"I just met that lawyer, and he's sharper than a stiletto."
"Yeah? Oh, well, it didn't matter because as soon as I asked him about yesterday morning, he loosened up. Didn't seem to bother him a bit to answer all my questions."
"He was probably too relieved to realize that you weren't interested in his whereabouts last night," Sigrid said and then told him about the Vanderlyn College crowbar, the stolen notebooks and the restraining order Stephen Laszlo had served on Doris Quinn.
"So Quinn did rook him out of his inheritance," Tillie exclaimed. "That's why Szabo was acting like the cat that swallowed a bowl of canaries. When his landlady asked him if today was a holiday, he told her that every day was from now on. That he was going to be rich. He wouldn't say how, but he answered everything else I asked him. He swears no one was in the outer office when he carried in the tray and set it on the bookcase. Unless he's a better actor than I'd give him credit for, I don't think it even crossed his mind that we'd accuse him of putting poison in
Quinn's cup. He says he was never in the printing studio and didn't know it had a storage closet.
"I stopped in at Buildings and Grounds over at the college. There aren't any master keys for those special locks, and the girl on the desk says that someone like Mike Szabo-maintenance personnel-just wouldn't have access to the duplicates."
"So we're left with two down and six to go?" asked Sigrid. "Or is it seven?" She sensed a suppressed satisfaction behind the detective's cherubic face and was willing to let him work his way around to its source in his own methodical way.
"Just six. I met David Wade in the cafeteria and casually asked him if he'd been up in the Art Department yesterday during all the excitement."
"And?"
"At the library all morning. I checked. He was in the reserve stacks. No mistake. There's only one entrance into that area, and it's gimmicked with some sort of magnetic alarm that goes off if anyone tries to sneak a book out. There's a desk where you have to sign in and out, and the librarian showed me the time sheets:i n at 9:40, out at 12:15."
"What about the dean of faculties?"
Now they'd come to it.
"Your hunch was right," Tillie beamed. "Nauman's meeting with the dean wasn't about anything crucial, and his secretary says she made that clear when she called at such short notice yesterday morning. She seemed surprised to hear that Nauman had a previously scheduled appointment for that same time and wondered why the Keppler girl didn't suggest another date for Nauman to see the dean."
He looked at Sigrid expectantly, but she wasn't quite prepared to share his surmises. Her curiosity about the odd lapse in the competent young secretary's efficiency had been a shot in the dark, and after all, what did it prove? She tipped her chair back until it rested on its two rear legs and wedged her knee onto the edge of her desk.
"What did Keppler accomplish by double-scheduling Nauman?" she mused aloud.
"It wouldn't have kept him from being there when Quinn drank his coffee," said Tillie. "Classes were over at ten-fifty; his appointment with the dean was at eleven-fifteen. Anyhow, he still could have seen Harris at eleven if he'd wanted to. The dean's office is just three floors down."
Sigrid thought about that and agreed. "Fifteen minutes should have been long enough to make it clear he wasn't going to reverse the committee's decision. The only thing canceling Harley Harris accomplished was to make him angry all over again."
Tillie resorted to his notes again, leafing through them as if they held the answer concealed in his neat script. At times like this he was humbly aware of his lack of imagination. The book made no mention of intuition, but he knew two and two didn't always make four even when it looked as though they should.
"I guess I'm being rather stupid about this case," Sigrid said, letting her chair hit the floor on all four legs. "After all, life's not a convoluted double-crostic. Why shouldn't the simplest explanation be the right one?"
"She had plenty of opportunity," Tillie encouraged. He cited chapter and verse, but Sigrid waved it aside impatiently.
"We could build an airtight case against
Sandy Keppler if all we needed was opportunity. Give me a motive, Tillie! Why would she do it? There's no logical reason. Nauman says that as soon as she and Wade are married, they'll probably leave New York. No, we need someone with a more solid motive. Someone like Jake Saxer. He and Quinn had a loud fight the night before last. Sounds very much as if Quinn were kicking him off their book project," She repeated Doris Quinn's account, and Tillie perked up.
"What if he had the door cracked when Szabo brought in the tray? Then when Keppler took the hot chocolate into Vance-" He brought out his sketch of the Art Department floor plan and pointed to the partition separating Vance's office from Nauman's. "I don't know how thick that wall is, but he might have been able to hear them talking. From the inner office to the bookcase and back is only thirty seconds, and that includes doctoring the coffee and putting the lid back on and wiping it. I timed it. Forty-five seconds for the others."
He was looking at his watch as he spoke, watching the sweep of the second hand.
Suddenly he focused on the time itself and bounded to his feet. "I promised Chuck I'd leave on time today," he exclaimed, his round face guilt-stricken. "He's trying out for shortstop in Little League, and I'm supposed to help him with his fielding."
Sigrid inclined her head and paraphrased an old Henry Morgan weather report, "April showers followed by small boys with baseball bats?"
"You'd better believe it! And out-of-shape dads with sore pitching arms," Tillie grinned as he rushed from the room.
A short while later Sigrid stood in the parking lot feeling suddenly edgy and restless. She unlocked her car, drove to the exit and paused indecisively. The sun was still high; it was too early for dinner, and besides, that odd sensation wasn't hunger even though she couldn't put a true name to it? Spring fever? Absurd! She gave herself a mental shake and drove over to her favorite health spa. Twenty laps of the pool left her pleasantly tired and in a better mood. On the way home she stopped in at a grocery close to her apartment and bought a frozen chicken potpie for dinner later.
When she got home, she changed into jeans and an old shirt and went down the hall to a cubbyhole formally referred to as 'bedroom #2' on the rental agent's diagram, but which in Sigrid's case had devolved into a storage closet/workroom. The rest of the apartment was almost Spartan in its bare neatness; this room held the small amount of messiness Sigrid allowed in her life. Its latest addition both fascinated and appalled her.
Once a week large open trucks from the Sanitation Department make the rounds through Manhattan. On the night before, citizens wanting to rid themselves of old mattresses, dilapidated sofas, defunct refrigerators or any such furnishings too large for the regular garbage trucks, may stack these items on the sidewalk for early-morning pick-up. Other citizens spend that same evening picking through the leavings. One person's trash truly becomes another's treasure, and scavenging is considered a respectable pastime.
Sigrid had never indulged in the sport. Her furniture came from a proper store and was all modern, with neutral-colored no-nonsense fabrics and clean, functional lines.
When her cousins cooed over Grandmother Lattimore's Chippendale piecrust tables or her Queen Anne highboy, delicately asserting nebulous claims in case Grandmother wished to dispose of anything, Sigrid had always yawned and gone off with a book. Yet two weeks ago, walking home from the Laundromat, she had paused by a motley collection of castoffs near the curb.