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"No."
"Then why didn't he show up before this-yesterday, or the day before?"
"Ask him."
"Is it true that he's up to his tonsils in debt, or was before the Leggett estate got into his hands?"
"Ask him."
Santos smiled with thinned lips and said:
"We don't have to: we asked some of his creditors. Is there anything to the report that Mrs. Collinson and her husband had quarreled over her being too friendly with Whidden, a couple of days before her husband was killed?"
"Anything but the truth," I said. "Tough. You could do a lot with a story like that."
"Maybe we will," Santos said. "Is it true that she and her husband's family are on the outs, that old Hubert has said he's willing to spend all he's got to see that she pays for any part she had in his son's death?"
I didn't know. I said:
"Don't be a chump. We're working for Hubert now, taking care of her."
"Is it true that Mrs. Haldorn and Tom Fink were released because they had threatened to tell all they knew if they were held for trial?"
"Now you're kidding me, Jack," I said. "Is Andrews still here?"
"Yes."
I went indoors and called Mickey in, asking him: "Seen Dick?"
"He drove past a couple of minutes after Andrews came."
"Sneak away and find him. Tell him not to let the newspaper gang make him, even if he has to risk losing Andrews for a while. They'd go crazy all over their front pages if they learned we were shadowing him, and I don't want them to go that crazy."
Mrs. Herman was coming down the stairs. I asked her where Andrews was.
"Up in the front room."
I went up there. Gabrielle, in a low-cut dark silk gown, was sitting stiff and straight on the edge of a leather rocker. Her face was white and sullen. She was looking at a handkerchief stretched between her hands. She looked up at me as if glad I had come in. Andrews stood with his back to the fireplace. His white hair, eyebrows, and mustache stood out every which way from his bony pink face. He shifted his scowl from the girl to me, and didn't seem glad I had come in.
I said, "Hullo," and found a table-corner to prop myself on.
He said: "I've come to take Mrs. Collinson back to San Francisco."
She didn't say anything. I said:
"Not to San Mateo?"
"What do you mean by that?" The white tangles of his brows came down to hide all but the bottom halves of his blue eyes.
"God knows. Maybe my mind's been corrupted by the questions the newspapers have been asking me."
He didn't quite wince. He said, slowly, deliberately:
"Mrs. Haldorn sent for me professionally. I went to see her to explain how impossible it would be, in the circumstances, for me to advise or represent her."
"That's all right with me," I said. "And if it took you thirty hours to explain that to her, it's nobody's business."
"Precisely."
"But-I'd be careful how I told the reporters waiting downstairs that. You know how suspicious they are-for no reason at all."
He turned to Gabrielle again, speaking quietly, but with some impatience:
"Well, Gabrielle, are you going with me?"
"Should I?" she asked me.
"Not unless you especially want to."
"I-I don't."
"Then that's settled," I said.
Andrews nodded and went forward to take her hand, saying:
"I'm sorry, but I must get back to the city now, my dear. You should have a phone put in, so you can reach me in case you need to."
He declined her invitation to stay to dinner, said, "Good evening," not unpleasantly, to me, and went out. Through a window I could see him presently getting into his car, giving as little attention as possible to the newspaper men gathered around him.
Gabrielle was frowning at me when I turned away from the window.
"What did you mean by what you said about San Mateo?" she asked.
"How friendly are he and Aaronia Haldorn?" I asked.
"I haven't any idea. Why? Why did you talk to him as you did?"
"Detective business. For one thing, there's a rumor that getting control of the estate may have helped him keep his own head above water. Maybe there's nothing in it. But it won't hurt to give him a little scare, so he'll get busy straightening things out-if he has done any juggling— between now and clean-up day. No use of you losing money along with the rest of your troubles."
"Then he-?" she began.
"He's got a week-several days at least-to unjuggle in. That ought to be enough."
"But-"
Mrs. Herman, calling us to dinner, ended the conversation.
Gabrielle ate very little. She and I had to do most of the talking until I got Mickey started telling about a job he had been on up in Eureka, where he posed as a foreigner who knew no English. Since English was the only language he did know, and Eureka normally held at least one specimen of every nationality there is, he'd had a hell of a time keeping people from finding out just what he was supposed to be. He made a long and laughable story of it. Maybe some of it was the truth: he always got a lot of fun out of acting like the other half of a half-wit.
After the meal he and I strolled around outside while the spring night darkened the grounds.
"MacMan will be down in the morning," I told him. "You and he will have to do the watchdog. Divide it between you anyway you want, but one will have to be on the job all the time."
"Don't give yourself any of the worst of it," he complained. "What's this supposed to be down here-a trap?"
"Maybe."
"Maybe. Uh-huh. You don't know what the hell you're doing. You're stalling around waiting for the horseshoe in your pocket to work."
"The outcome of successful planning always looks like luck to saps. Did Dick have any news?"
"No. He tailed Andrews straight here from his house."
The front door opened, throwing yellow light across the porch. Gabrielle, a dark cape on her shoulders, came into the yellow light, shut the door, and came down the gravel walk.
"Take a nap now if you want," I told Mickey. "I'll call you when I turn in. You'll have to stand guard till morning."
"You're a darb." He laughed in the dark. "By God, you're a darb."
"There's a gallon of gin in the car."
"Huh? Why didn't you say so instead of wasting my time just talking?" The lawn grass swished against his shoes as he walked away.
I moved towards the gravel walk, meeting the girl.
"Isn't it a lovely night?" she said.
"Yeah. But you're not supposed to go roaming around alone in the dark, even if your troubles are practically over."
"I didn't intend to," she said, taking my arm. "And what does practically over mean?"
"That there are a few details to be taken care of-the morphine, for instance."
She shivered and said:
"I've only enough left for tonight. You promised to-"
"Fifty grains coming in the morning."
She kept quiet, as if waiting for me to say something else. I didn't say anything else. Her fingers wriggled on my sleeve.
"You said it wouldn't be hard to cure me." She spoke half-questioningly, as if expecting me to deny having said anything of the sort.
"It wouldn't."
"You said, perhaps . . ." letting the words fade off.
"We'd do it while we were here?"
"Yes."
"Want to?" I asked. "It's no go if you don't."
"Do I want to?" She stood still in the road, facing me. "I'd give-" A sob ended that sentence. Her voice came again, high-pitched, thin: "Are you being honest with me? Are you? Is what you've told me-all you told me last night and this afternoon-as true as you made it sound? Do I believe in you because you're sincere? Or because you've learned how-as a trick of your business-to make people believe in you?"
She might have been crazy, but she wasn't so stupid. I gave her the answer that seemed best at the time:
"Your belief in me is built on mine in you. If mine's unjustified, so is yours. So let me ask you a question first: were you lying when you said, 'I don't want to be evil'?"
"Oh, I don't. I don't."
"Well, then," I said with an air of finality, as if that settled it. "Now if you want to get off the junk, off we'll get you."
"How-how long will it take?"
"Say a week, to be safe. Maybe less."
"Do you mean that? No longer than that?"
"That's all for the part that counts. You'll have to take care of yourself for some time after, till your system's hitting on all eight again, but you'll be off the junk."
"Will I suffer-much?"
"A couple of bad days; but they won't be as bad as you'll think they are, and your father's toughness will carry you through them."
"If," she said slowly, "I should find out in the middle of it that I can't go through with it, can I-?"
"There'll be nothing you can do about it," I promised cheerfully. "You'll stay in till you come out the other end."
She shivered again and asked:
"When shall we start?"
"Day after tomorrow. Take your usual snort tomorrow, but don't try to stock up. And don't worry about it. It'll be tougher on me than on you: I'll have to put up with you."
"And you'll make allowances-you'll understand-if I'm not always nice while I'm going through it? Even if I'm nasty?"
"I don't know." I didn't want to encourage her to cut up on me. "I don't think so much of niceness that can be turned into nastiness by a little grief."
"Oh, but-" She stopped, wrinkled her forehead, said: "Can't we send Mrs. Herman away? I don't want to-I don't want her looking at me."
"I'll get rid of her in the morning."
"And if I'm-you won't let anybody else see me-if I'm not-if I'm too terrible?"
"No," I promised. "But look here: you're preparing to put on a show for me. Stop thinking about that end of it. You're going to behave. I don't want a lot of monkey-business out of you."
She laughed suddenly, asking:
"Will you beat me if I'm bad?"
I said she might still be young enough for a spanking to do her good.
XXI.Aaronia Haldorn
XXII.Confessional
"Then why didn't he show up before this-yesterday, or the day before?"
"Ask him."
"Is it true that he's up to his tonsils in debt, or was before the Leggett estate got into his hands?"
"Ask him."
Santos smiled with thinned lips and said:
"We don't have to: we asked some of his creditors. Is there anything to the report that Mrs. Collinson and her husband had quarreled over her being too friendly with Whidden, a couple of days before her husband was killed?"
"Anything but the truth," I said. "Tough. You could do a lot with a story like that."
"Maybe we will," Santos said. "Is it true that she and her husband's family are on the outs, that old Hubert has said he's willing to spend all he's got to see that she pays for any part she had in his son's death?"
I didn't know. I said:
"Don't be a chump. We're working for Hubert now, taking care of her."
"Is it true that Mrs. Haldorn and Tom Fink were released because they had threatened to tell all they knew if they were held for trial?"
