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“Yes, of course they do. I’m not implying they don’t,” the old man said impatiently. “But they’re open to suggestions, I hope. I always was, and still am — from any clerk in our organization.”

“Sir, we’re after the baby, not the kidnappers,” Crowley said quietly. “If we made wholesale arrests we might get a lead — but your granddaughter would become a death sentence to the men who kidnaped her, to anyone connected with the crime in any way at all. We’d put her on the spot, but good. About the kidnap note; supposing we sent it to Washington for analysis. And supposing the kidnapers sent a messenger here and asked for the note? That’s happened in cases like this. What would you say? That you’d lost it? That you threw it out with the garbage?” Crowley shook his head. “It wouldn’t wash. The kidnapers, if they weren’t fools, would know you’d called in the police. They’d know they couldn’t dare bargain with you any longer for the baby.”

“I see, I didn’t think—” The old man rubbed his jaw.

Crowley said, “The hardest thing in the world is to wait, to do nothing. That’s our job right now.”

Young Bradley stood up from the table abruptly and walked into the living room. His father said, “You’ll excuse me?” to Crowley, and joined his son who was standing at the window, staring into the street. Crowley picked up the three cups and saucers from the table and carried them into the kitchen. “Where do you want these?” he said to Mrs. Jarrod.

She didn’t answer him immediately: she was frowning faintly, counting on her fingers. Finally she looked at him and said. “What?”

He nodded at the cups he was holding. “Where do you want these?”

“Oh, anywhere at all. Right on the sink is fine.” Her voice was edged with impatience. “You asked me if there had been any strangers around in the last few weeks.”

“Yes?” Crowley felt the sudden stroke of his heart. “You remember something?”

“I’ll tell you what is was. Three weeks ago Thursday there was a man here to look at the telephones. I wasn’t here, it was my day off. But Kitty told me about it the next day, just talking casually. She didn’t think it was anything unusual, mind you.” Mrs. Jarrod seemed determined to be an exact and unemotional witness. “She just mentioned it over a cup of tea, as you would say.”

“You’re sure of the date?”

“I just counted it back. It was three weeks last Thursday. I know because I’d been at my sister’s in Roslyn for the day.”

“Please try to tell me exactly what Kitty said. Don’t leave out anything, no matter how trivial it might sound.”

“I’ll try my best.” Mrs. Jarrod drew a deep breath. “Well, for one thing she thought he must have kissed the Blarney Stone. He was full of smooth talk, about how beautiful she was and all like that. A chatterbox — but an amusing one, she said. He was big and good-looking, with dark hair and dark skin. He was Irish, she mentioned that for sure. Talked about his father over there, she said. And what else now?”

Mrs. Jarrod frowned at the floor, and Crowley said nothing. “I can’t remember anything else,” she said at last.

“What was wrong with the phones?”

“Ah, that’s it. Nothing at all. They were all right. He went through the house, checking the wires and all, downstairs and upstairs, and then went off. Said it was probably somewhere else in the block.”

“This could be important. Keep thinking about your talk with Kitty. Something else might occur to you.”

“Ah, there was another thing. He was hurt in the war, he told her. He had a limp in his leg.”

This last bit dampened Crowley’s enthusiasm slightly, it didn’t seem likely that a man with such memorable characteristics would be used on the inside part of the job. The breezy line of chatter also seemed out of place. He wouldn’t be calling attention to himself that way; he would slide in and out as inconspicuously as possible...

As Crowley pushed through the swinging doors of the kitchen he saw a slim young woman in mules and a blue robe standing with Dick Bradley at the living-room fireplace. He hesitated, suddenly conscious of his shirt-sleeves, his day-old beard, the gun in the holster at his hip. This would be the mother, he thought. Ellie Bradley. He hoped they had told her why he was here. Although they were not facing each other, he wasn’t sure that she had seen him; her eyes were unrevealing shadows in the whiteness of her face. Even without make-up though, he saw that she was chic and elegant, with thin classic features in the fashion magazine style, and a cap of sleek yellow hair.

She put a hand suddenly on her husband’s arm. “Dick,” she said, and Crowley knew that she had seen him; instinctively she had crowded close against her husband.

“It’s all right, dear, don’t be upset.”

“Who is he?” Ellie said, and there was a tremor of hysteria in her voice.

Oliphant Bradley was standing a few feet from them, tall and straight and handsome, his appearance a tribute to healthy living, a number of active interests, and a very good tailor. He had been born to a tradition of duty, trained to make the unpopular decision and stick by it. But yesterday he had done what he felt was right, and now he was nervous and uncertain as he stared at the growing fear in Ellie’s eyes.

“My dear,” he said, making placating little gestures with his hands. “Ellie, my dear, it’s quite all right.”

The fools, Crowley thought. They might have spared her this...

“Who is he?” she cried, clinging to her husband’s arm.

“My name is Crowley, Mrs. Bradley. I’m an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. We’re working to bring your baby back home safe and sound.”

She shook her head slowly, as if he had just told her a preposterous lie. “That can’t be,” she said, in a soft puzzled voice. “They told us not to call the police. They said they’d kill our baby if we called the police.”

Dick Bradley held her close to him. “Honey, honey, everything is all right. We stand a better chance with the FBI.”

“But they told us not to call them.”

“We need help to find the men who kidnaped her.”

“I don’t care about them!” she cried. “I want my baby back!”

“Please, honey. Hang on to yourself. Father thought it was smarter to call in the police. It seems—”

She twisted herself from his arms with convulsive strength. “Your father,” she said, shaking her head slowly. “No, no,” she said. “No, Dick.”

The old man cleared his throat. “Ellie. I acted hastily, I admit that. I should have consulted with Dick. But time was precious, and I thought—”

“Stop it, stop it!” she cried, pressing her fingers to her temples.

“I acted with your interests at heart. You know that, Ellie.”

“How could you do it?” She shook her head desperately. “It’s Jill who’ll suffer. How could you do this to us?”

“My dear—”

“Oh, but it was easy for you, I’m sure,” she cried, turning on him with cold, deliberate fury. The change in her expression was sudden and shocking; she looked dangerous then, savage and pitiless, her eyes shining oddly in the marble-whiteness of her face. “You thought it was all for the best,” she said, in a low, trembling voice, “so that settled it. It’s my baby who is gone. She may be dead now, or crying for comfort and attention. It was our right to decide what to do. But you took over as you’ve always tried to do, with your college funds, and plans for schools and summer vacations and trips abroad. Only this time it’s her life—”

“Ellie!” her husband said hoarsely.

She ignored him; her dark, shining eyes were fixed on the old man. “If she’s killed will you still think you acted for the best?”

Crowley knew that nothing he could say would help the situation. She wouldn’t trust him or believe him; he was the law, the symbol of the new threat to her child. But changing the direction of her anger might help to dissipate it.