<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">CHAPTER IV</span> <br/>THE NAIL</h2>
<p>“My God!” Farrell exclaimed, stepping closer and
pushing aside the gray hair, thus clearly revealing the
awful truth.</p>
<p>A flat-headed nail, the head rather more than a quarter
of an inch in diameter, had been driven into the skull with
such force that it showed merely as a metal disk. Having
been hidden by the dead man’s hair, it had remained
unnoticed until Moore’s quick eyes espied it.</p>
<p>Farrell picked at it a little, but it was far too firmly
fastened to be moved by his fingers.</p>
<p>“What shall we do?” the Inspector asked, helplessly.
“Shall we try to get Doctor Rogers back?”</p>
<p>“No,” returned the Coroner, “he’s just starting on a
long trip. Let him go. He could do nothing and it would
be a pity to spoil his journey. His diagnosis of apoplexy
was most natural in the circumstances, for the symptoms
are the same. I, too, thought death was the result of an
apoplectic stroke. But now we know it is black murder,
the case comes directly within my jurisdiction, and there’s
no occasion to recall Doctor Rogers.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_49">[49]</div>
<p>“You’re right,” Ames assented, “but who could have
done this fearful thing? I can hardly believe a human
being capable of such a horror! Mr. Moore, you simply
must take up this case. It ought to be a problem after
your own heart.”</p>
<p>Every word the man uttered made me dislike him more.
To refer to this terrible tragedy as a problem after
Moore’s own heart seemed to me to indicate a mind callous
and almost ghoulish in its type.</p>
<p>I knew Kee well enough to feel sure that he would
investigate the murder, but not at the behest of Harper
Ames.</p>
<p>He only acknowledged Ames’s speech by a noncommittal
nod and turned to Detective March.</p>
<p>“We have our work cut out for us,” he said, very
gravely. “I have never seen a stranger case. The murderer
must have been a man of brute passions and brute
strength. That nail is almost imbedded in the bone, and,
I fancy, needed more than one blow of the hammer that
drove it in. But first, as to the doors and windows. You
tell me they were locked this morning?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” answered Griscom, the butler, as Moore
looked at him.</p>
<p>He was a smallish man, bald and with what are sometimes
called pop-eyes. He stared in a frightened manner,
but he controlled his voice as he went on to tell his story.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, I brought the master’s tea at nine o’clock,
as always. The door was locked——”</p>
<p>“Is it usually locked in the morning?” Moore interrupted.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_50">[50]</div>
<p>“Sometimes, not always. When it is locked, I knock
and Mr. Tracy would get up and open the door. If unlocked,
I walked right in.”</p>
<p>“And this morning it was locked, and the key in the
lock on the inside?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. So I knocked, but when there was no answer,
I got scared——”</p>
<p>“Why were you scared?”</p>
<p>“Because Doctor Rogers had often told me that Mr.
Tracy was in danger of an apoplectic stroke, and that I
must do anything I could to make him eat less and take
more exercise. I’ve been with the master a long time,
sir, and I had the privilege of a bit of talk with him now
and then. So I did try to persuade him to obey the doctor’s
orders, and he would laugh and promise to do so.
But he forgot it as soon as he saw some dish he was
fond of, and he’d eat his fill of it.”</p>
<p>“Go on, Griscom,” Moore said, “what happened
next?”</p>
<p>“I went to Mr. Everett——”</p>
<p>“Yes, he went to Everett,” broke in the aggrieved
voice of Harper Ames. “Why did he do that, instead of
coming to me, I’d like to know!”</p>
<p>“Go on,” Moore instructed the butler.</p>
<p>“I went to Mr. Everett, sir, he was up and dressed, and
he said, at once, to get Louis—that’s the chauffeur—and
tell him to bring some tools, I did that, and Louis first
pushed the key out of the lock, and then poked around
with a wire until he got the door open. Then we came
in——”</p>
<p>“Who came in?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_51">[51]</div>
<p>“Mr. Everett and Mr. Ames and me, sir. And Mrs.
