<h2><SPAN name="xv" id="xv"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV<br/> <span>The Mystery Solved</span></h2>
<hr class="divider2" />
<p class="noi">I<small>T WAS A PLEASANT SUNDAY AFTERNOON, TWO DAYS</small> after Vicki’s hair-raising
experience with Steve Miller’s airplane. Vicki, Mr. Curtin, Nina,
Louise, John Quayle, and Joey Watson were sitting on the Curtins’ broad
patio sipping cool fruit drinks and relaxing. A gentle breeze blew
through the flowers and trees that surrounded the big brick house, and
Vicki could feel its gentle fingers patting her on the cheek.</p>
<p>“So if it hadn’t been for this young lady,” John Quayle was saying as
he raised his glass and made a toast to Vicki, “I’m afraid all of us
would still be in the dark about the theft of the gold coins, and the
thieves would be well on their way to parts unknown. But now, thanks to
her, all of the gang except Amos Tytell are safely behind bars. Since
the old man was an unwilling accomplice, we released him, and, for the
first time since he came South, he’s enjoying himself<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</SPAN></span> here in Tampa
waiting to be the key witness at the trial.”</p>
<p>“The newspapers,” Mr. Curtin said, “didn’t tell all the details of the
story, not enough anyway to satisfy those of us who had a part in it.
Frankly, Mr. Quayle, that’s why I invited you here today. Are you at
liberty to give it all to us? I suddenly found myself caught up in the
middle of it—first when our committee opened the crate of scrap metal,
and second when I bought that gold ship in Havana—but frankly I’m
still at sea.”</p>
<p>Mr. Quayle took a long sip of his drink. “It might be well,” he said,
“if I started at the beginning.” He paused for a second to marshal the
thoughts in his mind, and then went on.</p>
<p>“It all started out with Eaton-Smith. He had, as we finally found out,
a pretty shady career behind him. He had never been arrested, though,
and that’s why it took our people so long to track down his past. He
had become friendly with a certain Max Schmidt in New York. Max didn’t
have a record either, but Eaton-Smith discovered that he wasn’t above
making a dishonest dollar if he thought he could get away with it. Max
was a man-of-all-work at the Numismatic Museum, and when Eaton-Smith
learned that your committee, Mr. Curtin, had requested that the antique
coin exhibit be sent to Tampa, the two of them went to work on an
elaborate scheme to steal them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</SPAN></span>
“First he contacted Raymond Duke who had, he knew, a business in Havana
under the name of Ramon Garcia and who also was not reluctant to steal
several hundred thousand dollars’ worth of gold. Through Duke he got in
touch with Van Lasher.”</p>
<p>“But I thought you said Van was an old Federal Airlines employee with a
good record,” Vicki interrupted.</p>
<p>“He had been for the past eight years, Vicki, and that’s what almost
fooled us. After you reported that skull-and-crossbones warning, we
started digging a little deeper into the background of all employees at
the airport here. And we found out that he had served a prison term in
Texas ten years ago for larceny. When he got out of prison, he changed
his name and went to work for Federal Airlines. So far as we can
tell, he had kept his record clean ever since. But Duke, who had been
involved in a deal with Lasher some years ago, approached him on the
gold coin job. And again, the prospect of all that easy money was too
much for him.”</p>
<p>He took another sip of his lemonade.</p>
<p>“It is this kind of case that is always toughest to break. Where you
are dealing with people who are known criminals, you automatically
suspect them when a crime is committed. But all of these men had an
outward cloak of respectability that acted as protective coloration.”</p>
<p>“But Mr. Tytell?” Vicki began, unable to control<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</SPAN></span> her curiosity about
the old man who had so aroused her sympathy.</p>
<p>“I’m coming to him,” Quayle continued. “He had been an expert jeweler
and goldsmith as I told you the other day, Vicki, and Eaton-Smith ran
into him in New York. When this gold coin business came up, the old
man immediately came to Eaton-Smith’s mind. Eaton-Smith went to him
and told him that he had a good job for him in Tampa. The old man was
so grateful that he didn’t say he hadn’t eaten in twenty-four hours.
