Authors: Frances and Richard Lockridge
“Yes,” he said. “I read about it this morning. In the
Times.
A horrible thingâalmost unbelievable. Was it a case of someoneâbreaking in? One of thoseâone of
those
murders?”
His emphasis clarified his words.
“No,” Mullins said. “Not so far as we know. If you mean was she raped, no. She was just killed.”
“Tragic,” Alfred Pierson said. “Utterly tragic. She was a lovely person. It is hard to believe.”
Nevertheless, Mullins indicated, it had to be believed. It had also to be investigated. Which brought himâ
“Of course,” Mr. Pierson said. “I was there a few hours before it happened. If, as the
Times
said, it happened some time very early yesterday morning. I and a number of others. You want to know if I saw anythingâwell, anything that would help. Anything suspicious.”
It simplified matters for people to question themselves. Mullins merely nodded.
“Let me think,” the black-eyed Mr. Pierson said. “There was nothing at the time, of course. It was all very pleasant and gay andâunexciting. You want to know whether, looking back, I remember anything strange in view of what happened. The answer is, I don't.”
He paused.
“Nothing,” he said, with finality. “A few people who knew one another in the home of a girl we all knew and liked. Or, in some instances, more than liked.” He broke off. “In several cases, more than liked,” he added, thoughtfully.
“Who?” Mullins wanted to know. He explained. “We've gotta find out everything we can about her, you know,” he said. “We always do. Most of it don't help, but we always do.”
“Who more than liked her?” Pierson repeated. “Elliotâa chap named John Elliot. For one.”
“Yes,” Mullins said, appearing to make a note of it. “John Elliot. We've heard of him. Who else?”
Pierson shrugged. No one else, in quite the same sense. Elliot made no bones about it. His attitude toward Ann Lawrence, and hers toward him, were accepted things. They were acknowledged.
“But most men who knew her hadâwell, had notions,” he said. He smiled slightly, rather sadly. “I didâonce. For a little while. I suppose I was thinking of that as much as anything. I don't really know how other men felt.”
“No,” Mullins agreed. “A guy can't always tell. But who would you think?”
“Does it make any difference, now?” Pierson wanted to know. “Any real difference?”
“We don't know,” Mullins said. “It could. We don't know why she was killed. Maybe it was somebody who hated her. Maybe she was in somebody's way. Maybe it was somebody who was crazy about her. All kind of things happen.”
Pierson nodded.
“And all menâ” he said, and let it drop. Mullins nodded. That was one allusion he knew.
“Yeah,” he said. “It happens,”
“Probably,” Pierson said, “I ought to tell you, under the circumstances, that I wasn'tâwell, violently in love with Ann. I just thought about it sometimes, the way a man does. You know?”
“Sure,” Mullins said. “Who don't? She must of been quite a girl.”
“Well,” Pierson said, “she made youâthink about it. I don't suppose she intended to, or not more than most. You know what I mean? It seems the hell of a way to talk about her, now.”
“Yeah,” Mullins said. “I know how you feel. And that was all there was to it?”
“Yes,” Pierson said. “There was Elliot, anyway, if I had other ideas. And there were other people. I was merely trying to give you an idea the way other men might have felt. I don't know what anybody else felt, of course.”
“O.K.,” Mullins said. “But who else might have felt the way you did? Or more so?”
Pierson looked at nothing, obviously remembering.
“A guy named Beck, maybe,” he said. “I don't know. The guy on the radio. A funny little guy with a hell of a voice.”
“Beck,” Mullins repeated.
“He made it look fatherly, if anything,” Pierson said. “And even that wasn't obvious. Probably there wasn't anything else. I tell you I don't know.”
“I know,” Mullins said. “I'm not holding you to anything, Mr. Pierson. We're justâfishing around. Trying to find out something about her. What kind of a girl she was; that sort of thing.”
“She was a swell girl,” Pierson said. “Don't get any ideas. She didn'tâhow do you want me to say it?”
“Play around?” Mullins suggested. “We know that, Mr. Pierson. She hadn't played around, that way. What else about her?”
