翻訳と辞書
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・ Too Lost in You
・ Too Loud a Solitude
・ Too Low for Zero
・ Too Low for Zero Tour
・ Too Many Broken Hearts
・ Too Many Clients
・ Too Many Cooks
・ Too Many Cooks (film)
・ Too Many Cooks (novel)
・ Too Many Cooks (short)
・ Too Many Cooks (TV series)
・ Too Many Cowboys
・ Too Many Crooks
・ Too Many Crooks (1927 film)
・ Too Many Crooks (1930 film)
Too Many Detectives
・ Too Many Fish in the Sea
・ Too Many Friends
・ Too Many Girls
・ Too Many Girls (film)
・ Too Many Girls (musical)
・ Too Many Humans.....
・ Too Many Husbands
・ Too Many Kisses
・ Too Many Lovers
・ Too Many Magicians
・ Too many men
・ Too Many Men (novel)
・ Too Many Millions
・ Too Many Millions (1918 film)


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Too Many Detectives : ウィキペディア英語版
Too Many Detectives

"Too Many Detectives" is a Nero Wolfe mystery novella by Rex Stout, first published September 14, 1956, in ''Collier's''. It first appeared in book form in the short-story collection ''Three for the Chair'', published by the Viking Press in 1957.
==Plot summary==

Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin have been summoned to appear for questioning in Albany by the New York Secretary of State, part of an effort to investigate wiretapping activities by the state's private detectives. Dol Bonner, her assistant Sally Colt, and three other detectives from New York City have been brought in for the same day. Albert Hyatt, a deputy official, is in charge of the inquiry and calls Wolfe and Archie into his office to go over a statement Wolfe has provided. A man calling himself Otis Ross had asked Wolfe to tap his phone line and report all conversations, believing that his secretary might be leaking confidential business information. Wolfe took the job, but ended it after Archie discovered that the client was not the real Ross.
One of Hyatt's staff members finds a man strangled to death in another meeting room; Wolfe and Archie identify him as their client. The city police detain everyone at the scene for questioning, under the direction of Chief of Detectives Leon Groom. Hyatt states that the client had come to see him shortly before the day's meetings were to begin, introduced himself as William A. Donahue, and said that he wanted to give information on some illegal wiretaps he had arranged - including the one performed by Wolfe. Donahue had been sent to another room to wait until Hyatt had more time to speak with him.
Wolfe and Archie are arrested as material witnesses and held for most of the day until Wolfe arranges bail through his lawyer, Nathaniel Parker. They take a room at a nearby hotel, not being allowed to leave the city, and Archie calls the other detectives for a meeting so they can share information. Donahue had gone to each of them, giving a different name and address and asking for a wiretap to be set up; from Lon Cohen, Archie learns that these five men were all members of a committee tasked with investigating the use of charity funds. Wolfe asks the detectives to mobilize as many operatives as they can and has Archie call Saul Panzer so that he can be ready to get instructions from Wolfe in the morning.
Wolfe gives Archie that morning off, but when Archie returns to the hotel after a walk, he is taken for questioning by the district attorney. After being released, he spends the afternoon at his leisure and has dinner with Sally, only to be interrupted by a call from Wolfe. They find all the other detectives gathered in the room, and Hyatt and Groom arrive soon afterward. Wolfe and Dol have been taking reports from operatives all day long and gaining information on Hyatt and Donahue. Hyatt had been hired by a profitable fundraising organization to provide legal counsel, but the formation of the committee threatened its activities. Unable to get any information from the members directly, he arranged for Donahue to set up the wiretaps. Donahue's visit to his office was a surprise, and Hyatt killed him to prevent him from exposing the truth.
Hyatt is convicted of the murder, and the other detectives invite Wolfe to a celebratory dinner; Wolfe declines, but invites them to dine at the brownstone instead. Archie realizes that Wolfe left him out of the investigation because there was nothing he could do to assist, and also because he could serve as a distraction for the district attorney so that Wolfe and Dol could go through the operatives' reports undisturbed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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