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“No,” she said, without so much as moving a muscle of her head. “I saw nothing.”
“And heard nothing?”
“And heard nothing.”
Perry Masonscowled. Somehow he sensed that the woman was concealing something.
“Did you answer those questions in just that way when you were questioned upstairs?” he asked.
“I think,” she said, “the coffee is about ready to start percolating. You can turn the fire down as soon as it does, so that it doesn’t boil over.”
Mason turned to the coffee. The percolator was specially designed to heat a maximum of water in a small amount of time, and the fire under it was a blue flame of terrific heat. Steam was commencing to rise from the water.
“I’ll watch the coffee,” he said, “but I am interested to know whether or not you answered the questions in exactly that way when you were upstairs.”
“What way?” she countered.
“The way you answered them here.”
“I told them the same thing,” she said, “that I saw nothing and heard nothing.”
Norma Veitch giggled. “That’s her story,” she said, “and she sticks to it.”
The mother snapped, “Norma!”
Mason stared at them both, his thoughtful face apparently absolutely placid. Only his eyes were hard and calculating.
“You know,” he said, “I’m a lawyer. If you have anything to confide in me, now would make an excellent time.”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Veitch, tonelessly.
“How’s that?” asked Perry Mason.
“I merely agreed,” she said, “that this would be an excellent time.”
There was a moment of silence.
“Well?” said Mason.
“But I have nothing to confide,” she said, her eyes still fixed on the table top.
At that moment, the percolator commenced to bubble. Mason turned down the fire.
“I’ll get some cups and saucers,” said Norma, jumping to her feet.
Mrs. Veitch said, “Sit down, Norma. I’ll do it.” She pushed back her chair, walked to one of the cupboards, and took down some cups and saucers. “They’ll drink out of these.”
“Mother,” said Norma, “those are the cups and saucers that are kept for the chauffeurs and servants.”
“These are police officers,” said Mrs. Veitch. “They’re just the same.”
“No, they aren’t, Mother,” said Norma.
“I’m doing this,” said Mrs. Veitch. “You know what the master would have said had he been alive. He’d have given them nothing.”
Norma Veitch said, “Well, he isn’t alive. Mrs. Belter is going to be the one that runs things.”
Mrs. Veitch turned and looked steadily at her daughter from those deep-set, lack-luster eyes.
“Don’t be too sure that she is,” she said.
Perry Mason poured some of the coffee into the cups, and then poured it back through the coffee container in the percolator. When he had poured it through the second time, it was black and steaming.
“Get me a tray,” he said, “and I’ll take in a couple of cups to Sergeant Hoffman and Carl Griffin. You can serve coffee to the others upstairs.”
Wordlessly, she secured him a tray. Perry Mason poured three cups of coffee, picked up the tray, and walked into the dining room, through it into the sitting room.
Sergeant Hoffman was standing, his shoulders thrown back, his head thrust forward, feet wide apart.
Plumped down in one of the chairs, his face flushed and his eyes very red, was Carl Griffin.
Sergeant Hoffman was talking as Perry Mason brought in the coffee.
“That wasn’t the way you talked about her when you first came in,” Sergeant Hoffman said.
“I was drunk then,” said Griffin.
Hoffman stared at him. “Many times a person tells the truth when he’s drunk and conceals his feelings when he’s sober,” he remarked.
Carl Griffin raised his eyebrows in an expression of well-bred surprise.
“Indeed?” he observed. “I’d never noticed it.”
Sergeant Hoffman heard Mason behind him, whirled, and gri
“Okay, Mason,” he said, “that’s going to come in pretty handy. Drink one of these, Griffin, and you’ll feel better.”
Griffin nodded. “It looks good, but I feel all right now.”
Mason handed him a cup of coffee.
“Do you know anything about a will?” asked Sergeant Hoffman, abruptly.
“I’d rather not answer that, if you don’t mind, Sergeant,” Griffin answered.
Hoffman took himself a cup of coffee. “It happens that I do mind,” he commented. “I want you to answer that question.”
“Yes, there’s a will,” Griffin admitted.
“Where is it?” asked Hoffman.
“I don’t know.”
“How do you know there is one?”
“He showed it to me.”
“Does the property all go to his wife?”
Griffin shook his head.
“I don’t think anything goes to her,” he said, “except the sum of five thousand dollars.”
Sergeant Hoffman raised his eyebrows, and whistled.
“That,” he said, “puts a different aspect on it.”
“Different aspect on what?” asked Griffin.
“On the whole situation,” said Hoffman. “She was kept here practically dependent on him, and upon his continuing to live. The minute he died, she was put out with virtually nothing.”
Griffin volunteered a statement by way of explanation. “I don’t think they were very congenial.”
Sergeant Hoffman said, musingly, “That’s not the point. Usually in any of these cases, we have to look for a motive.”
Mason gri
“Are you insinuating that Mrs. Belter fired the shot which killed her husband?” he asked, as though the entire idea were humorous.
“I was making a routine investigation, Mason, in order to find out who might have killed him. In such cases, we always look for a motive. We try to find out any one who would have benefited by his death.”
“In that case,” Griffin remarked, soberly, “I presume that I’ll come under suspicion.”
“How do you mean?” asked Hoffman.
“Under the terms of the will,” said Griffin slowly, “I take virtually all of the estate. I don’t know as it’s any particular secret. I think that Uncle George had more affection for me than he did for any one else in the world. That is, he had as much affection for me as he could have, considering his disposition. I doubt if he was capable of having affection for any one.”
“How did you feel toward him?” asked Hoffman.
“I respected his mind,” Carl Griffin replied, choosing his words carefully, “and I think I appreciated something of his disposition. He lived a life that was very much apart, because he had a mind which was very impatient of all subterfuges and hypocrisies.”
“Why did that condemn him to live apart?” asked Sergeant Hoffman.