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Эллери Куин: Dutch Shoe Mystery

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Эллери Куин Dutch Shoe Mystery

Dutch Shoe Mystery: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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An eccentric millionairess is lying in a diabetic coma on a hospital bed in an anteroom of the surgical suite of the Dutch Memorial Hospital, which she founded, awaiting the removal of her gall bladder. When the surgery is about to begin, the patient is found to have been strangled with picture wire. Although the hospital is crowded, it is well guarded, and only a limited number of people had the opportunity to have murdered her, including members of her family and a small number of the medical personnel. The apparent murderer is a member of the surgical staff who was actually seen in the victim’s vicinity, but his limp makes him easy to impersonate. Ellery Queen examines a pair of hospital shoes, one of which has a broken lace that has been mended with surgical tape. He performs an extended piece of logical deduction based on the shoe, plus such slight clues as the position of a filing cabinet, and creates a list of necessary characteristics of the murderer that narrows the field of suspects down to a single surprising possibility.

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“Bichloride of mercury solution, then alcohol,” whispered Minchen to Ellery.

Immediately upon drying his hands of the alcohol, the assistant surgeon held them out while a nurse removed a pair of rubber gloves from a sterilizing machine and smoothed them onto the doctor’s hands. A similar procedure was followed with the other surgeon.

Suddenly the door at the left of the room opened and the slight, limping figure of Dr. Janney appeared. He looked around with one of his bird-like glances, then limped rapidly over to a wash-bowl. He slipped out of his gown and a nurse skilfully dressed him in a freshly sterilized gown. While the surgeon bent over the bowl, rinsing his hands thoroughly in the blue bichloride solution, another adjusted a fresh white cap on his head, carefully tucking in his greyish hair.

Dr. Janney spoke without looking up. “The patient,” he said brusquely. Two assistant nurses quickly opened the door leading to the Anteroom. “The patient; Miss Price!” one said. They disappeared into the room, emerging a moment later pushing a long, white rubber-shod wheel-table on which lay a quiet figure covered with a sheet. The patient’s head was thrown far back; it was ghastly, bluish-white. The sheet was tucked around the neck. The eyes were closed. A third figure entered the operating-room from the Anteroom — another nurse. She stood quietly in a corner, waiting.

The patient was lifted from the wheel-table and deposited on the operating-table. The wheel-table was instantly removed to the Anteroom by the third nurse. She closed the door carefully, disappearing from sight. A gowned and gagged figure took his place close by the operating-table, fussing with a small taboret on which were various instruments and cones.

The anæsthetist,” muttered Minchen; “they’ve got to keep one handy in case Abby comes out of the coma during the operation.”

The two assisting surgeons approached the operating-table from opposite sides. The sheet was whipped off the patient, discarded; a peculiarly-cut garment was immediately substituted. Dr. Janney, now gloved, gowned and capped, was standing patiently at one side while a substitute nurse adjusted a gag about his mouth and nose.

Minchen leaned forward in the chair, a curiously intent look in his eyes. His gaze was riveted on the body of the patient. He muttered to Ellery in a queerly tense tone.

“Something wrong, Ellery; something wrong!”

Ellery answered without turning his head. “Is it the stiffness?” he whispered. “I noticed that. A diabetic...”

The two assisting surgeons were bending over the operating-table. One lifted an arm, let it fall. It was rigid and unbending. The other touched an eyelid, peered at the eyeball. They looked at each other.

“Dr. Janney!” said one of them insistently, straightening up.

The surgeon wheeled, stared. “What’s the matter?” He brushed aside a nurse; limped forward rapidly. In a flash he had covered the distance, bent over the inert body. He tore the garment from the table, felt at the old woman’s neck. Ellery saw his back stiffen as if he had been struck.

