"Kill yourself into a hole, and the chances are a time comes when you have to kill yourself out. To this nut Joseph now, 'taking care of' me is simply a matter of another murder. He and the Finks-though I don't think we're going to prove their part-went to work on Minnie with the spooks again. She had killed Riese docilely enough: why not me? You see, they were handicapped by not being equipped for this wholesale murdering into which they had all of a sudden plunged. For instance, except for my gun and one of the maids'-which they didn't know anything about-there wasn't a firearm in the place; and the dagger was the only other weapon-until they got to dragging in carving sets and plumber's helpers. Then, too, I suppose, there were the sleeping customers to consider-Mrs. Rodman's probable dislike for being roused by the noise of her spiritual guides ganging up on a roughneck sleuth. Anyway, the idea was that Minnie could be induced to walk up to me and stick the dagger into me in a quiet way.
   "They had found the dagger again, in the dressing-gown, where Aaronia had stuck it; and Joseph began suspecting that his wife was double-crossing him. When he caught her in the acting of turning on the dead-flower stuff so strong in Minnie's room that it knocked her completely out-put her so soundly asleep that a dozen ghosts couldn't have stirred her into action-he was sure of her treachery; and, up to his neck now, decided to kill _her_."
   "His wife?" Fitzstephan asked.
   "Yeah, but what difference does that make? It might as well have been anybody else for all the sense it makes. I hope you're not trying to keep this nonsense straight in your mind. You know damned well all this didn't happen."
   "Then what," he asked, looking puzzled. "did happen?"
   "I don't know. I don't think anybody knows. I'm telling you what I saw plus the part of what Aaronia Hahdorn told me which fits in with what I saw. To fit in with what I saw, most of it must have happened very nearly as I've told you. If you want to believe that it did, all right. I don't. I'd rather believe I saw things that weren't there."
   "Not now," he pleaded. "Later, after you've finished the story, you can attach your ifs and buts to it, distorting and twisting it, making it as cloudy and confusing and generally hopeless as you like. But first please finish it, so I'll see it at least once in its original state before you start improving it."
   "You actually believe what I've told you so far?" I asked.
   He nodded, grinning, and said that he not only believed it but liked it.
   "What a childish mind you've got," I said. "Let me tell you the story about the wolf that went to the little girl's grandmother's house and-"
   "I always liked that one, too; but finish this one now. Joseph had decided to kill his wife."
   "All right. There's not much more. While Minnie was being worked on, I popped into her room, intending to rouse her and send her for help. Before I did any rousing, I was needing some myself: I had a couple of lungfuls of the gas. The Finks must have turned the ghost loose on me, because Joseph was probably on his way downstairs with his wife at that time. He had faith enough in his divinity-shield, or he was nutty enough, to take her down and tie her on the altar before he carved her. Or maybe he had a way of fitting that stunt into his scheme, or maybe he simply had a liking for bloody theatricals. Anyway, he probably took her down there while I was up in Minnie's room going around and around with the ghost.
   "The ghost had me sweating ink, and when I finally left him and tottered out into the corridor, the Finks jumped me. I say they did, and know it; but it was too dark for me to see them. I beat them off, got a gun, and went downstairs. Collinson and Gabrielle were gone from where I had left them. I found Collinson: Gabrielle had put him outside and shut the door on him. The Haldorns' son-a kid of thirteen or so-came to us with the news that Papa was about to kill Mama, and that Gabrielle was with them. I killed Hahdorn, but I almost didn't. I put seven bullets in him. Hard-coated .32's go in clean, without much of a thump, true enough; but I put seven of them in him-in his face and body-standing close and firing pointblank-and he didn't even know it. That's how completely he had himself hypnotized. I finally got him down by driving the dagger through his neck."
   I stopped. Fitzstephan asked: "Well?"
   "Well what?"
   "What happened after that?"
   "Nothing," I said. "That's the kind of a story it is. I warned you there was no sense to it."
   "But what was Gabrielle doing there?"
   "Crouching beside the altar, looking up at the pretty spotlight."
   "But why was she there? What was her reason for being there? Had she been called there again? Or was she there of her own free will? How did she come to be there? What was she there for?"
   "I don't know. She didn't know. I asked her. She didn't know she was there."
   "But surely you could learn something from the others?"
   "Yeah," I said; "what I've told you, chiefly from Aaronia Haldorn. She and her husband ran a cult, and he went crazy and began murdering people, and how could she help it? Fink won't talk. He's a mechanic, yes; and he put in his trick-machinery for the Haldorns and operated it; but he doesn't know what happened last night. He heard a lot of noises, but it was none of his business to go poking his nose out to see what it was: the first he knew anything was wrong was when some police came and started giving him hell. Mrs. Fink's gone. The other employes probably don't really know anything, though it's a gut they could make some good guesses. Manuel, the little boy, is too frightened to talk-and will be sure to know nothing when he gets over his fright. What we're up against is this: if Joseph went crazy and committed some murders on his own hook, the others, even though they unknowingly helped him, are in the clear. The worst any of them can draw is a light sentence for taking part in the cult swindle. But if any of them admits knowing anything, then he lets himself in for trouble as an accomplice in the murder. Nobody's likely to do that."
