Erle Stanley Gardner The Case of the Musical Cow (rtf)

Contains:


67

FF

MC

TT







CHAPTER ONE

Several large cities now boast that a person standing on this or that corner will eventually meet everyone he knows. Originally intended as an index of cosmopolitan background, this specious claim has degenerated into the advertising slogan of a dozen chambers of commerce.

But one thing is certain: any American tourist in Paris who sits at the sidewalk tables of the Cafe de la Paix sooner or later will meet every fellow passenger who has not as yet taken off on one of the beaten paths of tourist travel to Switzerland, England or Italy.

Rob Trenton, occupying a sidewalk table for the second consecutive afternoon, consuming Cinzano at intervals carefully spaced so that he could maintain perpetual occupancy of his table, realised, to his disgust, that the law of averages is a treacherous thing. Every one of the shipboard bores he had avoided on the trip across insisted on dropping into the vacant chair beside him, telling him at length what he should see in Paris. But the one person Rob wanted desperately to see failed to show up.

Linda Carroll had been shrouded in mystery from the start. On shipboard she had been friendly and cordial, yet he had never been able to get her to talk about herself or her background. She had casually mentioned the Hotel Lutetia in Paris, but when Rob called at the hoie! he found that she was

not registered, had not made any reservations, and, so far as could be ascertained, had not even attempted to get a room.

So Rob, having made a fruitless canvass of the different hotels where she might be stopping, had resorted to the expedient of waiting at the Cafe de la Paix, his eyes restlessly searching with such singleness of purpose that even the generous display of legs by the French girl cyclists failed to hold his attention for more than a fleeting glance.

And then, in the second afternoon, she suddenly appeared with Frank and Marion Essex, a couple they had met on shipboard, and said, "Oh, there you are! I'd heard you were spending most of your time warming a chair here. Would you like to make a fourth?"

Robert Trenton's head began nodding involuntarily as he was getting to his feet. "A fourth at bridge, poker, or what?" he asked. "Won't you sit down?"

He pulled out a chair for Linda, and the four sat around the table. Trenton caught the eye of a waiter and gestured.

Linda Carroll said, "A fourth for a tour in my car. I brought it over with me, you know. Frank and Marion are coming along, and 1 find that by installing one of those roof racks so we can carry all our baggage on top I've room for a fourth. We're going all through Switzerland, then back to Paris, and will catch the boat at Marseilles. It'll be a four weeks' trip."

"We'll split expenses four ways," Frank Essex added. "Only it's understood that the three of us are to pay all the car expenses - gasoline, repairs, tyres, and I'd like to make an allowance to Linda of so much a mile ..."

"You can't do that," Linda interrupted, "without making me a common carrier, and then the insurance wouldn't be any good."

The waiter stood respectfully silent, and Rob hoped no one noticed the eagerness in his voice as he accepted the invitation and asked them what they wanted to drink, all in one breath.

While the waiter was taking their orders, Linda regarded Rob with thoughtful speculation. "What on earth have you been doing here all this time?" she asked.

"Watching people, looking for ... well, just watching."

Linda turned to Marion Essex. "Don't pay any attention to what he says," she warned. "I had a chance to sound him out on the ship. I didn't get anywhere. He's a dog trainer, and he's over here to investigate foreign methods."

"How interesting," Marion Essex said. "Aren't you rather young for that, Mr Trentcn?"

lt was Frank Essex who answered the question, gazing at Marion with that look of amused superiority with which husbands sometimes regard their wives. "What does age have to do with it?"

"Weil, I thought ... I thought, you know, the training of animals takes experience, and ..."

"He's older than the dogs,'' Frank Essex said.

They all laughed.

As the waiter brought their drinks Linda observed, "1 think it would be a swell idea to train a dog to carry a pouch containing passport, vaccination certificates, customs declarations and all the red tape. My bag is bursting at the seams."

"Swell idea - a pooch with a pouch," Frank Essex said. "Or you might get the St Bernards to carry mint juleps in summer instead of the usual keg of brandy."

"What do you do with the dogs after you train them?" Marion Essex asked, quite apparently trying to draw him out.

"Oh, he probably trains them to retrieve and things like that," Frank commented.

UI give my dogs basic training for more serious things than that," Rob said, trying not to seem curt. He was embarrassed at being discussed so freely.

"You mean hunting?" Marion Essex asked.

