read the book in question.
He merely remembered having read of such a thing.
All the same he's right, returned Lassiter,
and I wish I'd thought of it.
The coroner was greatly impressed with this new idea.
He turned to Dr. Mason and asked his opinion.
The old doctor looked thoughtful.
I wouldn't say it was impossible.
But you must remember, gentlemen,
the whole left by the weapon in this case
is small and perfectly round.
Would it not be difficult to make artificially a smooth, brown icicle,
strong enough to pierce clothing and flesh and strike the heart with a fatal blow?
It would be difficult, said the coroner,
but I must admit it seems to me the only solution.
By the process of elimination, we must conclude that this is the truth.
Rubbish! exclaimed the detective Markham, who had scant patience with the coroner's pompous manner.
Consider the facts. Let us suppose a picture.
of ice water had been brought into the room.
Was it?
He looked around inquiringly.
Yes, said Morland.
Father rang for it, and the butler brought it in.
At what time?
About ten o'clock, I should say?
Well, triumphantly went on the detective.
Then I hold that after twelve o'clock
there would not be sufficient ice left in the pitcher
from which to make this deadly icicle.
Dr. Mason nodded his head,
and indeed we all felt that the icicle theory
was rather untenable.
Well, said Archer,
it is merely a suggestion
toward the explanation of the mystery.
It may or may not be the correct solution,
but what seems to me more important
is to learn who was the last person
to see Mr. Van Wick alive.
The absence of that deed of gift
seems to me a very peculiar feature.
A burglar would take pearls or money,
but he would have no reason
for taking that deed.
The coroner looked thoughtful.
If Mr. Van Wiggins,
was murdered, he said,
there must have been a motive for the deed.
It is true that a burglar would desire only money or valuables.
We must conceive, then, the deed being done,
that the murderer, if it is a murder,
must have been someone interested in keeping Mr. Van Wick's fortune away from the library.
The coroner had only put into words what everybody present had been uneasily thinking.
The missing deed seemed to prove that the murderer was one of the household.
For who, except the member?
of the family would care whether Mr. Van Wick gave away his money or not.
Of course, my glance flew straight to Anne to see how she took this blow.
She sat very still and her face was white, even to the lips.
I could see it was only by a brave exercise of willpower that she kept herself from collapse.
Morland looked angry and belligerent.
He glared at Lasseter and the secretary responded with a stare equally unfriendly.
Barbara looked horror-stricken.
She seemed about to speak, and then shut her lips tightly
as if determined to say nothing at this crisis.
In agony my heart cried,
Anybody but Anne.
I was unable to keep still.
Nonsense, I exclaimed.
You are theorizing about data.
Your implication is unwarranted and false.
The coroner looked at me, not reprovingly,
but as if deeply interested.
Then he dismissed Archer from the stand.
twelve anne's testimony mrs van wick was next called to testify if barbara had appeared calm and composed the same could not be said of anne she was white and trembling to the very lips she tottered as she walked and with an audible sigh she sank into the chair placed for her
but all this at least to my mind in no way impaired her strange eerie beauty her large gray eyes looked almost black against the whiteness of her pallor and as she swept a mournful unseeing glance round the room i endeavored to intercept her gaze and give her a nod of sympathy and help
but she did not look at me and clasping her hands in her lap prepared to meet the ordeal of the coroner's questions mr mellon looked at her for a moment before he spoke and his hard face took on a slightly softer expression at the sight of her evident distress
in what he doubtless meant to be a gentle voice he said when did you last see your husband alive mrs van wick to my surprise anne showed a decided agitation she clasped her hands tightly to her breast and a
in a choked almost inaudible voice, she replied.
When he left me after dinner, to go to his study.
He was then in good health and spirits, asked Mr. Mellon,
and a more inane question I never heard.
It seemed perfunctory as if the man scarcely knew how to broach the subject.
For a moment, Anne simply stared at her questioner as if trying to control her voice.
Then she said,
My husband was in perfect health, and, yes, I think I may say he was in good spirits,
What were his last words to you as he left you?
If this were a random shot, it was certainly a peculiar coincidence.
For we all remembered how, as he left the room,
David Van Wick had whispered to his wife something
that had caused her the deepest emotion.
Anne's great eyes looked at each of us in turn.
After the briefest glance at the others,
she gazed longer at Archer.
It may have been my imagination,
but I thought he gave to her an almost imperceptible,
negative shake of his head.
She looked frightened, and then her glance
met mine. I so
feared that any appearance of secrecy
on her part would be prejudicial to her,
that I nodded my head affirmatively,
meaning for her to answer the question.
Must I tell that?
She asked in a pained voice.
Yes, said Mr. Mellon,
especially if it has any bearing
on Mr. Van Wick's death.
But Anne did not hear the coroner's words.
She was nerving herself for her
reply, and she said in a low voice but distinctly.
As he leapt me, my husband whispered to me that he would give the Van Wick pearls as well as
his gift of money to the library committee.
A wave of indignation swept over the audience.
Anxious as the villagers were for the gift of the library, not one of them would have wished
Anne Van Wick's jewels sacrificed in its cause.
Elated by the sensational answer, the coroner continued.
Did he say anything more?
he inquired.
Must I tell that?
Anne scarcely breathed her face as white as the handkerchief she held.
And the coroner said inexorably, yes.
Had Anne looked toward me then, I should have shaken my head,
for I feared from her expression that the revelation would be a startling one.
She looked dazed, she spoke almost as one in a trance,
but she said clearly.
He said,
Now, don't you wish I was dead?
Doubtless it was unconscious,
and involuntary, but Anne had reproduced almost exactly the jeering tones of David Van Wick's sarcastic voice,
and not one of us doubted that those were the very words and the very inflection that had sounded in her ear,
as he had whispered to her just before leaving the drawing-room.
I well remembered the agonized expression on her face as he turned away from her,
and I knew that at this moment she was vividly seeing a picture of the scene.
The audience fairly rustled with this new sensation.
The coroner seemed spurred, and with great enthusiasm continued his catechising.
Why did he say that? he said bluntly.
Had you wished him dead?
A murmur of indignation was heard from the audience, and both Archer and Morland started as if about
to protest.
But Anne raised her clear eyes to the coroner's face and said coldly,
No, I had never wished such a thing.
Why then did he speak that way?
Mr. Van Wick was quick-tempered and very sarcastic of speech, she replied.
I can only explain his remark by assuming that it was prompted by anger and sarcasm.
Mr. Van Wick was angry, then?
Yes, he was angry?
At what?
He was angry because the members of his family were opposed to his plan of giving away
practically all his fortune to a public institution.
And then Mr. Van Wick left you, and you never saw him again alive.
That—that is so—
Except for a slight hesitation, the statement was direct, but it was manifestly untrue.
Anne's eyes fell. The color came and went in her cheeks. Her foot tapped nervously on the
floor, and she was rapidly tying her handkerchief into knots. A more agonized, indeed a more
guilty demeanor, could not have been manifested. At that moment my eyes met hers,
and it flashed across me that she and I had looked in at the window of the study and had seen Mr. Van
and colloquy with the committee.
Perhaps it was telepathy that carried the same thought to her,
for she said suddenly, and I know she spoke truly.
Oh, yes, I did see him again after that.
I was walking on the terrace later,
and I saw him through the study window, talking with his visitors.
At what hour was this?
inquired the coroner, as if the exact time of the incident
were the turning point of the whole case.
I don't know, returned Anne carelessly,
perhaps about half-past nine or quarter.
quarter of ten, I should say?
Mr. Mellon looked a little crestfallen as if an important bit of evidence had gone wrong.
To my mind he certainly was a blockhead, but after all, he was merely there to ask questions,
and if the jurymen desired, they could supplement his inquiries.
I glanced at the detective Markham to see how he took it.
He was exceedingly attentive to what was going on and sat with his head slightly forward,
and his eyes alert, apparently gleaning more information than was offered by the
mere spoken words.
And then, pursued the coroner,
after that glimpsed through the window,
you never saw your husband again alive?
Anne answered this in the negative,
but so low and uncertain was her voice
that she was obliged to repeat it twice
before the coroner was satisfied with her reply.
I felt a vague alarm.
If Anne were speaking the truth,
why should she act so strangely about it?
And if, by any chance,
she was not veracious,
she must know that her manner was unconvincing.
I had no interest in anyone else who might be implicated in the tragedy,
but my heart again cried out,
anybody but Anne.
At what time did you retire, Mrs. Van Wick, went on the questioner.
I went to my room about half past ten o'clock.
And you retired then?
I did not.
I read for a time and wrote some letters and went to bed about midnight.
Or perhaps it was later.
I dare say it was one o'clock.
Are you not sure?
No, I didn't notice the time.
Perhaps my maid can tell you.
She was with me.
So casual was Anne's manner now
that the coroner seemed to realize
his questions were not of particular importance
and he tried a new tack.
Was your husband kind to you, Mrs. Van Wick?
Anne stared at him coldly for a few seconds
and then spoke with great deliberation.
I declined to answer such a question
and I'm sure you are overstepping your rights in asking it.
Her manner even more than her words abashed the coroner,
but to cover his chagrin he became insistent.
It is necessary that I should know if there was harmony between you, he declared.
I regret that the circumstances make it necessary for me to press the question.
Anne's eyes flashed.
Her agitation was gone now,
and her poise and calmness seemed to disconcert her inquisitor
even more than her embarrassment had.
"'There was perfect harmony between us,' she said, holding her head proudly and looking straight at the corner,
with the exception of this matter of the library. I tried to dissuade my husband from his intent,
for his own sake, quite as much as for my own, for I felt sure he would regret such quixotic
generosity. But he was determined to proceed in his plan in spite of my protest.
And at the last moment he decided to add the valuable jewels to his gift?
Yes, his words to me last evening were the first intimation I had had that he meant to give away the Van Wick Pearls.
Had you any reason to doubt your husband's sanity?
None, except in this matter of the library gift.
Nor do I call that insanity, but rather a monomania which possessed him temporarily.
Do you think your late husband hid the pearls, or do you think they have been stolen?
I can form no opinion as my husband's death is so wrapped in mystery.
He may have secreted the pearls, or they may have been stolen by an expert burglar.
Personally, I have no theories on the subject.
It is all utterly mysterious to me.
Anne passed her hand wearily across her brow with a gesture of exhaustion.
I think this roused the coroner's sympathy, and he excused her from further questioning.
Mrs. Carstairs was next called as a witness.
There was a stir among the audience as she rose and walked slowly to the witness chair.
it was quite evident that considerable curiosity was felt regarding this woman i expected she would appear perturbed but instead she had a calm air of superiority and held her head high as if entirely mistress of the situation
in spite of myself i was obliged to admit that her face was fascinating in its expression quite apart from the real beauty of her features and then i suddenly realized that this remarkable woman was deliberately trying to charm the
coroner by her demeanor. She was beautifully gowned, as always, in black lustreless
craped as sheen, which clung to her beautiful figure in long, sinuous lines, and which, to my
imagination, gave her the effect of a beautiful serpent. Her personality affected me
unpleasantly, and yet absorbed my attention entirely. She was so evidently conscious of the
effect she produced that it was as interesting as a play to watch her. The very way in which
she sat in her chair was a picture of itself. But it was no strained or forced pose, merely the
careless grace of a perfectly poised woman. I glanced at Anne, and was surprised to see that
she, too, was looking at Mrs. Carstairs admiringly. The two women were deadly enemies at heart,
and it seemed to me to indicate a fine, generous nature in Anne to forget her prejudice in an honest
appreciation of the other's charm. Mr. Mellon looked at his witness a little uncertainly.
clearly he did not understand Mrs. Carstairs, and was not sure how to address a woman of this type.
After the preliminary questions as to her position and length of sojourn in the family, he said almost abruptly,
Do you think Mr. Van Wick was a suicide?
It may be, replied Mrs. Carstairs in low musical tones.
Mr. Van Wick had reason to wish to die, and there are those who wished him dead.
As she said these words, Mrs. Carstairs dropped her eyes and sat quietly awaiting further questions.
Her speech almost amounted to an accusation, and Morland looked at her with a face full of rage and with clenched hands.
Will you explain that implication, madam? asked the coroner.
It was no implication. It was merely a statement.
Very well, then amplify it.
Who are those who, in your opinion, wished the death of DeVos?
van wick mrs carstairs assumed an expression of gentle pathos which while beautiful to behold seemed to me the quintessence of hypocrisy in a sad low voice she said slowly a man's foes shall be they of his own household
mr mellon stared at her it is your opinion then he said that david van wick's death may have been brought about by someone who lived under his roof do you not think so
and the question was accompanied by a grave look of infinite pain.
You are here to answer questions, not to ask them, nor are you invited to give unsupported opinions.
If you know of anything, madam, definite and positive, that would lead you to suspect the thing you mention, tell us of it at once.
But if not, kindly refrain from insinuation or implication.
Mrs. Carstairs looked amazed rather than reproved. To my mind she was suddenly confronted by
a man who could not be cajoled by her fascinations, and who was outspoken in reply to her veiled
hints. Assuredly, I know of nothing definite, or I should have divulged it sooner. To your knowledge,
had Mr. Van Wick an enemy in his own household. Enemy is a harsh word, but the man was
far from happy with one who should have been his closest friend, meaning his wife, meaning his wife.
Mrs. Scarstair's face was white now and her eyes
had a steely glitter as she said these words
looking straight at the coroner.
You state then that Mr. Van Wick
was not happy in his marital relations.
I state that emphatically.
There was a murmur of disapproval
all through the room at the trend of this conversation
and more than one was heard to whisper,
shame, and this won't do.
I could see that Archer, Morland, and the others
were restrained from speech only by Anne herself.
As I had noticed before,
these two women clashed, Anne won by the force of her marvelous aloofness.
She now sat regarding Mrs. Garstairs with an expression of slight scorn, which said
far more strongly than words could have expressed that the witness was talking nonsense.
Anne Van Wick looked like a queen listening to the prattle of a demented subject, and her
absolute indifference to the housekeeper's remarks was the one reason why her friends did not
at once put a stop to the testimony. I saw at once that Anne's attitude was the best
possible refutation of the housekeeper's evidence, and I saw, too, that Mrs. Carstairs was
herself quite aware of this. I think Anne's look of supercilious scorn almost tinged with amusement,
acted as a whip to the housekeeper's burdened soul, and spurred her to greater effort.
"'I know of what I am speaking,' Mrs. Carstairs went on, for David Van Wick was engaged to me
when he met in wooed the lady he made his wife. She flashed a dazzling smile at the corner,
which went far to disturb that gentleman's equilibrium.
It was, then, it was then, a breach of promise.
He said half involuntarily.
It was, yes.
But, of course, I never sued him,
or in any way asserted my rights.
He was sufficiently punished by his unhappy marriage.
His wife has always been jealous of me.
She has endeavoured many times to have me dismissed from my position,
but with no success.
However, and here Mrs. Carstairs turned her direct gaze upon Anne, since the death of her husband, Mrs. Van Wick has asserted her intention of getting rid of me. I accuse no one. I only state that there are several who would consider themselves benefited by the death of David Van Wick.
The quiet intensity of the speaker's voice took away the melodramatic effect of the scene and made her seem like an accusing angel speaking words of fate.
There was a pause which was broken by Detective Marken who burst out with something the effect of a bombshell,
and your son is one of them.
At last something had disturbed Mrs. Garstair's calm.
She turned white to the very lips and she trembled as if mortally afraid.
But she made a brave effort to control herself and said distinctly, though in tones that quivered,
My son is in no way implicated.
Then what were you searching in the road for early this morning?
"'I was not searching,' began Mrs. Carstairs,
and then as she saw me looking intently at her, she stopped speaking.
"'You were,' declared the detective.
"'There's no use you're denying it.
And later on your son was seen searching in the same place.
What clue was he looking for?'
Mrs. Carstairs could not speak.
Her lips moved inaudibly,
but she was striving to pull herself together
and would doubtless have succeeded when,
breaking the silence, the voice of Beth Fordyce was heard.
It sounded weird, and the audience listened breathlessly, as Beth said, in dreamy, faraway tones.
Wheel tracks. He was looking for wheel tracks. He was the man who came in the motor car.
I recognize him now. It was car stairs, Mr. Van Wicks' valet, who came into the grounds at midnight in a motor car.
Who stopped, and hesitated, and proceeded at intervals, who left the car and walked stealthily
around the house in the shadow of the eaves, evading the moonlight, seeking the shadow.
The shadow.
Miss Fordice's voice trailed away in a whisper, and I knew that she was in one of the semi-trances
or whatever word might express the strange condition that sometimes enveloped her.
She was perfectly conscious, but she was perfectly conscious, but I knew that she was,
her mentality seemed dual. She envisioned other scenes than those she might be among, and while she
saw them clearly, she spoke as if through a mist. The audience sat enthralled. Here at last was a hint
of something real and tangible. Wheel tracks were legitimate clues. If Miss Fordyce's story
were true, there was at last a way to look for light on the mystery. I glanced at Mrs. Carstairs,
expecting to find her almost collapsed. But, but
instead, she had again risen to the occasion and resumed her grasp of the situation.
I saw, too, that it was the alarm of her mother instinct that had nerved her to a renewed
effort at composure, and she said quietly,
"'There is no meaning to the babble of a mind given to frequent hallucinations.'
But apparently the coroner thought there was, for he abruptly dismissed Mrs. Carstairs
as a witness and recalled her son.
The valet looked wretched, but seemed ready to answer questions.
"'Did you come into this place in a motor last night at midnight?'
The coroner shot at him.
"'No, sir.'
And the answer was firm, though, in a low tone.
"'You have testified that you were at a ball in the village?'
"'Yes, sir, but I walked home. It isn't far, sir.'
"'Can you prove that you were at this village ball?
Did any of the servants of this house see you there?'
"'No, sir.'
"'How does that happen?' snapped the coroner.
Were none of them present at the ball?
I don't know, sir.
What do you mean?
Look here, carstairs.
You weren't at the ball at all.
