Collins nodded. “To represent the corporation or you personally?”
“Why—I guess it would be better to make it me personally.”
“It sounds more like a corporation concern.”
“Well, maybe I can get them to share the expense.” Cliff took a checkfold from one pocket and a pen from another. “It won’t matter to you, I imagine, as long as you get paid.” He opened the fold and uncovered the pen. “What shall I make this for a retainer? Five hundred? A thousand?”
“Wait a minute,” the lawyer protested, “you’re rushing me off my feet. We’d better have a little discussion before you subsidize me for servitude. I am already representing Miss Duncan in connection with the Tingley murder, and I would have to make it understood that in case of a conflict—”
“There’s already a conflict,” Fox interposed. “You’re too late, Mr. Cliff.”
“Too late?” Cliff turned to him with the expression of an executive meeting unexpected and vexatious obstruction.
“Yep. I’m sorry. Of course you intend to return later to inform Mr. Collins privately that what you really want to pay him for is to represent Miss Duncan, and that’s already been arranged.”
Amy made a noise. Nat Collins chuckled. Mr. Cliff, dealing with a man, said with spirit and composure, “You seem to know my intentions better than I do. On what basis do you make such a remarkable assertion—”
“Excuse me,” Fox said brusquely, “but you’re wasting time we might use for something else. Basis? As good as concrete. After chasing around the east end and Greenwich Village during business hours, you can’t deny your energetic interest in Miss Duncan’s welfare. How many firms of lawyers does your corporation have on its payroll? I suppose three or four, and good ones. In the kind of difficulty you describe, wouldn’t you merely phone one of them to report for duty? Of course you would. And would you be volunteering to write your personal check instead of letting the company pay? Not unless you love stockholders with an unprecedented passion. Offering to toss in a thousand dollars of your own hard-earned dough for the honor of dear old P. & B.?” Fox shook his head. “Dismount. Honestly. No soap.”
Collins was laughing,. “You see, Mr. Cliff, he’s a detective.”
“I—” Cliff stammered.
Amy, having already made noises, was on her feet again. “This is utterly—” She left that unfinished. “It doesn’t seem to matter that I—”
“Please, Miss Duncan,” Fox entreated her. “Of course it matters. Sit down and count your blessings. The fact is, you are all that does seem to matter, which should be gratifying—I suppose, Mr. Cliff, you learned from the paper or radio that Nat Collins was acting for Miss Duncan, and you knew his fees are outrageous and her resources limited. As I say, you’re too late; that has been taken care of; but you can help out some in another way, if you will. What were you and Dol Bonner talking about in Rusterman’s Bar—please, Miss Duncan, sit down and relax—last Saturday afternoon?”
Mr. Cliff gawked at him. A frown creased his brow. “What the devil—”
“I assure you it’s material, competent, and relevant. Miss Duncan: do you want Mr. Cliff to tell us what he was discussing with Miss Bonner?”
“No,” Amy blurted.
Fox glared at her. “Please don’t be a nincompoop. All aspects of this affair are going to have to be cleared up, whether we like it or not. Use your head, which was not fractured. Do we want him to tell us?”
“Yes,” Amy said.
“All right,” Fox turned to the executive, “she wants you to tell us.”
Cliff looked at Amy. “You do?”
“Yes, I—if you feel like it.”
Cliff said to Fox, “We were discussing a business matter.”
Fox shook his head. “We need more. Doubtless you have learned from the press that Miss Duncan is Arthur Tingley’s niece and was once employed by him—that was her connection with that place. Tingley engaged Dol Bonner to investigate the quinine in his titbits, with a conjecture, among others, that you or your firm had a hand in it. He learned that you had been seen in confidential conversation with Bonner, and feared that she was double-crossing him. You can tell us whether she was or not.”
Cliff looked wary. “I fail to see what that has to do with Miss Duncan.”
“That’s another story, and for the present beside the point. It certainly had to do with Arthur Tingley, who was murdered, and with you.”
