Tell It To The Birds (PDFDrive)

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Tell It To The Birds

James Hadley Chase


Part One
Chapter 1
At the far end of the narrow road, scarcely wide enough to take two cars and
bordered by high prickly hedges, Anson finally found the house he had been
looking for for the past hour. The house hid behind a barrier of overgrown
shrubs that stood either side of shabby double gates. It wasn't until Anson got out
of his car and approached the gates that he had his first glimpse of the house. He
didn't immediately look at it because his attention became riveted on the garden.

Although quite small with a twenty foot square lawn as immaculate as the
surface of a billiard table, the garden presented a horticultural picture seldom
seen outside professional floral exhibitions.

Everything, including a miniature fountain, a tiny waterfall, massed bedding


plants, blazing with colour, standard roses in perfect bloom, flowering shrubs
and even a dove cot was there.

For several moments, Anson stood at the gate staring at the garden, then he
looked beyond the garden to the house.

By comparison, the house was as surprising as the garden. It was a two storey
brick and wooden structure with a red tiled roof. At one time, the wooden face of
the house had been painted a dark green, but the rain, the wind and the sun over
the years had played havoc with the paint work, and the house now presented a
shabby, neglected and uncared-for appearance. The windows were streaked with
dust and dirt. The brass door knocker was black with grime. To the left of the
house was a two car garage with a broken window and many of its roof tiles
missing.

Anson looked at the garden, then at the house, then at the garden again. He
stepped back and read the name painted in crude white letters on the gate: "Mon
Repos".

He zipped open the well worn leather document case he was carrying and took
from it a letter he had received that morning. He read it again:

Mon Repos.

Nr. Pru Town National Fidelity Insurance Corporation Brent Dear Sir,
Nr. Pru Town National Fidelity Insurance Corporation Brent Dear Sir,

I would be glad if your representative would call between two and four o'clock
any afternoon this week.

I have a few pieces of jewellery worth about $1,000 which my husband thinks I
should insure against theft or loss.

Yours, etc.

Meg Barlowe.

Anson pushed open the gates, drove the car onto the tarmac drive, then walked
up the drive to the house.

Heavy,rain clouds hovered threateningly overhead. The sun, obscured by the


clouds, made a faint, brave light over the spectacular garden. In an hour or so,
Anson thought, as he reached for the dirt grimed knocker, it would be pouring
with rain. He lifted the knocker and rapped twice.

There was a pause, then he heard quick footfalls; the door opened.

Anson remembered to the moment of his death his first meeting with Meg
Barlowe.

At the age of fourteen, Anson had his first sexual experience. His parents had
gone on a short trip, leaving him in charge of the hired help: a woman some
twenty years older than Anson:plain, fat and a Quaker. His parents had been
gone less than four hours when the woman had come into Anson's bedroom
where he tad been lolling on the bed, reading a lurid paperback. Half an hour
later, Anson had moved from his youth to corrupt manhood, and from then on,
the sexual hunt was ever present in his alert, active mind. This first experience
left him with a conviction that didn't last long, that all women were easy. Later,
when he discovered his error, he preferred to consort with prostitutes rather than
be bothered to persuade and woo. He was fastidious in his choice, and the
women he went with cost him a considerable amount of his weekly earnings.

Beside this constant sexual urge, Anson had yet another weakness: a persistent
and incurable urge to gamble. He had little luck. The combination of paying for
his sexual pleasures and losing to his bookmaker had him continually struggling
to keep solvent. His shrewdness, personality and drive had gained him a Field
to keep solvent. His shrewdness, personality and drive had gained him a Field
Agency of the National Fidelity Insurance Corporation that covered three small
prosperous towns: Brent, Lambsville and Pru Town. This district offered a rich
field for an energetic insurance salesman. It was a farming district, and most
farmers owned two or three cars, were interested in life insurance and anxious to
insure their crops and property. But what Anson earned, he threw away until he
was now facing a financial crisis that alarmed even his irresponsible conscience.

Before leaving Brent for his weekly visit to Pru Town and Lambsville, he had
received a telephone call from Joe Duncan, his bookmaker.

In his wheezy asthmatic voice, Duncan had said, "Listen, Anson, you know what
you owe me?"

Anson had said, "Sure, Joe. Relax. You'll get paid." "You owe me close on a
thousand bucks," Duncan said. "You settle on Saturday. If you don't, Sailor will
be around to talk to you."

Sailor Hogan was Joe Duncan's debt collector. At one time he had been the light
heavy weight champion of California.

His viciousness was legend. If he failed to collect a debt, he left a permanent


mark on the welsher.

But Anson wasn't worried about a mere thousand dollars. If the worst came to
the worst, he could scrape that amount up by borrowing from his friends, selling
his TV. set and even hocking his car, but the pressure was now on, and as he
hung up, he remembered he owed Sam Bernstein, the local money lender, eight
thousand dollars and he had to the end of the year to settle or else... When he had
signed I.O.U. back in June, next June seemed a long way off. He had plunged
the whole of the borrowed money on a rank outsider at 100 to 1 from a tip
straight from the stable boy and the horse had turned out to be exactly what it
was: a rank outsider.

This day was Tuesday. Anson had five more days ahead of him in which to find
a thousand dollars to keep Duncan quiet. This wasn't an impossible task, but he
flinched from the thought of how to raise eight thousand dollars for Bernstein.
But here, at least he had time.

Because he was now getting anxious, Anson was a little too persistent, a little
too pressing, and when a salesman gets into that state of mind, he doesn't and
never will sell insurance.
never will sell insurance.

This week had begun badly, but he was a salesman enough and optimistic
enough to assure himself it should finish well.

As he lifted the knocker on the shabby, paint peeled door of this shabby house
standing in this extraordinary garden, he had a presentiment that his luck was
about to change.

Anson looked at Meg Barlowe as she stood in the doorway, regarding him with
her large, searching cobalt blue eyes.

At the sight of this woman whom he judged to be a year or so younger than


himself, Anson experienced a rush of blood through his body that inevitably
happened when he met any woman who awoke his sexual feelings.

She was tall: an inch or so taller than himself, and built with the strength and
durability of a wooden wedge. She had broad shoulders, a provocative bust, a
small waist, neat hips and long legs. She wore a close fitting orange sweater and
black tight fitting slacks. Her auburn coloured hair was caught back with a strip
of green ribbon. All this he took in at a glance. She wasn't beautiful. Her mouth
was a little too large, and her nose too solid for perfect beauty, but she was the
most sensational and sensual looking woman Anson had ever seen.

For a long moment they stared at each other, then her red lips parted as she
smiled, showing white, even teeth.

"Good afternoon," she said.

Automatically, but with a conscious effort, Anson moved into his sales
approach. His expression, schooled by years of experience, was bright, friendly
and alert.

"Mrs. Barlowe? I am John Anson. National Fidelity Insurance Corporation. I


have a letter from you ..."

"Of course ... do come in."

Still aware that his heart was thumping, Anson followed her through a dark little
hall into the living-room.
It was a big room, comfortably furnished. There was a bright log fire burning in
the oversized fireplace. Before the fireplace stood a vast settee: large enough to
seat four people comfortably. There was an oval shaped table in the bay window.
On the table was a portable typewriter and a mass of papers, carbons, and a
Webster's Dictionary.

As Anson moved into the room, he became aware of dust and dirt everywhere.
The room had the same uncared for appearance as the exterior of the house.

The woman walked over to the fireplace and now stood, her back to the fire, her
hands on her hips, looking at him.

Disconcerted by the quizzing expression in her eyes, Anson walked over to the
window.

"What a garden you have!" he said. "You must be very proud of it!"

"My husband is." She laughed. "He thinks of nothing else."

Anson turned. His eyes moved over her body.

"Is it his profession?"

"Not exactly. He wants it to be. Right now, he's with Fram-ley's Store in Pru
Town. He is in charge of their horticultural department." She waved to the settee.
"But do sit down, Mr. Anson."

He came around the settee and sat down at the far end, disturbed by being so
close to her. She knelt on the seat away from him.

An air crash out at sea. They have to wait six months before it does happen.
Immediately the news is flashed to the terminal, the boy friend puts the woman's
name on the passenger list. He also takes care of the ticket receipt and so on.

The woman has moved out of the district where she used to live and is keeping
out of sight. He telephones her, warning her of the crash. Then later, her sister
puts in a claim for the money showing proof supplied by the boy friend that the
woman, her sister, was on the plane." She paused, took a sip of her drink, then
looked at him. "Of course the details have to be worked out, but that's the
general idea ... do you think she would get away with it?" During the twelve
years he had been an insurance agent, Anson had become familiar with the tricks
years he had been an insurance agent, Anson had become familiar with the tricks
and dodges dreamed up by people ambitious to swindle insurance companies.
Every week, he received a printed bulletin from Head Office setting out in detail
the various swindles attempted. This bulletin came from the Claims Department
run by Maddox who was considered to be the best Claims man in the business.

For the past three months, when money had become so desperately short, Anson
had thought of ways and means by which he himself might swindle his
company. But for all his shrewdness and experience, he realized he could never
succeed unless he had someone on whom he could rely to help him. Even then,
there was always Maddox who was said to have a supernatural instinct that told
him a claim was a phoney the moment it was laid on his desk.

"It's a nice idea," Anson said. "It might even be believable as fiction, but it
would never work in real life." She looked enquiringly at him. "But why not?"

"The sum involved is too large. Any claim over fifteen thousand dollars is
examined very closely. Suppose this woman insured with my company. The
policy would go immediately to the Claims department. The head of this
department is a man who has been in the racket for twenty years. During this
time, he has had something like five to eight thousand phoney claims to deal
with. He has so much experience he can smell a bad claim the way you can
smell a dead rat. So what does he do when he gets this policy? He asks himself
why a woman should be insuring her life for such a big sum. Who will benefit?
Her sister? Why? Is there a boy friend around? He has twenty experienced
investigators who work for him. He'll turn two of them onto this woman. In a
few days he will know as much about her as she knows about herself. His men
will have unearthed the boy friend at the air terminal.

Once they have dug him up, then God help them both if she is supposed to have
died in the air crash. No, it wouldn't work in real life. Make no mistake about
that ... not with Maddox around." Meg made a face, then shrugged.

"Oh well! I thought I was onto a good gimmick. I'm disappointed." She drank
some of the whisky, then reaching forward, she picked up the poker and stirred
the fire into a blaze. "Then it is very difficult to swindle an insurance company?"
she asked without looking at him.

Again, Anson felt an intense prickle of excitement run through him.

"Yes ... unless ..."


"Yes ... unless ..."

She was staring into the fire, a little flushed by the heat, her eyes reflecting the
red of the flames. "Unless ... ?"

"It could be done, but it needs two people to do it. One couldn't do it."

She twisted around to look at him.

"That makes me think that you have thought about it," she said. "If you do get an
idea would you share it with me? I'd write the story and we could go fifty-fifty if
I sold it."

He finished his drink, set down the glass and reluctantly got to his feet.

"If I think of anything, I'll call you." She stood up. They faced each other; again
Anson's eyes moved over her body.

"If you do think of something, you could come out hers, couldn't you? It's not far
from Brent, is it? We could talk over the whole thing and I could get the idea
down on paper."

He hesitated, then said what was in his mind: "I guess your husband won't want
me around after a day's work." She nodded.

"You're right. Phil isn't sociable and he hasn't much patience with my writing,
but on Monday and Thursday nights he is always at Lambsville. He takes night
school there and he stays the night with a friend of his."

Anson's hands suddenly turned damp. "Does he? Well..."

"So if you get an idea, you'll always find me alone here on those two nights.
Don't forget, will you?"

She moved to the door and opened it. Picking up his document case, Anson
followed her to the front door. As she opened the doer, he said, "By the way,
does your husband carry any life insurance?" "No. He doesn't believe in
insurance."

They looked at each other and Anson quickly shifted his gaze.
She went on: "I'm afraid there is no hope for you in, that direction. Other
salesmen have tried to sell him insurance. He just doesn't believe in it."

Anson stepped out into the rain.

"Thanks for the drink, Mrs. Barlowe. If I get an idea for you, I'll call you."

"Thanks. I'm sorry about the jewellery." She gave him a quick smile as she
closed the door.

Scarcely feeling the rain on his face, Anson walked down the drive towards his
car.

From behind the curtains Meg watched the car drive through the gateway and
onto the lane. She watched Anson get out of the car and shut the gate then return
to the car. She remained motionless until the sound of the car engine had died
away, then she turned swiftly, crossed to the telephone and dialled a number.

There was a short delay, then a man's voice came over the line.

"Yeah? Who is this?"

"Meg. The fish bites."

There was a pause, then the man said, "Hook him first before you crow," and the
connection was cut.
Chapter 2
Anson's weekly routine included two days in Pru Town. He stayed the night in
the Marlborough hotel. At one time he had wasted much time in chasing the
local prostitutes, but now, from experience and impatience, he had fixed a date
with Fay Lawley, an easy going blonde who worked at a cigar store on Main
Street. For sixty bucks and a dinner, she was willing to go with him to his hotel
where the desk clerk who knew Anson well, looked the other way as he look her
up to his room.

When Anson arrived at the hotel after his first meeting with Meg Barlowe he had
every intention of following his usual routine, but while he was shaving he
began to compare Fay with Meg and it occurred to him with surprising force
what a cheap hustler Fay was. Disconnecting the razor, he sat on the edge of his.
bed and lit a cigarette. He told himself he had never met another woman to touch
Meg, and she had actually invited him to visit her when her husband was away
for the night! Surely that could only mean one thing!

The thought of having an affair with her made him breathless. Again he
considered Fay's flashy cheapness, her high pitched giggles and her vulgarity.
Acting on the spur of the moment, he reached for the telephone, but there was no
answer to Fay's number. Irritated, he hung up and went back into the bathroom
to complete his shave.

It was while he was slapping after-shave lotion on his face that he heard
movements in his bedroom. Frowning, he went to the bathroom door and found
Fay looking through his wallet.

At the sight of him, she dropped the wallet hurriedly back on the chest of
drawers.

"Hello sweetie," she said. "I thought I'd surprise you."

Anson looked her over, his face expressionless. A week ago, he had thought Fay
Lawley an exciting woman. Now, comparing her with Meg, he saw her
shortcomings. She was shabby,

I overdressed, dyed and sordid. "You did surprise me," he said, coming into the
bedroom. "Or did I surprise you?"
bedroom. "Or did I surprise you?"

Fay giggled and put her hand to her mouth. It was this movement that Anson
was so used to that now drew his attention to her tobacco stained, chipped teeth.

"John, darling," she said, sinking down on the bed, "I have a favour to ask you."

He remained motionless, looking at her.

"I'm in trouble," she went on after a long and awkward pause. "I've got to have a
hundred bucks by tomorrow or I'll lose my room. I'm behind in the rent."

A hundred bucks! Anson thought bitterly. She thought that was being in trouble!
What would the silly mare do if she owed eight thousand bucks!

"What do you expect me to do about it?" he said, staring at her. "There's more
than a hundred bucks walking Main Street. Go out there and earn it."

She looked sharply at him, her green-blue eyes hardening.

"That's a nice thing to say, Sweetie!" she said. "1 didn't expect that from you. I'm
your girl friend ... remember?"

He had a sudden urgent desire to be rid of her. If he had had the courage, he
would have shoved her cut into the corridor and locked the bedroom door, but he
was scared she might make a scene. Looking at her, he was horrified with
himself for ever having associated with her. Meg now made all his women
shabby and sordid.

He went over to his wallet and look out six ten dollar bills.

"Fay... I'm sorry. I'm not well. It's something I've eaten," he said. "Here take this
... it's the best I can do. Let's skip tonight. I want to go to bed."

She stared at the bills in his hand, then she looked at him, her eyes quizzing.

"Can't you run to a hundred?" she asked. "I tell you I'm in trouble."

He dropped the bills into her lap.

"Trouble? That's a joke. I'm in trouble too. Be a good girl... run along. I'm not
well."
well."

She put the bills into her shabby handbag and stood up.

"Okay, Sweetie, see you next week."

He went with her to the door. She paused and looked intently at him.

"Want to change your mind?" She put her hand on him, but he moved quickly
back. "Well, okay, if you're as ill as all that... See you," and she went out into the
corridor.

The rest of the evening Anson spent lying on his bed, his thoughts of Meg
Barlowe burning holes in his mind The following day when he wasn't actually
working, he thought about her. His mind still tonnented by her, he left Fru Town
for Lambsville where he had a few calls lo make. He got through his calls by
half past five He had to pass through Pru Town again to reach the Brent
highway, and he had to pass the dirt road that led to the lonely, intriguing
Barlowe house.

As he drove along the highway, he tried to decide whether he dare call on Meg
so soon. She had said she would be alone this night: that her husband would be
staying in Pru Town. But suppose she really meant that stuff about a plot for a
short story? He would look a dope arriving at the house with no ideas for her if
he had misunderstood the setup and she hadn't after all been extending an
invitation to him to share her bed.

He reached the dirt road and pulled up, drawing off the highway onto the grass
verge. He sat for some moments, trying to make up his mind what to do.

I'd better not, he thought to himself. It's too risky. I could spoil my chance. It
shouldn't be too hard to think up a plot for her and I'll then have a legitimate
excuse for calling on her. She'll be on her own again next Monday. Between now
and Monday, I should be able to dream up something: it doesn't matter how
corny it is, but I can't barge in there without something to tell her. Reluctantly he
started the car engine and drove on to Brent.

"Have you something on your mind, Mr. Anson?" Anna Garvin asked curiously.

Anson started, frowned and looked across the office to where Anna sat behind a
typewriter. She had been working for him now for the past two years. She was
typewriter. She had been working for him now for the past two years. She was
young, fat, cheerful and capable. Apart from wearing heavy hornrimmed glasses
which Anson disliked on women, she also had a talent for wearing all the wrong
clothes which made her look more homely and fatter than necessary.

She had interrupted an idea he had been developing: an idea for a story which
had to do with an insurance swindle.

"I've spoken to you twice," Anna went on. "You just sit there as if you were
hatching a plot to murder someone."

Anson stiffened.

"Look, Anna, I'm busy. Keep quiet, can't you?"

She grimaced, screwing up her good-natured, fat face, then she went on with her
typing.

Anson got to his feet and crossed to the window to stare down at the steady
stream of traffic passing along Main Street.

This was Saturday morning. After lunch he had arranged to play a round of golf
with a friend of his, but he now found himself in no mood for golf. He had Meg
on his mind so badly he couldn't concentrate on his work. A dozen or so letters
lay on his desk, waiting his attention, but he couldn't bring himself to bother with
them.... as if you were hatching a plot to murder someone.

And that was exactly what he had been doing: planning a murder for gain, but,
of course, only for this story he was working out for Meg Barlowe. Just suppose
he had really been planning a murder. Was he so transparent that someone as
simple as Anna could read his thoughts?

He forced himself to his desk.

"Let's go," he said and when Anna picked up her notebook, Anson began to
dictate.

Anson had a one room apartment on the fourth floor of the Albany Arms, a
block of apartments near the Brent railroad station. He had lived in this rabbit
warren of a place since he had become the Field Agent for the Insurance
Corporation.
Each apartment was provided with a garage which was situated in the basement
of the building and approached by a long drive-in from the road.

Anson had played bad golf, had had an indifferent dinner, but he had had a lot to
drink. Now, relaxed from the exercise and slightly drunk, he drove his car down
the dimly lit drive-in and expertly swung the car into the stall allotted to him.

He noticed that most of the other stalls were empty. This was the weekend.
There was always a rush to get out of Brent over the weekend, and Anson liked
the quiet that prevailed in the apartment block, free from the racket of television,
people walking over his head and children screaming and quarrelling in the
courtyard.

He cut the engine, turned off the headlights and got out of the car. As he
slammed the car door shut, he became aware that he wasn't alone. He looked
sharply to his right.

A tall, thick-set man had appeared out of the shadows and was now standing
looking at him from the entrance of the stall. His unexpected appearance gave
Anson a start. He stared into the gloom, looking towards where the man was
standing.

"Hi, palsy," the man said in a thick, husky voice. "I've been waiting quite a long
time for you to show up."

Anson's heart skipped a beat and he felt a cold clutch of fear. He recognized this
threatening, massive figure: Sailor Hogan! During the past days his mind had
been so obsessed with Meg Barlowe he had entirely forgotten Joe Duncan's
threat. Now he remembered what Duncan had said: You pay up on Saturday. If
you don't, Sailor will be around to talk to you.

Anson recalled a story he had heard about Sailor Hogan. How he had visited a
client of Joe's who had failed to pay up.

Sailor had maimed the man. Anson had actually seen the man after Sailor had
dealt with him so he knew the story to be no exaggeration. Sailor, so they said,
had laced his thick fingers together and had hit the man a frightful chopping
blow on the back of his neck. The man was now going around in a wheel chair,
looking and acting like an idiot. When the police had tried to pin the assault onto
Sailor, he proved with the help of five bookmakers that he was playing poker
with them in Lambsville at the time the assault had taken place.
with them in Lambsville at the time the assault had taken place.

And now here was Sailor Hogan walking slowly and deliberately towards Anson
who backed away. It wasn't until he felt his heels grinding against the concrete
wall that Anson came to a standstill. By now, Sailor was within four feet of him.
Sailor paused, his hands thrust into his trouser pockets, his shapeless hat cocked
over one eye, a cigarette dangling from his thick, moist lips.

"I've come to collect, palsy," he said. "Let's have it."

Anson drew in a quick uneven breath.

"Tell Joe he'll have it on Monday," he said, trying to keep his voice steady.

"Joe said for me to collect it now or else ..." Sailor said and took big, knuckly
fists out of his pockets. "Come on, Palsy, I want to get home."

Anson felt the cold concrete wall pressing against his shoulders. He could retreat
no further. He thought of the man in the wheel chair.

"I'll have the money on Monday," he said. "Tell Joe ... he'll understand. I'm
expecting..." He broke off as Sailor sidled towards him. Suddenly more
frightened than he had ever been before, he said in a high hysterical voice. "No!
Keep away from me! No!"

Sailor grinned at him.

"Palsy, you're in trouble. When I'm not working for Joe, I work for Sam
Bernstein. You owe him eight grand. Sam doesn't think you'll pay him. Okay,
you have time, but Sam is worried about you. Joe's worried about you too. You'd
better pay Joe on Monday or I'll have to work you over." His small white teeth
gleamed in the overhead light as he smiled viciously. "If you don't raise Sam's
dough, I'll fix you till you wish you were dead. Understand?"

"Sure," Anson said, feeling cold sweat running down his ribs.

"Okay. You pay Joe on Monday ... that's fixed, huh?"

It's going to be all right, Anson thought wildly. I've gained two days. Monday
night I'll be with Meg.
But it wasn't all right for Sailor moved forward with a quick, shifting movement
that left Anson helpless to defend himself.

Sailor's hammer-like fist sank into Anson's stomach with paralysing and awful
violence and sent him forward in a jack-knife dive.

Anson sprawled face down on the oily concrete floor. He heard Sailor say,
"Monday, palsy. If you haven't the dough, then you're in for a real beating and
remember Sam ... you don't pay him and you're as good as dead."

Anson lay still, his hands clutching his stomach, his breath moaning through his
clenched teeth. He was dimly aware of the cold ground that chilled his pain
wracked body as he listened to the quick footfalls of the ex-light heavy weight
champion of California as he walked briskly up the drive-in and out into the
darkness of the night.

Anson lay in bed. The day was Sunday. The time was eleven fifteen a.m. Around
his navel where Hogan had sunk his fist the flesh was yellow, green and black.
Somehow he had managed to drag himself to the elevator and reach his
apartment. He had taken three sleeping tablets and had got into bed. When he
woke, the bright morning sunshine was coming around the edges of the blind.
He had limped to the bathroom. His guts felt as if they were on fire. At least, he
thought, I am not passing blood, but he was frightened. He thought with horror
of the next meeting with Hogan if he failed to raise Duncan's money. His mind
moved ahead to next June. He. must have been out of his mind to have borrowed
eight thousand dollars from Bernstein. He must have been crazy to have put all
that money on that goddamn horse! He felt a cold chill as he thought of the
reckoning. He was certain now that he would never be able to raise that sum. He
put his hand to his tender aching stomach and he cringed. Hogan would fix him.
He knew it. He too would be going around looking like an idiot after Hogan had
fixed him.

He lay there in a mood of frightened, black despair during the next four hours.
His mind darted like a trapped mouse, searching for a way of escape.

There was one thought that kept moving into his mind and which he
immediately rejected, but as the hours passed and no other solution presented
itself, he finally began to consider the idea.

Up to this moment he had shied away from any criminal act to make money, but
now he realized there was nothing left but to make money dishonestly.
now he realized there was nothing left but to make money dishonestly.

He thought of Meg Barlowe.

She has something on her mind, he told himself. That story about an insurance
swindle ... she knew that junk she called jewellery was worthless. So why did
she ask me to call? Why did she tell me her husband would be away for the night
on Mondays and Thursdays? This could be my way out ... this could be the
chance I'm looking for.

He was still thinking about the idea when he drifted off into an exhausted sleep
that took him through the night to Monday morning.

Anson walked across the vast parking lot of Framley's store with a slight
dragging step. Movement caused him pain. He had to force himself to walk
upright.

He pushed open the swing doors into the bustle of the store. He looked around,
then asked one of the elevator attendants where he could find the horticultural
department.

"Basement. Section D," the girl told him.

There was a big crowd around the horticultural stand and Anson wasn't
surprised. He recognized the same genius that had created the garden at the
Barlowe house. People moved around gaping and exclaiming at the blooms, the
perfect floral arrangements, the little fountains and the beautifully arranged
banks of cut flowers. There were four girls, wearing green smocks, busy with
their order books. Barlowe stood by a desk, a pencil behind his ear, while he
watched the girls book orders.

Barlowe was so unlike the man Anson had imagined him to be that after staring
at him for several seconds, he asked one of the girls if it was Mr. Barlowe. When
the girl said he was, Anson moved back to the edge of the crowd. He again
studied the man who was now selling a rose tree to an elderly couple. How in the
world could such a sensational looking woman like Meg have come to marry
such a man? Anson asked himself. From his vantage point behind the crowd,
Anson studied Barlowe with increasing surprise.

Barlowe was in his early forties. He had a shock of thick black hair. He was thin
and undersized. His eyes were deep set in hollows that were dark ringed. He had
and undersized. His eyes were deep set in hollows that were dark ringed. He had
a thin, ill-tempered mouth and his nose was pointed and long. Examining him,
Anson decided that this little shrimp of a man's only grace lay in his long,
slender and artistic hands: they were beautiful hands, but there was nothing else
about him that could win anyone's favour.

Anson moved away from the scent of the flowers, suddenly very confident that
he had no serious competition to fear.

He even forgot the nagging soreness of his stomach as he passed the parking lot
towards his car. He had three prospects to call on. The time was now twenty
minutes to four. He should be free to. visit Meg by seven o'clock.

On his way to his car, he paused by a row of telephone booths. It took him only a
few minutes to find Barlowe's telephone number. He dialled the number.

Meg answered the call. The sound of her voice made him feel breathless.

"Good afternoon, Mrs. Barlowe," he said, forcing his voice to sound brisk. "This
is John Anson."

There was a pause, then she said, "Who?"

He felt a moment of irritation. Didn't she even remember his name?

"John Anson: National Fidelity Insurance. You remember me?"

She said at once, "Why, of course. I'm sorry. I was trying to write ... my mind
was miles away."

"I hope I haven't disturbed you."

"Oh, no. I was thinking of you. I was wondering if you had an idea for me."

He was tempted to tell her that he had spent the whole of yesterday thinking of
her.

"That's why I am telephoning ... I do have an idea. I was wondering ..." He let it
hang, feeling his hand turn moist as he gripped the telephone receiver.

"Yes?" There was a pause as he still said nothing, then she went on, "I suppose
you're not free this evening?"
you're not free this evening?"

Anson drew in a deep breath.

"I'm in Pru Town right now. I have a few calls to make, but I could drop by
around seven o'clock if that would be convenient?"

"Well, why not?" Her voice went up a note. "Come to supper. There won't be
much but I hate eating alone."

Anson was suddenly worried that she might hear the violent beating of his heart.

"Fine ... then, around seven," and with an unsteady hand, he put the receiver
back onto its cradle.

She was sophisticated, sun-tanned and very sure of herself. She wore a sky blue
shirt and close fitting white slacks. She paused before Barlowe and stared at him
the way you stare at a sudden coffee stain on your best table cloth. "Mary
Wheatcroft," she said. "Is it too early to plant?" Barlowe felt a tightening in his
chest at the sight of this woman.

"Yes ... a little early, but I can take an order. We will deliver and plant when..."

Her sapphire blue eyes flicked over him indifferently,

"I want two dozen. It's Mrs. Van Hertz. I have an account with you ... arrange it
for me," and she moved away, her hips rolling under the white material of her
slacks.

Barlowe watched her go.

One of the assistants said sharply, "Mr. Barlowe ... you have cut yourself!"

Barlowe looked at the blood dripping from his fingers. His grip had
unconsciously tightened on the pruning knife he was holding.

His pale brown eyes shifted once again to Mrs. Van Hertz's arrogant back. He
lifted his hand and licked the warm blood from bis fingers.
Chapter 3
As Anson reached the top of the dirt road, he saw the double gates leading to the
Barlowe house were open and so too were the doors of the garage. Taking the
hint, he drove his car into the garage, got out, shut the garage doors and then
walked back and shut the double gates.

A light was on in the sitting-room. As he walked to the front door, he saw Meg's
shadow pass the blind as she crossed the room, to let him in.

She opened the door and for a moment they stood looking at each other.

"You're very punctual," she said. "Come on in."

He followed her into the sitting-room.

In the shaded lamp light, as he took off his overcoat, they again looked at each
other. She was wearing a flame coloured dress with a wide, pleated skirt. She
was even more sensational looking than when he had first met her.

"Let's eat, shall we?" she said, "Then we can talk, I don't know about you but I'm
starving. I've been working all day and haven't bothered to eat since breakfast."

"Sure, I'd like to," he said, aware that he had no appetite.

"How's the work going?"

"Oh, so ... so." She waved towards the table. She had pushed aside her typewriter
and her papers and had set two plates on which lay some cold cuts of beef and
pickles. The cutlery was dumped anyhow. There was a bottle of whisky, ice and
charge water at hand. "It's a bit of a picnic. I'm no cook."

They sat down at the table and she poured two stiff drinks.

"So you have an idea for me?" she said, beginning to eat quickly and ravenously.
"I'm terribly excited; I do want a good idea."

