"What's it to you if I did?"
"I'm very anxious to get in touch with her."
"You're a friend of hers?"
"Yes."
"Ain't her husband home?"
Perry Mason shook his head.
"Hmm," said the woman. "Must have gone out this morning a lot earlier than usual. I didn't see him, so I thought he was still in bed. They've got money, so he doesn't have to do anything he doesn't want to."
"Mrs. Montaine?" asked Perry Mason. "How about her?"
"She was his nurse. She married him for his money. She went away in a taxicab about half an hour ago, maybe a little less."
"How much baggage?" Perry Mason asked.
"Just a light bag," she said, "but there was an expressman came about an hour ago and got a trunk."
"You mean a transfer man?" asked Perry Mason.
"No, it was the express company."
"You don't know when she'll be back?"
"No. They don't confide their plans to me. The way they look at me, I'm just poor folks. You see, my son bought this house and didn't have it all paid for. That was when times were good. He had some kind of a life insurance loan that paid off the house when he died. That was the way Charles was, always kind and thoughtful. Most boys wouldn't have thought of their pa and ma and taken out insurance…"
Perry Mason bowed. "Thank you," he said, "very much. I think you've given me just the information that I want."
"If she comes back, who should I say called?" asked the woman.
"She won't be back," Perry Mason said.
The woman followed him to the edge of the porch. "You mean won't ever be back?" she asked. Perry Mason said nothing but strode rapidly to the sidewalk. "They say his folks don't approve of the match. What's her husband going to do if his father cuts him off without a cent?" the woman called after him.
Mason lengthened his strides, turned, smiled, raised his hat and rounded the corner. He caught a cab at the boulevard. " Municipal Airport," he said. The driver snapped the car into motion. "If," said the lawyer, "there are any fines, I'll pay them." The cab driver grinned, nursed his car into speed, slipped in and out of traffic along the boulevard with deft skill.
"This is as fast as the bus goes?" asked Perry Mason.
"When I'm driving it, it is."
"There's a good tip if you get me there in a rush, buddy."
"I'll get you there just as fast as it's safe to drive," the cab driver rejoined. "I've got a wife and kids and a job…"
He broke off as he slammed his foot on the brake pedal, twisted the steering wheel sharply, as a light sedan whizzed around a corner. "There you are," he called back over his shoulder, "that's what happens when you try to make time, and they don't give us any breaks in the home office. The cab driver is always wrong. We've got to drive our car, and we've got to drive the other fellow's car for him, too. When we get in a smash, we're laid off, and… Say, buddy, do you know you've got a tail?"
Perry Mason straightened to rigid attention. "Don't look around," warned the cab driver. "He's commencing to crowd up on us. It's a Ford coupe. I noticed it a ways back, just after you got in, and I didn't think anything of it, but he's been sticking pretty close to us all through the traffic."
Perry Mason raised his eyes and tried to see the road behind him in the rearview mirror. "Wait a minute," the cab driver said, "and I'll give you a break."
He took advantage of a clear stretch in the traffic to raise his hand and adjust his mirror so that Perry Mason could watch the stream of traffic in the road behind him.
"You watch the rear. I'll keep an eye on the front," the driver told him.
Perry Mason's eyes narrowed thoughtfully. "Boy," he said, "you need a quick eye to spot that fellow."
"Oh, shucks," the cab driver protested, "that's nothing. I have to see what's going on in this racket, or the wife and kids would starve to death. You've got to have eyes in the back of your head. That's all I'm good for, driving a cab, but that's one thing I am good for."
Perry Mason said slowly, "A Ford coupe with a dented fender on the right. Two men in it… Tell you what you do, you swing to the left at the next corner and figureeight around a couple of blocks. Let's just make it sure."
"They'll figure we've spotted them if you figureeight," the driver said.
"I don't care what they figure," Perry Mason rejoined. "I want to smoke them out in the open. If they don't follow us they're going to lose us. If they do follow us, we'll stop and ask them what it's all about."
"Nobody that's likely to start throwing lead around, is it?" the driver inquired apprehensively.
"Nothing like that," Mason said. "They might be private dicks, that's all."
"Trouble with the wife?" the driver inquired.
"As you so aptly remarked," Perry Mason said, "you're an excellent cab driver. That is one of the things that you are good at. In fact, I believe you said that was the one thing you were good at."
The driver grinned. "Okay, chief," he said, "I'll mind my own business. I was just being sociable. Hang on. Here we go to the left."
The cab lurched into a fast turn, slid down a side street. "Hold everything, buddy, we're making another turn to the left." Once more the cab screamed into a wide turn.
"They went by," Perry Mason said. "Pull in close to the curb and stop for a minute. Let's see if they circle down the other street. I was watching them in the mirror. They slowed down at the intersection. They got there just as we made the second turn to the left. They acted for a minute as though they were going to make the turn, and then they passed it up."
The cab driver turned in his seat, chewed gum with rhythmic monotony as he peered through the window in the rear of the cab. "All the time we stand here, we're losing time," he said. "You going to take a plane?"
"I don't know," Perry Mason said, "I want to get some information."
"Uh huh… They ain't coming down any of these side streets."
"Suppose we run down to another boulevard and try for the airport along it. You could run down to Belvedere, couldn't you?"
"Sure, we could. You're the boss."
"Let's go," Mason said.
The driver straightened back in the seat and readjusted the rearview mirror. "You won't want this any more, buddy," he told Perry Mason.
The cab once more clashed through its gears and rattled into speed. The lawyer sank back in the cushions. From time to time, he turned to look thoughtfully back at the road behind him. There was no sign of pursuit.
"Any particular place?" asked the cab driver, as the car turned in to the airport.
"The ticket office," Mason told him.
The cab driver nodded his head in a gesture of indication and said, "There's your boy friends."
A Ford coupe with a dented fender was parked beside the curb at the place where signs painted in red announced there was, "No parking."
"Police, eh?" asked the cab driver.
Mason stared curiously. "I don't know, I'm sure."
"They're dicks or they wouldn't park there," the cab driver remarked positively. "You want me to wait, buddy?"
"Yes," Mason said.
"I'll have to drive down there for a parking place."
"Okay. Go down and park. Wait for me."
Perry Mason walked through the door to the lobby of the airport ticket office, took half a dozen quick strides toward the ticket window, then abruptly halted as he caught sight of a brown coat with a brown fur collar. The coat was catching sunlight in a small enclosed space next to a swinging gate. Beyond this gate was a big trimotored plane glistening in the sunlight. The propellers were clicking over at slow speed. Perry Mason pushed his way through the door. A uniformed official strode toward the gate. A stewardess climbed down from the plane and stood by the steps leading to the fuselage. Perry Mason moved up behind the coated figure. "Don't show any surprise, Rhoda," he said in a low voice.