   "I see," Fitzstephan said slowly. "Joseph is dead, so Joseph did everything. How will you get around that?"
   "I won't," I said; "though the police will at least try to. My end's done, so Madison Andrews told me a couple of hours ago."
   "But if, as you say, you aren't satisfied that you've learned the whole truth of the affair, I should think you-"
   "It's not me," I said. "There's a lot I'd like to do yet, but I was hired, this time, by Andrews, to guard her while she was in the Temple. She isn't there now, and Andrews doesn't think there's anything further to be learned about what happened there. And, as far as guarding her is necessary, her husband ought to be able to do that."
   "Her what?"
   "Husband."
   Fitzstephan thumped his stein down on the table so that beer sloshed over the sides.
   "Now there you are," he said accusingly. "You didn't tell me anything about that. God only knows how much else there is that you've not told me."
   "Collinson took advantage of the confusion to carry her off to Reno, where they won't have to wait the Californian three days for their license. I didn't know they'd gone till Andrews jumped on my neck three or four hours later. He was kind of unpleasant about it, which is one of the ways we came to stop being client and operative."
   "I didn't know he was opposed to Collinson as a husband for her."
   "I don't know that he is, but he didn't think this the time, nor that the way, for their wedding."
   "I can understand that," he said as we got up from the table. "Andrews likes to have his way in most things."

Part Three: Quesada 

XIII.The Cliff Road

   Eric Collinson wired me from Quesada:
 
   COME IMMEDIATELY STOP NEED YOU STOP TROUBLE DANGER STOP
   MEET ME AT SUNSET HOTEL STOP DO NOT COMMUNICATE STOP
   GABRIELLE MUST NOT KNOW STOP HURRY
   ERIC CARTER
 
   The telegram came to the agency on Friday morning.
   I wasn't in San Francisco that morning. I was up in Martinez dickering with a divorced wife of Phil Leach, alias a lot of names. We wanted him for spreading reams of orphan paper through the Northwest, and we wanted him badly. This ex-wife-a sweet-looking little blonde telephone operator-had a fairly recent photograph of Phil, and was willing to sell it.
   "He never thought enough of me to risk passing any bum checks so I could have things," she complained. "I had to bring in my own share of the nut. So why shouldn't I make something out of him now, when I guess some tramp's getting plenty? Now how much will you give for it?"
   She had an exaggerated idea of how much the photograph was worth to us, of course, but I finally made the deal with her. But it was after six when I returned to the city, too late for a train that would put me in Quesada that night. I packed a bag, got my car from the garage, and drove down.
   Quesada was a one-hotel town pasted on the rocky side of a young mountain that sloped into the Pacific Ocean some eighty miles from San Francisco. Quesada's beach was too abrupt and hard and jagged for bathing, so Quesada had never got much summer-resort money. For a while it had been a hustling rum-running port, but that racket was dead now: bootleggers had learned there was more profit and less worry in handling domestic hooch than imported. Quesada had gone back to sleep.
   I got there at eleven-something that night, garaged my car, and crossed the street to the Sunset Hotel. It was a low, sprawled-out, yellow building. The night clerk was alone in the lobby, a small effeminate man well past sixty who went to a lot of trouble to show me that his fingernails were rosy and shiny.
   When he had read my name on the register he gave me a sealed envelope-hotel stationery-addressed to me in Eric Collinson's handwriting. I tore it open and read:
 
   _Do not leave the hotel
   until I have seen you_.
   _E. C._
 
   "How long has this been here?" I asked.
   "Since about eight o'clock. Mr. Carter waited for you for more than an hour, until after the last stage came in from the railroad."
   "He isn't staying here?"
   "Oh, dear, no. He and his bride have got the Tooker place, down in the cove."
   Collinson wasn't the sort of person to whose instructions I'd pay a whole lot of attention. I asked:
   "How do you get there?"
   "You'd never be able to find it at night," the clerk assured me, "unless you went all the way around by the East road, and not then, I'm sure, unless you knew the country."
   "Yeah? How do you get there in the daytime?"
   "You go down this street to the end, take the fork of the road on the ocean side, and follow that up along the cliff. It isn't really a road, more of a path. It's about three miles to the house, a brown house, shingled all over, on a little hill. It's easily enough found in the daytime if you remember to keep to the right, to the ocean side, all the way down. But you'd never, never in the world, be able to find-"
   "Thanks," I said, not wanting to hear the story all over again.