Anson sipped his drink, then making an effort, he too began to eat.

"It's something we can talk about," he said, paused, then went on, "Mrs.
"It's something we can talk about," he said, paused, then went on, "Mrs.
Barlowe... it interests me... have you been married long?"

She glanced up.

"A year ... the end of the month will be our first anniversary. Why do you ask?"

"I guess I get interested in people's backgrounds. I was in Framley's store this
afternoon, Your husband seemed to be very busy."

"He's always busy. He's the original busy bee."

Was there a note of contempt in her voice? Anson wondered, suddenly alert.

"Meeting so many people as I do, I'm often surprised at the odd, unexpected
married couples I run into. Seeing your husband, I should never have imagined
you would have married him." He paused and looked at her, wondering if he had
gone too far. Her reply sent a hot rush of blood up his spine.

"Goodness knows why I did marry the poor fish," she said. "I guess I should
have my head examined."

She continued to eat, not looking at him and he stared at her. Then aware of his
concentrated stare, she looked up.

"You're not eating... is there anything wrong?" He put down his knife and fork.

"I haven't been too well over the week-end. I'm sorry. It's just I'm off my food."

"But not your drinking, I hope?"

"No."

"Why not go over to the fire? You don't have to watch me eat. Go on ... I won't
be long."

He carried his drink to the settee. He sat down and stared into the flickering
flames.

Goodness knows why I did marry the poor fish.


Goodness knows why I did marry the poor fish.

This could be the green light he was hoping for.

"Have I shocked you?" she asked suddenly. "You asked me, so I told you. Phil is
a poor fish. All he thinks about is his garden. He has only one ambition: to set
himself up as a florist with a greenhouse and to sell flowers. He will never do
that because he will never make enough money to find the necessary capital. He
would need at least three thousand dollars to start a business of his own."

"I should have thought he would have needed more than that," Anson said.

Meg grimaced.

"You don't know my darling Phil. He thinks small. All he wants is a greenhouse
and an acre of land."

"Just why did you marry him?" Anson asked, staring into the fire.

There was a long pause. He could hear her cutting the meat on her plate.

"Why? Ask me another! I thought he had money. I thought I was escaping from
the things girls like me want to escape from. Okay ... I made a mistake. Now I'd
like to be a widow."

Anson leaned forward. He felt the need of the flickering flames. His body had
suddenly turned cold.

He heard her push back her chair, then she came and sat near him.

"You're interested in me, aren't you?" she said. "Why?"

"Why?" Anson gripped his glass so tightly his knuckles turned white. "Because I
think you are the most exciting woman I have ever met."

She laughed.

"I haven't had anything said to me like that since I was stupid enough to get
married."

"Well, there it is. I'm saying it."


"Come to that if we are going to hand out compliments, I think you're pretty nice
yourself."

Anson drew on a long, slow breath.

"The moment I set eyes on you I thought you were wonderful," he said. "I've had
you on my mind every hour since we first met."

"These things happen, don't they?" She reached for a cigarette, lit it and blew the
smoke towards the fire.

"Two people meet: there is a sudden chemical explosion and bingo ... !" She
turned her head slowly and looked directly at him, her cobalt blue eyes inviting.
"Don't let's waste time, John. Time is always running out on me. You want to
love me, don't you?"

Anson set down his glass.

"Yes," he said huskily.

She flicked her cigarette into the fire.

"Then love me," she said.

A log dropped onto the red hot bed of ashes and flared up, lighting the room for
a brief moment. Meg moved away from Anson and getting down on her knees,
she put more logs on the fire and stirred the fire into a blaze.

"Like a drink?" she asked, looking over her shoulder at him.

"No ... come back here," Anson said.

She didn't move. Poker in hand, she continued to stir the fire, making lively
shadows on the ceiling.

"Look at the time," she said. "It's after nine. Can you stay the night?"

"Yes."

She lit a cigarette, then squatting before the fire, the light from the flickering
logs on her face, she went on, "Tell me about this idea of yours ... this idea for a
story."
story."

Anson stared up at the moving shadows on the ceiling. He was relaxed and
happy. Their love making had been violent, exciting and satisfying. The ghosts
of every girl he had made love with slid through his mind: that's all they were
now: faded, dull ghosts.

"John ... tell me about your idea," Meg said.

"Yes, all right, I will have a drink."

She made two drinks, gave him a glass and then sat on the floor again before the
fire. "Tell me ..."

"I don't know anything about story telling, but I think this more or less is how it
goes," Anson said, staring at the ceiling. "An insurance salesman needs money
badly. One day he calls on a woman who has made an inquiry about a fire
coverage. He falls in love with her and she with him. She is unhappily married.
He persuades the husband to take out a life policy. Between the two - the
salesman and the wife - they concoct a plan to get rid of the husband. Because
the salesman knows how to handle the set-up, they get away with it. It is in the
working out of the details that the story is interesting," He took a long; drink and
set down his glass. "Like the idea?"

She reached for the poker and again stirred the fire into a blaze.

"It's not very original is it?" she said doubtfully. "When we first met you said it
was very difficult to swindle an insurance company and yet you say these two
get away with it."

"It's not only difficult, but dangerous, but the insurance salesman knows how to
handle it. If he wasn't in the racket himself, it would be more than dangerous."

"And isn't it contrived?" She put down the poker and turned to look at him. "I
mean the reader would have to accept the fact that the husband would be willing
to take out an insurance policy. But why should he? What I mean is, suppose it
was Phil that was the husband. I know for certain he would never insure his life.
He is against taking out an insurance policy."
"That depends of course on how the story is set up," Anson said. "But okay, just
for the sake of discussing this, suppose the man was your husband, you were the
unhappily married woman and I was the salesman."

There was a short silence, then without looking at him, Meg said, "Well ... all
right ... let's just suppose ..."

"I am certain that I could sell your husband an insurance policy," Anson said.
"It's the way I'd approach him that would hook him ... I'm sure I could do it."

"How would you approach him?"

"Knowing he needs capital," Anson said, "I wouldn't try to sell him a policy as a
life insurance. I'd sell him the policy as security to get a loan from the bank.
Banks accept life policies as securities for a loan, and as he is so keen to set up
on his own, I would have him half sold already." Meg shifted to a more
comfortable position. "You're clever," she said. "I hadn't ¦ thought of that."
"That's only the start of it," Anson said. "I know I wouldn't be able to sell him
anything larger than a five thousand dollar coverage. That's not much good, is it?
It's all right for him: he could raise a three thousand dollar loan on that coverage,
but if he died suddenly, it wouldn't be much use to you, would it?"

She shook her head, staring into the fire.

"It wouldn't be much use to me either, but fifty thousand dollars would be ...
wouldn't it?" She looked at him. "Yes, but..."

"The trick in this is I could insure him for fifty thousand and he would imagine
he was insured only for five thousand."

Again there was a long pause, then Meg said, "It's beginning to be interesting.
Just suppose Phil did take out an insurance coverage for fifty thousand dollars ...
then what happens?"

Here was the danger spot of the plan, Anson thought. He would now have to
move very carefully. Maybe he was rushing this too fast.

"Don't let's keep this story on such a personal basis," he| said. "I was using your
husband because it makes it more believable. Let's now imagine, shall we, we
have a man - any man - insured for fifty thousand dollars although he doesn't
know it... his wife and an insurance salesman who are in love with each other ...
know it... his wife and an insurance salesman who are in love with each other ...
okay?" "Yes ... of course."

"These two are in love and they need money. If the husband dies, the wife will
get fifty thousand dollars, which she will share with her lover, but it isn't going
to be that easy because the husband shows no signs of dying. So these two begin
to think about how to get rid of him. The wife mustn't have anything to do with
the ... the getting rid of the husband.

That would be completely fatal. His death must appear to be an accident without
the wife being involved in any way."

"You've really thought about this, haven't you, John?" she said, looking at him,
her cobalt eyes intent. "Go on... so what happens?" "Suppose the husband is
keen on gardening. Suppose he has a miniature pond," Anson said, his voice a
little husky. "One Saturday afternoon, the wife goes down to the shops, leaving
her husband working in the garden. He falls off a ladder and hits his head on the
side of the pond ... his face goes into the water and when the wife returns, she
finds him drowned. Of course, what really happened is the insurance salesman
has knocked the husband over the head and drowned him in the pond."

Neither of them looked at each other. Anson felt rather than saw Meg suppress a
shudder. She said, "But what about this man you were talking about... Maddox?
The man in charge of the Claims department?"

Anson took another drink. He had nothing to worry about now, he told himself.
She was ready to co-operate with him.

She had abruptly brought the story back into real life by mentioning Maddox.
She was ready to be rid of her husband.

He was sure of that if he could convince her he could do it with safety and with
profit.

"Yes: there's Maddox. We mustn't underestimate him. He's dangerous, but he


does think in a groove. Man and wife: man insures his life for fifty thousand
dollars and suddenly dies. How about the wife? That's the way his mind works.
It is essential to our plan that you have a cast-iron alibi. He must be absolutely
convinced that you couldn't have had anything to do with your husband's death.
Once he is convinced of that, he'll let the claim go through. I can convince him."
She picked up the poker and stirred the fire.

"So if I went into Pru Town while you ... you handled Phil, it would be all
right?" she asked as calmly and as casually as if they were discussing a movie
they had seen.

"That's the way I see it," Anson said. He finished the whisky and sat up. "Do you
like the idea?"

She turned slowly and stared at him.

"Oh, yes, John, I like it. If only you knew how this drab life with him is crushing
me! Fifty thousand dollars! I can't believe it ... all that money and my freedom!"

Anson felt a chill of uneasiness run through him. This was too easy, he thought.
She has either been planning to murder Barlowe for months or she doesn't
realize what she is getting into. It's too easy.

"The money would come to you," he said, looking intently at her. "I would have
to trust you to share it with me. I need the money badly, Meg."

She got to her feet.

"Let's go upstairs."

The expression in her eyes wiped out his uneasiness.

Somewhere downstairs a clock chimed five. Through the open window, the first
grey light of the dawn made light enough for Anson to look around the shabby
bedroom.

He grimaced at its poverty, and then looked at Meg, lying by his side. The grey
light softened her features. She looked younger and even more beautiful.

"Meg..."

She stirred, murmured something and her hand touched his naked chest.

"Asleep?"
She opened her eyes and looked blankly at him, then she smiled

"Not really ... dozing ..."

"Me too." He slid his arm around her, pulling her to him. "I've been thinking;
you really want to go ahead with this thing? It's not just: something you're
imagining is going to happen in one of your stories?"

"I want to go ahead with it. I can't go on living this way. I must have money ..."

"That's the way I feel, but it won't be easy. There is a lot to think about. We've
only just started; we're only on the fringe of this thing."

She was now fully awake and she sat up. "I'll get some coffee. Let's talk. We
may not get the chance again ... not to have a real talk."

She was right of course. After this, he knew he would have to be very careful
about seeing her again. If Maddox ever found out they were lovers, the plan
forming in his mind would be cooked.

He waited for her, listening to her moving around downstairs. She came back
eventually with coffee and set the tray on a table by the bed.

She had on a pale green nylon nightdress that was completely transparent, but
now Anson could look at her without feeling the desperate urge to possess her,
for their love making had been long and satisfying.

She poured a cup of coffee and gave it to him. "If we do it ... you're sure it will
work?" she asked, sitting on the edge of the bed while she poured herself a cup.

Her attitude not only made him uneasy, but it irritated him. She couldn't be so
utterly cold-blooded as she sounded, he thought. She just didn't realize what they
were planning.

"No, I'm not sure," he said, determined to make her realize the danger of this
thing. "It will take time. I'll have to plan every move. But first I want to be
absolutely certain you're really willing ... you really want to do this thing." She
made an impatient movement. "Of course I do."

"Do you realize what we are planning to do?" Anson paused, then went on,
speaking slowly and deliberately, "We are going to commit a murder! Do you
speaking slowly and deliberately, "We are going to commit a murder! Do you
realize that?"

He was watching her. Her expression hardened, but she didn't flinch.

'"You heard me, Meg? We are going to commit murder!"

"I know." She looked at him, her mouth set in a determined line. "Does it
frighten you?"

He drew in a deep breath.

"Yes ... it frightens me. Doesn't it frighten you?"

Again she made an impatient movement.

"I can't even feel sorry for him. I've had to live with him for nearly a year. I've
thought for months now how happy I could be if he were dead ..."

"You could have divorced him," Anson said, staring at her.

"Where would that get me? At least I have a roof and food -no other woman but
a mug like me would look at him ...and now I won't have him near me. You don't
imagine he sleeps in this bed, do you? I lock him out. I've locked him out ever
since our first horrible night together. You don't know ... he's vile ... he's ..." She
stopped grimaced. "I'm not talking about it. Some men have these kinks ... he has
... I'll be glad when he's dead!"

Anson relaxed. Now he could understand her indifference. At last, he had found
someone he could work with. This woman wouldn't let him down.

"I'm sorry," he said. "I didn't know it was as bad as that. Well, all right ... we'll
use him, but you must think about it. If I make a mistake, you'll be involved.
Don't kid yourself the jury will be kind to you. A woman who helps to murder
her husband for gain gets a pretty rugged time." "Why should you make a
mistake?" Anson smiled mirthlessly.

"Murder is a funny thing. You can plan carefully and you can be awfully smart,
but you can still make a mistake and you have only to make one mistake."

"Is that what you are going to do?" She put down her cup and lit a cigarette. "I
don't think so, John. I have faith in you. I think you're clever enough not to make
don't think so, John. I have faith in you. I think you're clever enough not to make
a mistake."

"Have you any money?" he asked abruptly. "I want three thousand dollars if I'm
going to work this the way it has to be worked."

"Three thousand dollars?" She stared at him. "I haven't even twenty dollars to
call my own."

He had expected that. He had thought it would be too good to be true if she had
the money he needed.- "All right...forget it... I'll get it somehow." "But why do
you want three thousand dollars?" she asked curiously, staring at him.

Anson felt an impulse to be dramatic. He flicked aside the sheet so she could see
the horrible bruise that discoloured the skin of his stomach.

Meg caught her breath.

"What happened? That must be terribly painful ... John! What happened?"

He flicked the sheet over himself. Her concern made the encounter with Hogan
now trifling.

Staring up at the ceiling he told her about Hogan and he told her about Bernstein.

"I'm in trouble," he concluded. "I must have money. For months now I have been
hunting for a way out. Now I have found you. The two of us will escape together
at the cost of a man's life."

"You owe this bookmaker a thousand ... why do you need three thousand?" Meg
asked.

"I need two thousand to cover the first premium on a fifty thousand dollar life
policy," Anson told her. "Until the first premium is paid, we can't even think
about how we can get rid of your husband. So ... somehow ... I have to raise
three thousand dollars." He leaned back against the pillows, looking out of the
dirt grimed window at the rising sun. "I'll have to steal it." He looked at her and
grinned. "One thing leads to another, doesn't it? When you get involved in
murder, you go the whole way or you don't go at all."

"Steal it? What do you mean?" He put his hand on her thigh.
"Just that. I must have three thousand dollars. It shouldn't be difficult. I'm
committed now. I must find some way to get it." There was a pause, then as she
said nothing, but stared quizzingly at him, he went on, "What kind of man is
your husband business-wise?"

She made a contemptuous movement.

"All he thinks about ... apart from sex ... is flowers."

"Suppose he has papers to sign? Would he read all the details, including the
small print? Is he cautious about what he signs? Some people read every word:
others sign without reading anything. This is important. Would he want to read
every word of an insurance policy before he signed?"

"No, but he would never sign an insurance policy."

"Just suppose he had a policy in front of him with three or maybe four copies ...
would he check them all?"

"He wouldn't. He's not like that."

Anson finished his coffee and set down the cup.

"That's all I want to know ... it'll do for a start." He leaned forward and pulled
her down beside him. "You really want to go ahead with this thing, Meg? Once
you're in it, there'll be no turning back."

She ran her fingers through his blond hair.

"Why do you keep doubting me?" she asked. "/ said I'll do it with you. Don't you
understand? To have you and all that money, I'll take any risk."

In the silence of the bedroom with the first rays of the sun striking the dusty
mirror above the dressing-table, feeling her fingers caressing through his hair
and down the back of his neck, Anson was stupid enough to believe her.

It was while he was eating an under-done egg and burned toast that Anson
happened to notice something in a frame, hanging on the wall opposite to where
he was sitting.

"What's that?" he asked, pointing a buttery knife. "What's that on the wall?"
"What's that?" he asked, pointing a buttery knife. "What's that on the wall?"

Meg was sipping coffee. The time was ten minutes past eight. She was now
wearing a shabby green wrap that was none too clean. Her hair was tousled, but
in spite of the lack of make-up, she still looked sensually and excitingly
beautiful.

She glanced in the direction to which he was pointing.

"Oh, that's Phil's. He's very proud of it. It's a certificate for shooting. Phil is quite
a shot."

Anson pushed back his chair and crossed the room and examined the ornate
certificate in its black frame. He read that the certificate had been awarded by the
Pru's Town Small Arms and Target Club to Philip Barlowe for winning the first
prize in the .38 revolver shooting tournament held last March.

Anson walked thoughtfully back to the table. He sat down and pushed aside his
half eaten egg. His expression was so thoughtful that Meg looked enquiringly at
him.

"What is it, John?"

"So he shoots," Anson said.

"Not now, but he used to. He hasn't done any shooting for nearly a year. I wish
be would go to his dreary club. He would be out of my way."

"He owns a gun?" Anson asked.

"Yes," Meg said, frowning. "What's on your mind now, John?"

"Is the gun here... in the house?"

"Yes." She nodded to the ugly sideboard. "In there."

"I would like to see it."

"See it? But why?"

"May I see it?"


She shrugged, got to her feet and went to the sideboard. She pulled open a
drawer and took from it a wooden box which she put on the table.

Anson opened the box to find it contained a .38 police Special, a spare clip and a
box of cartridges.

He lifted the gun from the box, checked to see it was unloaded, then balanced it
in his hand.

"He doesn't use it now?" he asked.

"He hasn't touched it for months. Why the interest?"

"Do you think it would be safe if I borrowed it for a night?"

She stiffened.

"But why?"

"Could I borrow it?"

"Yes ... of course, but you must tell me ... why?"

"Use your head," Anson said impatiently. He put the gun in his hip pocket. "I
have to find three thousand dollars."

She sat motionless, staring at him.

He took six cartridges from the box and dropped them into his pocket.

There was a long pause, then he reached out and pulled her to him. His hands
moved down her long back as he pressed his lips to hers.
Chapter 4
Sometime during the late afternoon, Anson drove into the Caltex Service Station
on the Brent highway. While the attendant was filling his tank and cleaning his
windshield, Anson went into the office and through to the toilet. He left the toilet
door ajar and standing against the far wall, he examined the office. There was a
desk, a filing cabinet and a big, old-fashioned safe. He noticed the two big
windows that faced the highway.

He moved out of the toilet, satisfied he now had the geography of the office set
in his mind and he returned to the car.

As he paid the attendant, he said casually, "You keep open all night, don't you?"

"That's a fact, but I go off in three hours. My sidekick does the night shift."

A few months back, Anson had talked with the manager, of the Service station
about insuring the takings. He knew there was anything from three thousand to
four thousand dollars in the safe. While he had been examining Barlowe's gun, it
had flashed through his mind that the Service station could be a pretty easy hold-
up.

He was surprised that he felt so calm about planning this robbery. The weight of
the gun in his hip pocket gave him a lot of confidence. He decided around four
o'clock in the morning he would walk into the Service station and force the
attendant at gun point to open the safe. With any luck he would then have
enough money to pay off Joe Duncan and to pay the first premium of Barlowe's
fifty thousand dollar life policy.

Back at the Marlborough hotel, Anson went up to his room. Sitting on his bed,
he examined Barlowe's gun. He knew something about guns as he had served his
two years of military service. He satisfied himself that the gun was in good
working order, then he loaded it with the six cartridges he had in his pocket. He
put the gun in his suitcase.

He then went down to the bar. After drinking two stiff whiskies, he went along
to the restaurant. He ordered dinner and asked for half a bottle of claret. He
seldom drank wine, but he wanted the cork from the bottle: the cork was to play
a minor part in his robbery plan. His stomach still felt sore and he had no
a minor part in his robbery plan. His stomach still felt sore and he had no
appetite. He merely picked at his food. Around nine o'clock, he signed the check.
He put the cork from the wine bottle into his pocket and leaving the restaurant,
he walked to the men's toilet room. There was an old Negro attendant, dozing in
a chair. He peered sleepily at Anson and seeing he needed no service, he closed
his eyes again.

Anson washed his hands, and while he did so, he looked in the mirror at the rows
of hats and coats hanging on the rack behind him. He picked on a well worn
brown and green striped overcoat; a shabby but distinctive coat, and a Swiss hat
with a gay feather in it on the next peg.

After drying his hands, he looked at the dozing Negro who had begun to snore
gently. Anson took the hat and coat and left the hotel by a side entrance.

Carrying the hat and coat, he walked the few yards down the street to where he
had parked his car. He opened the trunk tossed in the hat and coat, closed the
trunk and returned to the hotel.

Back in his room, he stretched out on his bed, lit a cigarette and went over in his
mind the plan to make sure he knew exactly what he was going to do.

It seemed simple and straightforward so long as he didn't lose his nerve. He


would leave the hotel by the staff entrance around three o'clock a.m. At that time
he wasn't likely to run into anyone. There was a lay-by near the Service station.
He would leave his car there.

He would then darken his blond eyebrows and the sides of his hair with burnt
cork, put on the Swiss hat and the borrowed topcoat, tie a handkerchief over the
lower part of his face and walk to the Service station. Once he had the money, he
would put the telephone out of action and return to his car. If anyone tried to act
like a hero ... well, he had the gun.

He got off the bed feeling restless and excited. It was only ten o'clock. He
wondered what Meg was doing. She hadn't been far from his thoughts during the
day. He went down to the bar, and seeing two salesmen he knew, he joined
them.

It was around one o'clock when he returned to his room. He was a little drunk
and in a reckless mood. He took Barlowe's gun from the suitcase and sitting on
the bed, he balanced the gun in his hand.
the bed, he balanced the gun in his hand.

This is it, he thought. There is a time when every man worth a nickle must make
up his mind what to do with his life.

I've put off my decision long enough. I'll never get anywhere without money.
With Meg to help me and with fifty thousand dollars to get me started, I'll reach
up and take the sun out of the sky.

But he knew he was kidding himself. He knew in a year, probably less, the fifty
thousand dollars would be gone. He had never been able to hold onto money. He
knew Meg was an exciting sexual plaything, but nothing more, and she would
never help him. She was a slut: shiftless and worthless, and like him, money
loving.

Well, all right, he said shrugging, the money may not last long, but well have a
fine time while it does last. He lay back on the pillow, nursing the gun and
thinking again of Meg.

Harry Weber had been working the night shift at the Caltex Service station for
the past two years. It was a soft job, and Harry liked it. He was an avid reader
and the job gave him the opportunity to indulge himself.

After one o'clock a.m. he considered himself busy if he had to service more than
three cars up to the time he came off duty

which was at seven o'clock a.m. He sometimes wondered why the Service
station kept open all night, but as he could relax and read, it was no skin off his
nose if they were willing to pay him good money just to sit on his backside and
soak himself in the paperbacks on which he spent most of his wages.

A few minutes to four, Harry made himself a jug of coffee. Cup in hand, he
settled back in his chair to continue a James Bond story when the glass door to
the office swung silently open.

Harry looked up, stiffened, then very slowly set down his cup of coffee on the
desk. The paperback slipped out of his hand and dropped to the floor.

The man facing him was wearing an odd looking topcoat and Swiss style hat.
The lower part of his face was hidden by a white handkerchief. In his right hand
he held a vicious looking gun that he pointed to Harry.
he held a vicious looking gun that he pointed to Harry.

For a brief moment the two men stared at each other then the gunman said
quietly, "Don't act like a hero! I don't want to kill you, but I will if I have to. Get
that safe open and pronto!"

"Sure," Harry said, badly shaken. He got slowly and unsteadily to his feet.

The gunman came into the office and crossed to the toilet, his gun still covering
Harry. He pushed open the door and backed into the dark little room.

"Get the safe open!" he said, standing in the doorway. "Hurry it up!"

Harry pulled open the top drawer of the desk. Lying by the safe key was a .45
automatic supplied by the Service station for just such an emergency as this. He
looked down at the gun and hesitated. Could he grab the gun and shoot before
this gunman shot him?

Watching him, Anson saw his hesitation and a warning instinct told him there
was a gun in the drawer. "Don't move!" he yelled. "Get back ... get your hand
up!" The note in his voice frightened Harry. Cursing himself for hesitating and
yet glad of it, he lifted, his hands and backed away.

Anson moved forward, reached into the drawer, took out the gun and then
stepped back into the toilet. He put the gun on the floor at his feet.

"Get the safe open!" he said, a snarl in his voice. "Start, acting like a hero and I'll
kill you!"

Harry took the key and opened the safe.

Anson glanced anxiously through the wide windows and out on to the dark
highway.

"Get over against the wall!" he ordered. "Face the wall and don't move." Harry
obeyed. Anson knelt before the safe and pulled out a large steel cash box. It was
unlocked. He opened it. The pile of bills in the box made his eyes gleam. As he
began stuffing the bills into his topcoat pockets, he heard the unexpected sound
of an approaching motor cycle engine.

His heart skipped a beat. This could only be a traffic cop coming. Would he stop
or would he pass the Service station?
or would he pass the Service station?

Working frantically, Anson stuffed the rest of the bills into his pockets, threw
the cash box back into the safe and slammed the safe door shut. He stepped back
into the toilet.

"Sit at the desk," he said to Harry, his voice tense and vicious. "Quick! Give me
away and you'll get it first!"

Harry was moving towards the desk as the beam of the motor cycle headlight
flashed across the office. A moment later the sound of the motor cycle engine
spluttered to silence.

A trickle of cold sweat ran down Anson's face. The cop had stopped. He would
be coming in!

"If there's any shooting," Anson said, "remember, you'll get it first," and he
pushed the door of the toilet so it stood ajar.

He could only see part of the office now and it worried him he couldn't see
Harry.

As the toilet door pushed to, Harry picked up a pencil and quickly wrote on a
check pad: Hold up. Gunman in toilet.

The office door swung open, and a big red faced cop walked in. He often passed
at this time and Harry always had a cup of coffee ready for him.

"Hi, Harry," the cop said cheerfully. "Got any Java for your old pal?"

Anson looked around the dark little toilet for a way of escape but he saw
immediately he was trapped. The window was too high and too small for him to
use.

He heard Harry say, "I've just made some, Tom."

The cop pulled off his gauntlet gloves and as he dropped them on the desk,
Harry who was now standing, pointed to the written message.

The cop wasn't bright. He frowned down at the message, saying "What's this?
Something you want me to read?"
Hearing this, Anson knew he had been betrayed. Again he was surprised how
calm he felt. Silently, he opened the door of the toilet room.

Harry saw him and went white. The cop, frowning, was staring at the written
message, then he looked round and saw the masked gunman.

"Hold it!" Anson exclaimed, his voice unnaturally high. He lifted the gun so it
pointed directly at the cop.

The cop's small eyes widened with shock, then he recovered and slowly he
straightened. He looked enormous and threatening to Anson.

"Get back against the wall," Anson said. "Go on ... the pair of you!"

Harry hurriedly moved back until his shoulders were flat against the wall, but the
cop didn't move.

"You can't get away with this, punk," he said in a hard, gritty voice. "Give me
the rod. Come on ... you can't get away with it."

Anson had a sudden feeling of sensual excitement. This stupid hunk of meat was
going to be brave. He watched as the cop held out an enormous hand. He heard
him say again, "Hand it over ... come on!" As if he were talking to a circus dog.

Anson didn't move. His finger steadily took up the slack of the trigger. Then as
the cop began a brave and slow advance, Anson became aware that there was no
more slack to take up. The bang of the exploding gun and the kick of it in his
hand startled him. He stepped back, drawing in a quick gasping breath. He
watched the red of the cop's face suddenly drain from under the coarse weather-
beaten skin and the massive legs buckle as if the bones had turned into jelly.

Anson stood motionless, the handkerchief covering the lower part of his face
was wet with sweat. He watched the bulky body slide to the floor. One massive
hand feebly caught the edge of the desk, spilled off it and then the cop was lying
face down at Anson's feet.

Anson started towards the door, paused, grabbed the telephone and wrenched it
from the wall. He threw it viciously at Harry who had his hands covering his
head, his nerve broken by the shooting.
head, his nerve broken by the shooting.

Anson ran out into the night. With the weight of the money in his pockets
flapping against his legs, he fled towards his car.

The following morning, immediately after he had had breakfast, Anson went
into the writing room of the hotel and wrote a cheque for $ 1,045 in favour of
Joe Duncan. He put this cheque into an envelope with a curt note saying he
would no longer bet with Duncan, sealed the envelope, and then, leaving the
writing room, he went to one of the telephone call boxes and telephoned Meg.

There was some.delay before she answered and when she did, she sounded
cross. The time was twenty minutes to nine and Anson guessed he had got her
out of bed.

"I'm coming out this afternoon," he said. "I have something I borrowed to return.
Will you be in?"

"Oh, it's you." She still sounded cross. "You woke me up!"

With the vision of the cop falling like a felled tree still in his mind, Anson said
impatiently, "Will you be in?"

"Yes ... of course."

"Then around three," he hung up.

He left the hotel and went over to the Pru Town National bank. He paid in one
thousand dollars in cash. The money, he told the teller, was to be credited
immediately to his account at Brent. He then registered the letter to Duncan and
posted it.

He had five calls to make. He sold a policy worth a thousand dollars to a fanner.
Until lunch time he tried to convince two other prospects why they should insure
with the National Fidelity but without success. He then returned to Pru Town for
lunch.

He bought the lunch edition of the Pru Town Gazette and read Dout the robbery
and the shooting at the Caltex Service Station. 'e learned the cop's name was
Tom Sanquist. He had been lot through the lungs and his condition was so
critical his ife and twelve-year-old son were at his bedside.
There was a picture of Harry Weber pointing to the toilet here the gunman had
hidden. Lieutenant H. Jenson, Homicide spartment at Brent, had been called to
the scene.

Anson put down the newspaper and ordered lunch. He was leased to find that he
was hungry. The soreness of his stomach id faded and he was able to enjoy the
rather heavy lunch the ;staurant provided.

The waiter who served him was full of the robbery and nson listened politely to
what he had to say.

