"I see. Did he have any enemies?"
"Not really. Except for some gypsies who ran a tearoom on the outskirts of town. He insulted them once by putting on a pair of earmuffs and hopping up and down in place on their sabbath."
Inspector Ford noticed a half-finished glass of milk on the desk. It was still warm. "Mrs. Walker, is your son away at college?"
"I'm afraid not. He was expelled last week for immoral conduct. It came as quite a surprise. They caught him trying to immerse a dwarf in tartar sauce. That's one thing they won't tolerate at an Ivy League school."
"And one thing I won't tolerate is murder. Your son is under arrest."
Why Did Inspector Ford Suspect Walker's Son Had Killed Him?
Mr. Walker's body was found with cash in his pockets. A man who was going to commit suicide would be sure to take a credit card and sign for everything.
The glass case was shattered and the Bellini Sapphire was missing. The only clues left behind at the museum were a blond hair and a dozen fingerprints, all pinkies. The guard explained that he had been standing there when a black-clad figure crept up behind him and struck him over the head with some notes for a speech. Just before losing consciousness, he thought he had heard a man's voice say, "Jerry, call your mother," but he could not be sure. Apparently, the thief had entered through the skylight and walked down the wall with suction shoes, like a human fly. The museum guards always kept an enormous fly swatter for just such occasions, but this time they had been fooled.
"Why would anyone want the Bellini Sapphire?" the museum curator asked. "Don't they know it's cursed?"
"What's this about a curse?" Inspector Ford was quick to ask.
"The sapphire was originally owned by a sultan who died under mysterious circumstances when a hand reached out of a bowl of soup he was eating and strangled him. The next owner was an English lord who was found one day by his wife growing upside down in a window box. Nothing was heard of the stone for a while; then it turned up years later in the possession of a Texas millionaire, who was brushing his teeth when he suddenly caught fire. We purchased the sapphire only last month, but the curse seemed to be working still, because shortly after we obtained it, the entire board of trustees at the museum formed a conga line and danced off a cliff."
"Well," Inspector Ford said, "it may be an unlucky jewel, but it's valuable, and if you want it back, go to Han-dleman's Delicatessen and arrest Leonard Handleman. You'll find that the sapphire is in his pocket."
How Did Inspector Ford Know Who the Jewel Thief Was?
The previous day, Leonard Handleman had remarked, "Boy, if I had a large sapphire, I could get out of the delicatessen business."
"l
just shot my husband," wept Cynthia Freem as she stood over the body of the burly man in the snow.
"How did it happen?" asked Inspector Ford, getting right to the point.
"We were hunting. Quincy loved to hunt, as did I. We got separated momentarily. The bushes were overgrown. I guess I thought he was a woodchuck. I blasted away. It was too late. As I was removing his pelt, I realized we were married."
"Hmm," mused Inspector Ford, glancing at the footprints in the snow. "You must be a very good shot. You managed to plug him right between the eyebrows."
"Oh, no, it was lucky. I'm really quite an amateur at that sort of thing."
"I see." Inspector Ford examined the dead man's possessions. In his pocket there Was some string, also an apple from 1904 and instructions on what to do if you wake up next to an Armenian.
"Mrs. Freem, was this your husband's first hunting accident?"
"His first fatal one, yes. Although once in the Canadian Rockies, an eagle carried off his birth certificate."
"Did your husband wear a toupee?"
"Not really. He would usually carry it with him and produce it if challenged in an argument. Why?"
"He sounds eccentric."
"He was."
"Is that why you killed him?"
How Did Inspector Ford Know It Was No Accident?
An experienced hunter like Quincy Freem would never have stalked deer in his underwear. Actually, Mrs. Freem had bludgeoned him to death at home while he was playing the spoons and had tried to make it look like a hunting accident by dragging his body to the woods and leaving a copy of
Field & Stream
nearby. In her haste, she had forgotten to dress him. Why he had been playing the spoons in his underwear remains a mystery.
Half-starved, Kermit Kroll staggered into the living room of his parents' home, where they waited anxiously with Inspector Ford.
'Thanks for paying the ransom, folks," Kermit said. "I never thought I'd get out of there alive."
"Tell me about it," the inspector said.