Where were you?
Were you out in a motor?
No, sir.
Oh, no, sir.
The man's denial was so emphatic in his manner so agitated
that it was probably a falsehood on the face of it.
I think you were, the coroner went on.
And as I doubt your word, I will ask someone else.
Then the coroner called for Ranny,
the garage mechanician.
This witness doggedly persisted that he knew nothing of car-stairs' whereabouts the night
before.
But persistent nagging by the coroner finally drew out the fact that the new touring car had been
taken out.
How do you know it had? asked the coroner.
And Ranny seemed suddenly to decide that he would make a clean breast of the matter.
I seen the wheel track, sir, he said.
How did you know them from any other tracks?
It's a new car.
sir, and it has peculiar tires.
You can't mistake the track, sir.
I saw it all in a flash.
Carstairs had taken the car out for a joyride, and in order to escape discovery,
he had endeavored to obliterate these peculiar tire marks from the dust of the road.
And without a doubt, his mother had been engaged in the same work of precaution.
The detective also jumped to these conclusions,
and after a few of his questions, in conjunction with the coroner's inquiries,
forced a confession from the valet.
Carstairs manner became sullen as he owned up to his wrongdoing.
It seemed that the use of a motor car by any of the servants was a most grave offense in the
eyes of David Van Wick.
And especially, to take out the big new touring car was a daring thing to do.
Seeing that the valet was not making a good story of it, his mother cleverly managed the
coroner so that she told the story instead.
As Ranny had divulged the secret, she admitted that her son had taken.
taken out the car the night before. She said that it was wrong and that she did not excuse him for it,
but that since David Van Wick was no longer here to reprove or punish him, no one else had the right
to do so, and that the offence was a thing of the past and should be forgotten. She admitted that
she had heard her son return in the car, and that she was so worried about his wrong deed that
she had tried to eliminate any possible proof against him in the matter of the wheel tracks.
But she concluded, this had no bearing on the crime of the night before,
as her son had returned about 11 o'clock and had put the car away and had then retired.
She overreached herself here, because the valet had previously testified that he came home about midnight,
and both Miss Fordyce and Ranny agreed that the big car had arrived at about 12 o'clock.
But when this was put to her, Mrs. Carstairs became excited again,
and insisted that the hour of her son's return was of no consequence,
as he had not gone to the study at all, and knew nothing of the occurrences there.
You have no right to suspect him, she blazed out finally.
It is wicked of you to do so.
We have not said we suspected him, madam, said the coroner gravely.
But if we do suspect him, or even feel inclined to investigate his story,
it is because he has not been frank in the whole matter, and neither have you.
And now I wish to ask you further.
did your son know that in the will of Mr. Van Wick,
$5,000 was bequeathed to him, and $25,000 to yourself?
Mrs. Carstairs hesitated.
It would be wiser for you to tell the truth, prompted the coroner.
As you know, a lack of frankness has not served you well so far.
Now answer my questions truly.
Yes, we have both known of these facts for some years.
That is all, madam.
and to my surprise Mr. Mellon dismissed the housekeeper without a further word.
I did not quite understand his attitude in the matter, but I had no time to think about it,
for I was just then called to the witness stand myself and asked to give any information I could
that might be of any assistance in solving the mystery.
I had not had time to consider this new phase of the situation that included the valet's
evidence, but I had previously made up my mind what I should say when called upon.
End of chapters 11 and 12.
Chapter 13 and 14 of Anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
13. An adjournment.
I can tell you nothing in the way of facts that you do not already know, I said.
But I wish to say that I entirely coincide with Miss Van Wicks' opinion that her father ended his own life.
It is not incredible that his very erratic mind gave way at the last,
nor is it surprising that he should destroy the deed and hide the pearls under stress of sudden insanity.
And what is your theory regarding the manner of his death?
I have no definite theory, but I wish to call attention to the fact that I found several shot on the floor at Mr. Van Wicks' feet.
My statement produced quite a sensation in the audience, for the suggestion of shots seemed to imply at least a possible method of the crime.
But the detective Mr. Markham interrupted me and said quietly,
It is not worthwhile, Mr. Coroner, to waste time in consideration of the shot.
There is a small receptacle on Mr. Van Wick's desk, filled with that same shot, used as a pen-cleaner.
I observed that the shot found on the floor was the same, and I have no doubt it was spilled by accident.
The coroner turned to Dr. Mason and inquired if Mr. Van Wick's death could have been brought about by shot.
No, replied the doctor positively. I probed to the wound and found no bullet or shot.
David Van Wick was stabbed and the weapon was afterward withdrawn.
I cannot subscribe to the icicle theory, though I do not say it would be impossible,
but the deceased was most assuredly not shot.
I felt crestfallen and a little ashamed,
for having picked up the shot I should have noticed the same among the furnishings of the desk.
The coroner asked me only a few more questions of relative unimportance
and was about to dismiss me when he added as an afterthought.
When did you last see Mr. Van Wick alive?
It was the query I had been dreading,
but there was nothing for it except to tell the truth.
Involuntarily, I glanced at Anne,
but her eyes were cast down and she paid no heed to me.
Of course I was with him at dinner, I said,
and after dinner he left us to go to the study.
After that I saw him a moment,
when from the terrace I glanced in at the study window.
You glanced in, for what purpose?
No particular purpose.
Mrs. Van Wick and I were strolling by and merely chanced to look in.
What was Mr. Van Wick doing?
Conferring with the committee from the village, I assumed.
We could not hear his words, of course, nor did we try to.
What was Mr. Van Wick's apparent attitude?
He seemed to be angry, I felt myself obliged to say.
Angry at the gentlemen of the committee?
I was indeed sorry to give this evidence, but I was forced to do it.
To decline to answer would be absurd, and after all.
all, everybody knew that Morland and his father were at odds in the matter.
So I said,
No, he was addressing his son.
Ah, and he seemed to be angry?
He did.
Then they were quarreling.
As to that, I cannot say.
I merely tell you what I saw,
that Mr. Van Wick was addressing his son
and that he had the appearance of being angry.
The coroner excused me then,
and turning to Morland said directly,
Did you quarrel with your father last
evening. I told him what I thought of his procedure, replied Morland.
I make no secret of the fact that I tried my best to persuade my father not to give away his
fortune. And do you persist in your assertion that when you left your father at midnight,
his secretary was still with him? I do, said Marland firmly. And you deny this, Mr. Lasseter.
I do, replied the secretary quite as positively. This deadlock
was a peculiar feature of the situation.
Both men could not be telling the truth,
and considering Morland's greater reason
for desiring that the great gift should not be made,
perhaps it was not strange
that many of the audience
began to turn upon him the eye of suspicion.
Everybody now had testified
and the coroner began summing up.
I have had no direct evidence, he said,
that would tend to cast suspicion on any person.
I think we must all admit
that since the room was locked
and barred on the inside, Mr. Van Wick's death was not a murder.
I think the erratic mind of the deceased gives us reason to assume a sudden attack of insanity.
I think we must agree that if it was suicide, there was no possible means or method
unless we accept the really clever suggestion of the icicle.
At this point Mr. Markham interrupted the coroner.
I think we may discard the icicle theory, he said, as I have found the weapon with which the crime
was committed. Here it is.
Stepping forward, he laid on the table in front of the coroner
a small, sharp implement partly covered with brownish stains.
The coroner looked at it as if he could scarcely believe his eyes.
What is it? he said, picking it up gingerly.
It is an implement used in embroidering, said Mr. Markham.
It is called a stiletto, and it forms part of every lady's sewing equipment.
The audience were fairly breathless with suspense.
swayed by the slightest hint, they were quite ready to drop suspicion of Moreland and turn it toward the women of the family.
Where did you find this? said the coroner.
In Mrs. Van Wick's dressing room, returned the detective.
Is it your property? asked the coroner of Anne.
Yes, she replied after a glance at the stiletto.
It belongs in my work-basket.
Can you account for these stains upon it?
pursued the coroner, and he showed far more agitation than that.
did the woman he addressed.
I cannot, she replied coldly.
I have never used it except for embroidery purposes.
Now, of course, if Anne Van Wick had used this implement
for the purpose of killing her husband,
she could scarcely be expected to say so.
And so her flat denial carried little weight.
Where in the dressing-room was it found? asked the coroner.
Hidden beneath a pile of towels in a cupboard, replied Mr. Markham.
Whereupon the coroner inquired of Dr. Marek.
mason, if the stiletto would have been a possible instrument of death.
Mr. Van Wick was stabbed with some weapon about that size, replied the doctor gravely.
And are these brownish stains upon it stains of blood?
That I cannot tell you without subjecting them to analysis, returned the doctor,
but his hearers were impressed with the thought that he was endeavoring to delay to give Anne the
benefit of the doubt.
I think, went on the coroner in a hesitating manner, that this
piece of evidence must change the trend of our inquiries.
Mrs. Van Wick, did you, or did you not, put this stiletto in the place where it was found?
I did not, replied Anne quietly.
Do you know who did place it there?
I do not.
Of course, said the coroner, the discovery of this instrument in this condition does not necessarily
implicate its owner.
Other hands might have used it and secreted it where it was found, perhaps with the intent of
averting suspicion.
Who has the care of your dressing-room, Mrs. Van Wick?
My maid, Jeanette.
Let her be summoned, the coroner ordered.
But Jeanette was nowhere to be found.
She had disappeared.
No one knew when or where.
To the minds of most present, this looked suspicious.
It was easily to be seen that the villagers were quite ready
to denounce Anne Van Wick as the slayer of her own husband.
Anne had never been popular with the village people.
clever and highly
strong as she was
she had found little in common
with their ordinary
and to her stupid pursuits
and now they were
quite ready to believe
the worst of her
and herself
looked supercilious
and scornful
I have no notion
where my maid has gone
she stated
but I am positive
that she is in no way
implicated in this tragedy
she may have gone
on some errand
and will doubtless
return soon
I am entirely sure
she can give you
no information
or enlightenment as to the crime that has been committed in this house any more than I can.
And you can tell us nothing, Mrs. Van Wick, more than we know already, the coroner said,
floundering a little in the complexity of his emotions.
No, replied Anne quietly.
The coroner fidgeted uneasily and then said,
It is impossible to carry matters further without the testimony of the maid Jeanette.
I therefore declare this inquest adjourned for a few days, by which time I trust
we may have further and more definite evidence.
The jury to a man looked decidedly relieved,
but it was a rather disappointed audience
that filed slowly out of the house.
To my mind, the coroner's reason
for adjourning the inquest was a pretext.
I think he felt sure that if the jury had had to decide
then and there they must have accused Anne of the murder.
And the evidence was certainly incriminating.
While I felt with every fiber of my being
the wish and desire to hold Anne innocent,
Yet there was something terribly convincing of guilt in the fact of that hidden stiletto.
But again, the absurdity of it.
How was it humanly possible even granting that Anne had used the fatal instrument
for her to leave the study so securely locked and bolted on the inside?
But that was the old question, and the one to which no one had an answer.
But how I hoped the answer might incriminate anybody but Anne.
That evening was a strange one.
as an experience of my life
I shall never forget it.
The members of the household
all seemed to be at cross purposes.
There were a great many people about
with the result
that the Van Wicks and their house guests
chose the music room for themselves
and denied the others' admission.
In the library
were gathered the coroner and Mr. Markham
and Confab with Mr. Van Wicks' lawyers
and some directors of the companies
with which he had been identified.
The ceremony of dinner
had been a great strain on us all,
but now that we were by ourselves, the tension was loosened a little.
Anne was verging on the hysterical.
She had borne up so long and so bravely
against the onslaughts of Mrs. Carstairs
that a reaction had set in,
and she seemed to lose all her defensive courage.
As a result, we all tried to comfort or cheer her,
and avoided referring to painful subjects.
Archer was gentle and deferential,
but he said little to her,
and seemed to content himself with watching her closely.
Barbara and Morland were in a quarrelsome mood, a condition not unusual with them.
Of course it was necessary they should make certain arrangements pertaining to the funeral of their father,
and, naturally, they deferred to Anne in many matters.
But Anne listlessly declined to express any opinions,
and insisted that they should use their own judgment and settle all questions between themselves.
The subject of the stiletto was not so much as mentioned,
and indeed the whole great matter of the tragedy and the inquest was not
even touched upon.
Beth Fordyce was the only one who seemed inclined to open the subject, and she occasionally
declared with insistence that Carstairs had killed his master.
As we were awaiting the detective's investigation of the valet's affairs, we had no wish
to discuss this.
Or at least if some of us had, we did not want to do so in the presence of the Van Wick family.
I made up my mind to talk alone with Archer later, but at present I considered it my duty
to do anything I might to avoid serious.
or tragic considerations.
It seemed to me that Anne became more and more drooping,
and at last I begged of her to go for a short walk on the terrace.
She agreed more readily than I had hoped, and we went out together.
It was an exquisite night, the air soft and balmy, and the moon overhead.
Just for a little while, Anne, I said gently.
Forget it all, can't you?
A short respite from these harrowing thoughts will clear your brain and heart,
and make you stronger to bear what must come tomorrow.
She spoke suddenly, repeating my words in a frightened tone,
What must come tomorrow? What do you mean, Raymond?
I couldn't bring myself to speak of that tell-tale stiletto, so I said,
the whole dreadful business, Anne,
the conclusion of the inquest, the detective work that must follow,
the funeral, and all the thousand and one accompaniments of this tragedy that has come to you.
Just for an hour, put it out of your mind.
and I know it will help you.
Let us talk of things far off
and unassociated with this place.
Let us talk of when we went to school together.
We had left the terrace
and were walking down a path
through one of the formal gardens.
She gave me a look of trust
as she said softly,
You are very good to me, Raymond.
I'm your friend, Anne.
It is not being good as you phrase it
to want to help you in your sadness and trouble.
You are, my friend, she said slowly.
Does that mean you trust me? You have faith in me?
Of course I have. I trust you infinitely. I have unbounded faith in you.
Anne's voice sank to a whisper, and she tremblingly said,
You wouldn't if you knew. Oh, Raymond, that is the pity of it. You wouldn't, if you knew.
I was appalled, not so much by her words as by the despair in her voice.
Though I wouldn't admit it to myself, it was like,
the wail of a guilty conscience.
Like a flash, I remembered the peculiar tone of her voice when she had said to me,
I am capable of crime.
But I wouldn't believe it.
Nothing could make me believe it, not even Anne herself.
Don't talk, I said to her.
You are overwrought to-night.
You can't see things at their proper value, and you're exaggerating something to yourself.
Now I command you, and I endeavored to be playful, to talk about the
moon? How large do you think it is? Anne smiled involuntarily, for she remembered as I did,
that in our school days it had been one of our games to discuss the apparent size of the moon.
But my project was unsuccessful. After a fleeting memory Anne forgot the moon and burst out
passionately. Why does that woman hate me so? I saw that it was useless to try to divert her
thoughts, so I concluded to talk with her, and it seemed to me that a direct common-sense attitude
would be the best for her.
Anne, I said, you know very well why she hates you. You know that, whether she told the truth
or not when she said Mr. Van Wick had promised to marry her, she certainly hoped that he
would do so. And when he married you instead, it is not surprising that it should anger her
against you. It is more than that, said Anne musingly. She has for me an animosity beyond
that of a jealous rival.
She seems uncanny sometimes,
and looks at me with what I think
must be the evil eye.
Well, granted it is so, Anne,
you must rise above it.
However she has troubled you in the past,
she cannot trouble you any more.
After a short time she will go away
from here, and you, Anne,
you don't expect to stay on here, do you?
I don't know.
I haven't thought about it,
and Anne gave a weary little sigh.
I wish I had someone to help me
decide these things.
Morland and Barbara are so fiery-tempered
that I can't discuss plans coolly with them.
I don't know how the will reads exactly,
but I suppose it is thirds.
They may have Buttonwood Terrace, if they want it.
I don't care.
But I don't know where to go myself.
It is a tribute to my own self-control
that I didn't tell her what was in my heart
concerning her future welfare,
but I knew, from the tone of her voice,
that no thought of me as a factor in her future
had yet entered her mind.
whether she thought thus of archer or not i did not know but surely while david van wick lay dead in the house no one could speak of love to this widow and yet i had a brave hope that time might bring me that for which i longed with my whole heart
let the future take care of itself i responded gently what i want anne just now is for you to pluck up your courage and carry yourself through the ordeal of the next few days as bravely as may be
I have seen you rise above the annoyance of Mrs. Carstair's presence, and vanquish her with your own superiority.
What you have done you can do again.
But that was before last night, and Anne fairly moaned in despair.
Oh, Raymond, you don't know. You don't know.
At that moment we heard a slight sound behind us, and a dark-clad form glided by.
It was Mrs. Carstairs herself, and as she passed, she murmured,
But I know, Anne Van Wick. I know.
She passed away as swiftly as she had come and as silently, and I felt Anne's form grow limp and lean against me.
I could have carried her to the house, but I did not wish to subject her to a possible mortification.
So instead I grasped her arm firmly and whispered in her ear,
"'Brace up. Now is the time to show what you're made of?
Call upon your pride, your dignity, your scorn, whatever you will, but some of.'
succeed. The force of my voice must have nerved her, for she straightened up and walked with
a steady step toward the house. I kept my hold on her arm till we reached the door, and then,
seeing one of the maids in the hall, I bade her take Mrs. Van Wick to her room.
Then I went to the smoking-room, and though I would not allow myself even to surmise what
Anne had meant by her strange words, nor what Mrs. Carstairs had meant by her threatening
whisper, I said over and over from the depths of my soul.
anybody but anne fourteen a mysterious disappearance i found archer in the billiard-room and joined him in a chat and a smoke though our desultory conversation could scarcely be called a chat so uncommunicative were we both
but there seemed to be little to say we agreed that the mystery was inexplicable we agreed that the criminal if there had been one must be tracked down we agreed that markham while a shrewd man and a reasoning one hadn't done much as yet but we further agreed he should be allowed more time to show his prowess
i certainly had no intention of telling archer what anne had said to me out on the terrace nor yet what mrs carstairs had said as she so suddenly appeared and disappeared and if archer had any secret information he was equally determined not to confide in me
we told each other of our intention to remain at buttonwood terrace for a few days after the funeral in the hope of being of some assistance to the family if to both of us the family was merely a euphonism for anne van wick neither of us said that the funeral in the hope of being of some assistance to the family if to both of us the family was merely a euphonism for anne van wick neither of us said that
so. The talk turned again to Mr. Markham, and I compared him to Fleming Stone.
