The Glass Village (27 page)

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Authors: Ellery Queen

BOOK: The Glass Village
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“Who knows,” asked Mr. Sheare oddly, “what's the real thing and what's not? I won't, I can't, do what I know to be wrong, Mr. Shinn. Nor can you.”

“You think so?” Johnny smiled with violence. “A man can do anything. I've seen good Joes, firstclass soldiers, pining away for their loved ones, staunch patriots, faithful churchgoers, who were made to deny and betray their buddies, their wives, their children, their country, their God—every last thing they believed in. They didn't want to do it, Mr. Sheare, but they did.”

“And you've also seen men who did not,” cried the minister scornfully, “but you choose not to remember those! Mr. Shinn, if you don't stand up now and do what you can, you're worse than Hube Hemus and Mert Isbel and Peter Berry—you're worse than the lot of 'em put together! Wrong as they are, they're at least doin' what they're doin' 'cause they believe in it. But the man who knows what's right and won't stick by it—he's a lost man, Mr. Shinn, and the world's lost with him.”

Samuel Sheare darted to the door. The key was in the lock. He turned it with trembling fingers and yanked the door open. Constable Hackett faced about.

“Reached a verdict?” he yawned. “'Bout time.”

Mr. Sheare dashed by him. But before the minister could take two steps in the hall, Hube Hemus was upon him.

“No, Mr. Sheare,” Hemus panted. “
No.

Then the others were there, and before Hackett's unbelieving eyes they dragged their pastor back into the bedroom. Johnny was half out of his chair, staring.

“Set your back against that door, Burney,” rapped Hemus. His expressionless glance was on Johnny. “Orville, watch
him.

Johnny felt his arm clutched and paralyzed. Orville Pangman said in a low voice, “Don't try nothin', Mr. Shinn, and ye won't git hurt.”

And Samuel Sheare's eyes were on him, too. And a great roaring came into Johnny's ears, and he felt for the back of the chair.

“We're givin' ye one last chance,” said Hube Hemus. “Mr. Sheare, will ye change your vote?”

“No,” said Samuel Sheare.

Johnny struggled to get away from those eyes. But they bored through his lids, burning.

“Mr. Shinn, will you?”

Johnny said, “No.”

“Then we know where we stand,” said the First Selectman. “Ye tricked us. I think I saw it comin' a long time ago. It's our own fault for lettin' Judge Shinn talk us into this, for lettin' you sit in with us, Mr. Sheare, for lettin' this stranger from New York take his place amongst us like he belongs. We had our trial. We had it in our minds when we caught that murderin' furriner. Ye're only tryin' to take him away from us, like Joe Gonzoli was taken away from us.”

The only thing left was the Governor and the National Guard …

“He ain't escapin' us through a hung jury. That's what you want, ain't it? But you're not takin' this killer tramp away from us. Are they, neighbors?”

A growl answered him.

Those twenty-four sticks of fresh-cut firewood, Johnny thought wildly. All of a sudden they were running through his head like a fence. What was there about that wood …


Come on!

But Constable Hackett was in the doorway, licking his lips.

“Hube—” began Hackett uncertainly.

“You, too?” shouted Hemus. “One side!”

And Burney Hackett fell back, and the mob swept by him and out through Fanny Adams's bedroom door, dragging Samuel Sheare and Johnny Shinn with them. They thundered down the stairs and into the astounded room where Judge Shinn waited over coffee with Andrew Webster and Ferriss Adams and Roger Casavant and Usher Peague, while Josef Kowalczyk sat at the pine table with his face on his outspread arms and the Hemus twins standing over him.

The damned firewood. What was it again?
Oh, yes, what had happened to them. What had happened to them …

And suddenly there was nothing to be heard in the room, nothing at all. The men at the table slowly turned, and the prisoner raised his head, and they remained that way.

“Hube,” said Judge Shinn.

But he knew. They all knew.

“This trial,” said Hube Hemus, “is over. The verdict is guilty. The punishment—”

Josef Kowalczyk dropped out of his chair and to the floor like a snake. On all fours he slithered along under the table until he reached Lewis Shinn's place. There he entwined himself around the Judge's legs.

The twins jumped. Tommy Hemus flung the table aside. His brother dropped on the clinging man.

