“Oh — cynical this morning.” She looked around the office with an idle but raking glance. “Do you do pretty well in here? I mean financially? I mean, do you make a lot of money — with this kind of furniture?”
   I grunted.
   “Or should I try minding my own business and not asking impertinent questions?”
   “Would it work, if you tried it?”
   “Now we’re both doing it. Tell me, why did you cover up for me last night? Was it on account of I have reddish hair and a beautiful figure?”
   I didn’t say anything.
   “Let’s try this one,” she said cheerfully. “Would you like to know who that jade necklace belonged to?”
   I could feel my face getting stiff. I thought hard but I couldn’t remember for sure. And then suddenly I could. I hadn’t said a word to her about a jade necklace.
   I reached for the matches and relit my pipe. “Not very much,” I said. “Why?”
   “Because I know.”
   “Uh-huh.”
   “What do you do when you get real talkative — wiggle your toes?”
   “All right,” I growled. “You came here to tell me. Go ahead and tell me.”
   Her blue eyes widened and for a moment I thought they looked a little moist. She took her lower lip between her teeth and held it that way while she stared down at the desk. Then she shrugged and let go of her lip and smiled at me candidly.
   “Oh I know I’m just a damned inquisitive wench. But there’s a strain of bloodhound in me. My father was a cop. His name was Cliff Riordan and he was police chief of Bay City for seven years. I suppose that’s what’s the matter.”
   “I seem to remember. What happened to him?”
   “He was fired. It broke his heart. A mob of gamblers headed by a man named Laird Brunette elected themselves a mayor. So they put Dad in charge of the Bureau of Records and Identification, which in Bay City is about the size of a tea-bag. So Dad quit and pottered around for a couple of years and then died. And Mother died soon after him. So I’ve been alone for two years.”
   “I’m sorry,” I said.
   She ground out her cigarette. It had no lipstick on it. “The only reason I’m boring you with this is that it makes it easy for me to get along with policemen. I suppose I ought to have told you last night. So this morning I found out who had charge of the case and went to see him. He was a little sore at you at first.”
   “That’s all right,” I said. “If I had told him the truth on all points, he still wouldn’t have believed me. All he will do is chew one of my ears off.”
   She looked hurt. I got up and opened the other window. The noise of the traffic from the boulevard came in in waves, like nausea. I felt lousy. I opened the deep drawer of the desk and got the office bottle out and poured myself a drink.
   Miss Riordan watched me with disapproval. I was no longer a solid man. She didn’t say anything. I drank the drink and put the bottle away again and sat down.
   “You didn’t offer me one,” she said coolly.
   “Sorry. It’s only eleven o’clock or less. I didn’t think you looked the type.”
   Her eyes crinkled at the corners. “Is that a compliment?”
   “In my circle, yes.”
   She thought that over. It didn’t mean anything to her. It didn’t mean anything to me either when I thought it over. But the drink made me feel a lot better.
   She leaned forward and scraped her gloves slowly across the glass of the desk. “You wouldn’t want to hire an assistant, would you? Not if it only cost you a kind word now and then?”
   “No.”
   She nodded. “I thought probably you wouldn’t. I’d better just give you my information and go on home.”
   I didn’t say anything. I lit my pipe again. It makes you look thoughtful when you are not thinking.
   “First of all, it occurred to me that a jade necklace like that would be a museum piece and would be well known,” she said.
   I held the match in the air, still burning and watching the flame crawl close to my fingers. Then I blew it out softly and dropped it in the tray and said:
   “I didn’t say anything to you about a jade necklace.”
   “No, but Lieutenant Randall did.”
   “Somebody ought to sew buttons on his face.”
   “He knew my father. I promised not to tell.”
   “You’re telling me.”
   “You knew already, silly.”
   Her hand suddenly flew up as if it was going to fly to her mouth, but it only rose halfway and then fell back slowly and her eyes widened. It was a good act, but I knew something else about her that spoiled it.
   “You did know, didn’t you?” She breathed the words, hushedly.
   “I thought it was diamonds. A bracelet, a pair of earrings, a pendant, three rings, one of the rings with emeralds too.”
   “Not funny,” she said. “Not even fast.”
   “Fei Tsui jade. Very rare. Carved beads about six carats apiece, sixty of them. Worth eighty thousand dollars.”
   “You have such nice brown eyes,” she said. “And you think you’re tough.”
   “Well, who does it belong to and how did you find out?”
   “I found out very simply. I thought the best jeweler in town would probably know, so I went and asked the manager of Block’s. I told him I was a writer and wanted to do an article on rare jade — you know the line.”
