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Authors: Ellery Queen

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BOOK: The Roman Hat Mystery
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Just a minute son,

interrupted Queen.

Ever see a dead man before?


Why

why, no, sir, but I guess I could stand it once,

said the boy nervously.


Fine! Is this the man who asked you for the ginger ale?

The Inspector took the boy by the arm and made him bend over the dead body.

Jess Lynch regarded it with awed fascination. He bobbed his head vigorously.


Yes, sir. That

s the gentleman.


You

re sure of that now, Jess?

The boy nodded.

By the way, is that the outfit he was wearing when he accosted you?


Yes, sir.


Anything missing, Jess?

Ellery, who had been nestling in a dark corner, leaned forward a little.

The boy regarded the Inspector with puzzlement on his face, looking from Queen to the body and back again. He was silent for a full minute, while the Queens hung on his words. Then his face lit up suddenly and he cried,

Why

yes, sir! He was wearin

a hat

a shiny topper

when he spoke to me!

Inspector Queen looked pleased.

Go on, Jess

Doc Prouty! It

s taken you a long time getting here. What held you up?

A tall lanky man had come striding across the carpet, a black bag in his hand. He was smoking a vicious-looking cigar with no apparent concern for local fire rules, and appeared in something of a hurry.


You said something there, Inspector,

he said, setting down the bag and shaking hands with both Ellery and Queen.

You know we just moved and I haven

t got my new phone yet. I had a hard day today and I was in bed anyway. They couldn

t get hold of me

had to send a man around to my new place. I rushed down here as fast as I could. Where

s the casualty?

He dropped to his knees in the aisle as the Inspector indicated the body on the floor. A policeman was summoned to hold a flashlight as the Assistant Medical Examiner worked.

Queen took Jess Lynch by the arm and walked him off to one side.

What happened after he asked you for the ginger ale, Jess?

The boy, who had been staring at the proceedings, gulped and continued.

Well, sir, of course I told him that we didn

t sell ginger ale, only orangeade. He leaned a little closer, and then I could smell the booze on his breath. He says confidentially,

There

s a half dollar in it for you if you get me a bottle, kid! But I want it right away!

Well

you know how it is

they don

t give tips nowadays . . . . Anyway, I said I couldn

t get it that minute but that I

d duck out and buy a bottle for him right after the second act started. He walked away

after tellin

me where he was sitting

I saw him go back into the theatre. As soon as the intermission ended and the usherette closed the doors, I left my stand in the alleyway and hopped across the street to Libby

s ice-cream parlor. I
―”


Do you usually leave your stand in the alley, Jess?


No, sir. I always hop inside the doors with the stand just before she locks the doors, and then take it downstairs to the lounge. But the man said he wanted the ginger ale right away, so I figured I

d save time by getting the bottle for him first. Then I thought I

d go back into the alley, get my stand, and bring it into the theatre through the front door. No-body

d say anything . . . . Anyway, I left the stand in the alley and ran over to Libby

s. I bought a bottle of Paley

s ginger ale, sneaked it inside to this man, and he gave me a buck. Pretty nice of him, I thought, seeing as how he

d only promised me four bits.


You told that very nicely, Jess,

said the Inspector with approval.

Now, a few things more. Was he sitting in this seat

was this the seat he told you to come to?


Oh, yes, sir. He said LL32 Left, and sure enough that

s where I found him.


Quite right.

The Inspector, after a pause, asked casually,

Did you notice if he was alone, Jess?


Sure thing, sir,

returned the boy in a cheerful tone.

He was sittin

all alone on this end seat. The reason I noticed it was that the show

s been packed ever since it opened, and I thought it was queer that there should be so many seats empty around here.


That

s fine, Jess. You

ll make a detective yet . . . . You couldn

t tell me how many seats were empty, I suppose?


Well, sir, it was kind of dark and I wasn

t pay in

much attention. I guess it was about half a dozen all told

some next to him in the same row and some right in the row in front.


Just a moment, Jess.