   He led me up to a room, promised to call me at five, and I was asleep by midnight.
   The morning was dull, ugly, foggy, and cold when I climbed out of bed to say, "All right, thanks," into the phone. It hadn't improved much by the time I had got dressed and gone downstairs. The clerk said there was not a chance in the world of getting anything to eat in Quesada before seven o'clock.
   I went out of the hotel, down the street until it became a dirt road, kept to the dirt road until it forked, and turned into the branch that bent toward the ocean. This branch was never really a road from its beginning, and soon was nothing but a rocky path climbing along the side of a rocky ledge that kept pushing closer to the water's edge. The side of the ledge became steeper and steeper, until the path was simply an irregular shelf on the face of a cliff-a shelf eight or ten feet wide in places, no more than four or five in others. Above and behind the path, the cliff rose sixty or seventy feet; below and in front, it slanted down a hundred or more to ravel out in the ocean. A breeze from the general direction of China was pushing fog over the top of the cliff, making noisy lather of sea water at its bottom.
   Rounding a corner where the cliff was steepest-was, in fact, for a hundred yards or so, straight up and down-I stopped to look at a small ragged hole in the path's outer rim. The hole was perhaps six inches across, with fresh loose earth piled in a little semicircular mound on one side, scattered on the other. It wasn't exciting to look at, but it said plainly to even such a city man as I was: here a bush was uprooted not so long ago.
   There was no uprooted bush in sight. I chucked my cigarette away and got down on hands and knees, putting my head out over the path's rim, hooking down. I saw the bush twenty feet below. It was perched on the top of a stunted tree that grew almost parallel to the cliff, fresh brown earth sticking to the bush's roots. The next thing that caught my eye was also brown-a soft hat lying upside down between two pointed gray rocks, half-way down to the water. I looked at the bottom of the cliff and saw the feet and legs.
   They were a man's feet and legs, in black shoes and dark trousers. The feet lay on the top of a water-smoothed boulder, lay on their sides, six inches apart, both pointing to the left. From the feet, dark-trousered legs slanted down into the water, disappearing beneath the surface a few inches above the knees. That was all I could see from the cliff road.
   I went down the cliff, though not at that point. It was a lot too steep there to be tackled by a middle-aged fat man. A couple of hundred yards back, the path had crossed a crooked ravine that creased the cliff diagonally from top to bottom. I returned to the ravine and went down it, stumbling, sliding, sweating and swearing, but reaching the bottom all in one piece, with nothing more serious the matter with me than torn fingers, dirty clothes, and ruined shoes.
   The fringe of rock that lay between cliff and ocean wasn't meant to be walked on, but I managed to travel over it most of the way, having to wade only once or twice, and then not up to my knees. But when I came to the spot where the feet and legs were I had to go waist-deep into the Pacific to lift the body, which rested on its back on the worn slanting side of a mostly submerged boulder, covered from thighs up by frothing water. I got my hands under the armpits, found solid ground for my feet, and lifted.
   It was Eric Collinson's body. Bones showed through flesh and clothing on his shattered back. The back of his head-that half of it-was crushed. I dragged him out of the water and put him down on dry rocks. His dripping pockets contained a hundred and fifty-four dollars and eighty-two cents, a watch, a knife, a gold pen and pencil, papers, a couple of letters, and a memoranda book. I spread out the papers, letters, and book; and read them; and learned nothing except that what was written in them hadn't anything to do with his death. I couldn't find anything else-on him or near him-to tell me more about his death than the uprooted bush, the hat caught between rocks, and the position of his body had told me.
   I left him there and went back to the ravine, panting and heaving myself up it to the cliff path, returning to where the bush had grown. I didn't find anything there in the way of significant marks, footprints, or the like. The path was chiefly hard rock. I went on along it. Presently the cliff began to bend away from the ocean, lowering the path along its side. After another half-mile there was no cliff at all, merely a bush-grown ridge at whose foot the path ran. There was no sun yet. My pants stuck disagreeably to my chilly legs. Water squunched in my torn shoes. I hadn't had any breakfast. My cigarettes had got wet. My left knee ached from a twist it had got sliding down the ravine. I cursed the detective business and slopped on along the path.
   The path took me away from the sea for a while, across the neck of a wooded point that pushed the ocean back, down into a small valley, up the side of a low hill; and then I saw the house the night clerk had described.
   It was a rather large two-story building, roof and walls brown-shingled, set on a hump in the ground close to where the ocean came in to take a quarter-mile u-shaped bite out of the coast. The house faced the water. I was behind it. There was nobody in sight. The ground-floor windows were closed, with drawn blinds. The second-story windows were open. Off to one side were some smaller farm buildings.
