drink and they moved towards the wall as she went on almost in the same breath. “Did I see Baby Blue Eyes in the street as I was parking my car?”
“He’d just been in for a drink,” said Rollison. “How well do you know him?”
She looked at him quite sharply. “I’d never met him until this morning,” she said. “What makes you think I know him?”
“He didn’t mention you to the police,” said Rollison drily. “I couldn’t believe that was an accident.”
“Oh, poof! He was dazzled by the Toff and just didn’t see me!”
“Any man who doesn’t notice you is no man,” replied Rollison.
“But how
“Which would make him even less of a man.”
“You
“Yes. Did you know about this wall and my reputa-tion or had you been looking me up?” he asked.
“Who could tell me?” she asked.
“Any newspaperman who wanted to.”
“Oh,” she said. “Yes, I suppose so. Well, as a matter of fact, I knew.”
“Just as you knew I was going to meet Tommy Loman at the airport.”
“Yes,” she said. How beautifully her eyes glowed. “Mr. Rollison —”
“Richard.”
“Richard, I cannot tell a lie!” She was acting very slightly, as if this in many ways amused her; she was laughing partly at herself, partly at the situation, partly at him. She lowered her voice and went on melodramatic- ally: “I am a private inquiry agent.”
“Good God!” he gasped.
“You mean I fooled you?” She was delighted.
“You fooled me utterly. At the very least I thought you were a seductress, plotting to seduce Tommy Loman.”
“Oh, nothing so unexciting,” she replied.
This time Rollison was really astounded, but all he said was: “In my name?”
“Yes. I thought he would come if you invited him, whereas if a strange woman wrote, he might shrug it off. Aren’t you going to ask why?”
“Yes,” Rollison said heavily. “Why?”
“Because I believed he would run into trouble if he just arrived here and had nowhere to go for help.”
“I see,” said Rollison.
He was studying this young woman much more closely, reasonably sure that she was telling the truth but fully aware of how easy it would be to be fooled — ‘seduced’ — into accepting her on her face value. The harder he looked, the more flawless her complexion and the more beautiful her eyes; and the dress was most enticing, showing just enough of her white bosom and shoulders. She seemed to sense that it was a moment for silence and she made no attempt to speak or prompt him.
“Why should he run into trouble?” he asked. “Because he was coming to claim a fortune which someone else wants to take from him.”
“What fortune?”
“A great-uncle, his grandfather’s brother, left a for-tune and Thomas G. Loman is the only legatee,” she said. “And someone thought it a good idea to stand-in for the real Loman and collect the inheritance.”
“How did you know that?” Rollison asked quietly.
For the first time, she hesitated, and he preferred that she should; the series of swift answers made her sound almost glib. She sipped her ginger ale, swallowing slowly as if her mouth was dry, and finally went on:
“It’s a very long story, Mr. Rollison. If I’d been able to produce facts and evidence I think I would have gone to the police and told them — after all, it’s really their job, isn’t it? But I had only an old man’s fears and suspicions to go on, and — and a feeling, an intuition.
“I wouldn’t laugh even at a man’s intuition,” Rollison assured her.
“You see, old Josh — that’s the great-uncle — had a kind of persecution mania. He was ninety-one, and remarkably fit physically and no slouch mentally, except in this one way — he thought someone was always trying to rob him, and had a fear that someone outside the family would get his money when he died.”
“When
“Just a month ago.”
“A natural death?”
“Yes — indisputably, I think.”