She nodded with emphasis. 'I won't go back there.'
He patted the desk beside Imms thighs and made a thoughtful face. 'I think I've got it,' he said presently. 'Wait a minute.' He w'ent into the outer office, shutting the door.
Effie Perine reached for the telephone, saying: 'I'll try again.'
'Afterwards. Does your woman's intuition still tell you that she's a madonna or soniething?'
She looked sharply up at him. 'I still believe that no matter what kind of trouble she's gotten into she's all right, if that's w'hat you mean.'
'That's what I mean,' he said. 'Are you strong enough for her to give her a lift?'
'How?'
'Could you put her up for a few days?'
'You mean at home?'
'Yes. Her joint's been broken into. That's the second burglary she's had this week. It'd be better for her if she wasn't alone. It would help a lot if you could take her in.'
Effie Perine leaned forward, asking earnestly: 'Is she really in danger, Sam?'
'I think she is.'
She scratched her lip with a fingernail. 'That would scare Ma into a green hemorrhage. I'll have to tell her she's a surprise-witness or something that you're keeping under cover till the last minute.'
'You're a darling,' Spade said. 'Better take her out there now. I'll get her key from her and bring whatever she needs over from her apartment. Let's see. You oughtn't to be seen leaving here together. You go home now. Take a taxi, but make sure you aren't followed. You probably won't be, but make sure. I'll send her out in another in a little while, making sure she isn't followed.'
XI.The Fat Man
The telephone-bell was ringing when Spade returned to his office after sending Brigid O'Shaughnessy off to Effie Perine's house. He went to the telephone.
'Hello Yes, this is Spade. . . . Yes, I got it. I've been waiting to hear from you. . . . Who? . . . Mr. Gutman? Oh, yes, sure! . . . Now—the sooner the better. . . . Twelve C. . . . Right. Say fifteen minutes. Right.'
Spade sat on the corner of his desk beside the telephone and rolled a cigarette. His mouth was a hard complacent v. His eyes, watching his fingers make the cigarette, smoldered over lower lids drawn up straight.
The door opened and Iva Archer came in.
Spade said, 'Hello, honey,' in a voice as lightly amiable as his face had suddenly become.
'Oh, Sam, forgive me! forgive me!' she cried in a choked voice. She stood just inside the door, wadding a black-bordered handkerchief in her small gloved hands, peering into his face with frightened red and swollen eyes.
He did not get up from his seat on the desk-corner. He said: 'Sure. That's all right. Forget it.'
'But, Sam,' she wailed, 'I sent those policemen there. I was mad, crazy with jealousy, and I phoned them that if they'd go there they'd learn something about Miles's murder.'
'What made you think that?'
'Oh, I didn't! But I was mad, Sam, and I wanted to hurt you.'
'It made things damned awkward.' He put his arm around her and drew her nearer. 'But it's all right now, only don't get any more crazy notions like that.'
'I won't,' she promised, 'ever. But you weren't nice to me last night. You were cold and distant and wanted to get rid of me, when I had come down there and waited so long to warn you, and you—'
'Warn me about what?'
'About Phil. He's found out about—about you being in hove with me, and Miles had told him about my wanting a divorce, though of course he never knew what for, and now Phil thinks we—you killed his brother because he wouldn't give me the divorce so we could get married. He told me he believed that, and yesterday he went and told the police.'
'That's nice,' Spade said softly. 'And you came to warn me, and because I was busy you got up on your ear and helped this damned Phil Archer stir things up.'
'I'm sorry,' she whimpered, 'I know you won't forgive me. I—I'm sorry, sorry, sorry.'
'You ought to be,' he agreed, 'on your own account as well as mine. Has Dundy been to see you since Phil did his talking? Or anybody from the bureau?'
'No.' Alarm opened her eyes and mouth.
'They will,' he said, 'and it'd be just as well to not let them find you here. Did you tell them who you were when you phoned?'
'Oh, no! I simply told them that if they'd go to your apartment right away they'd learn something about the murder and hung up.'
'Where'd you phone from?'
'The drug-store up above your place. Oh, Sam, dearest, I—'
He patted her, shoulder and said pleasantly: 'It was a dumb trick, all right, but it's done now. You'd better run along home and think up things to tell the police. You'll be hearing from them. Maybe it'd be best to say 'no' right across the board.' He frowned at something distant. 'Or maybe you'd better see Sid Wise first.' He removed his arm from around her, took a card out of his pocket, scribbled three lines on its back, and gave it to her. 'You can tell Sid everything.' He frowned. 'Or almost everything. Where were you the night Miles was shot?'
'Home,' she replied without hesitating.
He shook his head, grinning at her.
'I was,' she insisted.
'No,' he said, 'but if that's your story it's all right with me. Go see Sid. It's up on the next corner, the pinkish building, room eight-twentyseven.'
Her blue eyes tried to probe his yellow-grey ones. 'What makes you think I wasn't home?' she asked slowly.
'Nothing except that I know you weren't.'
'But I was, I was.' Her lips twisted and anger darkened her eyes. 'Effie Perine told you that,' she said indignantly. 'I saw her hooking at my clothes and snooping around. You know she doesn't like me, Sam. Why do you believe things she tells you when you know she'd do anything to make trouble for me?'
'Jesus, you women,' Spade said mildly. He looked at the watch on his wrist. 'You'll have to trot along, precious. I'm hate for an appointment now. You do what you want, but if I were you I'd tell Sid the truth or nothing. I mean leave out the parts you don't want to tell him, but don't make up anything to take its place.'
'I'm not lying to you, Sam,' she protested.
'Like hell you're not,' he said and stood up.
She strained on tiptoe to hold her face nearer his. 'You don't believe me?' she whispered.
'I don't believe you.'
'And you won't forgive me for—for what I did?'
'Sure I do.' He bent his head and kissed her mouth. 'That's all right. Now run along.'
She put her arms around him. 'Won't you go with me to see Mr. Wise?'
'I can't, and I'd only be in the way.' He patted her arms, took them from around his body, and kissed her left wrist between glove and sleeve. He put his hands on her shoulders, turned her to face the door, and released her with a little push. 'Beat it,' he ordered.
The mahogany door of suite 12-C at the Alexandria Hotel was opened by the boy Spade had talked to in the Belvedere lobby. Spade said, 'Hello,' good-naturedly. The boy did not say anything. He stood aside holding the door open.
Spade went in. A fat man came to meet him.
The fat man was flabbily fat with bulbous pink cheeks and lips and chins and neck, with a great soft egg of a belly that was all his torso, and pendant cones for arms and legs. As he advanced to meet Spade all his bulbs rose