"They should never keep such sums in a place as isolated as at," the waiter said
as he gave Anson his check. "It is asking >r trouble."

Anson agreed and left the restaurant. In the lobby, he ran to the two salesmen he
had been drinking with the previous ght. They too had to discuss the robbery.

"Some thug passing through," one of them said. "It's my :t he wasn't a local man.
He's miles away by now."

Anson agreed and went on to where he had parked his car. e made another call to
renew a car insurance policy. As time as moving on, he drove out to the Barlowe
house.

As he drove along the highway, he went over in his mind the rents of the
previous night. He could see no reason why the >lice could possibly get on to
him. Weber's description of the bber had been influenced by his shaken nerves.
He said the an was heavily built and tall which Anson was not. He had :scribed
the Swiss hat accurately but he had said the topcoat d been fawn coloured.
Sanquist the dying cop, was too ill to i questioned.

On his way back to Pru Town after the robbery, Anson had }pped the car by a
wooded thicket and had dumped the hat d topcoat. The robbery had netted him
$3,670, more than he d hoped for.

He was still surprised that he was so calm about the whole affair: even the
shooting of Sanquist left him unmoved.

As he drove onto the tarmac drive of the Barlowe houses, Meg came to the door.
As he drove onto the tarmac drive of the Barlowe houses, Meg came to the door.

He came towards her, smiling.

"Hello," he said. "Here I am again." She gave ground, standing aside. Although
she returned his smile, her smile didn't reach her eyes. She looked pale and
tense.

As he took off his topcoat and as she shut the front door, she said, "It was on the
radio just now. The patrol officer ... the one who was shot ... he's - he's dead."

Anson walked into the sitting-room. He stood by the fire warming his cold
hands. He watched her as she stood in the doorway, her cobalt blue eyes sick
with fear.

"Didn't you hear what I said?" she demanded, her voice shrill. "He is dead."

Anson peered at her. Again he was surprised how calm he felt. The fool had
asked for it. He could have lived but he had asked for it. Now there was no
reason to turn back ... Barlowe would be next. The cop's death sealed Barlowe's
fate.

"What's the matter?" he asked.

"You shot him, didn't you?"

He looked around the room. She really was a slut, he thought as he saw the used
breakfast things on the table. One of them: Barlowe of course, had had eggs and
bacon. The yoke encrusted plate, the smear of jam on the tablecloth, the used
coffee cups by her typewriter disgusted him.

She stood watching him as he opened his briefcase and took out the gun. He
wiped it carefully with his handkerchief and carrying it in his handkerchief, he
put it in the wooden box he took from the drawer in the sideboard. He took five
cartridges from his pocket, carefully wiped each one before putting them in the
box.

"You've cleaned the gun?" she asked in a tight frightened voice.

"Of course."

"But you took six cartridges."


"But you took six cartridges."

"Do you think he will miss one?" Anson asked, turning to ook at her.

She shuddered.

"So you did kill that man ..."

He took hold of her wrist and jerked her roughly to him.

"This is the beginning," he said, his hand sliding down the ength of her back.
She stiffened and tried to pull away from urn, but he held her. "You said we
would go ahead with this." lis grip tightened. "Kiss me," he said urgently.
"You're in this ness with me. You can't escape from it now. Kiss me."

She hesitated, then closing her eyes, she relaxed against him. ^.s his lips met
hers, he felt her shudder. Roughly he moved her round the settee, pushed her
down so she lay on her back, taring up at him.

She shook her head wildly.

"No ... not now... John! No!"

Seeing his sudden change of expression, an expression that rightened her, she
pressed the palms of her hands against her yes and shudderingly yielded to him.

"Tell me about yourself, Meg," Anson said some twenty linutes later. He was
now sitting before the fire in the big habby armchair while Meg still lay upon the
settee. "You lustn't mind if I seem curious. I want you to be careful how ou
answer my questions. What I'm aiming to do is to make ure you don't land up in
the gas chamber."

Meg moved uneasily.

"Why talk like that? You frighten me."

"It's better to be frightened by me than by Maddox," Anson lid. "When


eventually you put in the claim for the insurance loney, Maddox will turn a
searchlight on you. Even if you ave a cast iron alibi, be'll still be suspicious of
you. Is there nything in your past he shouldn't know about?"

She frowned, not looking at him.


She frowned, not looking at him.

"No ... of course not!"

"You have no criminal record?"

She half sat up, her eyes angry.

"No!"

"You have never been in trouble with the police?"

She hesitated, then shrugging, she said, "Driving too fast... that's all."

"What did you do before you were married?"

"I was a receptionist at an hotel."

"What hotel?"

"The Connaught Anns in Los Angeles."

"Was it a respectable hotel? It wasn't a room by the hour and no questions


asked?"

"Of course not!"

"Before that?"

Again she hesitated before saying, "I was a night club hostess."

Anson became alert.

"What did you do?"

"The usual thing; partnered men, persuaded them to buy drinks."

"Now watch this, Meg. Did you go home with them? You know what I mean."

"I didn't."
He studied her. Her eyes were now angry.

"Sure?"

"I tell you I didn't!" She was now sitting bolt upright. "Is this man going to ask
me these kind of questions before he'll pay out?"

Anson shook his head.

"Oh, no. But if he doesn't like the look of your claim, he'll turn one of his smart
investigators on to you. Without your knowing anything about it, he'll dig up
your whole history. He'll then decide when he has your dossier in front of him if
he'll fight your claim or not. If your dossier is bad, he'll fight you."

She lay back, her expression showing how worried she was.

"If I'd known it was going to be like this, I wouldn't have agreed to do it with
you."

"There's still time to back out," Anson said. "You can't expect, to pick up fifty
thousand dollars for nothing. You have nothing to worry about so long as you
are telling the truth. What did you do before you became a night club hostess?"

"I lived with my mother," she said, not looking at him.

"You have been married nearly a year. This is vitally important, Meg. I must
have the truth. While you have been Barlowe's wife, have you had a lover?"

"I've had you," Meg said and made a face at him.

"I don't mean me," Anson said, staring at her. "We've been careful, and we're
going to remain careful. I mean someone else ... someone you haven't been so
careful about."

"No ... there's been no one."

"Sure? If Maddox finds there has been someone, he'll go after him. There's
nothing he likes better than to find out the wife of the insured husband who
suddenly dies has a lover. He thrives on a situation like that."

"There's been no one."


"There's been no one."

"Would there be anyone who would know hpw you really feel about your
husband? Anyone who might have overheard you quarrelling if you do quarrel?
Anyone who might say you weren't happily married?"

She shook her head.

"No one ever comes here."

"Would your husband discuss you with anyone?"

She shook her head emphatically.

"No ... I'm sure of that."

Anson leaned back in the chair and thought for a long moment while Meg
watched him.

"Okay," he said finally. "I think that covers it. You're sure you've told me the
truth? You may not think so now, but all these questions are important. Once
Maddox investigates you, and you can bet your life that's what he will do, you
have to be above reproach. You are sure you have told me the truth?"

"Yes ... don't keep on and on! I have told you the truth!"

"Okay." He relaxed and took out a packet of cigarettes. He tossed her one and
took one himself. As they lit up, he went on, "Now for the next step. Will your
husband be home tomorrow night?"

"He's always home except on Mondays and Thursdays."

"I'll be here around eight thirty. Make sure you answer the door. I've got to get
into this room if I'm to sell him. If he comes to the door, he may keep me on the
doorstep and you don't sell insurance on a doorstep."

"Don't think you are going to have an easy time with Phil... you won't."

Anson got to his feet.

"Your job is to open the front door and let me in. I'll do the rest. Tomorrow night
then."
She stood up.

"John ... I want to know ... did you shoot that policeman?"

Anson picked up his briefcase.

"I told you not to ask questions." He paused and looked directly at her. "I have
the money to pay for the premium ...

that's all you need know."

He made no attempt to kiss her, but went out of the house and down the drive to
his car.

As soon as the sound of his car engine had died away, Meg ran to the telephone
and hurriedly dialled a number. She listened to the ringing tone for a long time,
but there was no answer.

The following night was warm and mild with a brilliant moon. As things turned
out this was lucky for Anson.

Meg had warned him Barlowe would be difficult but he hadn't imagined he was
going to be as difficult as he was. Like most weak-willed people, Barlowe was
not only obstinate he was also rude.

Anson had no difficulty in getting in to the big sitting-room because Meg let him
in, but when Barlowe jumped up from the armchair before the fire, an evening
newspaper in his hand, Anson immediately felt the impact of hostility that came
from the small ill-tempered looking man.

In spite of the hostility, Anson went smoothly into his usual sales talk, but he
had scarcely begun, before Barlowe curtly cut him short.

"I'm not interested in insurance. I never have been and I never will be," he said.
"You're wasting your time and mine. I'll be glad if you'll go."

Anson had smiled his friendly professional smile.

"I've come all the way from Brent, Mr. Barlowe, to see you. I would take it as a
favour if you would listen to what I have to say. I..."
"I don't intend to listen!" Barlowe turned angrily to Meg who was standing in the
doorway. "Why did you let him in?

You know I never talk to salesmen!"

He sat down and opening his paper, he hid himself behind it.

Anson and Meg exchanged glances. She lifted her shoulders as if to say "Well, I
told you, didn't I?"

To Anson this was a challenge. He was one of the top salesmen of the National
Fidelity's group of salesmen. Over the years, he had often met with the complete
brush-off and had survived to make a sale.

He said to the newspaper, hiding Barlowe, "Of course if I am annoying you I'll
go, but I was under the impression you were interested in taking out a life policy.
In fact, I was told to call on you."

Barlowe lowered the newspaper and stared suspiciously at Anson.

"Told? What do you mean? Who told you?"

Anson made an apologetic gesture.

"Mr. Hammerstein," he said naming the general manager of Framley's store. He


felt safe in using Hammerstein's name.

In his lowly position as salesman, Barlowe wasn't likely to have contact with a
man in Hammerstein's position. "I sold him a life policy and he said it would be
a good idea if I called on some members of his staff. He gave me your name."

Barlowe flushed red.

"Mr. Hammerstein gave you my name?"

"That's right," Anson said and smiled. "He seems to think a lot of you."

There was a pause, then Barlowe said in a milder tone, "I'm not interested.
Anyway, thanks for calling."
"That's all right," Anson said. "I'm glad to have met you. I won't disturb you any
longer."

Barlowe got hastily to his feet. He was now looking embarrassed.

"I didn't mean to seem rude," he said. "I wouldn't like you to think ... I mean ...
well, one does get so pestered ..."

Anson's smile widened. This ill-tempered little man was now obviously scared
word might get back to his boss that he had given Anson the brush-off.

"I know ... I know," he said. "Believe it or not some optimist the other day
actually tried to sell me an insurance policy,"

and he laughed.

Barlowe laughed too. He was now losing his hostility and he moved forward as
if to show Anson to the front door.

"I'll bet he didn't sell you anything," he said.

"And you wouldn't lose," Anson returned and laughed again.

Barlowe was now in the hall. With a quick wink at Meg, Anson joined him.

"I was admiring your garden," he said. "I would very much like to see it in
daylight. As I drove up, my headlights showed me some of the finest roses I
have ever seen."

Barlowe was about to open the front door; now he paused.

"Are you interested in gardening?"

"I'm crazy about it, but unfortunately I live in an apartment. My father had a
cottage in Carmel. He grew roses, but they weren't in the same class as yours."

"Is that a fact?" Barlowe was now completely relaxed. "Would you like to see
my garden?" His ill-tempered face softened. "I'll show it to you."

He opened a cupboard by the front door and Anson saw the cupboard contained
a number of electrical switches.
Barlowe flicked them all down, then he opened the front door.

Anson moved forward, then paused.

The small garden had been transformed into a fairyland. Although he could see
no sign of any lamps, the garden was now artistically and beautifully floodlit. It
was as if the flowers themselves were producing their own lights. Even the
fountain and the fish pond were bathed in blue and yellow lights.

"Well for Pete's sake!" Anson said, catching his breath. He pushed past Barlowe
and stood on the drive, staring. There was no need for him to pretend. The sight
of this beauty, the gay play of the fountain, the colour and the flowers caught
him by the throat.

"I did it all," Barlowe said, standing by his side. "Everything... I grew the
flowers: lighted them; made the fountain ... I did everything."

"I would give five years of my life to be able to create a thing like that," Anson
said and at that moment he meant it.

"I've given a lot of the years of my life learning how to do it," Barlowe said, and
suddenly his face became pinched and ill-tempered again. "And where's it got
me? Just a small time job with Framley's."

Here it is, Anson thought. Here's what I've been waiting for! Turning to
Barlowe, a look of puzzled astonishment on his face, he said, "But why work for
anyone, Mr. Barlowe, when you have such a talent? You could make a whale of
a lot of money as a landscape architect."

Barlowe made an angry gesture.

"Do you think I haven't thought of that? How can I, without capital? I can't take
risks. I'm married and I haven't anything behind me."

"Nothing behind you?" Anson said his voice incredulous. "That's ridiculous!
You have this!" He waved dramatically towards the garden. "Any bank would
advance you money if they saw this! Haven't you talked to them?"

"My bank won't advance me anything!" Barlowe said bitterly. "I've no security
to offer. I have a minus credit rating. My mother cost me ... well, that's neither
here nor there. I can't raise a loan. Even the house is mortgaged to the hilt!"
here nor there. I can't raise a loan. Even the house is mortgaged to the hilt!"

Anson walked away from him. He stood over the floodlit fish pond, watching
the goldfish as they moved in the lighted water. He stood there for some
moments before Barlowe joined him.

"This interests me," Anson said. "When I see a garden like this ... well, it excites
me." He looked at Barlowe. "I see endless possibilities. How much capital would
you need to start up on your own? I'm in touch with a lot of people in Brent,
Lambsville and Pru Town ... wealthy people. They would be crazy to have a
garden like this. I could give you a flock of introductions. How much capital do
you want?"

Barlowe's face was suddenly alert and hopeful.

"What are we standing out here for?" he said, putting his hand on Alison's arm.
"Let's go inside and I'll tell you about it."

As Anson re-entered the sitting-room and sat down on the settee, he gave Meg a
quick furtive wink of triumph.

"I'll be working late, Anna," Anson said. "I have a policy to cope with. No need
for you to hang around."

"I'll do it if you like, Mr. Anson," Anna said, "I don't expect it will take long."

"It could do. Isn't this the night you take your boy friend to the movies?"

Anna giggled.

"He takes me, you mean."

"Go on ... get off. I've nothing to do." When she had gone, Anson went to the
store cupboard and took from it four policy blanks. He put them on his desk,
then lighting a cigarette, he leaned back in his desk chair.

It was now five days since he had talked Barlowe into taking out a $5,000 life
insurance policy. Before the deal could be completed, Barlowe had to take the
usual insurance medical examination. It would have been tough luck if he had
failed it, but he hadn't. Dr. Stevens, who acted for the National Fidelity, had said
failed it, but he hadn't. Dr. Stevens, who acted for the National Fidelity, had said
Barlowe was a first class life.

It was when Anson had explained to Barlowe how he could use a life policy to
raise the capital he needed to set up as a horticultural architect - a phrase Anson
kept using and which obviously pleased Barlowe — that Barlowe's sales
resistance had disappeared. He had become so eager to sign that Anson was
worried he had oversold his prospect. He had to explain to Barlowe that before
the National Fidelity would accept him as a client he would have to pass a
medical examination.

"The great advantage of this policy so far as you are concerned," Anson said
hurrying over the sudden pause that followed when he had mentioned the
medical examination, "is that you will be able to ask your bank manager, a year
from signature, for three thousand dollars and get it without any fuss. You will
only have to pay $150 to gain this advantage.'"

Barlowe frowned. He picked at the dirty adhesive bandage on his hand.

"Do you mean I have to wait a year before I can raise the capital I want?" he
demanded. "Why, I thought ..."

"Excuse me, Mr. Barlowe, but not so many minutes ago you told me you hadn't
a hope of ever raising any kind of capital," Anson said quietly. "Now, in a year's
time, because of this policy, you will be able to buy your land and start up in
business."

Barlowe hesitated, then nodded.

"Yes ... all right. So what happens now?"

"As soon as I have the doctor's report, I'll come out with the policy for your
signature," Anson said.

There was one final touch necessary to complete his plan.

"If you care to pay the first premium in cash, I'll be able to give you a five per
cent discount. You may as well have the discount and it saves book-keeping for
me."

And of course Barlowe had agreed.


And of course Barlowe had agreed.

Anson picked up one of the policy blanks. He inserted it into the typewriter and
filled in the necessary details. This policy was for $5,000: the beneficiary in the
event of the death of the insured was to be Mrs. Philip Barlowe.

He put in another blank, duplicating what he had already done. The third and
fourth policy blanks were different. These, he made out for the sum of $50,000.
If Barlowe happened to spot the difference, Anson could always say it was a
typist's error.

Tomorrow night would be Thursday. Anson knew Meg would be alone.


Although he was tempted to go out to the lonely house and make love to her, he
knew this now would be too dangerous. He would have to wait. In six months,
perhaps less, he and she would be together for as long as he liked: he and she
and fifty thousand dollars ... worth waiting for.

He called the Barlowe house. Meg answered the telephone.

"It's all fixed," he said. "I'll be coming out the night after tomorrow. I told you I'd
fix it, didn't I?"

"You are sure it is going to be all right?" The note of anxiety in her voice excited
him. "When he has signed ....what are you going to do?"

"Let's wait until he signs," Anson said. "I'm thinking of you. I wish I were with
you," and he put down the receiver.

A few minutes after six o'clock a.m. Philip Barlowe came awake with a sudden
start. He had been dreaming. His grey-white pillow was damp with sweat.

He came awake the way an animal comes awake: instantly alert, suspicious,
slightly frightened. He lay still, listening, then when he heard no sound to alarm
him, he relaxed and moved further down in the single bed, making himself more
comfortable.

Thursday!

The two days that meant more to him were Monday and Thursday when he got
away from the house to spend the night alone after the dreary night classes when
he attempted to instil into the minds of a group of pimply youths the basic theory
of horticulture.
of horticulture.

This night, he told himself, he would go out to Jason's Glen. There, he would be
sure to find a number of smoochers and petters: young people behaving
disgracefully in their secondhand cars. The thought of what he had heard and
seen in the past brought beads of sweat out on his high forehead.

One of these days, he told himself, his small, well shaped hands turning in to
fists, he would teach these sluts a lesson.

Their feeble, immoral petting disgusted him. Sometime in the very near future,
some girl would learn what it meant to go beyond a giggle, a struggle and vapid
gasp of breath.

Impatiently, he tossed off the blanket and sheet and got out of bed. He crossed to
the mirror above the dressing-table and stared at himself. The shock of black
hair, the white drawn ill-tempered face made him grimace. He turned away and
walked over to a cupboard on the wall. He hesitated, listened, then took a key
from his pyjama pocket. He unlocked the cupboard and looked at the .38
automatic revolver that lay on the shelf.

By the gun was a white bathing cap. He picked up the cap; stretching it, he drew
it down over his head. From the shelf he took two small rubber pads. These he
fitted between his gums and the inside of his cheeks ... they filled out his face,
altering his appearance in a startling way. He moved over to the mirror and
stared again at himself. The ill-tempered, thin-faced Barlowe had disappeared.
Instead, there was a fat-faced nightmarish looking creature: the white bathing
cap making him look completely bald. He picked up the gun. His fingers curled
lovingly around the trigger, and he smiled.

Not so far in the future, he told himself, this gun would explode into sound. Not
so far into the future ... someone would die.

He put the gun back on to the shelf. He took off the bathing cap. He took,the
rubber pads from his mouth and replaced them on the shelf. Then he carefully
locked the cupboard door. He paused for a long moment staring into space, then
whistling tunelessly, he went into the bathroom.

Twenty minutes later, he returned to his room. He dressed, again opened the
cupboard and put the bathing cap and the rubber pads into his hip pocket. For a
long moment he stared at the gun, hesitated then decided to leave it where it was.
long moment he stared at the gun, hesitated then decided to leave it where it was.

He stepped into the corridor. He paused outside Meg's bedroom door. He put his
ear against the locked door panel and listened. He could hear nothing. He stood
there for several moments, then with a frustrated grimace, he went down the
stairs to prepare his routine breakfast of eggs and bacon.

Unaware of what had been going on, Meg continued to sleep restlessly.

Jason's Glen was a favourite place for young couples who were lucky enough to
have a car, but unfortunate enough to have no room, little money, and no
facilities in which to make love. No matter what the weather offered, Jason's
Glen always had at least two or three cars in which couples made desperate and
natural love.

This Thursday night, rain was falling. There were only two cars parked under the
trees. One of them was a smal British sports car: the other a battered, aged
Buick.

From under the heavy overgrown shrubs, Barlowe watched the two cars. They
were separated by some fifty yards.

Suddenly a girl exclaimed: "Jeff! No! What do you think you're doing? Jeff! ...
No!"

The voice came from the Buick.

Crouching like a black crab, the white bathing helmet pulled down over his thick
black hair, Barlowe crept out into the rain towards the parked Buick.

The man in the sports car called out, "Don't let her take no for an answer, pal,"
and the girl with him gave a squeal of hysterical laughter.

Barlowe suddenly had a furious, frustrated desire to have his gun in his hand.
With a gun ... he could teach these young, filthy animals a lesson.

He moved up to the Buick, unaware of the rain that was beating down on his
crouched body. When the girl in the car began to moan, Barlowe suddenly fell
on his knees. His hands clawed into the wet, soft soil. He remained like that, his
body arched, and when the girl suddenly cried out, he dug his fingers deeper into
the soil.
Anson was flicking through a pile of coupon inquiries when the telephone bell
rang.

Anna picked up the receiver.

Looking across at her from his desk, Anson saw her usual placid expression
change to alertness and he had a sudden feeling of danger.

"Yes ... yes, he's here. I'll put you through."

Anna looked at Anson and waved the telephone receiver warningly. Then she
flicked down the key and hissed, "It's Mr. Maddox."

His face wooden, his heart suddenly thumping, Anson picked up his receiver and
said, "Anson here."

A hard, curt voice barked, "1 want you out here. How are you fixed for
tomorrow?"

"I can manage that," Anson said, "anything special?"

"You don't imagine I'd pull you off your territory just to look at you, do you?"
Maddox snapped. "Okay, then ten o'clock tomorrow," and he hung up.

Anson replaced his receiver, pushed back his chair and walked to the window so
Anna couldn't see how white he had gone.

Barlowe's policy for $50,000, signed and completed, had gone to Head Office
three days ago. Why had Maddox got on to it so quickly? Anson dug his
sweating hands into his trouser pockets as he wondered.

"What does he want?" Anna asked curiously.

Making an effort, Anson returned to his desk. He sat down.

"I don't know," he said, picking up another batch of coupons. "Why should I
worry?"

Anna lifted her fat shoulders.


"Well, if you're not worrying, why should I?" Anson went on sorting through the
coupons. There was a chill around his heart. Maddox! Even before Barlowe was
dead this jinx of a man was suspicious... or was he?

Anson lit a cigarette. Better now than after Barlowe was dead. If it looked too
dangerous, he wouldn't go ahead with his plan. It was better now to know the
worst before he was so far out on a limb he couldn't scramble back.

Maddox!
Chapter 5
Patty Shaw, Maddox's secretary, was typing busily when Anson entered the
small outer office.

She looked up, took her hands off the keys and smiled a welcome.

"Hello, John, nice to see you again. How's it out in the back of the beyond?"

Anson returned her smile. All the National Fidelity salesmen were fond of Patty:
apart from her blonde prettiness, she was smart and helpful. She understood a
salesman's difficulties and she knew how discouraging Maddox could be.

"Not so bad. What's he want?" Anson jerked his head to the door that led into
Maddox's office.

"The Vodex car smash," Patty said, rolling her blue eyes. "He's trying to get out
of paying the claim. He wants your angle on it."

Anson drew in a long, slow breath of relief. And he had been thinking it was the
Barlowe policy Maddox was going to gripe about.

"He can't get out of paying it!" he exclaimed angrily. "What's the matter with the
man? Vodex was drunker than a skunk! We've got to pay!"

"You know how he is," Patty said, lifting her shoulders. "He'll try anything to get
out of paying a claim." She flicked down a key on her intercom. "Mr. Anson's
here, Mr. Maddox."

A hard curt voice barked, "Shoot him right in."

"Go ahead," Patty said, waving to the door. "Remember Daniel in the lion's den.
Daniel didn't give a damn for the lions, and the lions didn't give a damn for
Daniel."

Anson forced a grin and then went into Maddox's office.

Maddox was sitting behind a vast desk, smothered in papers. There were papers
on the floor, papers on most of the chairs and papers everywhere.
Maddox was glaring at a policy he held in his thick freckled fingers. His
thinning grey hair was rumpled and his red face was screwed into a scowl.
Maddox wasn't a big man although he looked big from behind the shelter of his
desk. He had the shoulders of a boxer and the legs of a midget. His eyes were
restless, alert and bleak. He wore his well-cut clothes anyhow. Cigarette ash
rained on his sleeves, his tie and his lap. He had a habit of running his stubby
fingers constantly through his hair which added to his dishevelled appearance.

He leaned back in the chair and glared at Anson.

"Well, come on in," he said. "Sit down. This sonofa bitch, Vodex ..." and as
Anson sat down, Maddox launched into a steady invective against their client.

Twenty minutes later, Maddox made a gesture of disgust and reached for
another cigarette.

"Okay, so well have to pay up! Forty thousand dollars! You salesmen kill me!
Couldn't you have seen this jerk was an alcoholic? All you think about is your
commission! If you had a grain of insight, we'd be forty thousand dollars in
pocket!"

"It's my job to sell insurance," Anson said sharply. "You don't have to beef to
me. If you have any complaint take it up with Doc Stevens. He okayed Vodex. If
you don't like the way I sell insurance you'd better talk to Mr. Burrows."

Burrows was the President of the National Fidelity, the only man who could talk
back to Maddox.

Maddox lit another cigarette.

"Okay, okay," he said, waving his stubby hands. "Don't get your shirt out. But
this kills me! Forty thousand dollars!

What's the matter with Stevens? Doesn't he know a drunk when he sees one?"

"Vodex wasn't a drunk!" Anson said patiently. "He happened to be drunk on the
night of the crash. He hasn't been drunk in years."

Maddox shrugged and suddenly relaxed. His red, rubbery face contorted into a
sour grin.
"Well, let's forget it. How's business Anson? How are you doing?"

Knowing his man, Anson wasn't fooled. Cautiously he said, "It's all right. This is
a bad month. I have a number of prospects lined up once they have paid their
rents and bills."

"You're not doing so bad," Maddox said and dived into a mass of papers on his
desk. He came up with a policy which he studied, then looked at Anson with a
sudden cold penetrating stare.

"What's this? This guy Barlowe? You hooked him for fifty thousand dollars?"

Anson's face was expressionless as he said, "Oh Barlowe ... yes, that was a lucky
one. He sent in a coupon inquiry and I nailed him."

"Fifty thousand, huh?" Maddox stared at the policy, then dropped it on his desk.
"Who is Barlowe?"

"Probably one of the best gardeners I've ever come across," Anson said. "He
works in the horticultural department of Framleys' stores. I don't know if you are
interested in gardening, but he has the finest small garden I've eVer seen."

"I'm not interested in anything except the work that lies under my nose and the
pen I hold in my hand," Maddox misquoted sourly. "So this guy works at
Framley's stores, does he? How come he can afford a policy this size?"

"He wants to use it to raise capital to buy himself a business," Anson said. "After
a couple of years, he'll ask us to pay the premiums out of the policy."

"Nice for him," Maddox said scowling. "In the meantime if he happens to drop
dead, we're in the hole for fifty thousand bucks."

"Stevens rates him as a first class life."

"That quack! He can't even recognize a drunk when he sees one!"

Anson didn't say anything. He watched Maddox light yet another cigarette.

"The beneficiary is Mrs. Barlowe ... that his wife?"


"The beneficiary is Mrs. Barlowe ... that his wife?"

"Yes." Anson felt his heart give a little kick against his side.

"What's she like?" Maddox asked, staring at Anson.

"You mean what does she look like?" Anson asked, his voice casual, his
expression inquiring.

"Yeah ... I like to have a picture of people in my mind," Maddox said. "When I
get a policy for this amount come out of the blue and I learn the insured is just a
counter clerk, I get interested. What's she like?"

"Attractive, around twenty-seven. I didn't talk to her much. I talked to Barlowe. I


got the impression they were happy together," Anson said carefully.

Maddox picked up the policy and stared at it.

"How come this guy pays the first premium in cash?" he asked.

"He wanted it that way. He keeps money in his house. Anything wrong about
it?"

Maddox grimaced.

"I don't know. Twelve hundred is a lot of dough to keep in your house. Hasn't he
a banking account?"

"I guess so. I didn't ask him."

Maddox blew a stream of tobacco smoke down his thick nostrils. His red
rubbery face was screwed up in an expression of thought.

"So he wants to use this policy to raise capital ... that it?"

"That's what he told me."

"To set up as a gardener?"

"Well, more than that... to buy land, greenhouses, machines and so on."

"How much capital does he want?"


Anson shrugged.

"I don't know. I didn't ask him. He said he wanted to insure his life and he told
me why. I didn't argue with him."

"That's right," Maddox said and put the policy down on his desk, "So long as
you make a sale, you don't have to worry, do you?"

"It's my job to make a sale," Anson said quietly. "That's what / get paid for." He
stood up. "Is there anything else?"

"No, I guess that's about it," Maddox said, without looking at Anson.

"Then I'll get back. Will see you."

Maddox nodded absently. He still didn't look at Anson. He was staring at the
Barlowe policy. He was still staring at it, lost in thought, several minutes after
Anson had gone. Then, suddenly coming to life, he flicked down a key on the
intercom and said, "Harmas around?"

"Yes, Mr. Maddox," Patty said. "I'll call him."

Three minutes later, Steve Harmas, Maddox's chief investigator, wandered in.
He was a tall broad-shouldered man; dark around thirty-three with a deeply
tanned ugly but humorous face. He had married Maddox's favourite secretary,
something that Maddox had never got over, but as Harmas was by far his best
investigator, Maddox had been forced to accept the fact.

"You wanted me?" Harmas asked as he folded his long lean body into the client's
chair.

Maddox tossed him the Barlowe policy.

"Look at that," he said, then spilling ash over his papers he selected yet another
policy and began to examine it suspiciously.

Harmas looked through the policy handed to him, then he put it on the desk.

"Nice work," he said. "Anson is a smart cookie."

