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CHAPTER III
THE BOURBON GLASS

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(Wednesday, January 15; 10:30 p.m.)

An unusually gay and colorful sight confronted us in the great drawing room. Groups of young people stood about joking and laughing; others danced. A spirit of carefree revelry animated the scene.

Carlotta Naesmith was a capable hostess. She led us through the boisterous throng, introducing us haphazardly.

“This is Dahlia Dunham,” she said, snaring a wiry and tense young woman of perhaps thirty. “Dahlia’s a political spellbinder, full of incredible phrases, and death to hecklers. She’ll stump for any cause from Socialism to Fletcherism——”

“But not for prohibition, dear,” the other retorted in a raucous unsteady voice, as she withdrew her arm from Miss Naesmith’s and hurried toward the miniature bar.

Another girl came up, complaining.

“A hell of a place! No landing field! When you snare the Rexon millions, Carlotta, see to it that Dick builds one.”

She was blonde and frail, with liquid eyes that dominated her pointed face. I recognized the much publicized Beatrice Maddox before Carlotta Naesmith presented us. She had recently won fame as an airplane pilot, and only a governmental veto had stayed her proposed solo flight across the Atlantic.

“What’s up, Bee?” came a rumbling voice behind me, and a young Irish giant threw his arms about Miss Maddox. “You look glum. Out of gas? So am I.” He whisked her away to the bar.

“That was Pat McOrsay,” Miss Naesmith told us. “He drives ’em fast. Won last year’s auto grind at Cincinnati. He’s sweet on Bee, but she holds mere auto racers in contempt. Maybe they’ll compromise. I did want you to meet Pat—he’s such a beast. . . . But wait. There’s another speed demon of a kind over there. . . . Hi there, Chuck,” she called across the room. “Stop trying to tout Sally and come over here a moment—if you can make it.”

Chuck Throme, the internationally famous gentleman jockey who had won the last Steeplechase at Aintree, staggered stiffly up. His eyes wouldn’t focus, but his manner was impeccable.

“Sit down, darling, and meet Mr. Vance,” Miss Naesmith exhorted. “Don’t try it standing up. Your stirrups’ll bend.”

Throme drew himself up indignantly to his five-feet-five and bowed with a Chestertonian flourish. But the supreme gesture was not completed. He continued his obeisance to the rug and lay there.

“That’s one race Chuck didn’t win,” laughed our cicerone. “Let’s move on. Some assistant starter will put him back in the saddle. . . . Isn’t it positively disgusting, Mr. Vance? Liquor is a frightful curse. Saps the brain, undermines the morals, and all that. . . . Which reminds me: let’s take an intermission in our round of social duties and have a drink.”

She led us to the bar.

“I’m very demure—for Richard’s sake. I drink only Dubonnet in public. But don’t let my girlish restraint affect your batting average. Everything’s available, including trinitrotoluene.”

Vance drank brandy. As we stood chatting a tall, rugged, sunburnt man came up and put his arms possessively about Miss Naesmith.

“I’m still yearning to know your answer, Carlotta,” he blustered good-naturedly. “For the next-to-the-last time: Are you, or are you not, coming with me to Cocos Island when Dick returns to his bone-sawing?”

“Ha!” Carlotta Naesmith swung about and pushed him away playfully. “Still crooning your Once-Aboard-the-Lugger ditty. You’re inelegant, Stan. And right under Dick’s nose.”

Richard Rexon showed no annoyance. He came forward and, putting one hand on the other man’s arm, introduced him to us. It was Stanley Sydes, a young society man with too much money, who spent his time on expeditions in quest of buried treasure.

Vance knew of his exploits, and a brief discussion took place.

“A playboy bulging with good money who spends it hunting dirty doubloons!” Carlotta Naesmith laughed. “There’s a paradox—or is the whole world crazy except me?”

“Not a paradox, Miss Naesmith,” Vance put in pleasantly. “I understand Mr. Sydes’ urge perfectly. It’s really not the treasure, y’ know. It’s the quest.”

“Right!” boomed Sydes. “The joy of outwitting others, of solving riddles; and the acquisition of the unique. . . . Hell, I’m talking like a collector—— Forgive me, Richard. No offense to your eminent sire.” A noisy group opposite attracted his attention, and he joined them.

His place at the bar was taken almost immediately by the girl who had been bantering with Throme.

“My God, Sally!” Miss Naesmith greeted her. “Really alone? Hasn’t your gentleman jockey regained his mount? . . . Gentlemen,”—she turned to us—“we have here none other than Sally Alexander, the inimitable—pride of the Purple Room, off-color raconteuse and pianist extraordinary. A one-woman slum. She carried the Blue Book to the masses—and made ’em like it. A feat, egad!”

“I’m being maligned, gents,” Sally Alexander protested. “I’m elegant, no end.”

“I quite agree,” Vance defended her. “I’ve heard Miss Alexander sing, and never once have I blushed.”