Without raising his head Dr. Janney uttered two words: “Adrenalin. Pulmotor.” As if by magic the two surgical assistants, the two nurses, the two substituting nurses leaped into activity. The words were hardly dead before a large slender cylinder was carried over and several figures grew busy about the table. A nurse handed Dr. Janney a small glistening object; he forced open the mouth of the patient, held the object before it. He then intently examined its surface — it was a metal mirror. He threw it aside with a muffled curse, reached with one prehensile arm for a hypodermic ready in the hand of a nurse. He bared the torso of the old woman, plunged the needle into her body directly over the heart Already the pulmotor was in operation, forcing oxygen into her lungs...

In the gallery the nurses and internes, Dr. Dunning, his daughter, Philip Morehouse, Dr. Minchen, Ellery sat on the edge of their seats, motionless. There was no sound in the Amphitheater except the sucking of the pulmotor.

In fifteen minutes, exactly at 11:05 — Ellery mechanically consulted his watch — Dr. Janney straightened from his crouched position above the patient, turned around and crooked his forefinger furiously toward Dr. Minchen. Without a word the Medical Director left his seat, ran up the steps toward the door at the rear and disappeared. A moment later he had burst through the theater-door on the West Corridor and run up to the operating-table. Janney stepped back, pointed mutely at the neck of the old woman.

Minchen’s face whitened... Like Janney, he too stepped back and turned; and this time the crooked finger beckoned Ellery, who sat like stone where Minchen had left him.

Ellery rose. His eyebrows went up. His lips formed one soundless word, which Minchen caught. Dr. Minchen nodded. The word was:

“Murder?”

Chapter Five

Strangulation

Ellery no longer felt the qualms of temperament which had assailed him while viewing the preparations for an assault on mortal flesh. Life was now extinct, he felt sure, although as he opened the door of the theater from the West Corridor the surgeons and nurses still worked over the body. One who had lived was dead; and dead of violence. And deaths of violence were commonplace to a writer of mystery stories, an unofficial investigator of crime, and the son of a police Inspector.

Unhurriedly he approached the nucleus of swirling activity. Janney looked up, frowned. “Have to stay out, Queen.” He turned back to the table, Ellery already forgotten.

Minchen interposed. “Dr. Janney.”

“Well?”

Minchen spoke eagerly. “Queen is practically a member of the Police Department, Doctor. He’s the son of Inspector Queen, and he’s helped solve a lot of murder mysteries. Perhaps he’d—”

“Oh.” Janney’s smoldering little eyes twisted toward Ellery. “That’s different. Take charge, Queen. Anything you want. I’m busy.”

Ellery immediately turned to face the gallery. Every one had stood up. Dr. Dunning and his daughter were already hurrying up the steps toward the rear exit

“Just a moment” His voice rang crystal-clear in the amphitheater. “You will oblige me by remaining in the gallery — every one, please — until the police arrive and give permission to leave.”

“Preposterous! Police? What for?” Dr. Dunning turned, his face white with strain. The girl placed her hand on his arm.

Ellery did not raise his voice. “Mrs. Doorn has been murdered, Doctor.” Dr. Dunning, speechless, took his daughter’s arm; they groped their way down to the fore portion of the gallery; no one spoke.

Ellery turned to Minchen, spoke insistently in a low voice. “Do this at once, John...”

“Whatever you say.”

“See that every door of the Hospital is immediately closed and guarded. Have some one with intelligence discover, if possible, who has left the premises within the past half-hour. Patients, staff — everybody and anybody. That’s important. Telephone my father at Police Headquarters. Get in touch with the local precinct and tell them what’s happened. Understood?”

Minchen hurried away.

Ellery stepped forward, stood slightly aside. He watched the smooth efficient movements of the doctors working over the old woman. But, he could see at a glance that there was no hope of restoring life. The founder of the Hospital, millionairess, benefactress of countless charities, social leader, manipulator of fortunes, was beyond human aid.

He asked quietly of Janney’s lowered head, “Any hope?”

“None whatever. This is utterly useless. She’s gone — was dead a half-hour ago. Rigor mortis had already set in when she was brought into this room.” Janney’s muffled voice was as impersonal as if he had been discussing a Potter’s Field cadaver.

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