"Now you're kidding me, Jack," I said. "Is Andrews still here?"
"Yes."
I went indoors and called Mickey in, asking him: "Seen Dick?"
"He drove past a couple of minutes after Andrews came."
"Sneak away and find him. Tell him not to let the newspaper gang make him, even if he has to risk losing Andrews for a while. They'd go crazy all over their front pages if they learned we were shadowing him, and I don't want them to go that crazy."
Mrs. Herman was coming down the stairs. I asked her where Andrews was.
"Up in the front room."
I went up there. Gabrielle, in a low-cut dark silk gown, was sitting stiff and straight on the edge of a leather rocker. Her face was white and sullen. She was looking at a handkerchief stretched between her hands. She looked up at me as if glad I had come in. Andrews stood with his back to the fireplace. His white hair, eyebrows, and mustache stood out every which way from his bony pink face. He shifted his scowl from the girl to me, and didn't seem glad I had come in.
I said, "Hullo," and found a table-corner to prop myself on.
He said: "I've come to take Mrs. Collinson back to San Francisco."
She didn't say anything. I said:
"Not to San Mateo?"
"What do you mean by that?" The white tangles of his brows came down to hide all but the bottom halves of his blue eyes.
"God knows. Maybe my mind's been corrupted by the questions the newspapers have been asking me."
He didn't quite wince. He said, slowly, deliberately:
"Mrs. Haldorn sent for me professionally. I went to see her to explain how impossible it would be, in the circumstances, for me to advise or represent her."
"That's all right with me," I said. "And if it took you thirty hours to explain that to her, it's nobody's business."
"Precisely."
"But-I'd be careful how I told the reporters waiting downstairs that. You know how suspicious they are-for no reason at all."
He turned to Gabrielle again, speaking quietly, but with some impatience:
"Well, Gabrielle, are you going with me?"
"Should I?" she asked me.
"Not unless you especially want to."
"I-I don't."
"Then that's settled," I said.
Andrews nodded and went forward to take her hand, saying:
"I'm sorry, but I must get back to the city now, my dear. You should have a phone put in, so you can reach me in case you need to."
He declined her invitation to stay to dinner, said, "Good evening," not unpleasantly, to me, and went out. Through a window I could see him presently getting into his car, giving as little attention as possible to the newspaper men gathered around him.
Gabrielle was frowning at me when I turned away from the window.
"What did you mean by what you said about San Mateo?" she asked.
"How friendly are he and Aaronia Haldorn?" I asked.
"I haven't any idea. Why? Why did you talk to him as you did?"
"Detective business. For one thing, there's a rumor that getting control of the estate may have helped him keep his own head above water. Maybe there's nothing in it. But it won't hurt to give him a little scare, so he'll get busy straightening things out-if he has done any juggling— between now and clean-up day. No use of you losing money along with the rest of your troubles."
"Then he-?" she began.
"He's got a week-several days at least-to unjuggle in. That ought to be enough."
"But-"
Mrs. Herman, calling us to dinner, ended the conversation.
Gabrielle ate very little. She and I had to do most of the talking until I got Mickey started telling about a job he had been on up in Eureka, where he posed as a foreigner who knew no English. Since English was the only language he did know, and Eureka normally held at least one specimen of every nationality there is, he'd had a hell of a time keeping people from finding out just what he was supposed to be. He made a long and laughable story of it. Maybe some of it was the truth: he always got a lot of fun out of acting like the other half of a half-wit.
After the meal he and I strolled around outside while the spring night darkened the grounds.
"MacMan will be down in the morning," I told him. "You and he will have to do the watchdog. Divide it between you anyway you want, but one will have to be on the job all the time."
"Don't give yourself any of the worst of it," he complained. "What's this supposed to be down here-a trap?"
"Maybe."
"Maybe. Uh-huh. You don't know what the hell you're doing. You're stalling around waiting for the horseshoe in your pocket to work."
"The outcome of successful planning always looks like luck to saps. Did Dick have any news?"
"No. He tailed Andrews straight here from his house."
The front door opened, throwing yellow light across the porch. Gabrielle, a dark cape on her shoulders, came into the yellow light, shut the door, and came down the gravel walk.
"Take a nap now if you want," I told Mickey. "I'll call you when I turn in. You'll have to stand guard till morning."
"You're a darb." He laughed in the dark. "By God, you're a darb."
"There's a gallon of gin in the car."
"Huh? Why didn't you say so instead of wasting my time just talking?" The lawn grass swished against his shoes as he walked away.
I moved towards the gravel walk, meeting the girl.
"Isn't it a lovely night?" she said.
"Yeah. But you're not supposed to go roaming around alone in the dark, even if your troubles are practically over."
"I didn't intend to," she said, taking my arm. "And what does practically over mean?"
"That there are a few details to be taken care of-the morphine, for instance."
She shivered and said:
"I've only enough left for tonight. You promised to-"
"Fifty grains coming in the morning."
She kept quiet, as if waiting for me to say something else. I didn't say anything else. Her fingers wriggled on my sleeve.
"You said it wouldn't be hard to cure me." She spoke half-questioningly, as if expecting me to deny having said anything of the sort.
"It wouldn't."
"You said, perhaps . . ." letting the words fade off.
"We'd do it while we were here?"
"Yes."
"Want to?" I asked. "It's no go if you don't."
"Do I want to?" She stood still in the road, facing me. "I'd give-" A sob ended that sentence. Her voice came again, high-pitched, thin: "Are you being honest with me? Are you? Is what you've told me-all you told me last night and this afternoon-as true as you made it sound? Do I believe in you because you're sincere? Or because you've learned how-as a trick of your business-to make people believe in you?"
She might have been crazy, but she wasn't so stupid. I gave her the answer that seemed best at the time:
"Your belief in me is built on mine in you. If mine's unjustified, so is yours. So let me ask you a question first: were you lying when you said, 'I don't want to be evil'?"
"Oh, I don't. I don't."
"Well, then," I said with an air of finality, as if that settled it. "Now if you want to get off the junk, off we'll get you."
"How-how long will it take?"
"Say a week, to be safe. Maybe less."
"Do you mean that? No longer than that?"
"That's all for the part that counts. You'll have to take care of yourself for some time after, till your system's hitting on all eight again, but you'll be off the junk."
"Will I suffer-much?"
"A couple of bad days; but they won't be as bad as you'll think they are, and your father's toughness will carry you through them."
"If," she said slowly, "I should find out in the middle of it that I can't go through with it, can I-?"
"There'll be nothing you can do about it," I promised cheerfully. "You'll stay in till you come out the other end."
She shivered again and asked:
"When shall we start?"
"Day after tomorrow. Take your usual snort tomorrow, but don't try to stock up. And don't worry about it. It'll be tougher on me than on you: I'll have to put up with you."
"And you'll make allowances-you'll understand-if I'm not always nice while I'm going through it? Even if I'm nasty?"
"I don't know." I didn't want to encourage her to cut up on me. "I don't think so much of niceness that can be turned into nastiness by a little grief."
"Oh, but-" She stopped, wrinkled her forehead, said: "Can't we send Mrs. Herman away? I don't want to-I don't want her looking at me."
"I'll get rid of her in the morning."
"And if I'm-you won't let anybody else see me-if I'm not-if I'm too terrible?"
"No," I promised. "But look here: you're preparing to put on a show for me. Stop thinking about that end of it. You're going to behave. I don't want a lot of monkey-business out of you."
She laughed suddenly, asking:
"Will you beat me if I'm bad?"
I said she might still be young enough for a spanking to do her good.
XXI.Aaronia Haldorn
Mary Nunez arrived at half-past seven the next morning. Mickey Linehan drove Mrs. Herman to Quesada, leaving her there, returning with MacMan and a load of groceries.
MacMan was a square-built, stiff-backed ex-soldier. Ten years of the island had baked his tight-mouthed, solid-jawed, grim face a dark oak. He was the perfect soldier: he went where you sent him, stayed where you put him, and had no ideas of his own to keep him from doing exactly what you told him.
He gave me the druggist's package. I took ten grains of morphine up to Gabrielle. She was eating breakfast in bed. Her eyes were watery, her face damp and grayish. When she saw the bindles in my hand she pushed her tray aside and held her hands out eagerly, wriggling her shoulders.
"Come back in five minutes?" she asked.
"You can take your jolt in front of me. I won't blush."
"But I would," she said, and did.
I went out, shut the door, and leaned against it, hearing the crackle of paper and the clink of a spoon on the water-glass. Presently she called:
"All right."
I went in again. A crumpled ball of white paper in the tray was all that remained of one bindle. The others weren't in sight. She was leaning back against her pillows, eyes half closed, as comfortable as a cat full of goldfish. She smiled lazily at me and said:
"You're a dear. Know what I'd like to do today? Take some lunch and go out on the water-spend the whole day floating in the sun."
"That ought to be good for you. Take either Linehan or MacMan with you. You're not to go out alone."
"What are you going to do?"
"Ride up to Quesada, over to the county seat, maybe as far as the city."
"Mayn't I go with you?"
I shook my head, saying: "I've got work to do, and you're supposed to be resting."
She said, "Oh," and reached for her coffee. I turned to the door. "The rest of the morphine." She spoke over the edge of her cup. "You've put it in a safe place, where nobody will find it?"
