The address Edna Taylor had given him took him to a winding street on the bayfront east of Brickwell Avenue, a section taken over, for the most part, by rambling estates of the very wealthy. Miss Taylor’s bungalow was a small house of weathered rock tucked in between forbidding walled-in estates on either side, charmingly rustic and appealing in its setting of green lawns and cocopalms.
The cottage was situated on the edge of the bay at the end of a hundred-foot strip of ground leading down from the street. Red and purple bougainvillea intermingled with bright orange flamevine, having outgrown the slender trellises, ran rampant over the south side and upward to partially cover the roof.
A concrete driveway led in along the side of the lawn and a polished coupe was parked under the porte cochere. The coupe carried a Washington, D.C. license plate.
Shayne parked behind the car and got out. The bay waters rippled with red and gold and deep purple, reflecting the colorful clouds obscuring the setting sun. A gentle wind from the east splashed the wider waves against a low concrete bulwark, making a musical sound. Palms and Australian pine moved whisperingly, gleaming already in the light of a full moon riding low in the eastern sky.
There was a peaceful feeling of isolation in the protection afforded by the walls sloping down on either side to the edge of the water. Shayne stood for a moment taking in the scene before circling the coupe and making his way to the door.
The exterior of the smaller dwelling was decorated to conform with the old mansions. The massive wooden door looked weatherbeaten, and the heavy wrought-iron knocker was worn.
Shayne knocked twice. The door opened almost immediately and Miss Taylor smiled up at him. She said, “Do come in, Mr. Shayne,” in a welcoming lilt.
He stepped into a low square room with heavy hand-decorated beams overhead. Two ship’s lanterns were suspended from the center beam, wired for electricity, but with dim globes which gave off the yellowish light of kerosene wicks. Bright hand-woven rugs were strategically placed on the polished oak floor, and the furniture was of a simple, massive design. A wide fireplace of native rock was laid with driftwood, and a silver cocktail shaker was gathering frost on the mantel.
Edna Taylor still wore the tailored gray suit she had worn that morning, but her hair was brushed out in soft honey-colored ringlets and she held out a firm hand to Shayne.
“I’m late,” he apologized. “Got tied up with some things at my office.”
“Only five minutes,” she said, glancing at her watch. “If you’d come earlier you’d have caught me with a dirty face.” Her hazel eyes deepened with concern when she spoke of the bruise on his cheek. “Have things been happening to you?”
“Things are always happening to me.” Shayne tossed his hat onto a stiff occasional chair and looked around the room with approval. “You certainly have an attractive place here.”
“It’s no credit to me,” she told him gaily. “It belongs to a friend who couldn’t get down this season. I’m acting in the capacity of caretaker.”
“Nice work.” Shayne gave her a cigarette and took one for himself. She came close to him and he touched a match flame to both.
She said, “Do sit down,” indicating a comfortable chair.
Dropping into a chair close by she shook her head to loosen her curls so that they softened the contour of her face. Stretching her well-formed legs out she said, “Oh… this is nice.”
Shayne grinned. “I like you here better than in an office.”
“Oh, damn the office. And call me Edna. I get so tired of being ‘Miss Taylor, head of our legal department,’” she said, mimicking Brannigan’s tone.
“It’s the price you pay for having brains. You overawe men.”
“I don’t overawe you, do I?” The yellowish light from the ship’s lanterns was soft upon her face as she turned her eyes anxiously toward him.
“Not here,” Shayne assured her.
She put out her half-smoked cigarette and stood up. “I’m glad it’s different here,” she said in a rich contralto. “Excuse me a moment.” She went out of the room with long-limbed graceful strides.
Shayne crushed his cigarette in a brass ashtray, let his head sink back against the cushioned chair, clasped his hands above it and felt relief from the pressure of the bandage.
She returned after a moment, took the shaker from the mantel and poured cocktails into round, hammered copper bowls. She said, “I had just time to shake up some sidecars before you came,” and handed one to him.
Shayne raised bushy brows and said, “Sidecars,” in a tone of pleased surprise.
“They’re your favorite, aren’t they?” She resumed her seat and lifted her bowl from the end table beside her chair.
“I know a lot of things about you, Michael Shayne.” She made three soft syllables of his first name.
“I’m flattered.” He took a sip of the drink.
“You’re not… really,” she charged gaily. “How is it?”
“As good as I ever made,” he declared.
“Meaning that’s the highest accolade?” she laughed.
“If that means what I think it does, you’re right. What else do you know about me?”
“You’re tough and ruthless and mercenary. You solve cases your own way and set your own fees and drive the police department crazy.” She chuckled deep in her throat and her eyes danced.
“Well, what do you know… and I’m just a child at heart,” he muttered.
“You intend that for sarcasm,” she told him quietly, “but it’s true. Your toughness is all on the surface.”
