Read The Origin of Evil Online
Authors: Ellery Queen
Keats read it slowly. Then he examined the notepaper, front and back.
âThat's Hill's handwriting, by the way. Obviously a copy he made. I found it in a slit in his mattress.'
âWhere's the original of this, Mr. Queen?'
âProbably destroyed.'
âEven if this were the McCoy' â Keats put the sheet down â âthere's nothing here that legally connects Hill's death with a murder plot. Of course, the revenge business â¦'
âI know, Lieutenant. It's the kind of case that gives you fellows a hard ache. Every indication of a psycho, and a possible victim who won't co-operate.'
âWho's that?'
âThe “him” of the note.' Ellery told Keats about Roger Priam's mysterious box, and of what Priam had let slip during Ellery's visit. âThere's something more than a gangrenous imagination behind this, Lieutenant. Even though no one's going to get anywhere with Priam, still ⦠it ought to be looked into, don't you agree?'
The detective pulled at his unlit cigarette.
âI'm not sure I want any part of it myself,' Ellery said, glancing at his typewriter and thinking of Delia Priam. âI'd like a little more to go on before I commit myself. It seemed to me that if we could find something in Hill's past, and Priam's, that takes this note out of the ordinary crack-pot class â¦'
âOn the q.t.?'
âYes. Could you swing it?'
For a moment Keats did not reply. He picked up the note and read it over again.
âI'd like to have this.'
âOf course. But I want it back.'
âI'll have it photostatted. Tell you what I'll do, Mr. Queen.' Lieutenant Keats rose. âI'll talk to the Chief, and if he thinks it's worth my time, I'll see what I can dig up.'
âOh, Keats.'
âYes, sir?'
âWhile you're digging ⦠do a little spade work on a man who calls himself Alfred Wallace. Roger Priam's secretary-general.'
Delia Priam phoned that afternoon. âI'm surprised you're in.'
âWhere did you think I'd be, Mrs. Priam?' The moment he heard her throaty purr his blood began stewing. Damn her, she was like the first cocktail after a hard day â¦
âOut detecting, or whatever it is detectives do.'
âI haven't taken the case.' He was careful to keep his voice good-humoured. âI haven't made up my mind.'
âYou're angry with me about yesterday.'
âAngry? Mrs. Priam!'
âSorry. I thought you were.' Oh, were you? âI'm afraid I'm allergic to messes. I usually take the line of least resistance.'
âIn everything?'
âGive me an example.' Her laugh was soft.
He wanted to say,
I'd be glad to specify if you'd drop in on me, say, this afternoon
. Instead, he said innocuously, âWho's questioning whom?'
âYou're such a careful man, Mr. Queen.'
âWell, I haven't taken the case â yet, Mrs. Priam.'
âDo you suppose I could help you make up your mind?'
There's the nibble. Reel 'er in â¦
âYou know, Mrs. Priam, that might be a perilous offer ⦠Mrs. Priam?⦠Hello!'
She said in a low voice, quickly, âI must stop,' and the line went dead.
Ellery hung up perspiring. He was so annoyed with himself that he went upstairs and took a shower.
Laurel Hill dropped in on him twice in the next twenty-four hours. The first time she was âjust passing by' and thought she would report that nothing was happening, nothing at all. Priam wouldn't see her, and as far as she could tell he was being his old bullying, beastly self. Delia had tried to pump her about Ellery and what he was doing, and as a matter of fact she couldn't help wondering herself if â¦
Ellery's glance kept going to his typewriter, and after a few moments Laurel left abruptly.
She was back the next morning, recklessly hostile.
âAre you taking this case, or aren't you?'
âI don't know, Laurel.'
âI've talked to my lawyers. The estate isn't settled, but I can get the money together to give you a retainer of five thousand dollars.'
âIt isn't the money, Laurel.'
âIf you don't want to bother, say so and I'll get someone else.'
âThat's always the alternative, of course.'
âBut you're just sitting here!'
âI'm making a few preliminary inquiries,' he said patiently.
âFrom this â this ivory tower?'
âStucco. What I'll do, Laurel, depends entirely on what I find out.'