The Judge shrieked, “Stop, stop!”

What had happened to them …

Tommy Hemus brought his left arm up. It caught Judge Shinn full across the throat. The old man gagged. He staggered back, and the twin clawed at the prisoner in his brother's clutch.

Something happened to Johnny Shinn. Something devastating, like the clap of the Last Judgment.

There was no warning. Suddenly, there it was.

The answer.

The answer!

The room was a hell of shouting, plunging people and crashing furniture. Constable Hackett fell against the corner cupboard; the glass shattered and Fanny Adams's old silver tumbled out. Mathilda Scott was down, screaming as Peter Berry's heavy shoes trampled her. Elizabeth Sheare crouched in a corner like an animal. Her husband was trying vainly to reach her, his lips moving in frantic soundlessness.


String 'im up!
” Merton Isbel roared.

Old Andy Webster, Peague, Casavant, Adams were struggling in the grip of frenzied men and women. Eddie Pangman and Drakeley Scott were suddenly there, in the thick of it.

Johnny found himself fighting through the wreckage. It was like an episode in one of his recurring dreams, in which fists struck him, nails tore his skin, knees doubled him up, and all the while there was no pain, no feeling of any kind, just the cool remoteness of a bodiless mind, as if all the rest of him were dead but the spirit and will to think. And somehow, he never knew how, or even why, he was on the table kicking at reaching arms, stamping and shouting and screaming and pleading.

“Wait! Wait! If you'll hold it—if you'll give me a chance—I'll hang Kowalczyk for you with my own hands if I'm wrong …
I'll give you your damned proof!

“Funny thing,” Johnny was saying, “funny and grim. Simplest thing in the world … But it had to be got to. It was camouflaged. Hidden under a mess of people. And people had nothing to do with it. That's what's funny. Dead wood and people. And it's the people who turn out to be the dead wood.”

He was feeling lightheaded. With the dusk had come fireflies and mosquitoes, and they were winking and buzzing everywhere, impervious to slaughter, dancing the humid evening in. The road was as airless as Fanny Adams's bedroom had been. The lights of the cars lined alongside the bushes showed up the vacuum dance of tiny wings, and the sounds of what was going on where the people were came hollowly to the two men leaning against Peter Berry's delivery truck.

“What?” said Judge Shinn. He was fingering his throat.

“The alibis,” said Johnny. “Three days of alibis for mere people. And all the time the important ones were being set.”

“Important what, Johnny?”

“Alibis.”

“Alibis for whom?”

“Alibis for
what,
” Johnny corrected. “Why, for cars.”

“For cars?” The Judge stared. “Is that—”

“Yes,” said Johnny. “Remember Burney Hackett? ‘I parked my car in the garage.' And ‘it's only a one-car garage.' Burney Hackett owns one automotive vehicle. Fair enough?”

“Fair enough,” said the Judge, “because it's true.”

“And where was Hackett's only car at two-thirteen
P.M.
Saturday? It was some nineteen miles from Fanny Adams's house, being driven back by Hackett from Lyman Hinchley's office in Cudbury.

“And the Berrys,” said Johnny, murdering a mosquito. “A passenger car, a delivery truck, and a wrecker from the public garage. At two-thirteen
P.M.
Saturday the passenger car was locked in a parking lot in Cudbury while Emily Berry and her children sat in Dr. Kaplan's office. At two-thirteen Saturday the delivery truck was standing in Berry's garage, where it had stood since at least ten minutes of two, when Berry began tinkering with it to find out why it didn't start. And what's more, the truck was boxing in his wrecker, as he complained on the stand. Three vehicles, all accounted for.

“Hosey Lemmon?” Johnny shook his head. “No conveyance of any kind. You told me that yourself.

“Prue Plummer's car? She said on the stand it was at Wurley's garage in Cudbury being overhauled for a trip. She said Peter Berry saw Wurley's mechanic take it away. A statement she'd hardly have made in Berry's hearing it if weren't true. Out.

“The Hemuses. Two available vehicles, according to Hube's testimony: the passenger car he drove to the village, and the farm truck his family took to follow. At two-thirteen Saturday the car was parked before Berry's store in plain sight. At the same time his truck had to be on the Hemus place, because no one else in his family left the farm till the news of the murder came.