Maddox bent his chair back until it creaked under the weight of his massive
Maddox bent his chair back until it creaked under the weight of his massive
shoulders.

"I'm not so sure he is so smart," he said. "Take this policy. Barlowe is a ten-a-
dime salesman at Framley's stores, Pru Town. What's he doing taking out a life
policy for fifty thousand dollars?"

Harmas shrugged.

"I don't know .... you tell me."

"I'd like to," Maddox said. "If Barlowe suddenly drops dead, we're in the hole for
fifty thousand bucks. The story is he has taken out this policy so he can raise
enough capital to set up as a gardener. What would he want fifty thousand for to
set up as a gardener?"

Harmas scratched the back of his neck. He knew Maddox. He knew Maddox
wasn't asking for information. He was talking to himself.

"Go ahead ... I'm here to listen," he said.

"That's about all you're good for," Maddox said bitterly. "I have hunches. I don't
like this policy. I have a hunch about it.

It gives off a smell."

Harmas grinned.

"Is there any policy that comes to you that doesn't give off a smell?"

"A few do ... but not many. Here's what you do. I want to know everything there
is to know about Barlowe and his wife: repeat his wife. Get a Tracing Agency on
to them and have them send everything they can dig up direct to me.

Understand?"

"Okay," Harmas said, getting to his feet. "If that's what you want, that's what
you'll get."

"Why didn't this guy take out a five thousand dollar insurance?" Maddox asked.
"Why fifty thousand? Why did he pay the first premium in cash?"
"Why fifty thousand? Why did he pay the first premium in cash?"

"I wouldn't know," Harmas said, "but if you're all that interested, I guess, I'll
have to find out."

Maddox nodded.

"That's it... find out," and reaching for another policy, he settled down to
examine it.

Late back from his trip to San Francisco, Anson was thinking about going to bed
when his door bell rang. Wondering who could be calling at this hour, he went to
the door.

A woman, wearing a black coat and a green and yellow scarf over her head,
hiding her face, moved quickly past him into the room.

"Shut the door!" she said sharply.

"Meg!"

Anson hurriedly shut and locked the door as Meg Barlowe took off the scarf.

"What are you doing here?" Anson asked, alarmed.

"I had to come." She took off her coat and tossed it on a chair. "I've been trying
to contact you all day."

"Did anyone see you come in?" Anson asked. "Don't you realize if we are seen
together..."

"I was careful. No one saw me. Anyway, even if they did see me they wouldn't
recognize me." She came over to him and slid her arms around him. "Aren't you
pleased to see me?"

The feel of her body as she pressed herself against him lessened Anson's alarm.
He kissed her with mounting passion until she broke away.

"Where have you been?" she asked, moving away and sitting on the arm of an
armchair. "I tried to telephone you."

"I've just got back from 'Frisco," Anson said. "Look, Meg, I warned you we have
"I've just got back from 'Frisco," Anson said. "Look, Meg, I warned you we have
to be careful. You must never telephone me. Our plan stands or falls on the fact
that we are practically strangers. You must understand that!"

She made an impatient movement.

"What's been happening?"

He told her about his interview with Maddox. She listened, her cobalt blue eyes
worried.

"There's nothing to be worried about," he said. "Maddox won't take it further.


He's satisfied."

She looked down at her hands as she asked, "When do you ... get rid of Phil?"

"Not yet. We must wait. Four or five months at least."

She stiffened.

"Four or five monthsl"

"Yes. If we don't wait, we'll be in trouble. Imagine how Maddox would react if
your husband died within a few weeks of insuring himself. It'll be bad enough if
he dies to four or five months' time, but sooner than that would be out of the
question."

"How will you do it?"

The intensity of her stare began to irritate him.

"I don't know. I haven't even thought about it yet. This idea I had of him falling
and drowning in the pond won't work. I couldn't be sure someone might come up
the road while I was fixing it. It'll have to happen in the house."

Meg shivered.

"But how?"

"I don't know. I have to think about it. When I get the right idea, I'll tell you."

"But must we really wait all that time?"


"But must we really wait all that time?"

"If we rush this, we could ruin everything. Isn't fifty thousand dollars worth
waiting for?"

She hesitated, then nodded.

"Yes, of course," she paused, then went on, "so you have no idea how you'll do
it?"

"Don't keep on and on," Anson said impatiently. "At least I have him now
insured for fifty thousand dollars and that's something you didn't think I could
fix."

"Yes ... you were clever about that." She stood up. "I must go," and she picked
up her coat.

"Go?" Anson's face became tense, "but why? Now you're here ... he's not going
home tonight, is he? Of course you must stay..."

"I can't." She slipped on her coat and began to put the scarf on her head. "I
promised I would go to his class tonight. That's why I'm here. He drove me
down this morning. I've been trying to get you all day."

He made to take her in his arms, but she avoided him.

"No, John, I must go."

"Then when do we have a few minutes together?" he demanded, his voice edged
with frustration. "Now you're here: oh, come on, Meg... I want you..."

"No! I have to go! I shouldn't have come here. I have to go!"

The sudden hardness in her eyes warned him it would be useless to attempt to
persuade her to stay.

"You can kiss me, can't you?" he said angrily.

She let him kiss her, but when he became ardent, she pushed him roughly away.
"I said no!"

His face congested, his eyes sullen with frustrated anger, Anson went to the front
door, opened it and looked out on to the deserted corridor.

"I'll call you," he said as she moved past him.

He listened to her heels click on the stairs as she went down the street.

A dusty 1958 Buick was parked at the end of the street in which Anson's
apartment block stood.

Sailor Hogan sat at the wheel, a cigarette dangling from his lips, his big hands
resting on his knees. His hard eyes moved continuously to his driving mirror to
check the street behind him and then through the windshield to check the street
ahead of him.

When he saw Meg come out of Anson's apartment block, he started the car
engine. As Meg reached the car, he leaned across the bench seat and swung open
the door. Meg slid in, slammed the door as Hogan shot the car away from the
kerb.

"Well? What did he say?" Hogan demanded.

"At least four or five months," Meg told him and flinched away from the
explosion she knew would follow.

"Months?" Hogan's voice shot up. "You crazy? You mean weeks, don't you?"

"He said months. He says they'll be suspicious, if he does it before."

"I don't give a damn what he says!" Hogan snarled. "It's got to happen before
then! I can't wait that long! I must have the money by the end of the month!"

"If you think you can do better than me ... then you talk to him," said Meg
sullenly.

Hogan gave her a quick vicious glance.

"Okay, baby," he said. "We'll see about this."

He shoved his foot down on the gas pedal and the car surged forward.
He shoved his foot down on the gas pedal and the car surged forward.

Neither of them spoke until they reached the Barlowe house. Meg got out of the
car and opened the double gates.

Hogan drove the car into the garage. He joined Meg as she unlocked the front
door. They walked side by side into the dark house and into the sitting-room.

When Meg had lowered the blinds, she turned on the lights.

Hogan stood over the fire, his big hands thrust into his pockets while he watched
Meg get a bottle of whisky and glasses from the cupboard.

Hogan was above middle-height with the wide muscular shoulders of a boxer.
He wore his wavy, dark hair cut short.

He was handsome in a brutish way. During his professional fighting career his
nose had been flattened. There were scar tissues along the ridge of his eyebrows,
but this added to rather than detracted from his animal glamour.

"Listen, doll," he said, "you've got to do better than this." He took the glass half
full of whisky Meg handed to him. "I've got to have this money by the end of the
month! You've got to talk this guy into doing his stuff by then or you and me
will fall out."

Meg sat on the settee. She was pale and her eyes were anxious.

"It's no use, Jerry," she said. "You don't know him the way I do. He scares me."
She shivered. "I can't handle him. I wish I hadn't listened to you! I wish..."

"Aw, shut up!" Hogan snarled. "You do what I tell you or I'll give you
something to remember me by!" Meg looked at him.

"That policeman who was shot at the Caltex hold-up ... Anson did it."

Hogan stiffened.

"Anson? You're lying, you rotten little..."

"He did it!" Meg exclaimed, jumping to her feet and backing away as Hogan, his
hands now out of hfs pockets began to move threateningly towards her. "He
killed him with Phil's gun!"
killed him with Phil's gun!"

Hogan paused, then he rubbed his jaw with a sweating hand.

"So that's how he raised the money!" he said startled. "Joe and me wondered
how he had got it. Well! what do you know ... a cop killer!"

"It didn't mean a thing to him!" Meg exclaimed. "He's dangerous, Jerry. I'm
warning you! Those eyes of his! He scares me. I wish you hadn't picked on him."

"I picked on the right guy," Hogan said. He finished the whisky and set down the
glass. "It was your idea to get Barlowe insured, wasn't it? How else could we
have worked it without having some punk in the insurance racket to fix it? Well,
Anson's fixed it, hasn't he. He had to: I saw to that. With the money owing to
Sam Bernstein and me to put pressure on him, he was a natural." He sat down
beside her. "Get me another drink. Phew! A cop killer!" As Meg came back with
another glass half full of neat whisky, he asked, "Has he still got the gun?"

"No. He brought it back the next day. I've been trying to get you for days but
you're never in."

Hogan made an impatient movement.

"If I'd known he was that tough, I'd been more careful how I handled him... a cop
killer!" He drank some of the whisky and blew out his cheeks. "Well, what are
we going to do? I must have the money by the end of the month. This is a chance
in a lifetime. Joe told me this morning he couldn't wait. There's another punk
waiting to put up the money, but Joe wants me to be his partner. It's cheap at the
price ... twenty-five grand and Joe won't ask questions."

"It's no good, Jerry. You'll have to wait."

Hogan stared into the fire for a long moment while Meg watched him anxiously.

"What's wrong with me knocking Phil off?" he asked suddenly. "He's insured
now ... that was the tricky part. I could fix him and then we'd have the dough
without having to wait for this junk Anson to make up his mind."

"No!" Megs voice went shrill. "I won't let you! You must keep clear of this,
Jerry! You must have a cast iron alibi, same as me! That's the whole trick in my
plan to keep us both in the clear and let Anson take the blame if anything goes
plan to keep us both in the clear and let Anson take the blame if anything goes
wrong. You must keep out of this!"

"Well, we've got to do something!" Hogan snarled, suddenly angry again. "Stir
yourself. I can't wait five months!"

"I'll think of something," Meg said desperately.

Hogan got to his feet.

"You'd better or I'll look elsewhere for the dough." He caught hold of her by the
arms and shook her. "Listen, I'm getting sick of this! This was your great idea!
Okay! ... make it work or you and me will part company! We've parted company
before. You've got nothing another woman can't give me! Hear me! If we part
this time ... we part for good*!"

"I'll fix it!" Meg said desperately. "Honestly, Jerry ... I'll fix it!"

"You'd better!" He started towards the door, paused and glared at her. "And fix it
fast!"

"You're not leaving, Jerry?" She looked pleadingly at him. "I haven't seen you
for so long. He won't be back tonight..."

Hogan's battered face twisted into a contemptuous sneer.

"You imagine you've got something to keep me here?" he asked. "I've things to
do. You fix Anson!"

She came to him, but he shoved her roughly away.

"Keep your paws off me! You use your head instead of your body for a change!
I want the dough by the end of the month ... or you and me are through for
good!"

He left the house, slamming the front door.

Meg stood motionless. It was not until the sound of his car had died away that
she moved stiffly to the settee. She sat down. A convulsive sob shook her, but
she quickly controlled herself. She picked up the bottle of whisky and poured
herself a stiff shot. She had thought she had lost Hogan before, but he had come
back. This time she could lose him for good if she didn't do something. The
thought of losing him made her feel sick and weak. She drank the whisky and
with a sudden desperate gesture, she threw the glass into the fire.

It was when the whisky began to move through her body relaxing her, that Meg
thought back to the time when she had first met Jerry Hogan. It seemed a long
time to her, but it was only three years .... much had happened to her during
these three years.

Then she had been a waitress in a small Hollywood restaurant. Hogan had come
in with a short, fat elderly man named Benny Hirsch who she learned later was
Hogan's fight manager.

Hogan had just lost his Californian light-heavy weight title. He had been
knocked out with a sucker punch in the first two minutes of the first round. Apart
from an aching jaw, he was unscarred. Meg had no idea who he was. She had
come to the table, her order pad in her hand and had looked indifferently at the
two men.

Hogan had been in a vicious, frightened mood. His career, long threatened by his
sexual excesses and his heavy drinking, had now blown up in his face. He could
see Hirsch was no longer interested to him. There were plenty of young keen
fighters who could keep Hirsch in the money without him having to bother with
a beat-up, womanizer like Hogan, and Hogan knew it.

"A coffee," Hirsch said without looking at Hogan.

Hogan stared at him.

"A coffee? What the hell? Aren't you hungry? I want a steak."

Hirsch shifted around and looked him over, dislike and contempt on his fat face.

"Yeah ... you sure need a steak," he said bitterly. "I don't even need a coffee. The
sight of you makes me sick to my stomach. Steak! Some fighter! You do your
best fighting in bed with a bottle." He got to his feet. "I don't know why I even
came here with you. You're through, Hogan. As far as I am concerned, you're
yesterday's smell of boiled cabbage!"

Startled and shocked, Meg watched Hirsch walk out of the restaurant. She then
looked at Hogan who sat limply in his chair, sweat beads on his face, and at that
looked at Hogan who sat limply in his chair, sweat beads on his face, and at that
moment, seeing him in defeat, she was stupid enough to fall in love with him.

When the restaurant closed, Hogan went with her to her small bedroom above an
unsuccessful dry-cleaning establishment. His fierce, brutal, selfish love making
was something Meg had never experienced. That first sordid act of so-called
love chained her to this man, excusing his viciousness, his cowardice, his
cheating and his drinking.

Early the following morning, Hogan came awake and looked at Meg, sleeping at
his side. Here, he told himself was a meal ticket. He knew he was through with
fighting. He had to live somehow, and this dish, with her looks, could at least
keep him in food, drink and cigarettes.

It took him a few days to convince Meg that if she really wanted to have him as
her lover, she would have to give up her job as a waitress and start hustling.
Hogan made it easy for her. He went round to a couple of pimps who controlled
a certain, profitable beat and told them his girl was moving in. They regarded
him thoughtfully, remembered that he was an ex-light-heavy weight, and
decided it would be wise to offer no opposition.

For the next year, Meg worked the streets, giving her earmings willingly to
Hogan who used the money either for backing horses or to finance himself in all-
night poker games he and his fellow pimps arranged.

Then Meg began to realize the poker game was a blind. While she was working,
Hogan was chasing other girls. The money she made he now was spending on
any woman he happened to run into during the night hours Meg tramped her
beat.

One night, returning drunk, with lipstick on his shirt, Hogan told her that they
were parting company. Meg listened to his drunken slurring contempt, with fear
clutching at her heart.

Life without Hogan, no matter how he behaved, was unthinkable to her.

"You're chick-feed," Hogan had sneered. "I'm going to look for a girl who can
earn big money ... not a run-down street floosie like you. You and me are
through !"
through !"

The following afternoon, Meg was in the ladies' room of a smart hotel. She was
about to go up to the fourth floor where a middle-aged business man was
impatiently waiting for her. By one of the toilet basins she saw an expensive
lizard-skin bag. She stared at it, hesitated, then moving quickly, she opened it.
The bag was stuffed with fifty-dollar bills. For a long moment she stared at the
money, then grabbing the bills, she transferred them to her own handbag. Her
one thought was that with this money, Hogan would remain with her.

As she moved to the door, the door opened. A woman and the hotel detective
came in.

Hogan wasn't at the trial. Meg went away for three months, and when she came
out, Hogan had vanished. She had no money, no protection and the police
pestered her.

Finally, in desperation, she left Los Angeles and headed for San Francisco. Her
money ran out when she got as far as Pru Town on a Greyhound bus. She
managed to rent a small room on the top floor of an office block. It was her bad
luck to strike the worst winter for the past fifty years. The newspapers made
headlines about the frost, snow and cold.

She had no pimp to protect her and she had no regular beat. It was when she was
ill, frozen and defeated not caring what happened to her, using her last few
dollars on cheap whisky, that she met Phil Barlowe.

She would always remember that moment when he came furtively out of the
darkness. She was standing under a street lamp, wet snow falling on her, her feet
frozen, aware that the cold had turned her face into a stiff white mask.

Barlowe, wearing a black, slouch hat and a dark topcoat, had paused and they
looked at each other.

"Are you looking for a naughty girl?" Meg asked, her lips so stiff with the cold
she had trouble in speaking.

"How naughty?"

The pale brown eyes scared her. The thin, ill-tempered face warned her this man
could be a sadist, but she was beyond caring. She had to have money. If this
mean looking creature had money, then she would take a chance with him.
mean looking creature had money, then she would take a chance with him.

They had gone together to her room. Barlowe had sat on one of the chairs
making no attempt to take off his topcoat.

Meg had sat listlessly on the bed, shivering.

"Come on, honey," she said impatiently, "don't just sit there."

"I only want to talk to you," Barlowe said. "I've got no one I can talk to."

She was so used to nuts, perverts and queers, that she wasn't surprised.

"Look, honey," she said. "It'll cost you either way. Let's have your present."

He fumblingly produced his wallet and gave her three ten dollar bills. Meg, who
had been working for practically nothing, couldn't believe her eyes.

The room was heated by a small paraffin stove. It was enough only to keep out
the frost. Cold, shivering, and feeling she was now running a temperature, Meg
pulled the blankets over her and settled down in the bed, fully dressed.

She half listened to Barlowe talking. She vaguely gathered his mother had just
died and he was lonely. He talked on and on and on. She had an idea he told her
he had money, a cottage and a lovely garden. She gathered sleepily that he had a
good job in some store. Warmth at last began to steal over her and she fell
asleep.

She woke the next morning to find the stove out, the window covered with white
frost and her head aching wildly.

Barlowe had gone. She sat up in panic and opened her handbag, but the thirty
dollars was still there. She remained in bed, too ill to move, and at one time she
thought she might be dying.

Sometime during the evening, as the shadows lengthened and the cold sordid
little room began to dissolve into darkness, she heard a tapping on the door.

By then she was too ill to bother. She became aware vaguely that Barlowe was
standing over her, his bitter distressed face close to hers. She tried to say
something ... to tell him to go away, but the effort was too much for her. She
grimaced and closed her eyes, sinking into a feverish, frightening oblivion.

Later, she was vaguely aware of being carried down the narrow stairs in a kind
of hammock ... the stairs being so narrow and difficult a stretcher was
impossible. She found herself in a hospital bed and she was in the quiet ward for
ten days. Each day Barlowe came and sat by her side. He just stared at her and
said nothing. She was so ill and weak she accepted him ... a nut ... but she was
grateful for what he had done for her. During these ten days she constantly
thought of Jerry Hogan, wondering where he was, who he was sleeping with,
how he was making money enough to live.

Then suddenly, one morning, she woke up and she knew she was well again. Her
one thought was to get out of the hospital, but she shrank from returning to that
sordid room with its inadequate stove and the bitter wind that whistled under the
door and through the cracks of the ill-fitting windows.

Barlowe came in the evening. They talked. "I've been pretty ill," she said. "I
don't know anything about you ... why have you been so kind?"

"It's not kindness," he said quietly, his pale brown eyes moving over her in a
way that made her uneasy. "You and I are lonely people. I have a cottage: a
garden: a good job. I've lost my mother. I'd like to marry you. Will you marry
me?"

Right at that moment, thinking of the life that lay before her if she continued to
try to battle along on her own, Meg didn't hesitate. She regarded marriage as a
convenience. If it didn't work out, you could always get a divorce, so she
accepted his offer.

They were married by a special licence a week after Meg had left hospital. She
had been at first intrigued and pleased with the isolated house and the garden.
She believed that she would be able to find some kind of happiness here, but she
was quickly disillusioned.

She now never wanted to remember their first and only night together. It ended
by Meg locking herself in the spare room while Barlowe scratched on the door
as he knelt outside in the passage. She realized bitterly that she had married one
of those sick minded men whom she had had to cope with so often during the
time she had walked her beat in Hollywood.

But she knew herself to be hard and ruthless enough to control this poor, sick
But she knew herself to be hard and ruthless enough to control this poor, sick
little man. They lived their individual lives. Then, some months later, as she was
shopping in Brent, she came face to face with Sailor Hogan.

The sight of his reckless, handsome face sent a knife stab into her heart. Less
than an hour later, they were lying on his bed in his small two-room apartment
and she was telling him about Barlowe.

They met frequently, and during the weeks, while they talked, after Hogan had
made brutal love with her, the idea that Barlowe could bring them the money
they craved for began to evolve.

Hogan knew an insurance agent. Meg thought of the idea of insuring Barlowe's
life. Between the two of them they concocted the murder plan.

But now, as Meg, slightly drunk, sat on the settee staring into the fire, she
realized that unless she came up with some bright idea, she would again lose
Hogan. She sat there, her fists clenched between her knees, her mind active, her
heart pounding with the sick thought of once again facing life without her brutal,
vicious pimp.
Chapter 6
Barlowe stood by his bedroom door, listening. The time was just after nine
thirty. It was Sunday night. Downstairs, Meg was watching a television
programme. He had told her he was tired and was going to bed early. She had
shrugged indifferently.

Satisfied she was occupied with some pop-singer who sounded to Barlowe like a
banshee, he unlocked the cupboard on the wall, took from it the white bathing
cap and the cheek pads, and with a fixed grin on his face, he picked up the
.38 automatic, checked to see it was loaded, then dropped it into his overcoat
pocket.

Moving stealthily, he left his bedroom, locking the door. He crept down the
stairs, paused outside the sitting-room door to listen to the strident singing of the
pop singer, then let himself out into the hot, still night.

He was afraid to use his car for he knew Meg would, hear him drive away, so he
set out for the long walk across country to Glyn Hill, yet another quiet, favourite
place where the young made love in their cars.

He arrived at the open space that overlooked Pru Town a little after ten-fifteen.
Moving like a black, sinister crab, he edged his way through the shrubs.

There was one lone car parked under the trees. It was early yet. In another hour,
there would be several cars. From the lone car, came the faint sound of dance
music on the radio. Satisfied there was no one on this plateau except the two in
the car, Barlowe took off his hat and pulled the white bathing cap down over his
head. He then replaced his hat. He put the cheek pads into place, then taking the
gun from his pocket, he began to move silently and swiftly towards the car.

His heart hammered, his breath came in short, snorting gasps ... this time, he was
no longer going to be a mere onlooker; a mere peeping Tom.

On the following Monday morning as Anson was preparing to go to Pru Town,


the telephone bell rang.

Anna answered the call, said, "Yes, he's here: who is it please?" Then to Anson,
"A Mrs. Thomson wants you," and she flicked down the key.
"A Mrs. Thomson wants you," and she flicked down the key.

Impatiently, Anson scooped up his receiver.

"Yes? This is John Anson."

"John ... it is me."

With a feeling of shock, Anson recognized Meg's voice. He looked furtively


across at Anna who was threading paper into her typewriter. Alarmed that Meg
had been reckless enough to call him at his office, but excited to hear her voice
again, he said "Yes, Mrs. Thomson?"

"I must see you tonight. Something has happened."

Guardedly, Anson said, "I'll be able to manage that. Thank you for calling," and
he hung up.

As Anna showed no interest in the call, Anson didn't bother to lie to her. He
hurriedly completed his preparations.

Telling Anna he would be back the following morning, he went down to his car.

During the day he kept thinking of Meg and wondering what had happened to
make her call him. On his way to lunch at the Marlborough he stopped off at a
drug store for some after-shave lotion. As he was paying for his purchase a
woman who had come in after him, said, "Hello Johnny ... long time no see."

Turning sharply, he found Fay Lawley, the girl he used to go around with before
he had dropped her for Meg, standing by his side...

Fay's coarse prettiness and her enthusiastic wantonness had once attracted
Anson; but looking at her now, he marvelled that he had ever found her
interesting.

"Hello, Fay," he said in a cold, flat voice. "Excuse me ... I'm pressed for time."

"See you tonight, Johnny?" Fay asked, staring at him, her eyes hard and
challenging.
He forced a smile.

"I'm afraid not... not tonight. I'll call you the next time in town."

Side stepping her, he made a move to the door, but she caught hold of his arm.

"Remember me?" Her eyes now granite hard, scared him. "You and me met once
a week... remember?" He steeled himself and shook her off. "Take it easy, Fay ...
I just happen to be busy." He pushed past her and walked to his car. He was
aware sweat was on his face and there was a hollow feeling of alarm around his
heart.

He drove to the Marlborough, and parking his car, he entered the restaurant
where he was joined by Harry Davis, an oil and gas salesman whom he often
met on the road.

Davis was a fat, middle-aged man who had the happy knack of getting along
with anyone. But with this puzzle of what Meg had said on his mind, Anson
would have preferred to have eaten alone.

After they had ordered the lunch, Davis asked Anson how business was. The two
men discussed business conditions while they ate the excellent pea soup, then as
the waiter brought them the fried chicken, Davis said, "I don't know what this
town is coming to! Two shootings in ten days! We want a smarter police chief!
We've got to stamp out this kind of violence and at once!" Anson looked up
sharply. "Two shootings!

What's this?" "Haven't you seen this morning's newspaper?" "No. What's all
this?" Happily, Davis relaxed back in his chair. "A real juicy murder-cum-sex
crime! A young couple were necking out at Glyn Hill last night when some
maniac crept up on them with a gun. He shot the man and raped the girl. I knew
the murdered man ... he had been going steady with the girl for the past six
months. It's a hell of a thing! The girl was horribly used. Of course, the police
haven't a clue. At least they have a description of the killer. This, and the Caltex
murder must be making Jenson spin like a top."

"He's got nowhere with the Caltex shooting, has he?"

Anson said, cutting into his chicken.

"Well, no. I guess we can't blame him for that. Some passing thug, but this other
"Well, no. I guess we can't blame him for that. Some passing thug, but this other
thing is something else besides."

David chewed thoughtfully for a long moment, then went on, "I have a teenage
daughter ... you never know; once a swine like that rapes a girl, he wants to rape
another."

"Yeah," Anson said, but he wasn't interested. His mind, went back to Meg.
Something has happened. He only half listened to Davis as he talked on and on.

As Meg opened the front door, Anson said, "You're worrying me. I told you
never to telephone me at the office."

"I had to see you," Meg said, leading the way into the sitting-room.

He took off his top coat and joined her by the fire. "What is it?" "Sit down."

Impatiently, he sat on the settee and she sat on the floor at his feet.

"John ... this now isn't going to world. We're leaving here." Anson stiffened. A
cold void began to form inside him.

"Leaving? What do you mean?"

"Just that. Phil told me last night. We are going to Florida at the end of the
month."

"Florida?" Anson stared at her. "Meg! What are you telling me?"

She gave a hopeless shrug.

"That's what he told me. Some man ... his name is Herman Schuman ... has a big
horticultural set-up in Florida. He happened to be in Framley's stores a couple of
days ago. He saw what Phil could do. He's offered him a partnership.

Phil is wild with excitement. It's exactly what' he wants and no risks."

Anson sagged back against the cushions of the settee.

"At the end of this month?"

"Yes. Phil's giving in his notice at the end of the week. And there's something
"Yes. Phil's giving in his notice at the end of the week. And there's something
else. He intends to cancel the insurance policy. He doesn't need the capital now."

"You'll go with him?" Anson asked.

"What else can I do?" Meg suddenly gripped his hands. "Oh! John! I want you
so much! What can we do?"

He pulled her to him. His mind tried to cope with what she had told him.

Florida! She would be miles away from him! The thought of losing all that
money that he had counted on, had dreamed about, sent a stab of frustration
through him.

Meg pulled away from him and got to her feet. She began to move restlessly
around'the room.

"You see now? I had to telephone you! Can't we get rid of him before he leaves?
That's our only hope, John. If we can get rid of him before the end of the
month..."

"Yes ... let me think," Anson said, pressing his hands to his head. "How long
have we ... eighteen days before the end of the month?"

"Yes."

Anson felt a sudden chill of apprehension.

"There's Maddox!"

"Oh damn Maddox!" Meg exclaimed. "If we don't do it before the end of the
month, we'll never do it! John! I'm willing to take a risk ... are you?"

"But how?" Anson asked, wavering. "I imagined I had five months to get this
fixed ... now I have only eighteen days!"

Meg drew in a quick, sharp breath. She had him hooked! For the past days and
nights she had thought and thought how she could persuade him to kill her
husband before she lost Sailor Hogan. It had come to her suddenly to tell Anson
that Phil would be leaving the district at the end of the month. She knew she
would be safe telling him this. He would never think to check.
Anson was now facing her.

"This is something I must think about," he said. "Meg, may I stay the night?"

With him on the hook, she could afford to be generous. After all, in the past she
had slept with dozens of less savoury men than Anson.

"Of course ..."

She came to him and putting her arms around him, she pressed herself against
him, trying to control the shudder of revulsion that went through her at the touch
of his hands.

For the past hour, Anson had been lying on the bed, sleepless. The time was after
three o'clock a.m. The white light of the moon fell across the bed, lighting the
hollows and the curves of Meg's naked body as she lay sleeping by his side.

Suddenly Anson's mind became alert. For no reason at all, he thought of Harry
Davis and the conversation they had had together over lunch. He remembered
what Davis had said: I have a teenage daughter ... you never know, once a swine
like that rapes a girl, he wants to rape another.

He sat up abruptly.

"Meg!"

Meg's quick, light breathing faltered. She stirred and became awake.

"Meg!" Anson gripped her arm, "Wake up! I want to talk to you!"

She moaned, then half sat up.

"What is it?"

"Have you yesterday's newspaper?"

She stared at him as if she thought he had gone crazy.

"Newspaper? Yes ... it's downstairs."

"Get it! Make some coffee! Come on, Meg, wake up! I have an idea ... get
moving!"
moving!"

Still dazed with sleep, but urged on by his tone, Meg slid out of bed and put on
her wrap. She walked unsteadily to the door.

"Hurry!" Anson exclaimed.

He turned on the light and pulling the sheet over him, waited impatiently for her
return.

After some minutes, she came back into the room, the newspaper under her arm,
carrying a tray with the coffee things.

Anson snatched the newspaper from her and read the headlines as she poured
two cups of coffee.

"What is it?" she asked.

When he waved her to silence, she shrugged and sat on the foot of the bed,
sipping her coffee and watching him.

After some minutes, Anson let the paper drop and took the cup of coffee she
handed to him.

"I think I've got it!" he said. "See this?" He pushed the newspaper towards her,
pointing to the headlines.