“Am I being psychoanalyzed?”
“It’s my legalistic mind. I spent most of the afternoon reading up on you in old newspaper files.”
“Now, I am flattered,” Shayne said musingly. He emptied his glass and set it on the table beside him.
“You needn’t be. You see, I want something from you and I merely studied the best approach.”
“Your sidecars are a good beginning.”
She got up and brought the shaker, leaned over to refill his bowl. He looked up into her eyes and surprised a faint flush on her cheeks. “I’m not going to deny that I thought they would be.” She set the shaker on the table beside him. The line of her throat was smooth and girlish and her breasts swelled the tailored coat in wholly satisfactory curves.
“Let’s not rush things,” Shayne said. “I’m afraid I’ll say no to your proposition and then you won’t pour any more cocktails and I’ll have to leave and I don’t want to. I haven’t been so relaxed for a long time.”
She went back to her chair, sat down and clasped both hands around one knee which was crossed over the other. “I don’t think you’re going to say no,” she said with deep-toned conviction, “for I’m going to advance a lot of good arguments.”
“You’re strangely direct for a lawyer,” he opinioned.
“That’s because I’ve been studying you. I believe subtleties would irritate you.”
He said, “Clever women frighten me.”
“No… they don’t. That’s just a pose, Michael. You can be as direct as I am.”
“I could if you wouldn’t sit so far away from me.”
She studied him intently for a moment. She sighed and said, “I thought we would be completely businesslike… impersonal.”
“You lie,” Shayne muttered. “You didn’t think that. You weren’t impersonal at the office this morning.”
Her breathing quickened. She did not look at him when she said, “You are a strange man.”
“I’m not,” he contradicted roughly. “We’re alone here. You arranged it that way. You wouldn’t have done that if you expected to keep our discussion impersonal.”
She blushed furiously and lowered her eyes to the copper bowl in her hands. “Now I’m afraid of you.”
“You’re afraid of yourself,” he said gruffly. “Right now you’ve got a tingle inside. You’re afraid of that.”
“Perhaps I am.”
Shayne painfully drew his taped torso erect from his comfortable position, drained his bowl for the second time. “What do you want from me?” he demanded.
She finished her drink before answering, looked levelly at him and said, “I want to talk to you about the Wilson case.”
“Go ahead.”
“How much do you actually know, Michael?”
His nostrils flared. “So you’re a stooge for Brannigan.”
“No. I’ll swear I’m not.”
“Just feminine curiosity?” His mouth curved ironically.
“It’s a lot more than that. I have to know if it’s something we can really use.”
“You’ll have to take my word for it.”
“Then he was murdered by ration racketeers?”
Shayne nodded and said curtly, “That much is free.”
Edna Taylor drew in a long breath. “It’s worth a million dollars, Michael, if we handle it right.”
“We?” He poured another drink from the shaker.
“To you… and to me.”
“What about Brannigan?”
She said swiftly, “Brannigan is out. We don’t need him.”
“So? How about his organization? He’s the president of the Motorist Protective Association.”
She made a derisive gesture. “He is a little man, Michael. He has no vision. He’s satisfied with things as they are… a paltry few thousand per year and the title of president.”
“And you?”
She got up and paced the length of the room, came back to get her bowl and poured a drink. After swallowing half of it at once, she spoke swiftly and with rising excitement:
“This thing is just beginning. In six months it can be the biggest thing in the country. Why stop with motorists? Everything else is being rationed. Why not a Consumer’s Protective League… with every citizen of the United States as a potential member? We spread out… establish key offices throughout the country. With the right sort of publicity the idea will spread like wildfire.” She paused with her head held at a dramatic angle, her eyes staring at the rafters. “Fifty million members isn’t impossible,” she ended, lowering her gaze to meet his.
“What,” asked Shayne, “do you plan to protect consumers from?”
An irritated frown flickered between her brows. “We render the same services we now render motorists. Advise them about ration problems, find legal loopholes and methods by which our membership is able to get a jump ahead of non-members.”
“Which would mean a complete breakdown in the rationing system,” Shayne stated flatly and without enthusiasm.
She drank the last of her drink and began pacing again. “No… not that at all. It’s really protection against their own ignorance. The government expects everyone to take full advantage of the law. It’s like the income tax. It isn’t unpatriotic to protect oneself by legal advice against paying excessive amounts.”
Shayne said, “All right. Granted that it’s legal, and even that it’s dubiously ethical, where do I come in?”
She stopped in front of him. “As a partner, of course. You and I together.”
“What have I got to offer? I’m a private detective.”
“You could continue running down ration frauds. That would be an important part of our service. People hesitate to report chiseling neighbors to the Government, but we would break down that prejudice so far as our organization is concerned. When you crack the Wilson case as a starter, we launch our new league on the wave of nationwide publicity that follows.”