“But you—” Cliff screwed up his lips. “You are, presumably, merely trying to protect Miss Duncan from—unpleasantness.”
“Right. And it may turn out that the only way to do that is to discover who killed Tingley.”
“God knows I didn’t. And I had nothing to do with the adulteration of his product, either.”
“Good. But your talk with Miss Bonner?”
Cliff looked at him, at Amy, at the lawyer, and back at Fox. He laughed shortly. “It could be funny, I suppose. You say Tingley hired Bonner to investigate the quinine. As you know, I wanted to buy Tingley’s Titbits. It’s the finest product in that line, with the best and biggest and oldest reputation, and it would have filled a gap for us. I knew Tingley would sooner or later take the hook, they always do. Then I heard that Consolidated Cereals was trying to butt in, and then came the news of the adulteration. I suspected C. C., knowing how they work. I thought I knew how to get a line on it, but it required some delicate doing. I telephoned Miss Bonner. I didn’t want to go to her office, or her coming to mine, so we arranged to meet at Rusterman’s to discuss it.”
“Were you acquainted with her?”
“No. I had never met her.”
“How did you happen to pick her?”
“I had heard of her, and this seemed to be her sort of job. She did some work for a friend of mine once.” The executive glanced around. “I am counting on your regarding this information as strictly confidential.”
“You can. And did Miss Bonner undertake—what is it, Miss Duncan?”
“Nothing,” Amy declared. “Nothing!”
“You seemed to be speaking.”
“No, I—I guess I coughed—of course I’m glad—”
“I suppose you mean that you’re glad that your uncle would be glad to know that Miss Bonner was not double-crossing him, and that her meeting with Mr. Cliff was perfectly proper, and that Mr. Cliff was not putting quinine in his liver—”
“Yes—of course—”
“Of course. But don’t overdo it. There’s a new iris out—I have a clump of it up at my place—named Rosy Wings. Your face reminds me of a bud of Rosy Wings just bursting into flower. I’m glad you’re glad, but there’s still an unsolved murder, and the police won’t be nearly as much impressed—”
“My God!” Mr. Cliff ejaculated as one who had just emerged from a noisome cavern into a sunny day. “That was all—your uncle thought I—he told you—you thought I—” He was out of his chair and across intervening space, and had one of her hands. “Amy!”
“Well, I—Leonard—I—”
They gazed at each other, with Nat Collins regarding them quizzically and Fox dubiously. Cliff murmured something at her and she murmured back, and they were both smiling.
Collins said, “I have two hard cases to bone up on. I take it, Miss Duncan, that you accept Mr. Cliff’s statement without discount.”
“She’d better,” Cliff declared, “after suspecting me of such a low-down trick as adulterating a competitor’s product. Good lord!” He stayed by Amy’s chair, and spoke to her: “May I take you home? Are you through here?”
“No,” said Fox, “she isn’t. I want to ask her some things.”
Cliff returned to his chair and sat down. “Go ahead.”
Fox shook his head. “Confidential things. You can wait out front if you want to, but it will be a long wait.”
“But with Miss Duncan’s permission—you understand that I’m not claiming any right—”
“It wouldn’t do you any good,” Fox said sh
ortly, “if you did. Miss Duncan is under the suspicion of the police in a murder case. So are you and some other people. I am acting on the assumption that she is innocent, but on no similar assumption regarding anyone else. If you were a detective working for her you would do the same. So we won’t get personal and you can wait in front as long as you want to. All right?”
Cliff’s face did not give the impression of acquiescence that it was all right, but he rose to his feet. “I won’t quarrel about it,” he told Fox, “because I owe you something. I certainly do. Also I have a fact to give you which I have already given the police. Tingley phoned me yesterday afternoon and made an appointment to see me at ten o’clock this morning.”
Nat Collins looked interested. Fox said, “Thanks. What time did he phone?”
“At twenty to six. Just before I left the office.”
“What did he say?”