"I was on my way downtown to have my hat blocked when a sedan pulled up and two men asked me if I wanted to see a horse that could recite the Gettysburg Address. I said sure and got in. Next thing, I'm chloroformed and wake up somewhere tied to a chair and blindfolded."
Inspector Ford examined the ransom note. "Dear Mom and Dad, Leave $50,000 in a bag under the bridge on Decatur Street. If there is no bridge on Decatur Street, please build one. I am being treated well, given shelter and good food, although last night the clams casino were overcooked. Send the money quickly, because if they don't hear from you within several days, the man who now
makes up my bed will strangle me. Yours, Kermit. P.S. This is no joke. I am enclosing a joke so you will be able to tell the difference."
"Do you have any idea at all as to where you were being held?"
"No, I just kept hearing an odd noise outside the window."
"Odd?"
"Yes. You know the sound a herring makes when you lie to it?"
"Hmm," reflected Inspector Ford. "And how did you finally escape?"
"I told them I wanted to go to the football game but I only had a single ticket. They said okay, as long as I kept the blindfold on and promised to return by midnight. I complied, but during the third quarter, the Bears had a big lead, so I left and made my way back here."
"Very interesting," Inspector Ford said. "Now I know this kidnapping was a put-up job. I believe you're in on it and are splitting the money."
How Did Inspector Ford Know?
Although Kermit Kroll did still live with his parents, they were eighty and he was sixty. Actual kidnappers would never abduct a sixty-year-old child, as it makes no sense.
Viscous
and Sons
had announced publication of
The Annotated Poems of Sean O'Shawn,
the great Irish poet, considered by many to be the most incomprehensible and hence the finest poet of his time. Abounding in highly personal references, an understanding of O'Shawn's work requires an intimate knowledge of his life, which, according to scholars, not even he had.
Following is a sample from this fine book.
Beyond Ichor
Let us sail. Sail with Fogarty's chin to Alexandria, While the Beamish Brothers Hurry giggling to the tower, Proud of their gums. A thousand years passed since Agamemnon said, "Don't open The gates, who the hell needs A wooden horse that size?"
What is the connection? Only That Shaunnesy, with dying Breath, refused to order an Appetizer with his meal although He was entitled to it. And brave Bixby, despite his Resemblance to a woodpecker, Could not retrieve his underwear From Socrates without a ticket. Parnell had the answer, but no One would ask him the question. No one but old Lafferty, whose Lapis lazuli practical joke caused A whole generation to take Samba lessons.
True, Homer was blind and that Accounted for why he dated those Particular women. But Aegnus and the Druids bear Mute testimony to man's quest For free alterations. Blake dreamed of it too, and O'Higgins who had his suit Stolen while he was still in it. Civilization is shaped like a Circle and repeats itself, while O'Leary's head is shaped like A trapezoid.
Rejoice! Rejoice! And call your Mother once in a while.
Let us sail.
O'Shawn was fond of sailing, although he had never done it on the sea. As a boy he dreamed of becoming a ship's captain but gave it up when someone explained to him what sharks were. His older brother James, however, did go off and join the British Navy,
though he was dishonorably discharged for selling coleslaw to a bosun.
Fogarty's chin.
Undoubtedly a reference to George Fo-garty, who convinced O'Shawn to become a poet and assured him he would still be invited to parties. Fogarty published a magazine for new poets and although its circulation was limited to his mother, its impact was international.
Fogarty was a fun-loving, rubicund Irishman whose idea of a good time was to lie down in the public square and imitate a tweezers. Eventually he suffered a nervous breakdown and was arrested for eating a pair of pants on Good Friday.
Fogarty's chin was an object of great ridicule because it was tiny to the point of nonexistence, and at Jim Kelly's wake, he told O'Shawn, "I'd give anything for a larger chin. If I don't find one soon I'm liable to do something rash." Fogarty, incidentally, was a friend of Bernard Shaw's and was once permitted to touch Shaw's beard, provided he would go away.
Alexandria.
References to the Middle East appear throughout O'Shawn's work, and his poem that begins "To Bethlehem with suds . . ." deals caustically with the hotel business seen through the eyes of a mummy.
The Beamish Brothers.
