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“How do I know this isn’t a stall so you can beat it?” Sergeant Holcomb asked.

Mason looked up at him and laughed. “I should run away from a law practice that keeps me in the high income-tax brackets. For another thing, figure it out for yourself. Somebody kissed him, somebody shot him — and beat it. Then Mrs. Tidings and Peltham came along, found him dying, took him up to Mrs. Tidings’ house, and started to telephone for an ambulance. Tidings died and they tried to cover up. It’s the only theory that…”

The door opened. Della Street came bustling into the office.

“Okay?” Mason asked.

“Okay,” she said. “It was just exactly as you figured. Mrs. Tump bribed him to pin the crime on Peltham. Freel had sold Tidings the information about Byrl Gailord just as you’d suspected.”

“Can he prove Mrs. Tump committed the crime?”

“No, only that Mrs. Tump bribed him to pin it on Peltham.”

Mason grinned across at Sergeant Holcomb. “Even better than I thought, Sergeant,” he said. “The Clarion won’t dare to accuse Mrs. Tump of the murder in so many words. They can only publish Freel’s confession and accuse her of bribery. You know if I were you, Sergeant, I think I’d go to work on Byrl Gailord. I doubt if she had any idea Mrs. Tump was going to shoot him, but after the crime was committed she agreed to stand by her grandmother. I think a shrewd officer who went to work fast, before The Clarion hit the streets, could…”

Sergeant Holcomb spun on his heel, took two quick steps toward the door, then stopped and came back. Abruptly he pushed a hand out at the surprised lawyer.

“All right, Mason,” he said, “I don’t like your methods. Some day I’m going to throw you in the can, but I do appreciate good detective work when I see it and I’m enough of a cop to pull for a guy who solves crimes, even if I don’t like the way he goes about it.”

Surprised, Mason shook hands.

Sergeant Holcomb said, “Don’t think for a minute this gives you any right to cut comers on your next case.”

“What does it give me?” Mason asked, his eyes twinkling.

“My thanks for handing me a tip on a silver platter and for bringing a murderer to justice. Any cop worth his salt will respect a man who can do that.”

Mason clapped Sergeant Holcomb on the shoulder. “Spoken like a man, Sergeant. Go to it.”

Once more Sergeant Holcomb strode across the office. Just before he jerked the door closed, he turned back to say to Mason, “I still don’t like your methods.”

“I understand,” Mason said.

Sergeant Holcomb’s glittering eyes held the lawyer. “And I don’t think,” he went on, “that I like you.”

The door slammed.

Mason turned to grin at Della Street. “That,” he announced, “is that.”’

“Why,” she asked, “did you give Holcomb a break like that?”

“Because I think he’s the one to corner Byrl Gailord and make her tell the truth.”

Della Street regarded him steadily. “And because you wanted to give him a break.”

“Well, perhaps,” Mason admitted.

“He hates your guts, Chief.”

“I know he does, but he’s a fighter and I like fighters. How are things going over at The Clarion?”

“Like a house afire. Sergeant Holcomb can’t see Freel — they have him sewed up.”

Mason grinned. “He can get a lot of advertising trying,” he said, “and they’ll put Freel back into circulation after the extra hits the streets.”

The telephone rang. Della Street picked up the receiver, said hello, and then, cupping her hand over the mouthpiece, turned to Perry Mason. “Adelle Hastings wants to know if there is anything she can do.”

Mason said, “Tell her to meet us at the Haystack Cocktail Lounge in fifteen minutes. I want to see her face when she reads that newspaper.”

With her hand still cupped over the receiver, Della Street in the manner of a secretary who has been trying to deal in details, said, “If we get there in fifteen minutes do you think we’ll still be there when The Clarion comes out?”

“The way I feel,” Mason said, grinning, “we’re going to be there all afternoon.”

Della Street removed her hand from the mouthpiece. “Hello, Miss Hastings,” she said.