"How's the world?"
"Very bad, very bad. How's your daughter?"
"No change."
"Ah, I'm sorry, I'm terribly sorry." He was hulking by the table now, his eyelids dripping concern. "Look, I wouldn't even bother; your daughter; it's a worry. God knows, when my Ruthie was down with the---no no no no, it was Sheila, my little---"
"Please sit down," Chris cut in.
"Oh, yes, thank you," he exhaled, gratefully settling his bulk in a chair across the table from Sharon, who had now returned to her typing of letters.
"I'm sorry; you were saying?" Chris asked the detective.
"Well, my daughter, she---ah, never mind." He dismissed it. "You're busy. I get started, I'll tell my life story, you could maybe make a film of it. Really! it's incredible! If you only knew half of the things used to happen in my crazy family, you know, like my---ah, well, you're---One! I'll tell one! Like my mother, every Friday she made us gefilte fish, right? Only all week long, the whole week, no one gets to take a bath on account of my mother has the carp in the bathtub, it's swimming back and forth, back and forth, the whole week, because my mother said this cleaned out the poison in its system! You're prepared? Because it... Ah, that's enough now; enough." He sighed, wearily, motioning his hand in a gesture of dismissal. "But now and then a laugh just to keep us from crying."
Chris watched him expressionlessly, waiting....
"Ah, you're reading." He was glancing at the book on witchcraft. "For a film?" he inquired.
"Just reading."
"It's good?"
"I just started."
"Witchcraft," he murmured, his head angled, reading the title at the top of the pages.
"What's doin'?" Chris asked him.
"Yes, I'm sorry. You're busy. You're busy. I'll finish. As I said, I wouldn't bother you, except..."
"Except what?"
He looked suddenly grave and clasped his hands on the table. "Well, Mr. Dennings, Mrs. MacNeil..."
"Well..."
"Darn it," snapped Sharon with irritation as she ripped out a letter from the platen of the typewriter. She balled it up and tossed it at a wastepaper basket near Kinderman. "Oh, I'm sorry," she apologized as she saw that her outburst had interrupted them.
Chris and Kinderman were staring.
"You're Miss Fenster?" Kinderman asked her.
"Spencer," said Sharon, pulling back her chair in order to rise and retrieve the letter.
"Never mind, never mind," said Kinderman as he reached to the floor near his foot and picked up the crumpled page.
"Thanks," said Sharon.
"Nothing. Excuse me---you're the secretary?"
"Sharon, this is..."
"Kinderman," the detective reminded her. "William Kinderman."
"Right. This is Sharon Spencer."
"A pleasure," Kinderman told the blonde, who now folded her arms on the typewriter,, eyeing him curiously. "Perhaps you can help," he added. "On the night of Mr. Dennings' demise, you went out to a drugstore and left him alone in the house, correct?"
"Well, no; Regan was here."
"That's my daughter," Chris clarified.
Kinderman continued to question Sharon. "He came to see Mrs. MacNeil?"
"Yes, that's right"
"He expected her shortly?"
"Well, I told him I expected her back pretty soon."
"Very good. And you left at what time? You remember?"
"Let's see. I was watching the news, so I guess---oh, no, wait---yes, that's right. I remember being bothered because the pharmacist said the delivery boy had gone home. I remember I said, 'Oh, come on, now,' or something about its only being six-thirty. Then Burke came along just ten, maybe twenty minutes after that."
"So a median," concluded the detective, "would have put him here at six-forty-five."
"And so what's this all about?" asked Chris, the nebulous tension in her mounting.
"Well, it raises a question, Mrs. MacNeil," wheezed -Kinderman, turning his head to gaze at her. "To arrive in the house at say quarter to seven and leave only twenty minutes later..."
"Oh, well, that was Burke," said Chris "Just like him."
"Was it also like Mr. Dennings," asked Kinderman; "to frequent the bars on M. Street?"
"No."
"No, No, I thought not. I made a little check. And was it also not his custom to travel by taxi? He wouldn't call a cab from the house when he left?"
"Yes, he would."
"Then one wonders---not so?---how he came to be walking on the platform at the top of the steps. And one wonders why taxicab companies do not show a record of calls from this house on that night," added Kinderman, "except for the one that picked up your Miss Spencer here at precisely six-forty-seven."
"I don't know," answered Chris, her voice drained of color... and waiting...
"You knew all along!" gasped Sharon at Kinderman, perplexed.
"Yes, forgive me," the detective told her. "However, the matter has now grown serious."
Chris breathed shallowly, fixing the detective with a steady gaze. "In what way?" she asked. Her voice came thin from her throat.
He leaned over hands still clasped on the table, the page of typescript balled between them. "The report of the pathologist, Mrs. MacNeil, seems to show that the chance that he died accidentally is still very possible. However..."
"Are you saying he was murdered?" Chris tensed.
"The position---now I know this is painful---"
"Go ahead."
"The position of Dennings' head and a certain shearing of the muscles of the neck would---"
"Oh, God!" Chris winced.
"Yes, it's painful. I'm sorry; I'm terribly sorry. But you see, this condition---we can skip the details---but it never could happen, you see, unless Mr. Dennings had fallen some distance before he hit the steps; for example, some twenty or thirty feet before he went rolling down to the bottom. So a clear possibility, plainly speaking, is maybe... Well, first let me ask you..."
He'd turned now to a frowning Sharon. "When you left, he was where, Mr. Dennings? With the child?"
"No, down here in the study. He was fixing a drink."
"Might your daughter remember"---he turned to Chris---"if perhaps Mr. Dennings was in her room that night?"
Has she ever been alone with him?
"Why do you ask?"
"Might your daughter remember?"
"No, I told you before, she was heavily sedated and---"