   “So he believed your red hair and your beautiful figure.” She flushed clear to the temples. “Well, he told me anyway. It belongs to a rich lady who lives in Bay City, in an estate on the canyon. Mrs. Lewin Lockridge Grayle. Her husband is an investment banker or something, enormously rich, worth about twenty millions. He used to own a radio station in Beverly Hills, Station KFDK, and Mrs. Grayle used to work there. He married her five years ago. She’s a ravishing blonde. Mr. Grayle is elderly, liverish, stays home and takes calomel while Mrs. Grayle goes places and has a good time.”
   “This manager of Block’s,” I said. “He’s a fellow that gets around.”
   “Oh, I didn’t get all that from him, silly. Just about the necklace. The rest I got from Giddy Gertie Arbogast.”
   I reached into the deep drawer and brought the office bottle up again.
   “You’re not going to turn out to be one of those drunken detectives, are you?” she asked anxiously.
   “Why not? They always solve their cases and they never even sweat. Get on with the story.”
   “Giddy Gertie is the society editor of the Chronicle. I’ve known him for years. He weighs two hundred and wears a Hitler mustache. He got out his morgue file on the Grayles. Look.”
   She reached into her bag and slid a photograph across the desk, a five-by-three glazed still.
   It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window. She was wearing street clothes that looked black and white, and a hat to match and she was a little haughty, but not too much. Whatever you needed, wherever you happened to be — she had it. About thirty years old.
   I poured a fast drink and burned my throat getting it down. “Take it away,” I said. “I’ll start jumping.”
   “Why, I got it for you. You’ll want to see her, won’t you?”
   I looked at it again. Then I slid it under the blotter. “How about tonight at eleven?”
   “Listen, this isn’t just a bunch of gag lines, Mr. Marlowe. I called her up. She’ll see you. On business.”
   “It may start out that way.”
   She made an impatient gesture, so I stopped fooling around and got my battle-scarred frown back on my face. “What will she see me about?”
   “Her necklace, of course. It was like this. I called her up and had a lot of trouble getting to talk to her, of course, but finally I did. Then I gave her the song and dance I had given the nice man at Block’s and it didn’t take. She sounded as if she had a hangover. She said something about talking to her secretary, but I managed to keep her on the phone and ask her if it was true she had a Fei Tsui jade necklace. After a while she said, yes. I asked if I might see it. She said, what for? I said my piece over again and it didn’t take any better than the first time. I could hear her yawning and bawling somebody outside the mouthpiece for putting me on. Then I said I was working for Philip Marlowe. She said ‘So what?’ Just like that.”
   “Incredible. But all the society dames talk like tramps nowadays.”
   “I wouldn’t know,” Miss Riordan said sweetly. “Probably some of them are tramps. So I asked her if she had a phone with no extension and she said what business was it of mine. But the funny thing was she hadn’t hung up on me.”
   “She had the jade on her mind and she didn’t know what you were leading up to. And she may have heard from Randall already.”
   Miss Riordan shook her head. “No, I called him later and he didn’t know who owned the necklace until I told him. He was quite surprised that I had found out.”
   “He’ll get used to you,” I said. “He’ll probably have to. What then?”
   “So I said to Mrs. Grayle: ‘You’d still like it back, wouldn’t you?’ Just like that. I didn’t know any other way to say. I had to say something that would jar her a bit. It did. She gave me another number in a hurry. And I called that and I said I’d like to see her. She seemed surprised. So I had to tell her the story. She didn’t like it. But she had been wondering why she hadn’t heard from Marriott. I guess she thought he had gone south with the money or something. So I’m to see her at two o’clock. Then I’ll tell her about you and how nice and discreet you are and how you would be a good man to help her get it back, if there’s any chance and so on. She’s already interested.”
   I didn’t say anything. I just stared at her. She looked hurt. “What’s the matter? Did I do right?”
   “Can’t you get it through your head that this is a police case now and that I’ve been warned to stay off it?”
   “Mrs. Grayle has a perfect right to employ you, if she wants to.”
   “To do what?”
   She snapped and unsnapped her bag impatiently. “Oh, my goodness — a woman like that — with her looks — can’t you see — “ She stopped and bit her lip. “What kind of man was Marriott?”
   “I hardly knew him. I thought he was a bit of a pansy. I didn’t like him very well.”
   “Was he a man who would be attractive to women?”
   “Some women. Others would want to spit.”
   “Well, it looks as if he might have been attractive to Mrs. Grayle. She went out with him.”
   “She probably goes out with a hundred men. There’s very little chance to get the necklace now.”
   “Why?”
   I got up and walked to the end of the office and slapped the wall with the flat of my hand, hard. The clacking typewriter on the other side stopped for a moment, and then went on. I looked down through the open window into the shaft between my building and the Mansion House Hotel. The coffee shop smell was strong enough to build a garage on. I went back to my desk, dropped the bottle of whiskey back into the drawer, shut the drawer and sat down again. I lit my pipe for the eighth or ninth time and looked carefully across the half-dusted glass to Miss Riordan’s grave and honest little face.