âYou've sold out to Delia, that's what you've done,' Laurel cried. âShe doesn't really want this investigated at all. She only followed me the other day to see what I was up to â the rest was malarkey! She
wants
Roger murdered! And that's all right with me, you understand â all I'm interested in is the case of Leander Hill. But if Delia's standing in the way â'
âYou're being nineteen, Laurel.' He tried not to let his anger show.
âI'll admit I can't offer you what
she
can â'
âDelia Priam hasn't offered me a thing, Laurel. We haven't even discussed my fee.'
âAnd I
don't
mean money!' She was close to tears.
âNow you're hysterical.' His voice came out sharp, not what he had intended at all. âHave a little patience, Laurel. Right now there's nothing to do but wait.'
She strode out.
The next morning Ellery spread his newspaper behind a late breakfast tray to find Roger Priam, Leander Hill, and Crowe Macgowan glaring back at him. Mac was glaring from a tree.
$$$AIRE DENIES MURDER THREAT; SAYS PARTNER NOT SLAIN
Denying that he has received a threat against his life, Roger Priam, wealthy wholesale gem merchant of L.A., barred himself behind the doors of his secluded home above Hollywood Bowl this morning when reporters investigated a tip that he is the intended victim of a murder plot which allegedly took the life of his business partner, Leander Hill, last week â¦
Mr. Priam, it appeared, after ousting reporters had issued a brief statement through his secretary, Alfred Wallace, repeating his denial and adding that the cause of Hill's death was âa matter of official record.'
Detectives at the Hollywood Division of the L.A.P.D. admitted this morning that Hill's daughter, Laurel, had charged her father was âfrightened to death,' but said that they had found no evidence to support the charge, which they termed âfantastic.'
Miss Hill, interviewed at her home adjoining the Priam property, said: âIf Roger Priam wants to bury his head in the sand, it's his head.' She intimated that she âhad reason to believe' both her father and Priam were slated to be murdered âby some enemy out of their past.'
The story concluded with the reminder that âMr. Priam is the stepfather of twenty-three-year-old Crowe Macgowan, the Atomic Age Tree Boy, who broke into print in a big way recently by taking off his clothes and bedding down in a tree house on his stepfather's estate in preparation for the end of the world.'
Observing to himself that Los Angeles journalism was continuing to maintain its usual standards, Ellery went to the phone and called the Hill home.
âLaurel? I didn't expect you'd be answering the phone in person this morning.'
âI've got nothing to hide.' Laurel laid the slightest stress on her pronoun. Also, she was cold, very cold.
âOne question. Did you tip off the papers about Priam?'
âNo.'
âCross your heart and â?'
âI said no!' There was a definite
snick
â!
It was puzzling, and Ellery puzzled over it all through breakfast, which Mrs. Williams with obvious disapproval persisted in calling lunch. He was just putting down his second cup of coffee when Keats walked in with a paper in his pocket.
âI was hoping you'd drop around,' said Ellery, as Mrs. Williams set another place. âThanks, Mrs. W., I'll do the rest ⦠Not knowing exactly what is leaking where, Keats, I decided not to risk a phone call. So far I've been kept out of it.'
âThen you didn't feed the kitty?' asked Keats. âThanks. No cream or sugar.'
âOf course not. I was wondering if it was you.'
âNot me. Must have been the Hill girl.'
âNot she. I've asked her.'
âFunny.'
âVery. How was the tip tipped?'
âBy phone call to the city room. Disguised voice, and they couldn't trace it.'
âMale or female?'
âThey said male, but they admitted it was pitched in a queer way and might have been female. With all the actors floating around this town you never know.' Keats automatically struck a match, but then he shook his head and put it out. âYou know, Mr. Queen,' he said, scowling at his cigarette, âif there's anything to this thing, that tip might have come ⦠I know it sounds screwy â¦'
âFrom the writer of the note? I've been dandling that notion myself, Lieutenant.'
âPressure, say.'
âIn the war on Priam's nerves.'
âIf he's got an iron nerve himself.' Keats rose. âWell, this isn't getting us anywhere.'
âAnything yet on Hill and Priam?'
