so damned occupied with soothing this bird’s fright, you’d know Ben Edwards had been murdered.”
“Murdered?” Chief Boyle gulped the word out.
Shayne nodded angrily. “Of course. Don’t let anyone touch the body until the coroner gets here.”
Chapter Eleven: GOING TO THE DOGS
“You got no right to horn in telling me what to do,” Chief Boyle snapped vehemently. “I know not to have a body moved until the coroner inspects it.”
“I’m surprised at that,” Shayne growled.
Then Shayne felt wiry fingers gripping his arm and heard a panting voice close to his ear, “What’s up, Shayne? My God, that’s Ben lying there.”
Shayne turned to scrutinize Gil Matrix’s thin, agitated face. “Ben Edwards worked for you, didn’t he?”
“Hell, yes. He was my right-hand man. Been with me ever since I started. Who did this? Some drunken road- hog, I suppose.”
“There he is,” Shayne said, stepping back and nonchalantly indicating the ashen Mr. Payson. “Boyle thinks he should arrest Edwards for getting in Payson’s way,” he ended sardonically.
Gil Matrix shouldered past Shayne, tossing his bushy hair dramatically. He shook a long, lean finger in Albert Payson’s face. “This is one thing you’ll pay for, Payson. You’ve been running roughshod over people in this town long enough. Strutting around with your potbelly behind the wheel of that limousine. You’re a menace to society, and-”
“Shut your mouth, Gil.” Chief Boyle pushed him back with a big blunt hand, blowing out a worried sigh. “Mr. Payson wasn’t speeding. You can tell by the tracks he wasn’t going more’n twenty miles an hour.”
Gil Matrix snorted angrily. “How can you tell? You wouldn’t know where to feed yourself if your mouth didn’t blather so.”
“That don’t matter anyhow,” the chief asserted stoutly. “Shayne here says it’s murder. Says Mr. Payson didn’t kill him.”
Matrix whirled on the redheaded detective. “Did you make that statement, Shayne?”
“Not exactly. I said that any fool could see he wasn’t killed by being struck by a car. The side of his head is crushed where the car didn’t touch him. I didn’t say Payson didn’t kill him. I don’t know.”
“You just said it again,” Boyle averred indignantly. “We all heard you with our own ears. If Ben Edwards was already dead before Mr. Payson’s car ran over him, then Mr. Payson can’t be held accountable. That’s just plain sense.”
“It’s not that simple,” Shayne explained patiently. “How do we know Payson didn’t crack his skull first, then lay him out in front of the car and run over him to make it look like an accident?”
Albert Payson’s eyes bulged from their sockets. He made smothered sounds of indignant protest.
“You got no right to accuse Mr. Payson of a thing like that,” Boyle burst out. “Why would he want to kill Ben Edwards?”
Shayne said quietly, “I’m not accusing anyone. I’m pointing out what could have happened. One thing’s sure- you’re not going to learn the truth by standing here arguing.”
“What was he going so slow for if that’s not the way it happened?” Matrix yelled vindictively. “He’s always breaking the speed limits while you’re looking the other way, Boyle. It looks mighty funny to me.”
“But this is an outrage.” Color was coming into Payson’s face and he had stopped shaking. “Completely and utterly fantastic. Why, I scarcely knew Edwards. What motive do you think I could have for such a ghastly crime?”
“You might have been running after his wife. That sort of thing is right up your-”
“Cut it out, Matrix,” Shayne said. “That kind of talk isn’t going to do any good.” He took the little editor by the arm and drew him back, muttering, “Let’s get out of here. Edwards’s murder can’t be solved this way. We’ve got to run down a motive.”
Matrix let himself be drawn away to the outskirts of the crowd, which was growing larger every minute. Shayne led him to his parked roadster, jerked the door open and shoved him in. The editor leaned back and wearily rubbed his eyes as Shayne went around to the other side and got in beside him. He said, “Things are happening too fast even for me. First, those two fellows at the hotel-now, Ben Edwards. Where is it going to stop?”
Shayne said, “Don’t forget Mayme Martin.”
Matrix turned his head very slowly, as though he feared it might snap off if he made a sudden movement. His eyes bored into Shayne’s as he repeated in a tone of choked disbelief, “Mayme Martin?”
Shayne’s voice hardened. “Are you sure it’s news to you?”
Matrix continued to stare into his face. Beneath the surface of shocked surprise was a faint stirring of relief, as though some realization was slowly seeping through behind the first quick reaction. “Do you mean she-Mayme is dead?”
“Murdered,” Shayne amended brutally. “In a way to make it look like suicide. Not so different from the way Ben Edwards just cashed in-indicating a killer with a one-track mind.”
“You think she and Ben were both killed by the same person?” Gil Matrix was beginning to tremble. His voice shook with an emotion which Shayne could not quite analyze.
The big detective made a sudden gesture. “Let’s get down to cases. It appears that Mayme was killed to prevent her from telling what she knew about the counterfeiting. She offered to crack the case for me, but was murdered before I took her up on it.
“Now, Ben Edwards gets bumped-before I can talk to him. You were close to both Mayme and Ben. You were in Miami this afternoon. You knew I was waiting at Ben’s house to see him. You weren’t far from this spot when Ben got slugged. You printed a headline story this afternoon that set up a slugging for me that didn’t come off just right.”
Matrix chuckled maliciously. “Trying to hang something on me?”
Shayne hesitated. “I don’t know-yet. You’re in the middle of it. Too many things revolve around you to laugh them off. Hell, it was even your sweetie who tried to trip me up on my visit to the Rendezvous tonight-after you had sent Edwards scooting out there to contact her.”
“Midge Taylor?”
“None other. After her brother and Pug Leroy missed, she took a crack at stopping me.”
Matrix mumbled, “I was afraid-” He stopped, jerking his head toward Shayne. “What happened-to Midge, I mean?”
Shayne put his hand up to three long scratches on his cheek. “This is what happened to me-while she was pulling the hoary old decoy stuff for the benefit of Jake’s camera.”
Matrix’s breath grew jerky. He reached for the door-latch. Shayne put his hand over his wrist and jerked it back. “You’re going to sit here and talk.”
The editor’s eyes glinted crazily in the beams of headlights pointing toward the roadster. He snarled, “You don’t know what you’re talking about. You don’t know any of the inside stuff. I do. By God-”
“That’s the reason you’re going to talk. I’ve gone at this thing blind long enough.” Shayne held the little man’s wrist, forcing him back against the cushion. He growled, “Right now I’m more interested in Ben Edwards’s invention than anything else.”
Matrix sucked in his breath sharply. He said, “Yeh,” in a wondering tone. “I wonder-”
“What about it?” Shayne demanded.
Matrix shrugged his too-big shoulders. “Ask anyone in town and they’ll tell you Ben was just a harmless half-wit.”
“I’m not asking anyone in town. I’m asking you.”
“Ben was a genius,” Matrix, apparently satisfied to settle back and talk, said dreamily. “The most brilliant man I’ve ever met. He could talk fourth dimension while he was completely sober.”
“What was his invention?” Shayne pounded at him.
“A camera,” Matrix said readily. He paused and a sly expression of triumph came to his face. “This changes things-Ben’s death. I’ve got to see how it fits in.”