“I couldn’t help being interested. According to the newspapers, the burglar stole nothing; yet he released a canary from its cage. Newspaper reports are often careless and inaccurate. Is that what really happened? Or did the reporter color the story to suit his fancy?”
Lazarus considered. “You are from the police?”
“No. I’m attached to the District Attorney’s office, but this is not official. I’m just curious.”
“So.” Lazarus lost some of his caution. “After what happened at the theater last night I shouldn’t think anyone would be worrying about my burglary! It happened just the way the paper said. So far as I could see nothing was stolen. And the canary was set free.”
“May I see the canary?”
“Why not?” Lazarus unlocked the door he had just locked. Basil followed him inside. The shack was so tiny that there was hardly room for two men as well as the big grindstone and the chair in front of it. Shelves against the wall were piled with scissors, knives, and saws, all dull, many rusty. There was also a portable radio, an oil lamp, a glass, and a pitcher of water.
“From the cocktail bar,” explained Lazarus as his glance followed Basil’s. “They are very kind about letting me use their washroom, and the bartender often brings me sandwiches for my luncheon. You see, I don’t live here. I have a room uptown. I did have a wagon when I was younger, but all my customers are theater people in this neighborhood, and when I got older I began to think: “Why not have a workshop and stay in one place? So I sold the wagon, and here I am.”
“You were lucky to find such a suitable place,” said Basil.
Lazarus smiled wisely. “Sam Milhau built me this shack when he bought the Royalty Theatre. His father and I were friends years ago in Posen where we were born. In those days I was an actor too. In Warsaw I played
Smiling, he turned toward the cage.
It was made of brass wire, roomy and clean. There were the usual wooden perches and swinging trapeze; the usual white porcelain cups of seed and water fitted into the wire at either end, and a bit of cuttlefish bone for sharpening a small beak. On the shelf near by was a bird bathtub and a package of bird seed.
Eyes like tiny jet beads blinked at Basil from a ball of yellow feathers. Frail, pink claws curled around the central perch.
“Half asleep now,” said Lazarus. “But he’s lively in the early morning when the eastern sun comes through the window. He sings nicely then. Imitates the radio if it’s turned on. He always joins in when I get Bach, but he doesn’t like modern music.”
“A discriminating bird,” Basil was amused. “What’s his name?”
“Dickie.”
This was disappointing—like meeting a
“When I passed your window last night I happened to look in, but I didn’t see Dickie. Was he here?”
“Yes, but the cage was covered with burlap so he would sleep from sunset to sunrise. I always do that when I work late by artificial light.”
“Why do you keep the bird here instead of at home?”
“My ‘home’ is a room on a court with no sun. I’m only there at night when Dickie should be asleep. It never occurred to me that anyone would break in and molest him if he were left here alone at night.”
“The cage seems comfortable.” Basil surveyed the freshly sanded floor, the clean water cup, the full seed cup. “Have you any idea why anyone should want to let a bird out of a nice cage like this?”
“No, I haven’t,” admitted Lazarus. “I was puzzled by the whole thing.”
“You’re sure nothing was stolen?”
“There’s nothing of value here—unless it is the radio. It wasn’t taken, and I couldn’t find anything else missing. I can’t imagine why anyone would break in at all. You can tell from the outside of the shack that there’s nothing worth stealing here.”
The bird was awake now. He hopped up to his trapeze, and his weight swung it gently back and forth like a pendulum. “Cheep?” he demanded with a rising inflection.
“Hello, Dickie,” said Lazarus, conversationally.
“Cheep!” responded the bird in exactly the tone of a human being responding:
Basil’s glance wandered to the grindstone. “Do you think it possible that someone could have used your stone to sharpen something—say a knife?”