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Lo
I said: "You could be right."
He looked at me again. "You say you knew the guy. Do you go for the setup?"
"I'm tired. I'm not in a thinking mood tonight."
There was a long pause. Then Lo
"It's a thought."
He stuck a cigarette in his mouth and lit it by scratching a match on the dashboard. He smoked silently with a fixed frown on his thin face. We reached Laurel Canyon and I told him where to turn off the boulevard and where to turn into my street. His car churned up the hill and stopped at the foot of my redwood steps.
I got out. "Thanks for the ride, Morgan. Care for a drink?"
"I'll take a rain check. I figure you'd rather be alone."
"I've got lots of time to be alone. Too damn much."
"You've got a friend to say goodbye to," he said. "He must have been that if you let them toss you into the can on his account."
"Who said I did that?"
He smiled faintly. "Just because I can't print it don't mean I didn't know it, chum. So long. See you around."
I shut the car door and he turned and drove off down the hill. When his tail lights vanished around the corner I climbed the steps, picked up newspapers, and let myself into the empty house. I put all the lamps on and opened all the windows. The place was stuffy.
I made some coffee and drank it and took the five C notes out of the toffee can. They were rolled tight and pushed down into the coffee at the side. I walked up and down with a cup of coffee in my hand, turned the TV on, turned it off, sat, stood, and sat again. I read through the papers that had piled up on the front steps. The Le
I had seen all this stuff before, in jail, but I read it and looked at it again with different eyes. It told me nothing except that a rich and beautiful girl had been murdered and the press had been pretty thoroughly excluded. So the influence had started to work very early. The crime beat boys must have gnashed their teeth and gnashed them in vain. It figured. If Terry talked to his father-in-law in Pasadena the very night she was killed, there would have been a dozen guards on the estate before the police were even notified.
But there was something that didn't figure at all-the way she had been beaten up. Nobody could sell me that Terry had done that.
I put the lamps out and sat by an open window. Outside in a bush a mockingbird ran through a few trills and admired himself before settling down for the night. My neck itched, so I shaved and showered and went to bed and lay on my back listening, as if far off in the dark I might hear a voice, the kind of caIrn and patient voice that makes everything clear. I didn't hear it and I knew I wasn't going to. Nobody was going to explain the Le
As Lo
11
In the morning I shaved again and dressed and drove downtown in the usual way and parked in the usual place and if the parking lot attendant happened to know that I I was an important public character he did a top job in hiding it. I went upstairs and along the corridor and got keys out to unlock my door. A dark smooth-looking guy watched me.
"You Marlowe?"
"So?"
"Stick around," he said. "A guy wants to see you." He unplastered his back- from the wail and strolled off languidly.
I stepped inside the office and picked up the mail. There was more of it on the desk where the night deaning woman had put it. I slit the envelopes after I opened windows, and threw away what I didn't want, which was practically all of it. I switched on the buzzer to the other door and filled a pipe and lit it and then just sat there waiting for somebody to scream for help.
I thought about Terry Le
The hell it was a swell trip. You were bored stiff. You only talked to the guy because there wasn't anybody around that interested you. Maybe it was like that with Terry Le
The door buzzer and the telephone rang at the same time. I answered the phone first because the buzzer meant only that somebody had walked into my pint-size waiting room.
"Is this Mr. Marlowe? Mr. Endicott is calling you. One moment please."
He came on the line. "This is Sewell Endicott," he said, as if he didn't know his goddam secretary had already fed me his name.
"Good morning, Mr. Endicott."
"Glad to hear they turned you loose. I think possibly you had the right idea not to build any resistance."
"It wasn't an idea. It was just mulishness."
"I doubt if you'll hear any more about it. But if you do and need help, let me hear from you."
"Why would I? The man is dead. They'd have a hell of a time proving he ever came near me. Then they'd have to prove I had guilty knowledge. And then they'd have to prove he had committed a crime or was a fugitive."
He cleared his throat. "Perhaps," he said carefully, "you haven't been told he left a full confession."
"I was told, Mr. Endicott. I'm talking to a lawyer. Would I be. out of line in suggesting that the confession would have to be proved too, both as to genuineness and as to veracity?"