Problem
of
the Stolen Rubens
Matthew Kale
made fifty million dollars out of axle grease, after which he began to
patronize the high arts. It was simple enough: he had the money, and Europe had
the old masters. His method of buying was simplicity itself. There were five
thousand square yards, more or less, in the huge gallery of his marble mansion
which were to be covered, so he bought five thousand square yards, more or
less, of art. Some of it was good, some of it fair, and much of it bad. The
chief picture of the collection was a Rubens, which he had picked up in Rome
for fifty thousand dollars.
Soon
after acquiring his collection, Kale decided to make certain alterations in the
vast room where the pictures hung. They were all taken down and stored in the
ball room, equally vast, with their faces toward the wall. Meanwhile Kale and
his family took refuge in a nearby hotel.
It
was at this hotel that Kale met Jules de Lesseps. De Lesseps was distinctly
French, the sort of Frenchman whose conversation resembles calisthenics. He was
nervous, quick, and agile, and he told Kale in confidence that he was not only
a painter himself, but was a connoisseur in the high arts. Pompous in the pride
of possession, Kale went to a good deal of trouble to exhibit his private
collection for de Lesseps’ delectation. It happened in the ball room, and the
true artist’s delight shone in the Frenchman’s eyes as he handled the pieces
which were good. Some of the others made him smile, but it was an inoffensive
sort of smile.
With
his own hands Kale lifted the precious Rubens and held it before the
Frenchman’s eyes. It was a “Madonna and Child,” one of those wonderful
creations which have endured through the years with all the sparkle and color
beauty of their pristine days. Kale seemed disappointed because de Lesseps was
not particularly enthusiastic about this picture.
“Why,
it’s a Rubens!” he exclaimed.
“Yes,
I see,” replied de Lesseps.
“It
cost me fifty thousand dollars.”
“It
is perhaps worth more than that,” and the Frenchman shrugged his shoulders as
he turned away.
Kale
looked at him in chagrin. Could it be that de Lesseps did not understand that
it was a Rubens, and that Rubens was a painter? Or was it that he had failed to
hear him say that it cost him fifty thousand dollars. Kale was accustomed to
seeing people bob their heads and open their eyes when he said fifty thousand
dollars; therefore, “Don’t you like it?” he asked.
“Very
much indeed,” replied de Lesseps; “but I have seen it before. I saw it in Rome
just a week or so before you purchased it.”
They
rummaged on through the pictures, and at last a Whistler was turned up for
their inspection. It was one of the famous Thames series, a water color. De
Lesseps’ face radiated excitement, and several times he glanced from the water
color to the Rubens as if mentally comparing the exquisitely penciled and
colored modern work with the bold, masterly technic of the old.
Kale
misunderstood the silence. “I don’t think much of this one myself,” he
explained apologetically. “It’s a Whistler, and all that, and it cost me five
thousand dollars, and I sort of had to have it, but still it isn’t just the
kind of thing that I like. What do you think of it?”
“I
think it is perfectly wonderful!” replied the Frenchman enthusiastically. “It
is the essence, the superlative, of modern work. I wonder if it would be
possible,” and he turned to face Kale, “for me to make a copy of that? I have
some slight skill in painting myself, and dare say I could make a fairly
creditable copy of it.”
Kale
was flattered. He was more and more impressed each moment with the picture.
“Why, certainly,” he replied. “I will have it sent up to the hotel, and you
can——”
“No,
no, no!” interrupted de Lesseps quickly. “I wouldn’t care to accept the
responsibility of having the picture in my charge. There is always a danger of
fire. But if you would give me permission to come here—this room is large and
airy and light, and besides it is quiet——”
“Just
as you like,” said Kale magnanimously. “I merely thought the other way would be
most convenient for you.”
De
Lesseps drew near, and laid one hand on the millionaire’s arm. “My dear
friend,” he said earnestly, “if these pictures were my pictures, I shouldn’t
try to accommodate anybody where they were concerned. I dare say the collection
as it stands cost you——”
“Six
hundred and eighty-seven thousand dollars,” volunteered Kale proudly.