Why, said I, Stone would have found the criminal by this time, I'm sure.
How? asked Archer. There are no clues. But there is mystery. I once heard Fleming Stone say
that mystery in a case always spurred and enthused him. I wish the Van Wicks would engage him.
I thought somebody said he had gone west, returned Archer moodily.
blowing smoke rings into the air.
Yes, when he was here yesterday, he said he was to start at once.
But if Markham doesn't do something soon, I shall advise employing stone.
It's all very well to say Markham must have more time and all that,
but I know what a value stone places on looking into things
before the clues have been destroyed.
As you very well know, Archer,
he really deduced a lot of truths from that foolish fan business yesterday,
and you must admit he's unusually clever in that way.
I never denied it. I think he is a wonderful detective. But isn't he very expensive?
He is, I believe, but the Van Wicks are rich, and they ought to have the best possible expert advice in this matter.
While I was speaking, Morland came into the room. The young fellow looked worn and tired,
but he had his customary belligerent air as he flung himself astride of a chair and cleared at us over his back.
I suppose we are rich, but I don't mean to throw money away.
on spectacular detectives.
I heard what you were saying, Sturgis,
and I think it's Tommy Rot to get in that omniscient sleuth
you're talking about.
My father was killed by somebody.
I'm sure I don't know who did it,
but if Markham can't find out, nobody can.
I don't mean by that,
that I consider Markham such a great detective,
but I mean that I think the case is one
that can never be solved.
And perhaps it's just as well that it shouldn't be.
Young Van Wick sighed deeply,
and then frowned as he went on.
I suppose I'm master here now in a way.
I don't mean to question my stepmother's position or authority,
but I'm the man of the house,
and my wishes ought to have some weight,
especially as Mrs. Van Wick declines to take any part
in the settlement of questions that arise.
Don't you think?
I ventured,
that the services of a good detective are really necessary?
No, Moreland thundered.
Not since that stiletto business.
"'Good heavens, man. Do you want to run down that clue?'
Archer looked at the speaker as if he would jump at his throat.
"'You mean to say?'
He blazed and then stopped, unable to voice his own meaning.
I felt equally incensed and thought it better to speak plainly.
"'Morland,' I said,
"'I wish you'd state in plain terms what you do think.'
"'I don't think anything, and if I did I shouldn't say it.
but you must see both of you what it all means and i want a shield anne in every way i can oh let's not even speak of it it drives me crazy to think about it
the boy's face for marland was not really much more than a boy was pathetic he was afraid to face the conclusions which the finding of that stiletto must lead to not so archer the older man was quiet and composed as he said straightforwardly
nothing can be gained by shirking the issue if we refuse to consider the case others will do so don't you think it's wiser to learn all we can ourselves and be ready to meet any detective on his own ground
now look here morland if you are really anxious to shield mrs van wick from suspicion the best way to go about it is to face that stiletto business and run it to earth i don't believe there's anything in it i wish i could think so and morland's eyes showed
a gleam of hope.
But you fellows don't know how Anne hated the governor.
Hush, said Archer sternly.
Don't say such things as that.
But it's true, Morland insisted doggedly.
You fellows don't know anything about it.
At first they got along pretty well, but lately...
Well, it wasn't all Anne's fault.
Dad certainly made it hard for her,
with his domineering ways and unjust rules.
But Anne tantalized him too.
and lately they had a lot of quarrelling over those pearls now i'm terribly fond of anne perhaps more so than i ought to be but i can't help seeing things as they are why it was a crisis
last night the governor was going to give away an enormous sum of money and whether he intended to give the pearls too i don't know but he told anne that he did morland ceased speaking and indeed no more words were needed whatever the facts he had set forth
the theory that was at least plausible.
I wouldn't believe a word of it.
My heart refused to harbor the faintest suspicion of Anne.
But I knew it was only my heart that refused.
My brain saw clearly the logic and truth of what Morlin had said.
And, too, my brain refused to forget Anne's words.
I'm capable of crime.
And so, with my heart and brain in dire conflict, I couldn't speak.
But Archer spoke.
in a cold, even-cutting voice, he said,
you are, of course, entitled to jump to a conclusion if you wish.
You are, of course, at liberty to put the worst possible construction on the evidence of the stiletto.
But would you mind informing us how, in your opinion,
Mrs. Van Wick accomplished the diabolical act which you attribute to her
and left the study locked on the inside?
Morland passed his hand wearily over his brow.
I don't know, he said.
Nobody knows.
"'But you must admit that whoever did the diabolical deed
"'managed in some way to leave the study door locked.
"'Then, until you can discover how that was done,' Archer went on,
"'I think it will be wise for you to refrain from making accusations.
"'I'm an older man than you are, Morland,
"'and I think I have a right to call you down
"'when you pursue such a dangerous course.
"'Even though you feel sure your suspicions are correct,
"'I beg of you, do not shout them from the house-stop.'
i'm not began morland but i interrupted the very fact that the study was left locked so positively points to suicide that i think it would be better to let it go at that why not call off the detectives and insist upon a verdict of suicide
the fact that the weapon is missing is no more inexplicable if as much so as how the murderer escaped i'm sure i'm willing to let it go at that said morland who was now pacing up and down the room with his hand
in his pockets. I'd be glad to stop investigations at once, but I doubt if that's possible.
And then there's car stairs, said Archer. That chap certainly has a guilty conscience if anybody ever had.
If investigation must be made, can't it be turned in his direction? If he's innocent,
it can do no harm, and if he's implicated, we ought to know it. You see, he knew both he and his
mother would get big benefit from the death of his master. At any of his master, at any of
any rate, Moreland, I said rather crossly for my nerves were on edge.
Do keep your mouth shut about your suspicions.
And if your head of the house, and if your influence counts for anything,
for heaven's sake, direct the trend of investigation towards suicide,
or car stairs or a burglar, or anybody but Anne.
That's well enough to say, but I'm confronted by new suspicions all the time.
I have to look over my father's papers, of course,
and I have already found enormous bills of ends, still unpaid.
Recent bills? asked Archer. Fairly so, within a few months. I've only looked over the papers in the
safe so far. Those on the desk I'm going to tackle tomorrow. Of course they will be the most recent
bills, but I dare say they'll be plenty of them. I suppose all beautiful women are
extravagant. At any rate, Mrs. Van Wick has money enough now to pay her own bills, I suggested
a little shortly, for I thought
Morland unduly interested in the particular
matter of Anne's extravagance.
That's true, said Morland,
and turning on his heel he strode out of the room.
Archer and I were silent after young Van Wick left us,
and it was but a few moments before my companion
threw his half-smoked cigar into the fireplace
and announced abruptly,
I think I'll turn in.
I'm going up too, I said,
rather relieved that no further conversation was begun.
I followed Archer up the small side staircase, which led directly to our quarters, more conveniently than the grand staircase opposite.
Archer's room chanced to be directly over David Van Wicks' bedroom, while mine was over Anz.
There were one or two rooms between, I believe, but I don't know who occupied them.
We paused for a brief word of good-night at the head of the stairs and then turned our opposite ways.
I heard Archer's door close as I was about to open my own, when I suddenly bethought my
that I had meant to ask him what he thought about those contradictory stories of
Moreland and Lasseter as to which had been left alone with Mr. Van Wick the night before.
It seemed to me that a good deal might hinge on that question and I wanted Archer's opinion.
I didn't altogether like Archer, but I was just enough to know that it was largely due to my
jealousy of his friendship for Anne, and in spite of this I had great regard for his opinions
as I had usually found them logical and right-minded. I turned back and walked along the
corridor. It was but a moment since we had parted, and I assumed he could not yet be disrobing.
I tapped lightly at his bedroom door, but he didn't answer, so I tapped again.
Receiving no response, I was a little surprised, but I figured that he thought it was someone
else, and not wanting any further discussion that night he was pretending to be asleep.
So I tapped again, saying in a low tone,
It's Durges, let me in a minute, will you?
Still, he didn't answer, and in a moment of irritation at his silence I turned the doorknob.
The door opened, and as the room was brilliantly lighted, I stepped inside.
I didn't see Archer, but across the room a door was opened into a bathroom, and I assumed
he was in there.
"'Beg pardon, Archer,' I called out.
"'But I do want to see you a minute, if I may.'
Still there was no reply, and feeling that the strangeness of the situation justified it,
I went to the bathroom door and looked in.
The light was turned on,
but there was no one in the bathroom.
I was bewildered,
for I knew that Archer had to come in
and I could not imagine what had become of him.
There was a door at the farther end of the bathroom
and involuntarily I opened it.
However, it was only a clothes closet of good size,
but as it contained only a few garments,
I closed the door again and returned to Archer's bedroom.
As he couldn't have jumped out of the window,
it naturally followed that he had left his room,
and gone downstairs again, while I had stood for a moment in front of my own bedroom door.
It didn't seem possible, for the hall was brightly lighted, and I was sure I should have
seen or heard him had he passed so near me. I spoke aloud.
Archer, I said, are you under the bed, or where? If you are, come out.
Again I called his name a trifle louder, and then went out of his room into the hall,
closing the door behind me. I walked slowly along toward my.
own room, pausing at the staircase to look down. At that very moment, I heard the click of Archer's
door, and turning, I saw him. Did you want me, Sturgis? He inquired. Was that you calling?
I went slowly back and entered his room and closed the door behind us.
Where were you? I said, staring around curiously. Where was I when? He returned with a slight
smile. When I was in here a moment ago. I tapped three.
times and you didn't answer, so I took the liberty of entering, and you weren't here.
Oh, I was in the bathroom, he said lightly. What is it you want? Cigarettes?
But you weren't in the bathroom, for I looked in there. I persisted ignoring his question.
He looked at me curiously. You did, he exclaimed. Well, I chanced to be in the clothes closet of the
bathroom. It's rather large for the limited wardrobe I brought with me, and I expect I got lost in
its depths. But you weren't there, I said looking straight at him, for I looked in there.
Then I can only say your behavior is most ill-bred. I consider you unwarrantably intrusive.
Archer's manner was distinctly haughty and his tone even offensive, but the rebuke was
deserved and I responded, you are quite right, I beg your pardon. And now I will tell you why I
came. If you don't mind discussing it, I'd like to know what you make of those conflicted
statements of Morland and his father's secretary as to which remained in the study last night after
the other left. Archer considered seriously. I've thought over that myself, he said, and do you know
the thing that most impresses me in connection with that is that it seems to prove them both
innocent of any guilty knowledge of this matter? How so? I said wonderingly. Why, because if either
of them were guilty, not that I suspect for a moment that either of them.
is, but for the sake of argument, let us suppose it, or if either of them should be concealing
any bit of guilty knowledge, surely he would not so flatly give the other the lie, because he would
know that such a course would invite investigation. A man with a guilty conscience is plausible
and endeavours to be casual. He never makes such a sensational statement and sticks to it so
blatantly. You ought to be a detective yourself, Archer, I said looking at him admiringly.
I think you've made a very subtle point.
I haven't what are called detective methods, he returned,
but I do hold that reason and logic are the mainstays of the profession.
However, something more is needed.
For Markham has reason and logic, and yet I doubt if he will get anywhere.
I suppose ingenuity and originality are needed.
Of course your Flemingstone has those.
But Sturgis, and Archer's face grew very grave,
do we want to push this matter?
Neither of us is willing to voice suspicions as Morland did,
but shall we not admit to each other
that a cessation of all movement in the matter might be a good thing.
I don't know, Archer, and I looked at him thoughtfully.
I see the force of your suggestion, and yet,
well, I want to think it over.
I'll ponder on it tonight, and I know you'll do so.
Tomorrow let us again exchange ideas.
Archer agreed to this, though I must have.
confess he didn't seem greatly impressed with the brilliancy of my plan and I went off to my own
room. This time I really entered it and locked the door after me. I threw myself into an armchair
and proceeded to my pondering at once. But I may as well admit that my pondering began,
not with the mystery of the tragedy, but with the mystery of Archer's absence from his own room
that night. It was all very well for him to say that he was in the bathroom cupboard, but I
couldn't believe it, for I had looked in there and saw no one.
To be sure, I didn't go inside, but Archer could scarcely have been concealed behind the few coats
or trousers that were suspended from rods. Unless he had been in one of his own suitcases or
hat boxes, he couldn't have been in that closet, and the more I thought about it, the stranger
it seemed. And then, the jealousy lurking in my heart gave me a sudden suggestion.
Archer's room was directly over David Van Wicks' bedroom.
Before his marriage, David Van Wick had used for his own bedroom the very one Archer now occupied.
Could there be, hinted my jealous heart, secret staircase between the two?
Could Archer descend secretly to David Van Wick's room and so gain access to Anne's apartments?
It was a tawdry thought, it was melodramatic, but my heart was like a tinderbox and the thought
had struck a fiendish flame. I didn't believe it with my brain, but my foolish heart.
declared it to be the only possible explanation of Archer's mysterious disappearance.
And then another thought followed it, which made me ashamed of my evil imagination.
The dead body of David Van Wick lay in his own bedroom. Surely no man would descend to that
room on a clandestine errand. So I forced myself to believe Archer had told me the truth and that
he had been in the cupboard and as soon as he emerged had answered my call. It was a strange
circumstance, but not so strange as the bizarre explanation I had conjured up.
Besides, Morland had distinctly stated there was no secret staircase or anything of the sort in the house.
But, urged my unquiet soul, did Morland know?
David Van Wick was quite capable of keeping such a secret to himself.
And then, in a sudden practical mood, I seized a pencil and drew a plan of the room as it must be.
On the ground floor, a corridor ran between David Van Wynne.
Van Wick's room and the south wall of the house to give access to the study. But as the study was
two stories high, having no second floor, there was no occasion for this corridor on the second floor
of the house, and in Archer's room, the corresponding space above the corridor was completely filled
by the bathroom and the large clothes cupboard. I knew a little of practical architecture,
and I proved to myself beyond doubt that there was no space for the concealed staircase I had imagined.
The walls of the old house were substantial enough,
but they were by no means the thickness of walls necessary
to contain secret staircases or dungeons,
such as those I love to read of in medieval history.
I could reckon plainly from what I knew of the rooms
just how they connected with each other,
and I could account for every inch of space.
Moreover, if a secret staircase had let down
from the bathroom or the cupboard of Archer's room,
it would have dropped plum into the corridor below
as there was simply no other place for its outlet.
I thought even of a spiral staircase
such as that in the study
at the end of the musician's gallery
but I reasoned that was fully
four feet across
and the walls as I computed them
were in no case more than ten inches thick
so with a certain feeling of reluctance
and yet with a sense of relief
I gave up the idea of a concealed connection
between Archer's room and the room below
and turned the trend of my ponderings
toward the many and complex phases
of the greater mystery
But when I finally fell asleep that night, my dreams were all of rope ladders and secret stairways,
and even vague visions of an elopement on a pillioned white palfrey with a beautiful lady who strongly resembled Anne Van Wick.
End of chapters 13 and 14.
Chapter 15 and 16 of Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Who wrote the letter?
The next day was Sunday.
As the inquest was not to be continued, I hoped for a quiet day.
But aside from the necessary arrangements for funeral appointments,
there seemed to be much going on in the way of investigations.
Mr. Markham had developed a tendency to question everybody right and left,
and I continually ran against him interviewing a servant, a guest, or a caller.
I hung around somewhat listlessly, hoping to be permitted to see
Anne, but Miss Fordyce informed me that Anne refused to see anyone except her two stepchildren.
I strolled out on the terrace hoping to have a talk with Archer, but instead I met Mr. Markham,
and he proceeded briskly to interview me. I had no objection to this, as, although there were
a few things I knew that I intended to keep from him, I was quite willing to give him freely
any other information I possessed. But his talk, after all, was a repetition of what I already knew,
or a verbose disquisition on his own theories and plans.
As we talked, Mrs. Carstairus came out on the terrace,
and after a curious glance about she glided up to us with a mysterious air.
May I speak to you a minute, Mr. Markham?
She said, and though I disliked and distrusted the woman,
I could not help admiring her beauty and grace.
She was truly unusual in her charm,
and Markham beamed on her with a smile at once admiring and deferential.
shall I remain, I asked, and for the life of me I couldn't help speaking kindly to her, or do I intrude?
Not at all, she replied. I should be glad, Mr. Sturgis, for you to hear what I have to say.
I am in a dilemma, and I don't know exactly what I ought to do. I found this, and she produced a letter,
which, with a hesitating air she offered to Mr. Markham. I hate to bring it to you. She went on, half withdrawing it
as he was about to take it, and yet,
I feel it my duty to do so.
I'm sure it is your duty, madam,
said the detective as he somewhat eagerly took the letter
from her hand.
I caught sight of the inscription
and a fierce anger kindled within me.
That is a letter to Mrs. Van Wick,
I exclaimed.
You have no right to read it, Mr. Markham.
Mrs. Carstairs, where did you get it?
My vehemence seemed to frighten her,
and she clasped her hands to her breast
with a little fluttering motion.
Oh, have I done wrong?
Shall I put it back?
I thought, I thought that in a case like this,
you know it was one's duty to tell
if one found important evidence?
Of course this was enough for Markham
and he held the letter firmly
with no intention of giving it up.
But I made another desperate attempt.
Mr. Markham,
you shall not read that letter
without Mrs. Van Wick's permission.
Have you read it?
And I turned and glared at the housekeeper.
"'I have,' she said softly, with a look of pain in her deep eyes.
"'Oh, believe me, I did not know it was wrong. I thought I ought to.'
