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Authors: Ellery Queen

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BOOK: Wife or Death
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On with the show, Father!

Father Ireson discharged his pastoral duty cleverly, Denton thought, under the difficult circumstances. His cleverness consisted not in what he said about the deceased, but in what he left out. He could not very well bestow the customary “beloved wife and mother” encomium, since the deceased's wifehood had been conspicuously without virtue and her womb undelivered of the usual fruit; he could not even commiserate with her parents, since they had depressingly absented themselves. He could not sing her beauty, which she had put to corrupt uses; extol her past, which had been questionable; or give hope for her future, which had been nullified by a load of buckshot. So he let himself go on the subject of her eternal soul. Here the good father was on safe and familiar ground, and he could speak authoritatively.

Denton garnered little satisfaction from the entertainment he had planned—watching his handpicked pallbearers bearing their common beloved's pall to the hearse. For suddenly his mouth held the mortal taste of ashes and he found himself wishing he were on the moon, with or without a spacesuit, it made no difference.

Afterward he went home and made his lunch, which consisted of three whisky sours. Two funerals in one day called for nourishment of a rather delicate sort.

George Guest's obsequies at two o'clock drew an even larger audience, in whose staring ranks Jim Denton saw nearly all the mourners of the morning funeral and a great many more besides. As Ridgemore's leading hardware man George had been popular, having neither Angel's nor Denton's gift for making enemies.

Denton deliberately shut his eyes to the sharp or surreptitious looks that followed him to the front row, where Corinne was seated with her family and George's. He knew what they were thinking: There's Jim Denton again. Wouldn't you think he'd have the common decency to stay away from the funeral of the man whose wife he's been sleeping with? How much gall can you have? And so on, with and without variations.

But I'm damned, Denton thought, if I'm going to pass up my last chance to say good-bye to the best friend I had, or to deprive Corinne of the comfort my presence will give her.

To hell with all of them.

Corinne's eyes were a lifeless red and her face was swollen from crying. With her sense of the fitness of things she had shrunk from flaunting her new widowhood. She was not wearing the expensively couturiered all-black the guidebooks called for; she had chosen a simple dark brown suit and unobtrusive accessories. She looked up when he stooped over her, murmured something and looked away, back to the casket on its bier a few feet before her.

And that was all. Conscious of the stares, ignoring them, Denton greeted George's dazed-looking parents, whom he knew well; exchanged a few words with George's brother Fred; spoke briefly to Corinne's mother and sister Kate; walked over to the bier with a coolness he did not feel, looked down at the very poor wax imitation of George lying there, and then took a seat quietly to one side.

The Methodist minister, Reverend Curtis, labored under none of the difficulties that had hampered his Episcopal colleague of the morning. Mr. Curtis's subject was impeccable morally, a good fellow, a public-spirited citizen, a leading light of the community; a member of Rotary, the Masonic Lodge, the Mayor's Committee on Sewage Improvement, past commander of the American Legion post; loving husband, devoted son, staunch brother, loyal friend. Mr. Curtis had no trouble whatever glowing fiercely.

Through it all Denton was conscious of the stares, in particular the stares of Ellen Wright and Olive Haber, who were occupying the same seats in the second row center they had sat in during the morning service for Angel. The pair would turn, crane, turn back quickly, put their heads together and whisper; this went on throughout the minister's eulogy. Denton could only hope that their sibilance was overwhelmed by Mr. Curtis's loud firm voice and so failed to reach Corinne's ears.

He was glad when the service was over and the casket was whisked from the room. He had no intention of going to the cemetery; he knew Corinne would understand, just as he had understood without explanation her reason for not asking him to be a pallbearer.

So he was among the last to leave. Reverend Curtis had wrought better than he knew. Still under the spell of his oratory, several women threw venomous looks Denton's way as they passed him. One, a woman he had never seen in his life, actually flexed her claws as she glared.

Old Ellen and that bitch Olive have really done a job on me, he thought dispiritedly. For the first time it struck him that recent developments might have economic repercussions; he would have to watch the circulation figures of the
Clarion
. About the only thing I can hope for, he thought, is to be arrested and tried for murder—boy, would that boost circulation!

