Marjorie Clune's glance toward Thelma Bell was distinctly uneasy.
"What will the police do?" said Marjorie Clune.
"Plenty," said Perry Mason grimly.
"Look here," said Thelma Bell suddenly, "you can't put this kid in a spot like that."
"What kind of a spot?" Perry Mason asked.
"Get her involved in a murder and stand by and not do anything to protect her."
The mask of patient tranquillity dropped from Perry Mason. He flexed his muscles. His eyes became hard, like the eyes of a cat slumbering in the sun who suddenly sees a bird hop unwarily to an overhanging branch.
"How did you know it was a murder, Thelma?" he asked, straightening in the chair and swinging about so that his hard eyes bored steadily into hers.
She gasped, recoiled slightly, and said with quivering lips, "Why, why you acted that way. From something you said, I guess."
He laughed grimly.
"Now listen," he said, "you can either take this from me or you can take it from the police. You girls had an appointment with Frank Patton tonight. Marjorie called up and left her telephone number. It was this number. The police will trace the number and come out here. Also, Margy telephoned a message Patton got just before he arrived at the Holliday Apartments, telling him to tell Thelma that she would be about twenty minutes late.
"Both of you girls have won contests that Frank Patton put on; both of you have been chosen as having the most beautiful legs in a small town. One of you, at any rate, has been referred to in the newspapers as having lucky legs—probably both of you. It's a line of publicity that Patton hands out to the local press.
"Now, there was a girl in the bathroom at Frank Patton's apartment who was having hysterics about her legs. She kept using the word 'lucky legs.
"I saw Marjorie Clune leaving Frank Patton's apartment house. She says she didn't see him. That's what she says. Perhaps she did and perhaps she didn't. The police are going to be very interested in finding out. Their methods of finding out are going to be quite direct and not very pleasant.
"I'm the only friend you kids have got in the whole world so far as this business is concerned. I'm trying to help you. I've had the experience and I have the knowledge. You won't accept my help. You sit there and arch your eyebrows at each other and exclaim, 'What? Us go to see Frank Patton? Ha, ha, ha! Don't be silly.
"Then I come up to the apartment and find both of you girls in a lather of cleanliness. You've got bathtub hysteria. You can't get into the bathtub quick enough. You've drawn two baths, and one of you has hardly jumped out of the bathtub before the other jumps in."
"What's wrong with that?" demanded Marjorie Clune aggressively. "I guess we can take baths if we want them."
"Oh, certainly," Mason remarked. "Except that the police will see the evidences of those baths this early in the evening and wonder if you didn't have some reason for taking them."
"What reason could we possibly have for taking a bath that the police would be interested in?" Marjorie Clune demanded in that same haughty tone she had used previously.
Perry Mason turned on her savagely.
"All right," he said, "if I've got to hand it to you, I'll hand it to you. The police would say that you were washing off blood stains; washing blood off your stockings; washing off blood that had spattered on your legs when you stood over Frank Patton."
The girl recoiled as though he had struck her a physical blow.
Perry Mason pulled his big boned frame from the chair, stood towering over the two young women.
"My God!" he said, "have I got to pick on two women in order to get the truth from them? Why weren't there any clothes in the bathroom? What did you do with the clothes you took off? And you, Marjorie Clune, what did you do with the pair of white shoes that you were wearing when you came from the apartment house?"
Marjorie Clune stared at him with eyes that were wide and frightened. Her lips quivered.
"Do… do the police know that?"
"They'll know plenty," he told her. "Now, let's come down to earth. I don't know how much time we've got, but we might just as well face the issue frankly."
Thelma Bell spoke in even, expressionless tones.
"Suppose we were there? What difference does it make? We certainly wouldn't have killed him."
"No?" asked Perry Mason. "You wouldn't have any motive, I suppose?"
He turned back to Marjorie Clune.
"How long had you been here before I arrived?" he asked.
"Just a mmmmminute," she quavered. "I didn't take a ccccab. I came on the street car."
"You were in Frank Patton's apartment, in the bathroom, having hysterics, talking about your lucky legs?"
She shook her head mutely.
"Look here," said Thelma Bell quickly, "will the police know anything about Marjorie being there if the officer who saw her on the street doesn't connect her in some way with the crime?"
"Perhaps not," Perry Mason said. "Why?"
"Because," said Thelma Bell, "I can wear that white coat with the fox fur collar. I can wear the little cap with the red button on it. I'll swear they belong to me."
"That will just put you on the spot," Perry Mason said. "The officer probably didn't remember the face as much as he did the clothes. He'll see the clothes and figure that you were the one he saw. He'll identify you as being the one."
"That's what I want him to do," said Thelma Bell slowly.
"Why?" asked Perry Mason.
"Because," she said, "I wasn't anywhere near the place."
"Can you prove it?" Mason inquired.
"Of course I can prove it," she said savagely. "You don't think I'd put myself in a spot like that unless I could prove it, do you? I want to give Marjorie a break, but I'm not foolish enough to get myself mixed up in a murder rap in order to do it. I'll wear those clothes. The officers can identify me all they want to. The officer on the beat can swear I'm the one he saw coming from the apartment. Then I'll prove to them that I wasn't there."
"Where were you?" Perry Mason asked.
"With a boy friend."
"Why did you go home so early?"
"Because we had a fight."
"What about?"
"Is it any of your business?"
"Yes."
"About Frank Patton."
"What about Frank Patton?"
"He didn't like Frank Patton."
"Why? Was he jealous?"
"No, he knew the way I felt toward Patton. He thought Patton was dragging me down hill."
"In what way?"
"The contacts he was making for me."
"What, for instance?"
"Modeling," she said. "Artists, illustrators, and such stuff."
"Your boy friend didn't like it?"
"No."
"What's his name?" Perry Mason wanted to know.
"George Sanborne is his name."
"Where does he live?"
"In the Gilroy Hotel—room 925."
"Listen," said Perry Mason, "you wouldn't try to kid me?"
"Try to kid my lawyer? Don't be silly."
"I'm not your lawyer," he said. "I'm Marjorie Clune's lawyer. But I want to give you a fair break."
She waved a hand toward the telephone.
"There's the telephone," she said. "Go ring up George Sanborne. The number is Prospect 83945."
Perry Mason strode to the telephone, jerked the receiver from the hook.
"Get me Prospect 83945," he said when the exchange operator in the lobby asked for his number. And, as he spoke, he was aware of swift feminine whispers behind him.
Perry Mason did not turn. He held the receiver against his ear, stood with his feet planted far apart and his chin thrust forward. There was the buzzing of the line, the click of a connection, and a feminine voice said, "Gilroy Hotel."