looking for me. They’re probably on their way here now.”
Shayne’s face was very grave. He caught Rourke’s arm and said brusquely, “Get out the back way-down the fire escape. I’ll go out front to your car. If I meet the cops coming up I’ll stall them and say I’ve been trying to rouse you without any luck. Give me Brooks’s address, and for God’s sake stay in out of sight until I contact you there. Are you sure he’ll keep his mouth shut and not turn you in?” he ended desperately.
“Ned owes me a few favors,” said Rourke. He gave Shayne the address, shrugged off the detective’s grip on his shoulder, and went through the kitchenette to the fire escape without another word.
Shayne hastily turned out the lights and left by the front door, closing it and making certain it was locked. He went down the corridor at a leisurely pace. He met no one, and outside he waited until Rourke got in his car and drove away.
As he walked toward the side street where his own car was parked he heard a speeding motor come up behind him, heard the squeal of brakes when it stopped in front of the apartment building. He glanced over his shoulder and saw two uniformed men entering, and without breaking his stride he went on, got into his car, and wheeled it away toward Sixtieth Street.
Chapter Nine
The Jackson residence on Sixtieth Street was one of a row of bungalows erected from the same architectural plan. The monotony was relieved by reversing the design with every other house, and by the use of different colors of paint on the stuccoed exteriors. Here and there wide awnings had been installed on front porches to shut out the sun’s glare, thus obscuring the numbers. Set back some twenty feet from the sidewalk, each narrow lot boasted a patch of St. Augustine’s grass, and the houses were separated by graveled driveways leading back to one-car garages.
Shayne didn’t have to check the house number. An official police car and a gray coupe were parked in front of a bungalow a third of the way down the block. He drew in behind them and got out. He recognized the gray coupe as Doctor Meeker’s, and felt quite sure that the police weren’t getting anything from Betty Jackson.
As he started up the walk he heard the front door of the house next door slam and a voice say, “Pssst-young man.”
Shayne turned his head and saw a little old lady standing at her porch steps. She beckoned a gnarled finger imperiously. He hesitated briefly, then took off his hat and crossed the driveway, smiling his pleasantest smile.
“Now, young man, I want to know exactly what’s going on next door,” she began without preamble, her bright-blue eyes glittering with curiosity. “You come right in here and tell me. I saw the doctor come first,” she continued, catching his arm and urging him toward the open living-room door, keeping her voice low. “Then I saw those other men. They’re policemen. You’re not a policeman, are you?”
“Not exactly,” Shayne told her as they entered an immaculate room with a large window directly opposite a similar window in the Jackson house.
“I know there’s trouble next door, and land sakes! I’ve been expecting it. Such a nice young couple, too, when they first moved in. Neighborly and all. Took right in to calling me Grandma Peabody just like everybody else in this whole block, and her popping in for a visit most any afternoon. But it didn’t last long. These young people nowadays! Playing at being married, that’s what. It’s easy divorce that does it.
“Now you sit right down there, young man, and tell me what’s going on. Who’s sick, and what’re the police doing there? I’d of been over long ago, but it’s no more’n a month or so since she says to me snippylike, ‘I’ll tell you why I keep my living-room curtains drawn, Mrs. Peabody. Because I like a little privacy in my own house, that’s why.’ As if I cared a whit what she does in her own house, and it’s not my fault our houses happen to be built so my window is right opposite hers with no more’n the driveway between us. A body can’t help glancing out her own window now and then. Not if you’re neighborly the way I’ve always been.
“‘Oh, you needn’t try to pull the wool over my eyes, Mrs. Jackson,’ I told her right off. ‘It’s just when that other newspaper reporter comes visiting you while your husband’s not home that you’re ashamed to have anybody see in. And him ’most old enough to be your father,’ I told her right out. I’d of given her a real piece of my mind if she hadn’t slammed the door shut right in my face. I’ll tell you right now I haven’t set foot on her porch since that day and don’t expect to without I’m straight out invited.”
“I’m sure you’ve been a good neighbor, Mrs. Peabody,” Shayne broke in when she stopped to catch her breath.
He started to get up, but she commanded, “No you don’t, young man. You stay right here and tell me what’s going on. I’ll not rest easy until I know. He was there yesterday afternoon. Walking up brazen as you please at six minutes after three o’clock, and Mr. Jackson never home till six or after. Some people think things like that don’t get noticed in the daytime, but land sakes! I always say there’s just as much sinning goes on in the daytime as at night, and nobody can pull the wool over my eyes that way.”
Shayne settled back, suppressing a grin. “What time did this reporter leave, Mrs. Peabody?”
“They went out together at twenty-five minutes of six,” she told him triumphantly. “I made special note of the time because I was watching to see did Mr. Jackson come home early and catch him there. He did once,” she continued, hitching her chair closer and lowering her voice to a confidential tone. “Almost a month ago it was, and there was all manner of a row. After he left, the two of ’em went at it hammer and tongs till almost midnight. A body can hear a lot goes on over there if you leave the window up and sit right close to it. Now I want to know who’s sick-or what. I didn’t hear anything last night after he finally did come home, and drunk as a hooty owl, too. At nine minutes after ten, but then you never do know, do you, and I always say-”
“Do you mean to say that Bert Jackson came home at ten o’clock?” Shayne cut in sharply. “Was Mrs. Jackson home?”
“She was home all right. After leaving with that man, like I said, she came back alone at six-fifteen in a taxi and kept it waiting outside while she went in the house for a few minutes. Then she came back at ten of seven and didn’t stir out again.”
Shayne pressed four fingers of a hand against his wide mouth to hide his mirth at the definite timetable. He asked, “How can you be sure she didn’t go out?”
“With me sitting right here by the window every minute of the time watching out?” she said scornfully. “There’s a street lamp lights their front walk at night bright as day ’most.”
“Isn’t there a back door?” he persisted.
“It doesn’t go anywhere except to their garage, and they don’t have a car. Isn’t even an alley they can get to. What are you trying to make out, young man? Does he claim she wasn’t in when he came in staggering all over the walk? And you haven’t told me yet what the trouble is.”
“Bert Jackson was killed last night,” Shayne told her, “and Mrs. Jackson seems to have taken an overdose of sleeping-tablets and can’t be aroused.”
“Killed? Right next door to me and I didn’t hear it! Mercy me, you’d of thought I’d heard something.” Her toothless mouth worked nervously, and she shook her snow-white head from side to side in anger or sheer disappointment. She made a clucking sound and said, “So she did it so quiet I never even suspected. Oh, she’s a sly one, all right. Cut his throat-or was it a blunt instrument like they say in the radio plays?”
“He was shot and his body found in a ditch several miles from here,” Shayne told her gravely. He watched keenly for her reaction, and decided that it was definitely one of disgust and disappointment.
“How’d he get out of the house?” she asked, greatly agitated, the end of her sharp nose twitching. “I thought for sure he was dead drunk when I heard the telephone ringing and ringing and nobody answering it.”
“When was that?” Shayne asked quietly.
“About half after ten-and then again a minute or two past eleven.”
“How can you place the time so close?”
“Because I had my radio on, that’s why,” she retorted. “I keep it on all evening with the lights out while I’m sitting here-now that they’ve got so careful to be quiet that a body can’t hear anything even when it’s off.”
“If you think he was too drunk to answer the phone, didn’t you think it was queer that she didn’t? Didn’t it