“Dorothy, is this a gag to get me out there for some celebration or something? Remember that I’m a struggling young attorney, and having just opened an office...”
“Horace,” she interrupted firmly, “I feel a strong sympathy for women who have hysterics. I’ve pinched myself black and blue, trying to convince myself it’s some hideous nightmare. In short, as I have written so many times during my practice days on the typewriter, ‘Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party.’ ”
“The good men are coming,” Horace announced. “We’ll grab the first plane. Rest assured, Bright Eyes, that Sir Galahad is riding to the rescue.”
“Not Sir Galahad,” she said. “There are connotations of righteous virtue reeking about that character. What I need is someone who can take me in his arms and make me forget that I am being cast in the role of defendant by the local constabulary.”
“Hold everything until I get there,” he said. “I’m riding a white charger which will be all spotted with mud. I think the regularly scheduled planes will get me in to Los Angeles around six o’clock in the morning, your time, but I think there are some independent flights on which I can save a little money, and they’ll leave whenever they have a load. Anyway, I’ll come walking in on you. You’ll be at the Madison Hotel?”
“Better inquire at the jail first.”
She was reassured by his laugh, although she could detect a note of nervousness in his voice.
“You sit tight and hold everything, Princess. I’ll be right out.”
She hung up the phone with a feeling of relief.
12
Rex Brandon called Selby on the phone and said, “Doug, I think we’ve finally got our corpse identified.”
“Who is she?”
“Her name is Rose Furman. She has an apartment in Los Angeles, in the Pocahontas Apartments.”
“How did you get the identification, Rex?”
“Through her shoes. She has a very narrow foot, and it’s difficult for her to get shoes. This shoe store has been selling her shoes on special order for four or five years. They know her because they’ve delivered shoes to her apartment, and she has a charge account. Aside from that, they don’t know much about her. Sometimes she’d come in and buy one or two pairs of shoes, sometimes three or four pairs. Then they wouldn’t see her again for months. I’m going into L.A. Want to come along?”
“Sure,” Selby said. “How about taking Sylvia along?”
“Sure thing.”
Selby said, “Well, we’d better tip her off, and let her follow in her own car. We’ve been in enough trouble for one day taking reporters along with us.”
“I’ll say we have.”
“I’ll get hold of her,” Selby said.
“How about it, Doug? If this looks like the girl, do we go in her apartment and look around?”
“We use our judgment. But before we make a move we’ll have a complete identification. You have her picture. We’ll get someone to identify the picture positively. Then, if we find out she’s missing from her apartment, and we have a positive identification, and the man in the shoe store identifies the photograph, I see no reason why we shouldn’t go in.”
“It’s okay by me,” Brandon said.
“I’m getting a line on a little stuff here and there,” Selby said, “but I...”
“Hey, wait a minute,” Brandon interrupted, “something’s happened.
“Well,” Selby said, “we’ll see if...”
“Just a minute, here’s one of the deputies. He’s got a paper... Oh, oh, Doug, this looks like
“What is it?”
“That’s why they wanted to get out on the streets and grab the credit,” Brandon said. “Otto Larkin has grabbed the whole front page of the paper.”
“What’s he done?” Selby asked.
“According to the paper,” Brandon said, “he’s arrested the person who committed the murder, and... and damned if he hasn’t arrested Dorothy Clifton, Doug... and
Selby said, “Throw the paper in the car, Rex. We’ll read the lurid details on the way to Los Angeles.”
13
Selby read
“Well,” he said, “we have to read