“That must have been when she sang in the village choir, in her sub-deb days.”

“Just for that,” retorted Miss Alexander, “I’m going to take Dick away from you.” And, slipping her arm through Richard Rexon’s, she led him to the dance floor.

Miss Naesmith shrugged. She looked at Vance.

“Had enough of this, Sir Galahad? There are other exhibits in the zoo. Nothing really special, however. Am I not an honest guide?”

“Honest and charming.” Vance set down his glass. “But isn’t there a Mr. Bassett?”

“Oh, Jacques . . .” She looked round the room. “He’s Richard’s friend, you know. A more or less imported specimen, I believe. Anyway, he came over on the boat with Dick and is always comparing our ski runs with those of Switzerland—to the detriment of ours, of course. Maybe he does yodel and live on goat’s milk. I wouldn’t know. Though I do know he speaks American with a prairie accent—if my ears don’t lie.”

She caught sight of Bassett.

“There’s your man, in the far corner, drinking lustily by himself. Come along. You can have him gladly. Then I’ll go and rescue Dick. Sally’ll be at the risqué-story stage by now.”

Jacques Bassett sat at a small table, drinking Bourbon. He was tall, dark, aggressively athletic. His heavy eyebrows met over a broad flat nose.

He talked about Europe. Vance showed interest. Swiss winter resorts came up. Vance asked questions. Bassett expatiated. He was eloquent about the toboggan runs and the ski trails at Oberlachen in the Tyrol. Vance mentioned Amsterdam. But the subject had no interest for Bassett. He wandered away.

Vance turned his back. Then he threw his handkerchief over the glass from which Bassett had been drinking. Slipping it into his pocket, he left the room abruptly.

A little later I found Vance with Carrington Rexon in the den. Another man was seated with them before the log fire. He was in his late forties, with steel-grey hair, and a soft voice which seemed to cover a tension: obviously a man of the world, with a highly professional manner which was rigid, but not without ingratiation. I was not surprised to find that he was Doctor Loomis Quayne, the Rexon physician.

“Doctor Quayne,” Rexon explained, “dropped by to see my daughter Joan. But the excitement of so many guests has wearied her and she retired long ago.” His voice was wistful.

(Vance had told me during our drive to Winewood something of Joan Rexon’s tragedy: how she had fallen and injured her spine while skating, when she was only ten years old.)

“Joan’s fatigue need not worry you, my dear Rexon,” the doctor assured him. “It’s natural in the circumstances. This little excitement may do her good, in fact—stimulate her interest, lead her mind along new lines. Psychological therapy is our chief recourse just now. . . . I’ll drop in again tomorrow. I hope I’ll see Richard then, too. I’ve hardly talked with him since he came. But I’m glad to find him looking as well as when I saw him on my trip abroad two years ago.”

“Dick’s in the drawing room now,” Rexon suggested with a twinkle.

The doctor smiled. “No, not this evening. I must be going soon. I left the motor of my car running so I won’t have to bother priming it. These cold days the starter doesn’t work so well. . . . And I think I prefer the quiet of your den, if I may sit and finish my highball.”

“Can’t say that I blame you, doctor. . . . This new generation . . .” Rexon shook his head disapprovingly.

As we talked on, largely in generalities, but with an occasional allusion to Richard Rexon’s future in medicine, it became evident that there was something deeper than the mere professional relationship between Rexon and Quayne; a touch of intimacy, perhaps, due to long and tragic association.

At length the doctor rose and bade us good night. Vance and I left Carrington Rexon shortly after.

“A strange and dizzy household.” Vance sprawled in an easy chair in his room. “No wonder old Rexon’s jittery. Probably feels lost in the midst of the unknown. Obviously determined on Carlotta as a daughter-in-law, though; he’s just the type to crave a dynastic marriage for his son. And the girl’s not deficient in gifts. Nice; but too vivid for my aging tastes. And Richard. An admirable chap. Too serious for this outfit. Strange, too, his attitude toward Carlotta. Not all it should be. Seemed quite indifferent to the treasure hunter’s poaching. That rather irked the lady. I wonder. . . . Interesting creature, Sydes. Has a mental quirk. He put his finger on it, too. A collector! Just that. . . . But Bassett. Not a nice person. Worries old Rexon. Carlotta feels it, too. Something familiar about those cold eyes. Queer. And why should he pretend about Oberlachen? No ski runs or toboggan slides there. Only a lake and a castle and a few peasants. Probably never been there. He met Richard at Saint Moritz. He would. And when I mentioned Amsterdam, Jacques wasn’t having any. Well, well. . . . No, Van. As I said. A dizzy lot. Social life at its gaudiest. Too much mental makeup.”

He brought out his Régie cigarettes, lighted one, and stretched his legs.

“And all through the evening I kept thinking of little Ella Gunthar. Natural and fresh. Lovely. However. . . .”

The Winter Murder Case

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