1950 - Figure it Out for Yourself

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1950 - Figure it Out for Yourself Page 21

by James Hadley Chase


  MacGraw ran up the stairs.

  Mifflin said to me, 'Didn't she say he was Dedrick?' He nodded to Serena, who still lay on the settee, hiding her face.

  I nodded.

  MacGraw leaned over the banisters.

  'It's Ferris all right,' he called.

  'Then where the hell is Dedrick?' Mifflin demanded.

  'Ask her. She'll tell you,' I said, pointing to Serena. 'It's my bet he's the heap of rags and bones in the mine.'

  Serena suddenly sat up, her face white and her eyes glittering.

  'I shot him,' she said in a voice scarcely above a whisper. 'And I shot Ferris too. Do what you like with me. I don't care. Do what you like with me.'

  chapter thirty-eight

  It was around five o'clock the next afternoon when the office door pushed open and Muffin tramped in.

  I was lolling in my desk chair. Paula was standing over Jack Kerman, who lay on the office couch. He had just returned from Paris, and at this moment was endeavouring to justify an expense sheet that looked like Danny Kaye's income-tax assessment.

  'Twenty dollars a night for champagne,' Paula was saying, waving the expense sheet in Kerman's face. 'And nothing to show for it. Nothing at all.'

  Kerman grinned feebly.

  'Don't drive it into the ground,' he pleaded. 'A guy's got to live...'

  'Come right in, Tim,' I said, taking my feet off the desk. 'I was hoping you'd look us up. Sit down. Hey, Jack, quit lying. and get the Lieutenant a whisky.'

  'That's about all he's any good at,' Paula said tartly.

  'Nice to hear I've even that to my credit,' Kerman said bitterly.

  He rolled off the couch and busied himself with glasses, while Mifflin lowered his bulk into a chair opposite my desk.

  'Thought you'd want to know how it worked out,' he said. 'It's been some day. Brandon's having fits.' He blew out his cheeks. ‘We had no trouble with Serena. She talked. It's a funny thing: once a woman really lets herself go, can she talk!'

  'Men aren't exactly backward in that line either,' Paula reminded him gently.

  He winked at me as he stretched out his hand for the whisky Kerman had poured him.

  'This is going to do me a lot of good,' he said, sipped and sighed appreciatively. 'Yeah, very nice, and I certainly need it. Francon has taken over Serena's defence. He had a lucky break. He was with Perelli when I brought her in. The way he switched from Perelli to her made me dizzy. Perelli was released about an hour ago. Brandon hated letting him out, but there was nothing else he could do after he'd listened to Serena. Perelli tells me he's coming round to see you as soon as he's located his girlfriend. He said something about a celebration.'

  'Hot dog!' Kerman said enthusiastically. ‘We'll throw them a party!'

  'And you can finance it,' Paula said.

  'Do you want to hear the story the way Serena told it to Brandon?' Muffin asked me. 'You bet.'

  'Well, you weren't far off the beam. Souki started the trouble. He hated Dedrick at sight, and when Dedrick was staying with Marshland, Souki went through his baggage. He found evidence of Dedrick's smuggling activities as well as his marriage to Mary Jerome. Before he could report his discovery to Serena, he had to leave with Dedrick for Orchid City. He left the evidence in Serena's room. She promptly charted a plane and came after Dedrick. They met at Ocean End. Souki had returned to the Orchid Hotel, and was coming out to fetch Dedrick at ten. Serena accused Dedrick of marrying her bigamously. He laughed at her, admitting be had married her for what he could get out of her. Apparently you don't talk like that to a Marshland. She shot him. Dedrick had arranged to meet Barratt and Ferris at Ocean End. They walked in a few seconds after the shooting, and caught Serena red-handed. Barratt saw his chance, and took it. So long as the shooting wasn't discovered, he had Serena in his power. He offered to cover up the murder if she paid and continued to pay. There was no out for her.

  'Ferris took Dedrick's body in his car and hid it in the mine while Barratt drove Serena back to the airport. He and Ferris returned to Ocean End and waited for Souki to return. They shot him and Ferris phoned you, making out he was Dedrick. By shooting Souki and phoning you they established the faked kidnapping had taken place at ten, whereas, of course, Dedrick had been murdered at eight; giving Serena an alibi.

  'You know the rest of it. When Ferris heard Barratt was dead, he went to Ocean End and forced Serena to hide him. She heard you when you telephoned me, and listened in on her extension. She knew Ferris would talk if he was caught. She decided to silence him, hoping we would believe he was Dedrick. It was a gamble that might have come off. She went into Ferris's room, shot him and staged the suicide scene. If it hadn't been for Mary Jerome, she might have got away with it'

  I shook my head.

  'I don't think so. I think Wadlock would have given her away. He knew Dedrick; and besides she slipped up when she said Ferris had listened in to my conversation with you. He hadn't a phone in his room. That made me wonder why he had shot himself so conveniently and suddenly. It crossed my mind then that maybe he wasn't Dedrick. What'll happen to her, Tim?'

  Mifflin shrugged.

  'With Francon looking after her, anything can happen. It's a wonderful thing what money can do.'

  'I don't think even Francon can save her: not when the whole story comes out. What's happened to Mary?'

  'She's in the clear. She'll be our chief witness, but we have nothing on her.' Muffin heaved himself out of his chair. 'I guess I'll blow. Perelli doesn't seem to like coppers. I wouldn't want to spoil his celebration.'

  When he had gone, Kerman asked casually, 'What's Perelli's girl like — nice?'

  'Never mind what she's like,' Paula said briskly. 'You have other things to worry about just now,' and she reached for his expense sheet again. What's this item — fifty dollars for Perfume?'

  I settled down again to enjoy his feverish and unconvincing explanations.

  THE END

  Table of Contents

  chapter one

  chapter two

  chapter three

  chapter four

  chapter five

  chapter six

  chapter seven

  chapter eight

  chapter nine

  chapter ten

  chapter eleven

  chapter twelve

  chapter thirteen

  chapter fourteen

  chapter fifteen

  chapter sixteen

  chapter seventeen

  chapter eighteen

  chapter nineteen

  chapter twenty

  chapter twenty-one

  chapter twenty-two

  chapter twenty-three

  chapter twenty-four

  chapter twenty-five

  chapter twenty-six

  chapter twenty-seven

  chapter twenty-eight

  chapter twenty-nine

  chapter thirty

  chapter thirty-one

  chapter thirty-two

  chapter thirty-three

  chapter thirty-four

  chapter thirty-five

  chapter thirty-six

  chapter thirty-seven

  chapter thirty-eight

 

 

 


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