Jack looked at me. “What do you think, Brian? You know this guy Cole and you know what this is all about. Would Miss Roth be in any danger if she left?”
“You could figure that yourself, Jack,” I said. “Cole was here, alone in the house with her after he killed Dr. Roth, and he had all the time in the world because there hadn’t been an alarm yet. But let me go with her, though, just to be sure.”
He snorted. “Just to be sure—of what? He is after you, my fine friend. Until we get Cole under lock and key—and throw away the key—you’re not getting out from under my eye.”
“All right,” I said, “so I’m indispensable. But everybody isn’t, and this place will be full of police in a few minutes. If I’m not mistaken, that sounds like another squad car coming now. Why not have one of the boys in it use it to drive Miss Roth over to her aunt’s?”
He nodded. “Okay, Miss Roth. I’ll stick my neck out—even though Headquarters may cut it off. And Wheeler and Brach have finished looking around upstairs, so it’ll be okay for you to go to your room if you want to change that housecoat for a dress.”
He went to the front door to let the new arrivals in.
“I’m awfully sorry, Jeanette,” I said then. “I know that sounds meaningless, but— it’s all I can think of to say.”
She managed a faint smile. “You’re a good egg, Brian. I’ll be seeing you.”
She held out her hand, and I took it. Then she ran up the stairs. Jack looked in at the doorway.
“I told the new arrivals to search the grounds,” he said. “Not that they’ll find anything, but it’ll give ‘em something to do. I got to phone Headquarters. You stay right here.”
“Just a second, Jack,” I said. “How was he killed?”
“A knife. Messy job. It was a psycho, all right.”
“You say messy? Is there any chance Jeanette might go into— ?”
He shook his head. “Wheeler’s watching that door. He wouldn’t let her go in. Well, I got to phone—”
“Listen, Jack. Tell me one thing. How long, about, has he been dead? I mean, is there any chance Cole could have come here after he shot at me? I might have thought of phoning here, or getting here a minute or two sooner. I’d feel responsible if my slowness in reacting, my dumbness—”
Jack was shaking his head. “I’m no M.E.,” he said, “but Roth had been dead more than a few minutes when I found him. I’d say at least half an hour, maybe an hour.”
He went to the phone and gave the Headquarters number. I heard his voice droning on, giving them the details of the murder and the attempted murder.
I sat there listening, with my eyes closed, taking in every word of it, but carefully keeping the elation off my face. It had gone perfectly. Everything had worked out. Whether or not they caught Alister Cole—and they would catch him— nothing could go wrong now. It had come off perfectly.
I would never be suspected, and I stood to gain a million dollars—and Jeanette…
She came down the stairs slowly, as one approaching a reluctant errand. I waited for her at the foot of the staircase, my eyes on her beautiful face. There was shock there, but—as I had expected and was glad to see—not too much grief. Roth had been a cold, austere man. Not a man to be grieved for deeply, or long. She stopped on the second step, her eyes level with mine and only inches away. I wanted to kiss her, but this was not the time. A little while and I would, I thought.
But I could look now, and I could dream. I could imagine my hand stroking that soft blonde hair. I could imagine those soft, misty blue eyes closed and my lips kissing the lids of them, kissing that soft white throat, her yielding lips. Then—
My hand was on the newel post and she put hers over it. It almost seemed to burn.
“I wish I could go with you, darling,” I said. “I wish there was something I could do to help you.”
“I wish you could come with me too, Brian. But—your friend’s right. And didn’t you take an awful chance coming over here anyway—out in the open, with a madman out to kill you?”
“Jack was with me,” I said.
Jack was calling to me from the library. “Coming,” I said, and then I told Jeanette, “It’s cool out, darling. Put a coat on over that thin dress.”
She nodded absently. “I wish you could come with me, Brian. Mother likes you—”
I knew what she meant, what she was thinking. That things were going to be all right between us now. Her mother did like me. It was her stuffy, snobbish father who had stood in the way. Jack called again impatiently.
“Take care of yourself, Brian,” Jeanette whispered quickly. “Don’t take any chances, please.”
She pressed my hand, then ran past me toward the coat closet. I saw that one of the detectives was waiting for her at the door. I went into the library. Jack was still sitting at the telephone table, jotting things into a notebook. He looked very intent and businesslike.
“Captain Murdock—he’s head of Homicide—is on his way here,” Jack said. “He’ll be in charge of the case. That’s why I wanted you to let the girl get out of here first. He might insist on her staying.”
“What about you?” I asked him. “Aren’t you staying on the case?”
He grinned a little. “I’ve got my orders. They’re to keep you alive until Cole is caught. The Chief told me if anything happens to you, he’ll take my badge away and shove it up my ear. From now on, pal, we’re Siamese twins.”
“Then how about finishing that chess game?” I said. “I think I can set up the men again.”
He shook his head. “Life isn’t that simple. Not for a while yet, anyway. We’ll have to stick here until Cap Murdock gets here, and then I’m to take you into the Chiefs office. Yeah, the Chiefs going down there at this time of night.”
It was after one when Jack took me into Chief Randall’s office. Randall, a big, slow-moving man, yawned and shook hands with me across his desk.
“Sit down, Carter,” he said, and yawned again.
I took the seat across from him. Jack Sebastian sat down in a chair at the end of the desk and started doodling with the little gold knife he wears on the end of a chain.
“This Roth is a big man,” Chief Randall said. “The papers are going to give us plenty if we don’t settle this quick.”
“Right now, Chief,” Jack said, “Alister Cole is a bigger man. He’s a homicidal maniac on the loose.”
The Chief frowned. “We’ll get him,” he said. “We’ve got to. We’ve got him on the air. We’ve got his description to every railroad station and airport and bus depot. We’re getting out fliers with his picture—as soon as we get one. The state patrolmen are watching for him. We’ll have him in hours. We’re doing everything.”
“That’s good,” I told him. “But I don’t think you’ll find him on his way out of town. I think he’ll stay here until he gets me—or until you get him.”
“He’ll know that you’re under protection, Brian,” Jack said. “Mightn’t that make a difference? Wouldn’t he figure the smartest thing to do would be to blow town and hide out for a few months, then come back for another try?”
I thought it over. “He might,” I said, doubtfully. “But I don’t think so. You see, he isn’t thinking normally. He’s under paranoiac compulsion, and the risks he takes aren’t going to weight the balance too strongly on the safety side. He was out to kill Dr. Roth and then me. Now I’m no expert in abnormal psychology, but I think that if he’d missed on his first killing he might do as you suggested—go away and come back later when things had blown over. But he made his first kill. He stepped over the line. He’s going to be under terrifically strong compulsion to finish the job right away—at any risk!”