"'And you are right, madam,' said the detective.
"'Mr. Sturgis knows you are right. It is only his personal feeling that makes him want to
withhold the information this letter may give.'
"'Oh, is that it?'
And Mrs. Carstairs did not glance at me but confined her attention to Markham.
"'Then you will read it, won't you?
and tell me I was right in bringing it to you.
I was so uncertain what to do.
If Mr. Sturgis does not want to hear it,
perhaps he had better go away.
In my indignation I was quite ready to walk away
rather than be a party to this disgraceful act,
but as she spoke,
Mrs. Carstairs swept me a glance
in which beneath its apparent frankness,
I thought I caught a malevolent gleam,
and I promptly decided that I preferred to know all
that anyone else knew,
either for or against Dan.
The letter had been opened, and without further hesitation,
Mr. Markham drew the paper from its envelope.
It was a half-sheet and its message was typewritten.
The detective did not read it aloud,
but as I looked over his shoulder,
we too scanned its contents at the same time.
There was no address, no preliminary greeting of any sort,
but it was dated Friday.
Then the message ran.
Tonight is the time, after the committee meeting.
don't be afraid. You can never be found out. I will protect you and look out for you.
There was no signature. I read the lines twice, but even then was unable to sense their purport.
I took the sheet from Markham and scrutinized it closely. Meanwhile, he examined the envelope.
There could be no doubt of his genuineness. It was addressed in typewriting to Mrs. David Van Wick,
Buttonwood Terrace, town, and it bore the postmark of two days before and of the Crescent Falls.
Village Post Office. A postmark on the back showed that it had been mailed Friday morning and
received the same afternoon. It had been opened neatly and gave every evidence of being a letter
received and read by Anne Van Wick on Friday. And it was on Friday night that David Van Wick
had died. The half sheet of paper was undoubtedly from the same box of stationary as the envelope.
Both were of good style, rather large size and of good quality. Mr. Marker,
"'Markham read it over several times, and at last he said,
"'This is a very grave import.
"'You did quite right, Mrs. Carstairs, to bring it to me.
"'Where did you find it?'
"'It was in a book which lay on a table in Mrs. Van Wicks' dressing-room.
"'I chanced to pick up the book to put it away in its place,
"'and this letter fell out.'
"'And you deliberately read it,' I exclaimed,
"'and I dare say I glared at her.
"'Perhaps I ought not to have done so, Mr. Sturgis.
but I can't help thinking that in such a mysterious case as we have before us now,
certain conventional rules may be laid aside.
I quite agree with you, madam, said the detective,
and I can't help thinking that this is a most important piece of evidence.
Is it your habit to look after Mrs. Van Wicks' belongings?
It is my duty to see that her rooms are kept in immaculate order,
and, unless I show a certain amount of oversight,
sometimes the maids become a little careless in their care of the appointments of her dressing-table and such matters.
And so, as I was in there this morning on a tour of inspection, I found this letter, as I have told you.
I was absolutely crushed. I felt as if a black mantle had fallen over me like an enveloping pall.
Not for a moment did I believe Anne guilty even of complicity in her husband's death, but I realized that my refusal to believe it was based.
solely on my unwillingness to do so. However, the thought flashed through my mind that this letter
was dangerous and it must be destroyed or suppressed. I knew, too, that Mr. Markham was ready
and eager to make use of it, and I concluded that the only thing I could do was to beg for time.
So I said, I quite agree with you, Mr. Markham, that this is a serious matter. So much so, that I
think you will both be willing to agree to my proposition, which is to say nothing about it for a day or two.
Let us at least wait until after Mr. Van Wick's funeral, which takes place tomorrow afternoon.
I think it only decent courtesy that all investigations should be postponed until after that.
Mr. Markham considered this matter.
It might be well to adopt that course, he said slowly, though, of course, I shall conduct
personally and privately any investigation I choose, but I'm quite willing to agree that the
whole matter shall not be mentioned to any member of the family until after the funeral.
perhaps it need never be mentioned said mrs carstairs and her face was drawn with sorrow i'm just beginning to realize what it would mean if this discovery of mine were made public why it is practically a condemnation of anne van
it is nothing of the sort i cried out angrily it is doubtless a harmless communication on a totally different subject there is really nothing to connect it with the crime in the study don't talk rubbish said
Mr. Markham testily. If ever a bit of evidence pointed straight to a criminal, this certainly does.
There can be no doubt of its genuineness. The date and postmarks prove that Mrs. Van Wick
received this letter on Friday afternoon. The fact that it was found in a book which she had
been reading proves that she received and opened it herself. If all this is not so,
what is your explanation of the incident, Mr. Sturgis?
Yes, do tell us, said Mrs. Garstairs, ringing her.
her beautiful hands. I should be so glad to put any construction on it favorable to Mrs. Van Wick.
Would it be better to go to her and ask her frankly what it means?
No, I thundered. That poor woman is not to be harassed any more than is necessary during these awful days.
You have both promised to keep this matter a secret until after the funeral, and I hold you to your word.
To my relief, they both agreed to this, and promised not to mention that awful letter to any
at present.
I looked curiously at Mrs. Carstairs.
As always, she mystified me, and yet I couldn't say how or why.
Surely, she had been guilty of a breach of good manners in reading a letter addressed
to another.
But in her opinion the occasion had justified it, and doubtless many people would agree with
her.
Really, I could not help distrusting her in spite of the fact that she now expressed so much
sympathy for Anne, and seemed so truly grieved at the thought of her trouble that
she seemed to be sincere. And again, what could she have done with the letter better than to bring
it straight to the detective? It was the most logical proceeding, and the most just. If she had
taken the letter to Morland or Barbara, it might have made infinitely more trouble. I walked away,
leaving the two on the terrace still conferring on the matter. As I turned aside, I heard Markham say,
What was the book in which you found the letter? And Mrs. Carstairs replied,
A volume on rose culture.
The question struck me as absurd,
for what difference could it possibly make
what the subject of the book might be?
I walked along the terrace and down into the gardens.
Finding a pleasant seat on one of the by-paths,
I sat down there to think it over.
I didn't need the letter to look at.
Its words were branded into my brain.
Alone by myself, I was forced to admit
that the letter, if genuine, was definitely condemning.
And it was genuine.
beyond a doubt, and had certainly received that letter on Friday.
The letter stated that after the committee meeting that same night was the time for some
preconcerted plan to be carried out, that the plan was a dangerous one was proved by the
wording of the letter, and it was shortly after that committee meeting that David Van Wick
had died of violent death. I forced myself to face the matter squarely. Not because I believed it,
but merely as a necessary argument,
I accepted the implication that the letter conveyed.
Then it would mean that Anne had an accomplice,
or at least an advisor in the matter.
Who could the accomplice be?
But my mind refused to work in that direction,
and I resolutely pushed the matter out of my mind
and began to think what I could do
to help and protect Anne if she should be accused.
I almost thought of urging her to run away with me
while she yet had opportunity to escape.
And as my thoughts were in this turmoil, Anne herself came walking along the path near me.
Her soft, trailing black garments made her beautiful face seem whiter than ever.
Sit down, Raymond, she said as I rose, talk to me a little, can't you?
I feel dazed and weak.
Surely this was no time to ask questions, so I talked to her gently on casual subjects,
and after a time the conversation veered around to the tragedy.
I felt a premonition something would happen that night, said Anne, her large dark eyes growing
misty with the memory. I was so restless I couldn't go to bed, and I wrote letters and read until
quite late. What were you reading, Anne? I was looking through a book about rose-growing. The
gardener had been asking me about some new varieties he had just bought. I'm interested in such things,
and the book was well written. But I never want to see it again. Or a rose-es.
either. There was a look of horror in her eyes, and I felt that the Rose book brought back the
scenes of that dreadful night so poignantly that she could scarcely bear it. I changed the subject,
and persistently led her mind away from the scene of the tragedy. You always do me so much good,
Raymond, Anne said gratefully, as at last we started back to the house. You always know just what
to say to me. You're a real comfort. You need and deserve comfort, Anne.
I said gently,
and I think you know you may always depend upon me
to give you all I can.
And Anne, if you ever want more of me,
if you want real assistance,
or if you want to confide in me,
you will do so, won't you?
She turned to me with a startled look.
Why, what do you mean?
She asked and her voice quivered,
and she almost gasped for breath.
I looked her straight in the eyes.
I don't mean anything,
I said.
except that I am your friend through any circumstance that may come to you.
In any trouble or danger, count on me.
Even if I have been wicked, said Anne in a whisper.
Yes, even then.
But a pang shot through my heart, not so much because of the words, she said,
as the look of horror and despair that came into her eyes.
The days went by slowly.
On Monday the funeral was held,
and with appropriate obsequies the moment.
body of David Van Wick was buried. The houseguests had all chosen to remain at Buttonwood Terrace
in response to Anne's urgent invitation that we should do so. She seemed to have a dread of being
left alone with her stepchildren, and it became more and more evident that matters were far from
harmonious between her and David Van Wick's son and daughter. The day after the funeral I had a
long talk with Mr. Markham. There is no doubt in my mind, he declared, that Mrs. Van Wick is the
guilty party. We never can
fasten the crime upon her, for it cannot
be explained how she left the room locked up.
But it must be that she did so in some clever way.
But there isn't any such way,
I objected. If it were
the mere turning of a key, it might be done from the other side,
but heavy boats cannot be shot into their
sockets except by a person on the inside
of the room. And again,
waving the mystery of the locked room,
we are as well justified in suspecting
Morland or Barbara as Anne.
That is true, agreed Markham.
But the stiletto was found in her room and her maid is missing, and then there is that
mysterious letter.
That mystery must be sifted out.
To my mind it would be better to put the question plainly to Mrs. Van Wick and ask her
what it means.
I wish you'd try some other way first, I said.
What's the use of being a detective if you can't trace a letter to its source without
asking anybody?
Why, if Flemingstone saw that letter, he'd soon tell you who wrote it and what it all meant.
Mr. Markham didn't like this speech, and I didn't blame him. I dare say I ought not to have said it.
But he had so little of what is known as the detective method that I couldn't help speaking my mind.
Well, I'll tell you one thing I think about it, he said. That is, whoever wrote that letter to Mrs. Van Wick was certainly her accomplice.
Now, who could that be, but that valet carstairs?
He has acted queer from the beginning,
and I'm going to hunt him up and make him tell all he knows.
Carstairs, I exclaimed in amazement,
You don't think Mrs. Van Wick would stoop to receive letters from a servant?
If Mrs. Van Wick has stooped to crime, or participation in crime,
she cannot be very particular about her associates.
But she hasn't stooped to crime.
Good heavens, man, don't condemn her on her.
But, even as I spoke, I remembered that Anne had asked me if I would stand by her even if she were wicked,
and I had said I would. Yes, and I would, too, even if she were convicted of the worst crime in the
calendar. I don't know whether it was because of my reference to Stone or not, but Markham seemed
to acquire new energy. He announced with great determination that he was going to find out about
that letter whatever method he might have to pursue. And it was part of the
to divert his sudden energy from this subject that I proposed again that we should make a search
for Jeanette.
Strange about Jeanette, I observed. Suppose we set out to trace her. That would be at least a step
in the right direction. There have been very few steps taken in any direction, said the detective
moodily. My own movements are hampered by orders from the family. Of course there's no one to
say what I shall do except Mrs. Van Wick and her two step-children. And every direction in which I
wish to investigate is forbidden by one or another of those three. Sometimes I think they are all
inconyments, and their inharmonious attitude toward one another is a mere bluff. This was a new
idea to me, and I pondered it. But I couldn't think it a true theory and said so. Maybe not,
maybe not, said Markham, but they do act mighty queer. Miss Barbara, for instance, begged me if I
found any clues which might incriminate her brother to suppress them and tell nobody.
"'Did she really suppose that you would do that?' I asked.
"'Yes, she was very much in earnest.
"'But I haven't found anything that points to Morland definitely.
"'If I did, I'd show it up fast enough.'
"'I should hope so,' I returned emphatically.
"'I'd far rather suspect Morland of his father's death than Mrs. Van Wick.
"'Yes, so should I.
"'But it's a mystery whichever way one turns.
"'I can't seem to make any start.
but as you say Mr. Sturgis,
it would be a good idea to hunt for that maid.
It proved not to be a difficult matter to find Jeanette,
for we soon discovered that she had gone to stay with her sister in a neighboring village.
I couldn't help thinking that Anne had known all along where the girl was,
for she seemed rather annoyed than otherwise that we had made the discovery.
At any rate, Jeanette was brought home and closely questioned by Mr. Markham and myself.
and the result of the questioning was to eliminate entirely the stiletto as incriminating evidence.
Jeanette explained that she had used that stiletto to dig a refractory cork out of a bottle of bronze
shoe dressing. The bronze had given the metal a reddish stain which she could not remove,
and she had hidden it lest she be scolded for having used the dainty implement for such a purpose.
Markham was frankly disappointed. I can't think he wanted to prove Anne guilty,
but his pride was hurt at having his cleverness in finding the stiletto of no avail.
But, I said to Jeanette, why did you run away?
I didn't run away, she said. I merely went to visit my sister.
But you took a strange time to do that when your mistress was in such trouble and sorrow.
I thought I'd better go, responded Jeanette, and Markham jumped at this admission.
Why did you think it better to go, he demanded.
But Jeanette turned pale and,
and looked very much frightened.
I didn't have any reason,
she said, beginning to cry.
I just, I just thought I'd go.
We tried every possible way to learn more from her,
but without success.
She became hysterical and stupid by turns,
and finally refused to answer our questions.
Markham declared that this attitude on Jeanette's part
was strongly against Anne,
but this I would not believe.
Finally, I said,
Jeanette, the reason you were,
refused to talk is because you're afraid of carstairs. Now I'll tell you, it will be better in the long
run if you make a clean breast of this matter and tell us all you know. And then, between her
hysterical sobs, Jeanette managed to stammer out that Carstairs had said he would kill her if she told.
Certainly she was weak-minded and I thought the best thing was to scare her a little.
Nonsense, Jeanette, I said. Of course, Carstairs won't kill you. Don't be so foolish.
But you may get into very serious trouble if you don't tell this thing that you're keeping back.
How would you like to go to prison for withholding evidence?
The girl shivered at the thought, and a little more of this sort of persuasion
soon brought her to the point of saying that she would tell all she knew,
but that she knew nothing of importance.
We will judge of the importance, I said,
and what we want from you is a full account of anything you know concerning last Friday night.
In the first place, were you at that ball in the village?
no sir the answer though in low tones was positive was carstairs at that ball no sir where were you both it seemed almost as if the girl were hypnotized by my question for she spoke like one in a trance
nevertheless her answers bore the stamp of truth and it seemed impossible to doubt that she was telling a straight story in the same low steady voice jeanette went on we both went for a ride in mr
Van Wick's new car. This was forbidden, of course, but Carstairs said his master would never find it out.
You went then on what is called a joyride. I suppose so. And what time did you get home?
About midnight. Then it was Carstairs that Miss Fordyce saw sneaking into the grounds.
I don't know, sir, but Rani saw us, and Carstairs made him promise not to tell.
At last we're getting at something definite, said Mr. Markham.
fairly rubbing his hands with pleasure at these new developments.
He then took up the work of questioning himself.
You came into the house about twelve o'clock that night.
Yes, sir.
And then what did you do?
I stopped in the servant's dining-room, sir,
and in a few minutes,
Castairs came in there after putting away the car.
He said nobody had seen us except Rani,
and he wouldn't tell.
Then he told me I'd better go
and see if Mrs. Van Wick wanted me.
So I started, for me.
Mrs. Van Week's room, but before I reached it, I saw her coming out of the study.
Coming out of the study? Be careful what you're saying, girl. Are you sure of this?
Of course, I'm sure. Mrs. Van Wick had one of her boudoir gowns, and she was just coming
through the study door into the corridor as I saw her. I asked her if she wanted me to help
her undress. And what did she say? The detective was almost breathless now in his excitement.
She said,
No, no, for heaven's sake, go away.
Why did she speak like that?
I don't know, sir.
She was greatly excited,
and her eyes were blazing like stars.
She was clutching her hands,
and she looked almost distracted.
Jeanette, I said very sternly,
you're telling the truth?
Only the truth, sir.
I was frightened at Mrs. Van Wicks' appearance,
but as she said she didn't want me,
I went straight back to the servant's dining room.
i found carstairs there and he looked frightened and white too i was all upset sir at these queer actions and i said good-night to carstairs and went right up to my room at what time was all this asked mr markham when i reached my bedroom it was half-past twelve
mr markham looked at the girl thoughtfully i believe your story he said but you will have to tell it again under oath and in the meantime i forbid you to mention a word of this to any one
Do you understand?
I forbid you.
Yes, sir.
You ought to have been here
and given this evidence at the inquest.
Why did you go away just then?
You may as well own up.
Jeanette hesitated only a moment,
and then she said simply,
Mrs. Carstairs advised me to go.
Mrs. Carstairs, why did she do that?
I don't know, sir.
She said for me to go to my sisters for a day or two
and make a little visit.
That is all.
for the present, Jeanette, said Mr. Markham.
You may go now, but to remember you are not to say a word about all this to anyone.
I will remember, sir, said Jeanette, and she went away.
Sixteen.
Tell-tail typewriting.
After the girl had gone, Mr. Markham looked at me significantly.
We certainly have material to work on now, he said.
What do you make of it all, Mr. Sturgis?
I can't make anything of it, I replied.
it has all come upon me so suddenly it makes my head whirl.
Of course I see as you do
that this girl's story is pretty strong evidence against Mrs. Van Wick,
but I, for one, am not willing to take the unsupported evidence
of a hysterical and weak-minded servant.
But how can you doubt it?
The girl would never have made up all that story.
You don't question, do you,
the fact that she saw Mrs. Van Wick
coming from the study soon after midnight.
Then how do you explain Mrs. Van Wick's presence there
after the men of the committee had gone home and the secretary had also.