“And
surely they must be well protected here in your house during your absence?”
“There
are about twenty servants in the house while the workmen are making the alterations,”
said Kale, “and three of them don’t do anything but watch this room. No one can
go in or out except by the door we entered—the others are locked and barred—and
then only with my permission, or a written order from me. No, sir, nobody can
get away with anything in this room.”
“Excellent—excellent!”
said de Lesseps admiringly. He smiled a little bit. “I am afraid I did not give
you credit for being the far-sighted business man that you are.” He turned and
glanced over the collection of pictures abstractedly. “A clever thief, though,”
he ventured, “might cut a valuable painting, for instance the Rubens, out of
the frame, roll it up, conceal it under his coat, and escape.”
Kale
laughed pleasantly and shook his head.
It
was a couple of days later at the hotel that de Lesseps brought up the subject
of copying the Whistler. He was profuse in his thanks when Kale volunteered to
accompany him to the mansion and witness the preliminary stages of the work.
They paused at the ball room door.
“Jennings,”
said Kale to the liveried servant there, “this is Mr. de Lesseps. He is to come
and go as he likes. He is going to do some work in the ball room here. See that
he isn’t disturbed.”
De
Lesseps noticed the Rubens leaning carelessly against some other pictures, with
the holy face of the Madonna toward them. “Really, Mr. Kale,” he protested,
“that picture is too valuable to be left about like that. If you will let your
servants bring me some canvas, I shall wrap it and place it up on the table
here off the floor. Suppose there were mice here!”
Kale
thanked him. The necessary orders were given, and finally the picture was
carefully wrapped and placed beyond harm’s reach, whereupon de Lesseps adjusted
himself, paper, easel, stool, and all, and began his work of copying. There
Kale left him.
Three
days later Kale just happened to drop in, and found the artist still at his
labor.
“I
just dropped by,” he explained, “to see how the work in the gallery was getting
along. It will be finished in another week. I hope I am not disturbing you?”
“Not
at all,” said de Lesseps; “I have nearly finished. See how I am getting along?”
He turned the easel toward Kale.
The
millionaire gazed from that toward the original which stood on a chair near by,
and frank admiration for the artist’s efforts was in his eyes. “Why, it’s
fine!” he exclaimed. “It’s just as good as the other one, and I bet you don’t
want any five thousand dollars for it—eh?”
That
was all that was said about it at the time. Kale wandered about the house for
an hour or so, then dropped into the ball room where the artist was just
getting his paraphernalia together, and they walked back to the hotel. The
artist carried under one arm his copy of the Whistler, loosely rolled up.
Another
week passed, and the workmen who had been engaged in refinishing and decorating
the gallery had gone. De Lesseps volunteered to assist in the work of rehanging
the pictures, and Kale gladly turned the matter over to him. It was in the
afternoon of the day this work began that de Lesseps, chatting pleasantly with
Kale, ripped loose the canvas which enshrouded the precious Rubens. Then he
paused with an exclamation of dismay. The picture was gone; the frame which had
held it was empty. A thin strip of canvas around the inside edge showed that a
sharp penknife had been used to cut out the painting.
All
of these facts came to the attention of Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van
Dusen—The Thinking Machine. This was a day or so after Kale had rushed into
Detective Mallory’s office at police headquarters, with the statement that his
Rubens had been stolen. He banged his fist down on the detective’s desk and
roared at him.
“It
cost me fifty thousand dollars!” he declared violently. “Why don’t you do
something? What are you sitting there staring at me for?”
“Don’t
excite yourself, Mr. Kale,” the detective advised. “I will put my men at work
right now to recover the—the—— What is a Rubens, anyway?”
“It’s
a picture!” bellowed Mr. Kale. “A piece of canvas with some paint on it, and it
cost me fifty thousand dollars—don’t you forget that!”
So
the police machinery was set in motion to recover the painting. And in time the
matter fell under the watchful eye of Hutchinson Hatch, reporter. He learned
the facts preceding the disappearance of the picture, and then called on de Lesseps.