"Yeah," I said, grinning at her, patting my coat-pocket.
In Quesada I spent half an hour talking to Rolly and reading the San Francisco papers. They were beginning to poke at Andrews with hints and questions that stopped just short of libel. That was so much to the good. The deputy sheriff hadn't anything to tell me.
I went over to the county seat. Vernon was in court. Twenty minutes of the sheriff's conversation didn't add anything to my education. I called up the agency and talked to the Old Man. He said Hubert Collinson, our client, had expressed some surprise at our continuing the operation, having supposed that Whidden's death had cleared up the mystery of his son's murder.
"Tell him it didn't," I said. "Eric's murder was tied up with Gabrielle's troubles, and we can't get to the bottom of one except through the other. It'll probably take another week. Collinson's all right," I assured the Old Man. "He'll stand for it when it's explained to him."
The Old Man said, "I certainly hope so," rather coldly, not enthusiastic over having five operatives at work on a job that the supposed client might not want to pay for.
I drove up to San Francisco, had dinner at the St. Germain, stopped at my rooms to collect another suit and a bagful of clean shirts and the like, and got back to the house in the cove a little after midnight. MacMan came out of the darkness while I was tucking the car-we were still using Fitzstephan's-under the shed. He said nothing had happened in my absence. We went into the house together. Mickey was in the kitchen, yawning and mixing himself a drink before relieving MacMan on sentry duty.
"Mrs. Collinson gone to bed?" I asked.
"Her light's still on. She's been in her room all day."
MacMan and I had a drink with Mickey and then went upstairs. I knocked at the girl's door.
"Who is it?" she asked. I told her. She said: "Yes?"
"No breakfast in the morning."
"Really?" Then, as if it were something she had almost forgotten: "Oh, I've decided not to put you to all the trouble of curing me." She opened the door and stood in the opening, smiling too pleasantly at me, a finger holding her place in a book. "Did you have a nice ride?"
"All right," I said, taking the rest of the morphine from my pocket and holding it out to her. "There's no use of my carrying this around."
She didn't take it. She laughed in my face and said:
"You are a brute, aren't you?"
"Well, it's your cure, not mine." I put the stuff back in my pocket. "If you-" I broke off to listen. A board had creaked down the hall. Now there was a soft sound, as of a bare foot dragging across the floor.
"That's Mary watching over me," Gabrielle whispered gaily. "She made a bed in the attic and refused to go home. She doesn't think I'm safe with you and your friends. She warned me against you, said you were-what was it?-oh, yes-wolves. Are you?"
"Practically. Don't forget-no breakfast in the morning."
The following afternoon I gave her the first dose of Vic Dallas's mixture, and three more at two-hour intervals. She spent that day in her room. That was Saturday.
On Sunday she had ten grains of morphine and was in high spirits all day, considering herself as good as cured already.
On Monday she had the remainder of Vic's concoction, and the day was pretty much like Saturday. Mickey Linehan returned from the county seat with the news that Fitzstephan was conscious, but too weak and too bandaged to have talked if the doctors had let him; that Andrews had been to San Mateo to see Aaronia Haldorn again; and that she had been to the hospital to see Fink, but had been refused permission by the sheriff's office.
Tuesday was a more exciting day.
Gabrielle was up and dressed when I carried her orange-juice breakfast in. She was bright-eyed, restless, talkative, and laughed easily and often until I mentioned-off-hand-that she was to have no more morphine.
"Ever, you mean?" Her face and voice were panicky. "No, you don't mean that?"
"Yeah."
"But I'll die." Tears filled her eyes, ran down her small white face, and she wrung her hands. It was childishly pathetic. I had to remind myself that tears were one of the symptoms of morphine withdrawal. "You know that's not the way. I don't expect as much as usual. I know I'll get less and less each day. But you can't stop it like this. You're joking. That would kill me." She cried some more at the thought of being killed.
I made myself laugh as if I were sympathetic but amused.
"Nonsense," I said cheerfully. "The chief trouble you're going to have is in being too alive. A couple of days of that, and you'll be all set."
She bit her lips, finally managed a smile, holding out both hands to me.
"I'm going to believe you," she said. "I do believe you. I'm going to believe you no matter what you say."
Her hands were clammy. I squeezed them and said:
"That'll be swell. Now back to bed. I'll look in every now and then, and if you want anything in between, sing out."
"You're not going off today?"
"No," I promised.
She stood the gaff pretty well all afternoon. Of course, there wasn't much heartiness in the way she laughed at herself between attacks when the sneezing and yawning hit her, but the thing was that she tried to laugh.
Madison Andrews came between five and half-past. Having seen him drive in, I met him on the porch. The ruddiness of his face had been washed out to a weak orange.
"Good evening," he said politely. "I wish to see Mrs. Collinson."
"I'll deliver any message to her," I offered.
He pulled his white eyebrows down and some of his normal ruddiness came back.
"I wish to see her." It was a command.
"She doesn't wish to see you. Is there any message?"
All of his ruddiness was back now. His eyes were hot. I was standing between him and the door. He couldn't go in while I stood there. For a moment he seemed about to push me out of the way. That didn't worry me: he was carrying a handicap of twenty pounds and twenty years.
He pulled his jaw into his neck and spoke in the voice of authority:
"Mrs. Collinson must return to San Francisco with me. She cannot stay here. This is a preposterous arrangement."
"She's not going to San Francisco," I said. "If necessary, the district attorney can hold her here as a material witness. Try upsetting that with any of your court orders, and we'll give you something else to worry about. I'm telling you this so you'll know how we stand. We'll prove that she might be in danger from you. How do we know you haven't played marbles with the estate? How do we know you don't mean to take advantage of her present upset condition to shield yourself from trouble over the estate? Why, man, you might even be planning to send her to an insane-asylum so the estate will stay under your control."
He was sick behind his eyes, though the rest of him stood up well enough under this broadside. When he had got his breath and had swallowed, he demanded:
"Does Gabrielle believe this?" His face was magenta.
"Who said anybody believed it?" I was trying to be bland. "I'm just telling you what we'll go into court with. You're a lawyer. You know there's not necessarily any connection between what's true and what you go into court with-or into the newspapers."
The sickness spread from behind his eyes, pushing the color from his face, the stiffness from his bones; but he held himself tall and he found a level voice.
"You may tell Mrs. Collinson," he said, "that I shall return my letters testamentary to the court this week, with an accounting of the estate, and a request that I be relieved."
"That'll be swell," I said, but I felt sorry for the old boy shuffling down to his car, climbing slowly into it.
I didn't tell Gabrielle he had been there.
She was whining a little now between her yawning and sneezing, and her eyes were running water. Face, body, and hands were damp with sweat. She couldn't eat. I kept her full of orange juice. Noises and odors— no matter how faint, how pleasant-were becoming painful to her, and she twitched and jerked continually in her bed.
"Will it get much worse than this?" she asked.
"Not much. There'll be nothing you can't stand."
Mickey Linehan was waiting for me when I got downstairs.
"The spick's got herself a chive," he said pleasantly.
"Yeah?"
"Yeah. It's the one I've been using to shuck lemons to take the stink out of that bargain-counter gin you bought-or did you just borrow it, the owner knowing you'd return it because nobody could drink it? It's a paring knife-four or five inches of stainless steel blade-so you won't get rustmarks on your undershirt when she sticks it in your back. I couldn't find it, and asked her about it, and she didn't look at me like I was a well-poisoner when she said she didn't know anything about it, and that's the first time she never looked at me that way, so I knew she had it."
"Smart of you," I said. "Well, keep an eye on her. She don't like us much."
"I'm to do that?" Mickey grinned. "My idea would be for everybody to look out for himself, seeing that you're the lad she dog-eyes most, and it's most likely you that'll get whittled on. What'd you ever do to her? You haven't been dumb enough to fool with a Mex lady's affections, have you?"
I didn't think he was funny, though he may have been.
Aaronia Haldorn arrived just before dark, in a Lincoln limousine driven by a Negro who turned the siren loose when he brought the car into the drive. I was in Gabrielle's room when the thing howled. She all but jumped out of bed, utterly terrorized by what must have been an ungodly racket to her too sensitive ears.
"What was it? What was it?" she kept crying between rattling teeth, her body shaking the bed.
"Sh-h-h," I soothed her. I was acquiring a pretty fair bedside manner. "Just an automobile horn. Visitors. I'll go down and head them off."
"You won't let anybody see me?" she begged.
"No. Be a good girl till I get back."
Aaronia Haldorn was standing beside the limousine talking to MacMan when I came out. In the dim light, her face was a dusky oval mask between black hat and black fur coat-but her luminous eyes were real enough.
"How do you do?" she said, holding out a hand. Her voice was a thing to make warm waves run up your back. "I'm glad for Mrs. Collinson's sake that you're here. She and I have had excellent proof of your protective ability, both owing our lives to it."
That was all right, but it had been said before. I made a gesture that was supposed to indicate modest distaste for the subject, and beat her to the first tap with:
"I'm sorry she can't see you. She isn't well."
"Oh, but I should so like to see her, if only for a moment. Don't you think it might be good for her?"
I said I was sorry. She seemed to accept that as final, though she said: "I came all the way from the city to see her."
I tried that opening with:
"Didn't Mr. Andrews tell you . . . ?" letting it ravel out.
