Copyright S. 8. Van Dine WNU Service SYNOPSIS Philo Vance, famous detective, and John fF. X. Markham, district attorney for New York county are dining in Vance's apart. ment when Vance receives an anonymous telephone message informing him of a "dis- turbing psychological tension at Professor Ephriam Garden's apartment’ advising that he read up on radio-active sodium, consult a passage in the Aeneid and coun- seling that “Equanimity is essential.” Pro- fessor Garden is famous in chemical re- search. The message, decoded by Vance, reminds him that Professor Garden's son Floyd and his puny cousin, Woode Swift, are addicted to horse-racing. Vance says that “Equanimity’’ is a horse running next day in the Rivermont handicap. Vance is convinced that the message was sent by Dr. Siefert, the Gardens’ family physician. He arranges to have lunch next day at the Gardens’ penthouse. Vance is greeted by Floyd Garden (3d meets Lowe Hammle, an elderly follower of horse racing. Floyd ex- presses concern over Swift's queer actions. Mrs. ‘Garden, supposedly ill, comes down. stairs and places a $100 bet on a horse. Gathered around an elaborate loud speaker service, listening to the racing are Cecil Kroon, Madge Weatherby and Zalia Graem, who bet varying amounts on the race. There is tension under the surface galety. Zalia and Swift are not on speaking terms Kroon leaves to keep an appointment be- fore the race starts. Miss Beeton, a nurse, and Vance bet on "Azure Star.” Swift reck- lessly bets $10,000 on “Equanimity’ and goes to the roof garden to hear the results Floyd follows Swift, remaining away sev. eral minutes. Zalia Graem answers a phone call in the den. Soon after the announce. ment that “Azure Star’ wins, the guests hear a shot. Vance finds Swift dead, shot dead, shot through the head with a revolver nearby. He says Swift has been murdered. After calling the police, he finds the door of a vault ajar. Kroon returns and is sharply questioned by Vance, who finds he had not left the building. Vance orders Miss Bee- ton to guard the stairway and prevent Mrs. Garden and Zalla from viewing Swift's body Floyd Garden admits the revolver belongs to his father. Further questioning by Vance reveals that the revolver had been found recently by Zalia in the presence of the other guests. Floyd hinfs that Swift bet 80 recklessly because of Zalia. CHAPTER V—Continued neni Garden shrugged carelessly, as if the matter was neither important nor unusual. “Probably,” he suggested, ‘‘the pater didn't shut the door tightly when he went out this morning. It has a spring lock." “And the key?" “The key is a mere matter of form. It hangs conveniently on a g¢mall nail at the side of the door.” “Accordingly,” mused Vance, ‘the vault is readily accessible to any- one in the household who cares to enter it.” Vance went to the door. ‘Miss Beeton,” he called, ‘‘will you be good enough to run upstairs and see if the key to the vault door is in its place?” A few moments later the nurse re- turned and informed Vance that the key was where it was always kept. Vance thanked her and, closing the den door, turned again to Gar- den. ‘““There’'s one more rather impor- tant matter that you can clear up for me—it may have a definite bear- ing on the situation. Can the gar- den be entered from the fire exit opening on the roof?” “Yes, by George!” The other sat up with alacrity. ‘“‘There's a gate in the east fence of the garden, just beside the privet hedge, which leads upon the terrace on which the fire exit of the building opens. When we had the fence built we were re- quired to put this gate in because of the fire laws. But it's rarely used, except on hot summer nights. Still, if anyone came up the main stairs to the roof and went out the emergency fire door, he could easily enter our garden by coming through that gate in the fence.” *Don’t you keep the gate locked?” Vance was studying the tip of his cigarette with close attention. “The fire regulations don’t permit that. We merely have an old-fash- ioned barn-door lift-latch on it.” We could hear the sharp ringing of the entrance bell, and a door opening somewhere. Vance stepped out into the hall. A moment later the butler admitted District Attor- ney Markham and Sergeant Heath, accompanied by Snitkin and Hen- nessey. “Well, what's the trouble, Vance?” Markham demanded brusquely. ‘I phoned Heath, as you requested, and brought him up with me.” “It's a bad business,” Vance re- turned. “‘Same like I told you. I'm afraid you're in for some difficulties. It's no ordin’ry crime. Everything I've been able to learn so far con- tradicts everything else.” He looked past Markham and nodded pleas- antly to Heath. “Sorry to make you all this trouble, Sergeant.” “That's all right, Mr. Vance.” Heath held out his hand in solemn good-nature. ‘“‘Glad I was in when the chief called. What's it all about, and where do we go from here?” Mrs. Garden came bustling ener- down the hallway. “Are you the district attorney?” she a eyeing Markham fero- ciously. Without walting for an an- swer, she went on: ‘This whole thing is an outrage. My poor neph- ew shot himself and this gentleman here''—she looked at Vance with supreme contempt—*'is trying to make a scandal out of it."’ Her eyes swept over Heath and the two de- tectives. ‘‘And I suppose you're the police. There's no reason what- ever for your being here.” Markham looked steadfastly at the woman and seemed to take in the situation immediately. “Madam, {if things are as you say,” he promised in a pacifying, yet grave, tone, ‘you need have no fear of any scandal.” “I'll leave the matter entirely in your hands, sir,” the woman re- turned with calm dignity. She turned and walked back up the hall. “A most tryin’ and complicated state of affairs, Markham." Vance took the matter up again. “I ad- mit the chap upstairs appears to have killed himself. But that, I think, is what everyone is supposed to believe. Tableau superficially cor- rect. Stage direction and decor fairly good. But the whole far from perfect. I observed several dis- crepancies.”’ Garden, who had been standing in the doorway to the den, came for- ward, and Vance introduced him to Markham and Heath. Then Vance turned to the sergeant. “I think you'd better have either Snitkin or Hennessey remain down here and see that no one leaves the apartment for a little while.” He addressed Garden. ‘I hope you don't mind." ‘Not at all,” Garden replied com- placently. “I'll join the others in the drawing-room. 1 feel the need of a highball, anyway.” He includ- ed us all in a curt bow and moved up the hall. “We'd better go roof now, Markham," up to said Vance. The Nurse Informed Vance That the Key Was Where It Was Al- ways Kept. to the case. He moved down the hall, Markham and Heath and I followed him. But before he mounted the nurse, thanks for your help. But one more favor: when the medical ex- aminer comes, please bring him di- rectly upstairs.” The girl inclined her head in ac- quiescence and stepped into the bed- room. We went immediately up to the garden. As we stepped out on the roof, Vance indicated the body of Swift slumped in the chair. “There's the johnnie,” he said. “Just as he was found.” Markham and Heath moved clos- er to the huddled figure and studied it for a few moments. At length Heath looked up with a perplexed frown. “Well, Mr. Vance,” he announced querulously, "it looks like suicide, all right.”’ He shifted his cigar from one corner of his mouth to the other. Markham too turned to Vance. He nodded his agreement with the Ser- geant's observation. “It certainly has the appearance of suicide, Vance,” he remarked. “No—oh, no,’”* Vance sighed. "Not suicide. A deuced brutal crime and clever no end." Markham smoked a while, still staring at the dead man skeptically; then he sat down facing Vance. “Let's have the whole story be- fore Doremus gets here,” he re- quested. Vance remained standing, his eyes moving aimlessly about the garden. After a moment he re- counted succinctly, but carefully, the entire sequence of events of the afternoon, describing the group of people present, with their relation- ships and temperamental clashes; the various races and wagers; Swift's retirement to the garden for the results of the big Handicap; and, finally, the shot which had aroused us all and brought us up- stairs. When he had finished, Mark- ham worried his chin for a moment. “1 still can’t see a single fact,” he objected, “‘that does not point logi- cally to suicide.” Vance leaned against the wall be- side the study window and lighted a cigarette, “Of course,” he said, “there's nothing in the outline I've given you to indicate murder. Nevertheless, it was murder; and that outline is exactly the concatenation of events which the murderer wants us to accept, We are supposed to arrive at the obvious conclusion of suicide. Suicide as the result of losing mon- ey on horses ig by no means a rare occurrence. It is not impossible that the murderer's scheme was in- fluenced by this account. But there are other factors, psychological and actual, which belie this whole supege ficial and deceptive structure.” He drew on his cigarette and watched the thin blue ribbon of smoke dis- perse in the light breeze from the river. ‘To begin with,” he went on, “Swift was not the suicidal type. In the first place, Swift was a weak- ling and a highly imaginative one. Moreover, he was too hopeful and ambitious—too sure of his own judg- out of the world simply because he had lost all his money. The fact that Equanimity might not win the race was an eventuality which, as a take into consideration beforehand, that, if he were greatly disappoint- hatred of others. emergency, have He might, in against himself. Like all gamblers, he was trusting and gullible; and I think it was these temperamental qualities which probably made him CHAPTER VI leaned forward protesiingly. ‘No ysis can make a crime out of a situ- I must have more definite reasons than you have given me be- fore I would be justified in dis- carding the theory of suicide.” “Oh, I dare say,” nodded Vance. “But I have more tangible evidence that the johnnie did not eliminate himself from this life." “Well, let's have it." Markham Rd geted impatiently in his chair. “Imprimis, my dear Justinian, a bullet wound in the temple would undoubtedly cause more blood than you see on the brow of the deceased. There are, as you notice, only a few partly coagulated drops, where- as the vessels of the brain cannot be punctured without a considerable flow of blood. And there is no blood either on his clothes or on the tiles beneath his chair. Meanin’ that the blood has been, perhaps, spilled elsewhere before 1 arrived on the scene--which was, let us say, within thirty seconds after we heard the shot" “A far-fetched theory,” muttered Markham. “All wounds don't bleed the same." Vance ignored the district attor- ney's objection. “And please take a good look at the poor fellow. His legs are stretched forward at an awkward angle. The trousers are twisted out of place and look most uncomforta- ble. His coat, though buttoned, is riding his shoulder, so that his col- lar is at least three inches above his exquisite mauve shirt. No man could endure to have his clothes so outrageously askew, even on the point of suicide — he would have straightened them out almost un- consciously. The corpus delicti indication of having to the chair and we been dragged placed in it.” Markham's eyes were