That’s why he was practically starved when you saw him on the plane.</p>
<p>“Eaton-Smith picked him up in a taxi on the morning of—let’s
see—Thursday the sixth. On the way to the airport, Tytell made certain
inquiries about the job and Eaton-Smith evaded them. Then, when
Eaton-Smith told him that the two were going to travel on the plane as
if they didn’t know each other, the old man began to get suspicious.
Being old and sick and hungry and nervous, he began talking to you,
Vicki, after he was on the plane. Eaton-Smith noticed this, moved over
into the empty seat beside him, and told him in no uncertain terms to
keep his mouth shut. Then Tytell knew for sure that something was wrong
and he became badly frightened. That’s when he left what he hoped you
would discover as a message in the form of the folded travel folder.
The Granada Restaurant thing was an accident. He
<SPAN name="was" id="was"></SPAN><ins title="Original has 'way'">was</ins> trying to tell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</SPAN></span> you
that he would be in Ybor City, where he knew that Eaton-Smith lived.”</p>
<p>“But how in the world did he think Vicki could help him?” Louise asked.</p>
<p>“He wasn’t thinking clearly at all. Remember that he was badly
frightened and desperate.”</p>
<p>The FBI man stopped for a moment.</p>
<p>“Am I keeping this straight enough for you?”</p>
<p>Everyone nodded silent assent, and he continued:</p>
<p>“Well, for weeks Eaton-Smith and Raymond Duke had been scheming to
steal the coins. Max Schmidt in the museum in New York had found out
that the shipment would be made by air, since the closing of the
exhibit in New York and the opening of the Festival here were only
a few days apart. Part of Schmidt’s work at the museum was handling
packing and shipping details. Schmidt then made up an exact duplicate
of the crate that the coins would be shipped in. He loaded this
duplicate crate with scrap metal and shipped it in advance to Raymond
Duke. When it was received, Van took it to the small inside room of
the warehouse where valuables were kept overnight and covered it up
with a canvas tarpaulin. Being the warehouse foreman, Van’s movements
were never questioned. Of course, at this point, there was nothing for
anyone to be suspicious about. So when Schmidt in New York advised Duke
that the gold was coming on Federal’s Flight Seventeen—your ship,
Vicki—they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</SPAN></span> were all ready to snatch it. It was only a coincidence
that Eaton-Smith and Tytell were on the same plane.</p>
<p>“Since he was the warehouse boss, it seemed natural for Van to offer to
sit up with the private detective who had accompanied the shipment and
whose main reason for coming to Tampa was to guard the coins while they
were on exhibit at the Hall. Jones, of course, was glad of the company.
And Van had figured out a pretty cute gimmick. He knew that the
all-night guard duty in the warehouse would be a pretty dull affair, so
he brought along a thermos jar of coffee which he went out at regular
intervals to refill. He had also provided himself with some very mild
sleeping pills. Sometime during the night he slipped one of the pills
into Jones’s coffee. Since Jones had been up all day, and had had a
fairly tiring plane trip too, the mild pill was just enough to put him
into a sound sleep and give Van a chance to switch the crates. Schmidt
had sent him a set of duplicate labels from the museum in New York. So
Van soaked the original labels off each crate with a solvent solution,
and put the label addressed to Duke on the crate of gold, and the label
addressed to the Festival committee on the crate of junk. Since the
solvent had thoroughly dried by morning, there was no way to tell that
a change had been made. Then he switched the bills of lading, covered
up the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</SPAN></span> genuine crate with the canvas—and that was all there was to it.</p>
<p>“When it was all shipshape, he woke the detective up, and so far as
Jones knew he had only slipped off for a moment into a brief nap. The
bit about the prowler, Joey, was staged by Van to indicate that someone
had been snooping around. It was just by chance that he used your
flashlight. You had left it on top of your locker and Van happened to
see it.”</p>
<p>“And so,” Mr. Curtin said, “the theft was accomplished by the simple
device of Van Lasher switching the crates.”</p>
<p>“That’s right,” Mr. Quayle said, “it was as simple as that. The
next morning, at the same time the fake crate was delivered to your
committee, the crate containing the gold was delivered to Raymond Duke.