He found the artist in a state of excitement bordering on hysteria; an
intimation from the reporter of the object of his visit caused de Lesseps to
burst into words.
“Mon Dieu! it
is outrageous!” he exclaimed. “What can I do? I was the only one in the room
for several days. I was the one who took such pains to protect the picture. And
now it is gone! The loss is irreparable. What can I do?”
Hatch
didn’t have any very definite idea as to just what he could do, so he let him
go on. “As I understand it, Mr. de Lesseps,” he interrupted at last, “no one
else was in the room, except you and Mr. Kale, all the time you were there?”
“No
one else.”
“And
I think Mr. Kale said that you were making a copy of some famous water color;
weren’t you?”
“Yes,
a Thames scene, by Whistler,” was the reply. “That is it, hanging over the
mantel.”
Hatch
glanced at the picture admiringly. It was an exquisite copy, and showed the
deft touch of a man who was himself an artist of great ability.
De
Lesseps read the admiration in his face. “It is not bad,” he said modestly. “I
studied with Carolus Duran.”
With
all else that was known, and this little additional information, which seemed
of no particular value to the reporter, the entire matter was laid before The
Thinking Machine. That distinguished man listened from beginning to end without
comment.
“Who
had access to the room?” he asked finally.
“That
is what the police are working on now,” was the reply. “There are a couple of
dozen servants in the house, and I suppose, in spite of Kale’s rigid orders,
there was a certain laxity in their enforcement.”
“Of
course that makes it more difficult,” said The Thinking Machine in the
perpetually irritated voice which was so distinctly a part of himself. “Perhaps
it would be best for us to go to Mr. Kale’s home and personally investigate.”
Kale
received them with the reserve which all rich men show in the presence of
representatives of the press. He stared frankly and somewhat curiously at the
diminutive figure of the scientist, who explained the object of their visit.
“I
guess you fellows can’t do anything with this,” the millionaire assured them.
“I’ve got some regular detectives on it.”
“Is
Mr. Mallory here now?” asked The Thinking Machine curtly.
“Yes,
he is up stairs in the servants’ quarters.”
“May
we see the room from which the picture was taken?” inquired the scientist, with
a suave intonation which Hatch knew well.
Kale
granted the permission with a wave of the hand, and ushered them into the ball
room, where the pictures had been stored. From the relative center of this room
The Thinking Machine surveyed it all. The windows were high. Half a dozen doors
leading out into the hallways, to the conservatory, and quiet nooks of the
mansion offered innumerable possibilities of access. After this one long
comprehensive squint, The Thinking Machine went over and picked up the frame
from which the Rubens had been cut. For a long time he examined it. Kale’s
impatience was painfully evident. Finally the scientist turned to him.
“How
well do you know M. de Lesseps?” he asked.
“I’ve
known him for only a month or so. Why?”
“Did
he bring you letters of introduction, or did you meet him merely casually?”
Kale
regarded him with evident displeasure. “My own personal affairs have nothing
whatever to do with this matter,” he said pointedly. “Mr. de Lesseps is a
gentleman of integrity, and certainly he is the last whom I would suspect of
any connection with the disappearance of the picture.”
“That
is usually the case,” remarked The Thinking Machine tartly. He turned to Hatch.
“Just how good a copy was that he made of the Whistler picture?” he asked.
“I
have never seen the original,” Hatch replied; “but the workmanship was superb.
Perhaps Mr. Kale wouldn’t object to us seeing——”
“Oh,
of course not,” said Kale resignedly. “Come in; it’s in the gallery.”
Hatch
submitted the picture to a careful scrutiny. “I should say that the copy is
well nigh perfect,” was his verdict. “Of course, in its absence, I couldn’t say
exactly; but it is certainly a superb work.”
The
curtains of a wide door almost in front of them were thrown aside suddenly, and
Detective Mallory entered. He carried something in his hand, but at the sight
of them concealed it behind him. Unrepressed triumph was in his face.