surveying the limp figure of Swift as Vance talked. “Even that argument is not en- ically, though his tone was a bit modified; “especially in view of the " phone . quickly. “That's another oughness in the setting of the stage. I believe his first impulsive move- ment would have been to remove pose. thermore, I seriously doubt if he would have come upstairs to listen to the race with his mind made up in advance that he was going to commit suicide in case his horse didn't come in. And, as I have explained to you, the revolver is one belonging to Professor Garden and was always kept in the desk in the study. Consequently, if Swift had decided, after the race had been run, to shoot himself, he would hardly have gone into the study, procured the gun, then come back to his chair on the roof and put the head-phone on again before ending his life. Undoubtedly he would have shot himself right there in the study ~at the desk from which he had obtained the revolver.” Vance moved forward a little as if for emphasis, “Another point about that head- phone—the point that gave me the first hint of murder—is the fact that the receiver at present is over Swift's right ear. Earlier today I (10 BE CONTINUED) what : b ob i) (obt about: Curing Stuttering. HIN LEE, ARIZ.—Away up + here in the Indian country comes a newspaper, saying some expert at correcting hu- man utterance has turned up with a cure for stuttering. But why? By his own admission, most of them can swear fluently, thus providing superior emotional cutlets in two directions. One of the smartest criminal lawyers 1 know deliberately cultivated a natural impediment in his speech. In court- room debates it gave him more time » to think up either the right questions or to figure out the right answers. And one of the most charming voices I ever heard belonged to a Louisiana girl whose soft southern accents were fascinatingly inter- rupted at intervals by a sudden stammer-like unexpected ripples in a gently flowing brook. Irvin 8S. Cobb . » . How to Relax. BE FORE 1 started out here, feel- g somewhat jumpy after mW a radio program for six months, Jimmy Swinnerton, the art- ist, who's one of the most devoted friends these high mesas ever had, advised me to try stretching out on the desert sands as a measure for health and complete relaxation and a general toning up. “Just lie down perfectly flat, said. Then he took another look at my figure. “Anyway, lie down,” he sai a " he John or irk, the Tio In dian ‘tad. er, helped me pick out a suitable spot on the Navajo reservation that miles from the nearest habitation. But the site I chose was already pre-empted by a scorpion with a fretful stinger and an irritable dis- position that seemed to resent be- ing crowded. So 1 got right up again. In fact, I got up so swiftly that Kirk said it was impossible to follow the movement with the hu- man eye. It was like magic, he said. » - * Speed Crazed Drivers. Be y? . You're roaring through populous streets or skidding on hairpin turns or whirl- ing at sixty perilous miles an hour around the kinked and snaky twists of mountain roads like some de- moniac bug racing along the spine of a coiled rattler. If I am one to say, you probably have primed yourself for this sense- less speeding on that most danger- ous of all mixed tipples—the fear- some combination of alcohol and gasoline. Or perhaps, like the blind mule of the folklore tale, you just naturally don't care a dern. One thing is plain: Despite the high per- centage of mortality your breed is on the increase. So, again, echoing the question which the coroner must frequently ask at the inquest, why the hurry, Sonny Boy? you back at the place where you've you're going. Really now, Sonny Boy, what is Civilization’s Predicament. FEEL it my duty to call atten- tion to the following warning, re- “The earth is degenerating in these latter days. . bribery and corruption abound. . . the children no longer obey their parents. . . it is evident that the end of the world is approaching!” However, it should be added that this prediction is not, as might be assumed from its familiar . ring, the utterance of some inspired ob- server of the present moment. It is a translation from an Assyrian tablet, dated 2800 B. C. So, if the fulfillment of the doleful | assume that it may be some months yet before civilization flies all to pieces. * - * Waning States’ Rights, S I watch commonwealth after commonwealth below the Ma- son and Dixon line tumbling over one another to embrace centralized authority in exchange for federal funds for local projects, I'm re- AROUND the HOUSE Making Cocoa—Cocoa loses that raw taste if made with half milk and half water, then boiled. More nutritious and digestible, too . * » Milk Puddings — Orange peel shredded very finely makes an ex- cellent flavoring for milk pud- dings. It is a pleasant change from nutmeg when added to rice pudding or baked custard. . * - Cleaning Combs, Brushes—A teaspoon of ammonia in a fJuart of water will remove all grease . * - Fitting Your Hat—If you have hold it in the When easy to stretch it to the right size. . * - Stewed Macaroni — Boil one ter for three-quarters of an hour, adding one-fourth ounce butter, salt, and an onion stuck with cloves. Afterwards, drain the macaroni, add three ounces grat- ed cheese, a little nutmeg, pep- per, and a little milk or cream. Stew gently for five minutes and serve very hot, * » » Devilled Egg Lillies—Hard cook as many eggs as there are to be servings. Chill, then peel care- fully. With a sharp knife cut strips from the large end to the Foreign Words and Phrases Toute medaille a son revers. (F.) Everything has its good and its bad side. 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