   I went around to the front of the house. Wicker chairs and a table were on the screened front porch. The screened porch-door was hooked on the inside. I rattled it noisily. I rattled it off and on for at least five minutes, and got no response. I went around to the rear again, and knocked on the back door. My knocking knuckles pushed the door open half a foot. Inside was a dark kitchen and silence. I opened the door wider, knocking on it again, loudly. More silence.
   I called: "Mrs. Collinson."
   When no answer came I went through the kitchen and a darker dining room, found a flight of stairs, climbed them, and began poking my head into rooms.
   There was nobody in the house.
   In one bedroom, a .38 automatic pistol lay in the center of the floor. There was an empty shell close to it, another under a chair across the room, and a faint odor of burnt gunpowder in the air. In one corner of the ceiling was a hole that a .38 bullet could have made, and, under it on the floor, a few crumbs of plaster. The bed-clothes were smooth and undisturbed. Clothes in the closet, things on and in table and bureau, told me this was Eric Collinson's bedroom.
   Next to it, according to the same sort of evidence, was Gabrielle's bedroom. Her bed had not been slept in, or had been made since being slept in. On the floor of her closet I found a black satin dress, a once-white handkerchief, and a pair of black suede slippers, all wet and muddy-the handkerchief also wet with blood. In her bathroom-in the tub-were a bath-towel and a face-towel, both stained with mud and blood, and still damp. On her dressing-table was a small piece of thick white paper that had been folded. White powder clung to one crease. I touched it with the end of my tongue-morphine.
   I went back to Quesada, changed my shoes and socks, got breakfast and a supply of dry cigarettes, and asked the clerk-a dapper boy, this one-who was responsible for law and order there.
   "The marshal's Dick Cotton," he told me; "but he went up to the city last night. Ben Rolly's deputy sheriff. You can likely find him over at his old man's office."
   "Where's that?"
   "Next door to the garage."
   I found it, a one-story red brick building with wide glass windows labeled _J. King Rolly, Real Estate, Mortgages, Loans, Stocks and Bonds, Insurance, Notes, Employment Agency, Notary Public, Moving and Storage_, and a lot more that I've forgotten.
   Two men were inside, sitting with their feet on a battered desk behind a battered counter. One was a man of fifty-and, with hair, eyes, and skin of indefinite, washed-out tan shades-an amiable, aimless-looking man in shabby clothes. The other was twenty years younger and in twenty years would look just like him.
   "I'm hunting," I said, "for the deputy sheriff."
   "Me," the younger man said, easing his feet from desk to floor. He didn't get up. Instead, he put a foot out, hooked a chair by its rounds, pulled it from the wall, and returned his feet to the desk-top. "Set down. This is Pa," wiggling a thumb at the other man. "You don't have to mind him."
   "Know Eric Carter?" I asked.
   "The fellow honeymooning down to the Tooker place? I didn't know his front name was Eric."
   "Eric Carter," the elder Rolly said; "that's the way I made out the rent receipt for him."
   "He's dead," I told them. "He fell off the cliff road last night or this morning. It could have been an accident."
   The father looked at the son with round tan eyes. The son looked at me with questioning tan eyes and said: "Tch, tch, tch."
   I gave him a card. He read it carefully, turning it over to see that there was nothing on its back, and passed it to his father.
   "Go down and take a look at him?" I suggested.
   "I guess I ought to," the deputy sheriff agreed, getting up from his chair. He was a larger man than I had supposed-as big as the dead Collinson boy-and, in spite of his slouchiness, he had a nicely muscled body.
   I followed him out to a dusty car in front of the office. Rolly senior didn't go with us.
   "Somebody told you about it?" the deputy sheriff asked when we were riding.
   "I stumbled on him. Know who the Carters are?"
   "Somebody special?"
   "You heard about the Riese murder in the San Francisco temple?"
   "Uh-huh, I read the papers."
   "Mrs. Carter was the Gabrielle Leggett mixed up in that, and Carter was the Eric Collinson."
   "Tch, tch, tch," he said.
   "And her father and step-mother were killed a couple of weeks before that."
   "Tch, tch, tch," he said. "What's the matter with them?"
   "A family curse."
   "Sure enough?"
   I didn't know how seriously he meant that question, though he seemed serious enough. I hadn't got him sized up yet. However, clown or not, he was the deputy sheriff stationed at Quesada, and this was his party. He was entitled to the facts. I gave them to him as we bounced over the lumpy road, gave him all I had, from Paris in 1913 to the cliff road a couple of hours ago.
   "When they came back from being married in Reno, Collinson dropped in to see me. They had to stick around for the Haldorn bunch's trial, and he wanted a quiet place to take the girl: she was still in a daze. You know Owen Fitzstephan?"