“Ah,
professor, we meet often; don’t we?” he said.
“This
reporter here and his friend seem to be trying to drag de Lesseps into this
affair somehow,” Kale complained to the detective. “I don’t want anything like
that to happen. He is liable to go out and print anything. They always do.”
The
Thinking Machine glared at him unwaveringly, straight in the eye for an
instant, then extended his hand toward Mallory. “Where did you find it?” he
asked.
“Sorry
to disappoint you, professor,” said the detective sarcastically, “but this is
the time when you were a little late,” and he produced the object which he held
behind him. “Here is your picture, Mr. Kale.”
Kale
gasped a little in relief and astonishment, and held up the canvas with both
hands to examine it. “Fine!” he told the detective. “I’ll see that you don’t
lose anything by this. Why, that thing cost me fifty thousand dollars!” Kale
didn’t seem able to get over that.
The
Thinking Machine leaned forward to squint at the upper right hand corner of the
canvas. “Where did you find it?” he asked again.
“Rolled
up tight, and concealed in the bottom of a trunk in the room of one of the
servants,” explained Mallory. “The servant’s name is Jennings. He is now under
arrest.”
“Jennings!”
exclaimed Kale. “Why, he has been with me for years.”
“Did
he confess?” asked the scientist imperturbably.
“Of
course not,” said Mallory. “He says some of the other servants must have hidden
it there.”
The
Thinking Machine nodded at Hatch. “I think perhaps that is all,” he remarked.
“I congratulate you, Mr. Mallory, upon bringing the matter to such a quick and
satisfactory conclusion.”
Ten
minutes later they left the house and caught a car for the scientist’s home.
Hatch was a little chagrined at the unexpected termination of the affair, and
was thoughtfully silent for a time.
“Mallory
does show an occasional gleam of human intelligence; doesn’t he?” he said at
last quizzically.
“Not
that I ever noticed,” remarked The Thinking Machine crustily.
“But
he found the picture,” Hatch insisted.
“Of
course he found it. It was put there for him to find.”
“Put
there for him to find!” repeated the reporter. “Didn’t Jennings steal it?”
“If
he did, he’s a fool.”
“Well,
if he didn’t steal it, who put it there?”
“De
Lesseps.”
“De
Lesseps!” echoed Hatch. “Why the deuce did he steal a fifty thousand-dollar
picture and put it in a servant’s trunk to be found?”
The
Thinking Machine twisted around in his seat and squinted at him coldly for a
moment. “At times, Mr. Hatch, I am absolutely amazed at your stupidity,” he
said frankly. “I can understand it in a man like Mallory, but I have always
given you credit for being an astute, quick-witted man.”
Hatch
smiled at the reproach. It was not the first time he had heard of it. But
nothing bearing on the problem in hand was said until they reached The Thinking
Machine’s apartments.
“The
only real question in my mind, Mr. Hatch,” said the scientist then, “is whether
or not I should take the trouble to restore Mr. Kale’s picture at all. He is
perfectly satisfied, and will probably never know the difference. So——”
Suddenly
Hatch saw something. “Great Scott!” he exclaimed. “Do you mean that the picture
that Mallory found was——”
“A
copy of the original,” supplemented the scientist. “Personally I know nothing
whatever about art; therefore, I could not say from observation that it is a
copy, but I know it from the logic of the thing. When the original was cut from
the frame, the knife swerved a little at the upper right hand corner. The
canvas remaining in the frame told me that. The picture that Mr. Mallory found
did not correspond in this detail with the canvas in the frame. The conclusion
is obvious.”
“And
de Lesseps has the original?”
“De
Lesseps has the original. How did he get it? In any one of a dozen ways. He
might have rolled it up and stuck it under his coat. He might have had a
confederate. But I don’t think that any ordinary method of theft would have
appealed to him. I am giving him credit for being clever, as I must when we
review the whole case.
