Read The Origin of Evil Online
Authors: Ellery Queen
âNothing missing, Delia?'
She shook her head. âI can't understand it.' She turned away, pulling her robe closer about her.
âCrowe and I probably scared him off.' Alfred Wallace sat down again, exhaling smoke.
âYour father's stamp albums?' Ellery suggested to Delia's back. He had no idea why he thought of old Collier's treasures, except that they might be valuable.
âAs far as I know, they haven't been touched.'
Ellery wandered about the room.
âBy the way, Crowe tells me Mr. Collier hasn't been to bed. Have you any idea where he is, Delia?'
âNo.' She wheeled on him, eyes flashing. âMy father and I don't check up on each other. And I can't recall, Mr. Queen, that I ever gave you permission to call me by my first name. Suppose you stop it.'
Ellery looked at her with a smile. After a moment she turned away again. Wallace continued to smoke.
Ellery resumed his ambling.
When Keats returned he said shortly, âThere's nothing out there. Have you got anything?'
âI think so,' said Ellery. He was squatting before the fireplace. âLook here.'
Delia Priam turned at that, and Wallace.
The fireplace grate held the remains of a wood fire. It had burned away to a fine ash. On the ashes lay a heat-crimped and badly charred object of no recognizable shape.
âFeel the ashes to the side, Keats.'
âStony cold.'
âNow the ashes under that charred thing.'
The detective snatched his hand away. âStill hot!'
Ellery said to Delia, âWas there a wood fire in this grate tonight ⦠Mrs. Priam?'
âNo. There was one in the morning, but it burned out by noon.'
âThis object was just burned here, Keats. On top of the cold ashes.'
The lieutenant wrapped a handkerchief around his hand and cautiously removed the charred thing. He laid it on the hearth.
âWhat was it?'
âA book, Keats.'
âBook?' Keats glanced around at the walls. âI wonder if â'
âCan't tell any more. Pages all burned away and what's left of the binding shows nothing.'
âIt must have been a special binding.' Most of the volumes on the shelves were leather-bound. âDon't they stamp the titles into these fancy jobs?' Keats prodded the remains of the book, turning it over. âOught to be some indication left.'
âThere would have been, except that whoever burned this indulged in a little vandalism before he set fire to it. Look at these slashes on the spine â and here. The book was mutilated with a sharp instrument before it was tossed into the grate.'
Keats looked up at Delia and Wallace, who were stooping over them. âAny idea what this book was?'
âDamn you! Are you two here again?
'
Roger Priam's wheel-chair blocked the doorway. His hair and beard were threatening. His pyjama coat gaped, exposing his simian chest; a button was missing, as if he had torn at himself in a temper. His chair was made up as a bed and the blankets trailed on the floor.
âAin't nobody going to open his mouth? Man can't get any shut-eye in his own house! Alfred, where the hell have you been? Not in your room, because I couldn't get you on the intercom!' He did not glance at his wife.
âSomething's happened down here, Mr. Priam,' said Wallace soothingly.
âHappened! What now?'
Ellery and Keats were watching Priam closely. The library desk and a big chair stood between the wheel-chair and the fireplace; Priam had not seen the burned book.
âSomebody broke into your library here tonight, Mr. Priam,' rasped Keats, âand don't think I'm happy about it, because I'm as sick of you as you are of me. And if you're thinking of blasting me out again, forget it. Breaking and entering is against the law, and I'm the cop on the case. Now you're going to answer questions about this or, by God, I'll pull you in on a charge of obstructing a police investigation. Why was this book cut up and burned?'
Keats stalked across the room carrying the charred remains. He thrust the thing under Priam's nose.
âBook ⦠burned?'
All his rage had fled, exposing the putty colour beneath. Priam glared down at the twisted cinder in Keats's hand, pulling away a little.
âDo you recognize this?'
Priam's head shook.
âCan't you tell us what it is?'
âNo.' The word came out cracked. He seemed fascinated by the binding.