   "The writer fellow that was down here a while last year? Uh-huh."
   "Well, he suggested this place."
   "I know. The old man mentioned it. But what'd they take them aliases for?"
   "To dodge publicity, and, partly, to try to dodge something like this."
   He frowned vaguely and asked:
   "You mean they expected something like this?"
   "Well, it's easy to say, 'I told you so,' after things happen, but I've never thought we had the answer to either of the two mix-ups she's been in. And not having the answer-how could you tell what to expect? I didn't think so much of their going off into seclusion like this while whatever was hanging over her-if anything was-was still hanging over her, but Collinson was all for it. I made him promise to wire me if he saw anything funny. Well, he did."
   Rolly nodded three or four times, then asked:
   "What makes you think he didn't fall off the cliff?"
   "He sent for me. Something was wrong. Outside of that, too many things have happened around his wife for me to believe in accidents."
   "There's the curse, though," he said.
   "Yeah," I agreed, studying his indefinite face, still trying to figure him out. "But the trouble with it is it's worked out too well, too regularly. It's the first one I ever ran across that did."
   He frowned over my opinion for a couple of minutes, and then stopped the car. "We'll have to get out here: the road ain't so good the rest of the way." None of it had been. "Still and all, you do hear of them working out. There's things that happen that makes a fellow think there's things in the world-in life-that he don't know much about." He frowned again as we set off afoot, and found a word he liked. "It's inscrutable," he wound up.
   I let that go at that.
   He went ahead up the cliff path, stopping of his own accord where the bush had been torn up, a detail I hadn't mentioned. I didn't say anything while he stared down at Collinson's body, looked searchingly up and down the face of the cliff, and then went up and down the path, bent far over, his tan eyes intent on the ground.
   He wandered around for ten minutes or more, then straightened up and said: "There's nothing here that I can find. Let's go down."
   I started back toward the ravine, but he said there was a better way ahead. There was. We went down it to the dead man.
   Rolly looked from the corpse to the edge of the path high above us, and complained: "I don't hardly see how he could have landed just that-away."
   "He didn't. I pulled him out of the water," I said, showing the deputy exactly where I had found the body.
   "That would be more like it," he decided.
   I sat on a rock and smoked a cigarette while he went around examining, touching, moving rocks, pebbles, and sand. He didn't seem to have any luck.

XIV.The Crumpled Chrysler

   We climbed to the path again and went on to the Collinsons' house. I showed Rolly the stained towels, handkerchief, dress, and slippers; the paper that had held morphine; the gun on Collinson's floor, the hole in the ceiling, and the empty shells on the floor.
   "That shell under the chair is where it was," I said; "but the other-the one in the corner-was here, close to the gun, when I saw it before."
   "You mean it's been moved since you were here?"
   "Yeah."
   "But what good would that do anybody?" he objected.
   "None that I know of, but it's been moved."
   He had lost interest. He was looking at the ceiling. He said:
   "Two shots and one hole. I wonder. Maybe the other went out the window."
   He went back to Gabrielle Collinson's bedroom and examined the black velvet gown. There were some torn places in it-down near the bottom-but no bullet-holes. He put the dress down and picked up the morphine paper from the dressing-table.
   "What do you suppose this is doing here?" he asked.
   "She uses it. It's one of the things her step-mother taught her."
   "Tch, tch, tch. Kind of looks like she might have done it."
   "Yeah?"
   "You know it does. She's a dope fiend, ain't she? They had had trouble, and he sent for you, and-" He broke off, pursed his lips, then asked: "What time do you reckon he was killed?"
   "I don't know. Maybe last night, on his way home from waiting for me."
   "You were in the hotel all night?"
   "From eleven-something till five this morning. Of course I could have sneaked out for long enough to pull a murder between those hours."
   "I didn't mean nothing like that," he said. "I was just wondering. What kind of looking woman is this Mrs. Collinson-Carter? I never saw her."
   "She's about twenty; five feet four or five; looks thinner than she really is; light brown hair, short and curly; big eyes that are sometimes brown and sometimes green; white skin; hardly any forehead; small mouth and teeth; pointed chin; no lobes on her ears, and they're pointed on top; been sick for a couple of months and looks it."
   "Oughtn't be hard to pick her up," he said, and began poking into drawers, closets, trunks, and so on. I had poked into them on my first visit, and hadn't found anything interesting either.
   "Don't look like she did any packing or took much of anything with her," he decided when he came back to where I was sitting by the dressing-table. He pointed a thick finger at the monogrammed silver toilet-set on the table. "What's the G. D. L. for?"
   "Her name was Gabrielle Something Leggett before she was married."
   "Oh, yes. She went away in the car, I reckon. Huh?"
   "Did they have one down here?" I asked.
