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Authors: Ellery Queen

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“Val, he’ll hear you.” Rhys bent low over her face, speaking into her ear. “That’s what I wanted to talk to you about. The police—no one—must find out about that alibi.” Val felt her forehead. It was hard to think. “I’m in no danger,” whispered Rhys. “The Austin girl will testify at any time that I was in the
La
Salle
lobby when Spaeth was murdered. Don’t you see?”

“Yes,” said Val. “Yes.”

“And there’s at least one vital reason why I must let Glücke arrest me, puss. … No, don’t make any noise, Val. That detective mustn’t hear.”

Val sank back, her face drawn, her eyes screwed up. They felt hot, brittle, sore; they felt like her brain. “I don’t—I can’t seem to—”

“I think,” whispered Rhys, “I’m in danger.” He held her shoulders down. “I’ve just thought the whole thing through. Some one planted the sword and coat in our closet tonight, tipped the Inspector off that they were here.
Whoever
did
that is framing me for the murder
.”

“No,” said Val. “No!”

“It must be, Val; it’s the only reasonable explanation. So that means some one not only hated Spaeth, but hates me, too. He killed Spaeth and is taking his revenge on me by framing me for the crime.”

“No!”

“Yes, puss. And if I produce my alibi now and the police clear me, what happens? The maniac who’s doing all this, seeing that his frame-up has failed, will be more determined than ever to have his revenge. If he finds he can’t get the law to kill me, he’s liable to kill me himself. He committed murder once; why shouldn’t he do it again?”

There’s something behind this, thought Val. It’s all mixed up and there’s something behind it.

“I’ll be safe in jail, safer than here. Don’t you see?” Something. … “And there’s another reason.” Rhys paused. “It’s Walter. If I produce my alibi now, Val, he’ll be directly involved in the crime.” Walter. That’s it. That’s what’s behind it. Walter. “The police will learn he was wearing my coat. He certainly had a motive of revenge against his father—being cut out of the will. They’ll find out he was in that house at the time of the crime. They’re bound to find it out—
if
we let them know about my alibi.”

“But how—?”

“Don’t you see, puss?” he said patiently. “My alibi depends on the testimony of this Austin girl. She can place me in this lobby at the time of the crime, all right; but she also knows that it’s tied up with that telephone call to the Spaeth house.
And she spoke directly to Walter.
The merest questioning on the part of the police would bring that out. We’ve got to see that she isn’t questioned.”

“No,” said Val. “I won’t let you do it. You’ve got to tell them about the alibi. You mustn’t sacrifice yourself—”

“Walter didn’t kill his father, Val. He isn’t the killing kind. I’m protected, but he’s not. Don’t you see?”

“I see. I see that I’m smaller than the smallest wiggly thing that crawls. And you’re so big, so warm, so dear.”

Rhys tilted her face. “Val, you’ve got to trust my judgment in this.” Val shivered again. Her tongue seemed tied up in knots. “There’s one other thing. I think I’ve got a clue that may lead somewhere. While I’m in jail covering Walter up you’ll have to follow that clue, Val. Do you understand? We’ve got to find out who killed Spaeth before we talk!” Val turned her head slowly. “Listen, Val. Only this morning—”

“All right, Jardin,” said Inspector Glücke.

Val jumped up. Rhys sat still. The three detectives were in the room with Glücke, one of them looking hard at Pink, who was marking time, restlessly and unconsciously, with his feet, as if to inaudible music. “So soon?” said Rhys with a faint smile.

“I had my fingerprint man waiting downstairs,” said the Inspector. “Interested? Blood-stains on your coat. Your fingerprints, among others, on the rapier. And Bronson, who’s also with me, says that the tip of the rapier is coated with blood and that molasses-and-cyanide goo. Have you anything to say, Jardin?”

“Will you get me my hat and coat, Pink, like a good fellow?” said Rhys, rising.

Pink went blindly into the foyer. Rhys put his arms about Valerie. “See me tomorrow,” he whispered into her ear. “The old code. Remember? We may not be able to talk. The clue may be important, Goodbye, Val. Talk to the Austin girl tonight.”

“Goodbye,” said Val, her lips feeling rusty and stiff.

“Thanks, Pink,” said Rhys, turning around. “Take care of Val.”

Pink made a strangled sound. Rhys kissed Val’s cold cheek and stepped back. Pink helped him on with his coat, handed him his hat.

“Come on,” said Inspector Glücke. Two of the detectives grasped Rhys’s elbows and marched him out of the apartment. “You two,” said the Inspector. “Keep on ice.” He nodded to the third man and they followed the others.