She didn't say whether he had. She turned and began walking slowly across the grass. There was nothing for me to do but walk along beside her. Full darkness was only a few minutes away. Presently, when we had gone thirty or forty feet from the car, she said:
"Mr. Andrews thinks you suspect him."
"He's right."
"Of what do you suspect him?"
"Juggling the estate. Mind, I don't know, but I do suspect him."
"Really?"
"Really," I said; "and not of anything else."
"Oh, I should suppose that was quite enough."
"It's enough for me. I didn't think it was enough for you."
"I beg your pardon?"
I didn't like the ground I was on with this woman. I was afraid of her. I piled up what facts I had, put some guesses on them, and took a jump from the top of the heap into space:
"When you got out of prison, you sent for Andrews, pumped him for all he knew, and then, when you learned he was playing with the girl's pennies, you saw what looked to you like a chance to confuse things by throwing suspicion on him. The old boy's woman-crazy: he'd be ducksoup for a woman like you. I don't know what you're planning to do with him, but you've got him started, and have got the papers started after him. I take it you gave them the tip-off on his high financing? It's no good, Mrs. Haldorn. Chuck it. It won't work. You can stir him up, all right, and make him do something criminal, get him into a swell jam: he's desperate enough now that he's being poked at. But whatever he does now won't hide what somebody else did in the past. He's promised to get the estate in order and hand it over. Let him alone. It won't work."
She didn't say anything while we took another dozen steps. A path came under our feet. I said:
"This is the path that runs up the cliff, the one Eric Collinson was pushed from. Did you know him?"
She drew in her breath sharply, with almost a sob in her throat, but her voice was steady, quiet and musical, when she replied:
"You know I did. Why should you ask?"
"Detectives like questions they already know the answers to. Why did you come down here, Mrs. Haldorn?"
"Is that another whose answer you know?"
"I know you came for one or both of two reasons."
"Yes?"
"First, to learn how chose we were to our riddle's answer. Right?"
"I've my share of curiosity, naturally," she confessed.
"I don't mind making that much of your trip a success. I know the answer."
She stopped in the path, facing me, her eyes phosphorescent in the deep twilight. She put a hand on my shoulder: she was taller than I. The other hand was in her coat-pocket. She put her face nearer mine. She spoke very slowly, as if taking great pains to be understood:
"Tell me truthfully. Don't pretend. I don't want to do an unnecessary wrong. Wait, wait-think before you speak-and believe me when I say this isn't the time for pretending, for lying, for bluffing. Now tell me the truth: do you know the answer?"
"Yeah."
She smiled faintly, taking her hand from my shoulder, saying:
"Then there's no use of our fencing."
I jumped at her. If she had fired from her pocket she might have plugged me. But she tried to get the gun out. By then I had a hand on her wrist. The bullet went into the ground between our feet. The nails of her free hand put three red ribbons down the side of my face. I tucked my head under her chin, turned my hip to her before her knee came up, brought her body hard against mine with one arm around her, and bent her gun-hand behind her. She dropped the gun as we fell. I was on top. I stayed there until I had found the gun. I was getting up when MacMan arrived.
"Everything's eggs in the coffee," I told him, having trouble with my voice.
"Have to plug her?" he asked, looking at the woman lying still on the ground.
"No, she's all right. See that the chauffeur's behaving."
MacMan went away. The woman sat up, tucked her legs under her, and rubbed her wrist. I said:
"That's the second reason for your coming, though I thought you meant it for Mrs. Collinson."
She got up, not saying anything. I didn't help her up, not wanting her to know how shaky I was. I said:
"Since we've gone this far, it won't do any harm and it might do some good to talk,"
"I don't think anything will do any good now." She set her hat straight. "You say you know. Then lies are worthless, and only lies would help." She shrugged. "Well, what now?"
"Nothing now, if you'll promise to remember that the time for being desperate is past. This kind of thing splits up in three parts-being caught, being convicted, and being punished. Admit it's too late to do anything about the first, and-well, you know what California courts and prison boards are."
She looked curiously at me and asked: "Why do you tell me this?"
"Because being shot at's no treat to me, and because when a job's done I like to get it cleaned up and over with. I'm not interested in trying to convict you for your part in the racket, and it's a nuisance having you horning in now, trying to muddy things up. Go home and behave."
Neither of us said anything more until we had walked back to the limousine. Then she turned, put out her hand to me, and said:
"I think-I don't know yet-I think I owe you even more now than before."
I didn't say anything and I didn't take her hand. Perhaps it was because she was holding her hand out that she asked:
"May I have my pistol now?"
"No."
"Will you give my best wishes to Mrs. Collinson, and tell her I'm so sorry I couldn't see her?"
"Yeah."
She said, "Goodbye," and got into the car; I took off my hat and she rode away.
MacMan was a square-built, stiff-backed ex-soldier. Ten years of the island had baked his tight-mouthed, solid-jawed, grim face a dark oak. He was the perfect soldier: he went where you sent him, stayed where you put him, and had no ideas of his own to keep him from doing exactly what you told him.
He gave me the druggist's package. I took ten grains of morphine up to Gabrielle. She was eating breakfast in bed. Her eyes were watery, her face damp and grayish. When she saw the bindles in my hand she pushed her tray aside and held her hands out eagerly, wriggling her shoulders.
"Come back in five minutes?" she asked.
"You can take your jolt in front of me. I won't blush."
"But I would," she said, and did.
I went out, shut the door, and leaned against it, hearing the crackle of paper and the clink of a spoon on the water-glass. Presently she called:
"All right."
I went in again. A crumpled ball of white paper in the tray was all that remained of one bindle. The others weren't in sight. She was leaning back against her pillows, eyes half closed, as comfortable as a cat full of goldfish. She smiled lazily at me and said:
"You're a dear. Know what I'd like to do today? Take some lunch and go out on the water-spend the whole day floating in the sun."
"That ought to be good for you. Take either Linehan or MacMan with you. You're not to go out alone."
"What are you going to do?"
"Ride up to Quesada, over to the county seat, maybe as far as the city."
"Mayn't I go with you?"
I shook my head, saying: "I've got work to do, and you're supposed to be resting."
She said, "Oh," and reached for her coffee. I turned to the door. "The rest of the morphine." She spoke over the edge of her cup. "You've put it in a safe place, where nobody will find it?"
"Yeah," I said, grinning at her, patting my coat-pocket.
In Quesada I spent half an hour talking to Rolly and reading the San Francisco papers. They were beginning to poke at Andrews with hints and questions that stopped just short of libel. That was so much to the good. The deputy sheriff hadn't anything to tell me.
I went over to the county seat. Vernon was in court. Twenty minutes of the sheriff's conversation didn't add anything to my education. I called up the agency and talked to the Old Man. He said Hubert Collinson, our client, had expressed some surprise at our continuing the operation, having supposed that Whidden's death had cleared up the mystery of his son's murder.
"Tell him it didn't," I said. "Eric's murder was tied up with Gabrielle's troubles, and we can't get to the bottom of one except through the other. It'll probably take another week. Collinson's all right," I assured the Old Man. "He'll stand for it when it's explained to him."
The Old Man said, "I certainly hope so," rather coldly, not enthusiastic over having five operatives at work on a job that the supposed client might not want to pay for.
I drove up to San Francisco, had dinner at the St. Germain, stopped at my rooms to collect another suit and a bagful of clean shirts and the like, and got back to the house in the cove a little after midnight. MacMan came out of the darkness while I was tucking the car-we were still using Fitzstephan's-under the shed. He said nothing had happened in my absence. We went into the house together. Mickey was in the kitchen, yawning and mixing himself a drink before relieving MacMan on sentry duty.
"Mrs. Collinson gone to bed?" I asked.
"Her light's still on. She's been in her room all day."
MacMan and I had a drink with Mickey and then went upstairs. I knocked at the girl's door.
"Who is it?" she asked. I told her. She said: "Yes?"
"No breakfast in the morning."
"Really?" Then, as if it were something she had almost forgotten: "Oh, I've decided not to put you to all the trouble of curing me." She opened the door and stood in the opening, smiling too pleasantly at me, a finger holding her place in a book. "Did you have a nice ride?"
"All right," I said, taking the rest of the morphine from my pocket and holding it out to her. "There's no use of my carrying this around."
She didn't take it. She laughed in my face and said:
"You are a brute, aren't you?"
"Well, it's your cure, not mine." I put the stuff back in my pocket. "If you-" I broke off to listen. A board had creaked down the hall. Now there was a soft sound, as of a bare foot dragging across the floor.
"That's Mary watching over me," Gabrielle whispered gaily. "She made a bed in the attic and refused to go home. She doesn't think I'm safe with you and your friends. She warned me against you, said you were-what was it?-oh, yes-wolves. Are you?"
"Practically. Don't forget-no breakfast in the morning."
The following afternoon I gave her the first dose of Vic Dallas's mixture, and three more at two-hour intervals. She spent that day in her room. That was Saturday.
On Sunday she had ten grains of morphine and was in high spirits all day, considering herself as good as cured already.
On Monday she had the remainder of Vic's concoction, and the day was pretty much like Saturday. Mickey Linehan returned from the county seat with the news that Fitzstephan was conscious, but too weak and too bandaged to have talked if the doctors had let him; that Andrews had been to San Mateo to see Aaronia Haldorn again; and that she had been to the hospital to see Fink, but had been refused permission by the sheriff's office.
Tuesday was a more exciting day.
Gabrielle was up and dressed when I carried her orange-juice breakfast in. She was bright-eyed, restless, talkative, and laughed easily and often until I mentioned-off-hand-that she was to have no more morphine.
"Ever, you mean?" Her face and voice were panicky. "No, you don't mean that?"
"Yeah."
"But I'll die." Tears filled her eyes, ran down her small white face, and she wrung her hands. It was childishly pathetic. I had to remind myself that tears were one of the symptoms of morphine withdrawal. "You know that's not the way. I don't expect as much as usual. I know I'll get less and less each day. But you can't stop it like this. You're joking. That would kill me." She cried some more at the thought of being killed.
I made myself laugh as if I were sympathetic but amused.
"Nonsense," I said cheerfully. "The chief trouble you're going to have is in being too alive. A couple of days of that, and you'll be all set."
She bit her lips, finally managed a smile, holding out both hands to me.
"I'm going to believe you," she said. "I do believe you. I'm going to believe you no matter what you say."
Her hands were clammy. I squeezed them and said:
"That'll be swell. Now back to bed. I'll look in every now and then, and if you want anything in between, sing out."
"You're not going off today?"
"No," I promised.
She stood the gaff pretty well all afternoon. Of course, there wasn't much heartiness in the way she laughed at herself between attacks when the sneezing and yawning hit her, but the thing was that she tried to laugh.
Madison Andrews came between five and half-past. Having seen him drive in, I met him on the porch. The ruddiness of his face had been washed out to a weak orange.
"Good evening," he said politely. "I wish to see Mrs. Collinson."
"I'll deliver any message to her," I offered.
He pulled his white eyebrows down and some of his normal ruddiness came back.
"I wish to see her." It was a command.
"She doesn't wish to see you. Is there any message?"
All of his ruddiness was back now. His eyes were hot. I was standing between him and the door. He couldn't go in while I stood there. For a moment he seemed about to push me out of the way. That didn't worry me: he was carrying a handicap of twenty pounds and twenty years.
He pulled his jaw into his neck and spoke in the voice of authority:
"Mrs. Collinson must return to San Francisco with me. She cannot stay here. This is a preposterous arrangement."
"She's not going to San Francisco," I said. "If necessary, the district attorney can hold her here as a material witness. Try upsetting that with any of your court orders, and we'll give you something else to worry about. I'm telling you this so you'll know how we stand. We'll prove that she might be in danger from you. How do we know you haven't played marbles with the estate? How do we know you don't mean to take advantage of her present upset condition to shield yourself from trouble over the estate? Why, man, you might even be planning to send her to an insane-asylum so the estate will stay under your control."
He was sick behind his eyes, though the rest of him stood up well enough under this broadside. When he had got his breath and had swallowed, he demanded:
"Does Gabrielle believe this?" His face was magenta.
"Who said anybody believed it?" I was trying to be bland. "I'm just telling you what we'll go into court with. You're a lawyer. You know there's not necessarily any connection between what's true and what you go into court with-or into the newspapers."
The sickness spread from behind his eyes, pushing the color from his face, the stiffness from his bones; but he held himself tall and he found a level voice.
"You may tell Mrs. Collinson," he said, "that I shall return my letters testamentary to the court this week, with an accounting of the estate, and a request that I be relieved."
"That'll be swell," I said, but I felt sorry for the old boy shuffling down to his car, climbing slowly into it.
I didn't tell Gabrielle he had been there.
She was whining a little now between her yawning and sneezing, and her eyes were running water. Face, body, and hands were damp with sweat. She couldn't eat. I kept her full of orange juice. Noises and odors— no matter how faint, how pleasant-were becoming painful to her, and she twitched and jerked continually in her bed.
"Will it get much worse than this?" she asked.
"Not much. There'll be nothing you can't stand."
Mickey Linehan was waiting for me when I got downstairs.
"The spick's got herself a chive," he said pleasantly.
"Yeah?"
"Yeah. It's the one I've been using to shuck lemons to take the stink out of that bargain-counter gin you bought-or did you just borrow it, the owner knowing you'd return it because nobody could drink it? It's a paring knife-four or five inches of stainless steel blade-so you won't get rustmarks on your undershirt when she sticks it in your back. I couldn't find it, and asked her about it, and she didn't look at me like I was a well-poisoner when she said she didn't know anything about it, and that's the first time she never looked at me that way, so I knew she had it."
"Smart of you," I said. "Well, keep an eye on her. She don't like us much."
"I'm to do that?" Mickey grinned. "My idea would be for everybody to look out for himself, seeing that you're the lad she dog-eyes most, and it's most likely you that'll get whittled on. What'd you ever do to her? You haven't been dumb enough to fool with a Mex lady's affections, have you?"
I didn't think he was funny, though he may have been.
Aaronia Haldorn arrived just before dark, in a Lincoln limousine driven by a Negro who turned the siren loose when he brought the car into the drive. I was in Gabrielle's room when the thing howled. She all but jumped out of bed, utterly terrorized by what must have been an ungodly racket to her too sensitive ears.
"What was it? What was it?" she kept crying between rattling teeth, her body shaking the bed.
"Sh-h-h," I soothed her. I was acquiring a pretty fair bedside manner. "Just an automobile horn. Visitors. I'll go down and head them off."
"You won't let anybody see me?" she begged.
"No. Be a good girl till I get back."
Aaronia Haldorn was standing beside the limousine talking to MacMan when I came out. In the dim light, her face was a dusky oval mask between black hat and black fur coat-but her luminous eyes were real enough.
"How do you do?" she said, holding out a hand. Her voice was a thing to make warm waves run up your back. "I'm glad for Mrs. Collinson's sake that you're here. She and I have had excellent proof of your protective ability, both owing our lives to it."
That was all right, but it had been said before. I made a gesture that was supposed to indicate modest distaste for the subject, and beat her to the first tap with:
"I'm sorry she can't see you. She isn't well."
"Oh, but I should so like to see her, if only for a moment. Don't you think it might be good for her?"
I said I was sorry. She seemed to accept that as final, though she said: "I came all the way from the city to see her."
I tried that opening with:
"Didn't Mr. Andrews tell you . . . ?" letting it ravel out.
She didn't say whether he had. She turned and began walking slowly across the grass. There was nothing for me to do but walk along beside her. Full darkness was only a few minutes away. Presently, when we had gone thirty or forty feet from the car, she said:
"Mr. Andrews thinks you suspect him."
"He's right."
"Of what do you suspect him?"
"Juggling the estate. Mind, I don't know, but I do suspect him."
"Really?"
"Really," I said; "and not of anything else."
"Oh, I should suppose that was quite enough."
"It's enough for me. I didn't think it was enough for you."
"I beg your pardon?"
I didn't like the ground I was on with this woman. I was afraid of her. I piled up what facts I had, put some guesses on them, and took a jump from the top of the heap into space:
"When you got out of prison, you sent for Andrews, pumped him for all he knew, and then, when you learned he was playing with the girl's pennies, you saw what looked to you like a chance to confuse things by throwing suspicion on him. The old boy's woman-crazy: he'd be ducksoup for a woman like you. I don't know what you're planning to do with him, but you've got him started, and have got the papers started after him. I take it you gave them the tip-off on his high financing? It's no good, Mrs. Haldorn. Chuck it. It won't work. You can stir him up, all right, and make him do something criminal, get him into a swell jam: he's desperate enough now that he's being poked at. But whatever he does now won't hide what somebody else did in the past. He's promised to get the estate in order and hand it over. Let him alone. It won't work."
She didn't say anything while we took another dozen steps. A path came under our feet. I said:
"This is the path that runs up the cliff, the one Eric Collinson was pushed from. Did you know him?"
She drew in her breath sharply, with almost a sob in her throat, but her voice was steady, quiet and musical, when she replied:
"You know I did. Why should you ask?"
"Detectives like questions they already know the answers to. Why did you come down here, Mrs. Haldorn?"
"Is that another whose answer you know?"
"I know you came for one or both of two reasons."
"Yes?"
"First, to learn how chose we were to our riddle's answer. Right?"
"I've my share of curiosity, naturally," she confessed.
"I don't mind making that much of your trip a success. I know the answer."
She stopped in the path, facing me, her eyes phosphorescent in the deep twilight. She put a hand on my shoulder: she was taller than I. The other hand was in her coat-pocket. She put her face nearer mine. She spoke very slowly, as if taking great pains to be understood:
"Tell me truthfully. Don't pretend. I don't want to do an unnecessary wrong. Wait, wait-think before you speak-and believe me when I say this isn't the time for pretending, for lying, for bluffing. Now tell me the truth: do you know the answer?"
"Yeah."
She smiled faintly, taking her hand from my shoulder, saying:
"Then there's no use of our fencing."
I jumped at her. If she had fired from her pocket she might have plugged me. But she tried to get the gun out. By then I had a hand on her wrist. The bullet went into the ground between our feet. The nails of her free hand put three red ribbons down the side of my face. I tucked my head under her chin, turned my hip to her before her knee came up, brought her body hard against mine with one arm around her, and bent her gun-hand behind her. She dropped the gun as we fell. I was on top. I stayed there until I had found the gun. I was getting up when MacMan arrived.
"Everything's eggs in the coffee," I told him, having trouble with my voice.
"Have to plug her?" he asked, looking at the woman lying still on the ground.
"No, she's all right. See that the chauffeur's behaving."
MacMan went away. The woman sat up, tucked her legs under her, and rubbed her wrist. I said:
"That's the second reason for your coming, though I thought you meant it for Mrs. Collinson."
She got up, not saying anything. I didn't help her up, not wanting her to know how shaky I was. I said:
"Since we've gone this far, it won't do any harm and it might do some good to talk,"
"I don't think anything will do any good now." She set her hat straight. "You say you know. Then lies are worthless, and only lies would help." She shrugged. "Well, what now?"
"Nothing now, if you'll promise to remember that the time for being desperate is past. This kind of thing splits up in three parts-being caught, being convicted, and being punished. Admit it's too late to do anything about the first, and-well, you know what California courts and prison boards are."
She looked curiously at me and asked: "Why do you tell me this?"
"Because being shot at's no treat to me, and because when a job's done I like to get it cleaned up and over with. I'm not interested in trying to convict you for your part in the racket, and it's a nuisance having you horning in now, trying to muddy things up. Go home and behave."
Neither of us said anything more until we had walked back to the limousine. Then she turned, put out her hand to me, and said:
"I think-I don't know yet-I think I owe you even more now than before."
I didn't say anything and I didn't take her hand. Perhaps it was because she was holding her hand out that she asked:
"May I have my pistol now?"
"No."
"Will you give my best wishes to Mrs. Collinson, and tell her I'm so sorry I couldn't see her?"
"Yeah."
She said, "Goodbye," and got into the car; I took off my hat and she rode away.
XXII.Confessional
Mickey Linehan opened the front door for me. He looked at my scratched face and laughed:
"You do have one hell of a time with your women. Why don't you ask them instead of trying to take it away from them? It'd save you a lot of skin." He poked a thumb at the ceiling. "Better go up and negotiate with that one. She's been raising hell."
I went up to Gabrielle's room. She was sitting in the middle of the wallowed-up bed. Her hands were in her hair, tugging at it. Her soggy face was thirty-five years old. She was making hurt-animal noises in her throat.
"It's a fight, huh?" I said from the door.
She took her hands out of her hair.
"I won't die?" The question was a whimper between edge-to-edge teeth.
"Not a chance."
She sobbed and lay down. I straightened the covers over her. She complained that there was a lump in her throat, that her jaws and the hollows behind her knees ached.
"Regular symptoms," I assured her. "They won't bother you much, and you'll miss the cramps."
Fingernails scratched the door. Gabrielle jumped up in bed, crying:
"Don't go away again."
"No farther than the door," I promised, and went to it.
MacMan was there.
"That Mexican Mary," he whispered, "was hiding in the bushes watching you and the woman. I spotted her when she came out, and tailed her across to the road below. She stopped the limousine and talked with the woman-five-ten minutes. I couldn't get near enough to hear any of it."
"Where is she now?"
"In the kitchen. She came back. The woman in the heap went on. Mickey says the Mex is packing a knife and is going to make grief for us. Reckon he's right?"
"He generally is," I said. "She's strong for Mrs. Collinson, and doesn't think we mean her any good. Why in hell can't she mind her own business? It adds up that she peeped and saw Mrs. Haldorn wasn't for us, figured she was for Mrs. Collinson, and braced her. I hope Mrs. Haldorn had sense enough to tell her to behave. Anyway, there's nothing we can do but watch her. No use giving her the gate: we've got to have a cook."
When MacMan had gone Gabrielle remembered we had had a visitor, and asked me about it, and about the shot she had heard and my scratched face.
"It was Aaronia Haldorn," I told her; "and she lost her head. No harm done. She's gone now."
"She came here to kill me," the girl said, not excitedly, but as if she knew certainly.
"Maybe. She wouldn't admit anything. Why should she kill you?"
I didn't get an answer to that.
It was a long bad night. I spent most of it in the girl's room, in a leather rocker dragged in from the front room. She got perhaps an hour and a half of sleep, in three instalments. Nightmares brought her screaming out of all three. I dozed when she let me. Off and on through the night I heard stealthy sounds in the hall-Mary Nunez watching over her mistress, I supposed.
Wednesday was a longer and worse day. By noon my jaws were as sore as Gabrielle's, from going around holding my back teeth together. She was getting the works now. Light was positive, active pain to her eyes, sound to her ears, odors of any sort to her nostrils. The weight of her silk nightgown, the touch of sheets over and under her, tortured her skin. Every nerve she had yanked every muscle she had, continually. Promises that she wasn't going to die were no good now: life wasn't nice enough.
"Stop fighting it, if you want," I said. "Let yourself go. I'll take care of you."
She took me at my word, and I had a maniac on my hands. Once her shrieks brought Mary Nunez to the door, snarling and spitting at me in Mex-Spanish. I was holding Gabrielle down in bed by the shoulders, sweating as much as she was.
"Get out of here," I snarled back at the Mexican woman.
She put a brown hand into the bosom of her dress and came a step into the room. Mickey Linehan came up behind her, pulled her back into the hall, and shut the door.
Between the high spots, Gabrielle lay on her back, panting, twitching, staring at the ceiling with hopeless suffering eyes. Sometimes her eyes closed, but the jerking of her body didn't stop.
Rolly came down from Quesada that afternoon with word that Fitzstephan had come sufficiently alive to be questioned by Vernon. Fitzstephan had told the district attorney that he had not seen the bomb, had seen nothing to show when, where, and how it came into the room; but that he had an indistinct memory of hearing a tinkling, as of broken glass falling, and a thud on the floor close to him just after Fink and I had left the room.
I told Rolly to tell Vernon I'd try to get over to see him the next day, and to hang on to Fink. The deputy sheriff promised to deliver the message, and left. Mickey and I were standing on the porch. We didn't have anything to say to each other, hadn't all day. I was lighting a cigarette when the girl's voice came from indoors. Mickey turned away, saying something with the name of God in it.
I scowled at him and asked angrily:
"Well, am I right or wrong?"
He glared back at me, said, "I'd a damned sight rather be wrong," and walked away.
I cursed him and went inside. Mary Nunez, starting up the front stairs, retreated towards the kitchen when she saw me, walking backwards, her eyes watching me crazily. I cursed her and went upstairs to where I had left MacMan at the girl's door. He wouldn't look at me, so I made it unanimous by cursing him.
Gabrielle spent the balance of the afternoon shrieking, begging, and crying for morphine. That evening she made a complete confession:
"I told you I didn't want to be evil," she said, wadding the bedclothes in feverish hands. "That was a lie. I did. I've always wanted to, always have been. I wanted to do to you what I did to the others; but now I don't want you: I want morphine. They won't hang me: I know that. And I don't care what else they do to me, if I get morphine."
She laughed viciously and went on:
"You were right when you said I brought out the worst in men because I wanted to. I did want to; and I did-except, I failed with Doctor Riese, and with Eric. I don't know what was the matter with them. But I failed with both of them, and in failing let them learn too much about me. And that's why they were killed. Joseph drugged Doctor Riese, and I killed him myself, and then we made Minnie think she had. And I persuaded Joseph to kill Aaronia, and he would have done it-he would have done anything I asked-if you hadn't interfered. I got Harvey to kill Eric for me. I was tied to Eric-legally-a good man who wanted to make a good woman of me."
She laughed again, licking her lips.
"Harvey and I had to have money, and I couldn't-I was too afraid of being suspected-get enough from Andrews; so we pretended I had been kidnapped, to get it that way. It was a shame you killed Harvey: he was a glorious beast. I had that bomb, had had it for months. I took it from father's laboratory, when he was making some experiments for a moving picture company. It wasn't very large, and I always carried it with me-just in case. I meant it for you in the hotel room. There was nothing between Owen and me-that was another lie-he didn't love me. I meant it for you, because you were-because I was afraid you were getting at the truth. I was feverish, and when I heard two men go out, leaving one in your room, I was sure the one was you. I didn't see that it was Owen till too late-till I had opened the door a little and thrown the bomb in. Now you've got what you want. Give me morphine. There's no reason for your playing with me any longer. Give me morphine. You've succeeded. Have what I've told you written out: I'll sign it. You can't pretend now I'm worth curing, worth saving. Give me morphine."
Now it was my turn to laugh, asking:
"And aren't you going to confess to kidnapping Charlie Ross and blowing up the Maine?"
We had some more hell-a solid hour of it-before she exhausted herself again. The night dragged through. She got a little more than two hours' sleep, a half-hour gain over the previous night. I dozed in the chair when I could.
Sometime before daylight I woke to the feel of a hand on my coat. Keeping my breathing regular, I pushed my eyelids far enough apart to squint through the lashes. We had a very dim light in the room, but I thought Gabrielle was in bed, though I couldn't see whether she was asleep or awake. My head was tilted back to rest on the back of the chair. I couldn't see the hand that was exploring my inside coat-pocket, nor the arm that came down over my shoulder; but they smelled of the kitchen, so I knew they were brown.
The Mexican woman was standing behind me. Mickey had told me she had a knife. Imagination told me she was holding it in her other hand. Good judgment told me to let her alone. I did that, closing my eyes again. Paper rustled between her fingers, and her hand left my pocket.
I moved my head sleepily then, and changed a foot's position. When I heard the door close quietly behind me, I sat up and looked around. Gabrielle was sleeping. I counted the bindles in my pocket and found that eight of them had been taken.
Presently Gabrielle opened her eyes. This was the first time since the cure started that she had awakened quietly. Her face was haggard, but not wild-eyed. She looked at the window and asked:
"Isn't day coming yet?"
"It's getting light." I gave her some orange juice. "We'll get some solid food in you today."
"I don't want food. I want morphine."
"Don't be silly. You'll get food. You won't get morphine. Today won't be like yesterday. You're over the hump, and the rest of it's downhill going, though you may hit a couple of rough spots. It's silly to ask for morphine now. What do you want to do? Have nothing to show for the hell you've been through? You've got it licked now: stay with it."
"Have I-have I really got it licked?"
"Yeah. All you've got to buck now is nervousness, and the memory of how nice it felt to have a skinful of hop."
"I can do it," she said. "I can do it because you say I can."
She got along fine till late in the morning, when she blew up for an hour or two. But it wasn't so bad, and I got her straightened out again. When Mary brought up her luncheon I left them together and went downstairs for my own.
Mickey and MacMan were already at the dining room table. Neither of them spoke a word-to one another or to me-during the meal. Since they kept quiet, I did.
When I went back upstairs, Gabnielle, in a green bathrobe, was sitting in the leather rocker that had been my bed for two nights. She had brushed her hair and powdered her face. Her eyes were mostly green, with a lift to the lower lids as if she was hiding a joke. She said with mock solemnity:
"Sit down. I want to talk seriously to you."
I sat down.
"Why did you go through all this with-for me?" She was really serious now. "You didn't have to, and it couldn't have been pleasant. I was-I don't know how bad I was." She turned red from forehead to chest. "I know I was revolting, disgusting. I know how I must seem to you now. Why-why did you?"
I said:
"I'm twice your age, sister; an old man. I'm damned if I'll make a chump of myself by telling you why I did it, why it was neither revolting nor disgusting, why I'd do it again and be glad of the chance."
She jumped out of her chair, her eyes round and dark, her mouth trembling.
"You mean-?"
"I don't mean anything that I'll admit," I said; "and if you're going to parade around with that robe hanging open you're going to get yourself some bronchitis. You ex-hopheads have to be careful about catching cold."
She sat down again, put her hands over her face, and began crying. I let her cry. Presently she giggled through her fingers and asked:
"Will you go out and let me be alone all afternoon?"
"Yeah, if you'll keep warm."
I drove over to the county seat, went to the county hospital, and argued with people until they let me into Fitzstephan's room.
He was ninety per cent bandages, with only an eye, an ear, and one side of his mouth peeping out. The eye and the half-mouth smiled through linen at me, and a voice came through:
"No more of your hotel rooms for me." It wasn't a clear voice because it had to come out sidewise, and he couldn't move his jaw; but there was plenty of vitality in it. It was the voice of a man who meant to keep on living.
I smiled at him and said:
"No hotel rooms this time, unless you think San Quentin's a hotel. Strong enough to stand up under a third-degree, or shall we wait a day or two?"
"I ought to be at my best now," he said. "Facial expressions won't betray me."
"Good. Now here's the first point: Fink handed you that bomb when he shook hands with you. That's the only way it could have got in without my seeing it. His back was to me then. You didn't know what he was handing you, but you had to take it, just as you have to deny it now, or tip us off that you were tied up with the Holy Grail mob, and that Fink had reasons for killing you."
Fitzstephan said: "You say the most remarkable things. I'm glad he had reasons, though."
"You engineered Riese's murder. The others were your accomplices. When Joseph died the blame was put all on him, the supposed madman. That's enough to let the others out, or ought to be. But here you are killing Collinson and planning God knows what else. Fink knows that if you keep it up you're going to let the truth out about the Temple murder, and he'll swing with you. So, scared panicky, he tries to stop you."
Fitzstephan said: "Better and better. So I killed Collinson?"
"You had him killed-hired Whidden and then didn't pay him. He kidnapped the girl then, holding her for his money, knowing she was what you wanted. It was you his bullet came closest to when we cornered him."
Fitzstephan said: "I'm running out of exclamatory phrases. So I was after her? I wondered about my motive."
"You must have been pretty rotten with her. She'd had a bad time with Andrews, and even with Eric, but she didn't mind talking about them. But when I tried to learn the details of your wooing she shuddered and shut up. I suppose she slammed you down so hard you bounced, and you're the sort of egoist to be driven to anything by that."
Fitzstephan said: "I suppose. You know, I've had more than half an idea at times that you were secretly nursing some exceptionally idiotic theory."
"Well, why shouldn't I? You were standing beside Mrs. Leggett when she suddenly got that gun. Where'd she get it? Chasing her out of the laboratory and down the stairs wasn't in character-not for you. Your hand was on her gun when that bullet hit her neck. Was I supposed to be deaf, dumb, and blind? There was, as you agreed, one mind behind all Gabrielle's troubles. You're the one person who has that sort of a mind, whose connection with each episode can be traced, and who has the necessary motive. The motive held me up: I couldn't be sure of it till I'd had my first fair chance to pump Gabrielle-after the explosion. And another thing that held me up was my not being able to tie you to the Temple crowd till Fink and Aaronia Haldorn did it for me."
Fitzstephan said: "Ah, Aaronia helped tie me? What has she been up to?" He said it absent-mindedly, and his one visible gray eye was small, as if he was busy with other thoughts behind it.
"You do have one hell of a time with your women. Why don't you ask them instead of trying to take it away from them? It'd save you a lot of skin." He poked a thumb at the ceiling. "Better go up and negotiate with that one. She's been raising hell."
I went up to Gabrielle's room. She was sitting in the middle of the wallowed-up bed. Her hands were in her hair, tugging at it. Her soggy face was thirty-five years old. She was making hurt-animal noises in her throat.
"It's a fight, huh?" I said from the door.
She took her hands out of her hair.
"I won't die?" The question was a whimper between edge-to-edge teeth.
"Not a chance."
She sobbed and lay down. I straightened the covers over her. She complained that there was a lump in her throat, that her jaws and the hollows behind her knees ached.
"Regular symptoms," I assured her. "They won't bother you much, and you'll miss the cramps."
Fingernails scratched the door. Gabrielle jumped up in bed, crying:
"Don't go away again."
"No farther than the door," I promised, and went to it.
MacMan was there.
"That Mexican Mary," he whispered, "was hiding in the bushes watching you and the woman. I spotted her when she came out, and tailed her across to the road below. She stopped the limousine and talked with the woman-five-ten minutes. I couldn't get near enough to hear any of it."
"Where is she now?"
"In the kitchen. She came back. The woman in the heap went on. Mickey says the Mex is packing a knife and is going to make grief for us. Reckon he's right?"
"He generally is," I said. "She's strong for Mrs. Collinson, and doesn't think we mean her any good. Why in hell can't she mind her own business? It adds up that she peeped and saw Mrs. Haldorn wasn't for us, figured she was for Mrs. Collinson, and braced her. I hope Mrs. Haldorn had sense enough to tell her to behave. Anyway, there's nothing we can do but watch her. No use giving her the gate: we've got to have a cook."
When MacMan had gone Gabrielle remembered we had had a visitor, and asked me about it, and about the shot she had heard and my scratched face.
"It was Aaronia Haldorn," I told her; "and she lost her head. No harm done. She's gone now."
"She came here to kill me," the girl said, not excitedly, but as if she knew certainly.
"Maybe. She wouldn't admit anything. Why should she kill you?"
I didn't get an answer to that.
It was a long bad night. I spent most of it in the girl's room, in a leather rocker dragged in from the front room. She got perhaps an hour and a half of sleep, in three instalments. Nightmares brought her screaming out of all three. I dozed when she let me. Off and on through the night I heard stealthy sounds in the hall-Mary Nunez watching over her mistress, I supposed.
Wednesday was a longer and worse day. By noon my jaws were as sore as Gabrielle's, from going around holding my back teeth together. She was getting the works now. Light was positive, active pain to her eyes, sound to her ears, odors of any sort to her nostrils. The weight of her silk nightgown, the touch of sheets over and under her, tortured her skin. Every nerve she had yanked every muscle she had, continually. Promises that she wasn't going to die were no good now: life wasn't nice enough.
"Stop fighting it, if you want," I said. "Let yourself go. I'll take care of you."
She took me at my word, and I had a maniac on my hands. Once her shrieks brought Mary Nunez to the door, snarling and spitting at me in Mex-Spanish. I was holding Gabrielle down in bed by the shoulders, sweating as much as she was.
"Get out of here," I snarled back at the Mexican woman.
She put a brown hand into the bosom of her dress and came a step into the room. Mickey Linehan came up behind her, pulled her back into the hall, and shut the door.
Between the high spots, Gabrielle lay on her back, panting, twitching, staring at the ceiling with hopeless suffering eyes. Sometimes her eyes closed, but the jerking of her body didn't stop.
Rolly came down from Quesada that afternoon with word that Fitzstephan had come sufficiently alive to be questioned by Vernon. Fitzstephan had told the district attorney that he had not seen the bomb, had seen nothing to show when, where, and how it came into the room; but that he had an indistinct memory of hearing a tinkling, as of broken glass falling, and a thud on the floor close to him just after Fink and I had left the room.
I told Rolly to tell Vernon I'd try to get over to see him the next day, and to hang on to Fink. The deputy sheriff promised to deliver the message, and left. Mickey and I were standing on the porch. We didn't have anything to say to each other, hadn't all day. I was lighting a cigarette when the girl's voice came from indoors. Mickey turned away, saying something with the name of God in it.
I scowled at him and asked angrily:
"Well, am I right or wrong?"
He glared back at me, said, "I'd a damned sight rather be wrong," and walked away.
I cursed him and went inside. Mary Nunez, starting up the front stairs, retreated towards the kitchen when she saw me, walking backwards, her eyes watching me crazily. I cursed her and went upstairs to where I had left MacMan at the girl's door. He wouldn't look at me, so I made it unanimous by cursing him.
Gabrielle spent the balance of the afternoon shrieking, begging, and crying for morphine. That evening she made a complete confession:
"I told you I didn't want to be evil," she said, wadding the bedclothes in feverish hands. "That was a lie. I did. I've always wanted to, always have been. I wanted to do to you what I did to the others; but now I don't want you: I want morphine. They won't hang me: I know that. And I don't care what else they do to me, if I get morphine."
She laughed viciously and went on:
"You were right when you said I brought out the worst in men because I wanted to. I did want to; and I did-except, I failed with Doctor Riese, and with Eric. I don't know what was the matter with them. But I failed with both of them, and in failing let them learn too much about me. And that's why they were killed. Joseph drugged Doctor Riese, and I killed him myself, and then we made Minnie think she had. And I persuaded Joseph to kill Aaronia, and he would have done it-he would have done anything I asked-if you hadn't interfered. I got Harvey to kill Eric for me. I was tied to Eric-legally-a good man who wanted to make a good woman of me."
She laughed again, licking her lips.
"Harvey and I had to have money, and I couldn't-I was too afraid of being suspected-get enough from Andrews; so we pretended I had been kidnapped, to get it that way. It was a shame you killed Harvey: he was a glorious beast. I had that bomb, had had it for months. I took it from father's laboratory, when he was making some experiments for a moving picture company. It wasn't very large, and I always carried it with me-just in case. I meant it for you in the hotel room. There was nothing between Owen and me-that was another lie-he didn't love me. I meant it for you, because you were-because I was afraid you were getting at the truth. I was feverish, and when I heard two men go out, leaving one in your room, I was sure the one was you. I didn't see that it was Owen till too late-till I had opened the door a little and thrown the bomb in. Now you've got what you want. Give me morphine. There's no reason for your playing with me any longer. Give me morphine. You've succeeded. Have what I've told you written out: I'll sign it. You can't pretend now I'm worth curing, worth saving. Give me morphine."
Now it was my turn to laugh, asking:
"And aren't you going to confess to kidnapping Charlie Ross and blowing up the Maine?"
We had some more hell-a solid hour of it-before she exhausted herself again. The night dragged through. She got a little more than two hours' sleep, a half-hour gain over the previous night. I dozed in the chair when I could.
Sometime before daylight I woke to the feel of a hand on my coat. Keeping my breathing regular, I pushed my eyelids far enough apart to squint through the lashes. We had a very dim light in the room, but I thought Gabrielle was in bed, though I couldn't see whether she was asleep or awake. My head was tilted back to rest on the back of the chair. I couldn't see the hand that was exploring my inside coat-pocket, nor the arm that came down over my shoulder; but they smelled of the kitchen, so I knew they were brown.
The Mexican woman was standing behind me. Mickey had told me she had a knife. Imagination told me she was holding it in her other hand. Good judgment told me to let her alone. I did that, closing my eyes again. Paper rustled between her fingers, and her hand left my pocket.
I moved my head sleepily then, and changed a foot's position. When I heard the door close quietly behind me, I sat up and looked around. Gabrielle was sleeping. I counted the bindles in my pocket and found that eight of them had been taken.
Presently Gabrielle opened her eyes. This was the first time since the cure started that she had awakened quietly. Her face was haggard, but not wild-eyed. She looked at the window and asked:
"Isn't day coming yet?"
"It's getting light." I gave her some orange juice. "We'll get some solid food in you today."
"I don't want food. I want morphine."
"Don't be silly. You'll get food. You won't get morphine. Today won't be like yesterday. You're over the hump, and the rest of it's downhill going, though you may hit a couple of rough spots. It's silly to ask for morphine now. What do you want to do? Have nothing to show for the hell you've been through? You've got it licked now: stay with it."
"Have I-have I really got it licked?"
"Yeah. All you've got to buck now is nervousness, and the memory of how nice it felt to have a skinful of hop."
"I can do it," she said. "I can do it because you say I can."
She got along fine till late in the morning, when she blew up for an hour or two. But it wasn't so bad, and I got her straightened out again. When Mary brought up her luncheon I left them together and went downstairs for my own.
Mickey and MacMan were already at the dining room table. Neither of them spoke a word-to one another or to me-during the meal. Since they kept quiet, I did.
When I went back upstairs, Gabnielle, in a green bathrobe, was sitting in the leather rocker that had been my bed for two nights. She had brushed her hair and powdered her face. Her eyes were mostly green, with a lift to the lower lids as if she was hiding a joke. She said with mock solemnity:
"Sit down. I want to talk seriously to you."
I sat down.
"Why did you go through all this with-for me?" She was really serious now. "You didn't have to, and it couldn't have been pleasant. I was-I don't know how bad I was." She turned red from forehead to chest. "I know I was revolting, disgusting. I know how I must seem to you now. Why-why did you?"
I said:
"I'm twice your age, sister; an old man. I'm damned if I'll make a chump of myself by telling you why I did it, why it was neither revolting nor disgusting, why I'd do it again and be glad of the chance."
She jumped out of her chair, her eyes round and dark, her mouth trembling.
"You mean-?"
"I don't mean anything that I'll admit," I said; "and if you're going to parade around with that robe hanging open you're going to get yourself some bronchitis. You ex-hopheads have to be careful about catching cold."
She sat down again, put her hands over her face, and began crying. I let her cry. Presently she giggled through her fingers and asked:
"Will you go out and let me be alone all afternoon?"
"Yeah, if you'll keep warm."
I drove over to the county seat, went to the county hospital, and argued with people until they let me into Fitzstephan's room.
He was ninety per cent bandages, with only an eye, an ear, and one side of his mouth peeping out. The eye and the half-mouth smiled through linen at me, and a voice came through:
"No more of your hotel rooms for me." It wasn't a clear voice because it had to come out sidewise, and he couldn't move his jaw; but there was plenty of vitality in it. It was the voice of a man who meant to keep on living.
I smiled at him and said:
"No hotel rooms this time, unless you think San Quentin's a hotel. Strong enough to stand up under a third-degree, or shall we wait a day or two?"
"I ought to be at my best now," he said. "Facial expressions won't betray me."
"Good. Now here's the first point: Fink handed you that bomb when he shook hands with you. That's the only way it could have got in without my seeing it. His back was to me then. You didn't know what he was handing you, but you had to take it, just as you have to deny it now, or tip us off that you were tied up with the Holy Grail mob, and that Fink had reasons for killing you."
Fitzstephan said: "You say the most remarkable things. I'm glad he had reasons, though."
"You engineered Riese's murder. The others were your accomplices. When Joseph died the blame was put all on him, the supposed madman. That's enough to let the others out, or ought to be. But here you are killing Collinson and planning God knows what else. Fink knows that if you keep it up you're going to let the truth out about the Temple murder, and he'll swing with you. So, scared panicky, he tries to stop you."
Fitzstephan said: "Better and better. So I killed Collinson?"
"You had him killed-hired Whidden and then didn't pay him. He kidnapped the girl then, holding her for his money, knowing she was what you wanted. It was you his bullet came closest to when we cornered him."
Fitzstephan said: "I'm running out of exclamatory phrases. So I was after her? I wondered about my motive."
"You must have been pretty rotten with her. She'd had a bad time with Andrews, and even with Eric, but she didn't mind talking about them. But when I tried to learn the details of your wooing she shuddered and shut up. I suppose she slammed you down so hard you bounced, and you're the sort of egoist to be driven to anything by that."
Fitzstephan said: "I suppose. You know, I've had more than half an idea at times that you were secretly nursing some exceptionally idiotic theory."
"Well, why shouldn't I? You were standing beside Mrs. Leggett when she suddenly got that gun. Where'd she get it? Chasing her out of the laboratory and down the stairs wasn't in character-not for you. Your hand was on her gun when that bullet hit her neck. Was I supposed to be deaf, dumb, and blind? There was, as you agreed, one mind behind all Gabrielle's troubles. You're the one person who has that sort of a mind, whose connection with each episode can be traced, and who has the necessary motive. The motive held me up: I couldn't be sure of it till I'd had my first fair chance to pump Gabrielle-after the explosion. And another thing that held me up was my not being able to tie you to the Temple crowd till Fink and Aaronia Haldorn did it for me."
Fitzstephan said: "Ah, Aaronia helped tie me? What has she been up to?" He said it absent-mindedly, and his one visible gray eye was small, as if he was busy with other thoughts behind it.