"Hunting men," Linda Carroll explained. "He's told me all about it. He's close-mouthed and probably won't tell you a thing, but I'll give you the high spots. State police use bloodhounds to trail persons, but a bloodhound with a really good nose is very valuable. He's not what you'd call expendable in a military sense So when a criminal has been run to earth and the trail begins 1.0 get hot, they use dogs like German Shepherds 01 Doberman pinschers to go in for the kill. Those dogs are expendable and they move like a streak of greased lightning."

Frank Essex regarded Trenton with new-found respect. "Sounds interesting. Perhaps you'll tell us more about it while we're on the tour."

"It's hard to get him to talk," Linda said. "It took moonlight, an hour's silent contemplation of the wake of the ship, and two cocktails before he loosened up for me. Well, here's to a swell trip."

All four raised their glasses, touched them lightly together and drank.

There followed dream days filled with a variegated panorama of rolling green plateau country and ridges covered with thick conifers; winding roads and breath taking vistas of mountains white with snow and studded with glaciers; quaint fanns and towns roofed with pink tile; lakes which varied their moods with the sky, laughing and blue or dark grey with mystery.

Marion and Linda sat together in the front seat. Rob and Frank Essex occupied the rear, an arrangement which was definitely distasteful to Rob hut which had been initiated by Frank Essex on that iVst day It had thereafter acquired the force of custom, so that any change would have been an innovation.

Rob Trenton tried to find some due to linda's ieeling -- and tried in vain. He felt certain she hadn't invited him to come aiong on the trip simply lor the purpose o! sharing expenses. On the ship he had been drawn to her as by a magnet. So had a dozen other young men, of course, yet Rob felt she had been particularly interested in him and in his theories of animal training. And she certainly must have hunted him up there at the Cafe de la Paix with a definite purpose in mind. Yet as time passed, Rob was forced to admit to himself that Linda Carroll became even more mysterious than ever.

One day, when he had seen her intent over a sketchbook while Frank and Marion Essex were in a nearby cocktail bar, he had asked her a direct question, "Do you paint for a living?"

She turned to regard him with quizzical eyes. "I didn't hear you coming along the pathway behind me."

"The question," Rob said, smiling so that his insistence would not seem impertinent, "was, 'Do you paint for a living?'"

"My painting is definitely not important," she said.

Then, suddenly something clicked in Rob Trenton's mind. "Wait," he said, "I remember one of the most unusual paintings I ever saw. It was on a calendar, and was the picture of a lake in Switzerland with snow-capped peaks and wisps of clouds. It was early in the morning and there was a lake deep down in the valley in the shadows. There was a campfire on the shore of the lake and the smoke went almost straight up for two or three hundred feet and then suddenly dispersed laterally, just as you sometimes see it in the early morning on a lake. That painting was signed Linda Carroll."

For a moment her eyes seemed to have something akin to panic in them. "You ... you're certain of the signature?" she asked as though sparring for time.

"That picture made a tremendous impression on me," Rob said. "I'd been wondering where I'd heard your name before. I think that was one of the most wonderful paintings I've ever seen. It caught the spirit of early dawn. And now to think that

I'd meet you ... to think that I'd be travelling through Switzerland with you, and ..."

"Rob," she said, "I didn't paint that picture."

"Linda, you must have. Itb exactly the way you would have seen the country. It was a completely unconventional approach. It ..."

She suddenly snapped her sketchbook shut, closed the package of crayons, and said firmly, "Rob, I did not paint that picture, and I dislike people who ask intimate personal questions. Now would you like to join me for a cocktail?"

There had been such sudden, bitter finality in her voice that Rob had not dared to press the matter further.

In fact, from that moment on, it seemed that she erected a barrier so far as any matter pertaining to her background was concerned. She was cordial enough otherwise, but her attitude indicated a cold determination to keep from any discussion of her personal affairs; nor would she let anyone see the inside of her sketchbook. Several times Rob saw her in the distance, sketching, and there was that in the swift motions of her hand, the smooth pivoting of her wrist, which indicated a mastery of her subject, a sure control and a deft touch. But the subject of her work and the sketchbook were both definitely closed.

They breezed along through Switzerland, a gay and friendly foursome, discussing matters of general interest, taking pictures, commenting on the different exposure speeds and diaphragm openings, and for the most part keeping the conversation on an impersonal plane, and filled with light banter.