“Oh,” Pierson said, “I don't know. What do you want to know? She had a lot of money from her parents, who were dead.' She had an aunt somewhereâupstate, I think. She went to a good school and a while to collegeâBryn Mawr, I think. She was engaged to some guy once and didn't marry him and she knew a lot of people and she did some kind of war workâdriving a car, I think. And she didn't wear a uniform, if she had a uniform, except when she was driving the car. And it was her own carâand she could drive it. She was just a nice girl with plenty of money, but not worrying about it, and plenty of people who liked her. She went a lot of places around town, the way people do, and she had a house up in Connecticut somewhere and people used to go up there weekends and play tennis and things. In the summer.”
Mullins said it sounded like a pretty good way to live.
“Yes,” Pierson said, “it's an all right way to live. Or was, until recently. I suppose she was a littleâunsatisfiedâlately. Like everybody. And not just because it was hard to get gas, and food for weekends and that sort of thing. I mean she wasâwell, keyed upâlike almost everybody.”
“Sure,” Mullins said. “I know what you mean.”
“You got it too, Sergeant?” Pierson asked, looking at Mullins with a new expression.
“Sure,” Mullins said. “I was in the last one, but sure. What the hell'd you think?”
“Look,” Pierson said, “they say I've got a bad heart. And my own doctor says they're crazy. What do you do about that, Sergeant. Do you know any way?”
“No,” Mullins said. “I don't know any way, Mr. Pierson. I heard about another guy like that. There didn't seem to be any way.”
“Of course,” Pierson said. “That was for a commission. Maybe the draft board will feel different.”
There was a pause while they regarded this possibility. It was now a comfortable, friendly conversation and Mullins, during the pause, awoke to the fact that it was no longer leading anywhere. There had been a few points, but they seemed to have passed. He sighed slightly and became again a policeman.
“So,” he said, “I gather nothing out of the ordinary happened at the dinner or afterward. Nothing we ought to know about.”
Pierson, coming back, said there wasn't. If anything occurred to him, he'd let Sergeant Mullins know. But he didn't suppose anything would.
Mullins had already stood up to leave when Pamela North was announced by the receptionist. Mullins was surprised, but not greatly. When Pierson raised eyebrows, Mullins said only that Mrs. North was a friend of the lieutenant's. Mrs. North could speak for herself.
Mrs. North, looking very trim and very interested, came through the door. Her eyes flickered over Mr. Pierson politely and came to rest on Sergeant Mullins. Mrs. North spoke for herself.
“Mr. Mullins,” she said. “I might have known you'd be here first. Isn't it a coincidence that Cleo Harper works here?”
“What?” Mullins said. Then he remembered a note on Cleo Harper which he had forgotten; a note which explained why, as he came to its offices, the name Estates Incorporated had seemed familiar. But he still didn't quite see why it was a coincidence.
“Why?” Mullins said.
“Why because it handles her estate, of course,” Mrs. North said. “Ann's estate. Thisâthis company does. Doesn't it, Mr. Pierson?”
Now she looked at Mr. Pierson with interest. He looked back at her, and Mullins, intercepting the look, decided that it was at least with interest. Possibly, Mullins thought suddenly, there was even more than interest in the look with which Mr. Pierson greeted Mrs. North's announcement.
But all he said was, “Why yes, as a matter of fact, I believe it does.”
Mullins looked at Mr. Pierson for almost a minute with considerable intentness. But when he spoke, his voice was mild. Mr. Pierson hadn't, Mullins pointed out, got around to mentioning that point.
“And don't,” Mullins added, “tell me I didn't ask.”
But precisely, Pierson explained, that was what he would have to tell Mullins. Mullins hadn't asked. It did not occur to him to volunteer the information any more than it would have occurred to him to volunteer the information that Miss Lawrence had had a checking account in the Corn Exchange Bank Trust Company orâor that she owned a Cadillac. That Estates Incorporated managed her estate was, to his mind, extraneous. He still thought it was extraneous.
“Were you in charge of her estate yourself, Mr. Pierson?” Pam North asked in the light tone of one who merely wanted to know. Pierson examined the idea and examined Pam North. He said that the handling of an estate by the company was never, in any real sense, a one-man job.