Fenn—she’s the housekeeper—she saw Louis running
upstairs, so she came, too.”</p>
<p>“And you saw——?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Tracy, just as he was when you first saw him,
sir. Just as he is now, except for the things Doctor
Rogers chucked out.”</p>
<p>“Is that door, the one that was locked, the entrance
to the whole suite?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, that door is the only one connecting these
rooms with the house.”</p>
<p>“I see. Now what about the windows?”</p>
<p>“They haven’t been touched, sir.”</p>
<p>Kee Moore turned his attention to the windows. There
were many of them. The suite of Sampson Tracy’s was
a rectangular wing, built out from the main house, and
having windows on three sides. But all of these windows
overlooked the deep, black waters of the Sunless Sea. It
had been the whim of the man to have his quarters thus,
to be surrounded on all sides by the water of the lake that
he loved, and he usually had all the windows wide open,
doubtless enjoying the lake breezes that played through
the rooms, and listening to the birds, whose notes broke
the stillness of the night.</p>
<p>“What is below these rooms?” Moore asked.</p>
<p>“The big ballroom, sir. Nothing else.”</p>
<p>After scrutinizing every window in the bedroom,
dressing room, bathroom and sitting room, Moore said,
slowly: “These windows seem to me to be inaccessible
from below.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_52">[52]</div>
<p>It was characteristic of the man that he didn’t say
they were inaccessible but merely that they seemed so to
him.</p>
<p>As they certainly did to the rest of us. We all looked
out, and in every instance, the sheer drop to the lake was
about fifteen or more feet. The outer walls of marble
presented no foothold for even the most daring of climbers.
They were smooth, plain, and absolutely unscalable.</p>
<p>“It is certain no one entered by the windows,” Moore
said, at last, having looked out of every one. “I suppose
the house is always carefully secured at night?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” Griscom assured him. “Mr. Tracy was very
particular about that. He and all the household had
latchkeys, and the front door—indeed, all the doors
and windows were carefully seen to.”</p>
<p>“Who has latchkeys?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Everett, Mr. Dean, myself and the housekeeper.
Then there are others which are given to guests. Mr.
Ames had one——”</p>
<p>“With so many latchkeys about, one may have been
abstracted by some evil-minded person.”</p>
<p>“Not likely, sir. We keep strict watch on them.”</p>
<p>“Well, that would only give entrance to the house.
How could anyone get into and out of Mr. Tracy’s
room, leaving the door locked on the inside?”</p>
<p>I knew Moore purposely voiced this problem himself,
to head off those who would ask it of him. He had often
said to me, “if you don’t want a question asked of you,
ask it yourself of somebody else.” And so, as he flung this
at them each felt derelict in not being able to reply.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_53">[53]</div>
<p>But Ames’s querulous voice volleyed the question back.</p>
<p>“That’s why I want you to do up this business, Moore,”
he said. “That’s what makes it such a pretty problem——”</p>
<p>Moore could stand this no longer.</p>
<p>“For an intimate friend of a martyred man, I should
think you would see the matter in a more personal light
than a pretty problem!”</p>
<p>“Oh, I do. I’m sad and sorry enough, but I don’t wear
my heart on my sleeve. And first of all, I’m keen to
avenge my friend. And I know that what’s to be done
must be done quickly. So, get busy, I beg.”</p>
<p>The more Ames said, the less I liked him, and I knew
Kee felt the same way about it. But the man was right
as to haste being advisable. The circumstances were so
peculiar, the conditions so fantastic, that search for the
criminal must be made quickly, or a man of such diabolical
cleverness would put himself beyond our reach.</p>
<p>The Inspector, the police detective and Keeley Moore
consulted a few moments and then Inspector Farrell
said:</p>
<p>“The case is altered. Now that we know it is wilful
murder, and not a stroke of illness, we must act accordingly.