Nevertheless, underlying this casual association, there was a consciousness of growing intimacy. Frank and Marion Essex had the bond of marriage, and rapidly Rob and Linda were developing a bond of their own, a sense of belonging which ripened without the aid of words and filled Rob with happiness.

At Lucerne there was an unexpected development. A cablegram caught up with Frank and Marion Essex which necessitated their taking the first plane out from Zurich, and Linda Carroll and Rob Trenton found themselves confronted with a dilemma.

"I'm afraid I don't know any other people to ask," Linda said slowly.

"Well, after all," Rob replied, "we were a little cramped, and we had quite a bit of baggage on the roof."

Her steady hazel eyes regarded him with a slight twinkle. "Are you suggesting," she began, "that we ..."

"Definitely," Rob Trenton concluded.

She mulled the situation thoughtfully. "It wouldn't look good. The Garden Club in Falthaven wouldn't approve - if it knew."

"But it would be fun," Rob insisted, hopefully. "We could pretend Frank and Marion were here with us, and, as you pointed out, the Falthaven Garden Club wouldn't need to know a thing about it."

"I didn't point out anything of the sort."

"Well, you pointed out the way for me to point it out."

Linda considered the matter for several seconds. "No funny business," she said at length.

Rob pretended to debate the matter with himself. "No funny business," he promised at length and with such exaggerated reluctance that Linda burst out laughing.

And so they had embarked upon the second stage of an idyllic holiday, stopping at little taverns where the showing of two passports and the request for two rooms at the time of registration invariably provoked voluble protest and shrugs of despair.

Linda made sketches, which only she ever saw. and planned ar, itineraty which gave Rob 'hf chance he wanted to find out about methods used in the training of dogs for military purposes - as much as was permitted for a civilian to learn.

Shortly after they left Interlaken, Linda told Rob that there was a little inn which she wanted to visit. Some relative of hers had been there the year before and had asked Linda to look in and say hello and present a letter to the owner. "Do you mind?" she asked.

Rob Trenton shook his head. He would cheerfully have stayed days, weeks, or months at any place. In the back of his mind he was serenely aware that, despite the barrier of mystery concerning Linda's personal background, their companionship was daily growing and maturing with time, just as fruit hanging on a tree sweetens and ripens.

The inn turned out to be a neat little place and the proprietor, Rene Charteux, sad-eyed, quiet and courteous, took the letter Linda presented to him, seemed greatly moved by it and extended to Linda the hospitality of the place.

The little car, which had done so bravely during the journey, developed a leak in the radiator while standing in front of the inn, and Rene Charteux agreed to have a mechanic come and repair the car, while Rob and Linda looked around and enjoyed the beautiful scenery.

There had, he explained as he unloaded their baggage, been a tragedy in the family very recently. His good wife, who had been so friendly with Linda's aunt when she had been at the inn for several days during the preceding year, had passed away.

Rend Charteux paused in carrying the baggage. He looked as though he might be ready to cry, but after a moment picked up the baggage again and carried it to their rooms. Then he was back to see that his guests were made comfortable and to see about getting the mechanic.

There was one other American guest, the proprietor told them. He showed the name scrawled on the register in forceful, masculine handwriting, Merton Ostrander, Los Angeles, California, USA. There was no street address.

Rob Trenton made friends with the dachshund that waddled about the inn with droll indignity, while Linda Carrol looked around at the pictures, at the old dishes, then finally suggested a stroll.

M. Charteux, in his sad-eyed way, became enthusiastic over a very fine vista which he said was to be viewed by taking a trail which wound along the plateau, then ascended in zigzags to a wooded peak. It was, he explained in his perfect English, an easy climb and well worth it. Merton Ostrander frequently walked up this trail and made sketches.

So Rob and Linda started up the trail, and some half mile from the inn came on a tall blond, clad in serviceable tweeds. As Rob saw the sketch-book under the man's arm, he said to Linda, "No chance of muffing this one, is there?"

Ostrander showed surprise suddenly faced by the two Americans.

Trenton extended his hand. "Mr Livingstone, 1 presume."

"Stanley!" Ostrander exclaimed, grabbing the outstretched hand and pumping it up and down. "How the devil did you ever locate me?"

"Looked on the register of the inn," Linda Carroll said, laughing. "Despite the fact that you had registered under the alias of Merton Ostrander, we knew you, Mr Livingstone."

"And do 1 have to look at the register to find out your aliases, Mr and Mrs Stanley?" he asked

"Not Mr and Mrs," she said. "I'm Linda Carroll, and this is Rob Trenton."