“Just that he wanted to see me, and we made an appointment. He had never phoned me before, our communication had all been on my initiative, and I was pleased because I thought it meant that he was ready to make terms, but he didn’t say so. He was curt and anything but amiable, but under the circumstances that was only natural.”
“You thought he was surrendering.”
“If you want to call it that. I thought he was prepared to make a deal that would be profitable for both sides.”
Fox grunted. “It took a lot of quinine to get him into that frame of mind. I’m not saying that you furnished the quinine. By the way, you say you left your office at twenty to six. Would you mind telling me where you spent the next two hours and a half?”
The trite and routine question produced an effect. Cliff’s eyes altered their focus for a fleeting glance toward the opposite corner of the desk, and his face changed color, faintly but perceptibly to an alert regard.
“Yes,” he said, “I would.”
“You mean you’d mind?”
“Yes.”
“You mean you refuse?”
“Yes.”
Fox shrugged. “Since the cops have questioned you, you certainly had to tell them. But suit yourself.”
“I didn’t tell the cops. I refused to. I told them that instead of inventing something about going for a walk or going to a movie, I preferred to state that from six to nine Tuesday evening I was on personal confidential business which I declined to disclose.”
“I see.” Fox smiled at him. “Maybe you’d better give Nat Collins a retainer after all.”
“I believe I’ll be able to keep afloat, Mr. Fox. So you’re Tecumseh Fox. Well, as I say, I owe you something.” Cliff looked at Amy. “May I wait for you and take you home?”
Their eyes met. “Why,” she said, “it may be a long wait—”
“I don’t care if it’s a year.”
“Well—of course a girl loves attention—”
“I’ll be waiting,” he said, and marched out.
After the door was closed, Fox cleared his throat to address Amy, but she spoke first.
“I want to kiss you,” she said, “on the mouth.”
“Come ahead.”
“But I can’t. I think I’m part Puritan. I’ll bet I’m blushing. Or else I regard kisses as dissolute, which is so darned old-fashioned it makes me furious, but I can’t help it. Only I really do want to kiss you.”
Fox got up and crossed over, bent and kissed her proficiently on the lips without skimping, and returned to his chair.
“A little domestic but nice,” Nat Collins allowed. “Now for God’s sake let’s line up a few—Come in!”
It was Miss Larabee. She advanced to the desk, handed Collins an envelope, and announced, “By special delivery five minutes ago. And Mr. Philip Tingley is here.”
“Ask him to wait. If he gets restless, soothe him. If he gets too restless, send him in.”
Miss Larabee went. Collins, regarding the inscription on the envelope, grunted, “Personal and important,” and reached for a knife and slit the flap. Extracting a sheet of paper, he unfolded it and read it with a frown.
He glanced up at the others. “From our old friend John Henry Anonymous. As usual, he forgot to sign it. Cheap envelope, cheap paper, typewritten by one who knows how to spell and punctuate. Marked at Station F at three P.M. today. I’ll read it to you:
“‘Tuesday evening, twenty minutes after Amy Duncan’s arrival at Tingley’s, which would make it seven thirty since she arrived at seven ten, a black or dark-blue limousine stopped there. It was dark and rainy. The driver got out and held an umbrella over another man as he crossed the sidewalk to the entrance, then the driver went back to his seat. In five minutes the man came out again, ran across the sidewalk and climbed in, and the car left. The license was OJ55.
“‘Five minutes later, at seven forty, a man approached the entrance and went in. He had on a raincoat with a hat with a turned-down brim, and came from the east. He was inside a little longer than the first man, maybe seven or eight minutes. When he came out he hesitated there a moment and then walked rapidly west.
“‘Proof of the reliability of this information: When Miss Duncan left, a little after eight, she stumbled on the second step and nearly fell, and stood holding to the rail for thirty seconds before she went on. The times and intervals are approximate, but fairly accurate.’”
