Odor of Violets Baynard Kendrick (websites to read books for free .txt) đ
- Author: Baynard Kendrick
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âSuppose some organized band struck effectivelyâsimultaneously ruined the six power stations, cut off the sewage disposal, and valved down the four main water tunnels. In an incredibly short time the streets of New York would be tied up in an inextricable traffic snarl.
âAutomobiles would begin to run out of gasâthere are hundreds just at that point on the streets at every hour of the day. They couldnât get any moreâbecause filling-station pumps are operated electrically. The ones which have gas couldnât get out of town. The pumping systems in the tunnels would ceaseâimmediately fouling the air. Bridges and ferryboats would be hopelessly jammed. Anyone will know Iâm not exaggerating, if heâs ever crossed the Queensborough Bridge on a holiday. It can be tied up for hours by a single stalled car.â
The Colonel paused. Maclain heard his quickened breathing, and Spudâs uneasy moving on the leather divan. He said softly, âTell him about fire, Colonel Gray.â
âHavoc!â the officer exclaimed sharply. âDevastation! The engines couldnât get through the impeded streets. If they got through the water would be gone. Milling mobs would take possessionâmad with fear. Police canât move. Troops canât move. Then, with the sewers out of commissionâcomes pestilence.â He lowered his voice. âThe terror by night. The Queen is dead. New York City is gone.â
Spud asked: âWhat about the telephone? I suppose it would go too.â
The Colonel shook his head. âThatâs one of the companies which have had enough foresight to prepare for emergency. They have a secret power plant of Diesel engines safely hidden away.â He swung around on Maclain. âI hope you understand how invaluable you can beâa trained intelligence officer who can move around in darkness as well as in the light; a man who knows every street of this vast city.â
Maclain nodded soberly. âYes, Colonel Gray. I know.â
âGood.â The Colonel took out his pipe again, lighted a match, and let it burn down without applying it to the tobacco. When the match was out he threw it away. âGerente was working on two things,â he said. âHe was helping me on defense plans for one. Secondly, he was playing around with a girl.â
âHilda Lestrade?â Maclain sat up straight in his chair.
On the divan, Spud grinned quietly.
âMaybe.â The Colonel bit down on his pipe-stem. âThe police have her in custody along with a chap named Cameron, who has confessed to Gerenteâs murder. Have you read the morning papers?â
âNo,â said Spud. âThey werenât delivered. Weâre supposed to be out of town.â
Maclain asked, âWhat did they say?â
Colonel Gray hesitated. âThey gave Gerente a big play. He was well known on the stage a few years ago. Crime of passionââ
âI mean about the Lestrade girl.â
âNot much, Captain Maclain. Mysterious womanâand all that sort of thingââ
âBut he was playing around with her,â Maclain persistedââat least from what you say.â
âYou misinterpreted my statement, Captain. I said Gerente was playing around with a girl. It was you who mentioned Hilda Lestrade, and I said âMaybe.â I still mean it. Maybe she was girl number two. Her appearance in this affair has rather complicated things for meâanother reason I came to you.â
âPerhaps thereâre more,â Spud suggested. âThis Gerente seems to have been quite versatile with the ladies.â
âA valuable trait in some phases of my unpleasant duties,â said Colonel Gray. âFor the moment, I want to concentrate on a young lady from Hartford, Connecticut. Her name is Barbara Tredwill.â He paused and added, âDid you ever hear of her before?â
The Captain thoughtfully shook his head.
âWas she the girl that a columnist hinted about in the paper yesterday?â asked Spud. âI noticed Gerenteâs name.â
âThatâs the one. Her fatherâs Thaddeus Tredwill, a prominent producer. Oddly enough, his present wife was married to Paul Gerente ten years ago.â
âBut whatââ The Captain took up a flexible ivory paper cutter and began to bend it back and forth.
âBarbara Tredwillâs brother, Gilbert, is a designing engineer with International Aircraft,â Colonel Gray supplied. âThere have been leaks from that plant. Gilbert Tredwill invented the bombing sight used on our planes. He has an even better one almost perfected today. Young Tredwill has a workshop in The Crags, his fatherâs home.â
âHe lives there?â asked Maclain.
âWith his wife, Helena. Sheâs naturalized Frenchâmaiden name of Helena Corte.â
âYou sound suspicious of her,â said Spud bluntly.
âIâm suspicious of everyone,â said Colonel Gray. âIâm even suspicious of Gilbert Tredwill himself. He might be inadvertently giving information away. Thatâs why Paul Gerente made it his business to become acquainted with Gilbertâs sister, Barbara. Heâs been trying to learn all he could about the Tredwill family from the girl.â
Maclain laid the paper cutter down with a snap. âYou mean he might have learned too much to stay alive?â
âYouâre quick to get an idea. Gerente had an appointment with the Tredwill girl for dinner last nightâand later, he had an appointment with you.â
âThen the girl was in New York?â
âAnd most of her family, too,â said Colonel Gray. âHer father was at the Waldorf-Astoria. Gilbert Tredwill and his wife stayed there too. Barbara Tredwill and a younger brother, Stacy, were guests of Frederick Ritter, who has an apartment on Park Avenueâbut the Ritters are away. They turned over their apartment to the girl and her brother.â
âI presume, since you have all this information,â Maclain said slowly, âthat youâve questioned the girl.â
The Colonel regarded a crease in his well-tended trousers and sharpened it between finger and thumb. âI talked with Gilbert Tredwill on the phone this morning, before I came here to see you. There are strong reasons why I donât want anyone in the Tredwill household to know why Paul Gerente scraped up a friendship with Gilbertâs sister. Iâm telling you this, Captain Maclain, because I need your help right now.â
âIâve promised it,â said Maclain.
âWatch your step, Dunc,â Spud warned. âIâm afraid youâre dealing with a very clever man.â
âMe, Mr. Savage?â The Colonelâs friendly face grew even
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