Still dazed, Meg stared at the paper, then at Anson.

"I don't understand!"

Impatiently, Anson pointed to the headlines.

Maniac Kills Youth: Girl Companion Assaulted.

"A nut like that always strikes again," Anson said. "We're going to make use of
him. He's going to kill Barlowe and attack you! Even Maddox will have to
accept a situation like that!"

Meg stared at him as if she thought he had gone out of his mind.

"What are you saying ... attack me?"


"What are you saying ... attack me?"

Anson finished his coffee and set down the cup.

"It says here the police are warning all courting couples that this man might
strike again. This means the police expect him to strike again! Can't you see this
is just the set-up we are looking for?" He threw the paper aside. "The girl has
given the

police a description of the man. She says he is short with a fat face and staring
eyes. He was wearing a black top coat and a black slouch hat. When she was
struggling with him, his hat fell off: he was as bald as an egg. What a
description!

This is the man who is going to murder Barlowe! You will give the police his
description! They are waiting for him to kill and rape again! They'll accept what
you say without question! This is the foolproof way to get rid of your husband
and get the money!"

Meg remained motionless, her mind slowly grasping what he was saying.

"Didn't you say your wedding anniversary was coming up towards the end of the
month?" Anson asked. "When is it exactly?"

Bewildered, Meg said, "Next Friday... what has that to do with it?"

"Four days' time! It's exactly right! It has everything to do with it! You must
persuade Barlowe to take you out to dinner, then after dinner, you must persuade
him to drive out to some lonely spot ... Jason's Glen would do fine. I'll be there
... waiting."

Meg's eyes opened wide.

"And then ...?"

Anson pointed to the paper.

"That happens again."

Meg flinched.

"You mean ... you'll shoot Phil?"


"You mean ... you'll shoot Phil?"

"That's what I mean ... and attack you. Look, Meg, you can't expect to pick up
fifty thousand dollars for nothing. You'll have to be found in such a state the
police, and more important, Maddox, will have no doubt you were attacked by
this maniac. You'll give them a description of the man who attacked you ... they
won't suspect you ... they can't suspect me ... it's the perfect set-up !"

"But John..."

"Don't argue about it!" Anson said impatiently. "This is the foolproof way we
can do it in the time we have left. I'm certain Maddox won't be suspicious but if I
tried some other way to get rid of Barlowe, Maddox would be suspicious. The
trick with this set-up is the police expecting it to happen again!

We have four days in which to work this out. Well..."

"John!" Meg's voice rose a note. "You must listen to me! I see it's a good idea,
but you haven't thought enough about it.

Suppose it rains? Phil wouldn't go out to Jason's Glen if it was pouring with
rain." v Anson, impressed, nodded.

"You're right. We must hope it doesn't rain, but if it does, then I'll have to do it
here. Your story will be you heard someone prowling around the house: Barlowe
went to see who it was: you heard a shot: then this maniac came in and attacked
you. It's better if we do it up at Jason's Glen, but if we can't, then we'll do it
here."

"But suppose this man is arrested before Friday night? Suppose we don't know
he has been arrested?" Meg said. "I'd look a fool giving the police a description
of a man who is already in jail, wouldn't I?"

Anson stared at her for a long moment, then he nodded. "You're using your
head," he said. "I missed out on that one, and it's important. I have yet to work
out the details. This is just the outline of the plan. We can get over that snag.
You will be in such a state of shock after you've been attacked, you won't be able
to be questioned for two or three days. In the meantime I'll have found out if this
man has been arrested or not. Because you are the wife of one of my clients, I
man has been arrested or not. Because you are the wife of one of my clients, I
can send flowers to you. If this man has been arrested, I'll send you carnations. If
he is still at large, I'll send you roses.

You won't say a word to the police until you get flowers from me." "What
happens if he is caught?"

"We'll think up a description of some other man. It often happens that after an
attack like this some other maniac gets inspired and does the same thing, but if
we can give a description of the original killer we're in a much safer position."

There was something obviously worrying Meg and Anson, staring at her, sharply
asked her what it was.

"I don't understand what you mean ... I'll, be in such a state of shock ... what
does that mean?"

Anson picked up the newspaper and tossed it to her.

"The girl was chased through a wood, knocked down, beaten up and then raped.
She was in a hell of a state! Read it...

see for yourself! That's what has got to happen to you! This won't be play acting,
Meg! Maddox will want the doctor's report. He has got to be convinced. It's up
to you ... you either are ready to take it or you don't do it."

Meg walked over to the window. She lifted aside the blind and looked out into
the dark night. A feeling of cold, sick fear was growing inside her. She thought
of Hogan. / want that money by the end of the month or you and me are through!
The thought of never seeing Hogan again, never feeling his hard, muscular arms
around her, never hearing him cursing as he made love to her was something
Meg couldn't contemplate.

She dropped the blind, turned and forced a smile.

"Of course, John ... anything you say ... anything you want me to do... I'll do it."

Anson relaxed back on the pillow.

"Fine," he said. "I'll come out here next Thursday. I'll have everything fixed by
then. Friday, we'll do it. Are you sure you can get your husband to take you out
on Friday?"
on Friday?"

"He'll take me out," Meg said. "You don't have to worry about that."

Anson held out his hand.

"Come here. In five days we'll be worth fifty thousand dollars! Imagine! Fifty
thousand dollars."

Reluctantly, Meg crossed the room and let him pull her down beside him on the
bed.

Jud Jones, the fat, sprawling night guard of Anson's office block, waddled out of
his tiny office as Anson came from the elevator.

"Evening, Mr. Anson," Jones said cheerfully. "You intend to work late tonight?"

"I guess so," Anson said pausing, "but don't bother about me. I'm just going out
for a bite to eat, but I'll be back. I'll be through by eleven. Don't think it's a
burglar if you see my light on."

Jones's fat face split into a leering grin.

"I know your habits by now, Mr. Anson. I won't disturb you ... you sure must be
busy."

Anson had made it his business to keep friendly with Jones. There had been
times when Anson had taken a girl up to his office because he had been so short
of money he couldn't afford a hotel. Jones had turned a blind eye when there was
a light on in Anson's office after midnight. At Christmas, Anson had somehow
found the money to tip Jones liberally.

Jones knew all about Anson's girls and envied him his sexual prowess.

"Busy? I guess I am," Anson said. "Jud ..." He took out his wallet and selected a
five dollar bill. "I hate that shirt you're wearing ... buy yourself another." His
grin told Jones he was fooling, but he wasn't fooling about the five dollar bill.

"Sure will, Mr. Anson, and thanks."

Jones's thick fingers closed over the bill.


"You won on something good, Mr. Anson?"

"Got onto a fifty to one beauty," Anson lied, then nodding, he went out into the
street. The time was half past eight. He walked over to Luigi's restaurant. While
he ate the set dinner, he went over in his mind the plan he had concocted. He
was satisfied that it would work. Meg would be in the clear. Now he had to be
sure that he himself would also be in the clear.

His meal finished, Anson returned to his office.

He knew Jones's routine. At ten o'clock, Jones began his patrol of the building.
He rode up in the elevator to each floor, made his patrol along the corridors and
then returned to his cubby-hole of an office at eleven thirty. At one fifteen he
made a second patrol.

Anson sat at his desk. He switched on his tape recorder, put on a new reel of tape
and placed the microphone close to his typewriter. He fed paper into the
typewriter then pressed down the start and record buttons on the recorder. He
began to type meaningless words for the next hour, recording the busy clicking
sounds of the typewriter keys.

A few minutes past ten o'clock, he heard the whine of the elevator and he
listened to Jones' heavy tread going past his office door. Ansom kept on typing.
When he heard the elevator whine again, taking Jones to the next floor, he
switched off the recorder, put the reel of tape into one of his desk drawers,
turned off the light and after locking up his office, he went down to the street.

Fay Lawley sat alone in the bar of the Cha-Cha Club nursing a whisky and soda.
She was disgruntled. She had been sitting alone now for the past hour and no
man had as yet approached her. She wasn't pleased when she saw Beryl Horsey,
wearing a mink stole and diamond ear-rings come in, look around, spot her and
with a wave of her hand come over.

Beryl was Joe Duncan's girl friend and she had known Fay longer than Fay cared
to remember.

"Hello there ... all alone?" Beryl asked.

"Waiting for someone," Fay said shortly. "How's tricks? Have one with me?"

"Can't stop. I'm expecting Joe." Beryl looked at Fay, screwing up, her large
"Can't stop. I'm expecting Joe." Beryl looked at Fay, screwing up, her large
violet coloured eyes. "Don't see you around with Johnny Anson any more. You
two fallen out or something?"

Fay grimaced. "Who wants to go around with a cheap punk like him?" she said
shrugging. "Can't even afford these days to buy a girl a drink."

Beryl lifted her painted eyebrows.

"Hey! Hey! Who's been kidding you? He's come into money, darling. He paid
Joe all his debts ... a thousand and something. He's in the money." She smiled.
"Maybe he's found someone else. I've got to fly."

She flicked painted nails along her mink stole, smiled and was gone.

Fay sat sipping her drink, a sudden vicious expression on her over-painted,
coarse face.

A thousand dollars! Where could Anson have raised that land of money? He
never did have any money!

Fay finished her drink and stood up.

He'd had his fun with her. Now, if he had money, she was suddenly determined
to have some of it. If he thought he could brush her off that easy, he had another
think coming.

She left the bar and started down the street towards the nearest taxi rank.

A fat, elderly man moved into her path.

"Hello, baby," he said and closed one eyelid. "I'm looking for a naughty girl.
Have I found one?"

Fay hesitated, then she flashed on her hard, brilliant smile. There was time to fix
that rat Anson: a bird in the hand, she thought as she said, "Hello sweetheart.
You and I must have the same ideas."

Sailor Hogan woke with a start. The telephone bell was ringing. Cursing, he half
sat up on his big double bed. By his side was a redheaded, over developed
teenager whom Hogan had picked up at the afternoon dance at the Blue Slipper
club. She too had come awake and was staring owlishly at Hogan as he snatched
club. She too had come awake and was staring owlishly at Hogan as he snatched
up the receiver.

"Yeah? Who is it?"

"Jerry ... it's Meg."

His battle-scarred face showed angry impatience.

"You woke me up ... what's the fire about?" he snarled.

"He's going to fix it," Meg said breathlessly. "I must see you, Jerry."

Hogan suddenly became fully awake.

"He's really got it fixed?" he asked, sitting bolt upright. "For when?"

"This is Friday. He'll be here with the final plan on Thursday night. I must see
you before then."

"You'll see me," Hogan said. "I'll be along tomorrow," and he hung up.

The redhead said peevishly, "Who's she? Who are you seeing?"

Hogan flopped back on his pillow. Although he had plenty of stamina, he was
surprised to find that this teenager had exhausted him.

"That was my mother," he said. "What's eating you? A guy has to see his mother
once in a while, doesn't he?" He reached out and grabbed her.

"I didn't know you had a mother," she said, her fingers digging into the thick
muscles of his back.

"That's a nice thing to say," Hogan said, grinning. "How do you think I got here
without a mother?"

The girl suddenly cried out and her long nailed fingers began to scar Hogan's
back.

Patty Shaw came into Maddox's office. She paused in the doorway when she saw
Maddox was glaring at a policy he was holding in his hands.
"If you're busy, I'll come back," she said.

Maddox dropped the policy on his desk, made a grimace of disgust, then reached
for a cigarette.

"What is it?"

"Here's the Barlowe report from the Tracing Agency," Patty said. "Do you want
to look at it now?"

"Barlowe?" Maddox frowned, then his face cleared. "Yeah ... the gardener. Sure
I want to look at it now. You looked at it?"

"It'll interest you," Patty said and laid the file on his desk. "Not the husband ...
he's just the run of the mill, but the wife ... oh, la! la!"

Maddox picked up the file.

"What does that mean ... oh, la! la! ?"

"You'll see," Patty said, and swished her way out of the room.

Maddox lit another cigarette, pushed back his chair and began to read the neatly
typed dossier.
Chapter 7
On Thursday morning, Anson called in at an electrical store in Lambsville and
bought a time switch clock. He asked the salesman to show him how it worked.

"This is designed," the salesman explained, "to turn on any piece of electrical
equipment at any required time. It also turns the equipment off at any required
time. For example, if you want a radio programme that comes on at ten o'clock,
you set the hand of the clock to ten and the radio will automatically come on at
this time."

Anson said he wanted the clock to boil water for his morning coffee.

"It's the perfect thing," the salesman said, "I use one myself."

At lunch time, Anson went to the Marlborough restaurant. As he entered the bar,
he ran into Jeff Frisbee, a reporter on the Pru Town Gazette.

"Hi, John," Frisbee said. "Have one with me?"

Anson said he would have a Scotch. While they were waiting for the drinks to be
set up, Anson asked Frisbee if he was lunching.

"I haven't the time," Frisbee said. "I have two murders in my hair and the old
man expects me to write something about them every day. I'm running myself
ragged trying to find something to write about."

"The Chief of Police doesn't seem to be getting anywhere," Anson said, saluting
Frisbee with his glass before drinking.

"This maniac ... still no trace of him?"

"No, but the Chief is a wily bird. He may not be giving any secrets away. He
told me that he/is convinced the heistman who killed Patrol Officer Sanquist was
an out-of-towner, but he's convinced this maniac is a local man."

"What makes him think that?" Anson asked.

"He figures no one but a local man would know Glyn Hill. It's way off the
beaten track. No passing motorist would ever find it."
beaten track. No passing motorist would ever find it."

"A man as bald as an egg shouldn't be so hard to find."

"That's a fact, but the Chief isn't a hundred per cent sure the girl was right when
she said the guy was bald. She was in a hell of a panic. Could be he had white
hair or very fair hair and he looked bald to her in the moonlight."

"Well, I guess it isn't too tough to check every blond or white headed man in the
district and find out what he was doing at the time of the lolling," Anson said.

Frisbee, whose hair was as black as a raven's wing, looked at Anson's blond hair
and grinned.

"Just what were you doing at the time?"

Anson forced a laugh.

"In the sack with my local homework," he said and winked. "Anyway, according
to the girl, this guy was in his fifties and fat ... that's something you aren't,"
Frisbee said. "I guess she was lucky to come out of it alive."

When Frisbee had left, Anson went into the restaurant. So far then, he told
himself, the maniac hadn't been found, but there were still lots of hours to get
through before he killed Barlowe, and during those hours the maniac could be
arrested. After lunch, Anson continued his routine calls. Around seven thirty, he
drove out to the Barlowe house, and put his car in the garage. He rang the front
door bell and the door was immediately opened by Meg.

He followed her into the sitting-room. In the light of the shaded lamp, he saw
she looked pale and there were dark smudges under her eyes. She looked as if
she had been sleeping badly.

"What's wrong?" he asked, taking her in his arms. "You look tired. What's the
matter?" She pushed him away.

"Wrong? You ask what's the matter?" She faced him angrily. "This thing is on
my mind! I can't sleep. How would you like to sleep in the same house with
someone you are planning to murder? You ask what's wrong? Are you that
insensitive?" Anson lifted his shoulders.
"You made your mind up to go ahead," he said. "You should have no regrets."

She sat on the settee, her clenched fists resting on her knees. "I can't believe it is
going to happen tomorrow night!" "It depends on you," Anson said, sitting
beside her. "Can you get him out to Jason's Glen? The forecast is good ... it won't
rain. If you can get him out there, then it's fixed." Meg moved uneasily.

"Yes ... I'll get him out there," she said. "We are going to have dinner at the
Court roadhouse. After, I'll make him take me to Jason's Glen."

"I was out there last night," Anson said. "There's a telephone call box on the
highway about half a mile from the glen.

I'll be waiting there. I want you to call me and let me know for

certain if you are coming. If something goes wrong, and he insists on returning
home, I must know."

He took from his wallet a scrap of paper which he gave to her. "That's the
number of the call box. I'll be waiting from ten o'clock onwards."

She nodded, putting the paper in her bag.

"When you get to the glen," Anson went on, "stay in the car, but keep the
windows down."

Meg shuddered.

"I understand."

"When I've got rid of him," Anson said, staring into the fire, "I'll have to work on
you." He reached out and put his hand over hers. At his touch she closed her
eyes. "You're going to get hurt, Meg. We daren't take any chances. You'll have
to be brave about this ... you understand? You mustn't blame me. What I do to
you will convince Maddox and the police you are in the clear. The doctor must
be convinced that this isn't a faked attack."

She felt a chill creep up her spine, but thinking of Sailor Hogan, she nodded.
"It's all right... I understand."

"From the glen to the highway is about a quarter of a mile," Anson said. "You'll
have to get down to the highway. He'll be in the driving seat. You won't be able
to use the car. It may take some time before passing motorists see you. You must
fake you're unconscious. Remember, you say nothing until you get flowers from
me. If you get carnations, you'll know the maniac has been caught. If you get
roses, you'll know he's still at large." He took a folded paper from his wallet.
"Here is a description of a man I have made up. You'll use this if the maniac has
been arrested. You understand all this?"

"Yes."

"That's about it," Anson said. "Don't let them rattle you and don't say a word
until you see my flowers. The doctor won't let the police worry you until he is
sure you are good and ready."

She looked at him, her eyes dark ringed and scared.

"You are sure this is going to work?" she asked. "You're sure we'll get the
money?"

"We'll get it," Anson said. "With this set-up we can't go wrong. You'll have the
public's sympathy and Maddox will know if he tries to block your claim, it'll be
bad publicity and he hates that. I'll work on the reporters. Yes ... we'll get the
money all right."

Meg, still thinking of Hogan, said, "I can't believe it's going to happen."

"In a couple of weeks^ you'll be worth fifty thousand dollars!" Anson said.
"We'll go away together! You, me and fifty thousand dollars!" He put his arm
around her. "Together with that kind of money, we'll take the sun out of the
sky!"

"Yes."

Meg broke away and went over to the fire.

Anson stood up.

"I mustn't forget the gun," he said and crossed to the sideboard and took the
"I mustn't forget the gun," he said and crossed to the sideboard and took the
wooden box from the drawer. From it, he took the gun and six cartridges.

Watching him with growing horror, Meg said, "You'll have to leave now, John."
She felt she couldn't bear to have this coldblooded planner of murder any longer
in the room. "Phil is coming back. He said he would be back by nine."

Anson turned and stared at her; a surge of angry disappointment ran through
him.

"I thought we were going to spend the night together. Why is he coming back?"

"He has given up his classes now he is going to Florida," Meg lied. "He is seeing
this man he's doing the deal with, then he's coming home. You really must go,
John. He mustn't see you as you go down the lane."

A sudden cold suspicious expression came into Anson's eyes.

"You're not falling out of love with me, are you?"

"Of course not... but you take all this so calmly. I'm frightened. I'll do it with
you, but I can't be so, so coldblooded about it as you are."

"This man is nothing," Anson said. "Fifty thousand dollars will mean everything
to us. I'm not being coldblooded ... it is a matter of how much you want the
money."

"You must go ... look at the time."

"I'll be waiting for your telephone call," Anson said. "Remember what I've told
you. Ifil work." He picked up the gun and put it in his pocket. "Come here,
Meg..."

She forced herself to go to him. His kisses made her feel physically ill and the
feel of his hands as they moved down her back made her cringe.

She pushed away.

"You must go!"

He looked at her for a long moment, then nodded and went out to his car.
She sank onto the settee, her hands to her face, shuddering.

Sailor Hogan came out of the kitchen where he had been listening to everything
that had been said.

"Well, you nearly balled up everything," he said, coming into the room. "What's
the matter with you? Why didn't you love the guy a little? He was wanting it.
Now you've sent him away with a bee in his workbox."

"I hate him!" Meg said. "He terrifies me."

"What's the matter with you? He's smart and he means business. He's quite a boy
with his talk of taking the sun out of the sky ... I dig for that."

Meg jumped up and put her arms around Hogan's thick muscular shoulders.

"Love me, Jerry," she said, her lips lightly touching his thick coarse skin. "Please
love me."

With a bored grimace, Hogan swung her down onto the settee.

At half past five on Friday evening, Anna Garvin pushed aside her typewriter,
collected the papers on her desk and put them in one of her desk drawers.

"Time to go home, Mr. Anson," she said as she got to her feet.

Anson regarded her as he leaned back in his desk chair. His desk was covered
with papers which he had deliberately laid out to create an impression that he
was busy.

"You run along, Anna," he said. "I've still a few things to clear up.

"Can't I help?"

"No ... I'm just killing time. This is nothing urgent. I just don't happen to be in a
rush to get home."

When Anna had gone, Anson scooped up all the papers on his desk and pushed
them into a file. He then took from his desk drawer the time switch clock he had
bought the previous day. He read the instructions again, then plugged the gadget
bought the previous day. He read the instructions again, then plugged the gadget
in to the mains socket. To the lead from it, he plugged in a two-way adapter to
his tape recorder and his desk lamp.

He then set the switch to operate in five minutes and he sat back, lit a cigarette
and waited. After five minutes tiad crawled by his desk lamp suddenly came on
and the tape recorder started up, playing back the tape he had made of his typing.
He turned up the volume until he was satisfied the sound of the typing could be
heard in the corridor. He waited another five minutes, then he watched the desk
lamp go out and the recorder stop.

He then reset the time switch to come into operation at nine thirty. He set the
turn offhand of the clock to eleven.

Satisfied the gadget worked, he locked up his office and rode down in the
elevator to the ground floor.

He found Jud Jones reading the evening newspaper in his office.

"Jud ... I'll be working late tonight. Don't think I have a burglar in my office."

Jones grinned and winked.

"That's okay, Mr. Anson. I won't disturb you."

"This is work, Jud, so take that leer off your face," Anson said grinning. "I'm
going out to supper, then I'll be back.'

"Okay, Mr. Anson, have you your key?"

"Yeah ... see you," Anson nodded and went out into the street.

He had a light supper and then drove to his apartment. He cleaned and loaded
Barlowe's gun. Putting the gun in his top coat pocket, he went down to his car.

The time was now eight o'clock. He drove back to his office. Parking his car
some way from the entrance to the block, he entered the block. He walked to
Jones's office.

"I'm back," he said. "I'll be working to around eleven." Jones shook his head.

"You watch out, Mr. Anson ... the way you work, you could get an ulcer."
"You watch out, Mr. Anson ... the way you work, you could get an ulcer."

"I'll watch it," Anson said, and he went over to the elevator and rode up to his
floor. He waited a few moments, then silently walked down the stairs and left the
office block. He got in his car and drove fast to the Brent-Pru Town highway.

When he was in sight of the telephone call box, he pulled off the highway onto a
lay-by, turned off the car's lights and lit a cigarette. He had a long wait ahead of
him.

He relaxed in the driving seat, aware of the weight of the gun in his pocket, his
mind probing the plan he had made. He could find no flaw in it.

At twenty minutes to ten, he left the car and walked to the call box. He sat on the
dry earth behind the box out of sight of the passing motorist and waited. Again
he had a long wait. The minutes crawled by and he was beginning to wonder if
something had gone wrong when the telephone bell in the call box began to ring.
He opened the door to the call box and picked up the receiver.

Barlowe was startled when Meg had suggested they should go to the Court road
house to celebrate their wedding anniversary.

Meg had appeared while he was eating his breakfast. She had on her soiled green
wrap and her hair was tousled. She leaned against the doorway, a cigarette
between her full lips and Barlowe, looking at her, felt faint desire stir in him.

"We haven't been out for months," Meg said. "I'm sick of hanging around this
dump. If you don't want to take me, say so, I'll go alone."

Barlowe said, "A place like that costs money ..."

"Well spend some money for a change," Meg said. "I want to get drunk tonight."
She stared at him. "There are other things I want to do tonight as well."

They looked at each other for a long moment, then she turned and went upstairs
to her room.

Barlowe pushed aside his half eaten breakfast and leaned back in his chair. Meg
would have been surprised and shocked if she knew what was going on in his
sick mind. He was no longer interested in her. That moment when he had laid
hands on the screaming, terrified girl had been the most exciting and sensational
hands on the screaming, terrified girl had been the most exciting and sensational
thing that had happened to him in his life.

The living and the dead, he thought and got to his feet. The man rolling out of
the car, shot through the head, and the girl struggling and screaming. Meg was
poor stuff to such an experience, but if she wanted to be taken out, he'd better
take her out. He was now nervous that anyone should suspect that he had done
this thing. He had put the gun, the white bathing cap and the cheek pads under
the floorboards in his room. He wanted to have the chance of doing this act of
violence many times ... he had no intention of being caught.

Tomorrow night, he intended to go out again on the prowl. He would try Jason's
Glen this time. He might be lucky to find two young people up there alone.

It startled him when they had finished a good, but expensive dinner and had
returned to the bar for another drink that Meg should say she wanted to go out to
Jason's Glen.

"What for?" Barlowe asked, slightly fuddled by the drinks he had taken. "I want
to go to bed now." He stared at her, frowning, "I've had enough of this."

"Well, I haven't," Meg said. "What's the matter with you? Don't you want to be
romantic?"

"With you?" Barlowe grimaced. "After all this time? What's come over you ...
you're drunk!"

"All right, so I'm drunk," she said. "I'm sick of living like a nun. Even a drip like
you is better than nothing the way I feel. Let's go!"

Barlowe shook his head.

"I'm not going, I'm going home." He thought of tomorrow night; the anticipation
of the excitement and the violence made him break out into a sweat. "That place
is for courting couples, not for people like you and me."

She leaned close to him. He could smell the gin on her breath. "You're coming
with me. You'd better! If you don't, I'll go out there alone and find someone."

"I'm not going!" Barlowe said and became aware that the negro bartender was
"I'm not going!" Barlowe said and became aware that the negro bartender was
listening and staring. He lowered his voice. "I've had enough of this. I'm going
home."

"Then I'll take the car and you can walk home," Meg said. "I'm going! You do
what you like."

Barlowe hesitated. After all, he thought, it might be an idea to go out there. He


hadn't been to Jason's Glen for months.

By going out there now, he would get an idea of how many cars were there ...
the lay of the ground.

"All right ... have it your way," he said, shrugging. "Then well go."

"I'll get my things," Meg said, and leaving him, she went into the ladies' room.

She paused, aware that her heart was hammering and she was breathing
unsteadily. For a long moment she stood undecided, then with an effort, she
went to the telephone booth and shut herself in.

Anson, the telephone receiver hard against his ear, said, "Yes?"

There was a pause, then he heard a woman's voice say, "Go ahead please," then
Meg came on the line.

"Hello?" He recognized her voice. "Hello?"

"We are leaving now."

He realized how tense she was from the hysterical shrillness of her voice.

"It'll be all right," he said and hung up.

He returned to his car and drove up the narrow dirt road that led to Jason's Glen.
He was a little uneasy. There was a remote chance some other couple might be
in the glen. He arrived at the top of the steep road and then drove into the glen.
There was plenty of room for cars to be parked and he drove his car between
two, overgrown shrubs and turned off the car's lights. He got out of the car and
walked onto the open plateau that gave onto a wide and fine view of the lights of
the town below.
Usually ,at this time of night, the plateau was crowded with cars, but this night it
was deserted. Courting couples, neckers and smoochers were staying clear of
such spots. The police warning that the sex killer might strike again had made an
impression.

Anson looked around, then he selected a clump of shrubs that offered


concealment. He pushed his way into them and sat down on the sandy, dry
ground. He took out the gun and slid back the safety catch. While he waited, he
thought with satisfaction that the time switch clock in the office was creating a
fool-proof alibi for him. Light would now be showing through the frosted panel
of his office door and when Jud Jones passed on his patrol, he would hear the
busy clack of the typewriter from the tape recorder.

It would take Barlowe and Meg some thirty minutes to get from the roadhouse to
the glen. Anson didn't expect them to arrive before ten thirty.

As he waited for them to arrive, he fingered the gun, his mind preparing himself
for the moment when his finger would take up the slack of the trigger, when the
gun would go off and when Barlowe would slump forward, a dead man.

Anson was again surprised by his own calmness and his feeling of complete
indifference. He was now experiencing the same feeling that had come to him
when he had shot the patrol officer. The death of the big, red-faced cop had
meant nothing to him as the death of Barlowe would mean nothing to him when
it happened.

A little after ten thirty, he heard the distant sound of an approaching car.

His fingers tightened on the butt of the gun. He half stood up, crouching in the
shrubs as he listened. Then he saw the approaching lights of the car.

He watched the shabby Lincoln pull up within twenty feet or so from where he
was concealed. Before the head lights went out, he saw the outlined heads of
Meg and Barlowe.

In the silent stillness, he heard Barlowe say, "Well, here we are. There's no one
here... ."

Anson moved silently out of his hiding place and started across the open space
towards the car.
"Well, here we are," Barlowe repeated, his pale brown eyes roving around. He
noted there were no cars except his own.

A sudden, cold murderous thought dropped into his mind. Why not get rid of
Meg? They were alone together. He could do what he liked with her in this
loneliness. Then reason made him hesitate. Careful, he told himself, You can't do
a thing like that... they'd know you had killed her and they would then know you
had done the other thing.

By now Anson had reached the car. He saw the driver's window was down. He
could see Barlowe clearly in the moonlight.

Meg said, her voice unsteady, "Don't you want to make love to me?" Then
suddenly, her nerve cracked, and she put her hands to her face. She screamed;
"No! Don't do it, John...don't do it!"

As Barlowe turned towards her in startled surprise, Anson lifted the gun and
gently squeezed the trigger.

Meg was still screaming hysterically as the gun went off. Barlowe slumped
forward; blood sprayed over the windshield.

Anson dropped the gun into his pocket, then he walked around the car and
opened the off-side door. Meg threw up her hands to ward him off.

She was screaming hysterically as he dragged her out of the car.


Part Two
Chapter 8
Steve Harmas walked into the office, put his hat on the peg behind the door, then
lowered his long frame into his desk chair.

He and his wife, Helen, had been to a party the previous night which had turned
out to be a marathon drinking spree and Hannas was now suffering from a
hangover.

He rubbed his forehead, grimaced, then looked with glazed eyes at the mail
neatly laid out on his blotter.

There didn't seem to be anything that needed his immediate attention and he
relaxed back and closed his eyes. He thought enviously of his wife still asleep.

The sudden sound of the intercom buzzer made him wince. He flicked down a
key, said, "Harmas. Yeah?"

"I want you."

There was no mistaking Maddox's voice.

"I'm on my way," Hannas said, flicked up the key, pushed himself out of his
chair and started the long tramp down the corridor to Maddox's office.

Patty greeted him with a bright smile that made Harmas wince.

"You're looking like a man with a hangover," she said. "Do you feel that way?"

