Rex Stout - Counterfeit for Murder
Here you can read online Rex Stout - Counterfeit for Murder full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: Indianapolis, year: 1961, publisher: Curtis Publishing Company, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:
Romance novel
Science fiction
Adventure
Detective
Science
History
Home and family
Prose
Art
Politics
Computer
Non-fiction
Religion
Business
Children
Humor
Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.
- Book:Counterfeit for Murder
- Author:
- Publisher:Curtis Publishing Company
- Genre:
- Year:1961
- City:Indianapolis
- Rating:5 / 5
- Favourites:Add to favourites
- Your mark:
- 100
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
Counterfeit for Murder: summary, description and annotation
We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Counterfeit for Murder" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.
Counterfeit for Murder — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work
Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Counterfeit for Murder" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.
Font size:
Interval:
Bookmark:
Rex Stout
Counterfeit for Murder
Chapter 1
My rule is, never be rude to anyone unless you mean it. But when I looked through the one-way glass panel of the front door and saw her out on the stoop, my basic feelings about the opposite sex were hurt. Granting that women cant stay young and beautiful forever, that the years are bound to show, at least they dont have to let their gray hair straggle over their ears or wear a coat with a button missing or forget to wash their face, and this specimen was guilty on all three counts. So, as she put a finger to the button and the bell rang, I opened the door and told her, I dont want any, thanks. Try next door. I admit it was rude.
I would have once, Buster, she said. Thirty years ago I was a real treat.
That didnt help matters any. I have conceded that the years are bound to show.
I want to see Nero Wolfe, she said. Do I walk right through you?
There are difficulties, I told her. One, Im bigger than you are. Two, Mr. Wolfe can be seen only by appointment. Three, he wont be available until eleven oclock, more than an hour from now.
All right, Ill come in and wait. Im half froze. Are you nailed down?
A notion struck me. Wolfe believes, or claims he does, that any time I talk him into seeing a female would-be client he knows exactly what to expect if and when he sees her, and this would show him how wrong he was.
Your name, please? I asked her.
My names Annis. Hattie Annis.
What do you want to see Mr. Wolfe about?
Ill tell him when I see him. If my tongues not froze.
Youll have to tell me, Mrs. Annis. My name
Miss Annis.
Okay. My name is Archie Goodwin.
I know it is. If youre thinking I dont look like I can pay Nero Wolfe, therell be a reward and Ill split it with him. If I took it to the cops theyd do the splitting. I wouldnt trust a cop if he was naked as a baby.
What will the reward be for?
For what Ive got here. She patted her black leather handbag, the worse for wear, with a hand in a woolen glove.
What is it?
Ill tell Nero Wolfe. Look, Buster, Im no Eskimo. Let the lady in.
That wasnt feasible. I had been in the hall with my hat and overcoat and gloves on, on my way for a morning walk crosstown to the bank to deposit a check for $7417.65 in Wolfes account, when I had seen her through the one-way glass panel aiming her finger at the bell button. Letting her in and leaving her in the office while I took my walk was out of the question. The other inhabitants of that old brownstone on West 35th Street, the property of Nero Wolfe except for the furniture and other items in my bedroom, were around but they were busy. Fritz Brenner, the chef and housekeeper, was in the kitchen making chestnut soup. Wolfe was up in the plant rooms on the roof for his two-hour morning session with the orchids, and of course Theodore Horstmann was with him.
I wasnt rude about it. I told her there were several places nearby where she could spend the hour and thaw out Sams Diner at the corner of Tenth Avenue, or the drug store at the corner of Ninth, or Tonys tailor shop where she could have a button sewed on her coat and charge it to me. She didnt push. I said if she came back at a quarter past eleven I might have persuaded Wolfe to see her, and she turned to go, and then turned back, opened the black leather handbag, and took out a package wrapped in brown paper with a string around it.
Keep this for me, Buster, she said. Some nosy cop might take it on himself. Come on, it wont bite. And dont open it. Can I trust you not to open it?