Pink stood still in the middle of the living-room, blinking and blinking as if the sun were in his eyes. He didn’t do it.

Val stumbled to the door and watched Rhys go down the hall towards the elevator, walking steadily in the midst of his guard. He didn’t do it! He has an alibi! She tried to get the words out. Prison. Some grubby cell. Fingerprints. Arraignment. Rogues’ gallery. Reporters. Sob sisters. Keepers. Trial, Murder. … Please. Please.

It would be Walter marching down the hall. If she spoke it would be Walter. If she didn’t… Oh, wait, wait, please. Walter or pop. Pop or Walter. It wasn’t fair. It wasn’t a choice. He didn’t do it, I tell you. He has an alibi. Stop! But nothing came out, and the elevator swallowed the marchers, leaving the corridor bleak and empty.

PART THREE
9. Lady of the Press

V
ALERIE
did not sleep well Monday night. The apartment was dark and cold and full of whispering voices. She tossed open-eyed on her bed until the first grilles formed through the Venetian blinds; then she dozed. Pink pounded at the door at seven, and she crept out of bed to let him in. When she reappeared later in an old tweed sports outfit he had breakfast ready. They ate together in silence. She washed the dishes and Pink, whose broad shoulders seemed to have acquired a permanent droop, went out for the morning papers. It occurred to Val, scrubbing the pots with aluminium wool, that she had spoken her last word aloud the night before. It had been “Goodbye,” and in retrospect it seemed darkly prophetic. She said to the dripping pan: “Hello,” and was so startled at the sound of her voice that she almost dropped the pan. When Pink got back with the papers he found her powdering her nose, which had a suspiciously pink tinge.

And there it was in cold print. The coarse-screen halftone of Rhys made him look like Public Enemy Number 1. “Sportsman Held As Material Witness. Arrest on Murder Charge Hinted by Van Every. Spaeth Partner Refuses to Talk. … Rhys Jardin, 49, ex-millionaire and prominent Hollywood society man, is in Los Angeles City Jail this morning held as a material witness in the sensational murder yesterday of Solomon Spaeth, Jardin’s business partner in the ill-fated Ohippi Hydro-Electric Development….” Val pushed the paper away. “I’m not going to read it. I won’t read it.”

“Why don’t he hire a mouthpiece?” exclaimed Pink. “It says here he won’t open his trap except to say he’s innocent. Is he nuts?”

The buzzer jarred and Pink opened the door. He tried to shut it immediately, but he might have been pitting his strength against the Pacific Ocean. He vanished in a wave of arms, legs, cameras, and flash bulbs.

Val fled to her bedroom and locked the door.

“Out!” yelled Pink. “Out, you skunks! Paid parasites of the capitalist press! Get the hell out of here!”

“Where’s the closet where that sword was found?”… “Is this it, punk?”… “Where was the camel’s-hair coat?”… “Get that homely ape out of the way!”… “Miss Ja-a-ardin! How about a statement—Daughter Flies to Defense of Father?”… “This way, Pincus my boy. Look tough!”

Pink finally got them out. He was panting as Val cautiously peeped out of her bedroom. “This is terrible,” she moaned.

“Wait a minute, I smell a rat.” Pink sneaked into Rhys’s bathroom and found a knight of the lens gallantly photographing Rhys’s tub. When the cameraman saw Val he hastily put a new plate into his camera. Val bounded back to her bedroom like a gazelle.

“Funny thing about me. Either I like a guy,” Pink said, knocking the photographer down, “or I don’t. Scram, you three-eyed gorilla!” The photographer scrammed.

Val peered out again. “Are they
all
gone now?”

“Unless there’s one hiding in the drain,” growled Pink.

“I’m going,” said Val hysterically, clapping on the first hat she could find. “I’m getting out of here.”

“Hey—where you going?” demanded Pink, alarmed.

“I don’t know!”

Val ducked down the emergency stairway, preceded Indian-wise by Pink, who flailed through the crowd in the lobby and executed a feint by loudly warning Mibs Austin, who was barricaded behind the switchboard, to keep her mouth shut or he would break her neck, and then challenging every newspaperman in Los Angeles to a fist-fight. He won his desire,
en masse
; and while Mibs shrieked encouragement to her red-haired gladiator and the lone policeman on duty prudently backed into the elevator, Val escaped unnoticed through the side-exit of the
La Salle
.