She noted the swift questioning glance as Ostrander shifted his gaze to Rob, and she went on hurriedly, "We're the sole survivors of a foursome which was shattered on the rocks of business. My friends, Mr and Mrs Essex, were suddenly called back to the States."

She flushed as she realised she had emphasised the Mr and Mrs, and that Merton Ostrander had been quick enough to understand and to smile a little at that emphasis.

"You're an artist?" she asked abruptly.

"Not an artist," Ostrander told her, "but I find 1 can capture what 1 want with a sketchbook better than with a camera. I like to be able to recall things that I've seen and I'm a very indifferent photographer. 1 always have a tendency to move the camera, or forget to turn the film. Even when I watch myself and take a really perfect picture, it always turns out I've missed the exposure and the thing is drab and grey. Now with my sketchbook I can pick out the things I want and put them on paper."

He gestured to the sketchbook under hi§ arm but made no offer to show them any of the sketches.

"If you're interested in scenery," Ostrander went on affably, "I'll be only too glad to turn around, act as guide, and show you one of the most beautiful little glades in the world."

"We'd love to be guided," Linda said.

Merton Ostrander, turning back up the trail, swinging along with the easy stride of a man who is accustomed to hiking, commented on the tragedy at the inn. "The proprietor lost his wife just a few days ago. A most tragic occurrence. The woman had been picking native mushrooms all her life; but of late her eyes had been getting bad, and you know how these people are; they wouldn't pay out the money for glasses. Madame Charteux considered them an extravagance - that's the only way we can explain it."

"A toadstool?" Linda asked.

"Apparently a toadstool, and apparently only one, because she was the only one who felt any ill effects."

Ostrander was silent for a few seconds, then made an uneasy motion with his shoulders. "I ate with them; had some of the same food. There weren't many mushrooms, you understand, just a few, but I keep thinking of what would have happened - or what might have happened."

"Just the two of them in the family?" Linda asked.

"No, there's a daughter, Marie. I'm surprised you didn't meet her. She's a beautiful little thing, and, of course, she's in something of a daze. She's only sixteen, but you'd think she was twenty ... dark, well-developed, smouldering eyes that seem to reflect an inner fire. How long are you intending to stay?"

"Just overnight."

"Oh." Ostrander's face showed a faint flicker of disappointment.

"You've been here long?" Trenton asked.

"Several weeks," Ostrander said, laughing. "I can't remember whether it's six or eight. Up here, time passes as smoothly as the running of a jewelled watch - but the inn is different now, of course. Living in that atmosphere of grief is ... well, in a way I'm one of the family and I've hesitated to leave because 1 know how they'd feel. They've come to depend on me. However ... well, let's go on up to the plateau and look at the scenery from there. Are you by any chance an artist?" he asked Linda Carroll.

"Why on earth did you ask that question?"

"Oh, I don't know I just wondered."

She shook her head firmly. "Like you, 1 sometimes try to catch scenery with a sketchbook, just to help recall some of the various beautiful lighting effects I've seen but ..." She laughed nervously and said, "The sketches are so crude that they couldn't possibly convey meaning to anyone except me. I never let anyone see them ... anyone."

Merton Ostrander regarded her with smiling eyes. "I take it," he said, "that definitely includes me."

"Everyone means everyone," Linda said.

"Fair enough," Merton Ostrander told her, and started piloting the way up the trail.

CHAPTER TWO

Ostrander kept up a running fire of comment about the people, their customs, the countryside and personalities. Trenton observed that Linda Carroll's eyes sharpened with interest.

Ostrander, moreover, had natural talent as an actor, and as he described the various characters in the little village, occasionally mimicking a walk or a facial expression, he was able to ponray the people about whom he talked in such a way that the individuals seemed actually to be before them.

The air was clear, crisp and cool. Linda seemed in no hurry and it was late afternoon when they returned to the inn. Marie, who waited on the dinner table, glided in and out of the room, a beautiful girl but apparently completely dazed by the sudden loss of her mother.

M. Charteux, on the other hand, seemed to accept the situation philosophically. Yet there was about the little hostelry an atmosphere of brooding grief which made itself manifest in an underlying silence. Whenever conversation lagged, the clock made its ticking instantly and triumphantly audible.

Rene Charteux reported that the car was now quite ready for the road and went to bed early. Marie followed after a few minutes, giving them all a courteous good night, but reserving for Merton Ostrander a worshipful glance as she quietly left the room.

