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cautiously.

I put the wallet away. To him, it was like a black cloud passing

before the face of the sun.

“I wanted someone to investigate at Lakeham,” I said. “I want to

get everything I can on this woman, Mrs. Brambee, and I want a

background picture of Anne Scott.”

He brightened visibly. “Well, that’s something we might be able to

do,” he said, and looked hopeful y at the carton of cigarettes on his

desk. “I wonder if you’d mind . . .”

“Go ahead,” I said.

He took another cigarette, became quite genial.

“Yes, I think we could help you do that,” he went on, drawing

down a lungful of smoke. “I have an excellent man, very discreet. I

could put him on the job.” His eyes closed for a moment, then

snapped open. “It isn’t our usual line of investigation, you know. It

might-hum — cost a little more.”

“I’ll pay well for results,” I returned. “What are your terms?”

“Well, now let me see. Shall we say ten pounds a week and three

pounds a day expenses?” He looked hopeful y at me, looked away.

“For that I’d expect to hire Sherlock Holmes himself,” I said, and

meant it.

Mr. Merryweather tittered, put his hand over his mouth, looked

embarrassed.

“It’s an expensive age we live in,” he sighed, shaking his head.

I was glad I hadn’t told him about the attempted attack on me, or

about the guy following me in the Standard car. He would probably

have added danger money to the bill.

“Well, all right,” I said, shrugging. “Only I want results.” I counted

thirty-one pounds on to his desk. “That’ll hold you for one week. Get

me everything you can on Anne Scott, have someone watch Mrs.

Brambee’s cottage. I want to know who goes in and who comes out,

what she does and why she does it.”

“It’s a police job really,” he said, whisking the money into a

drawer and turning the key. “Who’s in charge of the case?”

“Inspector Corridan,” I told him.

His face darkened. “Oh, that fellow,” he said, scowling. “One of

the bright boys. Wouldn’t have lasted a day in my time. I know him-a

Chief’s pet.” He seemed to withdraw into himself, brooding and

bitter. “Well, I shouldn’t be surprised if we find out a lot more than he

does. I believe in old-fashioned methods. Police work is ninety per

cent patience and ten per cent luck. These new scientific methods

make a man lazy.”

I grunted, stood up. “Well, I guess I’ll be hearing from you.

Remember: no results, no more money.”

He nodded, smiled awkwardly. “Quite so, Mr. Harmas. I like

dealing with business men. One knows where one is so to speak.”

The door opened at this moment, and a little guy slid into the

room. He was shabby, middle-aged, pathetically sad-looking. His

straggling moustache was stained with nicotine, his watery eyes

peered at me like a startled rabbit’s.

“Ah, you’ve come at the opportune moment,” Mr. Merry-

weather said, rubbing his hands. He turned to me. “This is Henry

Littlejohns, who will personally work on your case.” He made it sound

as if this odd little man was Philo Vance, Nick Charles and Perry

Mason all rolled into one. “This is Mr. Harmas who has just given us a

most interesting case.”

There was no enthusiastic light in Mr. Littlejohn’s faded eyes. I

guessed he had visions of hanging around more draughty passages,

looking through more sordid keyholes, standing outside more houses

in the rain. He muttered something through his moustache, stood

staring down at his boots.

“I’d like to talk to Mr. Littlejohns,” I said to Merryweather. “Can I

take him along with me?”

“Of course,” Mr. Merryweather said, beaming, “By all means take

him along with you.”

“We’ll go back to my hotel,” I said to Littlejohns. “I’d like you to

have details of this case.”

He nodded, muttered again under his breath, opened the door for

me.

We walked to the elevator, rode down to the ground-level in

silence.

I waved to a taxi, ushered Mr. Littlejohns in and as I was about to

follow, something — intuition, instinct, something- made me turn

quickly and look behind me.

The young runt who had tried to dent my skull and who had

followed me in the Standard was standing in a doorway watching me.

For a second our eyes met, then he spat on the pavement, sauntered

off in the opposite direction.

Chapter VII

HENRY LITTLEJOHNS looked as out of place in the Savoy as a

snowman in the middle of August. He sat on the edge of a chair, his

bowler hat resting on his knees, a sad expression on his face.

I told him about Netta, took him through every detail of the story,

concluded with the burning of Anne’s body.

Throughout the recital, he sat motionless. The sad expression

remained on his face, but I could tel by the intent look in his eyes that

he wasn’t missing a thing.

“A very interesting story,” he said when I had finished. “It calls for

a most searching investigation.”

I said I thought he was right, and what did he think of the set-up

now that I had given him the facts?

He sat chewing his moustache for a moment or so, then looked

up.

“I think Miss Scott’s alive,” he said. “The fact that her clothes are

missing, the body stolen to prevent identification and that you think

you saw her yesterday seems proof enough to me. If she is alive, then

we shall have to discover who the dead woman was in Miss Scott’s

flat. We shall also have to find out whether Miss Scott had anything to

do with her death; whether it was murder or suicide, whether there

was anyone else implicated. It seems to me that if Miss Scott arranged

for the dead woman to be mistaken for her, she must have an urgent

reason for going into hiding. That’s another thing we must discover.

The fact that she didn’t take the money nor the diamond ring,

although she had time to pack her clothes, would point to a third

party being present whom she did not trust and from whom she was

anxious to conceal the fact that she had such valuables in the flat. We

must find out who that third party was.”

“You worked all that out in a few minutes,” I said, regarding him

thoughtfully. “I worked it out too, only I took a little longer, but

Corredan hasn’t got around to it yet. Now why? Why should Carridan

still insist that Netta committed suicide?”

Littlejohns allowed himself a bleak smile. “I have had some

experience of Inspector Corridan,” he said. “He is a most misleading

man. I suggest from my knowledge of his methods that he has arrived

at this conclusion but he is not letting you know that he has done so.

It may be, sir, that he considers you’re implicated in this case, and is

allowing you to think he has hold of the wrong end of the stick in the

hope you will be over-confident and commit yourself. The Inspector is

a deep thinker, and I wouldn’t underestimate his abilities for a

moment.”

I gaped at him. “Well, I’ll be damned,” I said. “That idea never

occurred to me.”

For a moment Littlejohns relaxed sufficiently to look almost