   You could get to like that face a lot. Glamoured up blondes were a dime a dozen, but that was a face that would wear. I smiled at it.
   “Listen, Anne. Killing Marriott was a dumb mistake. The gang behind this holdup would never pull anything like that. What must have happened was that some gowed-up run they took along for a gun-holder lost his head. Marriott made a false move and some punk beat him down and it was done so quickly nothing could be done to prevent it. Here is an organized mob with inside information on jewels and the movements of the women that wear them. They ask moderate returns and they would play ball. But here also is a back alley murder that doesn’t fit at all. My idea is that whoever did it is a dead man hours ago, with weights on his ankles, deep in the Pacific Ocean. And either the jade went down with him or else they have some idea of its real value and they have cached it away in a place where it will stay for a long time — maybe for years before they dare bring it out again. Or, if the gang is big enough, it may show up on the other side of the world. The eight thousand they asked seems pretty low if they really know the value of the jade. But it would be hard to sell. I’m sure of one thing. They never meant to murder anybody.”
   Anne Riordan was listening to me with her lips slightly parted and a rapt expression on her face, as if she was looking at the Dalai Lhama.
   She closed her mouth slowly and nodded once. “You’re wonderful,” she said softly. “But you’re nuts.”
   She stood up and gathered her bag to her. “Will you go to see her or won’t you?”
   “Randall can’t stop me — if it comes from her.”
   “All right. I’m going to see another society editor and get some more dope on the Grayles if I can. About her love life. She would have one, wouldn’t she?”
   The face framed in auburn hair was wistful.
   “Who hasn’t?” I sneered.
   “I never had. Not really.”
   I reached up and shut my mouth with my hand. She gave me a sharp look and moved towards the door.
   “You’ve forgotten something,” I said.
   She stopped and turned. “What?” She looked all over the top of the desk.
   “You know damn well what.”
   She came back to the desk and leaned across it earnestly. “Why would they kill the man that killed Marriott, if they don’t go in for murder?”
   “Because he would be the type that would get picked up sometime and would talk — when they took his dope away from him. I mean they wouldn’t kill a customer.”
   “What makes you so sure the killer took dope?”
   “I’m not sure. I just said that. Most punks do.”
   “Oh.” She straightened up and nodded and smiled. “I guess you mean these,” she said and reached quickly into her bag and laid a small tissue bag package on the desk.
   I reached for it, pulled a rubber band off it carefully and opened up the paper. On it lay three long thick Russian cigarettes with paper mouthpieces. I looked at her and didn’t say anything.
   “I know I shouldn’t have taken them,” she said almost breathlessly. “But I knew they were jujus. They usually come in plain papers but lately around Bay City they have been putting them out like this. I’ve seen several. I thought it was kind of mean for the poor man to be found dead with marihuana cigarettes in his pocket.”
   “You ought to have taken the case too,” I said quietly. “There was dust in it. And it being empty was suspicious.”
   “I couldn’t — with you there. I — I almost went back and did. But I didn’t quite have the courage. Did it get you in wrong?”
   “No,” I lied. “Why should it?”
   “I’m glad of that,” she said wistfully.
   “Why didn’t you throw them away?”
   She thought about it, her bag clutched to her side, her wide-brimmed absurd hat tilted so that it hid one eye.
   “I guess it must be because I’m a cop’s daughter,” she said at last. “You just don’t throw away evidence.” Her smile was frail and guilty and her cheeks were flushed. I shrugged.
   “Well — “ the word hung in the air, like smoke in a closed room. Her lips stayed parted after saying it. I let it hang. The flush on her face deepened.
   “I’m horribly sorry. I shouldn’t have done it.”
   I passed that too.
   She went very quickly to the door and out.

14

   I poked at one of the long Russian cigarettes with a finger, then laid them in a neat row, side by side and squeaked my chair. You just don’t throw away evidence. So they were evidence. Evidence of what? That a man occasionally smoked a stick of tea, a man who looked as if any touch of the exotic would appeal to him. On the other hand lots of tough guys smoked marihuana, also lots of band musicians and high school kids, and nice girls who had given up trying. American hasheesh. A weed that would grow anywhere. Unlawful to cultivate now. That meant a lot in a country as big as the U.S.A.
   I sat there and puffed my pipe and listened to the clacking typewriter behind the wall of my office and the bong-bong of the traffic lights changing on Hollywood Boulevard and spring rustling in the air, like a paper bag blowing along a concrete sidewalk.
   They were pretty big cigarettes, but a lot of Russians are, and marihuana is a coarse leaf. Indian hemp. American hasheesh. Evidence. God, what hats the women wear. My head ached. Nuts.
