Rex Stout - Too Many Clients

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Too Many Clients: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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If one of Nero Wolfe’s adventures had not already been called
that might have been the title of this one. For sex, to which Archie Goodwin is less a stranger than Nero, rears its quite pretty head throughout this new full-length novel.
When the big businessman, who lived in New York’s fashionable East 60s but maintained an expensive love-nest in one of New York’s worst neighborhoods, is murdered, Nero is called in. In fact he is called in three times, the first two times by very — wrong people. Hence before he can start to unravel the murder, he has to solve the unique problem of ditching the wrong clients. Rut ditching can be fun, especially the way Archie does it, and this book will supply new fun and challenge to mystery connoisseurs.

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“That she asked for it is only conjecture.”

“Yeah. But our theory is that she was killed by the person who killed Yeager or we haven’t got a theory, and in that case Maria must have made the contact. Suppose it was Julia McGee. She couldn’t have known there was an eye on her behind that crack as she went down the hall, or if she did she couldn’t have known whose eye it was. If she felt or suspected it, as I did, and pushed the door open and found Maria there, she wouldn’t have gone up and used the gun she had brought to shoot Yeager. So Maria must have made the contact yesterday, and she wouldn’t do that just for the hell of it, just for the pleasure of saying, ‘I saw you come in Sunday evening so I know you killed Mr. Yeager.’ She wanted to make a deal. That she asked for it may be only a conjecture, but I don’t make it because I like it. I would prefer to believe that she was as good inside as outside. Anyhow she didn’t drink that champagne.”

Wolfe said, “Mmmmh.”

I pointed to one of the three-sketch groups. “That’s Dinah. Mrs. Austin Hough. Maria knew how to get a likeness. She got Mrs. Delancey too.”

“There is none of Meg Duncan.”

“No. When she got photographs of her she didn’t need a sketch.”

He sat down. “Get Fred. How soon can he be here?”

“Twenty minutes.”

“Get him.”

I got at my phone and dialed, and Fred answered. I told him that if he could make it here in nineteen minutes two things would be waiting for him, $315 and instructions from Wolfe, and he said both would be welcome. I turned and told Wolfe, and he said, “Get Miss McGee. I’ll speak to her.”

That took a little longer. The trouble seemed to be, when I got the Continental Plastic Products switchboard, that Julia McGee had been Yeager’s secretary, and now that he was no longer there the operator didn’t know where Miss McGee was. I finally got her and signed to Wolfe, and he took his phone. I stayed on.

“Miss McGee? I must see you as soon as possible. At my office.”

“Well—” She didn’t sound enthusiastic. “I leave at five. Will six o’clock do?”

“No, it’s urgent. As soon as you can get here.”

“Can’t you tell me on the phone — no, I suppose not. All right, I’ll come.”

“Now.”

“Yes. I’ll leave in a few minutes.”

We hung up. Wolfe leaned back and closed his eyes. I gathered up the drawings and put them with the rest of Maria’s collection. Getting a folder from the cabinet, I marked it YEAGER and put the collection in it, decided that the safe was the proper place for something that might some day be a people’s exhibit, and took it there instead of the cabinet. When Wolfe’s eyes opened I took him a check to sign, to Fred Durkin for three hundred fifteen & 00/100 dollars. We were now out about five Cs on the Yeager operation, and we had four clients and two bucks in retainers, plus a damn good chance of ending up in the coop for obstructing justice. As I put Fred’s check on my desk the phone rang. It was Mrs. Yeager. She wanted to know when I was going to take her to see the room on 82nd Street. She also wanted to tell me that the daughter of the superintendent of that house had been murdered, and she thought Wolfe and I should look into it. I could do that when I took her to see the room, saving a trip. If you think I should have stopped her because phones have extensions and someone might have been on one, you are correct. I tried to. I finally managed without hanging up on her.

By then Fred was there, having been admitted by Fritz. I gave him his check, and Wolfe gave him his instructions, which he took without a blink. The difference in the way he takes Wolfe and the way he takes me is not based on experience. Up in the bower, getting it only from me, he had suspected that I was perching him far out on a limb and he didn’t like it. Now, with Wolfe, there was no question of suspecting or not liking. He had got the idea somehow, long ago, that there was absolutely no limit to what Wolfe could do if he wanted to, so of course there was no risk involved. I would like to be present to see his face if and when Wolfe tells him to go to Moscow and tail Khrushchev. When the doorbell rang he got up and moved to a chair over by the bookshelves as I crossed to the hall.

And got a surprise. It was Julia McGee on the stoop, but she wasn’t alone. I stepped back in the office and told Wolfe Aiken was with her. He scowled at me, pursed his lips, and nodded, and I went and opened the door and they entered. For a president Aiken was polite. She was only the ex-secretary of his ex-executive vice-president, but he let her precede him in, down the hall, and into the office. Wolfe stood until they were seated, him in the red leather chair and her in the one Fred had vacated.

Aiken spoke. “You sent for Miss McGee. If there has been a development, you should have notified me. I have had no word from you. If you have something to say to Miss McGee, I want to hear it.”

Wolfe was regarding him. “I told you Tuesday night, Mr. Aiken, that it may be that the less you know of the particulars of my performance the better. But it can’t hurt for you to know about this; I would almost certainly have informed you of it before the day was out. Indeed, it is just as well to have you present.” His head turned. “Fred?”

Fred got up and came to the corner of Wolfe’s desk. “Look at Miss McGee,” Wolfe told him. Fred turned for a glance at her and turned back.

“I don’t need to,” he said.

“You recognize her?”

“Sure. I ought to; she gave me this.” He pointed to his cheek.

“That was Tuesday evening. Had you seen her before that?”

“Yes, sir. I saw her Sunday evening when I was covering that house on Eighty-second Street. I saw her enter the house. At the basement door.”

“Did you see her leave?”

“No, sir. She could have left while I was at the corner, phoning in. I phoned in every hour, as instructed. Or after I left for the night.”

“Did you tell Archie, Tuesday evening, that you had seen her before?”

“No, sir. She came at me the second she saw me Tuesday evening, and it was a tangle. After Archie took her away I got to thinking. It was her I saw Sunday. I should have told you, but I knew what it would mean. It would make me a witness in a murder case, and you know how that is. But this morning I decided I’d have to. You were paying me and you were counting on me. So I came and told you.”

“How sure are you that you saw Miss McGee, the woman sitting there, enter that house Sunday evening?”

“I’m dead sure. I wouldn’t have come and told you if I wasn’t. I know what I’m in for now.”

“You deserve it. You had vital information, obtained while you were on an assignment from me, and you withheld it for thirty-six hours. I’ll deal with that later. Go to the front room and stay there.”

As Fred crossed to the door to the front room no eyes but Wolfe’s followed him. Aiken’s and mine were on Julia McGee. Hers were on a spot in the pattern of the rug, in front of her feet.

When the door had closed behind Fred, Wolfe spoke. “Miss McGee. Why did you kill him?”

“Don’t answer,” Aiken commanded her. He turned to Wolfe. “You’re working for me. As you put it yourself, you are to make every effort to protect the reputation and interests of the corporation. What’s that man’s name?”

“Fred Durkin.”

“Why did you have him watching that house Sunday evening?”

“On behalf of a client. In confidence.”

“You have too many clients. You didn’t mention it Tuesday evening. You said you had no engagement.”

“We were discussing the murder of Yeager, and I had no engagement to investigate that. I’m humoring you, Mr. Aiken. My other engagements are no concern of yours if there is no conflict of interest. Why did you kill Yeager, Miss McGee?”

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