Shayne smiled grimly. “You’re taking in a lot of territory. You’d find competitive organizations springing up everywhere, and they wouldn’t bother to be so legal. The light sentences and fines being imposed on out-and-out racketeers… and criminals of every sort… by the judges in this country encourage sabotage. The higher-ups can always produce a goat, so they have no fear of the law.”
Her shoulders drooped and she clasped her hands tightly together. She regarded him intently for a moment, then said, “We would have nothing to fear on the legal side. Don’t you think you could work with me?”
“And keep our relationship impersonal?” he asked roughly.
“Perhaps that wouldn’t be necessary,” she said quietly.
Shayne lit a cigarette and leaned back comfortably. He didn’t say anything.
She continued to stand before him. “You haven’t said no yet, have you?”
He did not look at her. His eyes were half-closed and there was a deep crease between his brows.
Suddenly she took a step backward, turned, and said, “I’m sorry I hadn’t time to change before you came. Do you mind?”
Shayne muttered, “Not at all.”
He had a hunch he ought to get the hell out before she came back, but he didn’t like to run away. He poured another drink and sipped it moodily. He should be at work. He tried to convince himself that he was at work. He knew he was getting drunk… pleasantly drunk.
He told himself he didn’t trust Edna Taylor. Not worth a damn. She had too many glib arguments. You couldn’t trust a glib woman. She was after something, he wasn’t quite sure yet what it was. She had made it sound simple enough, but he wasn’t sure it was so simple. He had never believed in the theory of income-tax experts. He had always taken his beating every March with the reassuring belief that it was the right thing to do. Maybe he was wrong.
He took another drink and ground out his cigarette. He heard Edna come into the room and turned to look at her.
She wore a pair of white satin pajamas and a hip length Mandarin coat of heavy brocaded satin. The coat had a high collar buttoned under her chin, and her feet were encased in white, furry slippers. She lowered her eyes and said, “I feel deliciously sinful.”
“You look like something good to eat,” he muttered.
She was highly rouged and her hair was combed into a mass of loose honey-curls. She asked, “Do you like this better than tweeds?”
“Much better.”
She poured a drink, complaining, “You’re not being a bit helpful.”
“What do you want me to do?”
“I don’t know,” she confessed. “I can’t quote any precedents.” She laughed shakily.
Shayne reminded her harshly, “You’re the one who’s making the propositions.”
“You’re a hard man, Michael Shayne,” she told him with a slight shudder. She emptied her bowl and walked over to set it on the mantel. It clattered to the hearth and the room rang with a gong-like sound. She giggled and said in a small voice, “I guess I’m drunk.”
Shayne remained stubbornly silent.
She came toward him, stopped close beside his chair and said, “I don’t know much about leading a man on. I thought… you might attack me.”
Shayne grinned up at her. “You’re the one who’s selling a bill of goods.”
“You’re being mean,” she accused, her eyes luminous. She lowered her hands to the arms of his chair and pressed her face against his. Her breath was hot on his cheek and she moved her face slowly until her mouth covered his. She tensed and her lips clung fiercely. His lips remained flaccid, and she drew herself upright with a choked laugh. “Aren’t you going to do anything?”
He said, “You’re doing all right.”
She backed away from him and collapsed on the divan, curling her legs under her. She said bitterly, “So you’ve made me feel like a prostitute.” She buried her face in her hands and began to cry.
Shayne watched her closely for a moment before saying, “Maybe you’re on the level. I’ll be damned if I know.”
“What do you mean?” she sobered.
Shayne made a grimace. “This whole set-up… it stinks. Why is my information on the Wilson case so important to you?”
She lifted her head and her wet hazel eyes smouldered with anger. “Get out!” she ordered between clenched teeth. “I hate you! Do you hear me… get out!”
Shayne winced with pain as he came up from the deep chair. He went over to sit on the couch beside her and laid a big hand on her shoulder. He said hoarsely, “Maybe I’m crazy,” and patted her. Abruptly he asked, “What do you know about Eddie Seeney?”
She stopped trembling and sat up to ask wonderingly, “Who?”
“Eddie Seeney. He works for your outfit, doesn’t he?”
She worked her lips together to moisten them. Her eyes were blank and bewildered. “I don’t know… what you mean.”
Shayne’s hand was still on her shoulder. She caught it and pulled it gently around her neck and snuggled against it.
“I guess we were both fools,” she murmured. “It simply wouldn’t work, would it? I’ve spent too much time pouring over law books to know how to be alluring. And you… you’ve lived on the edge of suspicion too long. You can’t let go, no matter how hard you try.” She pressed his hand down hard against her body and he felt the throbbing of her hot flesh beneath his palm.