   "He used to come to town in a Chrysler roadster when he didn't walk. She could only have took it out by the East road. We'll go out thataway and see."
   Outside, I waited while he made circles around the house, finding nothing. In front of a shed where a car obviously had been kept he pointed at some tracks, and said, "Drove out this morning." I took his word for it.
   We walked along a dirt road to a gravel one, and along that perhaps a mile to a gray house that stood in a group of red farm buildings. A small-boned, high-shouldered man who limped slightly was oiling a pump behind the house. Rolly called him Debro.
   "Sure, Ben," he replied to Rolly's question. "She went by here about seven this morning, going like a bat out of hell. There wasn't anybody else in the car."
   "How was she dressed?" I asked.
   "She didn't have on any hat and a tan coat."
   I asked him what he knew about the Carters: he was their nearest neighbor. He didn't know anything about them. He had talked to Carter two or three times, and thought him an agreeable enough young fellow. Once he had taken the missus over to call on Mrs. Carter, but Carter told them she was lying down, not feeling well. None of the Debros had ever seen her except at a distance, walking or riding with her husband.
   "I don't guess there's anybody around here that's talked to her," he wound up, "except of course Mary Nunez."
   "Mary working for them?" the deputy asked.
   "Yes. What's the matter, Ben? Something the matter over there?"
   "He fell off the cliff last night, and she's gone away without saying anything to anybody."
   Debro whistled.
   Rolly went into the house to use Debro's phone, reporting to the sheriff. I stayed outside with Debro, trying to get more-if only his opinions-out of him. All I got were expressions of amazement.
   "We'll go over and see Mary," the deputy said when he came from the phone; and then, when we had left Debro, had crossed the road, and were walking through a field towards a cluster of trees: "Funny she wasn't there."
   "Who is she?"
   "A Mex. Lives down in the hollow with the rest of them. Her man, Pedro Nunez, is doing a life-stretch in Folsom for killing a bootlegger named Dunne in a hijacking two-three years back."
   "Local killing?"
   "Uh-huh. It happened down in the cove in front of the Tooker place."
   We went through the trees and down a slope to where half a dozen shacks-shaped, sized, and red-leaded to resemble box-cars-lined the side of a stream, with vegetable gardens spread out behind them. In front of one of the shacks a shapeless Mexican woman in a pink-checkered dress sat on an empty canned-soup box smoking a corncob pipe and nursing a brown baby. Ragged and dirty children played between the buildings, with ragged and dirty mongrels helping them make noise. In one of the gardens a brown man in overalls that had once been blue was barely moving a hoe.
   The children stopped playing to watch Rolly and me cross the stream on conveniently placed stones. The dogs came yapping to meet us, snarling and snapping around us until one of the boys chased them. We stopped in front of the woman with the baby. The deputy grinned down at the baby and said:
   "Well, well, ain't he getting to be a husky son-of-a-gun!"
   The woman took the pipe from her mouth long enough to complain stolidly:
   "Colic all the time."
   "Tch, tch, tch. Where's Mary Nunez?"
   The pipe-stem pointed at the next shack.
   "I thought she was working for them people at the Tooker place," he said.
   "Sometimes," the woman replied indifferently.
   We went to the next shack. An old woman in a gray wrapper had come to the door, watching us while stirring something in a yellow bowl.
   "Where's Mary?" the deputy asked.
   She spoke over her shoulder into the shack's interior, and moved aside to let another woman take her place in the doorway. This other woman was short and solidly built, somewhere in her early thirties, with intelligent dark eyes in a wide, flat face. She held a dark blanket together at her throat. The blanket hung to the floor all around her.
   "Howdy, Mary," Rolly greeted her. "Why ain't you over to the Carters'?"
   "I'm sick, Mr. Rolly." She spoke without accent. "Chills-so I just stayed home today."
   "Tch, tch, tch. That's too bad. Have you had the doc?"
   She said she hadn't. Rolly said she ought to. She said she didn't need him: she had chills often. Rolly said that might be so, but that was all the more reason for having him: it was best to play safe and have things like that looked after. She said yes but doctors took so much money, and it was bad enough being sick without having to pay for it. He said in the long run it was likely to cost folks more not having a doctor than having him. I had begun to think they were going to keep it up all day when Rolly finally brought the talk around to the Carters again, asking the woman about her work there.
   She told us she had been hired two weeks ago, when they took the house. She went there each morning at nine-they never got up before ten-cooked their meals, did the housework, and left after washing the dinner dishes in the evening-usually somewhere around seven-thirty. She seemed surprised at the news that Collinson-Carter to her-had been killed and his wife had gone away. She told us that Collinson had gone out by himself, for a walk, he said, right after dinner the previous night. That was at about half-past six, dinner having been, for no especial reason, a little early. When she left for home, at a few minutes past seven, Mrs. Carter had been reading a book in the front second-story room.
