“Only she
Minerva Talcott’s face had turned dead white. Gerald Brand’s was scarlet. He took one step toward me and brought a right uppercut from below his knees to my chin.
I moved my head back two inches to let the uppercut whistle past. Then I stepped in with a left hook which set him to trotting backward a half dozen steps. He would have trotted farther, but his knees caught the edge of the overstuffed chair he had left a few moments before and he abruptly sat down.
The moment my fist connected, Deuce Fen moved, or at least part of him moved. His right hand flashed under his armpit. Mine moved too, a bare micro-second faster.
I let him look at the muzzle of my P-38, until he decided to drop his half-drawn gun back into its holster. When his hand returned to his side, I put away the P-38 and grinned at him.
I said cheerfully, “I want to talk to Mrs. Talcott alone. You gentlemen wouldn’t mind calling another time, would you?”
Gerald looked at Deuce, Deuce continued to look at me and his fingers began to caress the edge of his coat.
“You can try it again,” I said, “but this time I’m going to pull the trigger.”
Gerald looked amazed. Rising from his chair, he looked from Deuce to me and then back again, as though not quite willing to believe his bodyguard was refusing to tangle with me.
When the door closed behind them, I picked up my cigar, walked over and seated myself in the chair Gerald Brand had occupied, which left me facing the door, instead of with my back to it. Minerva Talcott watched me with pale fascination.
In a breathless voice she said, “It isn’t true — any of it.”
Before I could make any comment in reply, there was a sharp rap on the door. I again set down my cigar, and waited with my right hand under my coat while Minerva went to answer it.
Warren Day strode in, with a curt greeting for Minerva and a suspicious scowl for me.
Without preamble, he announced, “The guard reported your, conversation with Greene, Moon, and you’re on to something I missed. What is it?”
This sort of thing was what made me respect Warren Day as a cop. He had an airtight case against Mouldy, but the moment he discovered it contained a false note, his mind was wide open. And when he suspected he might have made a mistake, he followed up personally, instead of sitting in his office and sending out a subordinate.
“I’ve got an alternate theory, Inspector,” I said mildly. Then I outlined the case against Minerva.
I said, “Now tell your version again, Mrs. Talcott. Only this time, include a good reason for getting Greene over here.”
Her hands were fumbling nervously and she made two attempts to speak before words came. In a toneless voice, she said, “Your accusation is only partly true. I admit that I got Marmaduke over here deliberately, and I knew my husband would arrive at two thirty. But I only meant for him to get beaten up. It never even occurred to me that Marmaduke might kill him.”
Day said, “You’d better elaborate a little.”
“Henry and I haven’t lived together for two months,” she said wearily. “I wanted a divorce, but he wouldn’t give me one. He was insanely jealous and he made my life hell by creating scenes over my seeing other men. He still had a key to the apartment, and a week ago he unexpectedly walked in and found me with a male friend. He beat the man unmercifully.
“This incident was the last straw. Twice before he beat men friends of mine, but never so seriously. I decided to teach him a lesson. I picked Marmaduke Greene, not because he is dumb, as you suggested, but because he is the strongest man I ever knew. I knew Henry would attempt to beat up any man he found with me, and this time I wanted
Something about the tone of her voice, possibly its resigned weariness, led me to believe the woman was telling the truth. The inspector’s expression indicated he was believing nothing Minerva said, however, now that she had changed her original story.