coverage. I’d better surrender to the state attorney, it might be safer. He’ll want to know if I have any theories about what’s been happening. Why have you and Sam been acting like characters in a bad 1935 gangster movie? My new theory on that is that you’d be surprised and annoyed if the bill actually goes through.”

She put her hand on his arm. “Mike Shayne, you’re a sweet, virile man, and smarter than you look. And I do know I can’t stop you with compliments. First question.”

“This is a multiple choice. The late Senator Sheldon Maslow was (a) a dedicated, fearless crusader against crime, or (b) an unprincipled spieler who knew he couldn’t get anywhere in politics without using blackmail and dirty karate.”

“B,” she said promptly.

“Can you support that?”

“Let’s see,” she said slowly. “Sooner or later I hear most of the talk, and naturally Sam and his friends have been talking about Maslow’s anti-crime committee. Could he be reached? And they felt he could. I don’t mean they could walk in with a bundle and get him to cancel a subpoena. But he’s been trying to build a statewide organization, and there were hundreds of indirect ways. You ought to be talking to Sam, not me.”

“Sam’s been kidnapped.”

“I forgot. Mike-I mean I just overheard little bits now and then. It’s a man’s world, and the women are meant to stay out on the rim and look charming. I had one contact with Maslow myself. When was it? The night before last.”

“You told Grover about that, the look Maslow gave you in a restaurant.”

“There was more to it. He called up and said he wanted to see me. We met at a drive-in movie. He got in my car in the middle of the second feature, and it was a picture I wanted to see, too. He had a box of popcorn for camouflage, and he kept munching away. He wanted my advice about Grover. That’s what he said he wanted. His idea was that Grover and I had been-that we were-well, sleeping together. Not true, incidentally, and stop looking so skeptical.”

“It’s dark. How can you tell how I look?”

She snapped on her cigarette lighter and looked at him over the flame. “Just as I thought. Skeptical. I’m a pretty moral person, as it happens, but because of Sam nobody believes me. I always have to tell people I’m scared to stray because Sam would kill me if I did, but he’s really pretty reasonable about that, too much so, in my opinion. I’m off the subject.”

“Maslow was sitting there eating popcorn.”

“According to him, Grover barged into his hotel room with a deputy sheriff from his hometown, one of those mean red-necks from the back hollows-”

“If his name is Turner I know him.”

“I don’t know his name. They both had stripped-down shotguns in a shopping bag. They sat down and assembled the guns without saying a word-this is in Maslow’s hotel room, with Maslow pretending not to be frightened to death-and then they fired at imaginary birds, still without saying anything.”

“Maslow has a Xerox copy of some payoff figures, the judge told me. He claims they were faked.”

“They were sort of faked. I could explain, but didn’t you say you’re in a hurry? Maslow thought they proved something, and Grover, the idiot, picked this way to warn him not to push his luck, that shotguns have been known to go off. And Maslow wanted me to tell Grover to cool it. With sound effects from the popcorn.”

A highway patrol car whooshed past, its red beacon revolving.

“They’re a bit slow,” Shayne said. “Did you tell Sam about this scene at the drive-in?”

She missed a beat before answering. “No. He was worried enough. I asked Grover about it, and he claimed it hadn’t happened. So take your pick.”

Shayne, in the darkness, added a new piece to the puzzle. “Lib, who’s your real opposition? I don’t mean Jackie’s committee. Who’s putting up the dough?”

“You mean they didn’t tell you?” she said, surprised. “Are you doing this for love or something? Al Luccio.”

Shayne slapped the steering wheel. “From St. Albans.”

“Sure. My God, Mike, we thought you knew! His syndicate put four million into a new casino, and the grease on that came to a million even. That’s a real nut to work off. Now the big rollers from New York leave their wives and kids on the Beach and jet over to St. A. for the gambling. If we get gambling on the Beach, Luccio can turn his pretty new casino into a farmer’s market. As someone may have mentioned, there’s money at stake here.” She laughed. “Poor Al. He’s squeezed for cash. That’s why he’s going around baring his teeth. He’d like to be cool, but he can’t compete.”

“Al Luccio,” Shayne said under his breath.

“Hey, I told you something you didn’t already know! Pay me back, Mike. I know you owe Boots, but stay away from him till the banks open, at nine. That’s not much to ask. I’ve tried to be helpful.”

“I’ll check on a few things, and if you’ve been telling the truth-”

“Cross my heart.”

“Nine o’clock will be cutting it close.”

“You’ll have an hour before they convene, and the chaplain goes on and on. I’ve never listened to longer prayers. Boots is at some old-timey cabins on the road to Chattahoochee. He thinks he’s in hiding, the jerk. Mike, you don’t think somebody actually murdered Maslow?”

“Yeah-too many people wanted him dead. My first choice is still Sam.”

That jarred her. “Mike, don’t go around saying things like that! I thought you were beginning to get some sense. Why Sam? Why not Luccio? Why not Boots Gregory? Anybody had more reason to kill him than Sam had, and who says he was killed? Didn’t you hear about the coroner’s verdict, or whatever they call it? I think we ought to talk some more, and not out here where some cop may wonder what a Ferrari in good condition is doing in front of a body shop. I know we can’t go back to the Skyline, but there are other motels.”

He started the motor. “I need a car. I’ll borrow this one and drop you at a cabstand.”

Reaching across, she turned off the ignition. “Seriously.”

“I’m serious. On top of that, you’re a moral girl, and you don’t go to motels with strangers.”

“Not usually,” she admitted, her hand still on the key. “But this time I have a reason.”

She didn’t resist when he moved her hand. “Everybody else has been trying to block you out and you’re still hanging in there, aren’t you? I didn’t really expect-” She kissed his shoulder. “I wish we could play on the same team sometime.”

He heard the wail of a siren. He waited. It seemed to be moving in the opposite direction, and he backed out onto the highway. But he drove more cautiously, watching the mirror. Soon after they entered the city limits, another siren joined the first, and this one was much closer. He turned abruptly into a driveway between two houses and cut his lights.

“Get down.”

They slid down in the seat and Lib’s hand found his. “Damn, damn,” she said. “If it’s the cops, does our deal still hold? Nine o’clock?”

“If it’s the cops, all deals are off.” After a moment he sat up and turned on the lights. “It’s a fire. We’re all getting jittery.”

He backed out. A long hook-and-ladder clamored across the nearest intersection.

Shayne drove downtown and found an all-night cabstand at the bus depot.

“I hope I convinced you,” Lib said. “Be generous to those less fortunate than yourself. Nine A.M. Not eight fifty-eight.”

“I’ll see how it goes.”

She got out, a rewarding sight with her lovely unconfined body and white hair. A driver scrambled to open a cab door.

CHAPTER 14

The night clerk at the Prince George sent Shayne to a small bar off the lobby. It had closed officially hours

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