The King is Dead

Read The King is Dead Online

Authors: Ellery Queen

The King is Dead

Ellery Queen

MYSTERIOUSPRESS.COM

Cast of Characters

INSPECTOR QUEEN

Old war horse of Centre Street. Only orders from Washington could have persuaded him to leave New York

ELLERY QUEEN

He was badly miscast as fall guy for a murderer

ABEL BENDIGO

The King's ‘prime minister'. Deceptively undistinguished and blandly uncooperative

COLONEL SPRING

The gold-braided head of the King's private Gestapo

KING KANE BENDIGO

Munitions tycoon and monarch of Bendigo Island. Handsome, ruthless — but not invulnerable

JUDAH BENDIGO

The third brother. An ingenuous lush who specialized in Segonzac V.S.O.P.

KARLA BENDIGO

A Technicolor beauty who could have posed for Titian. Altogether, a fitting queen for the King

MAX

The King's ‘court jester'. A troglodyte with only one loyalty

Dr. STORM

Surgeon-General of Bendigo Island, whose conversation ran to the anatomically bawdy

IMMANUEL PEABODY

Chief legal adviser to the King. Lean and swarthy, with a catty smile

Dr. AKST

A tired young man who, according to Karla, spent his time fiddling with atoms

1

The invasion of the Queen apartment occurred at 8.08 o'clock of an ordinary June morning, with West 87th Street just washed down three storeys below by the City sprinkler truck and Arsène Lupin in grand possession of the east ledge, breakfasting on breadcrumbs intended for a dozen other pigeons of the neighbourhood.

It was an invasion in twentieth-century style — without warning. At the moment it exploded, Inspector Queen was poising a spoon edgewise over his second egg, measuring peacefully for the strike; Mrs. Fabrikant had just elevated her leviathan bottom at the opposite side of the room, preparing to plug in the vacuum cleaner; and Ellery was in the act of stepping into the living-room, hands at his neck about to pull down his jacket collar.

‘Don't move, please.'

There had been no noise at all. The front door had been unlocked, the door wedged back against the wall, and the foyer crossed in silence.

The Inspector's spoon, Mrs. Fabrikant's bottom, Ellery's hands remained where they were.

The two men were standing just inside the archway from the foyer. Folded topcoats covered their right hands. They were dressed alike, in suits and hats of ambiguous tan, except that one wore a dark blue shirt and the other a dark brown shirt. They were big men with nice, rather blank, faces.

The pair looked around the Queen living-room. Then they stepped apart and Ellery saw that they were not a pair but a trio.

The third man stood outside the apartment, straddling the landing to block the public hall. His motionless back was toward the Queen front doorway and he was looking down the staircase.

Blue Shirt suddenly parted company from his twin. He had to pass Inspector Queen at the dropleaf table, but he paid no attention to the staring old gentleman. He went through the swinging door to the kitchen, very fast.

His mate remained in the archway in an attitude of almost respectful attention. His brown shirt added a warm tone to his personality. His right hand appeared, holding a .38 revolver with a pug nose.

Blue Shirt came out of the Queen kitchen and disappeared in Inspector Queens bedroom.

The Inspector's spoon, Mrs. Fabrikant's bottom, Ellery's hands all came cautiously down at the same moment. But nothing happened except that Blue Shirt came out of the Inspector's bedroom, crossed to the doorway where Ellery stood, stiff-armed Ellery politely out of the way, and went into the study.

The third man kept watching the stairs in the hall.

Mrs. Fabrikant's mouth was working up to a shriek. Ellery said, ‘Don't, Fabby,' just in time.

Blue Shirt came back and said to his partner, ‘All clear.' Brown Shirt nodded and immediately set out across the room, heading for Mrs. Fabrikant. She scrambled to her feet, creamier than the woodwork. Without looking at her, Brown Shirt said in a pleasant voice, ‘Take the vacuum into one of the bedrooms, Mother, shut the door, and get it going.' He stopped at the window.

Arsène Lupin boomed and flew away, and Mrs. Fabrikant fled.

That was when Inspector Queen found his legs and his voice. Jumping to his full five feet four inches, the Inspector bellowed, ‘Who in the hell are you?'

The vacuum cleaner began to whine like a bandsaw from Ellery's bedroom beyond the study. Blue Shirt shut the study door, muffling the noise. He wedged his back in the doorway.

‘If this is a stickup —!'

Blue Shirt grinned, and Brown Shirt — at the window — permitted himself a smile that only briefly shattered his expression. His glance remained on 87th Street below.

‘— it's the politest one in history,' said Ellery. ‘You at the window. Would you get nervous if I looked over your shoulder?'

The man shook his head impatiently. A black town car with a New York licence plate was just swinging into West 87th Street from Columbus Avenue. Ellery saw its glittering mate parked across the street. Several men were in the parked car.

Brown Shirt's left hand came up, and two of the men in the parked car jumped out and raced across the street to the sidewalk below the Queen windows. As they reached the kerb, the car which had turned into 87th Street slid to a stop before the house. One of the men ran up the brown-stone steps; the other swiftly opened the rear door of the car and stepped back, looking not into the car but up and down the street.

A smallish man got out of the town car. He was dressed in a nondescript suit and he wore an out-of-shape grey hat. In a leisurely way he mounted the brownstone steps and passed from view.

‘Recognize him, Dad?'

Inspector Queen, at Ellery's shoulder, shook his head. He looked bewildered.

‘Neither do I.'

Brown Shirt was now at the door of the Inspector's bedroom, so that he and Blue Shirt faced each other from opposite sides of the room. Their foreshortened Police Positives dangled at their thighs. Their companion on the landing stepped up to the newel post, and now his right hand was visible, too, grasping a third .38.

Mrs. Fabrikant's machine kept sawing.

Suddenly, out in the hall, the third man backed away.

The smallish man's shapeless hat and undistinguished suit began to rise from the stairwell.

‘Good morning,' said the smallish man, removing his hat. He had a voice like a steel guitar-string.

Seen close up, he was not so small as he had appeared. He was several inches taller than Inspector Queen, but he had the Inspector's small bones and the narrow face structure of many undersized men. His head broadened at the temples and his forehead was scholarly. His skin was bland and firm, with an undertinge of indoor grey, his hair mouse-brown with a tendency to scamper. His eyes, which were protected by squarish rimless glasses, had a bulgy and heavy-lidded look, but this was an illusion; his blinking stare was unavoidable. A growing pot strained the button of his single-breasted jacket, which could have done with a pressing. He looked as if he ought to be wearing a square derby and a piped vest.

He might have been fifty, or sixty, or even forty-five.

Ellery's first impression was categorical:
The absent-minded professor
. The rather high-pitched Yankee voice of authority went with examinations and blackboards. But professors, absentminded or otherwise, do not go about the city accompanied by armed guards in powerful cars. Ellery revised. A general, perhaps, one of the intellectual brass, a staff man who moved mountains from the Pentagon. Or an old-fashioned banker from Vermont. But …

‘My name,' twanged the visitor, ‘is Abel Bendigo.'

‘Bendigo!' The Inspector stared. ‘You're not the Bendigo —' ‘Hardly,' said Abel Bendigo with a smile. ‘I take it you've never seen his photograph. But you see what I'm up against, Inspector Queen. These security people are members of my brother's Public Relations and Personnel Department, which is under the command of a very hard fellow named Spring. Colonel Spring — I doubt if you've ever heard of him. He tyrannizes us all, even my brother — or, I should say, especially my brother! And so you're Ellery Queen,' their visitor went on without so much as a glissando. ‘Great pleasure, Mr. Queen. I've never got over feeling a bit silly about these precautions, but what can I do? Colonel Spring likes to remind me that it takes only one bullet to turn farce into tragedy … May I sit down?'

Ellery pulled the old leather chair forward, and the Inspector said, ‘I wish, Mr. Bendigo, you had let us know in advance —'

‘The Colonel again,' murmured Abel Bendigo, sinking into the chair. ‘Thank you, Mr. Queen, my hat will do nicely on the floor here … So this is where all the mysteries are solved.'

‘Yes,' said Ellery, ‘but I believe what's bothering my father is the fact that he's due in his office at Police Headquarters in about twelve minutes, and it's downtown.'

‘Sit down, Inspector, I want to talk to both of you.'

‘I can't, Mr. Bendigo —'

‘They won't miss you this once. I guarantee it. By the way, I see we've interrupted your breakfast. Yours, too, Mr. Queen —'

‘Just coffee this morning,' Ellery went to the table. ‘Will you join us?'

From the side of the room Brown Shirt said, ‘Mr. Bendigo.'

Bendigo waved his slender hand humorously. ‘You see? Another of Colonel Spring's rules. Finish. Please.'

Ellery refilled his father's cup from the percolator and poured a cupful for himself. There was no point in asking this man questions; in fact, there was every point in not. So he stood by the table and sipped his coffee.

The Inspector gulped his breakfast, throwing side glances at his wristwatch in perplexity.

Abel Bendigo waited in silence, blinking. Blue Shirt and Brown Shirt were very still. The man on the landing did not move. Mrs. Fabrikant's vacuum cleaner kept buzzing in a helpless way.

The moment the Queens set their cups down, the visitor said, ‘What do you gentlemen know about my brother King?'

They looked at each other.

‘Got a file on him, son?' asked the Inspector.

‘Yes.'

Ellery went into his study. Blue Shirt moving aside. When he came back, he was carrying a large clasp envelope. He shook it over the table and a few newspaper and magazine clippings fell out. He sat down and glanced over them.

Abel Bendigo's prominent eyes behind the glasses blinked at Ellery's face.

Finally Ellery looked up. ‘There's nothing here that amounts to anything, Mr. Bendigo. Sunday supplement stuff, chiefly.'

‘You know nothing about my brother,' murmured the slender man, ‘beyond what's in those clippings?'

‘Your brother is rumoured to be one of the five richest men in the world — worth billions. That, I take it, is the usual exaggeration. However, the assumption may be made that he's a man of great wealth.'

Other books

The Unfortunates by Sophie McManus
Time's Chariot by Ben Jeapes
Uneasy Alliances by Cook, David
An Ideal Duchess by Evangeline Holland
The Meadow by Adrian Levy
A Painted House by John Grisham
The Summons by John Grisham