Ngaio Marsh

Inspector Alleyn 3-Book Collection 2


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seemed to find extreme difficulty in coming to the point. He rolled his eyes and goggled solemnly at Alleyn.

      ‘Listen, Chief,’ he said again. ‘I guess that you’ve got it figured out that whoever owns the book of the words and songs did the murder.’

      ‘You mean the book on chemistry?’

      ‘Yup.’

      ‘It certainly looks rather like that.’

      ‘Then it looks all cock-eyed,’ said Mr Ogden violently. ‘It looks all to – Hell! Do you know why?’

      ‘I think I can guess,’ said Alleyn smiling.

      ‘You can! Well I’d be –’

      ‘I rather fancied the book belonged to you.’

      ‘Chief, you said it,’ said Mr Ogden.

       CHAPTER 17 Mr Ogden Grows Less Trustful

      You said it,’ repeated Mr Ogden and collapsed into a pew.

      ‘Cheer up, Mr Ogden,’ said Alleyn.

      Mr Ogden passed his handkerchief across his brow and contemplated the inspector with a certain expression of low cunning that reminded Nigel of a precocious baby.

      ‘Maybe I seemed a mite too eager about that book,’ he said. ‘Maybe I kinda gave you the works.’

      ‘My inspiration dates a little further back than that,’ said Alleyn. ‘You told us last night that you were interested in gold-refining. A letter which we found in your pockets referred rather fully to a new process. It assumed a certain knowledge of chemistry on your part. The book is an American publication. It was a little suggestive, you see.’

      ‘Yup,’ said Mr Ogden, ‘I see. Now listen. I bought that book years ago, way back in the pre-war period when I first began to sit up and take notice. I was a junior clurk at the time in the offices of a gold-refining company. Junior clurk is a swell name for office-boy. I lit on that book laying out in the rain on a five-cent stall, and I was ambitious to educate myself. It’s kinda stayed around ever since. The book, I mean. When I came over here it was laying in one of my grips, and I let it lay. I know a bit more than I useter, and some of them antique recipes tickled me. Well, anyhow, it stuck and, and when I got fixed where I am now I packed it in the bookshelves along with the Van Dines and National Geographics and the Saturday Evening Posts. I never opened it. And get this, chief, I never missed it till last night.’

      ‘Last night? At what time?’

      ‘After I got home. I got to thinking about Cara, and I figured it out that she passed in her checks very, very sudden, and that the suddenest poison I knew was prussic acid. Hydrocyanic acid if you want to talk Ritzy. I thought maybe I’d refresh my memory and I looked for the old book. Nothing doing. It was gone. What do you know about that?’

      ‘What do you know about it?’ rejoined Alleyn.

      ‘Listen,’ said Mr Ogden for about the twentieth time that afternoon. ‘I know this far. It was there four weeks back. Four weeks back from tonight I threw a party. All the Sacred Flame crowd was there. Garnette was there. And Raveenje. And Cara Quayne. All the gang, even Miss Wade, who has a habit of getting mislaid or overlooked: she was there and cracking hardy. Well, Raveenje, he’s enthusiastic about literature. First editions are all published by Pep and Kick as he sees it. I saw him looking along the shelves and yanked down the old Curiosities for him to have a slant at. Well, maybe it hadn’t enough whiskers on it, but it seemed to excite him about as much as a raspberry drink at a departmental store. He gave a polite once-over and lost interest. But that’s how I remember it was there. From that night till last evening I never gave it a thought.’

      ‘Did anyone take it away that night?’

      ‘How should I know? I never missed the blamed thing.’

      ‘You can’t remember anything that would help? The next time you looked at your bookshelves?’

      ‘Nope. Wait a while. Wait a while.’

      Mr Ogden clapped a plump hand on top of his head as if to prevent an elusive thought from escaping him.

      ‘The next day or maybe the day after – it was around that time – Claude stopped in and he took Garnette’s books away with him. I was out at the time.’

      ‘Mr Garnette’s books? What books?’

      Mr Ogden looked remarkably sheepish.

      ‘Aw Gee!’ he said. ‘Just something for a rainy day. He loaned ’em to me. He said they were classics. Classics. And how? Boy, they were central-heated.’

      ‘Are they among the lot in brown paper covers, behind the others?’

      ‘You said it.’

      ‘And Claude Wheatley took them away?’

      ‘Sure. He told the maid Garnette had sent him for them. He wanted to keep hold of them because they were rare. I’ll say they were rare! Anyhow, that’s when I last remember anything about books. I suppose Garnette told Claude where they were.’

      ‘Was the Curiosities in your shelves then?’

      ‘Isn’t that what I’m aiming to remember!’ exclaimed Mr Ogden desperately. ‘Lemme think! Next day Claude told me he’d called for Garnette’s books and I said: “Those were the ones in brown-paper overalls,” and he said he’d recognized them by that.’

      ‘The Curiosities was not in a brown paper, then?’

      ‘No, sir. I’d no call to camouflage it. It was respectable.’

      Alleyn laughed.

      ‘Can you remember noticing it that day?’

      ‘Nope.’

      ‘Would you have noticed if it had already gone?’

      ‘Lordy, no!’ said Mr Ogden.

      He stared wildly into space for an appreciable time and then said slowly:

      ‘Not in that way. I wouldn’t have definitely missed it. But in another way I seem to remember not seeing it if you get me. It’s a red book. Seems like I remember not seeing a red book. That sounds crazy, I guess.’

      ‘On the contrary, this is all extremely interesting,’ said Alleyn.

      ‘Yeah? Well, here’s hoping it doesn’t interest you in Sam J. Ogden. Maybe Raveenje will recall me showing him the book. Or maybe one of the rest will. That,’ added Mr Ogden with a naîve smile, ‘is just why I thought I’d better come clean.’

      ‘Do you incline to think somebody took the book that evening, Mr Ogden?’

      ‘What the hell? I haven’t a notion when it was lifted.’

      ‘Have any of the Initiates been to see you since then?’

      ‘Sure, they have. I gave a little lunch last Wednesday for Cara and Raveenje and Garnette and Dagmar. Lemme see. Maurice and Janey were around last Sunday. That was the night Dr Kasbek came in. I haven’t had Claude and Lionel come in again. Those two queens give me a pain.’

      ‘Now look here, Mr Ogden, you’ve got your own ideas on the subject, haven’t you? You practically stated, just now, that you believed Mr Garnette had taken these bonds.’

      Mr Ogden looked extremely uncomfortable.

      ‘Didn’t you?’ pressed Alleyn.

      ‘I’m not saying a thing.’

      ‘Very well,’ said Alleyn shortly, ‘I can’t do anything against that,’

      Ogden gave him a sidelong but not unattractive