   Mary Nunez couldn't, or wouldn't, tell us anything on which I could base a reasonable guess at Collinson's reason for sending for me. She knew, she insisted, nothing about them except that Mrs. Carter didn't seem happy-wasn't happy. She-Mary Nunez-had figured it all out to her own satisfaction: Mrs. Carter loved someone else, but her parents had made her marry Carter; and so, of course, Carter had been killed by the other man, with whom Mrs. Carter had now run away. I couldn't get her to say that she had any grounds for this belief other than her woman's intuition, so I asked her about the Carters' visitors.
   She said she had never seen any.
   Rolly asked her if the Carters ever quarreled. She started to say, "No," and then, rapidly, said they did, often, and were never on good terms. Mrs. Carter didn't like to have her husband near her, and several times had told him, in Mary's hearing, that if he didn't go away from her and stay away she would kill him. I tried to pin Mary down to details, asking what had led up to these threats, how they had been worded, but she wouldn't be pinned down. All she remembered positively, she told us, was that Mrs. Carter had threatened to kill Mr. Carter if he didn't go away from her.
   "That pretty well settles that," Rolly said contentedly when we had crossed the stream again and were climbing the slope toward Debro's.
   "What settles what?"
   "That his wife killed him."
   "Think she did?"
   "So do you."
   I said: "No."
   Rolly stopped walking and looked at me with vague worried eyes.
   "Now how can you say that?" he remonstrated. "Ain't she a dope fiend? And cracked in the bargain, according to your own way of telling it? Didn't she run away? Wasn't them things she left behind torn and dirty and bloody? Didn't she threaten to kill him so much that he got scared and sent for you?"
   "Mary didn't hear threats," I said. "They were warnings-about the curse. Gabrielle Collinson really believed in it, and thought enough of him to try to save him from it. I've been through that before with her. That's why she wouldn't have married him if he hadn't carried her off while she was too rattled to know what she was doing. And she was afraid on that account afterwards."
   "But who's going to believe-?"
   "I'm not asking anybody to believe anything," I growled, walking on again. "I'm telling you what I believe. And while I'm at it I'll tell you I believe Mary Nunez is lying when she says she didn't go to the house this morning. Maybe she didn't have anything to do with Collinson's death. Maybe she simply went there, found the Collinsons gone, saw the bloody things and the gun-kicking that shell across the floor without knowing it-and then beat it back to her shack, fixing up that chills story to keep herself out of it; having had enough of that sort of trouble when her husband was sent over. Maybe not. Anyway, that would be how nine out of ten women of her sort in her place would have played it; and I want more proof before I believe her chills just happened to hit her this morning."
   "Well," the deputy sheriff asked; "if she didn't have nothing to do with it, what difference does all that make anyway?"
   The answers I thought up to that were profane and insulting. I kept them to myself.
   At Debro's again, we borrowed a loose-jointed touring car of at least three different makes, and drove down the East road, trying to trace the girl in the Chrysler. Our first stop was at the house of a man named Claude Baker. He was a lanky sallow person with an angular face three or four days behind the razor. His wife was probably younger than he, but looked older-a tired and faded thin woman who might have been pretty at one time. The oldest of their six children was a bowlegged, freckled girl of ten; the youngest was a fat and noisy infant in its first year. Some of the in-betweens were boys and some girls, but they all had colds in their heads. The whole Baker family came out on the porch to receive us. They hadn't seen her, they said: they were never up as early as seven o'clock. They knew the Carters by sight, but knew nothing about them. They asked more questions than Rolly and I did.
   Shortly beyond the Baker house the road changed from gravel to asphalt. What we could see of the Chrysler's tracks seemed to show that it had been the last car over the road. Two miles from Baker's we stopped in front of a small bright green house surrounded by rose bushes. Rolly bawled:
   "Harve! Hey, Harve!"
   A big-boned man of thirty-five or so came to the door, said, "Hullo, Ben," and walked between the rose bushes to our car. His features, like his voice, were heavy, and he moved and spoke deliberately. His last name was Whidden. Rolly asked him if he had seen the Chrysler.
   "Yes, Ben, I saw them," he said. "They went past around a quarter after seven this morning, hitting it up."
   "They?" I asked, while Rolly asked: "Them?"
   "There was a man and a woman-or a girl-in it. I didn't get a good look at them-just saw them whizz past. She was driving, a kind of small woman she looked like from here, with brown hair."
   "What did the man look like?"
   "Oh, he was maybe forty, and didn't look like he was very big either. A pinkish face, he had, and gray coat and hat."
   "Ever see Mrs. Carter?" I asked.
   "The bride living down the cove? No. I seen him, but not her. Was that her?"