Naturally, we checked on all deliveries made that morning, but Duke
showed our man the bill of lading for a shipment of perfume, and we had
no reason to doubt him.”</p>
<p>At that moment Mrs. Tucker interrupted with a plate of sandwiches and a
fresh pitcher of lemonade. Mr. Quayle turned his attention briefly from
the gold coins to the food.</p>
<p>“Being a bachelor,” he said to the housekeeper, “I don’t often get
chicken sandwiches like these.” He helped himself to another one.</p>
<p>As she sipped on her <SPAN name="lemonade" id="lemonade"></SPAN><ins title="Original has 'lemondae'">lemonade</ins> Vicki couldn’t get her mind off the old
man who had been the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</SPAN></span> starting point of the whole case so far as she
was concerned.</p>
<p>“How,” she asked, “did Duke and Eaton-Smith get Mr. Tytell to work for
them after he found out what was going on?”</p>
<p>“By another simple method,” the FBI man replied. “They threatened to
kill him if he made a false move.”</p>
<p>“But when I saw him in Ybor City and in the art supply store no one was
with him,” Vicki said. “So he couldn’t have been completely a prisoner.
Why couldn’t he have gone to the police? They’d have protected him.”</p>
<p>“They had one other weapon,” Mr. Quayle said. “It appears that the old
man has a grandson in New York. Tytell was unable to support him and
the boy is in a charitable institution. They threatened to hurt the boy
if Tytell went to the police. Naturally, the Tampa police would have
gotten in touch with the New York force to assure the boy’s protection.
But the old man was scared out of his wits and wasn’t thinking
straight. That’s why he was so frightened when you saw him that day in
front of Duke’s house.”</p>
<p>“But he did try to get away on my plane to New York,” Vicki reminded
him.</p>
<p>“There’s no accounting for what people do when they get panicky,” Mr.
Quayle said. “He saw you in the store that day and the idea of running
away on your ship suddenly occurred to him. He had come to look on
you as a friend,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</SPAN></span> Vicki, since you were the only person who had acted
friendly toward him. He had seen Eaton-Smith’s air-travel credit card
lying on his desk. So, having no money, he tried to use it to pay for
his ticket when he picked it up at the airport. Naturally, the Federal
people called Eaton-Smith, and he and Duke drove to the airport, found
the old man, forced him into the car and took him back to Ybor City. He
lost his violin case in the struggle.”</p>
<p>The FBI man took a long sip of his lemonade. “I’m certainly doing a lot
of talking,” he said.</p>
<p>“If you stop now,” Louise said pertly, “I’ll take away that tray of
chicken sandwiches.”</p>
<p>“In that case—” Quayle reached for another sandwich. “Now where was I?”</p>
<p>“What I don’t understand,” Mr. Curtin said, “is how that peddler in
Havana happened to have the solid gold ship he sold us.”</p>
<p>“We got him, too,” Quayle said. “But let me go back a little.