How do you explain the fact that she was wringing her hands in a state of great excitement
and even spoke sharply as she declined the services of the maid?
I don't explain these facts if they are facts.
But as I said, I'm not prepared to believe this story implicitly.
I do believe those two went on a joyride,
and they came home so frightened lest their misdemeanor should be discovered
that they haven't a very clear recollection of what happened.
At least the girl hasn't, and as you may remember, the valet was decidedly nervous and uncertain
of his facts when he gave his own testimony. Besides telling an up-and-down lie as to his whereabouts
that evening. That's all so, said the detective musingly. They're both servants. They had both been
doing wrong and were both fearful of discovery. But all that would not cause them to invent this
story of the maids about seeing Mrs. Van Wick coming from the study. Now, if, as I think,
carstairs was mixed up in the matter,
may it not be that it was because
she feared for her son's safety
that Mrs. Carstairs sent the girl Jeanette away.
I pondered on this.
I knew how Mrs. Carstairs idolized her son.
I knew she had been out early that next morning
endeavoring to obliterate the wheel tracks of the new car,
which might tell the tale of his wrongdoing.
And knowing Jeanette's hysterical nature,
the housekeeper might very easily have felt afraid
that the maid's evidence would lead to suspicion of her son.
and so she sent the girl away it all looked plausible so plausible that my fears for
anne grew deeper and the future looked very black indeed if my theory is right markham
went on that there is collusion between mrs van wick and the valet i think the best plan
is to question him i think if sufficiently frightened he will tell the truth and now he
has no fear of punishment for his stolen ride he will probably make up some other story
and I may yet catch him tripping.
But I think this, Mr. Sturgis,
I think it is high time
we gave all this information
to the other members of the family.
My way would be,
to go straight to Mrs. Van Wick
with the whole story.
But if not that,
I think at least Miss Van Wick
and her brother
should be told all of this.
They are practically my employers
and my report is due to them.
Give me a little more time,
I begged.
Wait till tonight, won't you?
If I could prove this girl's story false,
how much better not to have insulted Mrs. Van Wick with a recital of it.
It seems to me, Mr. Sturgis, that you're assuming a great deal of responsibility in the matter.
But who else is there to take the helm?
Morland Van Wick is not one to deal with such things, and the ladies could not be expected to do so.
And then, as it was tea time, we joined the others in the music room.
Of course, since the tragedy tea had not been served in the study,
and the beautiful music room made an attraction.
setting for the dainty function.
As was to be expected, there was an air of constraint over us all,
and instead of general conversation, we broke up into small groups and conversed in
low tones.
As was not unusual, Morland and Barbara were disagreeing on some subject.
A few words in their raised voices proved that they were discussing the lost pearls.
Somewhat, to my surprise, Mr. Lasseter took part in their argument.
It couldn't have been a burglar, Lassiter was saying,
because he would never have stolen that deed of gift.
That theft proves positively the work of someone interested in behalf of the family.
And so, Morland, as you can't believe there were two thieves,
I think you must agree that the criminal was some interested party.
Are you accusing me?
Burst out, Morland.
Do you perhaps think that I raised my hand against my own father?
I accused nobody, said Lasseter,
but I think we ought to make more progress toward discovering the criminal.
I cast no implication on Mr. Markham's work, but I do say that it is a most mysterious case,
and perhaps Mr. Markham himself would like it better if he could have someone of his own profession
to consult with. I was astonished that the secretary should so assert himself as to make
this suggestion, for as a rule he was rather reticent and non-committal.
Moreover, I knew that the one he had in mind was Flemingstone.
Morland opposed this idea and said rather angrily that there was no use throwing away
any more money on detectives, when the one we had didn't amount to anything.
I felt decidedly uncomfortable at this, for if I had not held him back, Mr. Markham would
have told the family of his recent discoveries. The glance that the detective shot at me
expressed this thought, and I partly made up my mind that I would tell him to go ahead
in his own way. I left the party and walked out on the terrace alone. It seemed as if I must
do something desperate. I had promised Markham that if I discovered nothing, I had promised Markham that if I
discovered nothing about that letter by evening, I would consent to his making the story public.
I had vague thoughts of going straight to Anne with it, as it would be easier for her to hear about
it from me alone than from the detective in the presence of others. But I couldn't bring myself to do
this. I tried to think what Fleming Stone would do if he had that letter to puzzle over,
and I thought at once that he would examine it to the minutest detail, even under a lens.
At any rate it was something to try, so I asked Markham for the letter and he gave it to me unnoticed by anyone else.
Remembering that there was a magnifying glass in the study, I took the letter in there.
Although the scene of the crime, the great room was so beautiful that it gave no sense of horror.
I crossed the soft Turkish rug to the desk that had been Mr. Van Wicks.
The lens was there and I read the letter through it.
The magnifying of it told me nothing, but as I read it,
re-read the terrible lines, I could not believe they were written to Anne in good faith.
I believed the letter of forgery of some sort, and I determined to find out.
I had heard Stone say that typewriting was almost as individual as pen writing, that no two
typewriters produced the same script, and indeed no two operators wrote alike even on the same
machine. And so I set to work to note any peculiarities I might find in the words or letters.
At the very outset I made a discovery.
This was that the typewriting on the envelope and inside the letter were not the same.
There could be no doubt that they were not done on the same machine.
The ink was the same color, the letters about the same size,
but the confirmation, though similar, was not identical.
I wondered what this could mean,
for surely the paper and envelope belonged to each other
and why would anyone write a letter on one typewriter and address it on another?
Spurred on by this discovery, I scrutinized still more carefully, and found that in the
message the capital T was imperfect. A tiny corner of one of its arms failed to print. This was a
small thing, but it was a certain thing. The tea on the envelope was perfectly clear and distinct.
I could find no other discrepancies of this kind, but I was positive that the fact of two
typewriters having been used proved chicanery of some sort.
then again i thought perhaps a letter might print clearly at one time and not at another as an experiment i went to the typewriter which stood on the side table in the study and hastily wrote a few lines
i did not copy the letter or the address but wrote a familiar quotation of some sort followed by a whole string of letters at random removing my paper i could scarcely believe my eyes as i looked at it the capital t in every instance was imperfect in precisely the same manner
as the one in Anne's letter. There was no doubt of this. I wrote a whole line of
tease, and it was impossible to make the key printed clearly. I made further examination of my
slip of paper and found that every letter had the same peculiarities as the corresponding
letters in the mysterious note. They were infinitesimal peculiarities, but they were indubitable.
Whoever wrote that letter to Anne Van Wick wrote it on that machine that was now before me
and no other. But the envelope was just as certainly not addressed on that particular typewriter.
Now what did this mean? I asked myself. And it was a long time before I could grasp the answer,
but it finally came to me in a flash of inspiration. As I had suspected, the letter was a forgery.
It had been written on David Van Wicks' typewriter by someone who could get access to it
either secretly or openly, and it had been placed in an envelope which had contained
another letter already received and opened by Anne.
A plan of diabolical ingenuity, of wicked cleverness.
I still sat by the machine looking at the letter
when the faintest sound caught my ear and I glanced up to see Mrs. Carrstairs
gliding toward me.
She was just at my elbow and was actually about to snatch the letter from my hand.
Indeed, her fingers almost touched it.
I stared at her and said quietly,
What does this mean? Do you want this letter?
Oh, she said, and her face showed a cajoling smile.
I beg your pardon, I do indeed. I thought you were copying it.
And what if I was? I said partly angry and wholly mystified.
Don't be angry, and her alluring face wore a coaxing expression.
Please give me the letter.
Give you the letter. Why should I do that?
She went so far as to lay her hand on my shoulder and said softly,
I know I did wrong. I ought never to have read it, but having read it, I ought never to have
shown it. I quite agree to all that, Mrs. Garstairs, but having given it into the hands of the
detective, you may not take it back. I spoke sternly, even more sharply than I meant to,
for I was afraid the woman's wiles would get that letter away from me against my will.
Then she said,
Mr. Sturgis, please.
And no words can express the persuasive power
of her look and voice.
Won't you please do this, then?
Copy the letter if you want to,
but give me back the original.
Why? I asked, eyeing her closely.
Because I'm sure I did wrong to take it,
and I want to restore it to Mrs. Van Wick.
Now, of course, I had no intention
of granting her request,
and I'm almost sure I should not have done so,
but I may as well admit that I was greatly relieved
that Markham entered the room at that moment.
She turned to the detective with a pretty pout
that was almost girlish.
Can't I have the letter, Mr. Markham?
She begged.
Have the letter?
Certainly not, madam.
It is without a doubt a most important clue.
Surely Mr. Markham was proof against her blandishments,
and she realized that there was no hope
to regain possession of the letter.
oh well she said lightly it's of no consequence if it gets mrs van wick into trouble i'm sure i can't help it i've done all i could to retrieve what was perhaps a mistake on my part now she may take the consequences
mrs carstairs glided from the room seeming not at all disappointed but actually triumphant i give her up i said to markham do you think she really wanted that letter back for mrs van wick's benefit or for some other reason
i can't think of any other reason i think she found the letter and brought it to me from a sense of duty then i think she felt sorry that she had given such awful evidence against mrs van wick and wanted to retract it
"'Markham,' I said abruptly.
"'That letter was written in this room on David Van Wick's own typewriter.
"'Did he write it himself?'
"'Markham seemed absolutely unable to sense my statement,
"'which must have accounted for his absurd remark.
"'Of course he didn't write it himself,' I said impatiently,
"'but somebody wrote it on this very typewriter.
"'Here I'll prove it to you.'
"'I showed Markham how I had discovered the fact
"'and proved to him beyond any doubt
that whoever wrote the letter it had certainly been done on that machine.
There were a dozen little peculiarities that made it impossible to be otherwise.
What's the answer? said Markham, looking absolutely blank.
I don't know. If the letter is in good faith it means an accomplice in the crime.
But if the letter is a fake, which I think it is, it is written by somebody who wants to
throw suspicion on Mrs. Van Wick. As you see, the address on the envelope
is not done on this machine. That envelope, whatever its contents may have been, was mailed and
delivered from the village post office last Friday. Now, Mr. Detective, solve the problem.
To begin with, said Markham thoughtfully, if it was done in this room, it must have been done by
some member of the family. Or some servant or some guest, I supplemented him. No guest would do it,
no servant would have opportunity to do it. And beside, the diction
and construction of the note is not that of an uneducated person.
Well, go over all the members of the household.
Of course it was neither David Van Wick or his wife.
Equally, of course, it was neither of his children.
Why not?
Good heavens, man, because that's impossible.
Do you suppose either Morland or Barbara connived with Anne Van Wick to kill her husband?
Absurd.
But if the letter is merely a blind...
Well, even so, neither of those two young people would do this thing to incriminate their stepmother.
Morland is more than half in love with her, and I refuse to suspect Barbara.
Go through with the houseguests.
Archer and myself would move heaven and earth to shield Mrs. Van Wick rather than to bring trouble to her.
Mrs. Stelton and Miss Fordyce are simply out of the question.
How about the two car stairs?
That woman was certainly not in league with Mrs. Van Wick for any purpose.
but I've already told you that I'm quite ready to suspect her son the valet yes if he were in league with mrs. Van Wick now keep your temper if they were accomplices in this matter would that not fulfill every condition of this letter he wrote it to her will say having access to this room at certain times then unable to give it to her himself he mails it in the morning in most ordinary fashion and she gets it in the afternoon I nearly thrott
the man. Do you mean then that after this advice, Mrs. Van Wick murdered her husband being assured
of the aid and protection of his valet? That's what I mean, and Mr. Markham gave me a quiet but
meaningful glance that quelled my anger as no protestations could have done. I had to stop and think.
I had known Anne only a few days, really. How could I tell of what she might be capable?
and I could never forget her assertion that she was capable of crime.
But to be leagued with a servant against her husband, it was unthinkable.
At last I burst out.
I won't believe it.
I won't listen to it.
And you've left out one member of this household?
What about that precious secretary?
He has access to this room at all times.
We know almost nothing about him.
Why may it not be he who can't be.
nived with his employer's wife.
In the first place, said Markham,
he is devoted to Miss Barbara.
I fancy they're engaged.
But it may be.
It may be that he is really in love with Mrs. Van Wick.
I tell you, Mr. Sturgis,
more crimes are committed for love than for money.
Then what about car stairs?
I countered.
If he had any motive,
it must have been the money that he knew he would get at his master's death.
He could have had no other reason.
you don't suppose, do you, that he lifted his eyes to his master's wife?
I don't suppose anything.
And Markham passed his hand wearily over his brow.
I have nothing to do with supposition.
I must find tangible clues and positive evidence.
I have nothing but this letter to work upon.
I am glad of your aid, Mr. Sturgis, for I confess I find it a most baffling case.
But unless you are willing to look at the matter from all sides,
you can be of little assistance to me.
I will help you all I can, Mr. Markham,
but I make this condition.
Don't tell of this letter quite yet.
It is, as you say, a tangible clue,
and I think we ought to learn something from it.
But if you exploit it,
you will only have panic as a result.
After a little further persuasion,
Markham agreed to say nothing of the letter just at present.
He said we would both try our best
to discover the truth from it,
and I curbed my anger
and indignation of his base suspicions because I really wanted to aid him.
As a matter of fact, I was the only one who aided Markham in his investigations, or who even seemed
interested in their results. Sometimes Anne would talk with us, but she was so contradictory
and made such untenable suggestions that I could scarcely find out what her desires or intentions
were. Barbara had taken the stand that she wished the investigation stopped. I could not
learn her reasons for this, but I began to think it was a very important.
because she feared what might be learned from them.
Morland, I had reason to think, knew more about the matter than he was willing to tell.
Whether he was guilty himself, or whether he knew the guilty person I could not decide,
but I was sure one or the other must be the case.
I talked it all over with Condren Archer.
He seemed to me to look at the matter very sensibly.
On the face of things, he said,
you must admit, Sturgis that it looks as if one of the three Van Wicks must be implicated.
So it appears to me that if we can throw suspicion elsewhere, it would save the Van Wick family.
And you would advise that, I said in surprise.
You would willingly cast suspicion on an innocent person in order to shield one of the Van Wicks.
He looked straight at me.
Wouldn't you, he asked, if it were Anne who was in danger?
I don't know, I said slowly.
You ought to know, he declared.
Look here, Sturgis.
What is the use?
of denying the truth to each other.
You are in love with Anne Van Wick, and so am I.
I don't for a moment believe that she killed her husband,
but if she did, I'd rather not know it.
Now, should we not do anything in our power to divert suspicion from her?
I wouldn't accuse her convict an innocent man,
but if by directing suspicion away from Anne we can save her, let us do so.
And then afterward, let the better man win her.
I had little doubt from our own.
archer's assured air that he felt certain he himself would prove the better man, but I was not so sure of this.
However, for the moment, I must consider his proposition.
I told him that I would certainly do all in my power to shield Anne, but it was because I believed
her innocent and not because I feared she was guilty. But he merely shrugged his shoulders at this
and gave me the impression without saying so that he thought me insincere.
End of chapters 15 and 16
Chapter 17 and 18 of anybody but Anne by Carolyn Wells
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
17
The Search for the Pearls
It was a strange sort of gloom that hung over us all at Buttonwood Terrace
It was not exactly sorrow
Indeed there was little evidence of real grief for David Van Wick
His children if they mourned for
him did not do so openly, while his wife seemed stunned rather than saddened.
I could not understand Anne. She seemed to pass rapidly from one strange mood to another.
Now she would be most anxious to discover the murderer and avenge the crime, and again
she would beg of us to discontinue all investigation. Archer watched her closely.
It seemed to me he suspected her, and wanted to make sure, but he wanted no one else to suspect
her.
David Van Wick had died on Friday night and the funeral had occurred on Monday.
It was now Wednesday, and the inquest would be resumed in a few days.
But, to my way of thinking, we had little, if any, more evidence to go on.
Jeanette had explained the stiletto, but who knew if she had told the truth?
Doubtless she would lie to shield Anne, for she was devoted to her mistress,
and the reason she had given for going away seemed to me far from plausible.
Moreover, Anne had expressed no surprise or annoyance at the girl's absence, which I was forced to admit looked as if the mistress had thoroughly understood it.
It was on Wednesday morning that I was strolling along the terraces thinking deeply when I became aware of voices below me.
I glanced down a winding, rustic stairway, and saw Anne and Condren Archer.
He seemed to be pleading with her and she looked disturbed and a trifle defiant.
I turned away, having no desire to be an eavesdropper,
But as I turned, Archer's voice rose in emphatic declaration, and I couldn't help hearing the words.
He said,
"'Anne, I know you took the pearls.
Now promise you will marry me some day, and so give me the right to shield and protect you in this trial.'
The shock of his speech was so great that I involuntarily paused for an instant and I heard Anne say,
"'I deny that I took the pearls. If you think I did, you may search for them.
I defy you to find them
I hurried away from the spot
suddenly realizing that I was listening
and I am quite willing to confess
to a strong desire to listen longer
but this I would not do
partly because my sense of honor forbade it
and also because Anne was the woman I loved
and I would not listen to a word of hers
that was not meant for my ears
a moment later I met Barbara and Morland
and they too were talking of the missing pearls
"'Don't you think, Mr. Sturgis,' said Barbara,
"'that we ought to make a thorough and systematic search of the house for those pearls
before we consider putting the matter in the hands of the police?
They represent a fortune in themselves,
and I am sure that my father hid them after he had lost control of his mind.
It seems to me, then, that they must be somewhere in the study,
and we ought to be able to find them.'
"'It can certainly do no harm to search,' I responded noncommittally,
but I supposed you had already done so.
We have, in a general way, said Morland.
But Barb means to try to find some secret cupboard or sliding panel hitherto unknown.
I'm with you, I said.
Let's begin at once.
Anything is better than doing nothing.
And I do think, Morland, that you're making very little effort to solve the whole mystery.
If I were you, I should call in Flemingstone.
No, cried Barbara so sharply that I was surprised.