"Yeah." Harmas held his head. "What's he want?"

"I don't know. I took the newspaper into him about five minutes ago. There was
an explosion, then I heard him yelling for you."

"I have an idea that this isn't going to be my favourite day," Harmas said
entering Maddox's office.

Maddox was smoking furiously. Although it was only a quarter after nine a.m.,
from the state of his desk and floor, he might have been working throughout the
night.
night.

"Look at this," he said and tossed the newspaper at Harmas.

Harmas sank into a chair and.read the banner headlines.

Maniac Strikes Again: Carbon Copy Murder and Assault.

He glanced at Maddox who was watching him, then he began to read the small
type under the headline. Suddenly, he stiffened.

"Philip Barlowe? He's a client of ours, isn't he? Isn't he the one...?"

"He was our client!" Maddox said, a snarl in his voice. "He was insured for fifty
thousand dollars ... now he's dead!"

"Shot through the back of his head ... his wife raped!" Harmas looked shocked.
"It's time they caught this nut. She sounds in a bad way."

"I can read," Maddox said, "Steve, I don't like this. There's a smell to it. This guy
took out a life coverage ten days ago ... now he's dead. I don't like it."

"I guess she doesn't like it either," Hannas said a little impatiently. "It's one of
those things." He looked sharply at Maddox. "You don't think he was killed for
the insurance money?"

"I don't know, but when a two bit salesman insures his life for fifty thousand
dollars and then he dies before the ink's scarcely dry on the policy, I don't like
it."

"It says here she was raped and is suffering from a dislocated jaw. She gets the
money, doesn't she? Don't tell me...."

"For fifty thousand dollars I'd be raped and have my jaw dislocated," Maddox
said grimly. "I'm a head start on you. You haven't seen the dossier the Tracing
Agency turned me on this woman ... I have. It's some story. A woman life that
could do anything."

"Where's the dossier? Let me see it, then I can look and act as clever as you,"
Harmas said.

"Never mind about the dossier. We've got to move fast. I want you to go to Brent
"Never mind about the dossier. We've got to move fast. I want you to go to Brent
right away. See leutenant Jenson. Tell him I don't like the set-up and that I want
you to work with him. He'll be glad to have you. I want you to be there when
Jenson talks to this woman. Keep your eyes and ears open. See Anson. Warn
him I'm going to fight her claim when she puts it in. I don't want him shooting
his mouth off to the press. Go to Jason's Glen or whatever it's called and look
around." He stubbed out his cigarette and lit another. "And Steve, while she's in
hospital, go out to her house and look around. Don't tell Jenson you're going".

"What am I supposed to be looking for?" Harmas asked. "I don't know. Get the
feel of the place. You might find something. Get out there and look."

"Well, okay," Harmas got to his feet. "I'll see Jenson first." "Get the doctor's
report about this woman. I want to be satisfied she was raped and attacked."

"It says so here, doesn't it?" Harmas pointed to the newspaper.

"Do you believe everything you read in papers?" Maddox snapped. "Get the
doctor's report!"

A few minutes to nine o'clock, Anna Garvin arrived at the office. She was
surprised to find Anson already at his desk.

"You're early," she said, then looked at her watch. "Or am I late?"

Anson had arrived some thirty minutes ago. He had come to the office early to
disconnect the time switch clock and remove the tape on the recorder before
Anna arrived.

"I'm early," he said. "Seen the paper? Barlowe's dead ... you remember ... the
guy I sold that big policy to." "Yes, I saw it. It's awful, isn't it, Mr. Anson? I'm
scared to go out at night." Ancon dailed the Pru Town Gazette. He asked to
speak to Jeff Frisdee.

When the reporter came on the line, Anson said, "This guy Barlowe ... I sold him
a fifty thousand dollar life coverage only a few days ago. I thought you might
want that bit of news."

"Why, sure", Frisbee said. "Thanks a lot. Fifty thousand, huh? That's quite a
"Why, sure", Frisbee said. "Thanks a lot. Fifty thousand, huh? That's quite a
hunk of dough. Well, his wife will welcome it. I'm glad you told me."

"There's been no arrest yet?" Anson asked.

"No. Jenson's going round like a zombie ... he hasn't a clue."

"How's Mrs. Barlowe?"

"Pretty bad. The doctor won't let anyone talk to her."

"If you hear anything, let me know. I'm interested as Barlowe was my client."

"Sure will. How soon will your people pay the claim?"

"Shouldn't take long."

"Let me know when they do. It's news. I'll let you know anything of interest
from my end."

Anson said he would and hung up.

"How is she?" Anna asked.

"Pretty bad. This is a horrible thing. I think the least I can do is to send her some
flowers. Call up Devons and tell them to send a dozen roses right away to the
hospital, will you, Anna?"

Lieutenant Fred Jenson of the Brent homicide squad was a chunky, fair man with
alert grey eyes and a brisk manner. He wasn't much of a policeman, but he did
try and sometimes, but not often, his efforts were rewarded.

He was flicking through a file when Harmas walked in.

"Hello," he said. "What do you want?"

He had worked with Harmas in the past and the two men got along well together.
Harmas sat astride a straight back chair.

"Maddox sent me down," he said. "Barlowe ... we have him covered for fifty
thousand and Maddox is laying a square egg."

Jenson who knew Maddox grinned.


Jenson who knew Maddox grinned.

"Fifty thousand! I'll say the egg's square! So what? Don't tell me he's trying to
make a mystery out of this one! It happened five days ago ... it's happened again.
We have a sex killer in the district: it's as simple as that. Catching a punk like
this isn't easy. I'm planning to plant a police officer and a girl out at Glyn Hill in
the hope of trapping him."

"Maddox thinks this is a lot more complicated than that," Harmas said. "He's
even thinking Mrs. Barlowe shot her husband and raped herself to collect the
fifty thousand."

Jenson moved impatiently.

"Maddox is crazy!" he exclaimed. "You don't mean this seriously, do you?"

Harmas shrugged.

"When can you talk to Mrs. Barlowe?"

"Doctor Henry at the hospital said I could call him around six o'clock. He
thought she might be ready to be interviewed by then."

"I'd like to come along. I won't be in the way. Maddox wants me to be around
and help where I can. Fifty grand is lots of folding money."

"Okay. You help me ... I'll help you, but Maddox is just shooting at the moon."

"Yeah ... I've said time and time again that he's shooting at the moon, then what
happens? The sonofabitch hits the moon!"

Jenson looked sharply at him.

"You don't really think Mrs. Barlowe is involved in this killing?"

"I'll tell you after I have talked to her," Harmas said "I'll be happier too, when I
have talked to Doctor Henry."

"This is wasting time. This killer hit her so hard that he dislocated her jaw. Don't
tell me..."

Harmas lifted his shoulders.


Harmas lifted his shoulders.

"Maddox says for fifty thousand bucks, he would let anyone dislocate his jaw."

Jenson stubbed out his cigarette.

"Maddox! The fact is he doesn't want to meet Mrs. Barlowe's claim! That's the
long and short of it! He'd believe any story so long as he doesn't have to pay out
and you know it."

"I guess you're right," Harmas said. "Well, I'll get along. I'll look in again around
six o'clock. I want to be there when you talk to Mrs. Barlowe."

Leaving police headquarters, Harmas drove over to Anson's office.

He had met Anson once before, but had only a vague recollection of him. He
knew him to be a smart salesman but that was about all he did know about him.

He found Anson at his desk. As soon as he saw him, he remembered him: a man
of middle height, blond, slimly built with grey, rather staring eyes.

"Remember me?" he said, offering his hand. "Why, sure," Anson said. "It's Steve
Harmas, isn't it?" He got up and shook hands, "Glad to see you. You've come
about this shocking murder of Barlowe?"

Harmas was aware of the fat, homely looking girl at the other desk who was
staring and listening.

"That's it," he said. "Look friend, I've just arrived from "Frisco". How's about
you and me going some place for a cup of coffee?"

"Why, sure," Anson said, "There's a place right across the road." To Anna he
went on, "I'll be back in about an hour ... if anyone wants me."

A few minutes later, seated in a quiet comer in a cafe, Anson said, "Maddox on
the warpath?" Harmas grinned. "That's an understatement. He thinks Mrs.
Barlowe shot her husband and raped herself!"

Anson dropped a lump of sugar into his coffee. "The man's pathological. Well,
he'll have to pass this claim! What's fifty thousand dollars to the National
he'll have to pass this claim! What's fifty thousand dollars to the National
Fidelity? The press know about it. If he tried to block payment, he's going to get
some rank publicity."

Harmas stroked his nose. He looked thoughtfully at Anson. "How come the
press know about it? Did you tell them?"

"Why not?" Anson asked and sat back looking at Harmas, his grey eyes mildly
inquiring. "Here we have a front page murder. Everyone in the district knows
me. I sold Barlowe the policy. It's great publicity not only for me but also for the
Company. It is this kind of publicity, providing the claim is paid, that sells
policies."

"Maddox didn't want you to talk to the press," Harmas said.

"Why not?"

"He thinks the set-up stinks." Anson smiled as he stirred the coffee.

"You work for him," he said. "I work for the Company. If I worked the way he
wants a salesman to work, the Company would go broke. Come on ... you know
that's right. Maddox should have retired years ago. He never gives a salesman a
chance."

"When you turned in that policy," Harmas said, "Maddox didn't like it. He got a
Tracing Agency to dig up some facts about Barlowe and his wife. He has a
dossier on them both. I haven't seen it, but from what he tells me the wife hasn't
anything to shout about. He told me a woman of her reputation could be capable
of anything."

Anson suddenly slopped his coffee. He put down the cup and looked at Harmas,
the grey of his eyes darkening.

"What's this dossier?"

"I don't know. I haven't seen it yet; that's what he says. He thinks she is capable
of anything."

"He's crazy!" There was sudden doubt in Ansons voice. "This woman was
attacked and raped! Hasn't he any feelings?"
"Jenson thinks the way you do," Harmas said quietly, "but I've worked with
Maddox now for ten years. He has never been wrong when he claims a policy is
off colour ..."

"What do you think you're doing?" Anson asked. Harmas winked. "You know,
Maddox is something very special. He told me to come out here and look
around. He had no idea what I was to look for and nor did I, but he told me to get
the feel of the place." He tapped his pocket. "Believe it, or not, here is an outline
for a short story of a woman who swindles an insurance company. She and her
lover ... he is a ticket officer of an airline company ... it's a nice idea. Maddox
will love it. If she wrote it, it shows she has had the idea of swindling an
insurance company and when she puts in the claim, we can use this story to
show the state of mind she's in."

"Look this is ridiculous," Anson said angrily. "Plenty of people write stories
about ..." He stopped as he saw Harmas wasn't listening. Harmas had got to his
feet and was now wandering around the room, whistling under his breath. He
paused and peered at something hanging on the wall. "Well, seen this?" he said.
"Barlowe was a pistol shot champion.

He won first prize at the Pru Town Small Arms and Target Club."

"So what?" Anson said, an edge to his voice. "We'd look a couple of jerks if
someone found us here."

"Relax," Harmas said. "Who's likely to come? Now a guy who is interested in
pistol target shooting is likely to have a gun. I wonder if he did own a gun?"

"What does it matter if he did?" Anson said. Harmas began moving around the
room. He paused to open cupboards and drawers and finally he came to the ugly
heavy, sideboard. He pulled open a drawer.

"Here we are ... a gun box." He took the wooden box from the drawer and
opened it. For a long moment there was a heavy silence, then he said
"Cartridges, cleaning material, but no gun, and yet here's a place for the gun.
Where's the gun?" "Are you asking me or are you talking to yourself?" Anson
demanded. Harmas grinned at him.

"I was talking to myself. Look, why not go and admire the garden. I'm going to
be here quite some time. This place fascinates me."
Anson went over to the settee and sat down.. "I'll stay here. If there is anything I
can do ..." Harmas, humming under his breath, wasn't listening. He walked from
the room and Anson listened to him climb the stairs.
Chapter 9
An hour and a half later, Harmas and Anson drove away from Barlowe's house
and towards Pru Town.

Harmas was silent, for some time during the drive, then as they approached the
outskirts of Pru Town, he began to talk.

"Maddox may seem to you to be a deadbeat always looking for trouble," he said,
"but he's far from that. He's practically clairvoyant, and I'm not kidding. Here we
have a situation: a man working as a small time clerk, insures himself for fifty
thousand dollars. Maddox was right to raise his eyebrows. Now I've seen this
guy's home, I also ask myself why he should have insured himself for such a
sum."

Anson hunched his shoulders.

"He wanted the policy to raise capital so he could start up on his own as a
horticulturist," he said tonelessly. "I've already explained all this to Maddox. I
didn't persuade Barlowe one way or the other if that worries you at all."

"He must have been planning something big," Harmas said, noting the irritation
in Anson's voice. "Fifty grand is a hunk of dough for a little man like Barlowe."

"You've seen his garden," Anson said. "Why shouldn't he have big ideas? He
was able to pay the first premium, so why should I worry?" "He paid in cash?"

"Yes." "

"From the look of the house, you wouldn't have thought he had that much money
in cash." Anson shrugged impatiently.

"Okay ... go ahead: make a mystery of it. He had the money: he gave it to me: do
I have to get worried about a man giving me cash?"

Harmas glanced thoughtfully at the small, blond man at his side and then looked
away.

"You're right," he said soothingly. "Tell me about Mrs. Barlowe. What kind of
"You're right," he said soothingly. "Tell me about Mrs. Barlowe. What kind of
woman is she?"

"I don't know," Anson said curtly. "I only saw her once ... she's good looking,
youngish. I didn't pay her much attention."

"Did they get along together?"

"Yes, they did," Anson said. "They got along very well together."

"Is that a fact? What makes you say that?"

Anson suddenly stiffened. Careful, he told himself, this guy isn't flapping with
his mouth for the sake of making noises.

He is the top investigator and Maddox's stooge.

"I don't know ... an impression I got. The way Barlowe spoke about her."

"He must have been smart to fool you," Harmas said, putting a cigarette between
his lips. "You been upstairs and looked the set-up over?"

Anson's hands tightened on the steering-wheel.

"Fool me? What do you mean?"

"They didn't sleep together. You should have seen his room. The sheets hadn't
been changed in months." Harmas grimaced. "Our little pal was a pervert. I
found some books in his room that would make your hair stand on end. There
were other things too. Those two didn't live as husband and wife. I'm ready to
bet a hundred bucks."

"Well, that's as it may be," Anson said tonelessly. "I had the impression that they
were happy together."

"She kept the house like a pig sty. If a woman really loves her husband, she
makes an effort to keep his home decent."

"That your idea?" Anson said indifferently. "It doesn't mean that to me. It just
means she doesn't know how to run a house ... some women just can't."

"Well, we'll see. I just can't wait to read her dossier," Harmas said, lighting his
"Well, we'll see. I just can't wait to read her dossier," Harmas said, lighting his
cigarette.

"Just what is this dossier?" Anson asked, his voice sharpening.

"I haven't seen it yet, but Maddox is worked up about it." "I'd like to see it,"
Anson said.

"You don't have to worry your head about all this. It's your job to sell insurance
and you do it damn well. It's my job to make sure the policy is okay."

Some five minutes later, Anson pulled up outside the Marlborough hotel.

"I'll leave you here," he said. "I have still a lot of work to do."

"Fine," Harmas said, getting out of the car. "I have to see Jenson at six. We're
calling on Mrs. Barlowe. I'll let you know how it goes."

"Yes," Anson said, and waving his hand, he drove away.

Fay Lawley watched Harmas get out of Anson's car and walk over to the
Marlborough hotel. She watched Anson drive away. She waited a moment, then
crossing the street, she entered the hotel in time to see Harmas pick up his key
from the desk and cross the lobby to the elevator.

She walked over to the desk where Tom Nodley, the clerk in charge, was busy
sorting mail.

"Hi, Tom," she said and gave him her wide professional smile.

"Hello, baby," Nodley said, letting his eyes run over her lush body. "What do
you want?"

"Who is the handsome Romeo who just picked up his key?" she asked, taking a
dollar bill from her bag.

Nodley eyed the bill and grinned.

"He's no good to you baby," he said and accepted the bill. "He's Steve Harmas:
chief investigator National Fidelity Insurance."

Fay lifted her plucked eyebrows.


"Chief Investigator? Does that mean he is a cop?"

"Along those lines. He's checking on the Barlowe murder."

"But he is a cop?"

"You could call him that."

Fay smiled.

"Thanks ... be seeing you."

Nodley watched her duck-tail walk to the exit with an appreciative stare.

Dr. Henry, the house surgeon of the Pru Town hospital received Lieutenant
Jenson and Harmas in his office. He waved them to chairs.

"This is Mr. Harmas of the National Fidelity Insurance Corporation," Jenson


explained. "Barlowe was insured by his company. He ..."

"Just a moment," Harmas broke in. He didn't want the doctor to get a wrong
impression. "I'm an investigator and I'm working with the Lieutenant. My job is
to check all claims made on our company. So far no claim has been made
regarding Barlowe. There hasn't been time, but we want to be prepared when it is
made. Barlowe was covered for fifty thousand dollars. He took out the policy
about ten days ago. The circumstances are exceptional, but naturally, with such a
sum involved, we don't want to pay it out if there is any doubt about the
genuineness of the claim."

Dr. Henry, a tall, balding man, lifted pale eyebrows.

"What exactly do you mean by that and what has it to do with me?"

"We will need to be convinced that Mrs. Barlowe was really attacked and
raped," Harmas said. "We will need a certificate and details from you."

"I'll be happy to give you a certificate," Henry said. "The woman was most
certainly attacked ... her jaw was dislocated, and there is no doubt she was
brutally raped. I can give you details that must satisfy your people that she has
brutally raped. I can give you details that must satisfy your people that she has
been through a horrible and harrowing experience."

Harmas and Jenson exchanged glances. Harmas shrugged.

"Thanks, doctor, that's all we'll need. Can we talk to her now?"

"Yes. I'll take you to her." Henry looked at Jenson. "Make it as short as you can.
She really is in a bad way, and she is still suffering from severe shock."

"Sure." Jenson got to his feet. "All I want at this stage is a description of the
attacker. The rest of it can come later."

The two men followed the doctor up to the first floor. They entered a room in
which was a bed and the usual hospital equipment. In the bed was a woman with
auburn hair.

Motioning them to stay where they were, Henry went over to the woman.

"Mrs. Barlowe, Lieutenant Jenson would like to talk to you. I've asked him not
to bother you too much. Do you feel you can talk to him?"

While he was speaking, both Harmas and Jenson were looking curiously at the
woman. Harmas was shocked to see that the left side of her face was heavily
bruised and her left eye was half closed and swelling. There was split skin near
her mouth. It was obvious she had taken a violent blow on the side of her face ...
there was no fake about that ... In spite of this disfigurement, Harmas saw that
this woman was sensationally handsome ... beautiful he decided wasn't the right
word.

"I'm all right," she said in a shaky whisper. "Yes, of course I'll talk to him."

Jenson came forward.

"You're not all right, Mrs. Barlowe," he said. "I'm sorry to have to bother you at
this time, but I want a description of the man that attacked you. Can you help
me?"

Meg closed her eyes for a long moment, then opened them. On the table by the
window was a vase holding a dozen blood red roses.

If you get roses, you will know our man hasn't been arrested, Anson had said.
If you get roses, you will know our man hasn't been arrested, Anson had said.

"He was short and thickset," she said, "and he was completely bald."

"That's the punk!" Jenson exclaimed, looking at Harmas. "The same one who ..."
He paused, controlling his excitement.

To Meg, he went on, "How do you know he was bald, Mrs. Barlowe?"

She closed her eyes. There was a pause, then she said "In the struggle ... his hat
fell off... he had no hair at all."

"Can you remember what he was wearing?" "A black coat and a black slouch
hat." Jenson nodded, satisfied.

"Okay, Mrs. Barlowe, you take it easy. I won't worry you again for a while. You
just relax."

Moving forward, Harmas asked, "Mrs. Barlowe, there's just one thing that could
help us. Why did you and your husband go out to Jason's Glen?"

The cobalt blue eyes suddenly snapped open. Meg looked intently at Harmas.

"Why? Why ... Phil wanted to ... it was our wedding anniversary. He took me to
the Court roadhouse ... he was in a romantic mood..." She broke off and hid her
face in her hands.

Dr. Henry said, "That'll do for now, gentlemen. I want Mrs. Barlowe to rest."

He shepherded Jenson and Harmas to the door. Harmas paused at the door and
looked back at Meg. She lay motionless, her hands hiding her face.

As they walked down the corridor, Jenson said, "It's the same guy. The hell of it
is he could be anywhere, and he could do this again."

"Let's take a look at Mr. Philip Barlowe," Harmas said. "At least we won't be
disturbing him." "What do you want to look at him for?" "I want to look at the
man who managed to persuade that lush dish to marry him ... he should be quite
a guy," Harmas said.

The morgue attendant, a burly Negro, flicked back the sheet.


"Here he is mister... ain't much to look at."

Jenson, who had seen the body before, remained where he was, away from "the
table, his hand cupping a cigarette, his face showing impatience and irritation.

Harmas, his hat at the back of his head, surveyed what remained of Philip
Barlowe. He stared for a long moment, then he nodded to the Negro and turned
to Jenson.

"Got a report on the slug that killed him?"

Jenson squinted at him.

"Not yet... why?"

"How long will it be?"

"Could be ready now."

"I have a hunch," Harmas said. "Let's find out if it is ready."

They walked to the Coroner's office and Jenson put a call through to the
Ballistics department. While he was waiting, Harmas said thoughtfully, "What
magic did a little punk like Barlowe have to persuade a sexy piece like that
woman to marry him?"

"Women do odd things," Jenson said, then as the connection came through he
waved Harmas to silence. He asked for the report on the bullet. There was a
pause, then some talk, then Jenson said, "Okay, Ted. Thanks. I'll be right over,"

He hung up. He stared at Harmas, his eyes puzzled. "Now what do you know?
The two men were both shot with 38's, but the guns are different. The slugs don't
match. How did you know?"

"I didn't," Harmas said. "I told you ... it was a hunch." He stood up. "It needn't
mean a thing. Our bald headed pal could own two .38 automatics ... but
somehow I don't think he does."

A little after six o'clock, Anson completed his list of calls and then drove back to
the Marlborough hotel. Right at this moment, he was thinking as he locked the
car, Jenson and Harmas were seeing Meg. He would have given a lot to have
car, Jenson and Harmas were seeing Meg. He would have given a lot to have
been there. He had to trust her to keep her nerve. He wished he could call her
later and find out what had been said, but that was far too dangerous.

This dossier, Harmas had spoken about... what could be in it? Had Meg lied to
him when she said she hadn't a record: nothing to hide? Had Maddox found out
that she had had lovers? The more Anson thought about Meg, the more sure he
was she couldn't have lived with Barlowe without having a lover. He had made a
slip telling Harmas Meg and Barlowe had been happy together. He had forgotten
they had had separate rooms.

"Hello, Johnny ..."

Anson started and looked round.

Fay Lawley stood by his side. She smiled at him, her eyes hard and glittering.

"Hello," Anson said curtly. He wasn't in the mood to be bothered with this
overblown tart. "Excuse me. I have a business date ... I'm late already."

She caught hold of his arm.

"Skip it. Don't give me that line. I'm expecting you to take me out tonight and to
spend some of your new-found money on me. It's time you unbuttoned your
wallet."

Anson shook her hand off his arm.

"Beat it!" he said viciously. "Go, peddle it elsewhere," and pushing past her, he
crossed the street and entered the hotel.

Fay stood motionless watching him disappear into the hotel, then with a hard
little smile on her over-painted mouth, she started down the sidewalk to the
nearest bar.

Maddox shoved aside a pile of papers that fell on to the floor. He lit another
cigarette, ran his fingers through his hair and picked up yet another insurance
policy from his in-tray. Patty Shaw looked in. "Steve's here," she announced.

Maddox said nothing for several seconds, then he put the policy down and stared
at Patty. For some moments he didn't seem to register her, then his eyes became
alert. "Steve? Sure ... shoot him in."
alert. "Steve? Sure ... shoot him in."

Patty said to Harmas, "The Maestro is coming out of his trance. He'll see you."

Harmas entered the office and sat down in the client's chair. The time was nine
fifteen a.m. He had driven through the night back to San Francisco and he was
feeling jaded. Maddox pushed back his chair. "What's cooking?"

"Plenty," Harmas said, "but I haven't had the time yet to get it all straightened
out. I thought I'd better come back here and talk it over with you. For a start:
Barlowe and his wife didn't live as man and wife. They had separate rooms. He
was a queer: a sick man. You should have seen the muck I found in his room:
sadist stuff... really rotten. Mrs. Barlowe was attacked and raped. I have the
doctor's certificate. Here are all the sordid details." He dropped a paper on the
desk.

"There's no fake about that. I've seen her. She's certainly been beaten up. I went
over the house. She keeps it the way a self-respecting pig would hate. I've seen
Barlowe. He's a shrimp of a man ... I can't think why she ever married him."

Maddox relaxed back in his chair. His red rubbery face creased into a benign
grin.

"Go on ... keep talking."

"She writes short stories. Awful stuff, but one of them deals with an insurance
swindle." Harmas took more papers from his pocket and dropped them on the
desk. "Have a look at this when you have time. She has an idea."

Maddox nodded.

"Barlowe was a champion revolver shot," Harmas continued. "He owned a gun:
a .38, but the gun is missing. Barlowe was shot with a .38. The other guy was
also shot with a .38, but the slugs don't match. Mrs. Barlowe gave out a
description of the killer: a word for word description that appeared in the
newspapers of the guy who attacked the other couple."

Maddox was practically purring. He opened his desk drawer, took out a file and
pushed it towards Harmas.
"There it is, Steve. Take it away and read it. Then come back and we'll talk again
... you are doing fine."

Harmas picked up the file.

"There's one other thing," he said, getting to his feet. "Anson has already alerted
the press that this woman is going to make a claim. If we block the claim
without good reason, we're in for a lot of rank publicity. She has the sympathy of
the public."

Maddox grinned wolfishly.

"You read that dossier. We can't get bad publicity once that dossier becomes
public reading. This is a phony claim. I knew it was as soon as it came to my
desk. You keep going ... you're doing fine!"

Joe Duncan, a large man with a great sagging belly and a whisky complexion put
down one of his six telephone receivers and looked questioningly at Sailor
Hogan as he came into the office.

"Park your butt," Duncan said. "Have you any idea what the date is?"

Hogan settled himself in the big arm-chair opposite Duncans desk. He struck a
match to light a cigarette.

"Why should I care?"

"In five days you come across with twenty-five grand or you and me part
company," Duncan said. He leaned his gross body back into his chair, reached
thick fingers for a cigar, nipped off the end with his small yellow teeth and spat
the end into the trash basket. "How's it coming? I want the dough ..."

Hogan grinned at him.

"You'll get it, even if I have to borrow it."

Duncan sneered.

"Who's going to lend you money?"

"You'd be surprised," Hogan said and winked. He was feeling very confident.
"You'd be surprised," Hogan said and winked. He was feeling very confident.
"I'm a guy with prospects now."

Duncan tapped a copy of the Pru Town-Gazette lying on his desk.

"From this rag, your meal ticket has been raped. Are you telling me you can still
find twenty-five grand?"

Hogan's grin widened.

"Read it again. Who cares if she was raped? Her husband is dead and he was
insured for fifty grand. Now put that in your gizzard and chew it over." He
lounged to his feet. "Be seeing you, Joe. Relax. It's working out fine for me ...
just relax."

When he had gone, Duncan scratched the back of his thick neck, shrugged and
reached for the telephone.
Chapter 10
Harmas arrived back in Pru Town late the following evening. He had spent all
the morning with Maddox, and now briefed, was ready for action.

He dumped his bag at the hotel, then drove out to the Court roadhouse.

The roadhouse was situated a few miles outside Pru Town. It was one of those
showy, neon covered places that attracted the car trade and the young in search
of a reasonably good dinner with a reasonably good band at a not too exorbitant
price.

He walked into the bar, which, at that time, was nearly empty. He asked the
barman, a big, jolly looking Negro, if he could have a table in the restaurant. The
Negro said he would fix it. In the meantime, how's about a drink?

Harmas said he would have a large Scotch on the rocks and he sat at one of the
high stools at the bar. He asked for the evening newspaper.

The Negro got him the drink and the paper and then went to the far end of the
bar to phone the restaurant. The front page of the Pru Town Gazette was given
up to the Barlowe murder.

The barman came back to say a table would be ready in ten minutes.

"That's a horrible thing," he went on seeing Harmas was reading about the
murder. "These two were out here a couple of hours before it happened."

Harmas put down the newspaper.

"Is that right? It surprises me they went out to Jason's Glen. After the first
murder you would have thought they would have kept clear of such a lonely
place."

The barman rolled his eyes.

"That's just what he said. He didn't want to go. They argued about it for nearly
twenty minutes, but she wanted it. Man!

When a dame like that wants something, she gets it!"


When a dame like that wants something, she gets it!"

"So he didn't want to go out there?"

"That's a fact. They came in here for a final drink. It was around half past nine.
At one time I thought they would blow up, they got so heated. Finally, he said
the hell with it: if she wanted to go that bad, then he would take her. Then she
went to the Ladies' Room and kept him waiting for more than ten minutes. I saw
he didn't go for that either!"

"Too bad she didn't take his advice," Harmas said, his mind busy. He finished
his drink. "I guess I'll go and eat," and tipping the barman generously, he went in
towards the restaurant.

He crossed the lobby and paused outside the ladies' room.

The doorman glanced at him, then stiffened to attention as Harmas beckoned to


him.

"Would there be a telephone in there?" Harmas asked and took out his wallet.
From it he selected a five dollar bill.

The doorman eyed the bill the way a gun dog eyes a falling grouse.

"Yes, sir."

"Automatic or does it go through a switchboard?" "A switchboard, sir."

"I'd like to talk to the operator," Harmas said. He took out his card and let the
doorman examine it. Then as he took the card back, he handed over the five
dollar bill.

"I can fix that," the doorman said. "Come this way." He took Harmas to a small
office where there was a switchboard and a blonde thumping a typewriter. The
blonde was young and pretty and she looked at Harmas as the doorman said,

"This gentleman wants a little help." He winked. "You help him... he'll help
you." To Harmas, he said, "You go right ahead, sir. You'll find May ready to
help helpful gentlemen," and he went away. Harmas sat on the edge of the desk.
help helpful gentlemen," and he went away. Harmas sat on the edge of the desk.
"Is that right, beautiful?" he asked and took out his wallet. He felt this was the
right time to be extravagant. He knew Maddox would willingly meet any
expense to save the company paying a phony claim.

