what-”
“I don’t go to people’s homes.”
“Oh yes, you don’t.” She frowned, but only for an instant. “Then I’ll come here.”
“At noon tomorrow?”
“No, if it’s here, eleven-thirty would be better because I have a one-o’clock appointment. Until then you will not report my coming today. I want to-I must see someone. I must try to find out something. Tomorrow I will tell you all about it-no, I won’t say that. I’ll say this: if I don’t tell you all about it tomorrow you will inform the police if you decide you have to. If I do tell you I will need your advice and I will probably need your help. That’s what the retainer is for.”
Wolfe grunted. His head turned. “Archie. Is she Mrs. Damon Fromm?”
“I would say yes, but I won’t sign it.”
He went to her. “Madam, you tried one imposture and abandoned it only under pressure; this could be another. Mr. Goodwin will go to a newspaper office and look at pictures of Mrs. Damon Fromm, and phone me from there. Half an hour should do it. You will stay here with me.”
She smiled again. “This
“No doubt. But under the circumstances, not unreasonable. Do you refuse?”
“Of course not. I suppose I deserve it.”
“You don’t object?”
“No.”
“Then it isn’t necessary. You are Mrs. Fromm. Before you leave, an understanding and a question. The understanding: my decision whether to accept your retainer and work for you will be made tomorrow; you are not now my client. The question: do you know who the woman was who drove that car Tuesday and spoke to the boy?”
She shook her head. “Make your decision tomorrow, that’s all right, but you won’t report this visit before then?”
“No. That’s understood. The question?”
“I’m not going to answer it now because I can’t. I don’t really
“But you think you know?” Wolfe insisted.
“I won’t answer it.”
He frowned at her. “Mrs. Fromm. I must warn you. Have you ever seen or heard of a man named Matthew Birch?”
She frowned back. “No. Birch? No. Why?”
“A man of that name was run over by a car and killed Tuesday evening, and it was the same car as the one that killed Peter Drossos Wednesday. Since the car itself cannot be supposed ruthless and malign, someone associated with it must be. I am warning you not to be foolhardy, or even imprudent. You have told me next to nothing, so I don’t know how imminent or deadly a doom you may be inviting, but I admonish you: beware!”
“The same car? Killed a man Tuesday?”
“Yes. Since you didn’t know him you are not concerned, but I urge you to be discreet.”
She sat frowning, “I am discreet, Mr. Wolfe.”
“Not today, with that silly sham.”
“Oh, you’re wrong! I
Wolfe doesn’t usually rise when a woman enters or leaves the office. That time he did, but it was no special tribute to Laura Fromm or even to the check she had put on his desk. It was lunchtime, and he would have had to manipulate his bulk in a minute anyway. So he was on his feet to take her hand. Of course I was up, ready to take her to the door, and I thought it was darned gracious of her to give me a hand too, after the way I had repulsed her with my incorruptible look. I nearly bumped into her when, preceding me to the door, she suddenly turned to say to Wolfe, “I forgot to ask. The boy, Peter Drossos, was he a displaced person?”
Wolfe said he didn’t know.
“Could you find out? And tell me tomorrow?”
He said he could.
There was no car waiting for her in front. Apparently the parking situation had compelled even Mrs. Damon Fromm to resort to taxis. When I returned to the office Wolfe wasn’t there, and I found him in the kitchen, lifting the lid from a steaming casserole of lamb cutlets with gammon and tomatoes. It smelled good enough to eat.
“One thing I admit,” I said generously. “You have damn good eyes. But of course pretty women’s faces are so irresistible to you that you resented the scratch and so you focused on it.”
He ignored it. “Are you going to the bank after lunch to deposit Mr. Corliss’s check?”
“You know I am.”
“Go also to Mrs. Fromm’s bank and have her check certified. That will verify her signature. Fritz, this