murderer is. I can’t see that you’re doing anything but stalling.”

“I told you I had to have some truthful answers to some questions,” Shayne said with an impatient wave of his hand. He turned to Victor Morrison and said, “You chose last night for a private fishing expedition. You’d been across the bay in your boat previously, and you knew the way to the Hudson house. Did you meet Natalie Briggs at the back door and kill her?”

“What utter nonsense!” snorted Morrison. “Why would I kill a servant girl whom I’d never seen?”

“She wasn’t killed by someone she’d never seen,” Shayne agreed. “I think she was killed because she knew too much and was threatening to cash in on what she knew. Specifically, she’s the one who must have planted those letters on Mrs. Hudson. Did you arrange with her to plant them here, Morrison?”

“I know nothing whatever about those letters.”

“Three handwriting experts agree they were written by you. Any court will uphold their testimony. Who else could have planted the letters here through Natalie Briggs?”

“But that’s absurd,” Estelle Morrison spoke up. “What makes you think the letters were planted?”

“I’m trying to find a motive for the maid’s death.”

“That shouldn’t be so difficult,” she stated calmly. “She was here when the letters were found, wasn’t she? Perhaps she was blackmailing my husband’s former secretary. Isn’t murder the accepted method of dealing with blackmailers?”

Shayne turned again to Victor Morrison and said grimly, “I still want to know what time you were on the bay in your motorboat last night.”

“I have nothing to conceal,” Morrison told him angrily. “It was slightly after eleven o’clock when I left the house.”

“You can prove that?”

“Of course I can. Harry and Sylvia Bannerman were in for bridge. We finished a rubber slightly before eleven o’clock, and after they left I went out in the boat.”

“Can you verify that, Mrs. Morrison?”

“I can. And the Bannermans will, also.”

Shayne sighed and lit a cigarette. His mouth was dry and there was a hard knot in his belly. The telephone hadn’t rung yet and he had stalled about as long as he could.

He turned to Painter and said, “I think the whole thing hinges on the second set of photostats that were used to blackmail Mrs. Hudson. We can prove that Browne had two sets made.”

He said to Hampstead, “Think back to that afternoon when the photostats were made. Remember that Browne was an old customer and probably ran a monthly account with the company. Didn’t he order the photostats?”

“Of course. In fact, he went into the rear of the shop to explain how he wanted the work done and to have it rushed.”

Shayne drew in a long breath. “Then it’s plain enough how Browne got the positives without your knowledge-or Rourke’s.”

“Then Browne was the blackmailer,” Painter said importantly.

“And Natalie Briggs knew it,” Shayne agreed. “So he had to kill Natalie to avoid splitting with her.”

Leslie Hudson spoke up, “Then Browne must have committed suicide this afternoon in remorse.”

Shayne shook his head. “I said there was a murderer in the room. Browne was killed because he’d just received further blackmail material from New York and was putting the pressure on someone who fought back.”

Chapter Twenty-One: FATEFUL TELEPHONE CALL

“Who?” demanded Painter furiously. “I can lock you up for withholding information in a murder case.”

Shayne shrugged. “We’ll come to that presently.” He asked Painter, “What time was Angus Browne killed?”

“Around four o’clock. Half an hour leeway in either direction.”

Shayne turned to Christine. “What did you do after I left the house this afternoon?”

She looked startled. “I went upstairs and stayed in my room until Leslie came home. Floyd can tell you. I locked my door on the inside.”

“And you didn’t hear anyone here while you were locked in your room?”

“No,” Christine shook her head. “I didn’t.”

“How about you?” Shayne swung on Floyd Hudson. “You reached home just as I was leaving at four.”

“I poured myself a few drinks,” Floyd told him

“After making yourself so objectionable your sister-in-law locked herself up?”

“See here, Shayne,” said Leslie Hudson angrily. “I don’t like your tone or your insinuations.”

“The hell you don’t,” Shayne snapped. “If you don’t know your brother has been making life miserable for your wife it’s time you were told.” Shayne turned quickly to Mrs. Hudson. “You did go upstairs to get away from him, didn’t you Christine?”

“Yes,” she answered, her cheeks flushing.

“Why?” Shayne swung on Floyd again. “Was it because you expected Angus Browne and didn’t want any witnesses to the meeting? Had you already planned to kill him and throw his body in the bay?”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about. I didn’t know Browne,” he said sullenly.

“But you were here. Downstairs by yourself between four and four-thirty.”

“Mrs. Morgan was around,” he said uncertainly.

Shayne asked Leslie Hudson, “Where were you during that half hour?”

“Driving home from the office. I was pretty much upset and left for home early.”

“When did you arrive?”

“About a quarter of five,” he answered, glancing at his wife for confirmation.

Christine nodded and said, “He came upstairs about ten minutes of five.”

“What difference do a few minutes make?” Leslie asked impatiently.

“A few minutes is all it takes to commit murder,” Shayne told him, and turned his attention to Victor Morrison.

“Have you an alibi for that period?”

“This is preposterous,” protested the financier. He looked angrily at Painter. “Are you going to let this fellow keep on with this all night?”

Chief Painter said incisively, “I agree with Mr. Morrison. You’re making a grandstand play without getting anywhere at all.”

“I’ll get somewhere,” said Shayne grimly, “if I can find a single positive alibi in this entire bunch. You went for another ride in your boat this afternoon,” he reminded Morrison. “It seems to be a habit of yours to be out alone in your boat while murders are being committed across the bay.”

“I did go out for a spin about four o’clock,” he conceded. “Do you think I met this private detective in the middle of the bay and killed him?”

“You could have come over here and met him on shore, then carried him out a ways and dumped him.”

“In half an hour?” asked Morrison contemptuously. “My son can testify I wasn’t out more than that. He was waiting for me when I returned, and had timed me. It would require at least an hour to reach this side and return. You can take the boat and check it if you wish.”

Shayne said quietly, “That’s what I was doing this afternoon when I discovered Browne’s body. At that time I thought you might have slipped over here to kill the maid last night.”

Shayne was turning to question Hampstead again when the telephone rang. He whirled about and stalked toward the library to answer it

He met Mrs. Morgan in the doorway. Her eyes were wide and frightened and she twisted her hands as though panic-stricken.

Shayne pushed past her and grabbed up the receiver. Painter hurried after him, warning loudly, “No you don’t

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