He was bound for his car, which he had purposely left some distance from Gerard's, when he came on young Arnold Long and portly Thad Sommers talking on the sidewalk around the corner, out of sight of the entrance.

“What are you two hiding for?” Denton said. “Aren't you going to the cemetery, either?”

“I can't stand funerals,” the Long scion muttered. “And two in one day—”

“And one of them Angel's, to boot,” Denton said. “I can imagine how rough that is on you, Arnie.” Young Long flushed and began to look belligerent. “But what about you, Thad? You're an old married man. I'll bet Clara's looking for you with fire in her eye.”

“Look, Jim, I'm in the thrombosis age bracket,” the stout man said, wiping his face. “I'll be in the cemetery soon enough.”

Denton laughed, and both men looked at him suspiciously.

“Matt Fallon tells me you fellows had a poker session at his place Friday night. Anybody get hurt?”

“Not me,” Arnold Long said. “I made eight bucks. You broke ahead, too, didn't you, Thad?”

“A few dollars. I was in the hole for plenty till way past midnight, when all of a sudden the cards turned.”

“Matt says he phoned George that night,” Denton remarked, “but missed him—must have been by a few minutes.”

“Poor old George,” Thad Sommers said. “That's one poker game he
couldn't
have lost at.”

“We tried to phone everybody,” Long said. “It was ten-thirty before we got enough for a game. We even tried to get hold of Norm Wyatt and his father-in-law.”

“They spent the night at Norm's hunting lodge,” Denton said.

“What we figured when we got no answer at Norm's house.”

Denton said, “You didn't? Ardis was home.”

“The hell she was. At nine-thirty, anyway. Unless she's gone deaf. I made the call myself, and I let the damn thing ring for a couple of minutes.”

“Well.” Denton smiled. “Norm and old Trevor probably wouldn't be interested in your chicken-feed game, even if you'd located them. See you boys.”

All the way home he chewed on this disturbing discovery. Why should Ardis Wyatt have told him she was in all Friday evening when, at nine-thirty at least, she had been out? Denton saw, too, that Ardis's not having been home around that time gave credibility to one aspect of George Guest's movements that night. His theory that George had driven by the Wyatts' and out to the lodge without stopping became more convincing if, on noticing the cars gone from the Wyatts' garage, George
had
stopped and, getting no answer to his ring, had then driven on to the lodge. George had been a little on the belt-cum-suspenders side; he would have made sure no one was home.

Denton gave the Wyatts and Trevor plenty of time to get back from the funeral. At five o'clock he drove over.

Norm Wyatt and Ardis's father greeted him with just the awkward little touch of reserve he had come to look for in his friends. Not so Ardis. She received him with warmth and concern.

“You look
awful
. Norm, make Jim a drink.”

Denton shook his head. “Thanks, Ardis, hut I'd better not. All I had for lunch was a few whisky sours.”

“Well, you poor man! Then you've got to eat something. We're having an early dinner, Jim. How about joining us?”

There was nothing underlying her voice except sympathy. And this was strange. Why should Ardis Wyatt, of all his friends and acquaintances in Ridgemore except Corinne, remain untouched by the universal suspicions about him? Was it possible, Denton asked himself suddenly, that Ardis's complete acceptance of him was based on secret knowledge? That she
knew
Denton had not murdered Angel—because she had good reason to believe her own husband had done the job?

He said, “You're a pal, Ardis, but I'd make a rotten dinner companion tonight. I merely stopped in to ask you something. When you told me you were home here all last Friday evening, did you mean
all
evening?”

Ardis frowned. “Certainly, Jim. Why do you ask?”

“Some of the boys were trying to scare up a poker game Friday night, and one of them just told me he phoned here at half-past nine and got no answer.”

“Half-past nine …” Ardis's expression cleared. “Of course. I'd forgotten about that. I stepped over to the Smiths' next door around that time. Janice Smith had a new dress she wanted me to see. I couldn't have been gone more than fifteen minutes or so. That's when they must have phoned.” Ardis excused herself to see to her dinner.

