“Did you, Miss Grant?”
“No.”
The lawyer’s eyes swept that half of the room where the guests were scattered. “Did any of you see a gun in Jeffrey Thorpe’s possession after ten o’clock this morning?”
He had pushed the question through, raising his voice, in spite of an attempted interruption by Derwin, and, though the interruption forestalled vocal replies, apparently he was satisfied by the negative expression of the faces, for he turned to the district attorney and told him:
“Go ahead and ask him anything you want to.”
“Thanks,” said Derwin sarcastically. He glanced at the stenographer. “You have it that those questions were asked of Grant and his niece by Mr. Fuller?”
“Yes, sir.”
“With no attempt at interference by me.”
“Yes, sir.”
Derwin confronted Jeffrey. He looked sufficiently grim and determined, though not at all happy. “Mr. Thorpe,” he said gruffly, “you have a legal representative present. I think it would be proper for you to accept any advice he may give you. It is also proper for me to tell you that in my opinion, with the evidence now in my possession and the admissions you have yourself made, your indictment on a charge of first-degree murder would be procurable, but I am not at the moment making that charge. I don’t intend to be precipitate, but I do intend—”
“Don’t lecture him,” Fuller snapped. “And don’t threaten him. If you want to question him, do so.”
Derwin ignored it, kept his eyes at Jeffrey and finished his sentence. “I do intend to see that guilt is punished. Your statement is that you left the gun — the gun which was subsequently used for the commission of murder—”
“That was not his statement,” Fuller contradicted. “The identity of the weapon used.”
“Very well. Your statement is that you left the gun which you had borrowed from Tecumseh Fox — at his home from his employee — on the seat of your car when you returned from a ride about ten o’clock this morning?”
“That’s right,” said Jeffrey.
“And you haven’t seen it since?”
“That’s right.”
“Didn’t you see it lying on the library floor within a few feet of your father’s dead body?”
“No. I didn’t see the gun or anything else. I was looking at him.”
“You didn’t see the gun at all?”
“No.” Jeffrey was meeting the district attorney’s grim gaze with a scowl. “And since I knew that gun could be traced to me, if I had shot him and had left it there I would have been a bigger boob than I am.”
“If you did it, you had to leave it somewhere and there wasn’t much time. Then your contention is that the murderer got the gun from the seat of your car.”
“I’m not making any contention. I’m just telling where I left the gun.”
“Haven’t you returned to your car at all since ten o’clock this morning?”
“Yes. I went there this afternoon about four o’clock to see if the gun was still there and it wasn’t.”
“After Colonel Brissenden had finished his interview with you?”
“Yes.”
“You didn’t mention that gun to Colonel Brissenden, did you?”
“No.”
“You didn’t mention that you had borrowed it, or that it was in your possession this morning, or that you had left it on the seat of your car?”
“No.”
“Didn’t the possibility occur to you that it was that gun that had killed your father?”
“Yes.”
“And that it might therefore be an important clue. So you were willing to hamper the investigation of your father’s murder?”
“No. I wasn’t hampering it. I knew you had the gun that had killed him, because I heard Colonel Brissenden say it was there on the floor, though I hadn’t seen it. If it was the gun I had left in my car and the murderer had got it from there it wouldn’t have helped you any to know that, because any one who was around could have got it. As a matter of fact, I would probably have told you about it if it hadn’t been that sap Brissenden that was questioning me. And I would have told even him, if he had had the brains to show me the gun and ask me if I had ever seen it. I was expecting he would—”
“He couldn’t, at that time. It was away being tested. We had to establish that that gun had fired the bullet — What is it, Colonel?”
“We ought to get him out of here! Take him to the courthouse!”
Inspector Damon caught Derwin’s eye and, barely perceptibly, shook his head. The district attorney hesitated a moment and then returned to Jeffrey:
“If you object to the audience, Mr. Thorpe—”
“Not at all,” Jeffrey declared. “I’m not going to your damned courthouse as long as I have any alternative.”
“Very well. After you learned from your sister that we had identified the gun as the property of Tecumseh Fox, why didn’t you come forward and tell us about it?”
“I was making up my mind to. I knew then I’d have to. She only told me a little before dinner started.”
“Oh.” Derwin sounded sceptical. “That made you decide to tell, did it?”
“Yes.”
“But you weren’t in any hurry. You had to have dinner first. A vital piece of information for the inquiry into the murder of your father, but any time this week would do.”
“I said I was making up my mind.” Jeffrey’s color had heightened. “I deny it was a vital piece of information. I didn’t say ‘any time this week.’ You can leave the sneers for the colonel.”
“I wasn’t sneering, Mr. Thorpe, I was commenting, I think not improperly, on your attitude — or rather, your actions. It seems to me reasonable to say that if they were not actuated by a sense of guilt, they displayed a remarkable apathy towards the object of our investigation. If you resent my remark, I resent your failure to impart information in your possession. It costs us, at the least, much valuable time. I should think Fox would also resent it, since he narrowly escaped arrest as a material witness. And speaking of the motivation of your actions, what did you borrow the gun for? What were you going to do with it?”
Jeffrey nodded gloomily. “Uh-huh. That’s where you’ve got me.”
“Why have I got you?”
“Because the only explanation I can give for borrowing the gun will sound loony. It was loony. I’ll have to drag Miss Grant in again. Do you remember that photograph of her you showed me yesterday?”
“Yes.”
“And later you showed it to my father and he didn’t deny it had been given to him?”
“Yes.”
“All right. When you showed it to him and he didn’t deny it was his, I wished in my heart he had been killed instead of that fellow at the bungalow. I wanted him dead. I wanted—”
“Jeffrey!” Fuller’s voice was sharply warning. “You don’t need to—”
“Let me alone,” said Jeffrey impatiently. “I’m all right. I wanted to kill him myself and by God, if I found — I would have. But last evening at Fox’s place I learned that that was bunk. My father had never even seen Miss Grant. So when I left there I was feeling exuberant. Call it that or call it loony. Anyhow I had a reaction and I was feeling better toward my father than I ever had in my life, and I was ashamed because I had wanted to kill him, and the reaction to that was that I wanted to protect him—”
“Tchah!” Brissenden snorted.
Jeffrey ignored it. “I knew the man in the bungalow had been killed by someone who wanted to kill my father. I thought he wouldn’t stop with one attempt and he might make another one any minute, even that very night. I felt like protecting him. When I saw him — Pavey — there on the porch with a gun as we went out, on an impulse I asked to borrow it. By the time I got home, I was already feeling silly, because I was so seldom where my father was that my chances of protecting him were practically non-existent. When I dressed this morning, I put the gun in my pocket, because I expected to drive over to Fox’s place during the morning and return it, and then Miss Grant and her uncle suddenly arrived and put that out of my mind.”