   I got my penknife out and opened the small sharp blade, the one I didn’t clean my pipe with, and reached for one of them. That’s what a police chemist would do. Slit one down the middle and examine the stuff under a microscope, to start with. There might just happen to be something unusual about it. Not very likely, but what the hell, he was paid by the month.
   I slit one down the middle. The mouthpiece part was pretty tough to slit. Okey, I was a tough guy. I slit it anyway. See if can you stop me.
   Out of the mouthpiece shiny segments of rolled thin cardboard partly straightened themselves and had printing on them. I sat up straight and pawed for them. I tried to spread them out on the desk in order, but they slid around on the desk. I grabbed another of the cigarettes and squinted inside the mouthpiece. Then I went to work with the blade of the pocket knife in a different way. I pinched the cigarette down to the place where the mouthpiece began. The paper was thin all the way, you could feel the grain of what was underneath. So I cut the mouthpiece off carefully and then still more carefully cut through the mouthpiece longways, but only just enough. It opened out and there was another card underneath, rolled up, not touched this time.
   I spread it out fondly. It was a man’s calling card. Thin pale ivory, just off white. Engraved on that were delicately shaded words. In the lower left hand corner a Stillwood Heights telephone number. In the lower right hand corner the legend, “By Appointment Only.” In the middle, a little larger, but still discreet: “Jules Amthor.” Below, a little smaller: “Psychic Consultant.”
   I took hold of the third cigarette. This time, with a lot of difficulty. I teased the card out without cutting anything. It was the same. I put it back where it had been.
   I looked at my watch, put my pipe in an ashtray, and then had to look at my watch again to see what time it was. I rolled the two cut cigarettes and the cut card in part of the tissue paper, the one that was complete with card inside in another part of the tissue paper and locked both little packages away in my desk.
   I sat looking at the card. Jules Amthor, Psychic Consultant, By Appointment Only, Stillwood Heights phone number, no address. Three like that rolled inside three sticks of tea, in a Chinese or Japanese silk cigarette case with an imitation tortoise-shell frame, a trade article that might have cost thirty-five to seventy-five cents in any Oriental store, Hooey Phooey Sing — Long Sing Tung, that kind of place, where a nice-mannered Jap hisses at you, laughing heartily when you say that the Moon of Arabia incense smells like the girls in Frisco Sadie’s back parlor.
   And all this in the pocket of a man who was very dead, and who had another and genuinely expensive cigarette case containing cigarettes which he actually smoked.
   He must have forgotten it. It didn’t make sense. Perhaps it hadn’t belonged to him at all. Perhaps he had picked it up in a hotel lobby. Forgotten he had it on him. Forgotten to turn it in. Jules Amthor, Psychic Consultant.
   The phone rang and I answered it absently. The voice had the cool hardness of a cop who thinks he is good. It was Randall. He didn’t bark. He was the icy type.
   “So you didn’t know who that girl was last night? And she picked you up on the boulevard and you walked over to there. Nice lying, Marlowe.”
   “Maybe you have a daughter and you wouldn’t like newscameramen jumping out of bushes and popping flashbulbs in her face.”
   “You lied to me.”
   “It was a pleasure.”
   He was silent a moment, as if deciding something. “We’ll let that pass,” he said. “I’ve seen her. She came in and told me her story. She’s the daughter of a man I knew and respected, as it happens.”
   “She told you,” I said, “and you told her.”
   “I told her a little,” he said coldly. “For a reason. I’m calling you for the same reason. This investigation is going to be undercover. We have a chance to break this jewel gang and we’re going to do it.”
   “Oh, it’s a gang murder this morning. Okey.”
   “By the way, that was marihuana dust in that funny cigarette case — the one with the dragons on it. Sure you didn’t see him smoke one out of it?”
   “Quite sure. In my presence he smoked only the others. But he wasn’t in my presence all the time.”
   “I see. Well, that’s all. Remember what I told you last night. Don’t try getting ideas about this case. All we want from you is silence. Otherwise — “
   He paused. I yawned into the mouthpiece.
   “I heard that,” he snapped. “Perhaps you think I’m not in a position to make that stick. I am. One false move out of you and you’ll be locked up as a material witness.”
   “You mean the papers are not to get the case?”
   “They’ll get the murder — but they won’t know what’s behind it.”
   “Neither do you,” I said.
   “I’ve warned you twice now,” be said. “The third time is out.”
   “You’re doing a lot of talking,” I said, “for a guy that holds cards.”
   I got the phone hung in my face for that. Okey, the hell with him, let him work at it.
   I walked around the office a little to cool off, bought myself a short drink, looked at my watch again and didn’t see what time it was, and sat down at the desk once more.
