“What’s your name?”
“Schaeffer, sir.”
“When did you take it in?”
“When Mrs. Pomfret told me to. She rang—”
“Were these people already there?”
“Yes, sir.” The man darted a glance around. “That is, most of them were.”
“And you wheeled the bar in with the bottles and glasses already on it?”
“Yes, sir, and the ice, the bitters—”
“Including the bourbon?”
“Yes, sir. There is always Blue Grass bourbon, because that is the only kind Mr. Dunham will drink. I beg your pardon.”
“What for?”
“I mean, the only kind Mr. Dunham did drink.”
“Oh. How much was in the bourbon bottle? Do you know?”
“Yes, sir.” Schaeffer allowed himself to look pleased. “I have been considering that point. I have expected to be asked that. The Blue Grass bourbon bottle was slightly less than half full.”
“How do you know? Did you drink some?”
“No, sir. On serving the bar, if any bottle is less than half full, a full one is added. But I remember deciding that the bourbon would do, since no one drank it but Mr. Dunham.”
“How did you know no one else would drink it?”
“It was known, sir. To the household. To everyone. That Mr. Dunham drank nothing else. Most people take Scotch or rye or Irish. You would call it a deduction, sir.”
“I would like hell.” The inspector flushed. One of his weaknesses was that he never got along with trained menservants. He turned back to Diego Zorilla. “Did you drink any of that bourbon?”
Diego shook his head. “As I said, I drank Scotch.”
“Any of you?” Damon looked around. “Did any of you drink bourbon? You, Mr. Koch?”
“No.” Adolph Koch was seated across the room by the big screen, near Garda Tusar. Apparently there was an obstruction in his throat, and he cleared it out. “I had gin and bitters.”
“Did you go to the bar and get it yourself?”
“Yes.”
“You, Miss Tusar? What did you drink?”
“Vermouth cassis,” Garda said promptly and clearly. “I went to the bar with Mr. Koch and he poured it for me.”
“Miss Mowbray?”
“I had a glass of sherry.” Dora’s voice squeaked and she too had to clear her throat. “I poured one for myself and one for Mrs. Pomfret and took it to her.”
“Mr. Beck?”
“I do not drink!” Beck declared explosively. He was seated in a chair backed up against the table, rubbing his knees with his palms. “I went to that — bar if you call it that — and poured a glass of water and put lemon juice in it and drank it!”
“Mr. Gill. What was in your highball?”
“Rye,” Ted said succinctly.
“And Miss Heath, Mr. Zorilla says he took you Scotch and soda. You drank no bourbon?”
Hebe didn’t get to answer. Felix Beck’s voice, with a ring of accusation in it, forestalled her:
“Certainly she didn’t! She knew better! She picked the bottle up and threw it out of the window!”
Chapter 8
Hebe Heath clutched her breasts and tilted her chin to stare blue-eyed defiance up at the inspector. Adolph Koch half rose from his chair, muttering something, and sank back again. Ted Gill stepped across, put his hand on the back of Hebe’s chair, stood there as a protector, and sighed heavily. Damon’s gaze slanted down to the brave glory of Hebe’s matchless eyes, and then he took a step toward her and inquired:
“Well?”
“Well,” she whispered.
“Did you throw that bottle out of the window?”
She nodded.
“You did?”
She nodded.
“Why?”
Her hands abandoned their clutch on her breasts and flew straight for the inspector in appeal, to the length of her outstretched arms. “Oh,” she cried softly, “it was an ungovernment impulse!”
Tecumseh Fox stirred in his seat and looked away from her. The others stared at her in soundless fascination, then transferred to Henry Pomfret when a noise came from him — a spasmodic tremoloso titter. He looked around abashed, and said pugnaciously to no one, “I’m sorry,” and caught his lip with his teeth. Ted Gill spoke at Damon in a patient and determined voice:
“She means ungovernable. Miss Heath is sensitive and high-strung. She is emotionally unstable. She is impetuous, mercurial, galvanic. She is an artist—”
“I’m not asking her for a character analysis,” said Damon. “Or you either, Mr. Gill. I’m asking her why she threw that bottle out of the window.”
“And I’m telling you. You are dealing with an extraordinary person. She becomes seized with an irresistible desire to do something, and she does it. It’s a kind of trance. Then it goes out of her mind. She does not now actually remember picking up that bottle and throwing it—”
Damon snorted. “She just admitted it!”
“She admitted it because three of us saw her do it and have — mentioned it to her. Miss Mowbray, Mr. Beck, and myself. At the moment she did it, Mrs. Pomfret was kneeling beside her son, Koch and Miss Tusar were bending over her, and Zorilla had gone after Fox. I was standing with Miss Mowbray and I said the bottle he drank out of ought to be corked but I didn’t know which one, and she said he always drank bourbon. I reached for it, but Miss Heath grabbed it and made one of her — made a gesture, a dramatic gesture, and hurled it out of the window. When Fox came I told him, and I also told the first policeman who appeared. But I knew by the look on her face, a kind of, uh, exaltation, that she didn’t know what she was doing—”
“Bah!” Felix Beck was out of his chair, trembling with indignation. “Her an artist! Not know what she was doing? Hah! She’s a Circe! An evil witch! First Jan, I warned him about her, and now this—”
“Oh, can it!” Ted snapped at him. “It’s bad enough without a lot of yapping—”
“Both of you can it,” Damon commanded sharply. He confronted Hebe. “I’ll talk with you later, Miss Heath, but I’ll ask you now, is Mr. Gill correct? Do you do things and forget about them?”
“Oh,” she breathed.
“Well, do you?”
“I don’t know.” Her lovely hands were clasped tight and pulled against her shape. “Oh, I don’t know!”
“Do you become seized with an irresistible desire to do something, and do it? Did you become seized with such a desire to put something into that bottle of bourbon?”
“To put...” She goggled at him. Her hands unclasped, and tension left the muscles of her face. “Put something in the bottle?” she demanded incredulously, in an entirely new tone. “Don’t be a damn fool!”
Damon grunted, and regarded her in silence. He raised a hand to scratch the back of his neck, and still gazed at her.
“May I suggest—” Tecumseh Fox began.
“No,” Damon said shortly. His eyes swept an arc around the faces, around to the left, slowly, and back to the right. “It is my duty to inform you,” he said in a tone of displeasure, “that there is a presumption that Perry Dunham was murdered. I’ll have to talk with each of you separately before you’re allowed to leave here, and that will take a long time. May I have a room to use, Mr. Pomfret?”
“Certainly. My wife...” Pomfret hesitated. “But of course. Or we’ll go somewhere else and you can use this.”
“That will do fine. You and your wife will go where you please. In your house. But the rest of you will stay together in one room, with law officers present. I have the right to enforce that under the circumstances, but I would appreciate it if you will co-operate. I ask you to consider the possibility that the murderer of Perry Dunham is among you. If you don’t like that idea, neither do I. Now one thing. If there was poison in that bourbon, it could have been put there at any time since somebody last drank from it. It wasn’t necessarily put there in that room this afternoon. But it might have been. If it was, the container that held the poison is probably somewhere around, unless it was thrown out of the window the way the bottle was. That room is being searched, and the whole house will be. Each of you will be questioned about your movements. But there is a chance that the container is concealed on the person of someone. I think it would be a good plan if you would all allow yourselves to be searched. I think you should agree to that. For the ladies, I can have a policewoman here in five minutes.”