after she had finished. Then he shook his head.
âThatâs not good enough,â he said. âYou donât seem to get the situation, Miss Burke. I can take you in as it isâas it is right now. On the basis of the letter. And let you try to work your way out of it. Unless you sell me a better story.â
âThatâs the way it was,â the girl said. âReally.â
âNo,â Bill said. âNot unless Ozzie is lying. He says Merle was never at the apartment.â
âHeââ the girl said. âI donât believe he said that.â
âRight,â Bill said. âYou donât believe he said it. I do. We can take you both down. You can ask him. If you get a chance. We can say you and he were in it together.â
Her eyes widened. She stood up suddenly and her voice, too, went up.
âWe werenât in anything together,â she said. She almost screamed it. âNot in anything . You canât make that stick.â
Weigand did not meet her mood. His voice was level, casual. He said they could try.
âIf Ozzie said that,â she said, âit wasâit was because he didnât know. Heââ
âDidnât know what?â Weigand said. âThat Merle was visiting you? While he was paying your apartment rentâwhile Ozzie was? Is that what Murdock didnât know?â
The girl looked at him and now her eyes were narrowâspeculative. She raised her hands and pushed back her hair, which fell in curves around her face. The movement rounded the silk against her body. She let her hands drop and suddenly she shrugged just perceptibly. She sat down again. Her voice regained its studied depth as she spoke.
âSuppose it was,â she said. âSupposeâwhat you want to suppose. Why would I kill him? Suppose I was crossing Ozzie up.â
âYou were?â Bill said.
âSuppose I was,â she said. âSuppose the old boy thought I wasâwell, thought I was something he wanted. Suppose he made a good bid and I decided a girlâs got to live. Would I tell Ozzie everything?â
âNot if Mr. Merle was satisfied with things that way,â Bill said. âWas he?â
âHe wasâsuppose he was scared as hell,â she said. âScared people would find out if heâif he got me an honest-to-God place to live. Suppose he wanted me to go on with Ozzie asâas a way to cover up. Suppose he came through with enoughââ
âTo make it worth your while not to hold out for an honest-to-God place to live. And the rest of it,â Bill finished. âAre you saying that was the way it was? A dirty trick on Ozzie?â
âWhat the hell,â the girl said. âYou only live once. Is it any of your business?â
âNot that part of it,â Bill Weigand told her. âUnless you killed Merle.â
âWhy would I?â she said. âWith things that way I wouldnât have any reason. Iâd want to keep him alive. But Ozzieââ
âBut Ozzie wouldnât,â Weigand said. He looked at her. She was something to look at; but he was no longer even speculatively carnivorous. âSo you want to throw us Murdock,â he said.
âIâm not throwing you anybody,â she told him. âIâm just telling you the way things could have been. Nobodyâs going to hang it on me. Iâve got to look after myself.â
âYou seem to,â Weigand told her.
âWhat the hell,â the girl said, âwho doesnât?â
Bill Weigand could think of a lot of people who didnât; he could think of casualty lists. But there was no point to it.
âRight,â Weigand said. âSo this is your story.â
He sketched it for her, and as he did so he admitted to himself that it fitted well enoughâfitted with the few pieces of the puzzle he had so far foundâwith Merleâs interest in antiques, for
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