was the edgy thrill she gave me, or the fact that her moola would more than cover my two-way car radio debt, I don’t know. All I can say for sure is that I could feel my better judgment flying away as fast as a pheasant that you’d missed with both barrels.
“Okay. You’re rich, I’m not. That about covers all the bases except one: I still need to know why you feel threatened and want me to watch over you.” I pushed the money back toward her. “No answer, I’m afraid I’ll have to decline your case, even though I might kick myself later.”
“You have integrity. I don’t need integrity. But it will have to do, I suppose.” She slid the C-notes back at me. “I strongly suspect that my husband is planning to kill me.”
“That so? I didn’t know you were married.”
“We live apart,” she said, a definite sense of finality in her tone. “I have my own place; Harold has his.”
“Harold, huh?” I wrote his name down. “Tell me about Harold, Mrs. Demar. What makes you think he’s got it in for you?”
“It’s Mrs. Sikes, actually,” she corrected. “Demar is my maiden name.”
“Sounds better than Sikes; I don’t blame you.” I fixed Harold’s name in my notes. “So, once again, why would Harold have homicide on his mind?”
“He thinks I’m two-timing him.”
“Are you?”
“Yes.”
Her candor brought me up short. For want of anything better to say, I replied, “That’s refreshing.”
“Harold thinks he owns me. He doesn’t. That’s why I need you.”
I leaned back in my chair and blew a smoke ring. “What exactly do you want me to do?”
“Keep an eye on me, like I said.”
“That could get expensive.”
“I have my own money. I was rich before I married Harold, and I’m still rich.”
“Have you tried marriage counseling? It’s bound to be cheaper.”
She laughed. Only the second time I’d seen her crack a smile. It vanished as soon as she began talking. “You have a sense of humor too. Keep it. Do you want the job? Yes or no?”
“When would you want me to start?”
“Now.”
“How close do you want to be followed? I can tail you from a distance or so close we might have to get engaged.”
Another smile-very small, very brief. “While the latter method might prove interesting, Mr. Rossiter, just keeping an eye on me from a distance will be more than adequate for the time being.”
“In that case,” I said, picking up the phone, “I’ll have my right-hand man on the job before you leave the office.”
She stubbed out her butt in the ashtray. “You won’t be watching me personally?”
“I’m saving myself for you.” I grinned. “I want to be fresh as a daisy if you ever need the close tail work.”
“I see,” she told me, the hint of a flirt forming in her eyes. It disappeared the instant I got Heine on the horn.
“Heine. Got a gig for you.” I could hear the click and clack of pool balls caroming in the background. As usual, he was downtown, just a few minutes away, at Ben Paris’s pool hall. He haunted the joint trying to shark a few simoleons whenever I didn’t have him working a case.
“That so?” Heine asked. “Good. Where do ya want me and when?”
“Over here at the office. Now.”
“What’s up?”
“Dame I need you to keep tabs on. She’s with me as we speak. Make it a discreet tail, but don’t let her out of your sight. Her life may be in danger. Name’s Dorothy Demar. Just honk when you show up. She’s got better gams than Betty Grable. You’ll like the work.”
“Say no more, brother,” Heine answered quickly. “I already left.” The line went dead.
“Thank you,” Dorothy told me as I hung up the receiver.
“For what? The compliment or for taking the job?”
“Both. I’m very grateful.”
“Maybe you should save your gratitude until I’m sure I can keep you safe.”
“You will. I have no doubt.”
“You’re pretty certain about me, huh?”
“Everybody says you’re the best.”
“Can’t argue with that. Even so, I’d advise you to lay low for a while if you think your life’s in danger.”
“No, I won’t do that.” She stood up like she was preparing to leave. “I’m going to lead my life as usual. Neither your well-intentioned advice nor Harold’s ill-intentioned behavior are going to stop me.” She glanced at her diamond-studded wristwatch. “I hope your man hurries. I have a final fitting for my winter trousseau at Frederick’s, after which I have a date for dinner and a night out on the town.”
“Not with Harold, I presume.”
“Heavens no.”
“Your date’s a lucky man.”
“Yes, he is.”
Her eyes flirted with me again. This time, I let mine flirt back. Our orbs danced that way awhile, getting closer and closer. They say you can look right into another person’s soul through their eyes-I don’t know what she saw in mine, but what I was seeing was pretty much what I thought the moth saw instead of the flame.
Heine tooting his horn outside saved me from getting singed. He had a trick air horn on his hot rod ’47 Ford that sounded just like a wolf whistle.
“That’ll be Heine.” I walked over to the window, pulled it open, stuck my head out, and threw him the okay sign.
Dorothy came up behind me and put a light touch on my shoulder. “Am I going to be safe with him?”
I turned around-we were so close that her ample bosom brushed against my chest. “Maybe safer than with me,” I told her, taking a step back. “What kind of car are you driving?”
“The new Packard. Black. It’s out front.”
I yelled down at Heine a couple stories below. “Her ride’s the black Packard!” He couldn’t miss her expensive white side-walled sedan considering he’d parked right behind it. “She’ll be down in a minute, compadre. Stay loaded for bear and keep in touch. It’s worth a C-note.”
“I’ll stick to her like a fly on you know what!” he hollered at me.
Closing the window, I smiled as I noted the new radio antenna sported on Heine’s Ford. Twice as long as a normal aerial, it made his coupe look almost like an unmarked police cruiser. At least I’d be able to pay for it now.
Dorothy slipped on her long white gloves, took her clutch from the top of my desk, and headed for the door.
“Maybe we’ll see each other again,” she said over her shoulder.
“Up to you,” I told her, liking the way her curves curved when she walked.
She paused at the door. “Yes, it is.” Then she went out.
I watched out the window as she got into her ritzy Packard and drove off, south toward downtown, Heine’s Ford rumbling close behind. Then I pulled out my bottle of Cutty Sark and had a belt. I hate domestic cases-could’ve kicked myself for taking this one-except for the big moola and Dorothy Demar’s deep blue eyes. There was something about her that I didn’t trust. That’s why I had Heine tailing her instead of me. I figured I’d do some digging on her and see if there were any concrete reasons for my qualms. Besides, you never knew when another fat cat could walk through the door and offer a bundle for a simple job. Crazier things had happened.
A few minutes later, a man walked in just as I was about to start snooping on Dorothy. He doffed his gray Hamburg and said, “My name’s Harold Sikes. I want to hire you.”
I could’ve choked on my Scotch. Instead, I kept a poker face and studied him for a moment. Dressed to the nines in a double-breasted gray suit, with a pink boutonniere and a diamond stick-pinned tie, he looked to be in his mid-fifties, paunchy, balding, and thick-browed, with a heavy, jowly face bordering on ugly. For the life of me, I