“Well, that's
that
,” Denton said with a wry smile. “I'm beginning to have great respect for professional detectives.”

“I don't get it, Jim.” Norman Wyatt was at the bar mixing himself a drink; he spoke without turning around. “What's the point? I mean whether there was somebody here all Friday night or not?”

“I told you the other day, Norm. About George's probably having stopped by here Friday night after taking Emmet Taylor home? When Ardis told me she was home all evening and George hadn't been here, I thought I'd figured it wrong. But now it adds up. Ardis would have been next door admiring a dress at just about the time George must have rung your bell.”

“Jim.” Gerald Trevor seemed very disturbed. “I understand you've suggested that Guest was on the trail of whoever murdered your wife when he dropped into that ravine. Why would he come here? To this house?”

“Because Angel's killer was almost certainly one of the men who attended your house-party after the Hallowe'en Ball, Mr. Trevor, and I think George heard or saw something that night that became significant to him after Angel's murdered body was found. Maybe he wanted to verify his facts. Or check-list everyone who was here with you people. Whatever it was, he kept going and wound up dead. I want to know where George was headed that night. I'm convinced it wasn't Rock Hill Road. I think he was taken there in a state of unconsciousness and his car pushed into the ravine to make his death look like an accident.”

“I know, Ardis told me you thought George Guest was murdered, too.” The handsome old man shook his head. “I find it hard to believe.”

“Murder is always hard to believe, Mr. Trevor.”

“Jim, let me get this straight.” Norm Wyatt gulped and put down an empty glass. “It's your belief George went on from here to call on someone he suspected had shot Angel, turned out to have been right—and got himself murdered for his pains?”

“Yes, Norm,” Denton said easily. “The only thing is, if he was looking for confirmation or something from you people, why didn't he keep trying to find you before tackling the killer? I mean, getting no answer here, it seems to me he'd have assumed you were all at the lodge and so would have driven up there first. You two gents weren't out doing some illegal night hunting, were you?”

“Hell, no,” Wyatt grunted. “Gerald and I sat up till nearly midnight playing cribbage. If George had driven up there he'd certainly have seen our lights and stopped in.”

Denton stiffened. Wyatt's father-in-law had gone a dirty gray, quite as though an unthinkable thought had occurred to him. The instant Trevor saw Denton's glance he smiled a quick, weak smile.

“That's right, Jim,” the old man said; he had to stop to clear his throat. “I beat Norm four games out of five. One of 'em was a skunk.”

What had Trevor suddenly remembered? Wyatt's statement had jolted him to the core. Could it be that something had occurred at the lodge on which, until now, the old man had put an innocent interpretation?

Denton let his imagination create a scene in which the cribbage game was interrupted by a car driving into the lane. Norman Wyatt went out to see who it was. Minutes later Wyatt returned and told his father-in-law that it had merely been some stranger asking directions. But down at the foot of the lane, a good hundred feet from the house and concealed by the darkness, George Guest lay unconscious in his car, his skull fractured by Wyatt. The two men had then gone to bed, but later Trevor awoke to find his son-in-law gone.

Had it suddenly occurred to old Trevor that the so-called stranger had actually been George Guest?

Denton asked casually, “You didn't have any visitors that night?”

But Gerald Trevor had recovered. He said firmly, “No one at all. I didn't even hear a car pass.”

Whatever had disturbed the old man, he meant to keep it to himself.

18

It was a quarter to six when Denton left the Wyatts'. He knew that Augie Spile knocked off at five. He drove directly to the police chief's home.

The Spiles were just getting up from their dinner. The chief shooed his children into the kitchen with their mother and shut the door.

“You're busier'n a chicken yard,” the big man said. “What've you come up with this time, Jim?”

Denton told him. “And don't make any mistake about it, Augie. That old boy remembered something that happened at the lodge that night, and whatever it was came as one hell of a blow to him! And it's not going to be easy to get it out of him, either. Trevor's as wrapped up in Norm Wyatt as though Norm were his son instead of his son-in-law.”

BOOK: Wife or Death
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