Two half-wit brothers who tried to get from Belfast to Scotland by mailing each other.
Liam Beamish went to Jesuit school with O'Shawn but was thrown out for dressing like a beaver. Quincy Beamish was the more introverted of the two and kept a furniture pad on his head till he was forty-one.
The Beamish Brothers used to pick on O'Shawn and usually ate his lunch just before he did. Still, O'Shawn remembers them fondly and in his best sonnet, "My love is like a great, great yak," they appear symbolically as end tables.
The tower.
When O'Shawn moved out of his parent's
home, he lived in a tower just south of Dublin. It was a very low tower, standing about six feet, or two inches shorter than O'Shawn. He shared this residence with Harry O'Connel, a friend with literary pretension, whose verse play
The Musk Ox,
closed abruptly when the cast was chloroformed.
O'Connel was a great influence on O'Shawn's style and ultimately convinced him that every poem need not begin, "Roses are red, violets are blue."
Proud of their gums.
The Beamish Brothers had unusually fine gums. Liam Beamish could remove his false teeth and eat peanut brittle, which he did every day for sixteen years until someone told him there was no such profession.
Agamemnon.
O'Shawn was obsessed with the Trojan War. He could not believe an army could be so stupid as to accept a gift from its enemy during wartime. Particularly when they got close to the wooden horse and heard giggling inside. This episode seems to have traumatized the young O'Shawn and throughout his entire life he examined every gift given him very carefully, going so far as to shine a flashlight into a pair of shoes he received on his birthday and calling out, "Anybody in there? Eh? Come on out!"
Shaunnesy.
Michael Shaunnesy, an occult writer and mystic, who convinced O'Shawn there would be a life after death for those who saved string.
Shaunnesy also believed the moon influenced actions and that to take a haircut during a total eclipse caused sterility. O'Shawn was very much taken with Shaunnesy and devoted much of his life to occult studies, although he never achieved his final goal of being able to enter a room through the keyhole.
The moon figures heavily in O'Shawn's later poems, and he told James Joyce that one of his greatest pleasures was to immerse his arm in custard on a moonlit night.
The reference to Shaunnesy's refusing an appetizer
probably refers to the time the two men dined together in Innesfree and Shaunnesy blew chickpeas through a straw at a fat lady when she disagreed with his views on embalming.
Bixby.
Eamon Bixby. A political fanatic who preached ventriloquism as a cure for the world's ills. He was a great student of Socrates but differed from the Greek philosopher in his idea of the "good life," which Bixby felt was impossible unless everybody weighed the same.
Parnell had the answer.
The answer O'Shawn refers to is 'Tin," and the question is "What is the chief export of Bolivia?" That no one asked Parnell the question is understandable, although he was challenged once to name the largest fur-bearing quadruped extant and he said, "Chicken," for which he was severely criticized.
Lafferty.
John Millington Synge's podiatrist. A fascinating character who had a passionate affair with Molly Bloom until he realized she was a fictional character.
Lafferty was fond of practical jokes and once with some corn meal and egg, he breaded Synge's arch supports. Synge walked peculiarly as a result, and his followers imitated him, hoping that by duplicating his gait, they too would write fine plays. Hence the lines: "caused/A whole generation to take/Samba lessons."
Homer was blind.
Homer was a symbol for T. S. Eliot, whom O'Shawn considered a poet of "immense scope but very little breadth."
The two men met in London at rehearsals of
Murder in the Cathedral
(at that time entitled
Million Dollar Legs).
O'Shawn persuaded Eliot to abandon his sideburns and give up any notion he might have of becoming a Spanish dancer. Both writers then composed a manifesto stating the aims of the "new poetry," one of which was to write fewer poems that dealt with rabbits.
Aegnus and the Druids.
O'Shawn was influenced by Celtic mythology, and his poem that begins, "Clooth na
bare, na bare, na bare . . ." tells how the gods of ancient Ireland transformed two lovers into a set of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Free alterations.
Probably refers to O'Shawn's wish to "alter the human race," whom he felt were basically depraved, especially jockeys. O'Shawn was definitely a pessimist, and felt that no good could come to mankind until they agreed to lower their body temperature from 98.6, which he felt was unreasonable.