“Well,” Pam said. “Not in a real sense. In aâin a titular sense?”
Mr. Pierson was in no hurry to answer. He thought it over, giving a great impression of a man thinking over an abstruseâand academicâpoint. But finally he nodded.
“In a sense,” he said. “Only in a sense. I advised her. When she came to ask questions or sign papers, I saw her. No doubt the impression was given that I was her adviser. But it was a corporation responsibility. I was merelyâwell, a contact man.”
It sounded all right, Pam thought. It sounded fine. Butâ
“Was that how you met her?” Mullins asked. “Did you get to be friends, or whatever it was, because you advised her about her estate? Or did you know her before?”
Pierson didn't see what that had to do with it. Mullins remained bland. No doubt it had nothing to do with it.
“The lieutenant will want to know,” Mullins said. “I've got to anticipate what the lieutenant will want to know. I don't know what he'll do with it, myself.”
Pam looked at Mullins quickly and looked away. Mullins was being very innocent. You'd think he didn't have an idea of his own. But Pam thought he must have several ideas of his own.
“As a matter of fact,” Pierson said, “I did know her before. My father and her father were friends; the families used to get together now and then. I knew her when she was a little girl. And later.”
“Before you joined this company?” Mullins asked.
“Oh yes,” Pierson said. “Naturally. I was in college when she was a, little girl. I knew her thenâbefore then. But we weren't childhood sweethearts or anything, if that's what you mean.”
“I don't mean anything,” Mullins said. “I just want to get the picture. For the lieutenant.”
“Well,” Pierson said. “Don't get the wrong picture. She was just a little girl in a family my family knew. I only really began to know her a few years ago.”
“Sure,” Mullins said. “I'll explain to the lieutenant.”
Mullins stood up and his eyes signaled Mrs. North.
“Well,” he said, “I guess that's all the lieutenant would want to know. Don't you think so, Mrs. North?”
“Oh yes,” Mrs. North said. “I'd think so. Wouldn't you, Mr. Pierson?”
Mr. Pierson looked at her a little darkly, but perhaps only because he was a dark man. And handsome, if you liked dark menâvery dark menâMrs. North decided.
“I'd think a great deal more than the lieutenant would find interesting,” he said. “But I don't know the lieutenant.”
“Weigand,” Pam explained, wide-eyed. “William Weigand. He's very nice. But curious, sort of.”
Pierson stood up.
“For example,” Mrs. North went on. “I just thought. He'd wonder, I expect, if you advised Miss Lawrence about her investments and thingsâwhatever you
did
advise her about, you knowâbefore you became whatever you are here. A partner or something. He'd wonder whetherâwell, whether you sort of brought her business in when you came, you know. He's
very
curious, Bill is.”
Pierson looked at her and she thought his eyes were guarded.
“He must be,” Pierson said, dryly. “Perhaps if he wants to know so much he'd better come around and ask himself.”
Pam North smiled pleasantly.
“Oh,” she said. “I expect he will. He's very curious about things like that. He thinks so much murder comes from money. And vice versa, of course.”
Mullins and Mrs. North used that as a curtain line, leaving Mr. Pierson looking after themâdarkly, but no doubt only because he was such a dark man. When they got out on the street, Mullins said, still blandly, that he was afraid Mrs. North had irritated Mr. Pierson there toward the end. Mullins made a deprecatory sound with his tongue and teeth about that and Mrs. North said she was sorry.
“But I do think the lieutenant will be interested,” she said. “Because I do think that he got his job because he had control of Ann Lawrence's money andâsort of brought it with him. And that makes you wonder if he's still got it, doesn't it?”
“It could,” Mullins said. “It could make you wonder that. I guess the loot will want to have auditors find out, probably.”
Pam nodded.
“And,” she said, “you said something that made me wonder whether there was something between Mr. Pierson and Ann. Something emotional, I mean.”
“Yeah,” Mullins said. “I guess there was something. But he says it wasn't anything much.” Mullins pondered it. “Of course,” he said, still carrying out the game, “the lieutenant might think he was holding back something. The lieutenant's apt to be suspicious, sometimes.”