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me, went on.

I stared after her, a tingling sensation running down my spine.

The woman was Mrs. Brambee.

Chapter VIII

“Do you know what it means when a girl is said to be ruined?”

Crystal asked, sitting on the bed and surveying my room with

approval.

I put my hat in the cupboard, sat down in the arm-chair. “I have a

vague idea,” I said, smiling at her. “But it’s a little technical to go into

at this stage of our association. What makes you ask?”

She fluffed up her blonde curls. “My father says that if a girl

allows a man to take her into his bedroom, she’s as good as ruined.”

I nodded gravely. “There are times when your father talks sense,”

I said, “but it doesn’t count with me. You’re not the ruining type.”

“I thought there was a catch in it,” she said, sighing. “Nothing ever

happens to me. Confidentially, my greatest ambition is to be chased

up a dark alley by a man with glaring eyes. I’ve hung around dark

alleys until I’m sick and tired of them, but no man with or even

without glaring eyes ever shows up.”

“Remember Bruce and the spider and keep trying,” I said.

“Something’s bound to happen sooner or later.”

She nodded, sighed. “Oh, well, I’ve waited so long now, I can wait

some more. May I see those stockings or do I have to wait for those

too?”

“You can not only see them, but you can have them,” I said,

fetched them from my wardrobe. “Catch.” I tossed them into her lap.

While she was drooling over the stockings I rang for the floor

waiter, and then lit a cigarette.

My visit to the Blue Club hadn’t been a waste of time. Meeting

Mrs. Brambee had been a stroke of luck, especially as she hadn’t seen

me. Crystal had told me that she had seen Mrs. Brambee in the club

regularly every Thursday night. She appeared to have business with

Jack Bradley, and after, she had dinner and went away. No one knew

who she was; she always dined alone, and always left the club

immediately after finishing her meal.

This information intrigued me. When I first saw Mrs. Brambee she

was so obviously the village charwoman that meeting her dressed up

in her finery had come as a complete surprise. I decided to pass this

information on to Littlejohns. It might help him to find out what kind

of game Mrs. Brambee was playing.

Then the visit to the club’s garage had also been fruitful. The first

car I had seen in the vast cellar, running under the club, had been the

battered Standard Fourteen that had followed me on my run to

Lakeham.

Slowly, bits of the jig-saw puzzle were fitting themselves together.

For some reason Jack Bradley was interested in my moves. I was

pretty sure that the youth who had followed me was acting on

Bradley’s instructions. I thought Crystal could enlighten me, and

turned from the window to ask her. I found her in the act of changing

her stockings.

“Don’t look now,” she said with a giggle, rolling the nylons up her

shapely legs. “I’m in what is known as an intimate situation.”

“Hey! Get that limb out of sight,” I said, as I heard a gentle tap on

the door, and the handle turn.

The floor waiter drifted in as Crystal hurriedly adjusted her dress.

His eyes flickered for a second, then he looked at me, coldly inquiring.

“A double whisky and. a large gin and lime,” I said, trying to look

as if Crystal was my sister.

He inclined his head, drifted out again. His back was stiff with

disapproval.

“I guess I’ll be the guy who’ll be ruined,” I sighed, sitting in the

arm-chair again. “Will you hurry and get that leg show over before he

returns?”

“Don’t you like it?” Crystal asked, hurt. “I thought you’d go all

pop-eyed and coy.” She put on her shoes, regarded her legs with

unconcealed delight. “They are lovely, aren’t they?” she exclaimed. “I

can’t thank you enough.” She rushed over to me, sat on my la and

twined her arms around my neck. “You’re a good, kind pet and I adore

you,” she went on, nibbled the lobe of my ear with her sharp little

teeth.

I pushed her off, got up and plumped her in the chair.

“Stay still and behave,” I said. “I want to talk to you.”

“Talk away. I’ll listen,” she said, hugging her knees and peering at

me over the top of them with her big, dizzy blue eyes.

“Have you ever seen in the club a young guy, slight, dark, sal ow

complexion, wears a grey greasy looking hat, clean shaven, about

twenty, who drives that Standard I pointed out to you?” I asked.

“Oh, you mean Frankie,” Crystal said at once. “He’s a horrible boy.

None of the girls like him.”

“That doesn’t surprise me,” I said, called, “Come in,” as the waiter

tapped, and received the drinks with as much nonchalance as I could

muster. When he had gone, I went on, “What does he do?”

“Frankie?” Crystal raised her shapely shoulders. “He hangs

around. I suppose he does all Bradley’s dirty work. He drives the car,

runs errands-those kind of things. Why are you interested?”

“It’d take too long to tell you,” I said, putting her off. “You liked

Netta Scott, didn’t you?”

“I don’t like women,” Crystal said promptly. “I’m too busy trying

to like men. I’m mad about men. Did you know my mother was

frightened by a wrestler just before I was born?”

“I know. Sam told me.”

“It’s had ever such a funny effect on me . . .” Crystal began, but I

interrupted.

“Never mind about that,” I said hastily. “Let’s talk about Netta.

Sam tells me you two got on together.”

“I suppose we did,” Crystal said indifferently. “She was a bit odd,

but she didn’t try to steal my men, and I didn’t want Jack Bradley or

her other boys, so we didn’t ever come to blows.”

“Were you surprised when you heard what had happened to her?“

“I was stricken in a heap. I was sure she’d never have done an

awful thing like that. It just shows, doesn’t it? My father always says . .

.”

“And we’ll leave your father out of this conversation too,” I said.

“Will you try to remember that? Wrestlers and your father-out! Tell

me something about Netta. Did you ever meet her sister?”

Crystal frowned. “I didn’t know she had a sister.”

“She never mentioned one?”

“Oh, no, but then she might have and I mightn’t have listened.

You see, if she had said she had a brother . . .”

“Yes, yes, I can understand that, but we’re talking about her

sister. All right. You didn’t know she had a sister. Did she ever speak

about going to a village in Sussex cal ed Lakeham.”

“No. Lakeham? I don’t know the place.”

“Don’t let that worry you,” I said kindly, “There must be a whale

of a lot of other places you don’t know either. Tell me something else.

You’ll be able to answer this one. Did she have a regular boy friend

while you knew her?”

“Oh, yes,” Crystal said, perking up. “She did have someone, but

she never talked about him. In fact, she was quite secretive about