   Jules Amthor, Psychic Consultant. Consultations by Appointment Only. Give him enough time and pay him enough money and he’ll cure anything from a jaded husband to a grasshopper plague. He would be an expert in frustrated love affairs, women who slept alone and didn’t like it, wandering boys and girls who didn’t write home, sell the property now or hold it for another year, will this part hurt me with my public or make me seem more versatile? Men would sneak in on him too, big strong guys that roared like lions around their offices and were all cold mush under their vests. But mostly it would be women, fat women that panted and thin women that burned, old women that dreamed and young women that thought they might have Electra complexes, women of all sizes, shapes and ages, but with one thing in common — money; No Thursdays at the County Hospital for Mr. Jules Amthor. Cash on the line for him. Rich bitches who had to be dunned for their milk bills would pay him right now.
   A fakeloo artist, a hoopla spreader, and a lad who had his card rolled up inside sticks of tea, found on a dead man.
   This was going to be good. I reached for the phone and asked the 0-operator for the Stillwood Heights number.

15

   A woman’s voice answered, a dry, husky-sounding foreign voice: “’Allo.”
   “May I talk to Mr. Amthor?”
   “Ah no. I regret. I am ver-ry sor-ry. Amthor never speaks upon the telephone. I am hees secretary. Weel I take the message?”
   “What’s the address out there? I want to see him.”
   “Ah, you weesh to consult Amthor professionally? He weel be ver-ry pleased. But he ees ver-ry beesy. When you weesh to see him?”
   “Right away. Sometime today.”
   “Ah,” the voice regretted, “that cannot be. The next week per’aps. I weel look at the book.”
   “Look,” I said, “never mind the book You ‘ave the pencil?”
   “But certainly I ‘ave the pencil. I — “
   “Take this down. My name is Philip Marlowe. My address is 615 Cahuenga Building, Hollywood. That’s on Hollywood Boulevard near Ivar. My phone number is Glenview 7537.” I spelled the hard ones and waited.
   “Yes, Meester Marlowe. I ‘ave that.”
   “I want to see Mr. Amthor about a man named Marriott.” I spelled that too. “it is very urgent. it is a matter of life and death. I want to see him fast. F-a-s-t — fast. Sudden, in other words. Am I clear?”
   “You talk ver-ry strange,” the foreign voice said.
   “No.” I took hold of the phone standard and shook it. “I feel fine. I always talk like that. This is a very queer business. Mr. Amthor will positively want to see me. I’m a private detective. But I don’t want to go to the police until I’ve seen him.”
   “Ah,” the voice got as cool as a cafeteria dinner. “You are of the police, no.”
   “Listen,” I said. “I am of the police, no. I am a private detective. Confidential. But it is very urgent just the same. You call me back, no? You ‘ave the telephone number, yes?”
   “Si. I ‘ave the telephone number. Meester Marriott — he ees sick.”
   “Well, he’s not up and around,” I said. “So you know him?”
   “But no. You say a matter of life and death. Amthor he cure many people — “
   “This is one time he flops,” I said. “I’ll be waiting for a call.”
   I hung up and lunged for the office bottle. I felt as if I had been through a meat grinder. Ten minutes passed. The phone rang. The voice said:
   “Amthor he weel see you at six o’clock.”
   “That’s fine. What’s the address?”
   “He weel send a car.”
   “I have a car of my own. Just give me-“
   “He weel send a car,” the voice said coldly, and the phone clicked in my ear.
   I looked at my watch once more. It was more than time for lunch. My stomach burned from the last drink. I wasn’t hungry. I lit a cigarette. It tasted like a plumber’s handkerchief. I nodded across the office at Mr. Rembrandt, then I reached for my hat and went out. I was halfway to the elevator before the thought hit me. It hit me without any reason or sense, like a dropped brick. I stopped and leaned against the marbled wall and pushed my hat around on my head and suddenly I laughed.
   A girl passing me on the way from the elevators back to her work turned and gave me one of those looks which are supposed to make your spine feel like a run in a stocking. I waved my hand at her and went back to my office and grabbed the phone. I called up a man I knew who worked on the Lot Books of a title company.
   “Can you find a property by the address alone?” I asked him.
   “Sure. We have a cross index. What is it?”
   “1644 West 54th Place. I’d like to know a little something about the condition of the title.”
   “I’d better call you back. What’s that number?”
   He called back in about three minutes.
   “Get your pencil out,” he said. “It’s Lot 8 of Block 11 of Caraday’s Addition to the Maplewood Tract Number 4. The owner of record, subject to certain things, is Jessie Pierce Florian, widow.”
   “Yeah. What things?”
   “Second half taxes, two ten-year street improvement bonds, one storm drain assessment bond also ten year, none of these delinquents, also a first trust deed of $2600.”
   “You mean one of those things where they can sell you out on ten minutes’ notice?”
   “Not quite that quick, but a lot quicker than a mortgage. There’s nothing unusual about it except the amount. It’s high for that neighborhood, unless it’s a new house.”
