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“It wasn’t.”

“Then Ned must have started it.”

“There were lots of other people around and about,” Pedley said. “Miss Lownes, for instance.”

“Back to the asylum, Napoleon!”

“Or this Amery guy—”

“Dream on.”

“Or you.”

“Me? Me?” The press agent’s face puckered up as if he were about to sneeze. “Lord! That’s one for the book!”

“Yair.” Pedley moved toward the sedan. “In a few minutes we’ll go downtown and write it up.”

Chapter Three

Asking Questions with Eyes

He got into the sedan, closed the door, cranked up the windows. Then he fiddled with the two-way until the “go-ahead” came over. He held his mouth close to the microphone:

“Marshal to Double-you Enn Wye Eff, urgent. Locate Deputy Shaner. Tell him to fan his tail around to the Brockhurst. That’s all.” He switched off the set, climbed out of the car, went into the alley and through the stage door.

Across the clutter of music racks, microphones, and record-playing machines on the stage, he could see light reflected off helmets moving about in the gloom. They weren’t the black helmets of firemen; the men under those red helmets were from the insurance patrol. They’d be tossing tarpaulins over the plush-backed seats that paraded back in empty rows to the darkened front lobby.

They knew their business, that National Board of Fire Underwriters crew. More than once they’d helped Pedley to determine the three W’s of the arson-detection business. But this time the marshal was pretty sure he knew Where the blaze started and What started it. Exactly When it was started — well, that was a matter for the lab technicians to figure out. As for the fourth and ultimate W — the Who — the marshal refused to clutter up his methodical mind with guesses until he had something more to go on.

He knew only one way to go at a thing like this. Keep asking questions. With his eyes, when he could. With his mouth, when he had to. If you kept on asking questions and getting answers, the right one would be among them, sooner or later.

He paused by the fuse box in the wings before he went upstairs. The melted insulation stank like burning tires. He went on up.

The smell of smoldering cloth was sharper on the dressing-room level, too. A little “lazy” smoke feathered up between the charred joists. The cubbyhole where he’d found Leila was a shambles of charred woodwork and smashed glass. Under the blackened skeleton of the chaise lay a litter of mushy gray — upholstery padding, the source of those knockout fumes.

The floor sagged like wet cardboard under his weight. He kept close to the wall as he edged over to the dressing-table.

Its plastic top had melted in places under the terrific heat, but it had held together enough to preserve the original positions of the flatiron, the remains of the bottle. That might be one of the things somebody hadn’t counted on.

The switch of the iron was ON, all right. Nothing defective about that. And on one of the splintered shards there was enough of the partly burned label left for him to make out:

SPOTZOUT

p Away From Fire Or Flame

hly Inflammable

His nostrils distended like those of a startled horse. Naphtha! And the odor was still here! Under an imitation-ivory hand mirror he found a damp ring; a little of the cleaning fluid had trickled under the mirror when the bottle broke. By some thermal freak it hadn’t ignited.

Well, bottles of naphtha were frequently found in the vicinity of flatirons. And it was possible to imagine an absent-minded imbecile so far forgetting himself as to put a bottle marked Highly Inflammable next to a pressing iron. Just possible—

Too, people occasionally did plug in electrical appliances and forget about them until the heating elements became red hot. Pedley had even heard of fools who didn’t bother to look at switches to see if they were ON or OFF before plugging in. That such a congenital cretin could have been in this dressing-room wasn’t what he’d call a probability. Still, call it that—

But for two such implausibilities to coincide! That, he couldn’t buy.

Something gritty crunched underfoot. He bent down, felt bits of plaster. They were wet, but not soggy like the chunks that had dropped from the walls and ceiling because of the bondings having been weakened by the water. These bits had been protected from the direct force of the stream by something. They must have been beneath the girl’s body when she collapsed, here beside the dressing-table.

He examined the wall. There was a break in the plaster, three or four inches long, a couple of inches deep. It couldn’t have been made by a fireman’s ax; there were sharp cuts at the upper edge, showing where the stuff had been chipped away with a narrow blade.

The break was close beside the dressing-table, and at its level. It was an amateur’s job. An experienced arsonist would have started the blaze on the floor, instead of halfway up the wall. The naphtha would have gone to work on the exposed lathing just the same, and the updraft would have been much greater. Still, it had worked; the reason the boys had had so much trouble was that the flames had been eating away inside this rear wall.

Floor boards creaked behind him. Without turning, Pedley said, “Watch it. You’re walking on nothing but wet paper.”

A vaguely familiar voice answered, “I guess I’ll stay out here.”

Pedley swung his flash around. The beam came to rest on a pair of gray suede shoetops. The light traveled up: knife-edged mauve gabardines, checkered sports jacket, Scotch tartan muffler, a round, boyish, red-apple face. “Who the hell are you?”

The pleasant features assumed a pained expression. “Wes Toleman.” He said it as if he expected it to be self-explanatory.

“Anybody give you permission to come up here?”

“I just told one of the firemen I’d lost something valuable; he didn’t try to stop me.”

“Lost it up here? When?”

“I didn’t exactly lose it. I loaned my gold pencil to Leila to make corrections on her script — and they told me she’d been taken to the hospital, so I supposed she left it up here somewhere.”

“You one of the orchestra boys?”

The shoulders of the tweed jacket straightened. “I’m the network announcer.”

“Oh.” That was why Pedley recognized the voice. “You weren’t around when the fire started?”

“I went out to the drugstore. The engines came while I was having a cup of coffee. But I didn’t know it was the theater burning.”

Pedley held the cone of light steadily on Toleman’s face. This announcer was worried about a pencil, but didn’t appear to be concerned about the sooty water dripping down on his clothes!

“I haven’t seen any gold gadgets around here. Maybe the Lownes girl had it on her when they took her away in the ambulance.”

Toleman didn’t register surprise — or concern. “I expect it’s silly to bother about a pencil at a time like this. But it was a present. I’d like to get it back.” He poked ineffectually in the wreckage by the door.

“You don’t seem to mind that a guy was just broiled alive in here.”

“It’s a lousy way to go. But Ned’s better off where he is now. Wherever he is.”

“Guy was popular, wasn’t he! I haven’t found anybody who has a good word to say about him.”

“You’ll look a while before you do. Anybody in show business can name you a dozen people who’d have liked to fix the stem-winding son of a bitch. On account of the way he treated Leila.”