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I moved. I didn’t make as wide a detour as Wolfe had, but the program would go better without a scuffle, so I circled around. Halfway to my desk I stopped and said, “Look. If you jump me when I’m dialing you won’t leave here on your feet. I suppose you know the law, crashers do. You’re inside. If you try getting rough they’ll plug you and all they’ll get from the law is thanks.”

“Balls.” It was the big handsome one with a square jaw and square shoulders. The other one was taller, but skinny, with a face that showed the bones. Handsome was giving me the stony stare. “We’re not crashers, and you know it.”

“Like hell I do. You crashed. You can explain it to the cops. I’ve warned you. Stay put. Start moving and you’ll get stopped. One of them has a quick finger.”

To get to the phone at my desk I had to give them my back. I did, and as I reached for the phone he snapped, “Cut the comedy, Goodwin. You know damn well what we are.” He turned to Wolfe. “We’re agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and you know it. We have touched nothing, and we didn’t intend to. We wanted to see you. When we rang there was no answer, and the door wasn’t locked, and we came in.”

“You lie,” Wolfe said, just stating a fact. “Five men will swear that the door was locked and you didn’t ring. Four of them heard you picking it. When you are searched, by the police, your tools will be found. Federal Bureau of Investigation? Pfui. Get the police, Archie, and tell them to send men capable of handling a pair of ruffians.”

Before I turned to dial I said, “Fred,” and bent a finger at him, and he came. Passing them, he barely gave them elbow room. He had once had an arm twisted by a G-man, and he would have welcomed a chance to even up. With the backs of his thighs against Wolfe’s desk, facing them, his gun at his hip, he looked much nastier than he actually is. He is really a nice guy, with a wife and four children. As I started dialing I would have given a hundred to one that I wouldn’t finish, and I didn’t. At the fourth whirl Handsome blurted, “Hold it, Goodwin,” and I stopped my finger and turned. He was slipping his left hand inside his coat. I cradled the phone and moved beside Fred. The G-man’s hand came out with his little black leather fold. “Credentials,” he said, and opened it and displayed it.

That was a ticklish spot. They’re supposed to show it but hang on to it. Wolfe growled, “I’ll inspect it,” and Handsome made a move forward, and Fred’s big left hand shot out and shoved him back. I put a hand out, palm up, but said nothing. He hesitated, not long, and put it on my palm. I said, “You too,” to Skinny and stretched my arm. He had his fold already out and put it on top of the other one, and I turned and handed them to Wolfe. He looked at one and then the other, opened a drawer and got his big glass, inspected them through the glass, taking his time, returned the glass to the drawer, dropped the folds in on top of it, shut the drawer, and regarded them.

“Probably forged,” he said. “The police laboratory can tell.”

It must have taken a lot of control for them to hold tight. I would have admired them if my mind hadn’t been occupied. They both went stiff but they didn’t move; then Skinny said, “You fat sonofabitch.”

Wolfe nodded. “A natural reaction. Let’s make an assumption. Let us assume, merely for discussion, that you are in fact agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Then you have a valid complaint, but not against me; against your colleagues who were gulled into thinking that this house was empty. You have nothing to apologize for.”

He cleared his throat. “Now. Still on the assumption. I am going to keep your credentials as hostages. You can recover them, or your bureau can, only by action at law which would disclose publicly how they got here, and I would of course have a counter action, since you entered my house illegally and were caught flangrante delicto, and I have four witnesses. I doubt if your superiors would want to pay the price. So the initiative is mine. You may go. All I wanted, still on the assumption, was incontestable evidence that members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation have committed a felony and can be prosecuted, and I have it here in my drawer. By the way, I haven’t mentioned the gloves you’re wearing. Of course we have all noticed them. That will be a corroborative detail if and when this gets to a courtroom. You may go, gentlemen.”

“Goddamn you.” Handsome. “It will be a federal courtroom. Those credentials are the property of federal officers.”

“They may be. Even if they are I have a defense. Abandoning the assumption, I find it difficult to believe that federal officers of the law would enter my house illegally, and obviously I am justified in keeping the credentials until and unless their genuineness is established.”

“How are you going to establish it?”

“I’ll see. I shall await events. If they’re genuine I might be paid a call by one of your superiors — even Mr. Wragg.”

“You fat sonofabitch,” Skinny said. He seemed limited when under stress.

“Actually,” Wolfe said, “I am being lenient. You forced entry into my house, and for all I know you are impersonating officers of the law. Two felonies. If you are armed we should take your weapons and also the tools you brought to open my door — and, not doubt, to open doors and drawers in this office. And the gloves you’re wearing. I advise you to leave without delay. These four men are not fond either of burglars or of the FBI, and they would enjoy humiliating you. Confound it, go!”

They stood and looked at him. Handsome’s line of vision was between Fred’s shoulder and mine, and Skinny’s was to the right of Fred. They exchanged glances, looked at Wolfe again, and moved. As they approached the door Orrie backed into the hall, his gun on them. He likes to point a gun. Saul went through the front room to the hall and turned the light on. Fred and I followed the G-men. When they neared the front door Saul opened it, and Orrie and Fred and I joined him to watch them descend to the sidewalk. Almost certainly there had been a third one, but he was nowhere in sight. They turned left, toward Tenth Avenue, but we didn’t go out to see them to their car. Before we closed the door we examined the lock and found it intact. As I slid the bolt in Fred said that they must have the finest key collection in the world.

When we filed back into the office Wolfe was standing in the center of the rug, inspecting an object in his hand — the pencil flash Handsome had dropped. He tossed it onto my desk and roared, “Talk! All of you! Talk!”

Everybody laughed.

“I’m offering a reward,” I said, loud. “A framed photograph of J. Edgar Hoover to anyone who will prove that it is bugged and they have a tape of that to send him.”

“By God,” Fred said, “if only they had tried something.”

“I want champagne,” Saul said.

“Make mine bourbon,” Orrie said. “I’m hungry.”

It was twenty minutes to eight. We went to the kitchen, including Wolfe, everybody talking at once. Wolfe began getting things from the refrigerator — caviar, pâté de foie gras, sturgeon, a whole smoked pheasant. Saul opened the freezer to get ice for champagne. Orrie and I got bottles from the cupboard. Fred asked if he could use the phone to call his wife, and I said yes and give her my love, but Wolfe spoke.

“Tell her you will stay here tonight. You will all stay. In the morning Archie will take those things to the bank, and you’ll go with him. They will probably do nothing, but they might try anything. Fred, tell nothing of this to your wife, or to anyone else. It isn’t finished, it’s only well started. If you men want something hot I can have Yorkshire Buck in twenty minutes if Archie will poach the eggs.”

They all said no, which suited me fine. I hate to poach eggs.