Shayne pulled ahead and parked behind Matrix’s Ford. He got out and glanced in the back of Matrix’s car. Three traveling-bags and a briefcase were stacked on the back seat.
He went up the shell walk and stepped onto the porch lightly, turned the knob and opened the front door noiselessly.
Gil Matrix stood with his back to the door and facing the hallway leading to the bedroom. Midge’s voice floated in from the room as Shayne stood there.
“I’m hurrying as fast as I can, Gil,” she said. “Will I have time to pack another bag?”
From the doorway Shayne answered for Matrix: “Don’t bother to pack anything else, Midge. You’re not going anywhere.”
Gil Matrix whirled around with a smothered curse as. Shayne spoke. His eyes glittered and his thin features twitched. He whipped a revolver from his pocket and leveled it at Shayne, called loudly to Midge:
“Sure. Pack another bag if you want to. We’ll leave as soon as you’re ready.”
Chapter Nineteen: ENOUGH MURDER FOR ONE NIGHT
Shayne stepped over the threshold, moving with careful ease, taking extreme precaution to avoid any sudden gesture which might cause an instinctive reaction from Matrix’s trigger finger.
He frowned at the leveled pistol. “It’s too late for that, Matrix. Better put it down before it goes off.”
Midge rushed into the room, her face pale and pinched with terror. She stood close behind Matrix, her stark eyes looking at Shayne over the editor’s shoulder. She breathed:
“What is it, Gil?” Then, “Oh-no!” in a great sobbing breath when she saw the gun in his hand.
“Stand back out of the way,” he rasped over his shoulder. “Get your stuff ready. No one can stop me now.” Standing perfectly still he appeared to swagger and strut defiance.
Shayne saw Midge tense. Her stricken gaze was fixed on Gil’s pistol. She made a quick move with her right hand as if to grab the weapon.
Shayne said, “Don’t,” sharply.
When she drew back with an expression of disbelief, he explained, “It might go off if you reach for it. There has been enough murder in Cocopalm tonight.” He moved sideways, keeping his hands in plain sight, and sat down near the front window.
Matrix did not move. His head was hunched forward between shoulder blades that jutted up on each side. His round, owlish eyes held Shayne’s unblinkingly. He warned in a thin high voice of near-hysteria, “There’s likely to be one more killing, Shayne-unless you use your head.”
“No, Gil,” Midge begged. She pressed close against him. “I don’t understand,” she wailed. Her tongue came out to moisten her lips but left them dry. “You won’t tell me anything. What’s all this-talk about killing? Why should Mr. Shayne try to stop us from going?” She spoke with great effort and tried again to moisten her lips with a dry tongue.
“Because he’s too smart,” Matrix snarled. “Because he wasn’t satisfied with what was right before his eyes. He had to go digging into something else.” The little editor’s body began to tremble violently. The pistol was not cocked, but Shayne knew that it had a double-action mechanism and too much pressure on the trigger would fire it without cocking.
Midge put her arm around Matrix’s shoulders. Terror drove all youth and gaiety from her face and she looked as old as Gil Matrix. She crooned, “There now, Gil. There now, darling,” as a mother might croon to her baby.
She exerted gentle pressure on his shaking body, moving him slowly sideways to the couch. He let himself be pushed down to the cushions. The pistol wavered, then slid from his inert hand to the floor. He looked down at it in some surprise, slowly moved the fingers of his right hand as if testing their ability to move.
When he raised his eyes to Shayne’s the desperation had gone out of them and the pinched look had passed from his thin features. He nodded and essayed an odd little secretive smile.
“You win. You and Midge. It wouldn’t do for her to go away with me.”
“No,” Shayne agreed. “It wouldn’t do at all-Ross. You should have learned by now that nothing is ever gained by running away from things.”
The editor’s eyelids flickered at the name of Ross. That was the only evidence of surprise he allowed himself. He said, “So-you know all about that?”
Midge had curled herself up on the couch beside him. She had her arm around his neck and her finger tips caressed his cheek as she gazed at Shayne with bright, questioning eyes, trying desperately to understand without asking questions.
Shayne said, “Yes. I know all about that.” He paused, added casually, “I talked to the warden at Joliet long-distance this evening.” He took a pack of cigarettes from his pocket and offered Matrix one.
The little editor said, “No, thanks. I don’t see how-” He stopped, chewed fiercely on his underlip.
Shayne lit his cigarette. “You don’t see how I found out-with Mayme Martin and Ben Edwards both dead-and with you grabbing off the anonymous note Hardeman sent to me at the hotel.”
“You-know about that too?”
Shayne shrugged. “I guessed it came from Hardeman. He seemed to be itching all along to tell me something without quite getting around to it. I can make a pretty good guess what was in it.”
“Go on,” Matrix probed. “Guess.”
“He doubtless mentioned your past penitentiary record-and Ben Edwards’s. And I imagine he pointed out the proximity of the Voice office to the ground-floor windows of the Elite Printing Shop, and mentioned the camera that Ben had invented. I understand the camera had a faculty for taking very clear pictures from a great distance-an invention which would undoubtedly enable you to get pictures of each new set of tickets as they were printed-to be reproduced by you. And I presume he did not neglect to point out the incriminating fact that Edwards had suddenly decided not to patent his invention-but was resolved to keep it a deep secret even though a patent might be worth a great deal of money.”
Matrix nodded his bushy head. “All that was in the message. I was a sap to think it would do any good to keep it out of your hands. I might have known you’d go right to him and get the same information.”
“Why, no,” Shayne answered placidly. “I admit I just came from the track, but Hardeman wasn’t talking.”
Matrix stiffened. His eyes were blank as they darted toward the pistol on the floor beside him.
Shayne said again, “It’s too late for that.”
“Yeh,” Matrix agreed in a dull voice. “Yeh. I guess you’re right.”
Shayne reached in his pocket and took out the old newspaper clipping. He handed it to Matrix, saying, “Here’s something you forgot to get from Hardeman the last time you saw him.”
Matrix took it from him and started to unfold it, then glanced quickly at Midge and stopped.
“Show it to her,” Shayne commanded evenly. “She has a right to see it. Trying to escape your past is what has put you in this trap.”
Matrix said, “I guess you’re right. I haven’t been very fair to Midge. But-hell, a man gets to thinking-” His voice was wooden, without inflection. He handed the clipping to the girl and leaned back against her arm. He closed his eyes while she opened the clipping with exaggerated care and stared at the picture, then swiftly read the text.
It fluttered from her fingers when she finished and both her arms tightened around Matrix’s neck. “Is that all it is?” she demanded. “Why, that was a long time ago. What do I care? It’s nothing-nothing! Every man makes mistakes. Everybody does.”
Gil Matrix sat up straight and disengaged her arms from around his neck. “No, that isn’t all. You don’t understand, honey.” He turned to Shayne. “How did you figure all this out?”
“It was easy-once I got on the right track. I expect I got my real clue from the same place Hardeman got his. That deed made out to Gil Matrix by Theodore Ross. It doesn’t take a handwriting expert to see the similarity in the signatures. As a director of the bank, Hardeman inspected the papers when you applied for your loan.”