Her other arm curved up around his neck. She pulled his face down to hers and widened her moist lips to receive his kiss. They stayed like that for a long time, then she sighed and her lips slid away from his. She twisted her body to press her face against his chest. “So, it’s like this,” she murmured. “I’ve been missing a lot, haven’t I?”
Shayne winced with pain as she pressed against him. He asked, “How old are you?”
“Thirty-two, Michael. Thirty-two empty years behind me. Don’t ever let me go. I’ve dreamt of this… through lonely nights.”
Shayne cautiously pressed her body with his left arm, and pain shot through the area of the broken ribs on his right side.
She looked up at him and whispered, “You haven’t said no, have you, Michael? You’re not going to say no.”
“You’re offering some good arguments,” he confessed. His face was bleak in the yellow light of the ship’s lanterns.
She sighed and closed her eyes. “I’m glad,” she said simply, and snuggled comfortably in his arms.
The silence was broken by a thumping on the front door. An insistent sound, made by the heavy iron knocker.
Edna stiffened and sat up. Her hazel eyes grew black with the dilated pupils filling the iris. “What… who is it?”
Shayne grimaced. “Maybe it’s Barnacle Bill.” The trenches in his cheeks deepened and his eyes were suddenly wary.
She said, “I don’t know… who it could be.”
“Don’t you?”
She winced and shrank from him at the rough savagery in his voice. “Michael! You don’t think I…”
“There’s one way to find out.” He started to get up.
She clung to him in panic. “Don’t… don’t answer it! Whoever it is will go away. Don’t go to the door, darling. Everything will be spoiled.”
He took her clutching hands from his arm, saying, “You can hide under the bed. I’m going to see who’s at that door.”
As he moved toward it his hand slid into his pocket and drew out the. 38. He cocked the weapon and held it with no effort at concealment as he opened the door.
A dark-featured young man stood on the threshold. His jaw gaped open when he saw the gun in Shayne’s hand and he swayed backward, throwing one hand out to grasp the door frame for support. The reek of liquor came from him and he appeared to be very drunk.
Shayne heard a choked cry from Edna Taylor. He half-turned and saw her rushing toward him.
Shayne said to the man, “Well, what do you want? Who are you?”
The man leered vacantly and said, “I’m comin’ in.” His voice was thick, but he straightened himself and started forward.
Shayne lowered his gun and took a step back.
Edna cried, “No!” She snatched the pistol from Shayne’s lax grasp. Before he could stop her she swung it up and fired pointblank at the intruder.
He collapsed on the threshold and lay still.
Shayne threw Edna back angrily, closing his big hand over hers and wresting the weapon from her. “You fool!” he grated. “Why did you do that?”
She swayed back against a chair and covered her face. “He was coming in, Michael. He was coming right at you.”
Shayne knelt beside the man and turned him over. He tore his coat and shirt open, nodded somberly at the sight of blood oozing from a small hole in his chest. “You shot him right through the heart. You’ve played hell now.”
“Who is it?” she whimpered. “Do you know him? I didn’t know what I was doing, Michael. Everything went blank when I saw him coming in. Is he… dead?”
“Plenty.” Shayne stood up, frowning down at the lifeless body. “I think his name is Eddie Seeney. You wouldn’t know about that, I suppose?”
“Why should I? I don’t understand.”
Shayne said, “Neither do I… yet.” He turned away from the open door. “Where’s your telephone?”
“Why? What are you going to do?” She straightened up and stared at him.
“Call the police. Where’s your phone?”
“Please… wait,” she cried. “Do you have to?”
“It’s customary when there’s been a murder.”
“Murder?” She sank into the chair which she had backed against, her face going white. “It isn’t murder. He was forcing his way into my house. I fired in self-defense. You know I did.”
Shayne growled. “Maybe. We’ll find out. Maybe you arranged to have him come here.”
She sobbed, “Michael… you’re so strange… and cold. Can’t you get him away from here? Don’t you see what will happen if you call the police? Everything will be ruined. Don’t you love me… a little bit?”
“Love you?” He laughed shortly. “Just because you made me want you a little while ago?”
“Oh God! And I thought…”
“Where’s your telephone?”
She came to him again and pressed her body wantonly against him, crying, “I can make you want me again. You’ll hate yourself if you call the police. It’ll turn this into something ugly…”
“… And make very bad publicity,” Shayne interrupted with harsh irony. He put her away from him, saying, “I’m going to call the police. You can do as you please, but if you’re smart you’ll get into some clothes fast.” He turned away, searching the room for the telephone.
There was no instrument visible. He went into a bedroom and turned on the light. A French phone stood on a table beside the bed.
He dialed Will Gentry’s number. Edna came back into the room as he waited for an answer. He kept his back toward her, and when Gentry answered, said:
“Mike Shayne talking. I want to report a homicide.”