The blonde, snugly curved, with big baby blue eyes looked with alert interest as
Harmas fished out a five dollar bill.

"For that, handsome," she said, "you could go a very long way."

"That's good news," Harmas said, grinning, "but right now all I want is a little
information. Do you keep a record of the out-going calls you handle?"

"Yep." She looked him over. "Are you a private eye?" "I'm private," Harmas
said. "I'm trying to trace a call made from here on September 30th around half
past nine ... made by a woman."

The blonde got to her feet and swung her neat hips over to the switchboard. She
consulted a notebook.

"Here we are ... must be the one I can't remember if it was made by a woman,
but on that night I wasn't busy. I had only four calls. Three of them between
seven and half past eight ... the other was around nine forty. Elmwood 68009."

"Could I have the other numbers?"

She gave him the numbers and he wrote them down, then he thanked her and
passed over the five dollar bill.

She smiled happily as she tucked the bill away. She was pretty, pert and sexy
and for a brief moment Harmas regretted he was married, then he waved away
such thoughts and went into the restaurant.

Later, he called police headquarters. The desk sergeant told him Lieutenant
Jenson was still out.

"You could help me," Harmas said and introduced himself. "I want to know who
operates on Elmwood 68009."

The desk sergeant told him to hold on. After a delay he came back on the line.

"That's a public call booth on highway 57. If you have a Survey map of the
"That's a public call booth on highway 57. If you have a Survey map of the
district, the call box is in zone A.3." Harmas thanked him, and hung up.

Around ten o'clock the same evening, Harmas walked down the long corridor
that led to Jenson's office through the usual smell of disinfectant and sweat of a
cop house.

Jenson, looking dirty and tired, was talking to someone on the telephone. When
he saw Harmas, he said, "Well, keep after it... yeah ... yeah ... call me back," and
he hung up. He frowned at Harmas who was now sitting astride one of the hard
backed chairs. "What do you want?"

"I'm just back from seeing Maddox. He sends his love. How are you making
out?"

Jenson rubbed the back of his neck. He looked like a man who had been under
pressure for more hours than he likes to remember.

"One of my men was shot to death by a hold-up thug who cleaned out the Caltex
cash box on the Brent highway a few days back. The same gun that shot my
man, killed Barlowe."

Harmas drew in a long, slow breath.

"So what now?"

"We're checking on every bald-headed man in the district. We're hunting for the
gun," Jenson said, his expression grim.

"I have every man I can spare on the job."

"How much did the hold-up thug get away with?"

"A little over three thousand."

"Did you get a description of the guy?"

"Yeah ... not the same guy who shot Barlowe. This one was tall," Jenson leaned
back into his chair, took a cigar from his desk drawer and lit it. "Here's
something odd. We had a report from the Marlborough hotel that a hat and coat
were stolen on the night of the robbery. The hat was Swiss style with a cord and
feather ... the gunman had the same kind of hat. Could mean something. I had an
feather ... the gunman had the same kind of hat. Could mean something. I had an
idea that the gunman was passing through, but now I am beginning to wonder if
he wasn't a local man."

"Who gave you a description of this guy?"

"The gas attendant."

"Could be he was in such a panic he has the description wrong. Could be the
gunman is our sex killer."

Jenson blew smoke to the ceiling.

"I guess."

Harmas brooded for a long moment, then said, "I'd appreciate it if you'd take me
out to Jason's Glen tomorrow morning.

I have an idea ... I could be wasting your time, but I don't think I am."

Jenson wiped his sweating face.

"I want to go out there myself. Okay, I'll pick you up. What's your idea?"

Harmas got to his feet.

"It'll keep ... then see you tomorrow," and he made for the door.

As Jenson was about to pull into the lay-by at the bottom of the dirt road leading
to Jason's Glen, Harmas said sharply,

"Hold it!"

Jenson trod on the brake and brought his car to a standstill. "Before you muck up
the ground," Harmas said, "let's take a look."

He and Jenson went over to the lay-by. On a patch of soft ground they came
upon a deep impression of a tyre track.

Harmas stared at it.


Harmas stared at it.

"This could be too good to be true," he said. "If we find the same track at Jason's
Glen, I'd say my hunch is paying off.

Take a look at this ... see how the tyre is worn on the left side. It is as good as a
finger print. If you saw it again would you recognize it?"

Jenson examined the track for a long moment, then he nodded.

"Yeah... so what?"

"We'll go up to the glen and see if we can find the same impression there."

Jenson shrugged and returned to the car. With Harmas at his side, he drove up
the narrow road that led to the glen.

It took the two men more than an hour of patient searching before Jenson came
across the tyre track.

"Here it is," he called to Harmas who was on the far side of the glen.

Harmas joined him. The track was clear in the sandy soil. The two men squatted
beside it.

"That's it!" Harrnas's expression showed his excitement. "Who says I'm not one
hell of a detective!" He moved back.

"This guy drove his car between these two shrubs. The car would be out of
sight... yeah, that's it!"

"Will you quit talking to yourself and make with some explanations?" Jenson
said. "You think this could be the killer's car?"

As they walked back to the car, Harmas said, "That's my bet. Remember I asked
Mrs. Barlowe why she and her husband came out here and she said he was in a
romantic mood and wanted to?" "Yeah ... go on."

"She let drop that they had gone to the Court roadhouse. I went out there last
night and got talking to the barman. He says Barlowe didn't want to come out
here and they almost had a stand-up fight before Barlowe finally agreed to bring
her here. She went to the ladies' room and kept him waiting some minutes. I
her here. She went to the ladies' room and kept him waiting some minutes. I
wondered if she had used the telephone.

There's a record of all out-going calls, and at the time she was in the ladies'
room, there's a record of a call to Elmwood 68009. I checked and it's the number
of the call box we've just looked at. I think Maddox is right as usual." Harmas
shrugged. "He's always right. I think she and a boy friend murdered Barlowe.
The boy friend was waiting for her to call, alerting him they were on their way.
He then drove up there, hid his car and when they arrived, he shot Barlowe."

Jenson looked worried.

"Are you suggesting the boy friend then attacked and raped her? To hell with
that for an idea!"

"I'll quote Maddox. He said he would be happy to be attacked and raped for fifty
grand."

"That's what Maddox says. A woman wouldn't...."

"But we are one jump ahead of you," Harmas said. "We've turned a Tracing
Agency onto this woman and they've come up with quite a dossier. She has not
only been in jail for stealing she was also a prostitute before she married
Barlowe. I think Maddox is right. A woman like that wouldn't flinch from rough
treatment if it gave her an alibi and earned her fifty thousand dollars."

"You think this sex killer is her boy friend?"

"No. I think her boy friend did the Caltex job, and he duplicated the sex killing
as a front. The fact your patrol officer and Barlowe were killed by the same gun,
points to it."

"If these two were going to horn in on a fifty thousand dollar insurance," Jenson
said, "why should he risk his neck for a three thousand dollar hold-up?"

Harmas stared at him for a long moment.

"Yeah ... that's a point. Look, let's keep an open mind on this. The Barlowe
woman has already lied once. Let's go and talk to her ... maybe she'll lie again."

Meg Barlowe was sitting up in bed as the nurse led Jenson and Harmas into her
room. Although her left eye was stall badly bruised, Harmas was again aware of
her sensual handsomeness.

"I have to worry you again, Mrs. Barlowe," Jenson said.

"I'm told you'll be leaving here in a couple of days."

Meg looked from Jenson to Harmas and then back to Jenson again. "Yes."

Harmas had an idea she was nervous. He stood back and watched her.

"I understand you and your husband spent the evening at the Court road house
and he then persuaded you to go with him to Jason's Glen: Is that correct?"
Jenson asked. Meg nodded. "Yes."

"Did you want to go with him?"

"Not particularly. In fact I told him it mightn't be safe, but he laughed at me. I
guess he was a little high ... I guess I was too."

"It was his idea to go out there ... not yours?" She stared at him for a long
moment before saying, "That's right."

"When you reached Jason's Glen, did you see anyone up there ... any parked
car?"

"No. I - I thought we had the place to ourselves." "How long were you there
before the attack started?" "About five minutes ... a little more." "What happened
exactly?"

"We were talking. Then suddenly I saw a flash and heard a bang. Phil ... fell
forward. I looked around and there was this man. He pointed the gun at me and
told me to get out of the car. I got out and started to run. Although he was short
and fat, he was very quick. He caught up with me and jerked me around, I struck
him and his hat fell off. I saw he was completely bald." "You are sure of that?"
Jenson asked. "He couldn't have been very fair or even white haired, and in the
moonlight, you thought he was bald?" .

Harmas grinned at him.

"Maddox would love that remark. If you go on making those bright deductions,
"Maddox would love that remark. If you go on making those bright deductions,
you'll finish up as Chief of Police." As he got into the car beside Jenson, he went
on, "Hey! Here's an idea! If she has a boy friend, guess which room in Barlowe's
house he is most likely to visit?" Jenson started the car. "Go on ... I can guess."

"The way she keeps that house, never cleaning it, you might find his finger
prints. Why not send your boys out there and go-ever the bedroom before she
leaves hospital? You could do it nice and quiet without anyone knowing. If she
has a record, he might too and then we could find him a lot faster than waiting
for him to come out from under the wraps.

And another thing ... finger print the gun box. You might get a surprise there."

Jenson drove in silence to the hotel, frowning, then as he pulled up outside the
hotel he said, "Yeah, you've got something. Okay, I'll send the boys out there
this afternoon."

"Who runs the Pru Town Small Arms Club?" Harmas asked as he got out of the
car, "and where do I find him?"

"Harry Seamore. You'll probably find him at the club on Sycamore Street.
Why?"

"I want to talk to him," Harmas said. "Stick around, I'll get the^dossier."

Harry Seamore, a heavy built, red-faced man in his early forties, shook hands
with Harmas after Harmas had introduced himself.

"I'm interested in Barlowe's gun," Harmas said. "I've been told he gave the gun
away about nine months ago. Do you know who he gave it to?"

Seamore, settling in his chair, looked puzzled.

"I think you have made a mistake. Phil wouldn't ever give his guns away. I know
for a fact he had one of them last week. I happened to have borrowed it from
him."

Harmas leaned forward.

"Guns? Did he have more than one?"

Seamore grinned.
Seamore grinned.

"He had a pair and they were beauties. I ought to know. I got them for him: they
were a matched pair: about the best .38's I've ever handled."

Harmas ran his fingers through his hair as he frowned at Seamore.

"You just said you borrowed one of his guns?"

"That's right. A friend of mine from Miami was staying with me. He reckons he
is a pretty good shot." Seamore's pleasant face creased again into a smile. "We
had a wager. I use a .45, but my friend is used to a .38 and he hadn't his gun with
him. So I called Phil and asked him if he'd lend me one of his guns. My friend
and I had this match ... he using Phil's gun. I returned the gun to Phil three days
before the poor guy was killed."

Harmas leaned back in his chair until the chair back creaked.

"Where did this match take place, Mr. Seamore?"

"Right here," Seamore said, jerking his thumb towards the window through
which Harmas could see a shooting alley.

"We set up two target boxes and we both fired fifteen rounds. I pipped my friend
by an inner."

"What are the chances of getting the spent bullets from both guns, Mr.
Seamore?" Harmas asked.

"Easiest thing in the world. There's been no shooting for the past week. The
slugs are in the boxes right now."

"You know which box your friend shot into?"

"Of course."

"Could I use your telephone?"

"Go right ahead."

Smiling happily, Harmas dialled police headquarters.


Chapter 11
Anson had two likely prospects to call on in Pru Town. He then planned to spend
the night at the Marlborough hotel before returning to Brent.

As he drove along the busy highway, he wondered what was happening to Meg.
She would soon be discharged from hospital. He had already warned her to
destroy the insurance policy he had given to Barlowe. This he was sure she had
done. He had sent the policy for a claim of $50,000, signed by Barlowe to Jack
Jameson, a young but alert lawyer who was now acting for Meg.

Not for one moment had Anson any misgivings that his plans weren't foolproof.
The police would be hunting for the bald headed, sex maniac. The press was
sympathetic towards Meg. Jameson would put in the claim and Maddox would
have to meet it. There was, however, one slight uneasiness in Anson's mind ...
this dossier Harmas had mentioned.

Anson kept asking himself what could be in it.

His two calls successfully completed, he drove back to the hotel. It was after he
had finished his lunch and was walking towards the exit when he ran into
Harmas.

"There you are," Harmas said. "I was hoping to see you. I want to talk to you."

Anson looked sharply at him, then followed him into the deserted lounge. They
sat in a far corner.

"What is it?" Anson said, waving to the waiter to bring coffee.

"The Barlowe affair," Harmas said. "Maddox is right. That man kills me! He is
always right. The claim is phony."

Anson took from his pocket a pack of cigarettes. He offered it and the two men
lit up.

"Go on ... tell me," he said, his voice steady and wooden.
"Go on ... tell me," he said, his voice steady and wooden.

The waiter brought them coffee. When he had gone, Harmas said, "I'm sure as
I'm sitting here this woman, with the help of a boy friend, murdered her husband.
They used the sex killer as a front."

Anson stared at the burning end of his cigarette. Don't panic, he told himself.
What has he found out? What have I done wrong? He remembered with a feeling
of relief that he had an unbreakable alibi.

"You don't really expect me to believe this, do you?" he said. "Isn't this
something Maddox has cooked up to get out of settling the claim?"

"No," Harmas said quietly. "I have seen her dossier ... you haven't. She is
capable of anything. I'm sure Maddox is right as he always is."

Anson's mouth became too dry for smoking. He crushed out his cigarette.
"What's in this dossier, then?"

"The woman has a jail record," Harmas said. "She has been a prostitute. The
Tracing Agency says she became infatuated with a man who lived with her.
They don't know who this guy is, but she turned thief to keep him and got a three
months' sentence. When she came out of jail, her pimp had disappeared. She met
Barlowe. It's an odd thing how someone like Barlowe ... a mean-tempered,
middle-aged man ... does fall for a tart. He fell for her, and they married. It's my
guess she met her pimp again, and together they cooked up this idea of getting
Barlowe to insure himself and then the two of them knocked him off."

His face expressionless, Anson said, "Can you prove any of this?"

"I have some proof. Okay, I admit it wouldn't stand up in court, but it is enough
to make Maddox fight every inch of the way before we pay her claim." Anson
leaned back in his chair.

"She is a client of mine. You don't seem to realize how tricky this is for me. The
word gets around Mrs. Barlowe is front page news. People are sorry for her. The
newspapers have made a big play about her being raped and her husband being
killed. If Maddox fights her claim, where do I stand? Don't you see the situation
I'm in? Every time I call on a prospect to try to sell him a life policy, he'll say,
'What's the use? If anything happens to me, your people won't settle ... look at
the Barlowe case.' Can't you see that?"
"Sure," Harmas said, "but you're not suggesting that we pay out on a phony
claim, are you?"

"Is it phony? Just because you've found out this woman has a police record, does
that make her a murderess. What proof have you got?"

"I've caught her out in two lies," Hamas said. "It was she who persuaded
Barlowe to go out to Jason's Glen and I have a witness who'll swear to it, but she
claims it was Barlowe who wanted to go ... to be romantic. I have proof they
slept alone. Barlowe wasn't the romantic type ... he was a pervert. It's my bet that
her boy friend was waiting at the Glen for them. There's a telephone record at the
road-house where they spent the evening that a call was put through to a call box
near the glen. I can't prove she actually made the call, but it certainly looks as if
she did. I think she was alertting her boy friend that she and Barlowe were on the
way to the glen."

"Pretty circumstantial, isn't it?" Anson asked, staring at Harmas.

"Oh sure, but it turns on the red light. There's an impression of a car tyre by the
call box and we found the same impression up at the Glen. If we find her boy
friend has a tyre that matched the impression, he'll have a lot of explaining to
do."

Anson kept his face expressionless, but there was a sudden chill around his
heart.

"The impression could have been made any time, couldn't it? What else have
you got?"

Harmas sat forward.

"This is the topper," he said. "Barlowe was a crack pistol shot: he owned two
guns; .38's. Both these guns are missing.

Mrs. Barlowe told us Barlowe had given one gun away, but Harry Seamore, the
secretary of the Target Club, is certain, Barlowe would never have parted with
these guns. Now there's something ... Barlowe was shot with his own gun. We
have been able to check the slugs. And here's something really sensational; the
same guy that killed Barlowe, killed the cop in the Caltex hold-up. How do you
like that?"
"You've certainly been busy," Anson said as he bent to adjust his shoe string. He
felt he had lost colour and he cursed himself for using Barlowe's gun. At the time
it had seemed so easy and convenient ... what blind spot had led him into making
such a stupid, dangerous mistake? He straightened. "What does Lieutenant
Jenson think ... does he think Barlowe did that holdup? Could explain how he
got hold of the money to pay for his premium. Come to think of it, it could be
the answer. He was desperate to start up on his own. He probably hadn't the
money to pay for the premium and staged this hold-up. Could explain why he
paid up in cash."

Harmas stroked his nose.

"Yeah; you have an idea. All the same, I'm still convinced Mrs. Barlowe has a
boy friend and he and she cooked up Barlowe's murder."

"Just who is this boy friend you keep talking about?" Anson demanded.

"We're looking for him. He shouldn't be all that hard to turn up." Harmas
finished his coffee. "Well, that puts you in the picture. I'm alerting Maddox. He'll
love it! I don't think Mrs. Barlowe is going to get paid. She could end up in the
gas chamber."

Anson got to his feet.

"You have still to prove it," he said. "Until you do prove it, I'm going along with
my client. This kind of situation could put me right out of business here. See
you," and he walked out of the lounge.

Harmas watched him go, a sudden, puzzled expression in his alert grey eyes.

Harmas had just finished breakfast and had moved into the lounge of the hotel to
read the newspapers when Jenson came striding in.

"That finger print idea of yours has paid off," Jenson said. "I think we're on to
her boy friend. There are two sets of men's prints in her bedroom. One set we
have no record of, but the other belongs to a guy named Sailor Hogan. He was
one time light-heavy weight champion of California and he lived in Los
Angeles. He works now in Brent for Joe Duncan, a bookmaker. As Hogan lived
in L.A. and Mrs. Barlowe worked there as a prostitute could be he was her
pimp."
"Get any prints from the gun-box?" Harmas asked.

"Yeah, but they aren't Hogan's; they belong to the other guy," Jenson told him.
"I'm going to talk to Hogan now. Do you want to come?"

Harmas climbed to his feet.

"I'd like to see you stop me," he said.

Sailor Hogan lounged back in his chair, a sneering grin on his battle scarred face.

"Look, fellows, snap it up," he said. "I have things to do. What's biting you?"

"Where were you on the night of September 21st?" Jenson demanded.

Hogan's grin widened.

"What's this? What am I supposed to have been doing?"

"What were you doing and where were you?"

"I don't know," Hogan said, shrugging. "That's over two weeks ago, isn't it?"

"Think about it," Jenson said with his cop voice. "You could be in trouble. Better
think hard."

"Well, if it's like that," Hogan said still grinning, "maybe I can do something
about it." He took from his pocket a slim red diary and began to flick through the
pages "September 21 st?"

"You heard me!" Jenson snapped.

"Well, now yeah ... just as well I keep a diary, isn't it?" Hogan looked at Harmas
and winked. "I've been in a spot of trouble in the past, now I always keep a
record. Comes in useful when the law gets nosy."

"Come on, Hogan!" Jenson barked. "What were you doing?"

"I was in Lambsville ... I had a job to do for Joe Duncan ... any particular time
bothering you?"

"Three to four o'clock in the morning."


"Three to four o'clock in the morning."

"Well, for Pete's sake. I was in bed! Where else would I be?"

"Can you prove it?"

Hogan leered.

"Easiest thing in the world, Lieutenant. I don't often sleep along. I get scared of
the dark. I had a babe to look after me."

His sneering grin widened. "She has a reason to remember. You ask her ... Kit
Litman. She works at the Casino Club."

"What were you doing on the night of September 30th?"

Hogan again winked at Harmas as he flicked pages in his diary.

"Time?" he asked. "Between nine and eleven p.m."

"That's an easy one," Hogan said. "I was playing poker with four of my pals. We
played from eight to midnight at Sam's bar. Check if you don't believe me. I was
with Joe Gershwin, Ted Macklin, Frankie Stewart and Jack Hammond." He
lolled at ease in his chair. "They'll tell you. We started play at eight and finished
at around two o'clock. Is that all? I have work to do. You can't pin anything on
me, Lieutenant. I keep my nose clean."

Jenson asked abruptly, "You know Mrs. Barlowe? Hogan was waiting for this
question. "I can't say I do ... have I missed anything?" "You know Philip
Barlowe?" "The guy who was knocked off? No ... what's all this in aid of?"

"Have you ever been to the Barlowe house?" Hogan's smile began to fade. He
didn't like the cold, hard stare Jenson was giving him. "Is it likely?"

"How does it happen then your fingerprints were found in the Barlowe house?"
Jenson demanded, leaning forward. For a moment Hogan gaped at him, then he
forced a rueful grin.

"You coppers! You been out there getting fingerprints?" "We have yours
Hogan," Jenson said. "Let's start again; do you know Meg Barlowe?" Hogan
shrugged.
"Oh, sure. What's it matter now Barlowe's dead? She and I used to go around
together before she married Barlowe. We met again and she invited me out there
from time to time. Barlowe hadn't what it takes!" He had recovered his nerve and
he winked at Harmas as he went on, "I was just protecting the lady's honour. But
since you know, well, there it is.

Anything else you want to know?"

"There's another set of prints in the house," Jenson said. "A man ... know who it
could be?"

Hogan picked a tooth with a dirty fingernail.

"You surprise me," he said. "I thought I was the only one. I wouldn't know ...
why not ask her?"

Jenson looked at Harmas and shrugged. This gesture was an admission of defeat.

"Where's your car?" Jenson asked. "Outside ... the blue Buick."

The two men left the apartment, and as they shut the door, Hogan gave a
sneering little laugh.

It took Jenson only a few minutes to satisfy himself that Hogan's car hadn't made
the tyre track at Jason's Glen. He looked in disgust at Harmas.

"Well that's it," he said. "There's another boy friend. Hogan couldn't have done
it. I'll check his alibi, but I know him...his alibis stick." "So we start looking for
the other boy friend," Harmas said.

"That's it," Jenson said. "I'll turn the screws on this woman".

"Not yet," Harmas said. "I have an idea I'd like to work on first. When we do
start working on her, we want enough facts to crack her."

Anson drove his car into the Shell Service station on the Brent highway.

The manager of the Station, Jack Hornby, came out to shake hands.

"Jack,"Anson said, I'm worried about my tyres. I don't like them. I want
"Jack,"Anson said, I'm worried about my tyres. I don't like them. I want
Firestone fitted. Will you fix it?" "Happy to do it, Mr. Anson," Hornby said. He
walked around Anson's car. "I don't see why you should be worried about this
lot.

Could run another 8,000 miles."

"A pal of mine had a burst with one of these. Fit me with Firestone".

"O'kay; I can give you discount on your old tyres if you like?"

"Thanks, but I'll take them. Put them in the trunk. I'll wait. How long will it
take?" "Best part of an hour", Hornby said, looking puzzled. "I can lend you a
car, Mr. Anson and I'll send ..."

"I'll wait," Anson said curtly.

Edwin Merry weather, the manager of the Pru Town National Bank, was short,
fat and fussily old-fashioned. He wore a neat, well pressed blue suit and a polka
dot bow tie. As Harmas shook hands with him, Harmas thought he looked like a
character out of a novel by Sinclair Lewis.

"I understand Mr. Philip Barlowe was a client of yours?" Harmas said after he
had introduced himself. "We are expecting a claim to be made against us. Mr.
Barlowe took out a life coverage with us a few days before he died. We have to
check on certain points before we meet the claim."

Merryweather lifted his eyebrows.

"Yes?"

"Did Mr. Barlowe consult you about this policy?"

Merryweather regarded his nicely polished fingernails before saying, "As it


happens ... he did."

"I understand he took out the policy as security for a bank loan. Is that correct?"

"Those were his intentions."

"Did he tell you how much he planned to borrow?"


"Three thousand dollars. We would have been happy to have advanced him that
amount if he had lodged his policy with us."

Harmas became alert.

"I understand Mr. Barlowe wanted a much larger sum than three thousand
dollars."

Merryweather looked prim.

"We couldn't advance him any more than that sum on a five thousand dollar
policy."

"Five thousand? Barlowe was insured for fifty thousand dollars!"

Merryweather looked startled.

"Surely not. Are you sure there isn't a mistake?" Looking at Harmas's set
expression, he frowned and paused to adjust his bow tie. "No, obviously you
would know. Mr. Barlowe told me he was arranging to insure his life for five
thousand dollars and as your company offered a five per cent discount for cash,
he wanted to pay the first premium in cash. He drew out practically all the
money he had in his account to meet the premium."

Harmas felt a prickle of excitement run up his spine. Now he really was on to
something, he told himself.

Quietly, he said, "I don't understand. We don't give discount for cash ... what
made him say that?"

"Mr. Barlowe told me that your representative gave him this information ...
someone ... I think ... it's Mr. Anson, isn't it?"

"He's our representative," Harmas said slowly. "But there is obviously some
mistake here. How much did Barlowe draw out of his account?"

"A hundred and fifty dollars."

Harmas rubbed the back of his neck; the amount needed to cover a five thousand
dollar life policy.
"There's something odd about all this, Barlowe took out a fifty thousand dollar
coverage and he paid the first premium in cash! One thousand odd dollars."

"I can't imagine where he got that amount from, Mr. Harmas. He was often
overdrawn."

Harmas thought for a long moment, then he got to his feet.

"Well, thanks for your time."

Merryweather made a gesture with his fat hands.

"Only too happy to be of service," he said.

As Harmas picked up his key at the reception desk, Tom Nodley said, "There's a
woman wanting to talk to you, Mr Harmas. She's been waiting some time in the
bar."

The smirking expression on Nodley's face made Harmas stare sharply at him.

"Who is she?"

"Her name is Fay Lawley," Nodley leaned forward, lowering his voice. "She's
one of the girls." He winked. "I can get rid of her for you, Mr. Harmas, if you
don't want to see her."

"I always see everyone," Harmas said and walked across the lobby to the bar.

He spotted Fay sitting in a corner, nursing a whisky and water, and he joined her.

She smiled at him.

"Come and sit down. I've been trying to contact you for days."

"Is that a fact," Harmas said. He signalled to the waiter, then sat down opposite
her. "I've been busy. You know me ... I don't know you."

The waiter came over and Harmas ordered a Scotch on the rocks.

"I'm Fay Lawley," she said. "I live around here." Her painted lips twisted into a
hard little smile. "You're with National Fidelity, aren't you?"
"That's right."

"Well, I thought you'd like some information."

The waiter came over with Harmas's drink.

"I thrive on information," Harmas said when the waiter had gone away. He
offered cigarettes. They both lit up. "What is this ... some kind of deal?"

Fay shook her head.

"I'm just paying off a grudge. Treat me nice and I'm lovely. Treat me rough and
I'm the original stinker. I'll do anything for a man who is decent, but the jerk
who tries to shove me around gets his throat cut."

"Should this interest me?" Harmas asked, looking at her intently.

"I don't know ... you're an insurance cop, aren't you?"

"That's it."

"Would you be interested in the way your salesmen act?"

Harmas sipped his drink.

"Why, sure ... any particular salesman?"

"A little runt... Johnny Anson."

Harmas put down his drink. He kept his face expressionless.

"What about him?"

Her face suddenly vicious, her eyes glittering, Fay leaned forward and began to
talk.
Chapter 12
It was Harmas's idea, and as soon as he put it to Jenson, the Lieutenant agreed.

"Mrs. Barlowe will be returning home tomorrow," Harmas said, "this is our last
chance. Let's go cut there and really look the place over. Okay, your fingerprint
boys have gone over the place, but now let us go over it together?"

"Just what are we looking for?" Jenson asked as he got into his car.

"The guns. They could be hidden somewhere in the house. They bother me."

Arriving at the house soon after midday, Harmas and Jenson got out of the car
and surveyed the garden.

"You know, Barlowe had genius," Harmas said "It's odd, isn't it, how this land of
talent and artistic ability can go hand in hand with rottenness."

Jenson wasn't interested. He grunted and then walked over to the front door. He
had no difficulty in slipping the lock.

The two men wandered into the lobby. The stale smell of stuffiness and dirt
made them wrinkle their noses.

"Let's go and look at Barlowe's bedroom first," Harmas said and led the way up
the stairs.

Systematically, the two men searched the room. It was while Jenson was
grimacing with disgust at a pack of photographs he had unearthed, that Harmas,
pushing aside the bed, found one of the floorboards loose.

Taking out his pocket knife, he carefully lifted the board and shot his flashlight
beam into the cavity.

"Here it is," he said, "and what the devil's this?"

Jenson peered over his shoulder at the .38 automatic that lay on the plaster.
Harmas fished out a white bathing cap and two rubber cheek pads. Jenson
inserted a pencil into the barrel of the gun and lifted it carefully from its hiding
place.

Harmas was staring with interest at the bathing cap.

"The bald-headed man," he said and looked at Jenson. "It jells. All this muck ...
now this ... I'll bet a hundred bucks that this is the Glyn Hill murder weapon."

Jenson stroked his thick nose.

"Yeah? I never throw money away. Well, come on, now we're here, let's look at
the rest of this hole."

They remained in the stuffy little house all the afternoon, but they didn't find the
other gun. Jenson had called police headquarters and a couple of cars, loaded
with technical men, had arrived. Two of them had taken the .38 down to the
Ballistics department at Brent. By the time Jenson and Harmas had returned to
Brent, the experts were able to tell them that the gun was the Glyn Hill murder
weapon.

Anson was sensitive to atmosphere.

When Harmas walked into the office soon after six o'clock and just when Anson
was preparing to go home he was immediately aware that Harmas was hostile.

Harmas came abruptly to the reason of his visit. He described his interview with
Merryweather, his grey, steady eyes probing and suspicious.

When Harmas had finished talking, Anson said, "I can't imagine what he means.
I never offered Barlowe a five per cent discount. Why should I? Are you sure
Merryweather has his facts right?"

"I'm not sure about anything," Harmas said in a tone that belied his words.
"Barlowe told him you told Barlowe if he paid the first premium in cash, we
would give him a five per cent discount. What's more, he drew out one hundred
and fifty dollars from his account to cover his first premium ... nearly every
dollar he owned."