Coroner Hart will conduct an immediate inquiry,
preliminary to his formal inquest. No one may leave the
house; you, Griscom, will tell the servants this, and I shall
call in more help from the police station to guard the
place. We will go downstairs, and the Coroner will choose
a suitable room, and begin his investigation.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_54">[54]</div>
<p>Farrell was an efficient director, though in no way a
detective. He locked the door that commanded the whole
apartment after he had herded us all out.</p>
<p>We filed downstairs, and I could hear women’s voices
in a small reception room as we passed it.</p>
<p>The Coroner chose a room which was fitted up as a
sort of writing room. It was of moderate size and contained
several desks or writing tables, evidently a writing
room for guests. There was a bookcase of books and a
table of periodicals and newspapers.</p>
<p>Clearly, the house had every provision for comfort
and pleasure. Save for the sinister atmosphere now pervading
it, I felt I should have liked to visit there.</p>
<p>The Coroner settled himself at a table, and instructed
Griscom to send in the house servants one at a time. He
also told the butler to serve breakfast as usual, and advised
Harper Ames to go to the dining room, as he would be
called on later for testimony.</p>
<p>Hart’s manner now was crisp and business-like. The
realization of the awful facts of the case had spurred him
to definite and immediate action.</p>
<p>Mrs. Fenn, the cook-housekeeper, threw no new light
on the situation. She corroborated Griscom’s story of
the locked door and the subsequent opening of it by
Louis, but she could add no new information.</p>
<p>“You were fond of Mr. Tracy?” asked Moore, kindly,
for the poor woman was vainly trying to control her
grief.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, sir. He was a good master and a truly great
man.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_55">[55]</div>
<p>“You’ve never known, among the guests of the house,
any one who was his enemy?”</p>
<p>“No, sir. But I almost never see the guests. I’m housekeeper,
to be sure, but the maids do all the housework. I
superintend the cooking.”</p>
<p>“And you’ve heard no gossip about any one who had
an enmity or a grudge toward Mr. Tracy?”</p>
<p>“Ah, who could have? He was a gentle, peaceable man,
was Mr. Tracy. Who could wish him harm?”</p>
<p>“Yet somebody did,” the Coroner put in, and then he
dismissed Mrs. Fenn, feeling she could be of no use.</p>
<p>The other house servants were similarly ignorant of
any guest or neighbour who was unfriendly to Mr. Tracy,
and then Hart called for the chauffeur.</p>
<p>Louis, a Frenchman, was different in manner and disinclined
to talk. In fact, he refused to do so unless all
members of the household were sent from the room.</p>
<p>So the Coroner ordered everybody out except Farrell
and Detective March, Moore and myself.</p>
<p>Then Louis waxed confidential and declared that Mr.
Ames and Mr. Tracy were deadly enemies.</p>
<p>I thought the man was exaggerating, and that he had
some grudge of his own against Ames. But Hart listened
avidly to the chauffeur’s arraignment, and I was
forced to the conclusion that Louis knew a lot.</p>
<p>Yet it was all hints and innuendoes. He stated that the
two men were continually quarrelling. Asked what about,
he replied “Money matters.”</p>
<p>“What sort of money matters?” Hart asked him.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_56">[56]</div>
<p>“Stocks and bonds and mortgages. I think Mr. Ames
owed Mr. Tracy a great deal of money and he couldn’t
or wouldn’t pay it, and so they wrangled over it.”</p>
<p>“There was no quarrelling on other subjects?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, except now and then about Mrs. Dallas.”</p>
<p>“And what about her?”</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Ames didn’t want Mr. Tracy to marry
her.”</p>
<p>“Did Mr. Ames favour the lady himself?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, sir. He’s a woman hater. Or at least he says
so. No, but he didn’t want Mr. Tracy to marry anybody
for fear he might cut him, Mr. Ames, out of his will.”</p>
<p>“How do you know all these things?”</p>
<p>“Well, I drive the car, you see, and they talk these
matters over, and I can’t help hearing them. They make
no bones of it, they talk right out. I never repeat anything
I hear, in an ordinary way, but as you ask me, sir——”</p>
<p>“Yes, Louis, tell all you know. So Mr. Ames would
suffer financially if Mr. Tracy married?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know that, sir, but I know he thought he
would. And I suppose he knew.”</p>
