Perry Mason nodded, extended his hand with a five dollar bill folded between the fingers, holding it in such a position that the officer could see the bill but the woman could not.
"Yes, Officer," he said, "I can be reached at my office any time. There's nothing that I know. There was no commotion when I got up here. The apartment was silent just the way it is now."
The officer slipped the five dollar bill from between Perry Mason's fingers.
"Very good, Counselor, we'll reach you if we should want you for anything. I'm going to get a passkey and see what's in the apartment anyway."
The woman took a key from her purse and opened the door of the apartment opposite 302. The officer stood aside for her to enter; then followed her in and closed the door. Perry Mason moved swiftly down the corridor and didn't bother to wait for the elevator, but found the stairs and took them two at a time. He slowed to a leisurely walk as he went through the lobby of the apartment house. There was, however, no one at the desk.
Perry Mason walked rapidly down the street and picked up his taxicab.
"Run straight down the street. Keep your eye open for a place where I can telephone, after you've gone about a dozen blocks, but I don't want to telephone from any place in the neighborhood."
The driver nodded.
"She's all warmed up ready to go," he said, and slammed the door as the lawyer settled into the cushions, and jerked the cab into almost immediate motion. He ran for eight or ten blocks; then slowed.
"The drug store over there on the corner," he said.
"That'll be fine," Mason said.
The cab pulled in by a fire plug.
"I'll keep the motor running," the driver said.
"It may be a little while to wait," Mason told him, and entered the drug store. He found a telephone booth, dropped a coin and dialed the number of his office.
Della Street's voice answered.
"Is Bradbury there, Della?" asked Perry Mason.
"Not right now," she said, "he's due any minute. He called up from the Mapleton Hotel about fifteen minutes ago; said that he had the newspapers and that he had some other stuff, some communications that had been written to the Chamber of Commerce, some contracts that were used by the merchants, and some samples of the scrip, and a lot of that stuff. He asked if I thought you'd want that as well as the newspapers. He said he had it all in a brief case."
"What'd you tell him?" asked Mason.
She laughed.
"I didn't know whether you wanted it or not," she said, "but I figured it would keep him out of mischief, so I told him sure to bring it along. He should be in—here he comes now."
"Put him on the phone," Perry Mason said, "I want him."
Mason could hear the sound of her voice, coming faintly over the line.
"Mr. Mason is on the line, Mr. Bradbury," she said, "and he wants to talk with you. You can take the call from that phone over there on the table."
There was a click in the connection; then Bradbury's eager voice.
"Yes?" he asked. "Yes, what is it?"
Perry Mason's voice was low and impressive.
"Now listen, Bradbury," he said, "I'm going to tell you something, and I don't want a fuss made over it."
"A fuss," Bradbury asked, "what sort of a fuss?"
"Shut up," Mason told him, "and keep quiet until I can tell you just what the situation is. Just answer yes or no. I don't want my secretary to know what's going on. Do you understand?"
"Yes," said Bradbury.
"You've been to your hotel?"
"Yes."
"Did you get the papers?"
"Yes."
"You have them there with you?"
"Yes."
"And there was a brief case with some other stuff in it that you brought?"
"Yes."
"The one you telephoned my secretary about?"
"Yes."
"All right," Mason said, "Now we located Frank Patton a little while ago."
"You did," exclaimed Bradbury. "That's great. Have you talked with him yet?"
"He's dead," Mason said.
"What?" yelled Bradbury, his voice shrill with excitement. "What's that? You mean to say you found him —"
"Shut up," barked Perry Mason into the telephone. "Use your head. I told you to sit tight and listen. Don't make a lot of exclamations."
There was a moment of silence. Then, Bradbury's voice, lower in tone, said, "Yes, Mr. Mason. Go ahead. I couldn't hear you very well."
"Now get this," Perry Mason said, "and get it straight, and don't make a commotion about it. We located Frank Patton. He's living at the Holliday Apartments and he has apartment 302. Those apartments are out on Maple Avenue. I went out to see him. I wanted to try and get a confession out of him before you entered the picture. I figured your presence might simply lead to argument, and not do any one any good.
"Frank Patton had been killed about ten minutes before I got there. Some one had stuck a bread knife into his chest. He was lying in his apartment, stone dead."
"Good God," said Bradbury, and then added, almost immediately, "Yes, Mr. Mason. I was just thinking of something. Go ahead and tell me some more."
"Just as I was about to go into the apartment house," Mason went on, "I saw a girl coming out. She was around twentyone or twentytwo. She had snaky hips and wore a white coat, with a fox collar. She had on white shoes, and a little white hat with a red button on it. Her eyes were very blue, and she looked as though she might be running away from something.
"Now, I want to know if that was Marjorie Clune."
Perry Mason could hear the gasping intake of Bradbury's breath over the line.
"Yes, yes," he said, "that description fits. I know the coat and hat."
"All right," Perry Mason said, "figure it out."
"What do you mean?"
"She may be in a jam."
"I don't understand."
"She was leaving the apartment house just as I went up. There was a woman in an adjoining apartment who had heard quite a racket in Patton's apartment and had gone out to get a cop. She showed up with the cop about five minutes after I got there. There's a pretty good chance the cop may have seen Marjorie Clune. There's also a chance that they may find out she was in the apartment. There was some girl in the bathroom having hysterics and screaming about her lucky legs. That would seem to tie in with Marjorie Clune. Now, what do you want me to do about it?"
Bradbury's excitement burst the bounds of selfcontrol.
"Do about it?" he screamed. "You know what I want you to do about it. Go ahead and represent her. Go ahead and see that nothing happens to her. To hell with Frank Patton. I don't care anything about him, but Margy means everything in the world to me. If she's in a jam, you go ahead and get her out of it. I don't care what it costs. You send the bill to me and I'll foot it."
"Wait a minute," Perry Mason told him. "Keep your shirt on. Don't throw a fit. And, after you hang up the telephone, if Della Street starts asking you questions, don't tell her anything. Tell her that I told you I thought I was going to have some news for you in about an hour, or something of that sort. Stall her along and tell her to wait there. Do you understand?"
"Yes," Bradbury said, but his voice was still highpitched with excitement.
"You wait right there," Perry Mason said.
"Not here," Bradbury told him, "I'll go to my hotel. You can call me there at my room. You know the number, room 693. Be sure and ask for my room number. I'll be there."
"You'd better wait there in the office."
"No, no, I want to be where I can talk. I've got a lot to tell you, and I want to find out all about what's happening. Will you call me at my room in fifteen minutes, and tell me exactly what's happened?"