"That's what I want to know," he told her, and then suddenly laughed.
"You've got enough to puzzle your brains over without trying to turn detective."
She stood with her hand on the knob of the door, regarding him curiously.
"Chief," she said, "why don't you do like the other lawyers do?"
"You mean plant evidence, and suborn perjury?"
"No, I don't mean that. I mean, why don't you sit in your office and wait until the cases come to you? Let the police go out and work up the case, and then you walk into court and try and punch holes in it. Why do you always have to go out on the firing line and get mixed up in the case itself?"
He grinned at her.
"I'm hanged if I know," he said, "except that it's the way I'm built. That's all. Lots of times you can keep a jury from convicting a person because they haven't been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. I don't like that kind of a verdict. I like to establish conclusively that a person is innocent. I like to play with facts. I have a mania for jumping into the middle of a situation, trying to size it up ahead of the police, and being the first one to guess what actually happened."
"And then to protect some one who is helpless," she said.
"Oh, sure," he said, "that's part of the game."
She smiled at him from the door.
"Good night," she said.
Chapter 9
Perry Mason dialed the number of Paul Drake's office, and heard the voice of the detective saying cautiously, "Hello."
"Don't mention any names in case you're not alone. The coast is clear up here."
"I'll be in to see you in about ten minutes," Paul Drake said. "Can you wait?"
"Yes," Mason told him.
The lawyer dropped the receiver back into place, tilted back in his swivel chair and lit a cigarette. Then he took the end from his mouth and held the cigarette so that he could watch the smoke as it curled slowly upward. He sat entirely without motion, watching the curling smoke with eyes that seemed half dreamy. Not until the cigarette was more than half consumed did he nod his head slowly as though he had reached some decision; and then he returned the cigarette to his mouth. He smoked steadily until he had finished the cigarette, then pinched it out, dropped it in the ashtray, and looked at his watch.
It was at that moment that he heard a rattle on the knob of the door which opened into the corridor.
Perry Mason walked to the door, stood with his hand on the knob.
"Who is it?" he asked.
"Open up, Perry," said Paul Drake's voice, and Perry Mason opened the door to let the detective walk in.
"You covered the situation?" asked Perry Mason.
"Sure," Paul Drake told him. "I figured that was what you'd want me to do."
"How did you get wise to what had happened?"
"In the first place," Paul Drake said, "I was delayed a little with starting trouble. The starter went haywire. The whole thing seemed locked. I couldn't figure out what was the matter. I kept trying it both with the crank and with the starter; then some pedestrian came along who knew his onions. He said one of the gears had dropped out of position. That if I'd put the car in high gear and rock it back and forth, it would work all right. I tried it and it did."
Perry Mason watched Paul Drake narrowly.
"Go on," he said.
"I'm just telling you," Paul Drake said, "why I was a little late."
"How much late?"
"I don't know."
"I got out there just as you were headed away in a taxi. I got a glimpse of you going down the street. You looked as though you were going places in a hurry. I figured something was wrong; that there'd either be a message for me at Patton's apartment, or that you were up against an emergency. I went up, plenty cautious. A uniformed cop was just getting the door open as I came down the corridor."
"You didn't tip your hand?" asked Perry Mason.
"No. I didn't know whether you'd want me for an alibi or not. There were a few curious roomers forming a circle of spectators, and I joined them."
"You didn't get in?"
"You mean to Patton's apartment?"
"Yes."
"No. I couldn't get in. They got the homicide squad right away. But I was friendly with a couple of the boys, and then there were the newspaper photographers. I got all the dope."
"Let's have it," Perry Mason said.
"In the first place," Paul Drake told him, "and before I go ahead with it, have you got anything to tell me?"
"Only that I was a little bit delayed myself," Mason told him, "and when I got there, I found the door locked. I looked through the keyhole; saw a hat and stick and gloves. I knocked on the door, and —"
"I know all about the story you told the officers," Paul Drake said.
"Well," Mason told him, "what else would there be?"
Drake shrugged his shoulders.
"How should I know?" he asked.
"Well," the lawyer said, "if you know my story, that's all there is to it."
"It's a good story," Paul Drake said, and then added after a moment, "except for one thing."
"What's the one thing?" Mason wanted to know.
"I'll tell you the facts," Drake told him, "and then you can put two and two together."
"Go ahead," said the lawyer curtly.
Paul Drake squirmed about in the big leather chair so that his long legs were swung over the arm of the chair. The opposite chair arm braced the small of his back.
"Hat, gloves and cane on the table in the livingroom. Those were Patton's. A woman—the one you met, by the way—whose name happens to be Sarah Fieldman, occupying the opposite apartment, heard a girl having hysterics; figured the sounds must have come from the bathroom; thinks the girl was locked in the bathroom and perhaps some man was trying to get in. The body was lying in the bedroom, clad in underclothes, a bathrobe thrown over one shoulder, one arm through the sleeve, the other arm not in the sleeve; death almost instantaneous; a single stabbing puncture with a large bread knife. The knife was new. The wound was directly over the heart. It was a messy murder, a lot of blood spurting around; the doors both locked, the door from the bedroom bolted on the inside. An open window leading to a fire escape; marks on the bed indicating a man might have gone across the bed and out on the fire escape, or might have climbed in through the fire escape.
"In the bathroom, the police find a girl's handkerchief, all wet as though it had been used as a wash rag, or had been dropped in blood and then an attempt made to wash it out. There was bloody water spattered around the sides of the wash bowl. It had been a hasty job. Looks as though some woman had tried to clean the blood on her clothes, or herself, without much success. In the outer room, the police found a blackjack."
"Wait a minute," Mason interrupted. "You say the knife was a new knife. How could the police tell that?"
"Evidences of a chalk price mark on the blade. Also, the knife was brought to the apartment wrapped in paper. Apparently the wrapping paper is the same paper that was wrapped around the knife when it was purchased. The police have some fingerprints on the paper. They're not so good—mostly smudged. Knobs of the doors on the inside contain no fingerprints. Looks as though some one had wiped them off. The outer knob has too many prints to be of any value—the police, Mrs. Fieldman, perhaps yours, and lots of others."
"Any suspects?" asked Perry Mason.
"How do you mean?"
"Any one seen leaving the apartment?" asked the lawyer.
Paul Drake looked at him with that expression of droll humor on his face, his eyes glassy and utterly without expression.
"What makes you ask that?" he inquired.
"Just a routine question," Perry Mason told him.
"The officer on the beat," said Paul Drake, "reported a woman who acted suspiciously. There were a couple of telephone messages from women on the table. The police would have attached more importance to those, if it hadn't been for one thing."