There is no occasion for such a thing, she went on.
Father killed himself.
His mind gave way at the last, and he was not responsible.
Also, he hid the pearls, and we can find them.
Come on and let us begin the search.
Here are Anne and Mr. Archer.
They will help, I'm sure.
After listening to Barbara's request,
both Anne and Archer heartily agreed to help in a thorough search.
We went at once to the study.
Markham and Lasseter were already there,
and we all went to work with a will.
I think I'm safe in saying
that no room was ever searched more carefully
than the Van Wick study was that day.
We divided it into two sections
and each of us searched every section.
Mrs. Telton and Beth Fordyce joined us later
and every possible hiding place was ransacked.
Nor was it an easy task.
There were many cupboards and desks
and odd pieces of furniture with secret drawers.
And besides, there were many possible hiding places
in the massive and intricate ornamentations.
The enormous carved fireplace
seemed to mock at us with its possibilities.
The carved wainscott and stuccoed wall panels
all showed in stertices which,
though in some cases thick with the dust of time,
were large enough to hold a pearl necklace.
Anne was perhaps the most energetic of all the searchers.
She ran up the spiral staircase
to the musician's gallery
and called for someone to come and help her.
Four, said she,
this carved railing is simply full of places where anything could be hidden.
As I looked up and saw Anne leaning forward with both hands on the balcony rail,
I thought I had never seen a more beautiful picture.
Whether it was the mere exertion of the search or the result of some secret knowledge of her own,
her cheeks were flushed and her eyes were bright with an unnatural excitement.
I ran up the iron staircase myself in response to her invitation,
and as no one followed us, I drew her back in.
into the shadow of the curtain draperies,
and, clasping both her hands in mine,
I said earnestly.
Anne, you don't know where the pearls are, do you?
Her hands turned cold in mine,
and the color died from her cheeks.
How dare you, she whispered.
What do you mean?
What are you implying?
Nothing.
And unable to control myself,
I clasped her in my arms.
But only for a moment,
and then, my sense is returning,
I released her and said calmly.
I mean nothing, Anne.
Forgive me, I lost my head for a moment.
But you must know what I shall someday tell you,
that I love you, and I shall yet win you.
Hush, don't answer me now.
But just remember that I have utter faith in you,
and because of that faith I shall probe this whole mystery
to its furthest depths.
I shall learn the truth, the whole truth,
and then, Anne, when it is the proper time,
I shall claim you,
and you will give yourself to me.
I have wondered since how I had the courage to make these statements,
for Anne gave me no encouragement.
She merely stared at me,
her dark eyes, seeming to burn like coils of fire in her white face.
But as I finished, she gave a little despairing sob,
and said pitifully,
Oh, Raymond, you don't know, you don't know.
And then Beth Fordyce came up to the gallery,
and both Anne and I controlled our sense.
sufficiently to speak casually as we all continued our search.
The gallery was six feet wide and extended across the whole end of the room,
except for a space of about four feet from either side wall.
It rested on six enormously heavy brackets and its railing about three feet high
was also heavy and elaborate.
Miss Fordyce looked over the railing in despair.
We never can look into every cranny of those brackets, she said.
We can do it by ladders from below.
I returned, but I will say that I never saw any room so marvellously well provided with hiding-places.
Anne stood at the end of the gallery, but not the staircase end,
and looked at the great cartouce that formed the corner of the cornice,
but which was so massive that its lower end was on the level with the gallery.
I can't reach it, she said, stretching out her hand toward its plaster scroll work,
but the pearls could be in any one of those gilded crevices.
and there are four of those great ornaments in the room, said I, looking hopelessly around
at the cornice. But if Mr. Van Wick secreted his jewels in one of them, he must have had a long
ladder, and where is the ladder? He might have had a rope ladder, suggested Mrs. Telton
looking self-conscious as if she had voiced a brilliant idea. But even so it must be somewhere,
and we have found nothing of the sort, I said. Well, the search lasted all the morning without the
least result. And to my surprise, after luncheon Mr. Markham proposed that we should search the other
rooms of the house. I have my own reasons for this, he declared. And as this was the first time I had
known him to assume the mysterious error which is part of the stock and trade of every self-respecting
detective, I began to hope his reasons might be sound ones. No one was enthusiastic about a further
search but all agreed to it, except Anne. She declared that the privacy of
her own rooms should not be invaded, and she refused to allow search to be made in them.
At this I saw Archer looking at her intently. I saw Anne flush with anger and dismay,
and I saw Mr. Markham alertly observing both. It is a mere matter of form, Mrs. Van Wick,
he said, but I must insist upon it, and of course you must see that to close your rooms
to our search would look. He hesitated. Even he could not voice the implication he was about
to make in the face of Anne Scorn.
That will do, she said coldly, and at once led the way to her own apartments.
Her bedroom, dressing-room, and bathroom were subjected to a search, but on the part of
most of us it was perfunctory and superficial.
Except the detective, not one of us was willing to open the cupboards, boxes, or bureau
drawers.
But Mr. Markham darted here and there opening drawers, boxes and baskets one after another.
I chanced to be sitting by a table on which was a gilted Florentine chest which was locked.
Markham demanded the key and Anne gave it to him.
But the chest was entirely empty, save for several old photographs carelessly flung in.
Disappointed, the detective stared thoughtfully about the room.
You must understand, Mrs. Van Wick, he said smoothly,
that we have no suspicion, but at the same time we must make this search a thorough one.
and I think we have examined everything except the bookshelves.
I must ask now that the books be taken down.
The bookshelves, which were built against the wall,
covered nearly all one side of the room.
At Mr. Markham's orders, the books were taken down,
three or four at a time, and returned to their places.
But although there was plenty of space behind them,
no pearls were discovered.
Shall we open each book? inquired Mr. Archer sarcastically.
No, said the detective.
shortly. Pearls could not be placed in a book, but they could easily be behind them, and I must
do my duty. The others had helped with the bookshelf performance, but I had stayed near Anne.
She was trembling like a leaf. If she had hidden the pearls behind the books and feared their discovery,
she could not have been more nervously agitated. I noticed, too, that Archer was watching her
closely, even while he was busily engaged in taking down and putting back the volumes. In an effort
To distract Anne's attention, and perhaps to calm her unrest, I said.
How did you like the vase I brought you?
And I glanced at it where it stood on a small side table.
It is beautiful, she said, and thanked me with her eyes.
I have never seen a more exquisite piece of Venetian glass, but so very fragile.
I would not let anyone but myself touch it to unpack it,
and even then I was afraid it would break while I was disengaging it from its wrappings.
I was frightened, Raymond, lest Mr. Van Wick should see it.
He was so absurdly jealous that it would have made him very angry.
But now, it doesn't matter.
Her lip quivered, and a strange look came into her eyes,
but I was positive it was not a regret that she no longer had to endure her husband's jealousy.
At last, Markham declared himself satisfied that the pearls were not in Anne's apartments,
and, followed by his assistance, he went to search David Van Wink's rooms.
and from there the search continued all over the rest of the rooms,
and it was well on towards sundown before he was ready to declare himself satisfied
that the pearls were not hidden in any part of the house.
And so, said Mr. Markham with an air of finality,
we may be sure that Mr. Van Wick did not hide the pearls,
nor are they in the possession of any member of this household.
This, I think, proves that the robbery was committed by an intruder
who also killed Mr. Van Wick.
The mystery of how the burglar entered and what weapon he used will, I fear, never be solved.
And the missing deed? asked Archer. That is another mystery that seems inexplicable.
Of course, the fortune now remains in possession of the family and will be disposed of
according to the terms of Mr. Van Wicks' will.
The will, as everybody knew, left David Van Wicks's three heirs each in possession of one-third
of his fortune. The pearls were not mentioned in the will, although Anne, Clay,
he had verbally given them to her.
Both Barbara and Moreland disputed her ownership of them,
but as the pearls were gone it made little difference
whose they were.
I can't help thinking, Mr. Markham, I said,
that we have all reached the end of our ingenuity.
But I also think that the problem ought not to be given up,
and that it is now time to call in a more expert investigator.
I propose, therefore, that we send for Flemingstone
and put the matter in his hands.
"'Oh, that wonderful Mr. Stone!' exclaimed Mrs. Stelton, clapping her hands in her foolish way.
"'Sent for him do? He can tell us everything.'
"'I for one do not wish him sent for,' said Anne in a most positive manner.
"'Nor I,' said Barbara, for once agreeing with her stepmother.
"'I don't think we need him,' said Morland thoughtfully.
"'What could he find out more than we have?'
"'We haven't found out anything,' I retorted.
and he would explain everything in a short time.
Is he then omniscient, said Mr. Markham with a decided sneer?
He is very nearly so in matters of detective work, I returned gravely.
If Mrs. Van Wick does not wish to employ him, I will do so myself,
as I am quite willing to admit that I have a strong desire to solve the mysteries of David Van Wick's death
and of the stolen jewels and missing deed.
We discussed at some length the time.
question of sending for Flemingstone, but so strong was the opposition of the Van Wicks,
of the detective Aunt of Condren Archer, that I forbore to insist, and the matter was left unsettled.
But later I discussed it alone with Archer.
Don't do it, he said to me earnestly.
Don't you see that to get Stone here might implicate Anne?
Why, said I in surprise, my motive in getting him would be to prove Anne's innocence.
Then, if you want to prove Anne Venn's.
Anne Wick innocent, or even to continue to think her so, don't send for stone.
And with these words, Archer turned on his heel and left me.
I went to the study, hoping to find Morland there, and to persuade him to agree to my views.
But there was no one in the study except the secretary.
Mr. Lasseter, I said to him, as man to man, won't you explain to me why you and
Morland persist in these conflicting stories.
My story is the true one, said Lasseter, looking me squarely in the eye.
When I left the room that night, Morland sat here, indicating a large carved seat near the fireplace,
and Mr. Van Wick was at his desk.
It all occurred as I related at the inquest.
And Mr. Sturgis, I will tell you what I have not told anyone else.
After going out of the door, I went around the study and halfway down the front path
to the road. Then, on an impulse which I cannot explain, I turned back and went and looked in at
the study window, not the door, but the window at the farther end. And I distinctly saw
Morland bending over his father's desk. Of course, at that time I had no thought of tragedy,
and I hoped that father and son would make up their quarrel then and there. I merely glanced
in, and turning away again went straight home. Why didn't you tell of this at the inquest? Because,
it would in a way prove my story, in the face of the tragedy I feared it might make things
look black for Morland. You don't suspect him of, of any wrongdoing. No, I can't, but it is
all mysterious, and I agree with you in wishing that we could have the Great Fleming Stone look into
it. Why, I thought you didn't want him. Personally, I do, but Miss Van Wick is so opposed to the
idea I should rather defer to her wishes than insist upon my own. Oh, I see.
I didn't understand before.
Yes, said Lasseter frankly.
Although we're not formally engaged,
I hope to make Barbara Van Wick my wife.
And so, you see,
I cannot endorse a course of action
to which she is so definitely opposed.
This was true enough, and I told him so.
I couldn't help liking Lasseter,
and some things about him which I had thought strange
were explained by what he had just told me.
From him I went straight to Morland.
Tell me, I said to him,
in a confidential way. Why did you and Lasseter contradict each other at the inquest?
I wondered you didn't ask me that long ago, he said, seeming not at all offended.
You see, it is this way. I was sitting on that old bench by the fireplace.
But it is in a dark corner, and I was in a shadow, for after the committee left we had turned
off some of the lights, and the shaded desk light and the firelight made pretty much all the
illumination there was. I was tired and discouraged with the whole matter, and I left, and I
the room quietly, just before twelve, without even saying good-night.
Father and Lasseter were talking, and I don't believe they heard me go.
So when Lasseter said good-night to me as he says he did, he really thought I was there,
and if father spoke to me, why, he must have thought so too.
This was all plausible enough, and the young man's frank manner convinced me of its truth.
But there was another point to be cleared up.
All right, Morland, I said.
That does explain things.
you left the room just before midnight and a moment or two later lasseter went home and said good-night to you thinking you were there but a little later still you returned what cried morland and he turned fairly livid with rage what do you mean sturgis
what do you mean by getting so excited over it you did return and you were seen by whom never mind that now morland looked straight at me there was fear in his eyes but there was fear in his eyes but there was
also a strong ring of truth in his voice as he said.
Sturgis, if I returned to the study, and if I was seen there, then the one who saw me is the
murderer. Send for your Flemingstone, and discover who it may be.
Without another word, Morland strode away, leaving me completely bewildered by his words.
Eighteen.
When I went to my room to dress for dinner, I thought the matter over very definitely
before deciding to send for Stone.
It was a somewhat radical move on my part,
and I was not sure that I was entirely justified,
but I felt I must clear Anne of any possible breath of suspicion.
And as I was unable to do this by myself,
I wanted the best possible assistance I could find.
And yet everybody was opposed to the coming of the great detective.
I felt sure that Barbara didn't want him to come
because she suspected the guilt of either her brother or the secretary.
I could see this from the way in which she looked at both men, and from some slight hints
she had inadvertently dropped in conversation. And since it seemed to be fairly well proven
that Moreland Van Wick and Barclay Lasseter were the last two people known to be with
David Van Wick, then one was in a way justified in suspecting one or both of these men.
And Barbara, fearful that Fleming Stone's coming would mean disaster to her brother or her lover
naturally protested against it.
Condron Archer had said frankly that he didn't want Stone to come lest he might implicate Anne.
And when I remembered Anne's various inexplicable actions,
and especially her agitation during the search in her room,
I too trembled to think what Fleming Stone's investigations might disclose.
Markham, the detective I knew, didn't want Stone,
but that I ascribed to a petty professional jealousy.
Of course the two detectives were not to be mentioned on the same day of the week,
But Markham and his ignorance considered himself quite the peer of Stone.
But, on the other hand, Lassiter I knew, really wanted Stone,
and only refrained from saying so out of consideration for Barbara.
This to me was a fair proof of Lassiter's own innocence.
And indeed, no breath of real suspicion had fallen on the secretary,
except the general fact that he had had had opportunity to steal the pearls had he been inclined to do so.
But what had brought my inclinations to a positive decision?
was the fact that Morland had said to send for Flemingstone. He said it in the heat of passion
and under the influence of anger, but he had said it, and I decided to consider that as authority.
So I concluded to write at once before Morland could retract his permission. I made a rapid
toilette and found I had time enough left before dinner to write my letter. It was not an easy
matter, for I was not one of the principles in the case, and I didn't wish to tell Stone of my hopes
regarding Anne. But I wrote a straightforward account of everything, and I begged him to come at once.
I told him frankly that most of the household were opposed to his coming, but that Moreland had
sanctioned it, and if there were ever any question of authority, I would assume all the
responsibility of having asked him, and would also be held responsible for the financial
settlement. As I wrote, my mind became more firmly made up that I was doing right. I could never
marry Anne while she was under this cloud, and he would be held.
even should she refuse to marry me,
I must free her from any taint of suspicion
regarding her husband's death.
A varcher's hint
that Stone's coming might convict Anne
of the crime I resolutely took no notice.
If I could believe
such a thing of the woman I loved,
I would be utterly unworthy of her.
But I wrote nothing of all this to Stone.
I told him the simple facts of the case
as I knew them. I told him
the indications and evidences as I knew them,
and I must admit that it
seem a tangle. I felt that we had been neither stupid or inefficient in our endeavors to unravel
the mystery, for they certainly had led nowhere. All suspicion of any person fell to the ground
before the undeniable fact of that sealed room, and all suspicion of suicide fell to the ground in the
absence of any weapon. Truly, it was a case worthy of Flemingstone's attention, and I hoped,
with all my heart he would take it up. With the thought of helping him to
To understand it all, I wrote him everything we had done.
I told of Jeanette's disappearance, of the hidden stiletto, and of her subsequent explanation.
I told him of our exhaustive search for the pearls, and I told him to, though I hated to,
how nervous and agitated Anne was when we searched her bookshelves.
And then I told him, though I fully realized that all these things pointed in one direction,
of the last words David Van Wick said to his wife as he left the drawing-room.
how he had told her he was going to give away the pearls she looked upon as her own,
and how he had said,
Now don't you wish I were dead?
I admitted to him that Anne was very strongly opposed to the munificent gift her husband had intended making,
but stated also that the disappearance of the deed was quite as favorable to the wishes of the two stepchildren as to those of the wife.
I told Flemingstone all this, and I told him too that I believed Anne Van Wick innocent,
but for this belief I could give no reason.
That letter went off Wednesday night.
I sent it to the permanent address in New York which Stone had given me,
though of course I had no means of knowing whether he was there or not.
But by good fortune he was in New York,
and he replied to my letter at once,
so that late Thursday afternoon I received his reply.
To my satisfaction, he declared himself willing to undertake the case,
and incidentally complimented me on the clearness of my account
and the definiteness of my written details.
He said he would arrive Friday morning,
and he begged me to keep the room
from being disturbed any further.
Though I dare say, he wrote,
that by this time all possible clues
are removed or destroyed
through ignorance or carelessness,
however, lock up the room at once
and let no one enter it until I get there.
This instruction was scarcely necessary,
for the study had had few occupants since the tragedy.
everybody avoided the place and the servants could scarcely be induced to enter it i knew it had not been swept or dusted since the fatal night and i hoped that stone's marvellous powers could find clues where we had seen none
to be sure we had searched it thoroughly for the pearls and no one of us had then found anything in the way of evidence but we were not trained observers and i had great hopes of stone's wizardry
after dinner i walked on the terrace with anne i had announced at the dinner-table that i had written for flemingstone and that i had done this with morland's consent i glanced at morland as i said this but he made no response beyond a slight affirmative nod there was a silence after
my announcement, and then Mrs. Telton began to babble, and Beth Fordyce began a rapturous eulogy
of Flemingstone and his work. But the others said nothing, either for or against the coming of the
detective. As we walked on the terrace, I tried to draw Anne out on the subject. But she only said
wearily. It doesn't matter. It would have to come out some time, I suppose. Shall you mind, Raymond,
when your friend Stone proves me a criminal? I don't think he will do that. I don't think he will do
that, Anne, I said very gently, for I couldn't think it, and yet her despairing tone alarmed me more
than if she had been angry or deeply disturbed. And then the others joined us and the conversation
became general. But seemingly, by tacit's consent, the subject of the crime or the coming of the
new detective was not touched upon. Even Mrs. Stelton seemed to feel the restraint that was upon us all,
and for once refrained from making her usual flippant and ill-timed observations.