“For
instance, he asked for permission to copy the Whistler, which you saw was the
same size as the Rubens. It was granted. He copied it practically under guard,
always with the chance that Mr. Kale himself would drop in. It took him three
days to copy it, so he says. He was alone in the room all that time. He knew
that Mr. Kale had not the faintest idea of art. Taking advantage of that, what
would have been simpler than to have copied the Rubens in oil? He could have
removed it from the frame immediately after he canvased it over, and kept it in
a position near him where it could be quickly concealed if he was interrupted.
Remember, the picture is worth fifty thousand dollars; therefore, was worth the
trouble.
“De
Lesseps is an artist—we know that—and dealing with a man who knew nothing
whatever of art, he had no fears. We may suppose his idea all along was to use
the copy of the Rubens as a sort of decoy after he got away with the original.
You saw that Mallory didn’t know the difference, and it was safe for him to
suppose that Mr. Kale wouldn’t. His only danger until he could get away
gracefully was of some critic or connoisseur, perhaps, seeing the copy. His
boldness we see readily in the fact that he permitted himself to discover the
theft; that he discovered it after he had volunteered to assist Mr. Kale in the
general work of rehanging the pictures in the gallery. Just how he put the
picture in Jenning’s trunk I don’t happen to know. We can imagine many ways.”
He lay back in his chair for a minute without speaking, eyes steadily turned
upward, fingers placed precisely tip to tip.
“The
only thing remaining is to go get the picture. It is in de Lesseps’ room
now—you told me that—and so we know it is safe. I dare say he knows that if he
tried to run away it would inevitably put him under suspicion.”
“But
how did he take the picture from the Kale home?” asked Hatch.
“He
took it with him probably under his arm the day he left the house with Mr.
Kale,” was the astonishing reply.
Hatch
was staring at him in amazement. After a moment the scientist arose and passed
into the adjoining room, and the telephone bell there jingled. When he joined
Hatch again he picked up his hat and they went out together.
De
Lesseps was in when their cards went up, and received them. They conversed of
the case generally for ten minutes, while the scientist’s eyes were turned
inquiringly here and there about the room. At last there came a knock on the
door.
“It
is Detective Mallory, Mr. Hatch,” remarked The Thinking Machine. “Open the door
for him.”
De
Lesseps seemed startled for just one instant, then quickly recovered. Mallory’s
eyes were full of questions when he entered.
“I
should like, Mr. Mallory,” began The Thinking Machine quietly, “to call your
attention to this copy of Mr. Kale’s picture by Whistler—over the mantel here.
Isn’t it excellent? You have seen the original?”
Mallory
grunted. De Lesseps’ face, instead of expressing appreciation of the
compliment, blanched suddenly, and his hands closed tightly. Again he recovered
himself and smiled.
“The
beauty of this picture lies not only in its faithfulness to the original,” the
scientist went on, “but also in the fact that it was painted under
extraordinary circumstances. For instance, I don’t know if you know, Mr.
Mallory, that it is possible so to combine glue and putty and a few other
commonplace things into a paste which would effectually blot out an oil
painting, and offer at the same time an excellent surface for water color
work.”
There
was a moment’s pause, during which the three men stared at him silently—with
singularly conflicting emotions depicted on their faces.
“This
water color—this copy of Whistler,” continued the scientist evenly—“is painted
on such a paste as I have described. That paste in turn covers the original
Rubens picture. It can be removed with water without damage to the picture,
which is in oil, so that instead of a copy of the Whistler painting, we have an
original by Rubens, worth fifty thousand dollars. That is true; isn’t it, M. de
Lesseps?”
There
was no reply to the question—none was needed. It was an hour later, after de
Lesseps was safely in his cell, that Hatch called up The Thinking Machine on
the telephone and asked one question.
“How
did you know that the water color was painted over the Rubens?”
“Because
it was the only absolutely safe way in which the Rubens could be hopelessly
lost to those who were looking for it, and at the same time perfectly
preserved,” was the answer. “I told you de Lesseps was a clever man, and a
little logic did the rest. Two and two always make four, Mr. Hatch, not
sometimes, but all the time.”