   “It’s a very old house and in bad repair,” I said. “I’d say fifteen hundred would buy the place.”
   “Then it’s distinctly unusual, because the refinancing was done only four years ago.”
   “Okey, who holds it? Some investment company?”
   “No. An individual. Man named Lindsay Marriott, a single man. Okey?”
   I forget what I said to him or what thanks I made. They probably sounded like words. I sat there, just staring at the wall.
   My stomach suddenly felt fine. I was hungry. I went down to the Mansion House Coffee Shop and ate lunch and got my car out of the parking lot next to my building.
   I drove south and east, towards West 54th Place. I didn’t carry any liquor with me this time.

16

   The block looked just as it had looked the day before. The street was empty except for an ice truck, two Fords in driveways, and a swirl of dust going around a corner. I drove slowly past No. 1644 and parked farther along and studied the houses on either side of mine. I walked back and stopped in front of it, looking at the tough palm tree and the drab unwatered scrap of lawn. The house seemed empty, but probably wasn’t. It just had that look. The lonely rocker on the front porch stood just where it had stood yesterday. There was a throw-away paper on the walk. I picked it up and slapped it against my leg and then I saw the curtain move next door, in the near front window.
   Old Nosey again. I yawned and tilted my hat down. A sharp nose almost flattened itself against the inside of the glass. White hair above it, and eyes that were just eyes from where I stood. I strolled along the sidewalk and the eyes watched me. I turned in towards her house. I climbed the wooden steps and rang the bell.
   The door snapped open as if it had been on a spring. She was a tall old bird with a chin like a rabbit. Seen from close her eyes were as sharp as lights on still water. I took my hat off.
   “Are you the lady who called the police about Mrs. Florian?”
   She stared at me coolly and missed nothing about me, probably not even the mole on my right shoulder blade.
   “I ain’t sayin’ I am, young man, and I ain’t sayin’ I ain’t. Who are you?” It was a high twangy voice, made for talking over an eight party line.
   “I’m a detective.”
   “Land’s sakes. Why didn’t you say so? What’s she done now? I ain’t seen a thing and I ain’t missed a minute. Henry done all the goin’ to the store for me. Ain’t been a sound out of there.”
   She snapped the screen door unhooked and drew me in. The hall smelled of furniture oil. It had a lot of dark furniture that had once been in good style. Stuff with inlaid panels and scallops at the corners. We went into a front room that had cotton lace antimacassars pinned on everything you could stick a pin into.
   “Say, didn’t I see you before?” she asked suddenly, a note of suspicion crawling around in her voice. “Sure enough I did. You was the man that — “
   “That’s right. And I’m still a detective. Who’s Henry?”
   “Oh, he’s just a little colored boy that goes errands for me. Well, what you want, young man?” She patted a clean red and white apron and gave me the beady eye. She clicked her store teeth a couple of times for practice.
   “Did the officers come here yesterday after they went to Mrs. Florian’s house?”
   “What officers?”
   “The uniformed officers,” I said patiently.
   “Yes, they was here a minute. They didn’t know nothing.”
   “Describe the big man to me — the one that had a gun and made you call up.”
   She described him, with complete accuracy. It was Malloy all right.
   “What kind of car did he drive?”
   “A little car. He couldn’t hardly get into it.”
   “That’s all you can say? This man’s a murderer!”
   Her mouth gaped, but her eyes were pleased. “Land’s sakes, I wish I could tell you, young man. But I never knew much about cars. Murder, eh? Folks ain’t safe a minute in this town. When I come here twenty-two years ago we didn’t lock our doors hardly. Now it’s gangsters and crooked police and politicians fightin’ each other with machine guns, so I’ve heard. Scandalous is what it is, young man.”
   “Yeah. What do you know about Mrs. Florian?”
   The small mouth puckered. “She ain’t neighborly. Plays her radio loud late nights. Sings. She don’t talk to anybody.” She leaned forward a little. “I’m not positive, but my opinion is she drinks liquor.”
   “She have many visitors?”
   “She don’t have no visitors at all.”
   “You’d know, of course, Mrs. — “
   “Mrs. Morrison. Land’s sakes, yes. What else have I got to do but look out of the windows?”
   “I bet it’s fun. Mrs. Florian has lived here a long time — “
   “About ten years, I reckon. Had a husband once. Looked like a bad one to me. He died.” She paused and thought “I guess he died natural,” she added. “I never heard different.”
   “Left her money?”
   Her eyes receded and her chin followed them. She sniffed hard. “You been drinkin’ liquor,” she said coldly.
   “I just had a tooth out. The dentist gave it to me.”
   “I don’t hold with it.”
   “It’s bad stuff, except for medicine,” I said.
   “I don’t hold with it for medicine neither.”