âNot yet.' Keats slowly crumpled his cigarette. âIt might be a toughie, Mr. Queen. So far I haven't got to first base.'
âWhat's holding you up?'
âI don't know yet. Give me another few days.'
âWhat about Wallace?'
âI'll let you know.'
Late that afternoon â it was the twenty-first, the day after the Shriners parade â Ellery looked around from his typewriter to see the creamy nose of Delia Priam's convertible in profile against his front window.
He deliberately forced himself to wait until Mrs. Williams answered the door.
As he ran his hand over his hair, Mrs. Williams said: âIt's a naked man. You in?'
Macgowan was alone. He was in his Tree Boy costume â one loincloth, flame-coloured this time. He shook Ellery's hand limply and accepted a Scotch on the Rocks, settling himself on the sofa with his bare heels on the sill of the picture window.
âI thought I recognized the car,' said Ellery.
âIt's my mother's. Mine was out of gas. Am I inconvenient?' The giant glanced at the typewriter. âHow do you knock that stuff out? But I had to see you.' He seemed uneasy.
âWhat about, Mac?'
âWell ⦠I thought maybe the reason you hadn't made up your mind to take the case was that there wasn't enough money in it for you.'
âDid you?'
âLook. Maybe I could put enough more in the pot to make it worth your while.'
âYou mean
you
want to hire me, too, Mac?'
âThat's it.' He seemed relieved that it was out. âI got to thinking ⦠that note, and then whatever it was Roger got in that box the morning old man Hill got the dead dog ⦠I mean, maybe there's something in it, after all, Mr. Queen.'
âSuppose there is.' Ellery studied him with curiosity. âWhy are you interested enough to want to put money into an investigation?'
âRoger's my mother's husband, isn't he?'
âTouching, Mac. When did you two fall in love?'
Young Macgowan's brown skin turned mahogany. âI mean ⦠It's true Roger and I never got along. He's always tried to dominate me as well as everybody else. But he means well, and â'
âAnd that's why,' smiled Ellery, âyou call yourself Crowe Macgowan instead of Crowe Priam.'
Crowe laughed. âOkay, I detest his lazy colon. We've always fought like a couple of wild dogs. When Delia married him he wouldn't adopt me legally; the idea was to keep me dependent on him. I was a kid, and it made me hate him. So I kept my father's name and I refused to take any money from Roger. I wasn't altogether a hero â I had a small income from a trust fund my father left for me. You can imagine how that set with Mr. Priam.' He laughed again. But then he finished lamely, âThe last few years I've grown up, I guess. I tolerate him for Mother's sake. That's it,' he added, brightening, âMother's sake. That's why I'd like to get to the bottom of this. You see, Mr. Queen?'
âYour mother loves Priam?'
âShe's married to him, isn't she?'
âCome off it, Mac. I intimated to you myself the other day, in your tree, that your mother had already offered to engage my services. Not to mention Laurel. What's this all about?'
Macgowan got up angrily. âWhat difference does my reason make? It's an honest offer. All I want is this damned business cleaned up. Name your fee and get going on it!'
âAs they say in the textbooks, Mac,' said Ellery, âI'll leave you now. It's the best I can do.'
âWhat are you waiting for!'
âWarning number two. If this business is on the level, Mac, there will be a warning number two, and I can't do a thing till it comes. With Priam being pig-headed, you and your mother can be most useful by simply keeping your eyes open. I'll decide then.'
âWhat do we watch for,' sneered the young man, âanother mysterious box?'
âI've no idea. But whatever it turns out to be â and it may not be a thing, Mac, but an event â whatever happens out of the ordinary, no matter how silly or trivial it may seem to you â let me know about it right away. You,' and Ellery added, as if in afterthought, âor your mother.'
The phone was ringing. He opened his eyes, conscious that it had been ringing for some time.
He switched on the light, blinking at his wrist-watch.
4.35. He hadn't got to bed until 1.30.
âHello?' he mumbled.
âMr. Queen â'
Delia Priam
.
âYes?' He had never felt so wakeful.
âMy son Crowe said to call you if â' She sounded far away, a little frightened.