and the slippers and, carrying the nightgown over her arm, crossed the hallway to the bathroom. The bathroom was warm with steam. She ran cold water into the tub while she took the bandages off her knee and ankle.
After she had bathed she found fresh bandages in the cabinet over the basin, and rewrapped her knee but not her ankle. Then she put on nightgown, wrapper, and slippers, and returned to the bedroom. Brazil was there, standing with his back to her, looking out a window.
He did not turn around. Smoke from his cigarette drifted back past his head.
She shut the door slowly and leaned against it, the faintest of contemptuous smiles curving her mobile lips.
He did not move.
She went slowly to the bed and sat on the side farthest from him. She did not look at him but at a picture of a horse on the wall. Her face was proud and cold. She said: “I am what I am, but I pay my debts.” This time the deliberate calmness of her voice was insolence. “I brought this trouble to you. Well, now, if you can find any use for me—” She shrugged.
He turned from the window without haste. His copperish eyes, his face were expressionless. He said: “O.K.” He rubbed the fire of his cigarette out in an ashtray on the dressing table and came around the bed to her.
She stood up straight and tall, awaiting him.
He stood close to her for a moment, looking at her with eyes that weighed her beauty as impersonally as if she had been inanimate. Then he pushed her head back rudely and kissed her.
She made neither sound nor movement of her own, submitting completely to his caress, and when he released her and stepped back, her face was as unaffected, as mask-like, as his.
He shook his head slowly. “No, you’re no good at your job.” And suddenly his eyes were burning and he had her in his arms and she was clinging to him and laughing softly in her throat while he kissed her mouth and cheeks and eyes and forehead.
Donny opened the door and came in. He leered knowingly at them as they stepped apart, and said: “I just phoned Klaus. He’ll be over as soon’s he’s had breakfast.”
“O.K.,” Brazil said.
Donny, still leering, withdrew, shutting the door.
“Who is this Klaus?” Luise Fischer asked.
“Lawyer,” Brazil replied absent-mindedly. He was scowling thoughtfully at the floor. “I guess he’s our best bet, though I’ve heard things about him that—” He broke off impatiently. “When you’re in a jam you have to take your chances.” His scowl deepened. “And the best you can expect is the worst of it.”
She took his hand and said earnestly: “Let us go away from here. I do not like these people. I do not trust them.”
His face cleared and he put an arm around her again, but abruptly turned his attention to the door when a bell rang beyond it.
There was a pause; then Donny’s guarded voice could be heard asking: “Who is it?”
The answer could not be heard.
Donny’s voice, raised a little: “Who?”
Nothing was heard for a short while after that. The silence was broken by the creaking of a floorboard just outside the bedroom door. The door was opened by Donny. His pinched face was a caricature of alertness. “Bulls,” he whispered. “Take the window.” He was swollen with importance.
Brazil’s face jerked around to Luise Fischer.
“Go!” she cried, pushing him toward the window. “I will be all right.”
“Sure,” Donny said; “me and Fan’ll take care of her. Beat it, kid, and slip us the word when you can. Got enough dough?”
“Uh-huh.” Brazil was kissing Luise Fischer.
“Go, go!” she gasped.
His sallow face was phlegmatic. He was laconic. “Be seeing you,” he said, and pushed up the window. His foot was over the sill by the time the window was completely raised. His other foot followed the first immediately, and, turning on his chest, he lowered himself, grinning cheerfully at Luise Fischer for an instant before he dropped out of sight.
She ran to the window and looked down. He was rising from among weeds in the unkempt back yard. His head turned quickly from right to left. Moving with a swiftness that seemed mere unhesitancy, he went to the left- hand fence, up it, and over into the next-door yard.
Donny took her arm and pulled her from the window. “Stay away from there. You’ll tip his mitt. He’s all right, though Christ help the copper he runs into—if they’re close.”
Something heavy was pounding on the flat’s front door. A heavy, authoritative voice came through: “Open up!”
Donny sneered in the general direction of the front door. “I guess I better let ‘em in or they’ll be making toothpicks of my front gate.” He seemed to be enjoying the situation.
She stared at him with blank eyes.
He looked at her, looked at the floor and at her again, and said defensively: “Look—I love the guy. I love him!”
The pounding on the front door became louder.
“I guess I better,” Donny said, and went out.
Through the open window came the sound of a shot. She ran to the window and, hands on sill, leaned far out.
Fifty feet to the left, on the top of a fence that divided the long row of back yards from the alley behind, Brazil was poised, crouching. As Luise Fischer looked, another shot sounded and Brazil fell down out of sight into the alley behind the fence. She caught her breath with a sob.
The pounding on the flat’s front door suddenly stopped. She drew her head in through the window. She took her hands from the sill. Her face was an automaton’s. She pulled the window down without seeming conscious of what she was doing, and was standing in the center of the room looking critically at her fingernails when a tired- faced huge man in wrinkled clothes appeared in the doorway.
He asked: “Where’s he at?”
She looked up at him from her fingernails as she had looked at her fingernails. “Who?”
He sighed wearily. “Brazil.” He went to a closet door, opened it. “You the Fischer woman?” He shut the door and moved toward the window, looking around the room, not at her, with little apparent interest.
“I am Luise Fischer,” she said to his back.
He raised the window and leaned out. “How’s it, Tom?” he called to someone below. Whatever answer he received was inaudible in the room.
Luise Fischer put attentiveness off her face as he turned to her. “I ain’t had breakfast yet,” he said.
Donny’s voice came through the doorway from another part of the flat: “I tell you I don’t know where he’s gone to. He just dropped the dame here and hightailed. He didn’t tell me nothing. He—”
A metallic voice said, “I bet you!” disagreeably. There was the sound of a blow.
Donny’s voice: “If I did know I wouldn’t tell you, you big crum! Now sock me again.”
The metallic voice: “If that’s what you want.” There was the sound of another blow.
Fan’s voice, shrill with anger, screamed, “Stop that, you—” and ceased abruptly.
The huge man went to the bedroom door and called toward the front of the flat: “Never mind, Ray.” He addressed Luise Fischer: “Get some clothes on.”
“Why?” she asked coolly.
“They want you back in Mile Valley.”
“For what?” She did not seem to think it was true.
“I don’t know,” he grumbled impatiently. “This ain’t my job. We’re just picking you up for them. Something about some rings that belonged to a guy’s mother and disappeared from the house the same time you did.”
She held up her hands and stared at the rings. “But they didn’t. He bought them for me in Paris and—”
The huge man scowled wearily. “Well, don’t argue with me about it. It’s none of my business. Where was this fellow Brazil meaning to go when he left here?”
“I do not know.” She took a step forward, holding out her hand in an appealing gesture. “Is he—”