“The Sheares, no car at all.

“Pangman.” Johnny slapped himself in the face. “Same as the Hemuses—one passenger car, one truck. The truck was parked below the barn roof all Saturday afternoon while Joel Hackett handed up shingles to Orville. And the car, Pangman said, was in his garage.

“Scott. Again two vehicles, a car and a jeep. The car was with Drakeley in Comfort at two-thirteen waiting for a banker to say no. The jeep, according to Mathilda, stood out front on the Scott place all day.

“Calvin Waters. Like Hosey Lemmon, no vehicle of any kind, you said.

“The Isbels: one farm wagon, period. So it shares the alibis of old Mert and Sarah Isbel.

“That cleans out Shinn Corners,” said Johnny, “except for you and Dr. Cushman. And you had Russ Bailey drive that decrepit hack of yours back to Cudbury when he dropped us here a week ago, and I established through Dr. Cushman's nurse that at two-thirteen Saturday the doctor's car was parked outside his office in Comfort.

“Hell, you can even eliminate Judge Webster, if you've got that type of mind. His car didn't get to Shinn Corners until the day after the murder.

“And that,” said Johnny, “covers the alibi of every vehicle involved with anyone in the case. Except one, the one that's brought us here. And by the way, how did I pull it off? I don't remember.”

“Neither do I.” Judge Shinn shivered.

There were shouts now on the still night air, peculiar sucking sounds, clanks and creaks and the muffled straining of an engine.

“But how do you connect the two parts of the argument?” asked the Judge. “Because that's what they're going to want to know.”

“No, they won't,” said Johnny. “They won't want to know anything after this. All they'll want to do is go home and milk their lousy cows. Till the next time.”

“Johnny, Johnny,” said the Judge with a sigh. “The world does move. You've just moved it a little. … If you won't tell them, will you tell me?”

“It was the wood, the firewood.” Johnny listened; it seemed to him from the confused sounds that it must soon be over. “What happened to Aunt Fanny's firewood? It was always the sixty-four dollar question, but we were too stupid to ask it. …

“The wood was in that lean-to, where Kowalczyk had stacked it at two o'clock. Aunt Fanny painted it before she died at two-thirteen. After she died, after two-thirteen—gone. Taken away.

“Because taken away it was—off the property, an act of total removal, not just a transfer from one place to another. I searched for those twenty-four pieces of wood myself and didn't find them.

“Aunt Fanny was struck down dead and her striker-downer picked up twenty-four lengths of split log—and did what?” smiled Johnny. “Carried them off by hand? With a fresh corpse a few yards away and the possiblity of interruption and discovery any minute? It would have taken four or five trips—he could hardly have carried more than five or six pieces of wood in one armful. … The likely answer was a vehicle of some sort. A car, or a wagon. Took the mental stature of a foetus to figure out! Disgusting.

“If the wood was carted off in a car or a wagon, and only one vehicle has no alibi—or rather, a faulty alibi …” Johnny shrugged.

“I hope,” said the Judge, “I hope you're proved right.”

Johnny lounged against the truck, waiting. How
had
he done it? Not through sheer lung power—Mert Isbel had outroared him by many decibels. Yet, somehow, in that pandemonium, he had arrested their frenzy, caught their ears, seized their minds, such as they were. He had no faintest memory of what he had said to them. Maybe—the thought came out of nowhere—maybe they
wanted
to be stopped. Could that be it? Like kids in a tantrum, begging for their little world to be set right again. Johnny laughed, and the Judge looked at him sharply.


They've got it out!

It was Usher Peague, bursting out of the blackness of the swamp with his red hair flying like a banner, arms whirling in triumph.

They rushed with Peague up the old wagon road through the marsh, each with a flashlight scribbling nonsense on the dark, the sounds of the people and the machinery suddenly stilled.

They came to the end of the road. Flares had been set up, and they cast a cheap pink light over the scene. The derrick of Peter Berry's wrecker was dangling the corpse of Ferriss Adams's bogged coupé from its teeth like a dog. The wrecker was slowly pulling away from the quagmire. Men with two-by-fours and pulleys were maneuvering the car clear of the bog as the wrecker dragged it off. The women of Shinn Corners stood about in silence, watchfully.

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