The boy turned, licking his lips in honest fright at the sound of Ellery

s low cool voice.

Did you see anything more of that shiny topper when you handed him the bottle of ginger ale?

asked Ellery, tapping the point of his neat shoe with his stick.


Why, yes

yes, sir!

stammered the boy.

When I gave him the bottle he was holding the hat in his lap, but before I left I saw him stick it underneath his seat.


Another question, Jess.

The boy sighed with relief at the sound of the Inspector

s reassuring voice.

About how long, do you reckon, did it take you to deliver the bottle to this man after the second act started?

Jess Lynch thought gravely for a moment, and then said with finality,

It was just about ten minutes, sir. We got to keep pretty close tabs on the time, and I know it was ten minutes because when I came into the theatre with the bottle it was just the part on the stage when the girl is caught in the gang

s hangout and is being grilled by the villain.


An observant young Hermes!

murmured Ellery, smiling suddenly. The orangeade boy caught the smile and lost the last vestige of his fear. He smiled back. Ellery crooked his finger and bent forward.

Tell me, Jess. Why did it take you ten minutes to cross the street, buy a bottle of ginger ale and return to the theatre? Ten minutes is a long time, isn

t it?

The boy turned scarlet as he looked appealingly from Ellery to the Inspector.

Well, sir

I guess I stopped to talk for a few minutes with my girl . . . .


Your girl?

The Inspector

s voice was mildly curious.


Yes, sir. Elinor Libby

her old man owns the ice-cream parlor. She

she wanted me to stay there in the store with her when I went for the ginger ale. I told her I had to deliver it in the theatre, so she said all right but wouldn

t I come right back. And I did. We stayed there a couple of minutes and then I remembered the stand in the alley . . . .


The stand in the alley?

Ellery

s tone was eager.

Quite so, Jess

the stand in the alley. Don

t tell me that, by some remarkable whim of fortune, you went back to the alley!


Sure I did!

rejoined the boy, in surprise.

I mean

we both did, Elinor and me.


Elinor and you, eh, Jess?

said Ellery softly.

And how long were you there?

The Inspector

s eyes flashed at Ellery

s question. He muttered approvingly to himself and listened intently as the boy answered.


Well, I wanted to take the stand right away, sir, but Elinor and me

we got to talking there

and Elinor said why not stay in the alley till the next intermission . . . . I figured that was a good idea. I

d wait till a few minutes before 10:05, when the act ends, and I

d duck down for some more orangeade, and then when the doors opened for the second intermission, I

d be all ready. So we stayed there, sir . . . . It wasn

t wrong, sir. I didn

t mean anything wrong.

Ellery straightened and fixed the boy with his eyes.

Jess, I want you to be very careful now. At exactly what time did you and Elinor get to the alley?


Well . . . .

Jess scratched his head.

It was about 9:25 when I gave that man the ginger ale. I went across for Elinor, stayed a few minutes and then came over to the alley. Musta been just about 9:35

just about

when I went back for my orangeade stand.


Very good. And what time exactly did you leave the alley?


It was just ten o

clock, sir. Elinor looked at her wrist watch when I asked her if it was time to go in for my orangeade refills.


You didn

t hear anything going on in the theatre?


No, sir. We were too busy talking, I guess . . . . I didn

t know anything had happened inside until we walked out of the alley and I met Johnny Chase, one of the ushers, standing there, like he was on guard. He told me there was an accident inside and Mr. Panzer had sent him to stand outside the left alley.


I see . . . .

Ellery removed his pince-nez in some agitation and flourished it before the boy

s nose.

Carefully now, Jess. Did anyone go in or out of the alley all the time you were there with Elinor?

The boy

s answer was immediate and emphatic.

No, sir. Not a soul.


Right, my lad.

The Inspector gave the boy a spanking slap on the back and sent him off grinning. Queen looked around sharply, spied Panzer, who had made his announcement on the stage with ineffectual results, and beckoned with an imperative finger.

BOOK: The Roman Hat Mystery
7.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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