Chinese Orange Mystery

Chinese Orange Mystery by Ellery Queen Page A

Book: Chinese Orange Mystery by Ellery Queen Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ellery Queen
Ads: Link
furiously to himself. “Obviously, because even with its label torn out—to reduce it to its most advantageous terms—it must still have been identifiable! Traceable.”
    “But how could that be?” snorted the Inspector. “That doesn’t make sense. How could you trace a cheap tie?”
    “Maybe it was made out of a special kind of goods,” suggested the Sergeant hopefully, “that would be easy to trace back.”
    “Special kind? That would make it an expensive one.” The Inspector shook his head. “You couldn’t imagine that fat little grampus with his cheap get-up wearing an expensive tie. No, it’s not that.” He threw up his hands. “Well, I don’t know what to make of it. It’s got me sunk. … Well, Hesse?”
    A detective grunted something and the old gentleman pattered off. When the Inspector returned he was excited.
    “Say, he wasn’t smashed near the door at all!” he exclaimed. “We’ve found blood on the floor near that chair.” He thumbed the chair near the table against the wall. “He must have been struck down near the chair.”
    “Ah, so you’ve seen that, have you?” drawled Ellery. “Interesting, I must say. Then what the deuce is he doing near the office-door behind that shifted bookcase?”
    “The devil!” snarled the old gentleman. “This is getting crazier by the second. Let’s see what Doc Prouty has to say.”
    Dr. Prouty was rising and brushing off his knees. His cloth hat was perched at a rakish angle on his bald head, and faint perspiration gleamed on his forehead. The Inspector sprang over to engage him in furious conversation. Sergeant Velie drifted off to talk to a detective stationed at the corridor-door.
    Ellery straightened from the sill, his brow puckered like the skin of a gnome. He stood still for a long time. Then he rapped his right temple with a baffled fist and sauntered toward his father and the doctor. Midway he stopped, very suddenly. Something bright had caught his eye. Scattered pieces of brightness on the table. … He went to the table. The bowl of fruit, like everything else on the unpolished wood, had been turned upside down. Beside the bowl lay the ragged fragments of the rind of a tangerine, and a few dry pips. Vaguely he recalled seeing them before. … He lifted away the overturned bowl and studied the exposed fruits. Pears, apples, grapes. …
    Without turning he said: “Sergeant.” Velie came lumbering back. “Didn’t you say that the nurse, Miss Diversey, had testified to entering this room a few minutes before the arrival of the—the devil! the dead man?”
    “Why, sure.”
    “Fetch her like a good chap. No noise about it want to ask her something.”
    “Sure, Mr. Queen.”
    Ellery waited quietly. When Sergeant Velie returned a moment later he had in tow the tall nurse, her face quite pale. She kept her eyes averted from the corpse.
    “Here she is, Mr. Queen.”
    “Ah, Miss Diversey.” Ellery turned. “You were in this room, I understand, at about five-thirty this evening?”
    “Yes, sir,” she said nervously.
    “Did you notice this fruit-bowl, by any chance?”
    Something startled leaped into her eyes. “Fruit? Why—yes, sir. In fact, I—I helped myself to a piece.”
    “Splendid!” smiled Ellery. “That’s better luck than I could have hoped for. And did you notice the tangerines particularly?”
    “Tangerines?” She was frightened now. “I—I ate one.”
    “Oh.” Disappointment showed plainly on his face. “Then these fragments of rind are from the tangerine you ate?” He indicated the peelings.
    Miss Diversey stared at them. “Oh, no, sir. I threw mine, pits and all, out that open window there.”
    “Ah!” Disappointment vanished to be replaced by eagerness. “Did you notice how many tangerines were left after you had taken one?”
    “Yes, sir. Two.”
    “That’s all, Miss Diversey,” murmured Ellery. “You’ve been most helpful. All right, Sergeant.”
    Velie grinned vaguely and led the nurse

Similar Books

Over You

Christine Kersey

Peanut Butter Sweets

Pamela Bennett

All Bets Are On

Charlotte Phillips

Heroes Never Die

Lois Sanders

Trinity Blacio

Embracing the Winds