Anson picked up a pencil and began to draw aimless designs on his blotter.

"The premium was twelve twenty two," he said, without looking at Harmas.
"Some mistake here."

"Originally, Barlowe intended to take out a five thousand dollar policy," Harmas
said. "Merryweather is certain of that.

Barlowe only wanted to borrow three thousand dollars."

Anson shifted uneasily. He paused for a moment while he lit a cigarette.

"All I can tell you," he said finally, "is that Barlowe filled in one of your coupon
inquiries. When I called on him, he asked for a fifty thousand dollar policy ...
you've seen the policy ... it was signed by him! He might have talked the deal
over with Merryweather before he saw me. When he got home and thought
about it, he must have decided to go for the bigger policy."

"Ten times as big?" Harmas said quietly, "where did the money come from to
pay for such a premium?"

"He had the money ... he gave it to me," Anson said.

"Could I see the inquiry form?" Harmas asked. "I would like to be sure we have
proof that Barlowe talked to Merryweather before he saw vou."

Anson stiffened. The ash from his cigarette fell into his lap.

"I destroyed it," he said.

Harmas now paused to light a cigarette. He stared probingly at Anson who


forced himself to stare back.

"Do you usually destroy your coupons?" Harmas asked.

"Only when I have made a sale. As I sold Barlowe a policy there was no point in
keeping the coupon."

Harmas considered this, then shrugged.

"Yeah ... I see that." He let smoke drift from his nostrils for a long moment, then
suddenly leaning forward, he asked,

"Just for the record ... where were you on the night of September 30th?"
Anson felt a sudden cold stab of fear go through him.

"What do you mean?"

Harmas smiled.

"You know Maddox. He loves alibis. He wants to know where everyone was,
remotely connected with Barlowe on the night of his death," Harmas's smile
broadened. "It wouldn't surprise me if he doesn't ask me for an alibi as well. It
doesn't mean a thing and if I'm treading on thin ice say so and we'll skip it."

"Of course not."

Anson opened a drawer in his desk and took out an engagement diary.

"I was working late, right here," he said in a cold, fiat voice. "I didn't leave here
until eleven. The janitor downstairs will tell you if you want to check."

"Relax," Harmas said, waving his hands. "I don't want to check." He leaned back
in his chair. "You know, I've been thinking about this case. I'm inclined to agree
with you. Even if this woman isn't on the level, it might be wiser to pay her. As
you say, in this district, we might easily lose a lot of business by fighting her
claim. Maddox is coming here this evening I'm going to try to talk him into
paying up."

Anson stiffened and leaned forward. "Maddox is coming here?"

"Yeah. He wants to talk to Jenson. I'll let you know if I persuade him to meet the
claim. Will you be home tonight?"

Anson nodded.

"Up to around nine o'clock but I know Maddox; he won't pay up."

"He could do. Old man Burrows doesn't like bad publicity. The newspapers
could have a go at us. I'll see what I can do." Harmas pushed back his chair.
"Getting away from business, do you know anything about that antique shop at
the corner of the block? I picked up a paperweight there. They swore it was a
genuine antique." He took from his pocket a plastic bag and slid out an ornate
glass paperweight. He pushed it across the desk towards Anson. "Helen is nuts
about antiques, but I am now wondering, if it is a fake ... could be Japanese,
1960!"

Without thinking, Anson picked up the paperweight and examined it, then he
shrugged.

"I don't know; looks nice. If you tell her it's a hundred years old, she'll be
happy."

He handed the paperweight back and Harmas carefully returned it to its plastic
bag.

"Yeah: you have something there." He stood up. "If I can talk Maddox into
paying up, I'll call you. So long for now."

When Harmas had gone, Anson lit a cigarette and stared thoughtfully at the
opposite wall. He had an uneasy feeling that this murder plan of his was slowly
coming unstuck at the seams.

He tried to assure himself that although the situation was tricky, it wasn't
dangerous. Not for one moment did he believe that Maddox would pay up now.
He was sure that the insurance money was as good as lost. What he had to be
careful about was not to be involved. It was Meg's fault, of course. If she hadn't
told him all those lies about her past life, he wouldn't be in this spot now.

He was still sitting at his desk, probing the situation, still wondering if he had
made some fatal mistake, when some thirty minutes later, there came a gentle
tap on his door.

"Come on in," he called.

The door opened and Jud Jones, the night guard wandered in.

Surprised, Anson stared at him.

"Hello, Jud," he said. "I was just going home. Is there something I can do for
you?"
Jones moved his fat body further into the office. He closed the door. There was
an uneasy, smirking expression on his face Anson hadn't seen before and which
he didn't like.

"I wanted a word with you, Mr. Anson," he said.

"Can't it wait?" Anson said a little impatiently. "I want to get home."

Jones shook his head.

"I guess not, Mr. Anson. This is important... to you as well as to me."

Anson moved over to the window so his back was to the fading light.

"Go ahead ... what is it?"

"This guy Harmas ... you know him?"

Anson's hands turned into fists.

"Yes ... what about him?"

"He has been asking questions about you, Mr. Anson."

With an effort, Anson kept his face expressionless. So Harmas had checked his
alibi. Well, that would get him nowhere.

Forcing his voice to sound natural Anson said, "I know all about that. It's to do
with this murder case. The police want to check everyone's alibi; everyone
remotely connected with Barlowe. I happened to have sold Barlowe an insurance
policy so I'm involved. It's just routine. Don't let it worry you."

Jones took a half smoked cigarette from behind his ear, stuck it on his lower lip
and set fire to it.

"It's not worrying me, Mr. Anson. I thought it might be worrying you. You see, I
told him you were right here in this office between nine and eleven. I told him
you were using the typewriter."

There was a sneering tone in his voice that made Anson's eyes move intently
over the fat, sly face.
"That's right," he said. "I told him the same thing. Just as well I didn't have
company that night, isn't it?" He forced a smile.

"Yeah," Jones said without returning Anson's smile. "Well, I told him you were
here, but he's only a private dick. What if the cops should ask me?"

"You tell them the same thing, Jud," Anson said, his voice sharpening.

"You can't expect me to tell lies to the cops, Mr. Anson," Jones said, shaking his
head. "I can't afford to get into trouble ... they could make me an accessory ..."

Anson felt a chill growing around his heart.

"What do you mean? Accessory? What are you talking about?"

"You weren't in your office that night, Mr. Anson."

Anson sat abruptly on the edge of his desk. His legs felt as if they wouldn't
support him.

"What makes you say that?" he asked, his voice husky.

Jones dropped his cigarette butt on the floor and trod on it.

"I had run out of cigarettes," he said. "I thought I might borrow a couple from
you. I knocked on the door. No one answered, but the typewriter kept going. I
knocked again, then I thought something must be wrong. I opened the door with
my pass key. You weren't there, Mr. Anson. There was a tape recorder playing
back the sound of a typewriter working and very realistic it sounded ... it had me
completely fooled "

Anson felt cold sweat run from his armpits down his ribs.

Sunk! he thought, now what am I going to do?

His immediate impulse was to take Barlowe's gun from the locked drawer in his
desk and murder Jones. The thought was scarcely in his mind before he
dismissed it. He would never have the strength to move this great hulk of a body
from his office once Jones was dead. He had to gain time to think.
"That's right, Jud," he said. "I wasn't in my office but I had nothing to do with
the murder ... nothing at all."

Jones, who had been watching Anson closely, smirked. Anson could smell the
sweat of excitement and fear coming from the fat man.

"I'm sure, Mr. Anson ... never crossed my mind you did have anything to do with
it. I just thought I'd better let you know if the cops asked me. I'll have to tell
them the truth." He cocked his head on one side, and went on, "it wouldn't do
any harm, would it, Mr. Anson?" Anson said slowly, "Well, Jud, it might." Jones
managed to look sad.

"I wouldn't like that. You've always been good to me. What sort of harm would
it do?"

"I could lose my job," Anson said. "I set up this alibi because I was fooling
around with a married woman and her husband is on to me. I wanted to prove I
was right here instead of being with her." Even to him, this sounded pretty
feeble, but he had no time to think up something better.

"Is that right?" Jud said and leered. "You were always sharp with girls." He
paused to scratch the back of his fat neck.

"Well, maybe I could forget it if that's all it is. Maybe I could ... I'll have to think
about it."

Anson smelling blackmail, said quickly ... too quickly, "If a hundred dollars
would be of any use to you, Jud ... after all, although I have nothing to do with it,
this is a murder inquiry. How about a hundred bucks and you keep me in the
clear?"

Jones lolled his massive frame against the wall. "Well, I don't know, Mr. Anson.
It worries me. To tell the truth, my wife is far from well. The doc says she
should go away. The climate here doesn't seem to agree with her. Moving is an
expensive business. You couldnt run to a thousand, could you? For that I'll
forget everything and you will be doing us a good turn."

Anson suddenly became calm. He realized the situation. He told himself he


would have to kill this fat, hulking blackmailer, but he would have to stall him
until he got him where he could kill him in safety.
"A thousand!" he exclaimed. "For Pete's sake, Jud! Where do you imagine I'd
find that kind of money? Two hundred is the best I could do."

Jones shook his head. His expression became more sorrowful. "I'd like to help
you, Mr. Anson, but suppose the cops found out I had lied to them? What would
happen to my wife? They could put me away for. a couple of years. Two
hundred bucks is no good to me."

Anson stared at the fat, sweating blackmailer for a long moment, then he said,
"Give me a little time; two or three days.

I might manage to find five hundred, but that would be the top. How about that?"

"I hate to press a guy as nice as you, Mr. Anson," Jones said and Anson was
quick to detect a hardening in the expression of his eyes. "It'll have to be a
thousand or nothing. I will give you a couple of days to decide."

Anson watched him heave his bulk away from the wall and over to the door. As
Jones opened the door, he paused and leered at Anson.

"My wife knows," he said. "I never keep anything from her, but she can keep her
mouth shut as well as I can. Good night, Mr. Anson."

He went out into the corridor and closed the door after him.

On his way back to his apartment, Anson stopped off at the Shell Service
Station. Hornby shook hands with him and asked him how he liked his new
tyres.

"They're fine," Anson said. "I looked in to settle the account."

"Thanks, Mr. Anson. Come into the office and I'll give you a receipt."

As Hornby began to write out the receipt, he said casually, "The police have
been asking about your old set of tyres, Mr. Anson."

Anson was looking at a tyre pressure chart, hanging on the wall. His back was to
.Hornly. He felt the shock of Hornby's words like a physical blow.

Without turning, he asked, "The police? Why?"


"Something to do with the Barlowe murder," Hornby said. "It seems the killer
left an imprint of his tyres on the murder spot. The police are checking on
everyone who has changed his tyres recently. I told them that you had changed
your tyres and that you took your old set away."

Now the first shock was over, Anson turned.

"That's okay," he said. "I'll see Lieutenant Jenson. He's a good friend of mine... I
wouldn't like him to think I had anything to do with the murder," and he forced a
laugh.

"I just thought I'd mention it," Hornby said, giving Anson the receipt.

"Sure ... I'll see the Lieutenant."

As Anson drove away from the garage, he had a feeling he was in a trap. How
many more mistakes was he going to make? He had been so eager to get the
insurance money, he had rushed into this thing. He had been crazy to have used
Barlowe's gun. He had been even more crazy to have been so damned careless as
to get a garage that knew him to change his tyres. Then there was Harmas asking
about the coupon inquiry form and worse still, he now had no falibi for the night
when Barlowe died!

Could this bright idea of his be slowly but surely collapsing? He mustn't lose his
nerve, he told himself. So long as his alibi stood up, he was in the clear. What
was he to do about Jones? His hands turned damp as he gripped the steering-
wheel. Would he have to murder both Jones and his wife? Somehow he would
have to silence them. He was sure, even if he did manage to find one thousand
dollars, Jones would come back for more. This tyre business ... he had dumped
his old set in a breakdown yard among hundreds of other used tyres. No one had
seen him do it. Suppose Jones did betray him? Could the police prove he
murdered Barlowe? He didn't think they could ...unless ' Meg's nerve broke. If
they worked on her, she might involve him.

She would be back the following night and alone in the sordid dirty, little house.
He would go out there late and talk to her.

Maddox flicked cigarette ash off his tie.

"I never liked Anson," he said. "There has always been something queer about
him. He looks sexually starved and when a man looks like that, I don't like him."

Lieutenant Jenson sat behind his desk. Astride a chair, Harmas kept his eyes on
Maddox. They had spent the past hour going over the details that Jenson and
Harmas had collected covering Anson's connection with Barlowe's murder.

"Let's take another look at it," Maddox said, dropping his cigarette butt on the
floor and lighting another cigarette. "We know Anson has been in this woman's
bedroom. We know also he has handled Barlowe's gun-box. You have his
fingerprints in the bedroom and on the gun-box. We know this because you got
his prints on the glass paperweight." He looked approvingly at Harmas. "That
was smart." He drew in a lungful of smoke and let it drift down his thick nostrils.

"We know from this woman, Fay Lawley, that Anson has been losing money on
horses and has been chasing women.

We know he has been living far beyond his income. We also know on the
morning following the Caltex holdup, Anson suddenly pays into his bank a
thousand dollars. We know the gun that killed the officer in the hold-up
belonged to Barlowe. We also know that the gun killed Barlowe. We can assume
the woman gave Anson the gun. He hadn't the money to pay for the premium so
it looks as if he were forced to fake the Caltex hold-up to get the money and to
pay off his debts to this bookmaker. We know he changed his car tyres after he
was alerted by you ..." here Maddox scowled at Harmas, "that a tyre track was
found on the murder spot. We also know that he has a cast iron alibi." Maddox
leaned back in his chair "What is a cast iron alibi? Who is this night guard who
tells us Anson was working until eleven on the night Barlowe died?"

"He wouldn't stand Up for three minutes under cross examination," Jenson said.
"He copped a five year stretch for blackmail ten years ago. He'd lie his mother's
life away if he could earn a dollar."

Maddox ran his fingers through his hair, his red, rubbery face set in a scowl.

"Then it looks like Anson." He turned on Harmas. "What do you think? Can we
nail him?"

"I don't think so," Harmas said. "We have nothing against him that a smart
attorney couldn't shoot to bits. I think as you do ... I think he is our boy, but
proving it is something else besides."
"Well, this is your job," Maddox said, glaring at Harmas. "So what do we do?"

Harmas smiled his slow, lazy smile.

"I think we should settle the claim. Give Mrs. Barlowe fifty thousand dollars."

Maddox's face turned purple.

"Pay her! You're trying to be funny! She'll never get a dime out of me!"

Harmas glanced at his watch. It was twenty minutes to nine and he was hungry.

"I told Anson I'd persuade you to settle the claim. Just to get the right
atmosphere, I think we should call her lawyer and tell him the same thing. As
soon as they know the money is going to be paid out, things will start
happening."

Maddox suddenly relaxed.

"Go on ... keep talking ..."

"This woman is an ex-prostitute; there is no greedier animal," Harmas said. "She


won't part with any of the loot. She and Anson could have a quarrel. She'll be
leaving hospital tomorrow. I thought it would be an idea to tap the telephone and
plant microphones, hooked to a tape recorder around the house. It's my bet
Anson will go out there as soon as he knows the money is going to be paid. We
could get quite a conversation on tape."

Maddox rubbed the back of his neck as he looked at Jenson. "The boy's smart,"
he said. "I won't say I can't do without him, but he makes my life a little easier
than if I didn't have him." To Harmas, he said, "Go ahead ... call her lawyer and
call Anson."

Anson paced up and down in his sitting-room. Every now and then, he looked
impatiently at the clock on the sideboard.

It was five minutes to nine o'clock. Then suddenly the telephone bell rang.

For a moment he hesitated, then picked up the receiver. It was Harmas.


"I've fixed it!" Harmas exclaimed. "Phew! I'm pretty near a wreck! Maddox has
agreed to settle the claim. You have yourself to thank for it! If you hadn't been
selling so much insurance in the district, Maddox would never have agreed, but
even he can see that he would only be spoiling your territory if we fought the
claim."

"You really mean ... there's no trick in this?"

Anson was stiff with suspicion. The idea of Maddox parting with fifty thousand
dollars with the evidence he had against Meg seemed impossible.

"Don't imagine Maddox likes it," Harmas said and laughed. "He talked first on
the telephone with old man Burrows.

He's sure the woman fixed her husband, but he isn't sure he can prove it... so,
well, he's letting her get away with it. I've called her lawyer. He'll get the cheque
tomorrow."

"Well, I'm glad," Anson said. "Thanks for calling me."

"That's okay. I thought you'd like to know. See you sometime," and Harmas
hung up.

Anson slowly replaced the receiver.

Meg Barlowe stirred the fire into a blaze.

The big, dusty room gave her a feeling of security. Having Hogan, his heavy
body stretched out on the settee, gave her a feeling of relaxation even though
Hogan seemed in a vile mood.

The time was a few minutes after eleven p.m. Meg had left the hospital during
the afternoon. As soon as she had got back to the house, she had attempted to
call Hogan, but it was some hours before he answered her repeated ringing.

She had asked him to come out right away, but Hogan was busy. He said he
would be around about nine o'clock, but he hadn't arrived before a few minutes
after ten.

As soon as he had settled himself and had had a drink, he wanted to know when
Meg was going to get the money.

"I don't know," she said helplessly. "This guy Jameson is supposed to be smart.
He's put in the claim, but I haven't heard anything."

"You get after him tomorrow," Hogan snarled. "Chase him! I know lawyers. If
you don't keep after them, they sit on their tails and do nothing."

Meg nodded.

"I'll get after him. What are we going to do about Anson?"

Hogan scowled at her.

"Nothing ... you give him the brush-off. What can he do? As soon as we get the
money you give it to me to handle. You give him the air. You understand?"

Meg stared at him.

"I'll give you the money Jerry, but I'll also give you Anson to handle. He still has
Phil's gun."

Hogan half sat up; his eyes alert. "What are you talking about?"

"I have already warned you about Anson," Meg said. "There's something about
him that scares me. He's coldblooded.

It's fine for you to tell me to give him the brush off. What about me? He could
do anything ... he could kill me!"

"Yeah? He can't do a damn thing!" Hogan snarled. "Can't you see, you dope, that
unless he wants to stick himself into the gas chamber, he can't do a thing? We
have him over a barrel. You get the money, tell him to go to hell, and give me
the money ... it's as simple as that."

"I wish it was," Meg said, clenching her fists. "You don't know him the way I do.
He's ruthless. His mind is set on getting money."

Hogan swung his legs off the settee and sat up. His thick fingers closed around
the buckle of his belt. With a quick movement he released the buckle and
whipped the thin leather belt from around his waist.

"Okay, baby," he said, getting to his feet, "it's time you had a hiding. You're
getting too big for your pants. A beating..."

He paused as the front door bell rang. They looked at each other.

"Who's that?" Hogan said, the belt swinging idly, his eyes uneasy.

"Go and find out," Meg said. "But maybe you would like to beat me first!"

The front door bell rang, loudly and persistently.

Anson got out of his car, opened the double gates and drove the car onto the
tarmac drive.

The headlights of the car lit up the garden. Before be turned off the car's
headlights he saw the garden had already lost its magic neatness without
Barlowe's care and discipline.

The time was half past eleven. There was a light on in the sitting-room. He
paused for a moment, his hand going into his top coat pocket. His fingers
touched the cold butt of Barlowe's gun, then he walked to the front door and rang
the bell.

There was no answer to his ring. He waited, aware of a cold mounting rage
inside him, then he put his finger on the bell and held it there.

After a further wait, the front door was suddenly jerked open. The moonlight fell
directly on Meg.

Anson remembered the first time he had seen her; in exactly the same position in
which she was now standing, but now, of course, it was different. The bruise on
her jaw and her slightly swollen eye marred the sensual quality she had.

At the sight of Anson, she drew in a quick, alarmed breath.

"What do you want?" she demanded. "I don't want you here ... go away!"
"Hello, Meg," Anson said with a deceptively mild smile. "We have things to talk
about"

"You're not coming in!" Meg set herself to slam the door. "I have nothing to say
to you!"

Anson made a quick move forward. He put his hand on her shoulder and gave
her a hard shove that sent her staggering back. He entered the hall, shut the front
door and then walked past her into the sitting-room.

A log fire burned cheerfully in the grate. Anson was quick to notice two half
empty glasses of whisky standing on the occasional table. So she had company,
he thought, and his hand slid into his pocket and touched the butt of Barlowe's
gun.

As Meg followed him into the room, leaving the door open, a sudden gust of
wind blew a shower of rain against the windows.

Anson moved to the fire. He looked around the room. The burning logs, the
settee and the two glasses of whisky sent his mind back to the exciting moment
of their first meeting. It seemed a long time ago.

"What do you want?" Meg demanded.

Anson looked searchingly at her. His eyes moved over her body. He thought:
you meet a woman and she starts a chemical reaction in you. You think there is
no one like her in the world, then something happens, and it is finished. She
means less to me now than the used plate after a good meal, and how little can
that be?

"So you had to lie to me," he said. "If you had told me you had been a tart and
you had been a thief and you had been in jail, I wouldn't have gone ahead with
this thing, but you had to live in a dream world and lie. You hadn't the guts to
tell the truth. I'm sorry for you. To me now, you are just something I find on my
shoe and scrape off."

Meg hunched her shoulders. Her face was hard and her eyes bleak and
indifferent Anson knew he had no power to hurt her. Her past life had armoured
her against contempt.
"Do you imagine I care what you say about me?" she said. "Get out!"

"Not just yet ... I have news for you, Meg. In spite of your record, in spite of
your lies, they are going to pay the claim.

You'll get the money tomorrow."

Meg stiffened, staring at him. Blood rushed to her face, then receded, leaving her
pale with excitement.

"You mean that?" she demanded huskily. "You really mean they are going to
pay?"

Anson waved to the telephone.

"Call Jameson. They've even told him. I talked to him before I came out here. He
said he would be coming out himself tomorrow as soon as he got the cheque."

Meg drew in a long, slow breath. Watching her Anson's face showed amused
cynicism.

"We made a bargain ... remember?" he said, "I was to insure your husband and
murder him and you were to share the insurance money and yourself with me.
We were going away together and we were going to have a whale of a time
spending fifty thousand dollars." His smile became crooked. "But now I've
changed my mind. I have known too many whores to trust any of them and that
now includes you. So I'll settle for half the money. Tomorrow, you will get a
cheque for fifty thousand dollars. I want a cheque right now from you for
twenty-five thousand dollars, and we part and I hope I never see you again."

Meg was aware that Hogan was just outside the room, listening to what was
being said. His presence gave her the courage to say, "You get nothing! You
can't force me to give you anything ... get out!"

"Don't be stupid, Meg," Anson said, his eyes bleak. "I can force you to give me
my share ... make no mistake about that.

You will do what I tell you or..."


A slight movement at the door made him jerk round. His heart skipped a beat at
the sight of Sailor Hogan who grinned sneeringly at him.

"Hello palsy ... you threaten me, not her. I'm more your size."

As he moved into the room, Meg backed away.

Completely taken by surprise, Anson looked blankly from Hogan to Meg and
then to Hogan again. Then his quick mind realized why Hogan was here. He saw
suddenly the whole fabric of the plot he had blindly walked into.

"So ... that's how it is. You and she. So you are the boy friend the police think
murdered Barlowe," he said softly. "You are the pimp from Los Angeles who
they talk about."

Hogan's sneering grin widened.

"Don't get sore about it, palsy," he said, leaning his broad, fighter's shoulders
against the wall. "We're all suckers at one time in our lives. The cops thought I
had knocked him off, but I convinced them I didn't. I had an alibi. For your sake,
I hope you have one too for they are certainly sniffing around."

"I am having half the money," Anson said, his face white, his eyes glittering.
"You and your whore can have the other half, but I fixed this; I took all the risks
... so I get a half share."

Hogan laughed, slapping his thigh.

"You don't get a dime, sucker. You killed him. When Meg put up the idea, I
knew we had to find a sucker in the insurance racket and so I picked you. I
picked on you because I knew you were in trouble and panting for dough. I gave
you the treatment, and boy, did that punch in the belly soften you up. It was that
simple. All she had to do was to write that letter about insuring her jewellery and
then turn the heat on." He looked over at Meg and grinned, "If she knows
anything, she knows how to make a sucker out of a guy with hot pants. So
you've pulled the nuts out of the fire, but don't kid yourself ... you don't get a
dime. There's nothing you can do about it. You start bleating and you'll bleat
yourself into the gas chamber. Get it?" Hogan winked. He jerked a thick thumb
to the door. "Now, beat it. Me and my girl friend want to be alone."
Anson remained before the fire. His eyes were intent, his mouth a thin line.

"Are you telling me it was your idea to trap me into insuring Barlowe and then
murdering him?" he asked.

Hogan laughed.

"Not my idea ... she dreamed it up. You would be surprised how smart she is for
a tart. I worked it, but she invented it."

Meg, listening and watching, said sharply, "You're talking too much Jerry ... shut
up!"

"Let him know how it is," Hogan said, enjoying himself. "After all, he's made us
fifty thousand bucks. He's entitled to know. Well, that's it palsy ... on your way.
When we meet again, I'll buy you a cigar."

Still not moving, Anson asked, "How did the police get on to you, Hogan? Why
did they ever imagine you killed Barlowe?"

"Because they were smart enough to come out here and fingerprint the
bedroom," Hogan said. "They found my prints: maybs they have found yours,
but I have a cast iron alibi and I bet you haven't been sucker enough yourself not
to have a cast iron alibi."

Anson stood staring at Hogan, cold blood crawling up his spine. "They
fingerprinted the bedroom?"

He thought of Jud Jones, and his sneering blackmailing smile.

"They sure did," Hogan said. "Stood me on my ear when Jenson told me."

Anson suddenly felt defeated. He thought of that odd moment when Harmas had
produced the glass paperweight. He had been vaguely uneasy about why Harmas
had suddenly dropped his probing questions and had produced the paperweight.
His heart gave a lurch. He had fallen for one of the oldest police tricks in the
world. They now had his fingerprints. They would have found by now plenty of
his prints in the dirty, sordid bedroom made during those nights when he had
slept with Meg. They now would know that he had been Meg's lover; that, plus
Merryweather's evidence, plus the fact he had changed his car tyres could cook
him ... anyway, they were enough facts for Maddox to swing into action against
him!

Maddox!

Anson stood for a long moment, his brain racing, his face turning livid.

Harmas had said Maddox had agreed to pay the claim. So what had he done? He
had rushed out there to be sure of his share! Maddox would know he would do
just that very thing. What a stupid fool he was! He had walked into a trap.

Slowly, he looked around the room. He knew Maddox's methods. He lifted his
hands in a gesture of despair.

Puzzled, Hogan and Meg were watching him, shocked by the sudden change that
had come over him.

"Look, palsy..." Hogan began, then stopped as Anson motioned him to silence.

The two of them watched him move around the room. He pulled aside the
sideboard and looked behind it. He began a slow, systematic search of the room.
The whiteness of his face and his despairing expression made both Hogan and
Meg remain motionless and silent. Finally, Anson discovered the microphone. It
was concealed behind the radiator; its wire lead going out of the window and
into the darkness of the garden.

Anson stared at the microphone, furious with himself for falling for such a trick.
And I was crazy enough to think I could outwit this devil, Maddox, he thought.
Between the three of us, we have now talked ourselves into the gas chamber.

"What the hell's going on?" Hogan demanded, unnerved by the way Anson was
acting. "What is it?"

Again Anson motioned him to silence and then he beckoned. Moving cautiously,
Hogan approached and Anson pointed to the microphone. He put his hand on
Hogan's arm motioning him to say nothing.

Hogan stared at the microphone as if it was a deadly snake. Sweat burst out on
his battle scarred face. Meg moved forward. When she saw the microphone, she
stifled a scream.

Hogan turned on her viciously and slapped her across the face, sending her
reeling back.

"You smart, stupid bitch!" he yelled at her. "Look at that! So you thought you
could fix it!"

"Stop it," Anson said. He walked heavily over to the fire and bending down he
thrust his hands towards the flames. He felt cold and sick, "Well, it didn't come
off," he went on, staring into the fire. "At least, it wasn't a bad try. If this stupid
woman had only told me the truth ... if she had admitted she had a record, I'd
never have gone ahead with this thing As soon as Maddox know what she was,
he set this trap and we've walked into it. He never intended to pay the claim.
This was his trick to get me out here and set us all talking. We're on tape! We
have talked ourselves into the gas chamber!"

"Not me!" Hogan snarled, wiping his sweating face. "I have an alibi! They can't
touch me! To hell with you two! I'm in the clear!"

Meg turned on him; her face white and terrified. "Jerry! I did this for you! You
were going to have the money! You agreed! You can't walk out on me now. I
love you! We've got to face this together!"

Hogan's face was now a frightened, white mask. "Love? You? Do you imagine I
ever wanted anything to do with you, you cheap whore, except what I could get
out of you? I was planning to take the money and then I would have ditched you!
I have all the women I want without getting snarled up with a dead-beat floosie
like you. You and your sucker can go to hell!"

"Keep talking," Anson said in a cold, flat voice. "It's all being recorded. Just
keep talking."

Neither Hogan nor Meg bothered to listen to what he said. Meg had run over to
Hogan and had caught hold of him. He threw her off.

"Get away from me!" Hogan snarled, and he started for the door.

Anson's hand closed around the butt of Barlowe's gun. He pulled it from his
pocket and offered it to Meg.

"Kill him," he said. "He isn't fit to live!"

Hogan whirled round as Meg, gripping the gun, lifted it and pointed it at him.
His face went slack with fright as he stared at the gun in Meg's hand.

"No! Don't do it!" he exclaimed, his voice shooting up. "Meg!"

"Your yellow boy friend," Anson said softly and reaching forward, he took the
gun from Meg's shaking hand. The sight of the terror on Hogan's face did much
to repay that moment in the garage when Hogan had terrified him.

Hogan backed away, sweat running down his face, his breath coming in heavy
gasps. As he moved unsteadily into the lobby, the front door bell rang.

Anson said quietly, "Here they are; Jenson, Harmas and the rest of them."

Hogan came back into the sitting-room. He looked wildly around.

"Let them in," Anson said, smiling at him. He was now very quiet and calm.
"Then try to talk yourself out of all this.

You won't! Nor will she! You both have said enough to put you in the gas
chamber ... go ahead ... let them in!"

As the front door bell rang again, Anson put the barrel of the gun into his mouth,
and still smiling at Hogan, pulled the trigger.

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