Eaton-Smith had a very ingenious idea about shipping the gold out of
the country. He bought up several crates of those little Festival
souvenirs, on the pretext of giving them to his customers. You saw
some of them at his house, Vicki. He then forced Tytell to melt down
the coins and cast the gold in the shape of the little ships. He then
recrated the souvenirs, putting several layers of the gold ships under
the cheap ones, and Duke shipped them to Ramon Garcia in Havana. If
the Cuban customs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</SPAN></span> people bothered to open the crates at all—don’t
forget that Ramon Garcia was constantly shipping things in and out
of Havana—they would have seen the souvenirs on top and pass the
shipment. Naturally, they would have no reason to suspect that the
crates held anything more valuable than cheap novelties. And, of
course, it worked.</p>
<p>“Now for the man who sold you the gold ship in Havana. He was a
handyman who worked at odd times around Duke’s place. When Duke was
removing the gold from the crates of souvenirs, he was careless to let
the fellow get a good look at one. He recognized it for what it really
was, and when Duke’s back was turned for a moment, slipped it into his
pocket.”</p>
<p>“And thereby,” Mr. Curtin volunteered, “providing us with the one piece
of concrete evidence that solved the mystery.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you mean solid gold evidence, Daddy?” Nina teased.</p>
<p>“It’s a good thing we went to the Thieves’ Market that afternoon,”
Vicki remarked.</p>
<p>“No,” Quayle corrected her. “It’s a good thing that you have all the
instincts and the quick mind of a good detective, Vicki. You were smart
enough to put all the odds and ends of evidence together and come up
with the right answer. Not everyone has that talent.”</p>
<p>“Me, for instance.” Mr. Curtin laughed. “I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</SPAN></span> saw the same things Vicki
did, and they didn’t mean a thing to me.”</p>
<p>“Now there was nothing in the world to connect Raymond Duke and
Eaton-Smith in any way with that gold shipment except Van Lasher. And
that’s where you come in, Joey.”</p>
<p>“You mean that offer of a job that Duke made me?”</p>
<p>“That’s right. The three of them could never afford to be seen
together. They were even afraid to use the telephone, lest a message
somehow be intercepted when Van was out of the warehouse. But obviously
they had to keep in touch. Since you were always around the warehouse
with Van, the idea was to use you as a messenger boy. They figured you
needed the money badly enough to do as you were told, and that you
would believe any cock-and-bull story Van cooked up to explain the need
for secrecy. Of course, if everything went right, there was no reason
for you or anyone else to connect either of them with the missing gold.
But you turned them down, and they were afraid to approach anyone else.
So Van used the cover of the torchlight parade in Ybor City, where
almost everyone was in costume and most people were masked, to meet
with his confederates. That’s why he ran away when he recognized you,
Vicki, and lost himself in the crowd. And that’s why Duke went after
you, to hold you up by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</SPAN></span> some pretext or another until Van could get
away. Van sending you that threatening note was another dumb play. He
thought it might frighten you into keeping quiet.”</p>
<p>“That proves he doesn’t know Vicki very well,” Mr. Curtin said.</p>
<p>“And again you used your detective’s intuition when you saw Van walking
across the airfield toward Olsen’s plane, and recognized him as the
pirate. If you hadn’t followed him, Olsen would have got his clearance
papers and taken Van to Cuba as a matter of course.”</p>
<p>“But why was Van running away in such a hurry?”</p>
<p>“Well, up to that morning everything had gone according to plan.
Eaton-Smith and Duke, having shipped all the gold to Cuba, went there
themselves and took the old man with them for safekeeping. They planned
to stay there, under cover, until they could make arrangements to
dispose of the gold, possibly in South America. Then they would simply
ditch the old man and fade away. Van was completely in the clear up to
that point, so the plan was for him to stay here working at his job
until everything had blown over. Then he was to join them.</p>
<p>“However, Van was pretty leery of you, Vicki. It was obvious to all
three that you were doing a lot of poking around where you had no
business to be. Van saw me meet you at the plane<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</SPAN></span> Friday morning and
take you to my office. Since he knew the plane was inbound from Havana,
he began to smell a rat. He followed us upstairs, saw that my secretary
was away from her desk, and took a quick peek through the keyhole.”</p>
<p>“He was taking an awful chance of having your secretary walk in and
catch him,” Vicki suggested.</p>
<p>“That’s true. But he figured he was taking a worse one if he didn’t
find out what we were up to. He saw the gold ship model on my desk,
and he knew the jig was up. He hurried to his rooming house, which is
just on the edge of the field, picked up some money that Eaton-Smith
had given him in advance for emergencies, grabbed his raincoat and hat,
then hurried over to make a quick deal with Roy to fly him to Cuba.