Collins looked at Amy. “Of course you did. Stumble on the step and stand holding the rail. Otherwise John Henry wouldn’t have tacked on that embellishment.”
Fox, scowling, reached across the desk. “Let me see that thing.”
“I’m not sure,” said Amy, concentrating. “My head was so dazed I’m not very sure about anything. But then—” Suddenly she straightened. “Someone was there watching! Dol Bonner was having me tailed!”
Fox, folding the sheet of paper, grunted. “Or the cop on the beat saw your eyes as you went in,” he said dryly. “May I borrow this awhile?”
Collins nodded. He had reached for his phone and made a request to it, and presently he spoke:
“Bill? Nat. Love and kisses. Will you do me a little favor with the speed of light? Regarding a careless automobile, motor vehicle to you. New York license OJ55, whose is that? Call my office. Much obliged.”
He leaned back and eyed Fox. “Well, what is it? I don’t see how it can very well be a nut, with that about Miss Duncan stumbling. Do you?”
“Not a nut,” Fox agreed. “I’ll have to do some work on it, which of course will start with the owner of that license number. It’s fairly certain that whoever wrote it was there when Miss Duncan left the building, probably in the tunnel of the driveway or she would have seen him. He was close enough to see a hat brim turned down and a license number, if he’s not a liar. It’s also certain that he’s a trained writer—I’d say a newspaper man. Did you notice it?”
“Notice what?”
“There’s no ‘I’ in it. Any ordinary person would have put in at least half a dozen. He was describing something he himself had seen, his own experience. Elimination of the ‘I’ from a recital of a personal experience requires training and acquired discipline. ‘I couldn’t see distinctly because it was dark and rainy.’ That’s the natural way to put it. Other places the same. It’s a simple enough trick, but if you haven’t learned it you just don’t do it.”
“You’re right,” Amy declared. “One of the operatives at Bonner and Raffray was on the Herald Tribune over a year.”
“No, really?” Fox was sarcastic. “For the present, Miss Duncan, you’d better forget you’re a detective. You have sentiments involved that tend to thwart the inductive process. You’ll never forgive Dol Bonner for drinking a cocktail—”
“That isn’t true!” Amy denied indignantly. “Just because I permitted you to kiss me—”
“Permitted? Ha!”
“Be quiet!” Nat Collins told them. The telephone had buzzed and he was at it. After a short conversation, from his end mostly growls, he hung up and made a face at Fox.
“He’s a trained wri
ter, all right. Fiction writer. There is no OJ55. There’s no OJ at all with less than three figures.”
Chapter 8
They looked at each other. No pertinent comment appeared to be forthcoming.
Finally Collins addressed Amy: “We ought to know if you stumbled on that step or not.”
“She probably did.” Fox tapped his breast over the pocket where he had put the paper. “I’ll fiddle around with this in my spare time. What about Philip Tingley? Did you send for him or is he a volunteer?”
“I sent for him. I prodded Miss Duncan on the probable reason why her uncle phoned to ask her to come to see him. She doesn’t know. She doesn’t see how it could possibly have been in connection with the quinine thing. As a wild guess, the best she can do is that it might have been something about her cousin Phil. Tingley and his adopted son used to have frequent clashes, and Miss Duncan took Phil’s side. She thinks Tingley had an exaggerated idea of her influence with Phil, because he once came down from his perch and appealed to her to use it to make him a better boy. So I got in touch with him and asked him to drop in.”
“All right, let’s take a look at him. May I have the overture?”
“Help yourself.”
Collins used the phone for a message to Miss Larabee, and after a moment Philip Tingley was ushered in. Tall and ungainly and bony, dressed conceivably for a bread line, his hollow cheeks and the sagging corners of his mouth might have been attributed, by one who had never seen him before, to the shock and strain of the current casualty. He greeted Amy composedly, with a piercing glance from his deep-set eyes, allowing Collins and Fox, introduced, to grasp his bony fingers, and lowering himself into the chair that had been vacated by Leonard Cliff.
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