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"Do you think there's any chance of getting something for me, Mr. Mason?"

"I don't know," Mason said. "A great deal depends on the setup of the Hollywood Talent Scout Modeling Agency. A great deal depends on whether I can find something on which to predicate a charge of fraud; or perhaps of obtaining money under false pretenses."

"False pretenses?" she asked.

Mason said, "I don't think Boring ever had the faintest idea of promoting you as a model legitimately. Whatever he had in mind for you was along entirely different lines. He didn't intend to use you to start any new styles, and my best guess is that all of this talk about finding a firm-fleshed young woman who could put on twelve pounds and still keep her curves in the right places was simply so much double-talk.

"I think the real object of the contract was to tie you up so that you would be forced to give Boring a fifty per cent share of your gross income."

"But I don't have any gross income other than the hundred dollars a week-unless, of course, I could make some because of modeling contracts and television and things of that sort."

"Exactly," Mason said. "There were outside sources of income which Boring felt would materialize. Now then, something happened between Friday night and Saturday noon to make him feel those sources of income were not going to materialize. The question is, what was it?"

"But he must have had something in mind, Mr. Mason. There must have been some tentative television contract or some modeling assignment or something of that sort."

"That's right," Mason said. "There was something that he had found out about; something he wanted to share in; something he was willing to put up money on so he could hold you in line. And then the idea didn't pan out."

"Well?" she asked.

Mason said, "There are two things we can do. The obvious, of course, is to get some money out of Boring by way of a settlement. The next thing is to try and find out what it was he had in mind and promote it ourselves.

"Now, I want you to listen very carefully, Dianne. When a person is a party to a contract and the other party breaks that contract, the innocent person has a choice of several remedies.

"He can either repudiate the contract or rescind it under certain circumstances, or he can continue to treat the contract as in force and ask that the other party be bound by the obligations, or he can accept the fact the other party has broken the contract and sue him for damages resulting from the breach.

"All that is in case the element of fraud does not enter into the contract. If fraud has been used, there are additional remedies.

"Now, I want you to be very careful to remember that as far as you are concerned the contract is at an end. There are no further obligations on your part under the contract. But we intend to hold Boring for damages because of the breach of the contract. If anyone asks you anything about the contract, you refer them to me. You simply refuse to discuss it. If anyone asks you how you are coming with your diet, or your weight-gaining program, you tell them that the person with whom you had the contract broke it and the matter is in the hands of your attorney. Can you remember that?"

She nodded.

"Where are you going now? Do you want to stay in town or go back to Bolero Beach?"

"I had intended to go back to Bolero Beach."

"You have your car?"

"Yes."

"Go on back to Bolero Beach," Mason said. "See that Della has your address and phone number and keep in touch with your telephone. I may want to reach you right away in connection with a matter of some importance.

"Now, how do you feel about a settlement?"

"In what way?"

"What would you settle for?"

"Anything I could get."

"That's all I wanted to know," Mason said. "You quit worrying about it, Dianne, and incidentally start cutting down on the sweets and developing a more sensible diet."

She smiled at him and said, "My clothes are so tight I… I was just about to get an entirely new wardrobe."

"I think it'll be cheaper in the long run," Mason said, "to start taking off weight."

"Yes," she said somewhat reluctantly, "I suppose so. It's going to be a long uphill struggle."

CHAPTER FIVE

It was shortly before five o'clock when Gertie rang Della Street 's telephone and Della Street, taking the message, turned to Mason.

"Harrison T. Boring is in the outer office in person."

"What do you know!" Mason said.

"Do I show him in?"

"No," Mason said, "treat him like any other client. Go out, ask him if he has an appointment, get his name, address, telephone number and the nature of his business, and then show him in. In the meantime slip Gertie a note and have her call Paul Drake, tell him Boring is here and I want him shadowed from the moment he leaves."

"Suppose he won't give me his telephone number and tell me the nature of his business?"

"Throw him out," Mason said, "only be sure there's enough time for Paul to get a tail on him. He's either going to come in the way I want him to or he isn't going to come in at all. My best guess is the guy's scared."

Della Street left and was gone nearly five minutes. When she returned she said, "I think he's scared. He gave me his name, telephone number, address, and told me that you had said you wanted to have him call you upon a matter of importance, that rather than discuss it over the telephone he had decided to call in person since he had another appointment in the vicinity."

"All right," Mason said. "Now we'll let him come in."

Della Street ushered Harrison Boring into the office.

Boring was rather distinguished-looking, with broad shoulders, sideburns, keen gray eyes, and a certain air of dignity. He was somewhere in his late thirties, slim waisted and spare-fleshed, despite his broad shoulders. He had a close-clipped mustache which firmed his mouth.

"Good afternoon, Mr. Mason," he said. "I came to see you. You asked me to get in touch with you, and since I was here in the neighborhood on another matter I decided to come in."

"Sit down," Mason invited.

Boring accepted the seat, smiled, settled back, crossed his legs.

"Dianne Alder," Mason said.

There wasn't the faintest flicker of surprise on Boring's face.

"Oh, yes," he said. "A very nice young woman. I'm sorry the plans we had for her didn't materialize."

"You had plans?"

"Oh, yes, very definitely."

"And made a contract."

"That's right-I take it you're representing her, Mr. Mason?"

"I'm representing her."

"I'm sorry she felt that it was necessary to go to an attorney. That is the last thing I would have wanted."

"I can imagine," Mason said.

"I didn't mean it that way," Boring interposed hastily.

"I did," Mason said.

"There is nothing to be gained by consulting an attorney," Boring said, "and there is, of course, the extra time, trouble and expense involved."

"My time, your trouble, your expense," Mason said.

Boring's smile seemed to reflect genuine amusement. "I'm afraid, Mr. Mason, there are some things about the facts of life in Hollywood you need to understand."

"Go ahead," Mason said.

"In Hollywood," Boring said, "things are done on front, on flash, on a basis of public relations.

"When a writer or an actor gets to the end of his contract and his option isn't taken up, he immediately starts spending money. He buys a new automobile, purchases a yacht, is seen in all the expensive night spots, and lets it be known that he is at liberty but is thinking of taking a cruise to the South Seas on his yacht before he considers any new contract.

"The guy probably has just enough to make a down payment on the yacht and uses his old automobile as a down payment on the new car. He has a credit card which is good for the checks at the night spots and he's sweating in desperation, but he shows up regularly with good-looking cuties and buys expensive meals. He radiates an atmosphere of prosperity.