They took me up in the elevator, two flights, to a room they called the sewing room. The name must have been a carry-over from bygone days, as there was no sign of sewing equipment or supplies in sight. Mrs. O’Shea was going to seat us around a table, but I wanted it more informal and got it staged with her and me in easy chairs facing a couch on which the other two were comfortable against cushions.
They were good listeners all right. I took my time about getting to the point, since there was no question about having my audience. I told of Lewent’s coming to Wolfe’s office. I touched upon his childhood and young manhood, with no mother, not making it actually maudlin. I admitted he had been irresponsible. I told of his having been left out of his father’s will. Miss Riff’s gray-green eyes, and Miss Marcy’s dark eyes, and Mrs. O’Shea’s deep blue ones, all concentrated on me, were pleasantly stimulating and made me rather eloquent but not fancy. I told of the promise Lewent’s sister had made him a year before her death — which was, of course, pure invention — of his conviction that she had kept it, and his suspicion that a substantial sum in cash or securities had been entrusted by her to someone to be given to him. I added that he thought it possible that the trustee was one of the women there present, and would they mind answering a few questions?
Mrs. O’Shea stated that Lewent was a frightful little shrimp. Miss Marcy said it was utterly ridiculous. Miss Riff, with her nose turned up, asked, “Why a few questions? You can ask us one, did Mrs. Huck give any of us anything to give to her brother, and we say no, and that settles it.”
“It does for you,” I conceded. “But as Mr. Huck told you, I’m here to investigate, and that’s no way to do it. For instance, what if I were investigating something really tough, like a suspicion of murder? What if Lewent suspected that one of you poisoned his sister so you could marry Huck?”
“That’s more like it,” Miss Marcy said approvingly, with the coo still in her voice.
“Yeah. But then what? I ask if you did it, and you say no, and that settles it? Hardly. I ask plenty, about your relations with Mr. and Mrs. Huck and one another, and about your movements and what you saw and heard, not only the day she died, but a week, a month, a year. You can answer or refuse to answer. If you answer, I check you. If you refuse, I check you double.”
“Ask me something,” Miss Marcy offered.
“To be suspected of murder,” Miss Riff declared, “would at least be exciting. But a thing like this, and from Herman Lewent—” She shivered elegantly. “No, really.”
“Okay.” I was sociable. “But don’t think I’m not going to grill you, because that’s what I came for. First, though, I’d like to have your reaction to a little idea of my own. It seems to me that if Mrs. Huck wanted to leave something for her brother like that, the logical person for her to leave it with would have been her husband. Lewent is sure she didn’t, because he says Huck is an honest man and would have turned it over. Which may satisfy Lewent, but not me. Huck could be entirely too honest. He could figure that in leaving a gob of dough for her brother his wife was ignoring her father’s wishes, and that was wrong, and he wouldn’t go through with it. I think that’s quite possible, but you ladies know him better than I do. What kind of a man is he? Do you think he might do that?”
No reply. Nor was there any exchange of glances. I insisted, “What do you think, Mrs. O’Shea?”