"You wouldn't try to save her from a murder rap by putting yourself in danger?"
Thelma Bell shook her head.
"Not murder," she said, "not me."
"There was a message at Patton's apartment to call Margy at Hartcourt 63891," he said. "That's this number. I'm wondering how the detectives —"
"Oh, I explained that," she said. "I told them that I was out around six o'clock, but that Marjorie evidently had dropped in for a visit; that I found a note from her under the door."
"Did they want to see the note?"
"Oh, yes."
"What did you tell them?"
"I told them that I'd slipped it into my purse; that I didn't intend to save it; that I'd torn it up and couldn't remember just where I was when I'd torn it up, but I was in a speakeasy some place with my boy friend."
"They accepted that explanation all right?"
"Yes, they didn't seem interested in me at all; they were interested in Margy and they were interested in finding out about Margy's legs. They wanted to know if I'd ever heard her called 'The Girl with the Lucky Legs. "
"What did you tell them?"
"I told them yes, of course."
"They didn't know that you'd won a contest at Parker City?"
"No, they didn't know very much about me. They wanted to know how well I knew Frank Patton and I said not at all well; that I'd met him through Margy and that I was to go there for an appointment with Margy; that Patton had some work for us. I told them I wouldn't go if there was any reason why I shouldn't. They stalled along for a while and then finally told me that the reason I shouldn't go there was because Patton was dead. They looked at me to see how I took it."
"How did you take it?" he asked.
"I told them that it wasn't any surprise to me; that I'd heard he had a weak heart and he lived a pretty fast pace. They told me that he'd been murdered, and I stared at them and said, 'My God! and sat down on the bed. I let my eyes get big and said, 'To think that I had an appointment with him tomorrow morning! My God! What would have happened if I hadn't known about it and had gone on up to his apartment! "
"Did they say anything then?"
"No, they looked around and went out."
"And you were wearing the coat and the hat?"
"Yes."
Perry Mason hooked his thumbs in the armholes of his vest and started pacing up and down the carpeted floor of the apartment. Thelma Bell was attired in a nightgown and kimono. She looked down at her bare toes and wiggled them.
"My feet are getting cold," she said. "I'm going to cover up."
He shook his head at her.
"You're going to dress," he said.
"Why?" she inquired.
"I think," he said, "that you'd better go places."
"Why?"
"On account of the police."
"I don't want to," she told him.
"I think you'd better."
"But that would make it look bad for me."
"You've got an alibi, haven't you?"
"Yes," she said slowly and with some hesitation.
"Well," he said, "that's going to be okay then."
"But if I've got an alibi why should I go away?"
"I think it would be better, everything considered."
"Do you mean that it's going to be better for Marjorie?"
"Perhaps."
"If it's going to be better for Marjorie," she said with quick determination, "I'll do it. I'll do anything for her."
She switched on a reading light by the head of the bed, grabbed her kimono more tightly around her waist, stared at Perry Mason and then said, "When am I going?"
"Right away," he said, "as soon as you get dressed."
"Where am I going?"
"Places," he told her.
"Does it make any difference?"
"I think so."
"You mean that you're going to pick out the place I'm going to go?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
"Because I want to be able to put my finger on you."
"Have you talked with Margy?" she asked, her eyes, wide and innocent, fastened upon him with warm candor.
"Have you?" asked Perry Mason.
"Why, no," she said in a tone of rising surprise. "Certainly not."
Perry Mason abruptly stopped in his pacing. His feet were planted far apart, his jaw thrust belligerently forward. He shook off the fatigue which had sagged his shoulder muscles and stared at her with a somber light in his steady eyes.
"Don't lie to me," he said savagely. "You talked with Marjorie Clune since she left here."
Thelma Bell let her eyes grow wide and hurt.
"Why, Mr. Mason!" she exclaimed reproachfully.
"Forget that stuff," he said. "You talked with Marjorie Clune since I talked with her."
She shook her head in mute negation.
"You talked with her," Perry Mason said savagely, "and told her that you'd been talking with me; that I said for her to get out of town, or you told her something to that effect. You told her that she was to get out of town. You told her something that made her go."
"I did not!" she blazed. "I didn't tell her anything of the sort. She was the one that told me."
"Ah," said Perry Mason, "she's the one that told you what?"
Thelma Bell lowered her eyes. After a moment she said in a low voice, "That she was going out of town."
"Did she say where she was going?"
"No."
"Did she say when she was going?"
"She was leaving at midnight," Thelma said.
Perry Mason looked at his watch.
"About three quarters of an hour ago," he said.
"Yes, I guess so."
"What time did you have the conversation?"
"Around eleven o'clock, I guess."
"Did she tell you where she was staying?"
"No, she said that she had to leave."
"What else did she tell you?"
"She just thanked me."
"Thanked you for what?"
"For wearing her clothes and giving her a break."
"Did she say anything about a message for me?" asked Perry Mason.
"No. She said that you had told her to stay here in the city, to be in her room at the hotel, but that circumstances had arisen which made it absolutely impossible for her to do as you wished."
"Did she say what the circumstances were?"
"No."
"Give any hints?"
"No."
"You," said Perry Mason, "are lying."
"No, I'm not," she said, but her eyes did not meet his.
Perry Mason stood staring moodily down at the young woman.
"How did you know my secretary's name was Della Street?" he inquired.
"I didn't know."
"Oh, yes, you did," he said. "You rang up Dr. Doray and impersonated Della Street. You told him you were Della Street, the secretary to Perry Mason, and that he should get out of town."
"I didn't tell him any such thing!"
"You called him."
"I did not!"
"Do you know where he's staying?"
"I've heard Margy mention his name. It seems to me there's a hotel—the Midwick Hotel, I think it is."
"Yes," Mason told her, "you seem to have a pretty good memory."
"You can't accuse me of things like that!" she flared suddenly, staring at him with indignation in her eyes. "I didn't call Dr. Doray."
"Did he call you?"
"No."
"Did you hear from him?"
"No."
"Did Marjorie say anything about him?"
Her eyes lowered.
"No," she said.
"Dr. Doray was in love with Marjorie?" Perry Mason asked.
"I guess so."
"Is she in love with him?"
"I don't know."
"Is she in love with Bradbury?"
"I don't know."
"Did she talk over her affairs with you?"
"What sort of affairs?"
"Affairs of the heart—tell you who she loved?"
"No, we were never very intimate. She talked mostly about Cloverdale and about the predicament she was in on account of Frank Patton. She said that she was afraid to go back to Cloverdale; that she was ashamed; that she couldn't face them there."