I took it because I liked her. She had fine instincts and no sense at all. She had refused to tell me what was in it, and was leaving it with me and telling me not to open it my idea of a true woman if only she would comb her hair and wash her face and sew a button on. So I took it, and told her I would expect her at a quarter past eleven, and she went. When I had seen her descend the seven steps to the sidewalk and turn left, toward Tenth Avenue, I shut the door from the inside and took a look at the package. It was rectangular, some six inches long and three wide, and a couple of inches thick. I put it to my ear and held my breath, and heard nothing. But you never know what science will do next, and there were at least three dozen people in the metropolitan area who had it in for Wolfe, not to mention a few who didnt care much for me, so instead of taking it to the office, to my desk or the safe, I went to the front room and stashed it under the couch, If you ask if I untied the string and unwrapped the paper for a look, your instincts are not as fine as they should be. Anyhow, I had gloves on.
Also there had been nothing doing for more than a week, since we had cleaned up the Brigham forgery case, and my mind needed exercise as much as my legs and lungs, so walking crosstown and back I figured out what was in the package. After discarding a dozen guesses that didnt appeal to me I decided it was the Hope diamond. The one that had been sent to Washington was a phony. I was still working on various details, such as Hattie Anniss real name and station and how she had got hold of it, on the last stretch approaching the old brownstone, and therefore got nearly to the stoop before I saw that it was occupied. Perched on the top step was exactly the kind of female Wolfe expects to see when I talk him into seeing one. The right age, the right face, the right legs what showed of them below the edge of her fur coat. The coat was not mink or sable. As I started to mount she got up.
Well, she said. A grand idea, this outdoor waiting room, but there ought to be magazines.
I reached her level. The top of her fuzzy little turban was even with my nose. I suppose you rang? I asked.
I did. And was told through a crack that Mr. Wolfe was engaged and Mr. Goodwin was out. Mr. Goodwin, I presume?
Right. I had my key ring out. Ill bring some magazines. Which ones do you like?
Lets go in and look them over.
Wolfe wouldnt be down for more than half an hour, and it would be interesting to know what she was selling, so I used the key on the door and swung it open. When I had disposed of my hat and coat on the hall rack I ushered her to the office, moved one of the yellow chairs up for her, and went to my desk and sat.
We have no vacancies at the moment, I said, but you can leave your number. Dont call us, well call
Thats pretty corny, she said. She had thrown her coat open to drape it over the back of the chair, revealing other personal details that went fine with the face and legs.
Okay, I conceded. Its your turn.
My name is Tammy Baxter. Short for Tamiris. I havent decided yet which one to use on a theater program when the time comes. What do you think, Tammy or Tamiris?
It would depend on the part. If its the lead in a musical, Tammy. If it packs some weight, ONeill for instance, Tamiris.
Its more apt to be a girl at one of the tables in the night-club scene. The one who jumps up and says, Come on, Bill, lets get out of here. Thats her big line. She fluttered a gloved hand. Oh, well. What do you care? Why dont you ask me what I want?
Im putting it off because I may not have it.
Thats nice. I like that. Thats a good line, only you threw it away. There should be a pause after off. Im putting it off... because I may not have it. Try it again.
Nuts. I said it the way I felt it. You actresses are all alike. I was getting a sociable feeling about you and look what youve done to it. What do you want?
She laughed a little ripple. Im not an actress, Im only going to be. I dont want anything much, just to ask about my landlady, Miss Annis Hattie Annis. Has she been here?
I raised a brow. Here? When?
This morning.
Ill ask. I turned my head and sang out, Fritz! and when he appeared, in the doorway to the hall, I inquired, Did anyone besides this lady come while I was out?
Font size:
Interval:
Bookmark:
Similar books «Counterfeit for Murder»
Look at similar books to Counterfeit for Murder. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.
Discussion, reviews of the book Counterfeit for Murder and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.