THE ATTORNEY FOR THE DEFENSE leaped to his feet. "I object to that question, your honor, on the grounds that his answer might incriminate him."
"Objection sustained," ruled the court.
"King," continued the Prosecuting Attorney, "one of the defendants in this case has the same name as I; would you say that this defendant is older than the one who gave the red necktie to Judge Racket?
"He is younger, sir; he is ten years younger than you."
"That is all." He turned to a white-haired man sitting at a table beside the Attorney for the Defense. "Mr. James, please take the witness chair."
A PORTLY MAN with a careworn face approached and was sworn. "What is your name?" asked the prosecutor.
"Thaddeus James," came the answer in a dull, weary voice.
"And what is your vocation, Mr. James?"
"I am a banker."
"How old are you?"
"If I were five years younger I should be just your age."
"You are a very rich man, are you not, Mr. James?"
"I was born in 1929," replied the witness with a tinge of bitterness in his voice; "but today I am worth but little more than my clerk over there, regardless of what others may think."
"You mean William James, one of the defendants in this case?"
"Yes."
"Now, Mr. James, you have known Mr. Cooper for how long?"
"There are two Coopers in the court room, sir; my attorney's name is Cooper. Do you refer to him?"
"No, to the other Cooper -- one of your co-defendants."
"I have known him for one-seventh of my life and one sixth of his."
"Is the man who bribed Judge Racket older or younger than this man?"
"He is as much younger than you as he is older than the defendant whose name is the same as yours."
"THAT IS ALL, Mr. James; you are excused. And now, gentlemen of the jury, you have heard all the evidence, and during the past three days of this trial it has shown conclusively that one of these four defendants is guilty of having given a red necktie to Judge Racket. These men have all tried to shield one another, but the State has circumvented them by reducing the identification of the guilty man to a matter of cold figures that cannot lie. Unintentionally and unknowingly on their part, they have been adroitly led into divulging the identity of the culprit by revealing his age. The man against whom you must bring in a verdict of guilty, if this great and glorious nation is to endure, has just been identified by Mr. James.
"Gentlemen of the jury, your duty is plain."
FIFTEEN MINUTES LATER, the jury brought in a verdict of guilty against one of the four defendants.
How old is the guilty man, and what is his name?
THE TERRACE DRIVE MURDER
I was idling with my violin on a grey November morning, the sort of blue, depressing morning that offers no incentive to creative work, and wishing that something would happen that would shift the responsibility for shirking from my conscience, when the telephone bell jangled insistently.
It was Muldoon. "Hello, old man!" he greeted me. "Feel like a murder this morning?"
"I feel like murdering the weather man."
"This murder has already been committed; so if the victim is the weather man, you're too late. I think it may have possibilities; the men on the job are up a stump, and they have sent for me. Come along, you like murders."
"Sure!" I accepted with alacrity. "Shall I come to your office or meet you somewhere else?"
"I'll pick you up; it's over in your neck of the woods."
Twenty minutes later Muldoon and I were pulling up in front of a pretentious home on Terrace Drive. "Why, this is Atwater's place!" I exclaimed. "Has Atwater been murdered?"
"No, it isn't Atwater; but come on in and we'll soon know all about it."
"You hope."
"Want to make a little bet?"
"I'm a gentleman; I never bet on the other fellow's sure things."
One of the men from the homicide squad let us in through the ornate entrance and led us back to a large sun parlor overlooking the gardens and the tennis court at the rear of the house.
In addition to the chief of the homicide squad and two of his men, there were five people in the room. A grey-haired man arose as we entered and came forward. "I am glad you are here, Inspector," he said, extending a hand to Muldoon; "I want to see this thing cleared up. It is terrible, terrible!" He broke down and sobbed.
"Calm yourself, Mr. Atwater," said Muldoon; "and if I can have the co-operation of all those present, I am sure we can get to the solution quickly.
"And now, Mr. Atwater, when did the murder occur:"
"Some time between eleven o'clock last night and seven this morning."
"How do you know?"
"We had been playing bridge after dinner -- my daughter, Bernice (he indicated a tall, dark girl quietly weeping in a corner), Mr. Elwood, myself, and -- oh, it's terrible! Alive and well at eleven o'clock last night and now lying cold and dead up there -- murdered, foully, cruelly murdered."
"Who discovered the body?" snapped Muldoon.
"My secretary, Foley, over there, he replied, pointing.
"Who was in the house between eleven o'clock last night and seven this morning?" asked Muldoon.
"Just those who are in the room now," replied Atwater, "--and of course--" he nodded his head toward the upper floor where the corpse lay.
"I understand," said Muldoon -- "you, your daughter, your secretary, Mr. Elwood, and who's that man there?"
"That is Charles, my chauffeur and, ah, well, he is a sort of valet , too."
"Where were the other servants," explained Atwater, "that is, beside Charles; a man and his wife. They had been with us only a few days, and they were most unsatisfactory. They left after dinner last night."
"You paid them off, and they left and did not return - is that right?"
"Yes."
"Were the deceased and Mr. Elwood members of your household?"
"Oh, no. They are guests. I sent Charles to the station to get them yesterday evening, and we had dinner about nine o'clock. It was the late dinner that caused the butler and his wife to leave; they were disagreeable about it."
Muldoon turned to the chauffeur, a sullen appearing man with a deep scar across one cheek. "What time did you pick these guests up at the station, Charles?"
"Their train got in a 7:45 last night, but I had a little trouble finding them -- I hadn't never seen them before -- and it was about eight o'clock before I picked 'em out of the crowd."
Muldoon swung swiftly toward the secretary. "Why did you go to that room at seven o'clock this morning?"
The suddenness of it made me jump, and I saw Foley gasp.
"I -- I -- " stammered the secretary." Some one had to awaken the guests, and there were no servants in the house. I just went there to wake--"
"Foley, you're lying to me -- you know who committed this crime. Come on -- out with it!"
"Yes, I know," blurted the secretary; "but I'll never tell."
"You were with the murderer last night?" demanded the inspector.
"I was not. The last time I saw the murderer yesterday was while we were playing tennis together."