Painter swung on Smith. “You’d better tell us the truth now,” he grated.
“I have.” His round light-blue eyes showed fright. “The way I figure it,” he drawled, “if he’s telling the truth, maybe it was his wife that dropped the gun. I couldn’t see for sure. Maybe I just thought it was him.”
“There’s an unusually bright moon,” Shayne reminded him. “But we’re interested in a few other things beside the gun. Who’s the blonde who was registered as your wife at the LaCrosse?”
Smith’s mouth took on a sickly grin before saying, “Suppose we weren’t married. Whose business is it?”
“Who was she?” Shayne insisted harshly.
“A-girl I happened to meet. You know how it is.” He didn’t look at any of the men in the room, but instead had his eyes on a spot on the wall behind Shayne.
“What’s her name?”
“I can’t tell you that. She’s a nice girl, see? It wouldn’t be right to drag her into this.”
“She’s already into it,” Shayne warned him. “She’s the one who visited Rourke’s apartment the afternoon he was shot and tore up his place looking for something.”
“I don’t believe it,” he said in his slow drawl, still staring at the same spot on the wall. “She was out shopping that afternoon, but-”
“You’d better give us her name and let us check.”
“Sure-if you think she’s mixed up in-” Smith swallowed hard. “Sure-her name’s Patsy Jones and she lives in Atlantic City. I haven’t got her address.”
“Who’s the Betty Green in Denver to whom you checked the trunk?” Shayne demanded.
“Betty Green? Oh, she’s a friend of Patsy’s. They roomed together here a month ago and she left her trunk with Patsy when she took the bus back to Denver. I just shipped it to her.”
“But you didn’t ship it,” Shayne snapped. “You checked it through on a ticket. Did Patsy Jones go to Atlantic City by way of Denver?”
“She-I’ll tell you about that.” His eyes flickered around, came back to the spot on the wall behind Shayne.
Shayne turned his head and saw an electric clock. Turning back, he asked, “What are you watching the clock for?”
“Maybe he has a date,” Painter put in sarcastically.
“With a blonde?” Shayne asked.
Smith rubbed his nose hard again and said sullenly, “No. I just don’t like clocks with second hands. They make me nervous going around so fast.”
“What about Patsy Jones?” Painter barked.
“Well-she thought she’d go to Denver to visit Betty first, see? And she bought a ticket. Then she decided not to go. So she just checked the trunk through on the ticket before she turned it in.”
“It must have been a damned heavy trunk,” Shayne said.
“It was.” Smith was sweating freely and he looked a trifle green around the edges of his mouth.
“What did Patsy want in Rourke’s apartment that afternoon?”
“I sure don’t know,” drawled Smith. “I didn’t even know she had met the guy. But you can’t tell about those blond dames.” He laughed nervously. “All of them will two-time a fellow. Maybe she’d been his girl and had written him some letters and wanted to get them back before she left town.”
Shayne asked, “What did Madge Rankin know that she was threatening to tell Timothy Rourke?”
“Madge-Rankin?” Smith’s mouth sagged open.
“Your former girl friend. The one you threw over for this Patsy.”
“Yeh, Madge,” Smith muttered. “I don’t know what you mean. Did she know Rourke, too?”
Shayne stood up and stretched his long arms. He said to Painter, “There’s one little thing we could be doing while we’re waiting for Mrs. Bronson.”
Painter bounced up with alacrity. “Of course. We might as well attend to it.” He strutted to the door behind Shayne, saying to the guard, “Keep these two men in here until I get back.”
As they went down the corridor, Shayne asked, “When you ran that test on Bronson’s pistol, did you use the bullets taken from Rourke’s body or the ejected shells?”
“The bullets, of course.”
Shayne stopped just outside the front office. “If you want a suggestion from me, you’ll have Captain Roderick check the ejected shells, also.” Painter looked at him blankly. “But the bullets were positively identified.” He caught himself up with a shrug and said lamely, “All right. If you think it’s a good idea.” He hurried down a side passageway to the laboratory to instruct the identification expert, returned in a few moments, and asked in a subdued voice, “Where are we going now?”
“There’s one little thing I want to check on at Madge Rankin’s place,” Shayne told him grimly. “The answer to the whole thing should be there.” He stalked out ahead of the detective chief.
Chapter Eighteen: “COME HOME, MIKE”
Chief Painter drove Shayne in his official car to 614 Tempest Street. He didn’t ask any questions on the way out, and Shayne didn’t volunteer any information.
Shayne was grimly occupied with fitting into place certain pieces to support a theory that had come to him when Branson and Smith were talking. He had toyed with several theories during the past 24 hours, but this was the first one that actually pleased him. If he was successful at Madge Rankin’s, he would know beyond the shadow of a doubt.
“Pull around to the head of the alley leading to the rear of the house,” he directed Painter. “We’ll go in the back door in case anyone is watching the place.”
Painter obeyed without question, a frown of annoyance between his eyes. He parked beside the alley entrance and turned off the motor and lights. They got out and went up the alley together to the rear of the duplex. Number 614 was dark. Number 616 was lighted.
Shayne led the way across the lawn to the little flagged walk leading to the rear door of 614. He took out the key he had taken from the door earlier in the day when he got the photograph of the dead woman.
In the bedroom he turned on the lights, went on into the living-room, and pressed the light switch. He stood for a moment staring around the room, then stepped across and turned on the radio. It was tuned in to WQAM and a hot jive band was on the air.
Turning to Painter, Shayne said, “Give me your gun.”
Painter snapped startled black eyes up at Shayne’s grim gray gaze. He hesitated briefly, then flipped back his coat and unholstered a. 38 snugly belted to the front of his left thigh with the butt toward the right.
Shayne took it from him and strode over to a small ornamental fireplace with two pine logs in a wood-basket on the hearth.
He fired a single shot down into one of the logs, went swiftly to the front door, and unlocked it with Helen’s key. He waited tensely, his hand on the knob, his face bleak and drawn, while Painter looked on in helpless incredulity.
The front door of 616 slammed. High heels tapped across the few paces to rattle the knob of 614.
Shayne jerked it open and Helen Porter stumbled forward and almost fell into his arms. Her face was a white mask of terror and she panted, “Oh, it’s you? I thought I heard a shot in here. Then I saw the lights on and-”
She clung to Shayne’s arm. He shoved her off roughly and said, “You did hear a shot. Chief Painter wants to know why you heard the shot tonight with the radio going as loud as it will go, yet you didn’t hear the shot that killed Madge Rankin Tuesday night.”
“Why-I–I don’t know. I guess-”
“You claimed you didn’t hear it because you fired it yourself,” Shayne grated, “and had no way of knowing it could be heard on your side.” He shoved Helen Porter into Painter’s arms and strode back to turn off the radio.
In the abrupt silence he whirled around with Painter’s gun leveled at her as she tore herself free from the Miami Beach Chief and pawed frantically inside the handbag clutched in her left hand.
“Don’t touch that automatic, Helen. I’ll put a thirty-eight slug between your eyes, so help me God.”