“And he stayed all night?”
“I couldn’t say. We don’t keep watch on the guests.” He yawned, so wide I could count his cavities.
“What’s your name?” I said.
“Nelson Karp.”
“My name is Archer, Nelson. Lew Archer. I’m a private detective, and I have to ask you to return the five dollars I gave you. I’m sorry. You’re probably going to be a witness in a murder trial, and you’ll want to be able to tell the court that nobody paid you money.”
He took the bill out of his pocket and dropped it on the counter. “I might of known there was a catch to it.”
“I said I was sorry.”
“You and who else is sorry?”
“Anyway, the State pays witnesses.”
I didn’t say how little, and Nelson Karp cheered up.
“When Campion left here tonight, which way did he go?”
“ ‘Crost San Mateo Bridge. I heard them say that.”
“By ‘them’ you mean the cops?”
“Yeah. They did a lot of telephoning from here.” He gestured toward the pay phone on the wall.
I stepped outside and looked across the flats, where piles of salt rose like ephemeral pyramids. The lights of the Peninsula winked blearily in the haze across the Bay. As the crow flies, or the hawk, I wasn’t more than ten miles from Menlo Park.
I went back into the office and got some change from Karp and placed a toll call under the name John Smith to Campion’s sister Mrs. Jurgensen. Her phone rang thirteen times, and then a man’s voice answered.
“Hello.”
“I have a person-to-person call for Mrs. Thor Jurgensen,” the operator intoned.
“Mrs. Jurgensen isn’t here. Can I take a message?”
“Do you wish to leave a message, sir?” the operator said to me.
I didn’t. Campion knew my voice, as I knew his.
Shortly after one o’clock I parked in the three-hundred block of Schoolhouse Road in Menlo Park. I crossed into the next block on foot, examining the mailboxes for the Jurgensens’ number. It was a broad and quiet street of large ranch-type houses shadowed by oaks that far predated them. Bayshore was a murmur in the distance.
At this hour most of the houses were dark, but there was light in a back window of 401. I circled the house. My footsteps were muffled in the dew-wet grass. Crouching behind a plumbago bush, I peered through a matchstick bamboo blind into the lighted room.
It was a big country-style kitchen divided by a breakfast bar into cooking and living areas. A used-brick fireplace took up most of one wall. Campion was sleeping peacefully on a couch in front of the fireplace. A road map unfolded on his chest rose and fell with his breathing.
He had on the remains of his grey suit. There were dark stains on it, oil or mud or blood. His face was scratched, and charred with beard. His right arm dragged on the floor and he had a gun there at his fingertips, a medium-caliber nickel-plated revolver.
No doubt I should have called the police. But I wanted to take him myself.
A detached garage big enough for three cars stood at the rear of the property. I approached it through a flower garden and let myself in through the unlocked side door. One of the two cars inside had the outlines of a Chevrolet convertible.
It was Dr. Damis’s car. I read his name on the steering post in the light of my pencil flash. The keys were in the ignition. I took them out and pocketed them.
I looked around for a weapon. There was a work bench at the rear of the garage, and attached to the wall above it was a pegboard hung with tools. I had a choice of several hammers. I took down a light ball-peen hammer and hefted it. It would do.
I went back to the Chevrolet and stuck a matchbook between the horn and the steering wheel. It began to blow like Gabriel’s horn. I moved to the open side door and flattened myself against the wall beside it, watching the back of the house. My ears were hurting. The enclosed space was filled with yelling decibels which threatened to crowd me out.
Campion came out of the house. He ran through the garden, floundering among camellias. The nickel-plated revolver gleamed in his hand. Before he reached the garage he stopped and looked all around him, as though he suspected a trick. But the pull of the horn was too strong for him. He had to silence it.
I ducked out of sight and saw his shadowy figure enter the doorway. I struck him on the back of the head with the hammer, not too hard and not too easily. He fell on his gun. I got it out from under him and dropped it in my jacket pocket. Then I unjammed the horn.
A man was swearing loudly in the next yard. I stepped outside and said: “Good evening.”
He turned a flashlight on me. “What goes on? You’re not Thor Jurgensen.”
“No. Where are the Jurgensens?”
“They’re spending the night in the City. I was wondering who was using their house.”
He came up to the fence, a heavy-bodied man in silk pajamas, and looked me over closely. I smiled into the glare. I was feeling pretty good.
“A wanted man was using it. I’m a detective, and I just knocked him out.”
“Evelyn’s brother?”
“I guess so.”
“Does Evelyn know he was here?”
“I doubt it.”
“Poor Evelyn.” His voice held that special blend of grief and glee which we reserve for other people’s disasters. “Poor old Thor. I suppose this will be in the papers–”
I cut him short: “Call the Sheriff’s office in Redwood City, will you? Tell them to send a car out.”
He moved away, walking springily in his bare feet.
19
ROYAL AND I waited outside the hospital room while Campion returned to consciousness. It took him the better part of an hour. I had time to fill the Captain in on my activities, and Campion’s.
Royal was unimpressed by my findings in Saline City. “He’s trying to fake an alibi for his wife’s murder.”
“Or establish one. I think you should talk to the key boy Nelson Karp, and see if that registration card is genuine. It’s in the hands of the Saline City police.”
Royal said without much interest: “Alibis like that one come a dime a dozen and you know it. He could have checked in at this motel and even spent part of the night, then driven back to Luna Bay and done her in. It’s only about thirty miles between the two places.”
“Which makes it all the easier to check.”
“Look,” he said, “I’ve got other things on my mind. Take it up with Deputy Mungan if you like. He’s in charge of the substation at Luna Bay, and he’s been handling the evidential details.”
I didn’t pursue the argument. Royal was a good cop but like other good cops he had an inflexible mind, once it was made up. We sat in uneasy silence for a few minutes. Then a young resident wearing a white coat and a high-minded expression came out of Campion’s room and announced that, in view of the importance of the case, his patient could be questioned.
Royal and I went in past the uniformed guard. It was an ordinary small hospital room, with the addition of heavy steel screening on the window. Campion’s bed was slightly raised at the head. He lay still and watched us. His heavy eyes recognized each of us in turn, but he didn’t speak. His head was bandaged, and the flesh around his eyes was turning purple. Scratches stood out on his pale cheeks.
I said: “Hello, Campion.”
Royal said: “Long time no see, Bruce.”
Campion said nothing. The turbanlike bandage on his head, the grimace of pain on his mouth, made him look a little like an Indian fakir lying on a bed of spikes.
Royal’s shadow fell across him. “What did you do with Harriet Blackwell, Bruce?”
“I didn’t do anything with her.”
“She was last seen in your company.”