   I said we thought it was.
   "The man wasn't him," he said. "He was somebody I never seen before."
   "Know him again if you saw him?"
   "I reckon I would-if I saw him going past like that."
   Four miles beyond Whidden's we found the Chrysler. It was a foot or two off the road, on the left-hand side, standing on all fours with its radiator jammed into a eucalyptus tree. All its glass was shattered, and the front third of its metal was pretty well crumpled. It was empty. There was no blood in it. The deputy sheriff and I seemed to be the only people in the vicinity.
   We ran around in circles, straining our eyes at the ground, and when we got through we knew what we had known at the beginning-the Chrysler had run into a eucalyptus tree. There were tire-marks on the road, and marks that could have been footprints on the ground by the car; but it was possible to find the same sort of marks in a hundred places along that, or any other, road. We got into our borrowed car again and drove on, asking questions wherever we found someone to question; and all the answers were: No, we didn't see her or them.
   "What about this fellow Baker?" I asked Rolly as we turned around to go back. "Debro saw her alone. There was a man with her when she passed Whidden's. The Bakers saw nothing, and it was in their territory that the man must have joined her."
   "Well," he said, argumentatively; "it could of happened that way, couldn't it?"
   "Yeah, but it might be a good idea to do some more talking to them."
   "If you want to," he consented without enthusiasm. "But don't go dragging me into any arguments with them. He's my wife's brother."
   That made a difference. I asked:
   "What sort of man is he?"
   "Claude's kind of shiftless, all right. Like the old man says, he don't manage to raise nothing much but kids on that farm of his, but I never heard tell that he did anybody any harm."
   "If you say he's all right, that's enough for me," I lied. "We won't bother him."

XV.I've Killed Him

   Sheriff Feeney, fat, florid, and with a lot of brown mustache, and district attorney Vernon, sharp-featured, aggressive, and hungry for fame, came over from the county seat. They listened to our stories, looked the ground over, and agreed with Rolly that Gabrielle Collinson had killed her husband. When Marshal Dick Cotton-a pompous, unintelligent man in his forties-returned from San Francisco, he added his vote to the others. The coroner and his jury came to the same opinion, though officially they limited themselves to the usual "person or persons unknown," with recommendations involving the girl.
   The time of Collinson's death was placed between eight and nine o'clock Friday night. No marks not apparently caused by his fall had been found on him. The pistol found in his room had been identified as his. No fingerprints were on it. I had an idea that some of the county officials half suspected me of having seen to that, though nobody said anything of that sort. Mary Nunez stuck to her story of being kept home by chills. She had a flock of Mexican witnesses to back it up. I couldn't find any to knock holes in it. We found no further trace of the man Whidden had seen. I tried the Bakers again, by myself, with no luck. The marshal's wife, a frail youngish woman with a weak pretty face and nice shy manners, who worked in the telegraph office, said Collinson had sent off his wire to me early Friday morning. He was pale and shaky, she said, with dark-rimmed, bloodshot eyes. She had supposed he was drunk, though she hadn't smelled alcohol on his breath.
   Collinson's father and brother came down from San Francisco. Hubert Collinson, the father, was a big calm man who looked capable of taking as many more millions out of Pacific Coast lumber as he wanted. Laurence Collinson was a year or two older than his dead brother, and much like him in appearance. Both Collinsons were careful to say nothing that could be interpreted as suggesting they thought Gabrielle had been responsible for Eric's death, but there was little doubt that they did think so.
   Hubert Collinson said quietly to me, "Go ahead; get to the bottom of it;" and thus became the fourth client for whom the agency had been concerned with Gabrielle's affairs.
   Madison Andrews came down from San Francisco. He and I talked in my hotel room. He sat on a chair by the window, cut a cube of tobacco from a yellowish plug, put it in his mouth, and decided that Collinson had committed suicide.
   I sat on the side of the bed, set fire to a Fatima, and contradicted him:
   "He wouldn't have torn up the bush if he'd gone over willingly."
   "Then it was an accident. That was a dangerous road to be walked in the dark."
   "I've stopped believing in accidents," I said. "And he had sent me an SOS. And there was the gun that had been fired in his room."
   He leaned forward in his chair. His eyes were hard and watchful. He was a lawyer cross-examining a witness.
   "You think Gabrielle was responsible?"
   I wouldn't go that far. I said:
   "He was murdered. He was murdered by— I told you two weeks ago that we weren't through with that damned curse, and that the only way to get through with it was to have the Temple business sifted to the bottom."
   "Yes, I remember," he said without quite sneering. "You advanced the theory that there was some connecting link between her parents' deaths and the trouble she had at the Haldorns'; but, as I recall it, you had no idea what the link might be. Don't you think that deficiency has a tendency to make your theory a little-say-vaporous?"