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“It was a draw,” Cole explained briefly.

I mixed drinks for Fausta and Davis.

I have to credit Davis with being a cheerful loser. He simply accepted the situation and asked no questions whatever. His sole reference to the matter was an oblique remark he made just as he and the Farmer were leaving.

“If the Farmer ever leaves me, would you be interested in a job as a bodyguard, Mr. Moon?”

“Let’s take that up when it happens,” I suggested.

When they were gone, Fausta said, “I never in my life heard of such childishness. Two grown men fighting like babies, and then ending up friends. Your lip looks awful.”

I grinned at her.

“Also, it is way after noon, and time for you to feed me.”

Since she wanted to check up on how the club was functioning in her absence, we killed two birds with one stone by lunching at El Patio. It was a casual remark of Fausta’s during lunch which upset the applecart of the assassin of Walter Lancaster and Willard Knight.

She said, “Does it not make you think sometimes, Manny, that a person’s whole life may be changed by some small irrelevant thing which in itself is entirely unrelated to the person?”

Having just finished dessert, I was feeling unsuccessfully for a cigar. As I signalled a nearby cigarette girl, I said, “You mean, for instance, h there been a cigar in my pocket, probably I would never have noticed the shapely brunette approaching. But because of the irrelevant fact that I am out of cigars at this precise instant, perhaps we shall accidently look into each other’s eyes, and ten years from now we’ll be the fond parents of eight children.”

“If you raise your eyes above her tray,” Fausta said firmly, “I will fire her on the spot.”

I disregarded her instructions, but nothing happened. She was just another pretty girl, and I was just another customer to her.

As I lighted my cigar, Fausta said, “What I was thinking of was this morning. Had there been one more chair in the Jones and Knight office, Mrs. Knight would not have been arrested for murder.”

“You’ve got your small, irrelevant things twisted,” I said. “It was an idle remark by Isobel Jones which set us after Mrs. Knight.”

“Yes, but if you had not gone into Knight’s office after a chair you would not have heard Mrs. Knight in the next office, so would not have mentioned her when you came out. Then Mrs. Jones would have had no occasion to make the remark.”

“I suppose so,” I said without much interest. The school of philosophy which holds our lives are conditioned largely by minor and random events has never appealed to me much.

Nevertheless Fausta’s remark started me thinking about the incident, and almost unobtrusively a thought floated into my mind which pointed a finger of suspicion in an entirely new direction. The more I thought about it, and the more I related it to previous minor details which had come up during the investigation, the surer I became that I finally knew the real killer.

Fausta asked, “What is the matter with you, Manny? All at once you look like you are in a daze.”

“I want to make some phone calls from your office,” I said, rising abruptly. “Come along.”

My first call was to the airport, and my second to the office of the Jones and Knight Investment Company. Matilda Graves in-formed me Harlan Jones had never returned to the office after Day drove him from his room. He had called from home to tell her he was taking the day off, and I could probably reach him there.

My third call was to Warren Day at Headquarters. When he heard what I had to say, he didn’t even put up an argument.

“Meet you in front of the house in fifteen minutes,” he said, and hung up.

We timed it just right, swinging in behind the squad car just as it stopped at the curb. As the inspector stepped from the right hand door, Hannegan got out from the driver’s side. Fausta and I trailed them up the walk to the front porch.

In deference to the heat both Isobel and her husband were attired in sport clothes and were enjoying the relative coolness of the front porch. Isobel, as usual, looked better for being largely exposed, but Harlan’s orange shorts and thin T-shirt only succeeded in making him incongruous.

Isobel merely smiled us a languid greeting, but Harlan fought his way out of his nearly horizontal deck chair and flusteredly began trying to figure out where on the porch to seat four more people. Aside from the deck chairs he and his wife were occupying, the porch contained only a swing and one canvas chair.

“Sit down and stop fluttering,” Isobel told him. “They’ll find places to sit.”

Seating herself in the porch swing, Fausta looked at the inspector and patted the place beside her. He favored her with a look of utter astonishment and firmly seated himself on the broad railing. I decided to keep Fausta company, and Hannegan silently lowered himself into the chair.

“Go mix some drinks, Harlan,” Isobel suggested.

The inspector shook his head. “I have to inform you this is an official visit.”

“More questions?” Isobel asked. “I thought after you arrested the widow, it was all over.”

“Something new has come up,” the inspector said heavily. He looked at Jones and bluntly asked, “Where were you the evening Lancaster was killed?”

The little fat man stared at him blankly. “Why, in Kansas City. I told you that.”

Day shook his head. “A little while ago Moon phoned the airport. There was no reservation in your name Monday night.”

Isobel said in a surprised tone. “You just now checked up? I thought the first thing the police did was check alibis.”

Day’s face grew a deep red, which made his nose stand out like a white beacon. When he opened his mouth to speak, nothing came out but an unintelligible sputter.

I went to his rescue. “It was a silly oversight on my part as well as on the part of the police. But your husband wasn’t suspected of anything, and after both his secretary and his wife told us he had flown to Kansas City, it just never occurred to anyone to check up. Since we were satisfied Lancaster’s sole connection with the Jones and Knight Company had been his dealings with Knight, and your husband had neither any business nor social connections with the man, there wasn’t any reason to suspect him.”

Isobel turned to her husband. “Where were you, Harlan?” Then an expression of incredulity grew on her face. “Harlan! You couldn’t possibly have another woman!”

Harlan merely looked at her piteously and licked his lips.

“No, he hasn’t another woman,” I told her. “But he knew you had another man. He knew if he let it be known he was flying out of town, the minute his plane was supposed to leave, Knight would be over here.”

Isobel said indignantly, “Manny Moon! You promised me...”

“I’m not telling anything he doesn’t know,” I assured her. “He’s known about you and Knight for at least two months. Mrs. Knight told him. That’s how he knew Knight would be here at the time Lancaster was killed, making Knight a perfect alibi, but one he couldn’t use.”

Isobel looked from me to her husband and back again. “I don’t understand. You can’t possibly mean Harlan is a murderer.”

Her puzzlement was natural, for I have never seen anyone who looked less like a killer than the crushed little man in his ridiculous orange shorts and T-shirt.

“I’m afraid he is,” I said gently. “He had exactly the same motive we attributed to Mrs. Knight. It was there for us all the time, but Harlan’s timorousness made us overlook him as a possibility. Maybe it was that timorousness which sent him over the line. Maybe he couldn’t stand the thought of facing ruin, which was what he visualized when he overheard your lover and Lancaster arguing the other side of that thin partition, and realized Knight’s financial loss would bankrupt the firm.