   “I think you’re right,” I said. “Did he leave her money? Her husband?”
   “I wouldn’t know.” Her mouth was the size of a prune and as smooth. I had lost out.
   “Has anybody at all been there since the officers?”
   “Ain’t seen.”
   “Thank you very much, Mrs. Morrison. I won’t trouble you any more now. You’ve been very kind and helpful.”
   I walked out of the room and opened the door. She followed me and cleared her throat and clicked her teeth a couple more times.
   “What number should I call?” she asked, relenting a little.
   “University 4-5000. Ask for Lieutenant Nulty. What does she live on — relief?”
   “This ain’t a relief neighborhood,” she said coldly.
   “I bet that side piece was the admiration of Sioux Falls once,” I said, gazing at a carved sideboard that was in the hall because the dining room was too small for it. It had curved ends, thin carved legs, was inlaid all ever, and had a painted basket of fruit on the front.
   “Mason City,” she said softly. “Yessir, we had a nice home once, me and George. Best there was.”
   I opened the screen door and stepped through it and thanked her again. She was smiling now. Her smile was as sharp as her eyes.
   “Gets a registered letter first of every month,” she said suddenly.
   I turned and waited. She leaned towards me. “I see the mailman go up to the door and get her to sign. First day of every month. Dresses up then and goes out. Don’t come home till all hours. Sings half the night. Times I could have called the police it was so loud.”
   I patted the thin malicious arm.
   “You’re one in a thousand, Mrs. Morrison,” I said. I put my hat on, tipped it to her and left. Halfway down the walk I thought of something and swung back. She was still standing inside the screen door, with the house door open behind her. I went back up on the steps.
   “Tomorrow’s the first,” I said. “First of April. April Fool’s Day. Be sure to notice whether she gets her registered letter, will you, Mrs. Morrison?”
   The eyes gleamed at me. She began to laugh — a highpitched old woman’s laugh. “April Fool’s Day,” she tittered. “Maybe she won’t get it.”
   I left her laughing. The sound was like a hen having hiccups.

17

   Nobody answered my ring or knock next door. I tried again. The screen door wasn’t hooked. I tried the house door. It was unlocked. I stepped inside.
   Nothing was changed, not even the smell of gin. There were still no bodies on the floor. A dirty glass stood on the table beside the chair where Mrs. Florian had sat yesterday. The radio was turned off. I went over to the davenport and felt down behind the cushions. The same dead soldier and another one with him now.
   I called out. No answer. Then I thought I heard a long slow unhappy breathing that was half groaning. I went through the arch and sneaked into the little hallway. The bedroom door was partly open and the groaning sound came from behind it. I stuck my head in and looked.
   Mrs. Florian was in bed. She was lying flat on her back with a cotton comforter pulled up to her chin. One of the little fluffballs on the comforter was almost in her mouth. Her long yellow face was slack, half dead. Her dirty hair straggled on the pillow. Her eyes opened slowly and looked at me with no expression. The room had a sickening smell of sleep, liquor and dirty clothes. A sixty-nine cent alarm clock ticked on the peeling gray-white paint of the bureau. It ticked loud enough to shake the walls. Above it a mirror showed a distorted view of the woman’s face. The trunk from which she had taken the photos was still open.
   I said: “Good afternoon, Mrs. Florian. Are you sick?”
   She worked her lips slowly, rubbed one over the other, then slid a tongue out and moistened them and worked her jaws. Her voice came from her mouth sounding like a worn-out phonograph record. Her eyes showed recognition now, but not pleasure.
   “You get him?”
   “The Moose?”
   “Sure.”
   “Not yet. Soon, I hope.”
   She screwed her eyes up and then snapped them open as if trying to get rid of a film over them.
   “You ought to keep your house locked up,” I said. “He might come back.”
   “You think I’m scared of the Moose, huh?”
   “You acted like it when I was talking to you yesterday.”
   She thought about that. Thinking was weary work. “Got any liquor?”
   “No, I didn’t bring any today, Mrs. Florian. I was a little low on cash.”
   “Gin’s cheap. It hits.”
   “I might go out for some in a little while. So you’re not afraid of Malloy?”
   “Why would I be?”
   “Okey, you’re not. What are you afraid of?”
   Light snapped into her eyes, held for a moment, and faded out again. “Aw beat it. You coppers give me an ache in the fanny.”
   I said nothing. I leaned against the door frame and put a cigarette in my mouth and tried to jerk it up far enough to hit my nose with it. This is harder than it looks.
   “Coppers,” she said slowly, as if talking to herself, “will never catch that boy. He’s good and he’s got dough and he’s got friends. You’re wasting your time, copper.”
   “Just the routine,” I said. “It was practically a self-defense anyway. Where would he be?”
   She snickered and wiped her mouth on the cotton comforter.