She almost stripped the gears of Rhys’s sedan getting away from the curb. A long time later she became conscious of the fact that the sedan was bowling along the Ocean Speedway, near Malibu Beach, the spangled Pacific glittering in the sunshine to her left and the stinging breeze lifting her hair. The taffy sand, the chunky Santa Monica Mountains, the paintbox blue of the ocean, the salt smell and white road and warming sun did something to her; and after a while she felt quieted and comfortable, like a child dozing in its mother’s lap. Back there, in the haze-covered city, Rhys gripped gray bars, the papers whooped it up in an orgiastic war-dance, Walter sat steeped in some mysterious liquid agony of his own fermentation. But here, by the sea, in the sun, one could think things out, point by point, and reach serene, reasonable conclusions.

Oxnard slipped by, the flat white miniature Mexico of Ventura, the grove-splashed orange country where occasional fruit glowed in the trees, yellow sapphires imbedded in crushed green velvet. Valerie drew a deep breath. At Santa Barbara she headed for the hills. And when she got to the top she stopped the car and got out and slipped into the silence and coolness of the old Mission. She was there a long time. Later, feeling hungry, she drove down into the sunny Spanish town and consumed
enchiladas
. When she returned to Hollywood, in the late evening, she felt regenerated. She knew exactly what she had to do.

The Wednesday morning papers bellowed news. Inspector Glücke had decided, after a long conference with District Attorney Van Every, the Chief of Police, the Chief of Staff, and the Chief of Detectives, to charge Rhys Jardin with the premeditated murder of Solomon Spaeth. Val drove the ten miles into downtown Los Angeles and left her sedan in a parking lot on Hill Street, near First. It was only a few steps to the City Jail. But she did not go that way. Instead, she walked southeast, crossed Broadway, turned south on Spring, and stopped before a grimy building. She hesitated only a moment. Then she went in. The elevator deposited her on the fifth floor, and she said firmly to the reception clerk: “I want to see the managing editor.”

“Who wants to see him?”

“Valerie Jardin.”

The clerk said: “Wait a minute, wait a minute,” and babbled into the telephone. Ten seconds later the door opened and Fitzgerald said eagerly: “Come on in, Val. Come in!”

Fitz led the way with hungry strides through the city room. Inquisitive eyes followed Val’s progress through the room. But Val did not care; her lips were compressed. One man, sitting over a drawing board in a far corner, got half out of his chair and then sank down again, gripping a stick of charcoal nervously and adjusting his green eyeshade. Val suppressed a start and walked on. Walter back at work! She did not glance his way again.

Fitz slammed the door of his office. “Sit down, Val. Cigaret? Drink? Tough about the old man. What’s on your mind?”

“Fitz,” said Val, sitting down and clasping her hands, “how much money have you?”

“Me?” The Irishman stared. “I’m busted—Ohippi. Do you need dough? Maybe I can scare up a few C’s—”

“I didn’t come here for that.” Valerie looked him in the eye. “Fitz, I want a job.”

Fitz rubbed his black jowls. “Look, Val, if you’re broke, why—”

Val said with a faint smile: “I’m a special sort of person right now, isn’t that so?”

“What’s the point?”

“Daughter of a famous man charged with a front-page murder?”

Fitz got out of his chair and, still rubbing his face, went to the dust-streaked window. When he turned around his bird’s-nest brows almost completely concealed his eyes. “I’m listening,” he said, sitting down again.

Val smiled once more. Fitz was a little transparent. A nerve near his right eye was jumping. “I couldn’t write a news story, but you’ve got plenty of people who can. On the other hand, I can give you information you’d never get without my help.”

Fitz flipped a switch on his communicator. “Bill. I don’t want to be disturbed.” He sat back. “I’m still listening.”

“Well, I’m the daughter of the accused. The byline alone will sell papers.”

Fitz grinned. “Oh, you want a byline, too?”

“Second, I’ll be able to predict the defense before it comes out in court.”

“Yes,” said Fitz. “You certainly will.”

“Third, I’ll have inside information no other paper in town could possibly dig out. Where it won’t hurt my father, you’ll have an exclusive story.” Fitzgerald began to play with a paper-knife. “And last, you can play up the human-interest angle—rich gal loses all her money, goes to work in defense of accused father.” Fitz leaned forward toward his communicator again. “Wait a minute, darling,” said Val. “I’m no philanthropist. I’m proposing to do something that nauseates me. It’s going to take a lot of money to cure that nausea.”

“Oh,” said the Irishman. “All right, how much?”

Val said bravely: “A thousand dollars a yarn.”

“Hey!” growled Fitz.

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