<p>“It seems to me,” Farrell said, “we ought to know the
terms of Mr. Tracy’s will as it might help us to get at the
truth.”</p>
<p>“We can’t do that at the moment,” Hart said, “and
anyway, this is merely a preliminary inquiry to get the
main facts of the situation.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_57">[57]</div>
<p>But the other servants had no more information to
impart than those hitherto questioned. A chambermaid,
one Sally Bray, convinced us that all the queer decorations
spread on the bed had been already in the room
and were, therefore, not brought in by the murderer.</p>
<p>The red feather duster belonged in a small cupboard
that held polishing cloths and dusters. The larkspur
flowers had been in a vase on a side table, and the whole
bunch had been removed from the vase and laid around
the dead man. The orange and crackers had been on a
plate on the bedside table, but where the plate was,
Sally had no idea. The crucifix was Mr. Tracy’s property
and belonged on a small hook above the head of his bed.</p>
<p>“And the scarf,” suggested Hart. “The red chiffon
scarf, where did that come from?”</p>
<p>Sally blushed and looked down, but finally being urged
to tell, said that she knew it to be a scarf belonging
to Mrs. Dallas, and the lady had left it there one evening
not long ago, when she had been there to dinner.</p>
<p>“Why had it not been returned to her?” Hart wanted
to know.</p>
<p>“Because Mr. Tracy took a notion to it. It was a sort
of keepsake of the lady, sir, and, too, Mr. Tracy was that
fond of beautiful things. Any pretty piece of silk or
brocade would please him tremenjous.”</p>
<p>“Then, whoever arranged all those decorations round
him knew of his love for beautiful things, and that
would explain the flowers and the scarf. Is there anything
missing from his room, Sally?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, sir. I’ve not been allowed in there this
morning.”</p>
<p>“Well, go up there now. Tell the guard he’s to let you
in. Here’s the key.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_58">[58]</div>
<p>“Oh, sir, I—I daren’t! Don’t make me go in there!”</p>
<p>The girl shivered with real fear, but Hart had to know.</p>
<p>“You must go,” he said, not unkindly. “Get Griscom
to go with you, or Mrs. Fenn, if you like. But it is important
for me to know if anything has been taken away
that you know of. I don’t mean papers or letters from his
desk. I mean any of his appointments or small belongings.”</p>
<p>The girl went off, still shuddering, and Hart finished
up the rest of the servants in short order.</p>
<p>Next he interviewed Charlie Everett. I had taken a
fancy to Everett, and somehow, from the way Kee looked
at him, I thought he liked him, too.</p>
<p>He was not a distinguished-looking man, but he
seemed a well-balanced sort, and his eyes were alert and
showed a sense of humour. Not that the occasion called
for humour, but you can always tell by a man’s eyes if
he has that desirable trait.</p>
<p>Very quiet and self-possessed was Everett, his manner
polite but a little detached. He was quite ready to answer
questions but he gave only the answer, no additional information.</p>
<p>Yes, he said, he had spent an hour or so with Mr.
Tracy the night before. They had played a game of billiards
and had then sat for a short time over a cigar and
a whisky and soda. Then, perhaps about ten o’clock, he
had said good night to his employer and had gone to his
own room. No, he could form no idea whatever as to
who could have killed Sampson Tracy, or how he could
have got into the room.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_59">[59]</div>
<p>“That is,” he amended his speech, “he could get in
easy enough, but I don’t see how he could get out and
leave the door locked behind him.”</p>
<p>“It is one of those cases,” Hart said, a little sententiously,
“where there has been a murder committed in a
sealed room.”</p>
<p>Keeley Moore spoke up then.</p>
<p>“A murder cannot be committed in a sealed room,” he
said, “unless the murderer stays there. If the murderer
left the room, the room was not a sealed room.”</p>
<p>“How did he get out?” demanded Hart.</p>
<p>“That we have yet to learn. But he did get out, not
through the door to the hall. Remains the possibility of a
secret passage and the windows.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure there is no secret passage,” Everett said, with
an unusual burst of unasked information. “I’ve been here
three years and if there was such a thing I’m sure I’d
know of it.”</p>
<p>“You might and you might not,” said Moore, looking
at him. “If Mr. Tracy wanted a private entrance to his
suite for any reason, he would have had it built and
kept the matter quiet.”</p>
