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“Never mind my fingers,” she told him, “but you keep in the clear, Chief. Remember, you’re going to take a cruise around the world.”

He nodded and said, “It’ll be fun, Della, but I’ll miss the action of a rough-and-tumble law business, at that.”

“Don’t worry,” she told him, “you’ll have plenty of action — dances on the deck in the moonlight, the beach at Waikiki, Japan in Cherry Blossom Time, across the Yellow Sea, up the Whang Poo to Shanghai, the Paris of the Orient, with—”

“You,” he charged, leveling an accusing forefinger at her, “have been reading steamship literature.”

“And how!” she admitted. “In case you want to know, Chief, I took all the papers out of your top drawer and loaded it up with pamphlets on Bali, the Orient, Honolulu, India, and—”

He circled her waist with his arm, swept her off her feet and around in a circle toward the door. “Come on, baggage,” he told her, “there’s work to be done.”

Chapter seven

The motor ceased its monotonous, rhythmic roar. The nose of the plane tilted sharply forward. Della Street, her face pressed against the window, said, “So that’s Reno,eh?”

Mason nodded. Together they watched the lights as the plane banked into a sharp turn and slid downward through the darkness. The sound of the wind through the struts became audible as a high-pitched, whining note. The pilot flattened out, gunned the motor, and throttled down to a perfect three-point landing. Then the motor roared once more into a crescendo of noise as the plane taxied up to the airport.

Della Street’s face was glowing with excitement as she stood in the doorway of the enclosed fuselage, and Mason extended his hand. Wind, thrown back by the idling propeller, whipped her skirts closely about her. She placed her hand in Mason’s and jumped lightly to the ground.

“Any clues, Chief,” she asked, “or do we go it blind?”

“We go it blind. Get a cab,” he told her. And to the pilot, “All right, get your ship fueled and ready to take off at a moment’s notice. Get something to eat and hold yourself available, with everything ready.”

In the taxicab, Mason said, “We’ll cover the gambling places. I don’t know about Rosalind, but Rita Swaine doesn’t impress me as one who would stay in a hotel room — not in a city like Reno.”

“What do we do when we locate her?” Della asked. “Try to shadow her?”

Mason shook his head and said, “We put it up to her, cold turkey.”

“Suppose she tells us to go jump in the lake?”

“In that event,” Mason said, “we’ll get rough with her.”

“How rough can you get, Chief?” Della asked, stealing a sidelong glance as she added demurely — “with a woman.”

“Plenty,” he told her. “You only see me on my good behavior.”

The cab-driver turned and said, “Where do you want to go?”

“The main stem,” Mason told him,

“You mean Virginia Street?”

“Wherever the night life is thickest.”

The cab-driver said proudly, “There’s life all over this city, brother, twenty-four hours a day. I’ll drive down Virginia once, then turn around and come back, and you can pick the place you want to get out at.”

Notwithstanding the lateness of the hour, the business district was crowded with people of various descriptions. Cowpunchers in high-heeled boots clump-clumped along the sidewalks. Men in shirt sleeves, without coats or neckties, rubbed elbows with men who might have served for fashion plates. An occasional couple in evening clothes sauntered from doorway to doorway, while women, evidently from ranches, went swinging past with the long, easy strides of those who live in the open.

The driver passed under the arched sign bearing the illuminated legend in blazing letters:

THE BIGGEST LITTLE CITY IN THE WORLD

“Okay,” Mason told him, “drive back slowly. We’ll get out on the other side of the railroad track.”

The cab-driver ventured a suggestion. “If you folks wanted to get a license,” he said, “I could—”

Della Street laughed and shook her head. “Why speak of love,” she asked, “when there’s work to be done?”

She tucked her arm through Mason’s, and, together, they walked a block to the left, turned to the right, and started making a survey of the bars and gambling houses. The third place they entered was The Bank Club. Here, faro, roulette, wheels of fortune, craps, and twenty-one furnished the main attraction to the Goddess of Chance, each having its little circle of devotees ringed by curious spectators.

Della Street clutched Mason’s arm. “There she is!” she exclaimed.

“Where?” Mason asked.

“Over at the Wheel of Fortune. See her with that good-looking beige wool coat over the brown print dress?”

Mason nodded and said, “She’s changed her clothes since she was in the office.”

“Of course she has. She must have come up here by plane. That couple is with her.”

“You mean the ones over on the left?”

“Yes.”

Mason stood attentively watching the little knot of people who placed bets ranging from five cents to a dollar, while the wheel of fortune whirled its clattering course.

The woman next to Rita Swaine was chestnut-haired, brown-eyed, alert and vivacious. She was wearing a black dress with a frill of white at the throat, and a saucy, tight-fitting black hat. While Mason was watching her, she won a fifty-cent bet placed on the ten-dollar bill. The attendant slid ten, fifty-cent pieces across the glass top of the table. The young woman threw back her head and laughed.

“She’s not wearing any rings,” Mason observed speculatingly. “That may mean everything or nothing.”

He shifted his eyes to the hatless young man who was with her, a man in the late twenties, slightly above the average height, with the broad shoulders, slim hips and easy grace of an athlete. Light glinted from his dark curly hair as his head moved. His eyes were black, smoldering with intense fires. The face was volatile and animated. On the whole, a man who, once seen, would be easily remembered, a man who would be quite capable of gathering a woman into his arms, regardless of spectators, husbands or consequences. Della Street said, under her breath, “And I’ll bet he’s a swell dancer.”

Mason pushed past her, strode forward, and slid a silver dollar across the glass top so that it rested on the twenty-for-one. Rita Swaine, without looking up, silently moved over to give the newcomer room. The other young woman raised frank, speculative eyes, swept Mason’s face in interested appraisal, turned to the man at her side, and said something in an undertone. The wheel of fortune spun with a rapid whir which slowly resolved itself into individual sounds as the stiff leather tongue beat a fateful tattoo against the metal protuberances. Slowly, the wheel came almost to a stop. The leather tab hesitated for a moment, then, with one last faint slap, slid over into the twenty-for-one subdivision.

It was inevitable that Rita Swaine should look up at the man who had just won twenty dollars. It was as she raised her eyes that Mason, scooping in his winnings, said, “Are you going to introduce your friends?”

For a moment there was panic in Rita Swaine’s eyes, then she controlled herself, slid fifty cents over on the twenty-for-one, said, “Just in case this should repeat — Rossy, this is Perry Mason.”

Mason half turned, to look down into brown eyes which were no longer laughing, into a pleading, upturned face. “I thought so,” Rosalind Prescott said simply. “I asked Jimmy if it wasn’t.”

“And Mr. Driscoll,” Rita said.

Mason shook hands, felt the impact of the black eyes on his, the long, firm fingers which circled his hand. The face itself was as watchfully expressionless as that of the gambler back of the faro deck.