his mouth. Nathan truculently lifted his glass and drank deeply from it again.
Shayne asked quietly, “Were you aware that your wife was having this affair?”
“God, no!” Nathan’s hand jerked and he set the glass down. “I hadn’t the faintest idea. I still can’t believe…” He lifted his left hand to his face and rubbed the spread fingers across it slowly.
“I understand she was always alone on Friday nights?”
“Yes. That was her idea. I was allowed that night out.” There was an underlying note of bitterness in Nathan’s voice. “You’d have to know Elsa to understand. She was always so logical. So… so
“But it
“Oh, it was happy enough. At least, I considered it so.”
“Then why did you ask her for a divorce?”
“Some months ago, according to her father. And you demanded a quarter of a million dollars cash settlement.”
Nathan shook his head disbelievingly and then settled back with a short, harsh laugh. “That old bastard! It was Elsa who asked
“And Eli knew this?”
“Of course he knew it. He egged her on to get a divorce. In fact, she told me that he offered to make up half the amount himself.”
“Why,” demanded Shayne, “did he want his daughter to divorce you?”
“Because she
Although the “else” was deliberately stressed, Shayne chose to disregard it.
“At that time did you think that possibly your wife had some other man in mind?”
“Elsa? Hell, no! She wasn’t what you’d call… very sexy. I thought it was the old man’s idea entirely.”
“Does the name of Robert Lambert mean anything to you?”
“I never heard it until last night.”
“Then you have no idea when or how she met him… how long it’s been going on?”
“None.”
Shayne sipped at his drink and pondered. There were a lot of contradictions here. He thought back over his interview with Eli Armbruster that morning, and he wondered.
He asked Nathan that question: “Why did Eli hate you?”
“Because he would have hated any man his daughter married,” Nathan told him promptly. “She was almost thirty-five when we were married, you know. An attractive woman with more money in her own name than she knew what to do with. Does it occur to you to wonder why she hadn’t married earlier in life?”
“Why hadn’t she?”
“She told me after we were married. Because the old man busted up every affair she had in the past. Twice, he put private detectives on prospective sons-in-law and managed to dig up enough dirt to make her change her mind.
Shayne didn’t ask him what that idea was. It was altogether too plain from Nathan’s attitude.
Instead, he asked, “What did you do with your Friday nights?”
“I went on the town.” Nathan gestured vaguely. “Night spots. Gambling.”
“Have any luck gambling?”
“Not much. I generally ended up loser. Elsa was very generous and forgiving.” Nathan’s mouth twisted sourly. “She bailed me out a couple of times when I got in too deep… with a nice long lecture on the value of money.”
Shayne said, “Let’s go to last night. Did you come home at all?”
“From the office, you mean? No. I scarcely ever did. I… went out for dinner, and then on to make the rounds.”
For the first time during the interview Shayne noted a slight hesitation on Nathan’s part. He didn’t press the point.
“Then you last saw your wife yesterday morning?”
“That’s right. We had breakfast together before I left for the office.”
“How did she seem then? Upset or anything?”
“Not that I noticed. She was a woman who didn’t display her emotions. Goddamn it, if I’d had any idea…” He sighed and relapsed into silence.
“When did you hear… what happened to her?”
“It was about two o’clock this morning. I was having a lousy run at the crap table at El Cielito here on the Beach. Fellow I know from the office, Jim Norris, came in and told me. He’d heard it on the radio. My God! I didn’t believe him. I
Shayne said, “I’d like to have a time table of your movements… from the time you left the office until your friend spoke to you at the crap table.”
Nathan glared at him angrily. “Do I need an alibi for God’s sake?”
“It would help,” Shayne told him equably, getting the paper from his pocket on which the police had noted a record of Nathan’s evening as he had given it to them.
“I told it to the police last night. I’ve got nothing to hide.”
Shayne said, “Then tell it to me again. If it checks out, the case will be closed so far as I’m concerned.”
“I left the office about five.” Nathan screwed up his face in a look of concentration. “Stopped with Jim Norris and a couple of others at a bar for a few drinks. Drove over the Venetian Causeway to keep a dinner date at six- thirty.”
“Where? With whom?” Looking at the sheet of paper in his hand, Shayne noted that it did not mention dinner. The first entry was eight o’clock.
“What the hell does it matter? I understand nothing happened until about ten o’clock?”
“Then why do you mind telling me where you had dinner?”
“I don’t. That is… I don’t think it’s any of your damned business, but I ate at the Red Cock. I had a reservation for six-thirty.”
“By yourself?”
Paul Nathan colored slightly and wet his lips. “As a matter of fact, no. I was with a girl from the office. A secretary. But it was perfectly innocent and you can leave her name out of it. I drove her home at eight o’clock and left her without even a good-night kiss.” A sneer on his lips told Shayne to try to make something out of that. Shayne made a mental note to do exactly that.
But he said, “And after you left her?”
“I went to the Fun Club and played some blackjack and roulette. My luck was lousy. I stayed about two hours and went on to the Bay Breeze where I thought maybe the grass was greener. I know I got there a few minutes before ten because I looked at my watch and mentioned it to the girl when I bought chips. I generally didn’t make it there on a Friday night until about ten-thirty.”
“Do you mean you made the same rounds every Friday night?”
“More or less. Mostly more. You know how it is, gambling. You get to know the dealers and croupiers at certain places.”
Shayne said, “Go on.” He continued to check the list in his hand as Nathan mentioned the joints he had visited before two o’clock, with the approximate time he had spent at each place.
His statement checked closely with what he had told the police the preceding night, with a variance of no