Выбрать главу

“Indeed?” Wolfe’s face registered the kind of surprise that sometimes makes me believe Hollywood lost a great talent. “I’m not aware of any debt to you on my part. You are not clients of mine.”

“Our daughter is!” Megan hissed, and Doyle nodded slowly, leaning forward.

“And she is an adult,” Wolfe said. “My compact is with her and her alone, and, lacking her express approval, I will discuss my progress with no one else.”

“Well, have you been keeping her posted on that so-called progress?” Doyle squared his shoulders and folded his arms across his chest. “Isn’t that part of your compact?”

“Sir, I am not aware that your daughter is unhappy with my performance. If she is, she has not chosen to inform me of this dissatisfaction. However, your arrival, while unexpected, is not ill-timed. Had you not come here, you would each have been paid a visit by Mr. Goodwin.”

“Oh? And why is that?” Doyle asked.

“Before we go on, will either of you have something to drink? My preference is for beer.”

“Why not? I’ll have a beer too,” Doyle said, drawing a sharp look from his ex-wife. Wolfe reached under his desk and hit the buzzer, signaling Fritz as to how many beers he should bring in.

“Mr. Wolfe, we didn’t come here to drink — or at least I didn’t — we came for answers.” Megan was hot. She also was craving a cigarette, but I could tell from watching her that she’d searched the office for an ashtray. There weren’t any. “It’s hardly necessary to remind you that our son’s life is at stake.”

“You are correct, madam — a reminder is superfluous. Now, let us get to specifics: Can you account for your time on the night of the twenty-sixth, last Wednesday?”

I enjoyed watching her trying to control her facial spasms. “What kind of a question is that?” she shrieked. “Are you going to try earning one of your preposterous fees by manufacturing suspects willy-nilly?”

Wolfe considered her dubiously. “Does the question pose a problem for you?”

“No, it does not,” she said, spacing her words again. “I happened to be at home all evening. I was still unpacking from the trip to Europe.”

“Were others there as well?”

“Michael stopped over for a few minutes just after dinner, to see how Noreen was. And you know, of course, that Noreen was — and is — staying with me. I wouldn’t have her anywhere else after what I found out the night before.” She glared at Doyle, as if accusing him of not keeping proper watch over their offspring during her extended sojourn in Europe.

“And you both were home all evening?” Wolfe asked.

“I was, although Noreen went out for a walk later — sometime near ten, I think. I tried to discourage her, given all that had happened, but she said she needed to get some air and do some thinking.”

“So when she was gone, you were home alone?”

“That is correct,” Megan said.

“Does your building have a doorman?”

“Of course.”

“Then he will confirm that you did not go out?”

She sent Wolfe a look that would have wilted a cactus. “I don’t see that my comings and goings are any concern whatever of yours.”

“You can’t have it both ways,” Wolfe said, pouring beer from one of the frosty bottles Fritz noiselessly brought in, two of which went to Wolfe, with the third placed on the small table next to Doyle James, along with a chilled pilsner glass. “You express concern that I am not adequately representing your daughter’s interests in a matter that we concur is of overriding importance to your son. Yet you bridle at my questions when I attempt to delve into this imbroglio.”

“Well, what about it, Megan?” Doyle James said, turning toward his ex-spouse. “Let’s not pussyfoot around, for God’s sake. If you went out, you’d better tell him about it, because it’s going to come out sooner or later.”

“Oh, go to hell, Doyle. When I need your counsel, I’ll ask for it, but don’t hold your breath. I never got any advice from you that was worth following in the years we were together.” Megan turned back to Wolfe. “All right, dammit, I did go out, soon after Noreen did. I felt boxed in by the place, big as it is. I went to see a friend.”

“Pamsett, of course,” Doyle said, chuckling.

“Pamsett, of course,” Megan mimicked him. “As a matter of fact, that’s exactly where I was: at Edward Pamsett’s apartment on Park in the Eighties. I needed somebody to talk to. He’s an old friend — you’ve met him, Mr. Goodwin.”

I nodded to show I was paying attention.

“How long were you there?” Wolfe asked.

“God, I don’t know. I guess I went out around ten or so; as I said, it was after Noreen had left on her walk. It must have been... oh, twelve-thirty or thereabouts when I got back home. I remember seeing that Noreen’s door was closed, so I knew she was back.”

“Although you didn’t see her?”

“No — but when she’s staying with me, she always leaves the bedroom door open if she’s going out.”

“You took cabs to and from Mr. Pamsett’s residence?”

“Yes, but I can’t supply you with the drivers’ names or numbers. Sorry,” Megan said snidely.

Wolfe ignored the barb and turned toward Doyle. “Mr. James, can you account for your time Wednesday night?”

“I can tell you where I was,” he said blandly, allowing himself a grin.

“Please do.”

“I’ve got two places, a town house over in Jersey, near Princeton, and an apartment in Manhattan, because I enjoy coming into town.”

“I’ll just bet you do,” Megan said archly. “Next I suppose you’re going to tell us it’s because of the great theater here.”

Doyle gave her one of those smiles that isn’t a smile and took a healthy swig of beer, from the bottle. “I apologize for my ex-wife’s interruption,” he said to Wolfe. “Anyway, I come into New York once or twice a week — and, yeah, sometimes it’s to go to the theater. In fact, last Wednesday night I was here for just that reason — to see a show. Unfortunately, the lady I was going to take became ill at the last minute and I ended up giving the tickets away.”

“So now we know what you didn’t do that night,” Wolfe remarked. He’s a genius at deduction.

“Right. I ended up going out to dinner — alone — at a favorite spot of mine, a little French place on East Fifty-third. The maître d’ can vouch for me — I’m sure he’s still got his reservation list from that night, and I’ll be happy to give you his name.”

“When did you leave the restaurant?”

“As we’ve been talking, I’ve been trying to estimate the time. I’d say around ten,” Doyle said. “It was a nice night, so I walked across town to my place, which is over near the UN Building. I probably got there around, oh, ten-thirty, ten-forty, something like that. I know it was before eleven, because I caught the eleven-o’clock news on TV.”

“Can anyone vouch for the time of your arrival at home?”

“I really doubt it,” Doyle said. “My building has a doorman, but he doesn’t keep track of comings and goings. His nose is usually buried in some book.”

“We came here to get answers, and all we’ve been doing is giving them, which I find to be both insulting and degrading,” Megan pronounced nasally. “Now, tell us what’s going on. We’ve got a right to know.”

Wolfe considered her and frowned. “Madam, we have already been over this ground, and to retrace our steps would be fruitless. Good afternoon.” He got to his feet, walked around the desk, and marched into the hall, turning toward the kitchen.

“The arrogance!” Megan said, turning in her chair to watch his departure. “The man doesn’t have a shred of common courtesy.”