The party broke up early, and we all went to our rooms.
The men did not congregate in the smoking room as usual, but parted on the landing with brief good-nights.
I, for one, felt heavy of heart.
Anne's definite speech had frightened me, and I wondered if in sending for stone I had precipitated
the very calamity I wished to avert.
But it was too late now for regret.
I had put the matter in other hands, and I must abide by the consequence.
and yet, though I could still hope for Anne's innocence,
though my heart still whispered, anybody but Anne,
I was far from having the same confidence that I had felt earlier in the day.
The next morning Flemingstone came.
The moment I saw him, I was glad I had summoned him.
He looked so strong, so capable and so resourceful,
that I knew instinctively he would reach the truth.
And after all, it was the truth we wanted, or ought to
want. We congregated in the drawing-room to meet him, and his reception was more like that of an
honored guest than an official detective. He greeted each one individually and with the utmost
cordiality and kindness. But after a few polite commonplaces of conversation, he rose
alertly and declared himself ready to begin the business at hand.
"'I assume I have the freedom of the house,' he said turning to Anne, who responded merely by a
She was frightened, I could see that, and yet there was nothing in Flemingstone's manner to inspire alarm.
Indeed, he looked at her with an intent admiration, as he had done on his former visit,
and I realized that he would give her every possible benefit of doubt.
I shall go to the study first, he said, and I should like to be accompanied only by Mr. Sturgis and Mr. Markham.
After my investigations there, I may want to ask.
some questions of the rest of you i wanted to feel that stone was taking me with him because i might be of some assistance but this vain hope was quickly shattered i want you with me mr sturgis he said as we entered the study and he closed the door first because you are my employer and also because you are the only one of this household who cannot possibly be implicated in this crime
i suppose i looked my amazement for he went on that does not mean that all the rest are implicated but you are the only one who i know is not how do you know that mr stone
first from the letter you wrote me which leaves you free of suspicion while it leaves everyone else open to the possibility of it second because you had no motive for the deed but i you needn't finish i know you are deed
attracted to Mrs. Van Wick, but you would not murder her husband in order to win her,
and then send for me to come out here to discover the criminal.
No, I wouldn't, I replied, almost smiling at the way he put it.
And now, Mr. Stone, if I can help you in any way, I shall be only too glad.
I think I shall not require help, thank you. I ask only freedom from interruption, and
possibly, answers to occasional questions. If the words were trifectual.
Kurt, the tone was not at all so, and I willingly sat down, content to watch the great man at his work.
Mr. Markham also watched Stone intently, and even offered suggestions now and then.
But these Stone dismissed with a mere word or two, often with only a wave of his hand.
As I had surmised he would do, he scrutinized every part of the room,
at first with sweeping glances, and then focusing his attention on various details.
I had told him in my letter of the security with which the room was locked and bolted on the inside,
and he examined all the fastenings of the doors and windows with utmost care and interest.
I think I can safely say, he remarked,
that I have never seen a room apparently so absolutely impossible of ingress.
And yet, someone entered and left while it was thus bolted and barred.
It was not a suicide, then.
certainly not it was a case of willful murder committed by an intruder yes by an intruder of exceeding cleverness of marvellously cool nerve and and of great physical strength i prompted not necessarily said stone looking sharply at me i don't deduce a special strength i felt ashamed for i realized in a sudden flash that i had said that hoping to learn
that his thoughts were not directed toward Anne.
What, what did this intruder do with the weapon he used?
I stammered partly to hide my confusion.
He left it behind him in plain view of everyone.
I fear, Mr. Sturgis, you are unobservant.
Wait a moment, I cried, stung by his evident scorn of what we had done or rather what
we had failed to do.
Do you mean to tell me that the weapon is even now in this room?
It is, and in plain sight.
Don't tell me where.
Let me find it for myself.
I cried gazing wildly around.
Find it if you can,
but as you have overlooked it all these days,
how can you expect to see it now?
I'm completely mystified, I said.
We searched this room so carefully for the pearls
that I would have sworn we must have found a weapon
had there been any to find.
Show it to me, Mr. Stone.
There it is, and Flemingstone pointed quietly to a bill file which stood on the desk.
It was of the ordinary type with a heavy bronze standard in a long, sharp, upright spike.
The bills and papers on it reached nearly to the top, but as soon as my attention was drawn to it,
I realized that with the bills removed it would indeed be a deadly weapon,
and would correspond in every way to the weapon which the doctor declared must have been used.
I can only suppose, I said, that it escaped our attention because of its very obviousness.
Not only that, said Stone, but it was inconspicuous, being nearly covered with the bills,
and, moreover, you looked only for a definite weapon and not for an ordinary implement used as one.
How did you come to notice it so quickly?
Because you had told me no weapon could be found, with the exception of the possible stiletto.
and that did not greatly impress me for no one would leave evidence of a crime in so simple a hiding-place even now i believe that bill-file to be the criminal's weapon only because i can discover no other but let us look at it
if we find a particle of blood-stain on the papers i think we may have no further doubt flemingstone carefully lifted the bills from the metal rod that pierced them drawing a lens from his pocket he examined the bill-file
and several of the papers.
It was used to kill Mr. Van Wick, he declared.
It was carefully wiped off and the bills returned to it.
The particles of blood remaining on it are scarcely perceptible to the naked eye,
but may clearly be seen through the magnifying glass.
You may perceive also some faint stains around the holes in the papers where they slid down the spike.
As this is vital evidence, I will put it safely away.
Fleming Stone put the file with its papers in a small cupboard of the desk which he locked and then took out the key.
After that, for a long time, Markham and I sat silently watching him as he proceeded with his scrutiny of the room.
Occasionally he examined something through his glass. Occasionally he picked up a scrap of something from the floor and put it in his notebook or pocket.
At last I could contain myself no longer and I burst out with, Mr. Stone, do you know how the murderer
got in and out.
I do not, he replied.
I haven't the faintest idea.
But since a human being did do so,
another human being may discover how.
I felt that he was avoiding the masculine pronoun on purpose,
and again my heart sank, as I feared for Anne.
After an hour or so, though it seemed ages,
Flemingstone declared his investigation of the room completed
and announced his desire to see next some of the service,
I took him across the house to the kitchen quarters, and in the butler's pantry we found a footman and two maids.
After a quick glance at the faces of the trio, Mr. Stone interrogated the more intelligent looking of the maids.
When express packages arrive, he said to her in his pleasant way, who attends to them?
A footman, sir, said the girl, with an air of proud importance at being questioned.
What footman?
This one?
Yes, sir.
That's Jack.
"'Jackson, sir. He most always takes the express parcels.'
"'Ah, then you can speak for yourself, Jackson.'
"'On the day of your master's death, did any express parcels arrive?'
"'Yes, sir,' replied Jackson.
"'I remember there were three came that morning.
"'What was in them?'
"'Supplies for the pantry, sir.
"'Most bottles and jars, sir.'
"'And what were they packed in? Excelsior.'
"'Yes, sir.
excelsior and straw.
And was there no other parcel
containing china or glass?
There was another, sir, but not by express.
Mr. Sturgis brought it.
That was glass, and it was taken to Mrs. Van Wick's room.
Flemingstone turned to me.
What was the packing, Mr. Sturgis?
He said.
I don't know, I replied,
greatly mystified at this turn of affairs.
I brought a glass vase as a gift to Mrs. Van Wiggins.
but she opened the box when I was not present.
I emptied the box, sir, volunteered Jackson,
and it was full of tissue paper cut into little scraps.
Yes, of course, agreed Stone.
That is what a fine piece of glass would naturally be packed in.
That is all.
Thank you, Jackson.
Slowly and thoughtfully, Stone walked back through the house.
He detained me a moment as we passed through the dining room.
"'You want me to go on with the case, Mr. Sturgis,' he said.
"'Wherever the results may lead.'
I shuddered at this question coming right on top of his discovery of Anne's glass vase.
I could see no possible connection between my innocent gift and the Van Wick tragedy,
but there must have been one in Stone's mind.
However, I replied,
"'Yes, knowing that I must know the truth, whatever it might be.'
End of Chapter 17 and 18
Chapter 19 and 20
Of Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells
This Libre Fox recording is in the public domain
19
The Two Carstairs
We all three went back to the study
Stone looked thoughtful, even puzzled
It is the most mysterious case I have ever known, he said.
I heard you say once, I observed,
that the deeper the apparent mystery, the easier the solution.
And that is true in a way, Mr. Sturgis.
A simple, commonplace case with little mystery and much seemingly direct evidence
is often more difficult than a case which presents startling and strange features.
Well, put in Mr. Markham,
if another mystery will help you in the matter, here it is.
And he handed Fleming Stone the typewritten letter.
A letter always means a great deal, said Stone as he,
he scrutinized the address. Markham and I watched him almost breathlessly as he drew out the letter
and read it. He studied both the sheet and the envelope for a few moments and then looked up and said
quietly, The letter is a decoy. We thought of that, said Mr. Markham, eager to seem astute,
and it was mailed the day of Mr. Van Wicks' death, and the letter was written on the typewriter
in this very room. Mailed in the morning and received in the afternoon, agreed stone, glanced,
at the postmarks. It was written on two different typewriters, and to my mind this clearly
tells the whole story. I am willing to averred that whoever sent this missive abstracted from
Mrs. Van Wicks' room, perhaps from her waist-basket, a complete letter, probably an unimportant
one, which she had received duly in her Friday afternoon mail. That letter bore writing only on
its first page. It might have been a printed advertisement. Whoever was,
was managing the affair tore off that first page and utilized this second half of the sheet for
this letter, bringing it in here to write. Then it was an easy matter to put it back in the envelope,
thus making it seem like a letter which had come duly through the mail. It was brought to you
a bit of faked evidence, and I doubt if Mrs. Van Wick ever saw the letter at all. But it was
found in a book she was reading the very night the crime occurred, said Mr. Markham. You mean you have
been told that it was. Have you asked Mrs. Van Wick herself?
Would she admit it if she were guilty? said Mr. Markham with a triumphant air of having said
something clever. Not in so many words, perhaps, but surely one could judge from her manner.
Now then, to discover who did write this letter, which ought not to be at all difficult.
It does not bear on its face evidence of being the work of either of David Van Wick's children.
No, agreed Mr.
Markham eagerly. They would scarcely connive with their stepmother in such a deed.
I don't mean that. There was no conniving. Nobody really wrote to Mrs. Van Wick that she should
do this thing and he would protect her. The thing is a fraud, I tell you, and was written merely
to throw suspicion on Mrs. Van Wick. I could have hugged Stone for this. Wherever his
deductions might lead, it would certainly be toward anybody but Anne. Of course,
he went on this in no sense exonerates mrs van wick nor does it prove anything except that someone shows this means of throwing suspicion on her it was cleverly done and yet it is after all a clumsy piece of work for it bears on its face the stamp of fraud
anyone ought to know today that the fact of using different typewriters would give away the game therefore it was written by someone who by the way are there any french people in the house
stone asked this question after a further perusal of the letter yes said mr markham quickly there are two of them i have a strong conviction that one of them wrote this letter
carstairs i told you so and mr markham looked delighted he's mr van wick's valet and i knew all along he was in connivance with mrs van wick flemingstone looked at him i have told you he said this letter does not mean
Canivens. Would this valet for any reason want to throw suspicion on Mrs. Van Wick?
I don't know, and Mr. Markham looked positively sullen because Fleming Stone's deductions
did not seem to agree with his own. Who is the other French person? asked Stone.
It's Carstairs's mother, I said. She is housekeeper here. Carstairs is not a French name.
No, Mr. Stone, but she is a French woman. I believe her husband was an Englishman, and her
son seems to have the traits of both. Mr. Van Wick considered him an exceptionally good valet.
Please send for them both, was Flemingstone's order, and Markham rang the bell.
The two carstairs came in together, and to my mind the mother looked like a lion as defending
her young. Surely whatever traits this strange woman possessed, her maternal instinct was among
the strongest. She looked defiant as she entered, and putting carstairs in the background she
herself took a chair near Stone and seemed ready to answer questions.
Of course we had told Flemingstone everything we knew concerning the whole matter.
He knew of Carstairs joyride, and of his fright lest it be discovered.
His gaze went past the mother and fastened on the white-faced young man.
Carstairs, he said in a quiet, pleasant tone,
You really needn't feel so frightened.
You didn't kill your master.
You had no hand in it.
Now secure in the knowledge of your...
your innocence, why are you so filled with alarm?
I'm not, sir. And though the valet looked greatly relieved at Stone's words, he was still nervously agitated.
But the look of relief on Mrs. Garstair's face was unmistakable. A light spread over her whole
countenance and she looked like one who had narrowly escaped disaster. Fleming Stone looked at her
intently. She returned his gaze without fear, even with the trace of her usual seductive manner. But
he seemed to look straight through any mannerism to her very soul.
After a moment he said and his words shot out suddenly.
Mrs. Carstairs had you any reason for wishing to fasten this crime on Mrs. Van Wick,
except to direct suspicion from your own son?
The housekeeper's eyes blazed.
I hate her, and the exclamation seemed to wrung from her by stones compelling eyes.
Why? The inquiry was in the most casual tones.
Because she...
Mother, young Carstairs interrupted her.
What are you saying? Collect yourself. You make a mistake.
Mrs. Carstairs gave one frightened, bewildered glance at her son, and then like a flash she changed
the whole expression of her face.
I beg your pardon, she said gently. I spoke without thinking.
I really have no animosity toward Mrs. Van Wick.
I did feel a slight jealousy when she married a man who had promised.
to marry me, but that is past now, and I bear her no ill will.
You are telling deliberate untruth, said Stone straightforwardly, but it does not matter.
I have learned what I have wanted to know.
Now, Mrs. Garstairs, you have no notion who sent this letter to Mrs. Van Wick, I suppose.
Certainly not, she returned disdainfully eyeing the letter Stone held up.
You found it in a book, as you described to Mr. Markham.
Yes
And you came and asked Mr. Sturgis for it
Saying that he might keep a copy of it
I did
I have concluded Mrs. Carstairs to grant that request
If you will make the copy yourself
I cannot use a typewriter mr. Stone
I'm not familiar with the work
The valet gave an involuntary glance of surprise at his mother
But immediately dropped his eyes again
She can use a typewriter
I thought to myself, and won't admit it.
But Stone said lightly,
Oh, that doesn't much matter.
Just right with a lead pencil.
Here is one.
I prefer not to do it.
And Mrs. Carstairs looked at the great detective
with the air of a frightened animal
who does not understand into what snare it is being led.
Why not? asked Stone.
Because, because...
You seem to have no reason for refusing.
It is a smear.
small matter. Kindly make a copy at my dictation.
He offered a pencil and a paper pad to Mrs. Carstairs, and though she hesitated, she finally
took them as there seemed to be nothing else to do. In a low, clear tone, Flemingstone
read the sentences from the letter waiting after each until Mrs. Carstairs had written
it. The woman looked utterly miserable. It was evident that she could not see why she had to do
this, but she feared some underlying reason that voted ill for her.
inexorably, Stone continued.
One after another, the short, direful sentences fell from his lips.
Mrs. Carstairs grew whiter and her fingers almost refused to hold the pencil,
but with indomitable courage she persevered to the end.
After the last word, Stone held out his hand for the paper,
and she mutely handed it to him.
The rest of us sat spellbound.
There was nothing theatrical in the episode.
It was the quietest possible.
procedure, and yet the incident seemed fraught with intense mystery and importance.
Flemingstone gave the merest glance at the paper, tore it into tiny bits, and threw it into
the waist-basket.
Mrs. Carrstairs, he said, and his tone was almost careless.
You wrote that letter yourself on the typewriter in this room.
It was cleverly done.
You used the blank half of a letter Mrs. Van Wick had already received and the envelope it came in.
you pretended that she had received and read this letter.
Now you will tell us just why you did this,
or would you prefer to explain it to the coroner later?
I didn't.
It is useless to say you didn't, interrupted Stone.
The proof is positive.
Now I'll repeat my question of some time ago.
Did you wish to incriminate Mrs. Van Wick
merely to divert suspicion from your son or for any other reason?
Again anger and rage
gleamed from Mrs. Carstairs' eyes.
She was about to burst into a torrent of language when she controlled herself, glanced at her son
and said in a low, even thrilling tone.
Only to save my son from possible suspicion.
Again you're telling an untruth, madam, said Stone as if it were a matter of no moment.
You are rather expert at it. However, if you'll take my advice, you will do wisely to adhere
to that statement. Let me suggest that you keep your other reason to yourself,
you may go.
For the first time in my experience,
I saw Mrs. Scarstairs' face
wear a beaten look.
She rose from her chair a vanquished woman,
but she had nerve enough to make a slight mocking bow
as, accompanied by her son, she left the room.
The whole matter of that letter means nothing,
said Flemingstone.
The case is still the deepest mystery to me.
I saw at once after I learned Mrs. Carstairs
had written that letter that her prime
motive was to save that idolized son of hers from accusation or suspicion.
But another reason was her hatred of Mrs. Van Wick.
I advised her to keep that to herself, and as I imagine she will do so, I doubt if she can
do any more harm.
How are you sure she wrote the note? asked Mr. Markham, and I too waited with eagerness for
the answer.
It was a random shot, said Stone smiling a little, although it was quite evident how the thing
was done.
But you remember a little?
I asked you if there were any French people about. As you see in this letter, the word
committee is spelled with one M. While that might be a mere verbal error, it gave me the impression
that the note was written by a French native, for their word is comite, and while the writer
of the note is familiar with the English tongue, that is a tricky word for a Frenchman to
spell because of the double letters. However, that proof needed confirmation, so I simply
asked the lady to write the note from my dictation, and if you pleased, she misspelled committee
in exactly the same way. Even then it might have been that the son wrote it, or anyone else for
that matter, but when I declared with conviction that she had written it, she was unable to deny it.
It all sounds so simple now that you explain it, I said, with a feeling of chagrin that I had
not noticed the misspelled word. That particular bit of a mystery was simple of solution, said
Stone, but it helps us not a bit with the main issue.
At Stone's request we went in search of Anne.
We found her in the music room with Archer.
They were in close conversation, and I had no doubt he was urging her again to give him
the right to protect her.
I knew Archer felt as I did, that all usual conventions were to be ignored in such
circumstances as these we were experiencing.
Fleming Stone spoke directly to Anne, and his calm, pleasant manner seemed to imbue
her with an equal quietness of demeanor.
She even almost smiled
when Stone said,
Please don't think me over-intrusive Mrs. Van Wick,
but will you tell me what gown you wore
at dinner last Friday evening?
Certainly, said Anne, rising.
If you will come to my room, I will show it to you.
Although uninvited, Archer and I followed.
On reaching Anne's dressing-room,
she took from a wardrobe the beautiful yellow satin gown
which I well remembered,
and which now seemed to mock at the somber black
robes she wore. Stone looked at the gown admiringly, and seemed to show a special interest in the
frills and jabots of the bodice. Truly this man's ways were past understanding. What clue could he expect
to find in this way? And when you came to your room that night, did you keep on this gown until you
prepared to retire? No, said Anne, looking at him wonderingly. But even as she looked, her eyes fell
before his, and she continued in a
hesitating way.
No, I changed into a negligee gown.
May I see that? asked Stone
pleasantly. This time, it seemed to me with reluctance,
and took from the wardrobe a charming
boudoir robe of chiffon and lace.
It was decorated with innumerable frills and rosettes,
and again Stone seemed eagerly interested in the trimmings.
He even picked daintily at some of the bows and ruchess,
saying lightly,
I am not a connoisseur in ladies' apparel, but this seems to me an exquisite confection.
It is, replied Anne. It is Parisian. But she spoke with her preoccupied air, and I knew she was
deeply anxious as to the meaning of all this. She hung the gown back in its place, and then
Stone seated himself after having courteously placed a chair for her.
I warned you I should ask a few questions, Mrs. Van Wick, he began.
So please tell me, first, how you occupied the time,
before you retired that evening.
Anne's embarrassment had vanished,
and she looked straight at her questioner
as she replied in even tones.
I'm afraid I did nothing worthwhile.
I wrote one or two notes to friends,
glanced through a book about gardening,
tried on a new hat,
and then unpacked a glass vase
which Mr. Sturgis brought me
because I preferred not to trust that task to a servant.
And your maid was here when you finally retired.
No, I had dismissed Jeanette earlier,
and told her she need not return.
And did you leave your rooms late that night?
No. Not at all.
No.
But Anne was fast losing control of herself.
Her voice trembled and her large eyes were fixed on Stone's face.
His expression was one of infinite pity and he said gently,
Please think carefully and be sure of what you are saying.
I am sure, murmured Anne and then Archer leaned over and whispered,
to her. What he said, I do not know, but it must have been an accusation of some sort, for Anne
turned scarlet and stared at Archer with angry eyes. She glanced at her bookshelves, and then back at
Archer and then at Stone, and finally with a look of pathetic appeal, directly at me. I knew she was
asking my help, but what could I do? In a sudden, desperate attempt to relieve her for at least
a moment, I turned the subject and, touching the beautiful Florentine chest on the table beside me,
I drew Stone's attention to it as a work of art.
Yes, he agreed, it is a fine piece, worthy of holding the family heirlooms.
Instead of which, I said lightly, Mrs. Van Wick uses it merely as a receptacle for old
photographs.
Anne's agitation seemed to be increasing, and determined to keep Stone from addressing her for a few
moments longer, I opened the chest to prove my words.
Stone glanced carelessly at the old pictures, faded except round the edges, and then suddenly
rising, he picked up two or three and looked at them intently.
A sudden light flashed into his eyes, and, turning to Anne, he said in tones of genuine
admiration, "'Wonderful, Mrs. Van Wick, positively splendid.
I congratulate you.'
I looked at him in amazement.
There was no portrait of Anne among the old foyer.
photographs he held, and what he meant I could not imagine.
But Anne knew.
Sinking back in her chair, she covered her face with her hands and gave a low moan.
Twenty. The mystery solved.
Just then Barbara and Morland came into the room.
What's the matter, Anne? Morland asked.
Who's bothering you?
I won't have it.
He went to her and put his arm round her, and seemingly encouraged by his strength
and sympathy, Anne looked up and with an effort regained her poise.
They're mine, she exclaimed, addressing herself to Stone, while her dark eyes flashed defiance
at him.
I don't doubt it, he replied, and then he looked at her in a perplexed way.
For a moment these two exchanged glances, and it seemed as if they had superhuman powers
of reading each other's thoughts.
Then Stone gave a little nod, straightened himself up, and said,
we must go on whatever the outcome.
Then speaking to us all generally, he said,
I have found the missing pearls.
I can lay my hand upon them at any moment.
Before I do so,
does the one who took them from the study wished to say so.
Archer looked at Anne, but I looked at Morland.
I had a feeling that Morland had taken those pearls,
but if so he showed no evidence of guilt at this moment.
Flemingstone looked at no one in particular,
and after a moment's pause, he said.
Then I will simply hand them to their owner.
He went to the bookshelves and without hesitation took down a thick volume.
It was an old-fashioned photograph album,
fastened with two ornate gilt clasps.
Slowly snapping these open, he opened the book.
The photographs from several of the leaves had been removed
and in the cavity thus made, wrapped in blue cotton,
was the Van Wick pearl necklace.
Amid the exclamations of surprise,
was silent, for I realized instantly that those photographs in the gilt chest were the ones
taken from the album to make room for the pearls, and that I—I had deliberately shown those
photographs to stone, and thereby offered his quick intellect a clue to the hiding-place.
"'They are mine,' cried Anne.
"'It was no theft, and I had a perfect right to take them when I chose and hide them where I
chose. But because I took them from the safe in the study, you need not think that I killed my
husband. I took them the day before. Anne, exclaimed Archer in a warning voice, tell the truth, dear,
it will be better. But you did go into the study late that night, Mrs. Van Wick, said Stone quietly.
How do you know? flashed Anne. For one thing your maid saw you coming from the study shortly after
midnight. But also I found in there on the fur rug in front of the safe two small scraps of the
shredded tissue paper from the box which you unpacked. I found also two bits in the rosettes of the
negligee gown that you wore, and I am sure that the bits on the rug fell from your gown as you took
the pearls from the safe. I do not deny your right to take them, nor your right to hide them in the
exceedingly clever place you selected. But I must ask you to admit if this is true.
it is true said anne as if at the end of her endurance and then she fainted we went away from the room leaving her with barbara and the maid and as none of us felt inclined to talk we drifted apart
fleming stone seemed more than ever thoughtful and preoccupied i would have talked with him but he asked to be left to himself and went directly to the study soon after this luncheon was announced and we gathered round the table in a desperate effort to throw off the gloomy fear
that overhung us.
At first the conversation was on general subjects,
Stone leading the way with his kindly and courteous remarks.
But all at once, Anne lifted her great eyes and looking straight at Stone said,
I know you think I killed my husband, Mr. Stone, but I did not.
And why should I do so to get those pearls, since they were my own anyway?
I thought perhaps Flemingstone would answer this question directly, but instead, he said,
were you not anxious to prevent his gift to the library?
Then Morland spoke in a terse hard voice.
You mean by that, Mr. Stone, that Anne took the deed of gift from my father's desk?
That is not true, for I took it myself.
You did, said Stone, looking at him sharply.
Yes, I did.
I told the truth when I said I left the study before Lasseter did.
But I don't think Lassiter knew this, and he thought I was there when he went away.
but a little later I returned.
My father was not there.
The outside door was open,
and I think he had stepped out on the terrace.
However, I took the deed,
and I have it in my possession still,
but as it is unsigned,
it is of no value to anybody.
But I did not kill my father,
and I'm telling about the deed to exonerate Anne
from any suspicion of having taken it.
Anne cast a grateful look at Morland,
and then continued to look at him,
but with a changed expression,
i could follow her thoughts or at least i thought i could and i thought she was wondering if after all morland had killed his father perhaps they had quarrelled over the deed and morland was misrepresenting the scene
at any rate the net of suspicion was drawing close round the two morland and anne my heart sickened as i realized that it must have been one or the other of these and that fleming stone's unerring skill would yet discover which
"'It is unnecessary to assert innocence until guilt is suspected,' said Stone in a calm voice.
"'And until we learn how a murderer could get in and out of that locked room,
"'we can accuse no one, nor can we assert that it was not a case of suicide.'
"'And then he determinedly changed the subject,
"'nor would he allow it to be brought up again during the meal.
"'But as we left the table, Stone spoke low to me.
"'Lead the whole crowd out on the terrace,' he said.
and keep them there for an hour or so.
On no account let them come into the house
or at least not into the study.
I must be uninterrupted for an hour at least,
and then the mystery will be solved.
He had not set me a difficult task.
For some reason the members of the little group
seemed quite willing to stay out of doors.
We strolled down to a large arbor on the lawn
and sat there talking,
sometimes altogether, and sometimes in twos and threes.
After a while, Markham joined us and inquired how far Mr. Stone had progressed in his investigations.
Anne told him frankly enough that she herself had taken the pearls from the safe,
and Morland repeated his admission of having taken the deed.
Mr. Markham was excited over these revelations, but the strange apathy that had settled down
on our people was not greatly stirred by his comments.
Presently, Archer and Beth Fordyce went off for a walk around the garden.
Mrs. Telton asked me to go, too, but I declined, as I had my work of keeping the people out of the house.
It was just about an hour before Stone rejoined us. He greeted Mr. Markham pleasantly enough and then turned to me.
As my employer, he said, shall I make my final report to you?
To all of us, I replied. I asked you to come here, but Mrs. Van Wick and David Van Wicks's children are quite as much entitled to hear your report as I am.
"'Let us all go to the study, then,' said Stone.
"'Where is Mr. Archer?'
"'He went down through the lower gardens with Miss Fordice,' I replied.
"'Mr. Markham,' said Stone, "'suppose you go after them.'
He added a few words to Markham which I did not hear, and then we all went to the study.
"'I can tell you all in a few words,' said Mr. Stone.
"'We know that Mrs. Van Wick took the pearls from the safe,
and that Mr. Morland Van Wick took the paper from his father's desk.
But neither of these had any hand in Mr. Van Wick's death.
Mr. Van Wick was murdered later that same night.
He was stabbed with this bill file,
and Stone produced the file in evidence.
After killing Mr. Van Wick,
the murderer himself carefully fastened all the doors and windows
and left the room by a secret exit.
This is the explanation of the sealed room,
and I will now show you where the secret passage is.
I did not know myself until during the last hour.
I came in here positive that there was some such way of egress,
and after a careful search I found it.
As you see, the study is joined to the main house only by one corner,
which laps the corner of the house for a space of about ten feet.
This ten feet on the ground floor gives space for the connecting doorway which is usually used.
The study is the height of two full stories of the house,
but the study has only one story,
and therefore an unusually high ceiling.
The deep cornice has an immense cartouche ornamenting each corner.
It seemed to me that behind this cartouche in the corner that touches the house
was the only possibility of a secret exit from this room.
All eyes turned at once to the great shield-shaped affair of which he spoke.
It was quite large enough to conceal a secret door,
but at a height of twenty-five feet or more from the floor it was entirely inaccessible.
It seems inaccessible, said Stone following our thoughts,
and there is no ladder or possibility of one anywhere about.
But I was so sure that my theory was the true one
that I examined the floor in that corner
and found several tiny flakes of plaster that had fallen.
Then I was certain that the secret exit had been used recently.
I went in the house and upstairs to the room,
room in which the secret passage, if there was one, must necessarily open.
I found in the back part of a deep cupboard a panel, and by dint of search I found a spring
which caused the panel to open. I then discovered that I was directly back of the great
cartouche. In a word, the passage is an exit from this room. I will now show you the means
of using it. We watched with breathless attention while Flemingstone mounted the spiral staircase
and walked the length of the little gallery.
At the end he stood with his hand on the end rail
quite four feet from the cartouche.
Note the beautiful simplicity of it, he said.
Merely loosening a bolt on the underside of the end railing
caused the whole end of the balcony to fall outward.
As it did so, the great end bracket beneath
swung the other way, acting as a counterweight,
and what had been the end railing of the gallery
was now a horizontal bridge
straight across to the cartouche.
Moreover, mechanism in the wall had at the same time raised the outer shell of the cartouche which was hinged at the top and disclosed a small doorway.
That is all, said Mr. Stone speaking to us from the gallery. As I said, it is beautifully simple.
Once unbolted, a person's weight serves to throw down the railing as a bridge and open the cartouche.
Now you will see that as I step off and through this doorway, the removal of my weight causes the
to swing back to place and the cartouche to close.
Stepping off the railing upon a ledge and through the door,
Stone disappeared, and the mechanism worked exactly as he had said.
A moment later he reappeared.
You see, he resumed, that is the way David Van Wicks' murderer left this room,
after securely locking it with the intent to involve the affair in deepest mystery.
You all know, I suppose, who occupies the room into which the secret passage opens
on the second floor of the house.
I know, said Anne,
it is Condor an Archer.
And Mr. Archer has gone away,
said Flemingstone significantly.
I have sent Mr. Markham after him,
but as I understand it,
I was employed here to solve a mystery
and not to arrest a criminal.
In fact, I have not proved
that Mr. Archer is the criminal,
but I think no one doubts it.
It was at this point
that Beth Fordyce returned to us.
Oh, Anne!
she said mr archer said that he had to go away very suddenly he had had a telegram or something and he asked me to tell you good-bye for him and to give you this letter it is his confession said anne in a low voice as she took the letter from beth
i felt sure of it all the time raymond will you read it aloud i was touched at the confidence she showed in me and taking the letter i opened it it bore no address and began abruptly thus
this is not a confession but an explanation of why i killed david van wick i know now that flemingstone's penetration will discover the secret passage which mr van wick himself explained to me a few days before his death
and so i am going away not fleeing from justice but because i do not look upon myself as a criminal i killed mr van wick not in self-defence but in defence of one far dearer to me than myself
Last Friday night, after having gone to my room at eleven o'clock,
I came downstairs again about midnight, with no intent other than a stroll on the terrace.
I had been there but a few moments when Mr. Van Wick joined me.
I do not wish to repeat his conversation, but I realized what a vicious, cruel, and even
diabolical husband he was to the woman I adored.
I speak frankly of this adoration, for it is no secret.
David Van Wick talked of his wife in a way that made my
blood boil, and I was about to tell him so when,
his attention attracted by a sound in the study, he beckoned to me
and we looked in at the window.
Mrs. Van Wick was taking the pearls from the safe.
As we watched, she carried them from the room, closing the door
behind her.
David Van Wick drew me into the study with him and exclaimed in fiendish glee,
Now I have her where I want her.
I shall denounce her as a thief and see if she will then be so high
and mighty toward me.
I begged him not to do this, whereupon he accused me of being in love with his wife,
and made other wicked assertions that I could not stand.
He repeated his intention to give away all his money, to get back the pearls,
and to denounce Anne as a thief, and he became, I really think, momentarily insane in his rage.
Possibly I too lost my mind, but I snatched up the bill-file, tore off the papers,
and stabbed him in a moment of white-hot anger.
I carefully locked up the study, hoping the deed might thus be an insoluble mystery.
I left the room by the secret exit, which leads directly to the cupboard in the bathroom
adjoining my bedroom.
It was through this panel I had disappeared the night Sturgis looked for me.
I went back to the study to see if I had left behind me any incriminating evidence.
I found none, but after Mr. Stone deduced Mrs. Van Wicks' presence in the study by scraps
of tissue paper, I have no doubt he will in some way trace
mine. As to my act, I will not call it a crime. I do not regret it.
I have saved Mrs. Van Wick from the cruelties of a monster, and I am glad of it.
But I refuse to pay the penalty for this, and so I shall disappear forever from the country.
I could not do this if I thought I could ever win my heart's desire.
But I know, Anne, that in the after years you will find joy and peace with a man who is worthy
of your regard, though it peered.
is my heart to admit it.
But even if through crime,
I have saved you from the further
despotism and insults of a brute,
and the knowledge of that
is my reward.
Contern Archer
I finished reading, and there was
a death-like silence.
I think not one in the room wished to
prosecute Archer. I think
each heart was praying that Markham
might not find him.
I told Mr. Markham to detain
Mr. Archer if he found him,
said Flemingstone slowly.
I fear that I regret doing so.
He won't find him, said Anne,
as if in proof of her words Mr. Markham came in.
Mr. Archer has disappeared, he said.
I thought he might go by train
and I waited at the station, but he didn't.
Do you want him very much?
No, said Anne.
We don't want him at all.
Don't look for him any more, Mr. Markham.
And then, as the tears flooded her eyes,
she turned to me.
And, putting her trembling hand through my arm, she let me lead her out into the sunlight.
There was no more mystery. The secret of the cartouche explained all.
The two car stairs were dismissed from the Van Wicks service without punishment,
for Anne never knew of the villainous note that had been written to bring trouble to her.
We never saw Archer again, and between Anne and myself his name has never been spoken.
Buttonwood Terrace was sold, and the family separated.
morland went to the city to live and barbara went for a trip abroad with mrs stelton but they may wander where they will it matters not to me for after a time anne is going to crown my life with happiness and i well know i shall never want anybody but anne
End of Chapter 19 and 20.
End of Anybody But Anne by Carolyn Wells.