<p>“Not Sampson Tracy,” exclaimed Everett. “He was
not a secretive man. I think I may say I knew all about
his affairs, both business matters and private dealings,
and he trusted me absolutely.”</p>
<p>“Even so,” Moore told him. “But in the lives of most
men there is some secret, something that they don’t talk
over with anybody.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_60">[60]</div>
<p>“Not Mr. Tracy,” Everett reiterated. “Even his engagement
to Mrs. Dallas was freely talked over with me,
both before it occurred and since. I know all about his
habits and his fads and whims. And in no case was there
ever an occasion for a secret passage to or from his
rooms.”</p>
<p>“Yet it may be there,” Kee insisted. “But if none can
be found, then the murderer either escaped by the windows
or——”</p>
<p>“Or what?” asked Hart.</p>
<p>“Or he had a steel wire contraption to turn the key
from the outside. But this I don’t think likely, for the door
has a rather complicated lock, and is far from being an
easy thing to manipulate.”</p>
<p>“You know the terms of his will, then?” the Coroner
inquired.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” Everett said. “At present his niece, Miss
Remsen, is his principal heir. There are many bequests to
friends and to servants, but the bulk of the estate goes to
Miss Remsen. Mr. Tracy knew that his marriage would
invalidate this will, which was why he had not changed
it. He said that after his wedding with Mrs. Dallas, he
would revise the will to suite his changed estate.”</p>
<p>“Then, under his existing will, Mrs. Dallas has no
legacy?”</p>
<p>“Not unless Mr. Tracy made a change without telling
me. He may have done that, but I think it very unlikely.”</p>
<p>“You know of no one then, who had sufficient enmity
toward Mr. Tracy to desire his death?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_61">[61]</div>
<p>“Absolutely no one. So far as I am aware, he hadn’t
an acquaintance in the world who was anything but
friendly toward him.”</p>
<p>Everett was dismissed and Billy Dean was called in.</p>
<p>He was a pleasant-faced chap of twenty-three or thereabouts.
His work was far from being as important as
Everett’s. In fact he was really a high-class stenographer
and office boy.</p>
<p>He was good looking with big brown eyes and a curly
mop of brown hair. He too, scoffed at the idea of a secret
passage in the house.</p>
<p>“Pleasure Dome has all the modern improvements,” he
said, “but nothing like that. If there was such a thing, I’d
have been through it in no time. I can ferret out anything
queer of that sort by instinct, and there’s nothing
doing. There’s no way in and out of Mr. Tracy’s suite
but by that one hall door. I know that. And it has a
special lock. He had that put on about six months ago.”</p>
<p>“Why? Was he afraid of intruders?”</p>
<p>“Don’t think so. But there had been some robberies
down in the village and he said it was as well to be on
the safe side.”</p>
<p>“Then, Mr. Dean, in your opinion, how did the man
who killed Mr. Tracy get out of his rooms?”</p>
<p>“That’s where you get me. I’m positively kerflummixed.
I can’t see anybody twisting that peculiar key with
a bit of wire. Though that’s easier to swallow than to
imagine any one jumping out of the window.”</p>
<p>“Why? The windows are not so very high.”</p>
<p>“No. But the lake there is mighty deep and dangerous.”</p>
<p>“Why specially dangerous?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_62">[62]</div>
<p>“Because there are swirling undercurrents, you see, it’s
almost like a caldron. That Sunless Sea, as Mr. Tracy
named it, is in a cove and the winds make the water eddy
about, and—well, I’m a pretty fair diver, but I wouldn’t
dive out of a second story window into that cove!”</p>
<p>“Then, we have to look for either a clever mechanician
or an expert diver,” said Keeley Moore. “How about the
chauffeur?”</p>
<p>“He’s an expert mechanician all right, but he wouldn’t
harm a hair of Mr. Tracy’s head. He loved him, as, indeed,
we all did. Nobody could help loving that man.
He was always genial, courteous and kindly to everybody.”</p>
<p>“And his niece, Miss Remsen?” asked the Coroner.
“She, too, is gentle and lovely?”</p>
<p>Young Dean blushed fiery red.</p>
<p>“Yes, she is,” was all he said, but no clairvoyance was
needed to read his thoughts of her.</p>
<p>“Is she here?” asked Moore, knowing we had seen her
arrive.</p>
<p>“Yes,” Billy Dean said. “We telephoned her so soon
as we knew what had happened, and she came right
over.”</p>
<p>“You may go now,” said the Coroner, “and please send
Miss Remsen in here.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_63">[63]</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />