"More evidence?"
"Any evidence at all would be more evidence," I said. "What I mean is there has to be more to the case than the simple fact she was carrying on an affair with Strader. That"d obviously have nothing to do with your husband and yet they killed him. Why?"
She shook her head wearily. "It"s insane."
"Listen," I said. I asked you this once before, but I"ve got to ask it again, so don"t jump down my throat. Is there any chance at all your husband could have been involved with her?"
"No," she replied. "It"s absolutely inconceivable."
"Try to be objective about it," I urged. "Say that he"d found out what she was. That"s possible, you know. He might have seen her with Strader one of those other times, or she could have made a play for him-"
"No," she said firmly. "I just can"t buy it, Bill."
"Tell me a little about him."
She gazed moodily at the end of her cigarette. "He was a man who"d been almost wrecked, physically at least, and he"d just about finished rebuilding his whole att.i.tude towards life. I say just about. He still had a little way to go, but he was closing the gap. Everybody up here thought he was ideally happy, of course, retired, with the motel to furnish him with an adequate living, and all the leisure he wanted to fish, but you don"t turn off drive and ambition that easily and just overnight. I was helping him, I think, and he needed me.
"He"d lived most of his life like a steam engine with the safety valve tied down and the throttle wide open, and in the end, of course, it almost killed him. We met in a doctor"s office. A clinic, rather. I was the lab technician, and he was the patient of one of the men there, the cardiologist.
"It was just after he and his first wife broke up. You might say I caught him on the rebound, except there really wasn"t much in the way of a rebound-he was going too fast and hit too many things all at once. A messy divorce and a big property settlement, a heart attack, and the loss of a lawsuit that almost wiped him out financially. However, if I"m giving you the impression I gathered up a bunch of pieces and tried to put them back together, I don"t mean to. The man was still there, more or less intact but just badly battered. He still had a sense of humor, most of the time, and he could get a perspective view of it-again, most of the time. He was being sentenced to live what he considered an old lady"s existence for the rest of his life if he wanted to have any rest of his life, and I simply helped him to do it. We liked each other from the first, and the things we did together were quiet things. His big fishing days were over, for instance, but we found we both liked to sail small boats. We liked to picnic, and lie in the water with masks and snorkels and watch sea life. Music bored him, but we both liked to read-Oh, I could go on, Bill, but what"s the point of it? He simply wouldn"t be capable of a thing like that. He had too much sense of decency, to begin with. And Redfield was a friend of his."
I smiled at her. "I"m not accusing him of it," I said. "It"s just that in a thing like this you have to consider every angle. And G.o.d knows we"ve got few enough angles as it is." I got up restlessly and walked back and forth across the room. It was so d.a.m.ned baffling. "Are you sure you told him about Redfield"s canceling the trip?"
"Of course."
"And he understood?"
"Bill, how on earth could anybody misunderstand a simple thing like that?"
"Well, was he ever absent-minded? Could he have forgotten?"
She shook her head. "No. And, anyway, the last thing before he left that morning he promised to be very careful because I was worried about his going alone. What is it you"re trying to find?"
"Simply why he went to Redfield"s house that morning."
She stared. "Do you think he did?"
"He must have. Wouldn"t you say that was where she and Strader were?"
She frowned. "In her own home? In-?"
"Yes. In case you haven"t been able to grasp it yet, this girl"s not the finicky type. I think that"s where they were, and that"s where it happened."
"But why?" why?" she asked piteously. she asked piteously.
"I don"t know," I said. It made no sense at all except for the fact the three of them had to come together somewhere in that tragic fifteen minutes and he was the one who was in motion, so he he must have gone there. But then, even if he had, why the killing? The situation might have the ingredients for explosion, but only if she were utterly stupid or insane. All she"d have to do would be to go to the door and tell Langston her husband wasn"t home. must have gone there. But then, even if he had, why the killing? The situation might have the ingredients for explosion, but only if she were utterly stupid or insane. All she"d have to do would be to go to the door and tell Langston her husband wasn"t home.
There had to be more to it. A lot more. There was another man, to begin with. There was the acid job and the deliberate attempt to drive Georgia Langston out of her mind or break her health with those filthy phone calls. Why? Say that Cynthia Redfield had tried to frame her and had failed-her only object would have been to throw suspicion off herself, and she"d succeeded in that. Why keep lashing a dead horse? Sadism? Was she a complete mental case?
"We"re just beating our brains out," I said. "We"re going to forget it for tonight. We"ll have dinner together and not mention it once." Then I remembered the way I looked. "That is, if you don"t mind being seen in public with this open-toed haircut, and bandage."
"I don"t mind at all," she replied with a smile that was only a little forced.
Around six-thirty I shaved and put on the lighter weight of the two suits I had. It was a San Francisco job, a gray flannel, and still no prize in this heat. I examined the result in the mirror, with the fresh white shirt and dark tie, and decided I looked like a well-tended moose even if a little like one that"d just walked into the props of a D.C.-7. Well, I could wear the hat, and we might find a place with table booths. The Steak House-that was it.
I went across to the office. She called from beyond the curtained doorway that she"d be ready in just a moment. I sat down in one of the bamboo chairs and thumbed idly through a magazine. When she came out she was wearing a very dark green dress, darker than avocado, that aided and abetted the creamy pallor of her face and throat and the mahogany highlights of her hair. She wore small gold ear-rings like sea-sh.e.l.ls, and a gold sea-horse pin, and nylons and some very slender high heels.
I stood up. "Woof," I said. "You can quote me."
She gave an exaggerated curtsy. "Why, thank you."
"You"re entirely too lovely to waste on the peasants," I said. "Why can"t we go to Miami Beach for dinner?"
She grinned. "No reason in the world. Except it"s a thousand-mile round trip and I"m hungry."
"Well, we could have breakfast before we start back."
The gray eyes were cool and appraising, though there was still humor in them. "Tell me, Bill, was that an honest proposition, or are you still conducting an investigation?"
"That"s not fair and you know it," I said. "It was a perfectly honorable pa.s.s, from the bottom of my heart. Futile, maybe, but-Call it a gesture. Call it art appreciation."
She laughed delightfully, and we went out to the car feeling wonderful in a lightheaded sort of way, as if we"d had two quick Martinis. It was a bubbly sort of moment, the first one since I"d been here that was completely free of the tensions and ugliness that bore down on her. It didn"t last, however. I found a place to park on an intersecting street around the corner from the restaurant, and we had to run the gauntlet of hard, unfriendly eyes and blank stares, moving in our own little corridor of silence along the walk. When we were inside, people glanced up at us, and looked away, without speaking to her. We found an empty table near the back and sat down, and she still managed a smile.
I reached across the table and took hold of her hand. "Don"t let it throw you," I said. Then I realized how asinine it was. She"d been taking it for seven months completely alone, and now she needed my nickel"s worth of backing. "I wish I had your poise," I added.
She shook her head. "Don"t you dare go solemn on me. Let"s have a Martini."
We had a Martini and admired the polished steer horns on the wall above us and wondered why they were never bull horns or cow horns or ox horns. Would the day ever come when horns would stand or fall on their own merits, without s.e.x?
"What is an oxen?" she asked.
"An oxen is two or more ox," I replied.
She wrinkled up her nose at me. "Well, what are they? Are they any different from steers?"
"Not in any really worthwhile way," I said. "At least, from the Freudian point of view. I think it"s only occupational. If they worked, they were oxen."
She propped her elbows on the table and looked at me with mock admiration. "You know the most fascinating things."
"Oh, I used to have a piece of information even more useless than that. If I can remember it I"ll tell you."
We regained most of the mood, and had a fine dinner. She told me some more about herself. Her father had been a flight captain back in the old days of the flying boats and then later in the D.C.-4"s. She"d gone to Miami for a year before starting nurses" training. She"d been engaged once, to a boy who"d gone off to Korea, and after waiting two years learned she didn"t really want to marry him after he returned. She liked medical lab work better than nursing, but she didn"t think she would have wanted to be a doctor even if she"d had the opportunity. Would she be glad to get back to Miami when we were able to get the motel back on its feet and sell it? She said yes, but that brought us back too near the ugliness again, and we shied off.
I paid the bill and we went out and walked back to the car past the eyes that were like nailheads in the wall of silence around us. Only this time the silence was broken. There were two of them leaning against the corner where we turned. We were just past when one said, loudly enough to be sure he was heard, "Well, I reckon all it takes is guts."
In the quick, bright flare of anger, I turned and looked at them, but then, even before she had time to pluck at my sleeve, I remembered where the obligation lay. We went on, and when we were a dozen yards away she whispered, "Thanks, Bill."
"I told you before," I said, "I wish I had your poise. When I get full, I blow up."
I looked back as I was opening the car door for her, and saw an odd thing. The big cop, Calhoun, was on the corner in front of the two men. It was too far to hear, but he appeared to be barking at them like a drill sergeant, and then he caught one by the shirt and s.n.a.t.c.hed him off the wall as if he were a poster that had been imperfectly glued. When he let go and jerked a thumb, the two of them went across the street and disappeared.
I called her attention to it. She nodded. "I know. He"s done that several times."
I remembered the first afternoon, when I"d collided with Frankie. "But still-"
"Yes. He always looks at me as if I didn"t really exist. But he won"t tolerate anything like that. He"s a strange man, Bill. I"ve never understood him."
I turned right into Springer and we started back to the motel. We were just pulling away from the next traffic light when I heard her gasp. "Bill, that man!" I glanced quickly across the street in the direction she was pointing. There were several men. "The one in the white shirt! With the sleeves rolled up!"
I saw him then, but I was already at the cross-roads and had to keep on straight ahead. He was walking in the opposite direction, back the way we"d come. I turned left at the next corner, made a figure-eight around the block, and came back. We went all the way down Springer to the river, but he was nowhere in sight. I tried a couple of the intersecting streets, with no luck.
"Are you sure he was the one?" I asked. I"d had only a brief glimpse of him, but he did fit the description she"d given me that morning-tall, thin, sandy-haired, and sunburned.
"I"m almost positive," she said. Then she hesitated. "Of course, I just had a flash of him. And I didn"t see any gla.s.ses. Did you?"
"No," I said. "But they could have been props the other time."
We drove around for another ten minutes, and then parked for a time on Springer, watching the side-walks, but it was no use. "I"m going to drive you home," I said, "and come back. He may be still in town, in a beer joint somewhere."
"You won"t do anything?" she asked anxiously.
"No," I told her. "We can"t even have him picked up unless you can give a positive identification. If he"s the wrong man, he"ll sue you for false arrest. If I can locate him and pin him down somewhere I"ll call you so you can have another look."
I drove back to the motel. She unlocked the front door of the office, and I called a cab. I gave her the car key, and we went into the living-room. One bridge lamp was burning dimly in a corner, striking faint light in her hair.
She turned, and the gray eyes were concerned as they studied my face. "You will be careful, won"t you?"
"Sure," I said.
She smiled then, and held out her hands. "It"s been a wonderful evening, Bill."
I took the hint, and slid my hands up to take hold of her arms just above the elbows, and put my lips down against hers for a casual good-night kiss, but it got out of control. The next thing I was holding her far too fiercely and a.s.saulting the sweetest and most exciting mouth in the world, and her arms were tight around my neck. Then she broke it up. She put her hands against my chest and pushed, but it was herself she was talking to. "As you were," she said shakily, and stepped back, her face flushed and confused.
"Cigarette," she said. She took an unsteady breath.
"It got away from me," I said.
"Thanks," she said laconically.
"How"s that?"
"For not pointing out it was both of us it got away from. Or almost. It"s a little silly, isn"t it? I"ve known you for about three days."
"I hadn"t noticed," I said. "My calendar and stop-watch are in my other suit. All I know is I think you"re wonderful."
She smiled. "It"s all right, Bill. I"ve never doubted you"re a normal, healthy, thirty-year-old male. You don"t have to prove it."
"I don"t think I was trying to."
"It was just a little frightening. I hadn"t realized before that after a long enough time a girl might give way just for a place to cry."
"Is that all?" I asked.
"I don"t know. Don"t ask me. But you"ll never believe how utterly d.a.m.n sick you can get of being brave about something. Or how tempting that shoulder has looked a couple of times."
"It"s available," I said.
"Why?"
I put my hands on either side of her face and tilted it up under mine. I just told you why. I think you"re magnificent. You"re a very fine, sweet, warm-hearted woman, and you"re full of tricks, like being a little more beautiful every time I see you."
I kissed her, very gently this time, and looked down at the fine dark tracery of lashes against her face. When she opened her eyes they were misty, but she smiled "All right, maybe I think you"re pretty nice, too," she whispered. "And now, Bill, will you please get out of here?"
"No good night?"
"We"ve already said good night. I"m just trying to keep it airborne." The gray eyes were dreamy, and large enough to swim in. "Take your d.a.m.ned shoulder and get out of here." get out of here."
The taxi honked out front.
There"d been something I was going to do. I shuffled through the rose-tinted chaos in my mind and came up with it.
"Right, Georgia," I said. I turned in the doorway. "If I find him, I"ll phone."
By the time we reached town I had the lipstick off my mouth and the rest of her bulldozed far enough towards the outer edges of my mind to be able to think rationally. The chances were he wasn"t the acid thrower at all. It was a common description. And he certainly wouldn"t be stupid enough to come back here. But I had to try. As flimsy as he was, he was our only lead at the moment.
It was nine-thirty. I still had a good general idea of the location of all the beer joints from the other day. I paid off the cab and started making the rounds of them on foot. In the first two I drew nothing except a few blank and unfriendly stares, but at the third place I hit the jackpot. It was a smoky but air-conditioned dive on the street south of Springer, facing the railroad tracks. The instant I pushed through the door, I saw him. There were six or seven men in the place, but I spotted the white shirt about half-way down the bar and caught a glimpse of his face in the mirror. He didn"t see me. I ignored him and strolled to an open s.p.a.ce near the front of the bar. There were a couple of pinball machines along the left wall, and at the rear an empty phone booth, and jukebox that was silent at the moment.
I considered swiftly. He had a half-empty bottle of beer before him. The minute he ordered another, so I was sure he"d stick around, I"d duck into the phone booth, and call her. We could park in front of the place till he emerged. She"d be able to get a good view of his face, and once she gave a positive identification, he was my boy. I thought of the way that room had looked. Getting the police would be no strain; he was going to need them by the time they got there.
I"d paid no attention to the other customers when I came in, but now it struck me all at once a strange and rather ugly silence had fallen over the place. I looked around. On my left was Frankie, the hard case who"d backed into me. Beyond him was another familiar face with the same trouble-seeking stare. It was one of the two loafers who"d made that remark as we went back to the car. I didn"t know any of the others, but they all had the same ugly expression. The bartender, a fat man with a hearing aid, was shooting uneasy glances at them.
Well, there wouldn"t be any stupid brawl. There were too many of them, for one thing, and I had something much more important to take care of. That was out.
"She give you the night off?" Frankie asked.
I hit him with a left, and put down the beer I was holding in the right in time to take the next one just before he recovered his balance from having Frankie bounce off him. The third one, the loafer from the corner, was trying to claw his way between them waving a beer bottle. I caught his shirt and helped him through and hit him in the face as hard as I could with a right at the same time. He took Frankie back with him and they both slammed into the first pinball machine and turned it over with an explosion of gla.s.s and scattering of steel b.a.l.l.s I across the floor.
Somebody must have dropped a coin in the jukebox, for it erupted with a hot flood of sound above the ugly scuffling of shoes and the meaty impact of fists and gasped curses and hoa.r.s.e and labored breathing. They were all over me. I didn"t have a chance, but I couldn"t even feel the blows, if any of them were landing. All I was conscious of was the bright ocean of rage sloshing around inside me and faces popping up like targets in a shooting gallery. They backed me up against the bar with two of them riding my arms while three more jockeyed and scuffled for position in front of me, trying to swing. There were so many they defeated their own purpose; n.o.body could throw a solid punch. I heaved forward, trying to break my arms loose, and we all went to the floor in a flailing heap. I tried to fight my way up through them, and then in the midst of chaos I became vaguely aware of an odd phenomenon. They were disappearing. There was no other way to describe it.
It was as if they were birds taking off in flight. I turned my head and saw two solid, khaki-clad legs apparently growing out of the floor. It was Calhoun. He was unpiling them and throwing them behind him towards the rear of the bar, methodically, effortlessly, like some huge and completely noiseless machine. He yanked the last one off me and flung him backwards and I pushed to my knees, still raging, and saw Frankie hanging to the bar just beyond him. I shoved him aside and lunged towards Frankie, and then the roof fell on me. He caught me by the shoulder and spun me around, and a hand like a picnic ham stiff-armed me in the chest. I shot backwards and slammed up against the wall and slid down beside the wreckage of the pinball machine. It was like being hit by truck.