Keats turned in disgust. âI guess he doesn't know at that. Well â'
âJust a moment, Lieutenant.' Ellery was at the shelves, riffling through books. They were beautiful books, the products of private presses chiefly â hand-made paper, lots of gold leaf, coloured inks, elaborate endpaper designs, esoteric illustrations, specially designed type fonts; each was hand-bound and expensively hand-tooled. And the titles were impeccable, all the proper classics. The only thing was, after riffling through two dozen books, Ellery had still to find one in which the pages had been cut.
The books had never been read. It was likely, from their stiff pristine condition, that they had not been opened since leaving the hands of the bookbinder.
âHow long have you had these books, Mr. Priam?'
âHow long?' Priam licked his lips. âHow long is it, Delia?'
âSince shortly after we were married.'
âLibrary means books,' Priam muttered, nodding. âCalled in a fancy dealer and had him measure the running feet of shelf space and told him to go out and get enough books to fill the space. Highbrow stuff, I told him; only the best.' He seemed to gain confidence through talking; a trace of arrogance livened his heavy voice. âWhen he lugged them around, I threw 'em back in his face. “I said the best!” I told him. “Take this junk back and have it bound up in the most expensive leather and stuff you can find. It's got to look the money or you don't get a plugged nickel.”'
Keats had dropped his impatience. He edged back.
âAnd a very good job he did, too,' murmured Ellery. âI see they're in the original condition, Mr. Priam. Don't seem to have been opened, any of them.'
âOpened! And crack those bindings? This collection is worth a fortune, Mister. I've had it appraised. Won't let
nobody
read 'em.'
âBut books are made to be read, Mr. Priam. Haven't you ever been curious about what's in these pages?'
âAin't read a book since I played hooky from public school,' retorted Priam. âBooks are for women and long-hairs. Newspapers, that's different. And picture magazines.' His head jerked up with a belligerent reflex. âWhat are you getting at?'
âI'd like to spend about an hour here, Mr. Priam, looking over your collection. I give you my word, I'll handle your books with the greatest care. Would you have any objection to that?'
Cunning pin-pointed Priam's eyes. âYou're a book-writer yourself, ain't you?'
âYes.'
âEver write articles like in the Sunday magazine sections?'
âOccasionally.'
âMaybe you got some idea about writing up an article on the Priam Book Collection. Hey?'
âYou're a shrewd man, Mr. Priam,' said Ellery with a smile.
âI don't mind,' the bearded man said with geniality. There was colour in his cheekbones again. âThat book-dealer said no millionaire's library ought to be without its own special catalogue. “It's too good a collection, Mr. Priam,” he says to me. “There ought to be a record of it for the use of bib- bib-”'
âBibliophiles?'
âThat's it. Hell, it was little enough, and besides I figured it might come in handy for personal publicity in my jewellery business. So I told him to go ahead. You'll find a copy of the catalogue right there on that stand. Cost me a lot of money â specially designed, y'know, four-colour job on special paper. And there's a lot of technical stuff in it, in the descriptions of the books. Words I can't even pronounce,' Priam chuckled, âbut, God Almighty, you don't have to be able to pronounce it if you can pay for it.' He waved a hairy hand. âDon't mind at all. Mister â what was the name again?'
âQueen.'
âYou go right ahead, Queen.'
âVery kind of you, Mr. Priam. By the way, have you added any books since your catalogue was made up?'
âAdded any?' Priam stared. âI got all the good ones. What would I want with more? When d'ye want to do it?'
âNo time like the present, I always say, Mr. Priam. The night is killed, anyway.'
âMaybe tomorrow I'll change my mind, hey?' Priam showed his teeth again in what he meant to be a friendly grin. âThat's all right, Queen. Shows you're no dope, even if you do write books. Go to it!' The grin faded as he turned his animal eyes on Wallace. âYou push me back, Alfred. And better bunk downstairs for the rest of the night.'
âYes, Mr. Priam,' said Alfred Wallace.
âDelia, what are you standing around for? Go back to bed.'
âYes, Roger.'
The last they saw of Priam he was waving amiably as Wallace wheeled him across the hall. From his gesture it was apparent that he had talked himself out of his fears, if indeed he had not entirely forgotten their cause.
When the door across the hall had closed, Ellery said: âI hope you don't mind, Mrs. Priam. We've got to know which book this was.'
âYou think Roger's a fool, don't you?'
âWhy don't you go to bed?'
âDon't ever make that mistake. Crowe!' Her voice softened. âWhere've you been, darling? I was beginning to worry. Did you find your grandfather?'
Young Macgowan filled the doorway; he was grinning. âYou'll never guess where.' He yanked, and old Collier appeared. There was a smudge of chemical stain along his nose and he was smiling happily. âDown in the cellar.'
âCellar?
'
âGramp's fixed himself up a dark room, Mother. Gone into photography.'
âI've been using your Contax all day, daughter. I hope you don't mind. I've got a great deal to learn,' said Collier, shaking his head. âMy pictures didn't come out very well. Hello there! Crowe tells me there's been more trouble.'
âHave you been in the cellar all this time, Mr. Collier?' asked Lieutenant Keats.
âSince after supper.'
âDidn't you hear anything? Somebody jimmied that window.'
âThat's what my grandson told me. No, I didn't hear anything, and if I had I'd probably have locked the cellar door and waited till it was all over! Daughter, you look all in. Don't let this get you down.'
âI'll survive, Father.'
âYou come on up to bed. Good night, gentlemen.' The old man went away.
âCrowe.' Delia's face set. âMr. Queen and Lieutenant Keats are going to be working in the library for a while. I think perhaps you'd better stay ⦠too.'
âSure, sure,' said Mac. He stooped and kissed her. She went out without a glance at either of the older men. Macgowan shut the door after her. âWhat's the matter?' he asked Ellery in a plaintive tone. âDon't you two get along any more? What's happened?'
âIf you must keep an eye on us, Mac,' snapped Ellery, âdo it from that chair in the corner, where you'll be out of the way. Keats, let's get going.'
The âPriam Collection' was a bibliographic monstrosity, but Ellery was in a scientific, not an aesthetic, mood and his methodology had nothing to do with art or even morals; he simply had the Hollywood detective read off the titles on Priam's shelves and he checked them against the gold-crusted catalogue.
It took them the better part of two hours, during which Crowe Macgowan fell asleep in the leather chair.
When at last Keats stopped, Ellery said: âHold it,' and he began to thumb back along the pages of the catalogue.
âWell?' said Keats.
âYou failed to read just one title.' Ellery set the catalogue down and picked up the charred corpse of the book. âThis used to be an octavo volume bound in laminated oak, with hand-blocked silk endpapers, of
The Birds
, by Aristophanes.'
âThe what, by whom?'
âThe Birds
. A play by Aristophanes, the great satirical dramatist of the fifth century before Christ.'
âI don't see the joke.'
Ellery was silent.
âYou mean to tell me,' demanded the detective, âthat the burning of this book by a playwright dead a couple of dozen centuries is another of these warnings?'
âIt must be.'
âHow can it be?'
âMutilated and burned, Keats. At least two of the four previous warnings also involved violence in some form: the food poisoning, the murder of the frogs â¦' Ellery sat up.
âWhat's the matter?'
âFrogs. Another play by Aristophanes has that exact title.
The Frogs
.'
Keats looked pained.
âBut that's almost certainly a coincidence. The other items wouldn't begin to fit â¦
The Birds
. An unknown what's-it, food poisoning, dead toads and frogs, an expensive wallet, and now a plushy edition of a Greek social satire first performed â unless I've forgotten my Classics II â in 414
BC
.'
âAnd I'm out of cigarettes,' grunted Keats. Ellery tossed a pack over. âThanks. You say there's a connection?'
âAnd for each pace forward a warning ⦠a warning of special meaning for you â and for him,' Ellery quoted. âThat's what the note said. “Meanings for pondering and puzzling.”'
âHow right he was. I still say, Queen, if this stuff means anything at all, each one stands on its own tootsies.'
â“For each pace forward,” Keats. It's
going
somewhere. No, they're tied. The whole thing's a progression.' Ellery shook his head. âI'm not even sure any more that Priam knows what they mean. This one tonight really balls things up. Priam is virtually an illiterate. How could he possibly know what's meant by the destruction of an old Greek play?'