Dorothy sat up straight and mashed out her cigarette with unnecessary force. “You’re the one who’s being stupid.”
“The gal who’s putting the hooks into Carl right now is something to take his mind off a fox-faced brat like you,” he told her, “and don’t make any mistake.” Shayne’s voice was startlingly serious.
Dorothy shot him a searching glance and said, “I know Carl Meldrum,” with all the confidence she could command. “Don’t think he has fooled me-but he won’t be running out on me from now on. Not with the money I’ll have to throw around.”
“I’d still like to know where he might have gone with his new girl today,” Shayne persisted mildly.
“And I still don’t believe he went anywhere with a girl today,” Dorothy retorted. “Carl’s a night owl. He sleeps days. If you want to see him you’d better hang around the Tally-Ho tonight. He’ll be there.” She stretched her arms and yawned in Shayne’s face. “I’ve got to dress.” She started to get up but Shayne put a big hand out to stop her.
“Have you heard about what happened to your brother?”
“That dope? Did he get his behind in a sling? Let me get up, you brute.” She clawed at Shayne’s wrist and he grabbed her hand. He growled:
“I’ve got a bullet hole in my pants where Ernst shot me a couple of hours ago when he got the idea I was closing down on you for strangling your stepmother. You ought to have some appreciation for his brotherly interest.”
Dorothy Thrip fell back in her chair and stared at Shayne. “You’ve got-what?” she faltered. “Ernst tried to shoot you?” Her voice was weak with fright and incredulity.
Shayne let go of her wrist. “That’s right. He figures Carl detained him at the front door last night while you were up here finishing the job of strangling your stepmother.”
Dorothy’s round eyes were bright and wild. “The fool!” she exclaimed. “The crazy fool!” Her voice softened to a moan when she gasped, “What-else-did he tell you?”
“Plenty-before I finished with him,” Shayne told her. “With what he told me and what I’ve picked up here and there it’s about enough.” He paused, then demanded abruptly, “Did you know that Carl Meldrum was trying to blackmail your stepmother?”
So far as Shayne could judge, her surprise was genuine. “Trying to blackmail-Leora?” she asked in a dazed voice. “Now you’re crazy too. I never heard anything so foolish in all my life. How could he blackmail Leora?”
“Who else do you think was writing her those notes?”
“God knows.” For an instant she considered, then said, “I suppose some nut who knew she had money.”
Shayne was bent over, his chin resting in his hand, staring toward the fireplace where the log had been burning last night. At this early hour of the evening the room was warm.
After a brief silence, Dorothy Thrip said, “Another came today, you know.”
Shayne stiffened. “Another note?”
“Sure. Didn’t you know? I thought you were a detective and found out everything.” Her round eyes were scornful.
“What was it like? How did it come?”
“Just like all the others. Typewritten and mailed from Miami. It was postmarked last night, so Dad says that explodes your silly theory that your operative was innocent and the writer of the notes killed her. Because if he’d planned to kill her and did kill her, he certainly would not have mailed another note to her last night. So, if it was Carl who was writing them,” she ended triumphantly, “that proves more than ever that he didn’t have anything to do with what happened last night.”
“It doesn’t prove anything,” Shayne snapped, “except that whoever wrote the notes might try to use it as an out if he was caught. If you ask me, it’s the damnedest angle yet.” He sank back into his chair and stuck a cigarette in his mouth while he frowned at nothing across the room.
Dorothy was watching him with her head tilted slightly. Twice she started to speak but didn’t. Then she got up quietly and stepped past him. The detective appeared to have forgotten her entirely. She was halfway to her bedroom door when a telephone burred discreetly behind a painted screen near the fireplace.
She paused, looking back over her shoulder. Shayne shook his head like a man emerging from an underwater swim. He looked at the screen and then at Dorothy as the telephone stopped ringing.
He asked, “Is it an extension?” and Dorothy nodded. She said, “A maid will answer it downstairs,” and they both waited. The telephone didn’t ring again. After a few minutes there were light footsteps in the hall outside and a quick rap on the door.
Dorothy said, “Yes,” and went toward it. Shayne sat relaxed watching her. The door opened and a maid said:
“It was someone on the phone wanting to know if Mr. Shayne was here, Miss Dorothy. I told them I thought he was, and the man said he’d be right over and hung up.”
Dorothy said, “You needn’t have bothered me with that,’” petulantly, and turned back into the room.
Shayne eased himself erect and grinned at her. “I’ve got a hunch it’s the hounds of the Miami Beach law barking at my trail.” He lounged toward the door, adding casually, “See you at the Tally-Ho,” and went out.
With unhurried swiftness he went downstairs and out to his car, pulled away, and drove over the Venetian Causeway to the Miami side of the bay, where he had an even chance of staying out of jail. But he was beginning to wonder whether that was going to help a hell of a lot in solving the Thrip and Darnell murder cases.
Chapter Fifteen: ONE JUMP BEHIND DEATH
Shayne stopped at the first drugstore he came to on Biscayne Boulevard and called his hotel from a pay station. The clerk told him that Phyllis had neither returned nor phoned since the afternoon call which he had failed to receive. He hung up and used another nickel calling Miami police headquarters. He caught Will Gentry still in his office and the detective sounded worried.
“What the hell’s getting into you, Mike? You knocking out everybody you meet? I’m willing to go a long way with you, but you can’t go around bouncing your fist off Peter’s chin.”
“Why not?”
“Hell’s bells, Mike, be reasonable!”
“He’s been begging for that for a long time, Will. Did the little twerp tell you he was trying to lock me up in his stinking jail when it happened?”
“Sure. But resisting arrest and assaulting an officer in pursuit of his duty is what makes it so bad, Mike. I’ll have to pick you up if you show your mug in Miami.”
“All right, Will.” Shayne sounded weary and beaten. “I guess I do have a way of making it tough on my friends. You’ve gone the limit for me plenty of times and I know it. I’m calling from Twentieth and Biscayne if you want to send a car to pick me up.”
“Aw, now, you know how it is, Mike. I’ve got a job of my own to look out for. I can’t just outright refuse to pinch a man because he happens to be a friend.”
“I know it, Will. I’m a heel for expecting friendship to stretch that far.” Waiting tensely at his end of the line, Shayne heard a smothered curse come over the wire. His lips slowly twisted into a grin as Gentry spoke again:
“You know I’d do anything within reason for you. Take the Thrip boy, for instance. Did you hear about him being picked up in an alley beat half to death by an unidentified mob-and robbed?”
“Yeh. I heard about that, Will.” Shayne’s voice was warm. “That was white of you. I wouldn’t have blamed you if you’d grabbed me for that. I’m not squawking. I know when I get out of bounds. Come on and pick me up and get the credit for it. There’ll be plenty of credit. The morning papers will say I’ve gone berserk. Maybe I have. I just wanted to stay out of jail long enough to find Phyllis and bring her back home, but-I guess the cards are stacked against me this time.”
“Phyllis? Your wife, you mean? What in God’s name has happened to her, Mike?”
“I don’t know,” Shayne groaned hollowly. “A fate worse than death maybe. You know how impulsive she is. Well, she-but, hell! You can’t worry about that at a time like this.”