"No offense," Ab said, "but you look like heck, Michael. I mean you got bags under your eyes that could hold three days' worth of laundry."
"Thanks," I said, trying to laugh.
The wide fatherly hand left Tommy's shoulder and came down on mine.
"You get some rest," he said. "Otherwise you ain't going to be worth a damn to anybody."
But I was no longer paying attention to Ab. Instead I was looking at the man in the dark raincoat and the dark fedora who stood in the doorway. The big man with the air of comic menace. My favorite private eye, Stokes.
Ab caught the line of my gaze and quit talking. His eyes followed mine over to Stokes. He had the same reaction I had on first seeing Stokes-his eyes narrowed, trying to pinpoint the elusive reason that Stokes should exude such an air of evil.
Maybe I was imagining things, but I thought I saw Ab shudder.
That was when I noticed how pale Tommy had gotten.
Stokes had fixed the kid in his gaze. Tommy danced nervously, as if on the point of a knife.
A yellow grin twisted Stokes's mouth. If the agency was ever called on to do a poster against child molesting, I knew who we could cast in the role of the villain.
Tommy, clammy now, said, "Maybe I'd better be getting back to work, Michael."
"Interrupting something, am I?" Stokes said, strolling in the room.
Ab said, "Yeah, I better get back to it, too, Michael." He reached over, clapped Tommy on the back, and the two started away.
So it wasn't just me. A lot of people had the same repelled response to Stokes.
"You make friends everywhere you go," I said.
Stokes laughed. "I quit worrying about friends when I was in second grade."
Stokes bent down and picked up the rope. "I read in the paper where your man Gettig was strangled."
In his black-gloved fingers, the ordinary piece of clothesline rope assumed a violent significance. "Interesting," he said.
"What do you want, Stokes?"
He looked at the rope then let it drop back to the floor.
From inside his black coat he took a piece of paper. A newspaper clipping, much like the one I'd been carrying around myself these past few days, flared from his fingers.
"I want you to come by my office tonight at ten o'clock," he said. "I think I've figured this thing out for you. I can save you some headaches-and maybe your life."
He smiled yellowly again.
"The way you tried to save Merle Wickes's life," I snapped. "By blackmailing him?"
"So you peeked, huh?" he said, greatly amused that I'd looked inside the manila envelope he'd had me drop off at the duck pond the other day.
"I had a right to see what was going on."
"Don't get pious," he said. "You peeked just like everybody else would-just like I would." He chuckled. I had confirmed his suspicions that human beings were a sorry lot.
"Merle didn't do it."
"No, he didn't. But he's involved and he's got access to money-money I could use."
"Merle?" I said. "Money? You're crazy."
Stokes's eyes swam angrily behind his thick glasses. "I didn't say his money. I said access to money. I don't care whose money I get, I just need some."
For the first time-a curious tone of pleading, of desperation, in his voice-Stokes sounded human. It didn't make him any more pleasant, it just took the spooky edge off him.
"I want you at my office tonight at ten o'clock," he said. The threat had come back in his voice.
He handed me the newspaper clipping he'd been holding.
"See you," he said.
NINETEEN
She called around lunchtime. When I heard her voice, the receiver seemed to glow. All kinds of sappy lines came to mind when I started to talk, but I was afraid to say them, afraid to make myself vulnerable in case she'd been using me the way she'd been using Denny and decided to drop me.
"I'm still thinking about last night," Cindy Traynor told me. "You're really sweet."
"Gee," I said, "a guy likes to be told he's handsome or strong or bright, but I'm not sure he likes to be told he's sweet."
She laughed. "If he really understands women, then he knows how much of a compliment that is."
Now I laughed. "OK, I'll take your word for it."
"Detective Bonnell, the one you told me about, he was here this morning."
"Here?"
"My home. Questioning Clay. From the little I could hear, I think he thinks Clay did it."
"He didn't arrest Clay, did he?"
"No, but from what Clay said, he came pretty close." She paused. "Clay's not holding up very well. He started drinking bourbon straight after Bonnell left, then he went out. I'm not sure where. I'm worried about him and-and I think he may actually have done it."
"What makes you think so?"
"Remember I told you about the night Gettig and Merle Wickes and Clay were here and Denny was trying to get the bag from Merle?"
"Yes?"
"Guess what I found?"
"What?"
"The bag."
"Yeah?"
"Yes, tossed in among some stuff to be carried out that for some reason never got carried out."
"Anything special about the bag?"
"Yes. There's only half of an identification tag on the handle-as if it got torn off."
"Maybe I'd better take a look at the bag." She laughed. "What's so funny?"
"You," she said. "Sometimes you sound so earnest. 'Maybe I'd better take a look at the bag.' Sherlock Holmes."
"This is my day to sound earnest and pious," I said, thinking of Stokes's crack. "Can you get away for a drink around five or so?"
"Sure," she said. "I don't expect Clay back. When he starts drinking like this, he usually winds up at his honey's. Whoever she happens to be at the moment."
There was faded anger and regret in her voice. For a second I was jealous. I didn't want her to feel anything for Clay, even if the emotion was faded.
"Around five, then?" she said.
I named a place.
Three hours later I was sitting in my office going through storyboards when the phone buzzed.
Sarah said, "Mr. Hauser from Hauser Accountants is on the line."
"Fine," I said. I punched him in immediately. "Hello," I said.
"How about this weather?" he said. "I think I'm heading for Florida."
Great, just what I wanted. He was charging me two hundred dollars an hour to audit my profit-and-loss sheets and he was spending his time on the most banal of amenities.
I realized, of course, that I was overreacting-I was too eager to find out what was going on.
"Well," I said, "did you find out anything?"
"Maybe I have," he said.
Then again, I thought, maybe you haven't.
I said, after he said nothing, "Care to tell me about it?"
"Are you familiar with Eagle Productions?"
"Eagle? No, I don't think so."
"Apparently they produce TV commercials. They're located in Kansas City."
I thought hard. We used a variety of production houses for our commercials and product songs, including production houses in Kansas City. But I'd never heard of Eagle Productions and, as creative director, I was the logical one to know the name.
"Why are you asking me about them?" I said.
"Well," he said, "I'd rather finish running some things down before I say."
"Wonderful," I said, "just what I need. A clifrhanger."
"Beg pardon?" he said.
"Nothing. Call me back when you're ready to talk."
"You bet I will," he said, all enthusiasm. "Thanks for your time."
As I hung up, there was a timid knock on my door. I called out for whoever to come in. Tommy Byrnes entered.
"I talk to you a minute?" he said.
"Sure," I said.
He nodded to the door behind him. "All right if I close the door?"