   “Soap now,” she said. “Soft stuff. Copper smart. You guys still think it gets you something.”
   “I liked the Moose,” I said.
   Interest flickered in her eyes. “You know him?”
   “I was with him yesterday — when he killed the nigger over on Central.”
   She opened her mouth wide and laughed her head off without making any more sound than you would make cracking a breadstick. Tears ran out of her eyes and down her face.
   “A big strong guy,” I said. “Soft-hearted in spots too. Wanted his Velma pretty bad.”
   The eyes veiled. “Thought it was her folks was looking for her,” she said softly.
   “They are. But she’s dead, you said. Nothing there. Where did she die?”
   “Dalhart, Texas. Got a cold and went to the chest and off she went.”
   “You were there?”
   “Hell, now. I just heard.”
   “Oh. Who told you, Mrs. Florian?”
   “Some hoofer. I forget the name right now. Maybe a good stiff drink might help some. I feel like Death Valley.”
   “And you look like a dead mule,” I thought, but didn’t say it out loud. “There’s just one more thing,” I said, “then I’ll maybe run out for some gin. I looked up the title to your house, I don’t know just why.”
   She was rigid under the bedclothes, like a wooden woman. Even her eyelids were frozen half down over the clogged iris of her eyes. Her breath stilled.
   “There’s a rather large trust deed on it,” I said. “Considering the low value of property around here. It’s held by a man named Lindsay Marriott.”
   Her eyes blinked rapidly, but nothing else moved. She stared.
   “I used to work for him,” she said at last. “I used to be a servant in his family. He kind of takes care of me a little.”
   I took the unlighted cigarette out of my mouth and looked at it aimlessly and stuck it back in.
   “Yesterday afternoon, a few hours after I saw you, Mr. Marriott called me up at my office. He offered me a job.”
   “What kind of job?” Her voice croaked now, badly.
   I shrugged. “I can’t tell you that. Confidential. I went to see him last night.”
   “You’re a clever son of a bitch,” she said thickly and moved a hand under the bedclothes.
   I stared at her and said nothing.
   “Copper-smart,” she sneered.
   I ran a hand up and down the door frame. It felt slimy. Just touching it made me want to take a bath.
   “Well, that’s all,” I said smoothly. “I was just wondering how come. Might be nothing at all. Just a coincidence. It just looked as if it might mean something.”
   “Copper-smart,” she said emptily. “Not a real copper at that. Just a cheap shamus.”
   “I suppose so,” I said. “Well, good-by, Mrs. Florian. By the way, I don’t think you’ll get a registered letter tomorrow morning.”
   She threw the bedclothes aside and jerked upright with her eyes blazing. Something glittered in her right hand. A small revolver, a Banker’s Special. It was old and worn, but looked business-like.
   “Tell it,” she snarled. “Tell it fast.”
   I looked at the gun and the gun looked at me. Not too steadily. The hand behind it began to shake, but the eyes still blazed. Saliva bubbled at the corners of her mouth.
   “You and I could work together,” I said.
   The gun and her jaw dropped at the same time. I was inches from the door. While the gun was still dropping, I slid through it and beyond the opening.
   “Think it over,” I called back.
   There was no sound, no sound of any kind.
   I went fast back through the hall and dining room and out of the house. My back felt queer as I went down the walk. The muscles crawled.
   Nothing happened. I went along the street and got into my car and drove away from there.
   The last day of March and hot enough for summer. I felt like taking my coat off as I drove. In front of the 77th Street Station, two prowl car men were scowling at a bent front fender. I went in through the swing doors and found a uniformed lieutenant behind the railing looking over the charge sheet. I asked him if Nulty was upstairs. He said he thought he was, was I a friend of his. I said yes. He said okey, go on up, so I went up the worn stairs and along the corridor and knocked at the door. The voice yelled and I went in.
   He was picking his teeth, sitting in one chair with his feet on the other. He was looking at his left thumb, holding it up in front of his eyes and at arm’s length. The thumb looked all right to me, but Nulty’s stare was gloomy, as if he thought it wouldn’t get well.
   He lowered it to his thigh and swung his feet to the floor and looked at me instead of at his thumb. He wore a dark gray suit and a mangled cigar end was waiting on the desk for him to get through with the toothpick.
   I turned the felt seat cover that lay on the other chair with its straps not fastened to anything, sat down, and put a cigarette in my face.
   “You,” Nulty said, and looked at his toothpick, to see if it was chewed enough.
   “Any luck?”
   “Malloy? I ain’t on it any more.”
   “Who is?”
   “Nobody ain’t. Why? The guy’s lammed. We got him on the teletype and they got readers out. Hell, he’ll be in Mexico long gone.”
   “Well, all he did was kill a Negro,” I said. “I guess that’s only a misdemeanor.”