When he saw you had followed him, he got panicky and pulled his gun.
You know the rest of the story.”</p>
<p>The FBI man drained the last of his lemonade.</p>
<p>“It’s been quite a case,” he said.</p>
<p>“Just one other thing,” Mr. Curtin said. “How did you locate Duke and
Eaton-Smith so fast?”</p>
<p>Quayle smiled. “When Lasher saw that we finally had him, he told us
the whole story from the beginning, including where we could pick up
Eaton-Smith, Duke, and old Mr. Tytell.”</p>
<p>“That poor old man,” Vicki said. “This whole thing has been terrible
for him.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</SPAN></span>
“On the contrary,” Quayle said, “it probably will turn out to be the
best thing that ever happened to him.”</p>
<p>“What?” Vicki could hardly believe what she was hearing.</p>
<p>“This Florida climate was just what he needed,” Quayle said. “Even with
what he’s been through, his health has improved considerably in the few
days he’s been down here. A man with his skill as a jeweler shouldn’t
have any trouble finding work in Tampa. He can bring his grandson down,
and start living a normal life again.”</p>
<p>Vicki’s eyes sparkled. “Oh, I’m so glad for him. So very glad!”</p>
<p>The FBI agent rose to go.</p>
<p>“Miss Vicki Barr,” he said, “it’s been a pleasure working with you.
I’ve said it before and I say it again—you’re a darn good detective.”</p>
<p>Vicki blushed in spite of herself.</p>
<p>“This crime was much worse than an ordinary theft,” Quayle said.
“Those ancient gold coins were a living part of history. They were
irreplaceable and priceless. Those men who stole them and destroyed
them, all but the handful we found in Eaton-Smith’s house, did a
terrible thing. The jury and the judge will show them no mercy. It’s
fortunate that we recovered the gold, but compared to the original
coins, it is virtually worthless. There’s a whole vault full of gold up
in Fort Knox.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</SPAN></span>
He grinned. “When I say the gold is worthless, I am speaking only in a
comparative sense of course. I don’t think you’ll find this altogether
worthless, Vicki.”</p>
<p>From his pocket he took the little golden ship that Vicki had first
seen in the Thieves’ Market.</p>
<p>“For your invaluable help in solving this case, the insurance company
wants you to have this as a reward.”</p>
<p>He reached over and put the ship’s model in Vicki’s hand. The polished
gold glistened in the afternoon sun.</p>
<p>“If I ever have another case as perplexing as this one, I may call on
you for help, Vicki. You’re a darn good detective.”</p>
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<p class="center"><SPAN name="Transcribers_Note" id="Transcribers_Note"></SPAN>Transcriber’s Note:</p>
<p>Punctuation has been standardized. Other changes to the original
publication are as follows:</p>
<ul class="nobullet">
<li><ul><li>Page 9<br/>
“Hi, Joey!” Vickie greeted him. <i>changed to</i><br/>
“Hi, Joey!” <SPAN href="#Vicki">Vicki</SPAN> greeted him.</li></ul></li>
<li><ul><li>Page 148<br/>
flashing colors of a kaleidscope wheel <i>changed to</i><br/>
flashing colors of a <SPAN href="#kaleidoscope">kaleidoscope</SPAN> wheel</li></ul></li>
<li><ul><li>Page 172<br/>
He way trying to tell <i>changed to</i><br/>
He <SPAN href="#was">was</SPAN> trying to tell</li></ul></li>
<li><ul><li>Page 175<br/>
she sipped on her lemondae <i>changed to</i><br/>
she sipped on her <SPAN href="#lemonade">lemonade</SPAN></li></ul></li>
</ul></div>
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