The next morning Ostrander held them entertained until after breakfast, when Marie went to town to do some minor shopping and then to visit at the house of a friend. It was then that Ostrander casually, and with the calm assurance which should properly have been the prerogative only of an old friend, suggested that he'd like to 'shove along' with them if they had the room.

Linda hesitated, then, after a swift glance at Rob, said, "1 guess we could squeeze you in, but we're leaving almost at once."

"That suits me perfectly," Ostrander said.

"But you're ... well, you said you were almost one of the family here. Won't you want to wait and say goodbye?"

Ostrander brushed the suggestion aside. "They know I have to leave some time. Frankly this atmosphere of gloom gets me down. As far as that's concerned, it's better to do it suddenly, get it over with and make a clean break. I loathe farewells."

Rob Trenton, remembering that look which Marie Charteux had given Ostrander the night before, was surprised that Merton was so willing to leave the place before Marie returned. Linda Carroll, however, either noticed nothing out of the ordinary in Ostrander's haste, or sympathised with him.

"Of course," she confided to Rob, "I can understand his feelings. 1 hate farewells myself. And there's a pall hanging over this place which you can cut with a knife. Even one night is enough for me. I'm sorry for them, but ... after all ..."

Rob merely nodded.

In fact Rob tried to delay their departure so that Marie would at least have a chance to return and say goodbye to the man, who, according to his own admission, had become 'one of the family'.

However, Ostrander appeared with his belongings all packed and with such suspicious alacrity that Rob Trenton felt certain the process had started the night before.

M. Charteux made no comment when he was advised that Ostrander was leaving. He seemed incapable of any emotion whatever, but lethargically went about the detail of computing the various bills. Ostrander paid his account, deposited his luggage on the roof and in the tonneau, until it seemed that the little car was overflowing with baggage, and hurriedly shook hands with his host, rattling out a farewell in French, patting the man's shoulder. Then, as tears appeared in Ren6 Charteux's eyes, Ostrander gave him a final clap on the back and climbed into the back seat of the little car.

He was apologetic. "Didn't realise that I had so much stuff," he explained, with that disarming smile of his, "but if you can get me across the border with it, I'll express it to Marseilles and take the train."

"You're sailing from Marseilles?" Linda asked.

"Yes."

"What ship?"

"Well, now," he said good-naturedly, "that will depend largely on what cancellations show up. I'm getting back to the States on the first available ship."

He made quite a ceremony of adjusting himself, doubling his long legs so that his knees seemed to be up under his chin, but quite obviously making no complaint. Rob Trenton assumed his customary position in the front seat, and the little car purred on up the grade with such smooth power that it seemed eager to get away from the inn and its atmosphere of tragedy

From the back seat, Ostrander kept up a flow of conversation, pointing out little idiosyncrasies of the people, points of interest, bits of architecture which would otherwise have escaped them. Beyond question he was a very observing individual, with a penchant for pointing out and commenting on the quaint customs of a country.

By the time they stopped for lunch, Ostrander's legs were badly cramped. He made a ludicrous show of being frozen into the position he had been forced to assume on the back seat, and so clever was his performance that even Rob was forced to laugh. However, the device had the desired effect and Linda insisted that he should alternate with Rob and sit in the front seat during the afternoon drive.

So Rob Trenton found himself once more in the back seat, packed in with Merton Ostrander's collection of baggage, an attentive but enthusiastic audience, listening to Ostrander's comments.

Having pointed out the manner in which the farmers built an inclined driveway up to the attic of the house, using it for storing hay, and thereby giving an insulation to the roof and the rooms below, Ostrander went on to comment about the distinctive Swiss cowbells.

Rob was forced to admit that Ostrander really scored a point with this subject. Even Rob was interested.

From time to time Linda stopped the car at Ostrander's suggestion and they listened to the musical cadences drifting up from some hillside pasture, knee deep with lush green grass.

There was nothing harsh about these cowbells. They were designed to furnish a primitive rural harmony. From the deep, booming bell of the bull to the wistful little tinkle of the calf, the grazing cattle made a symphony of sound which seemed to blend with the natural beauty of the country.

Ostrander pointed out that not only did the matched cadences of the cowbells furnish a harmony which was pleasing to the ear, but it enabled the owner to identify each grazing animal by the particular pitch of the bell. Should one of the animals be missing, the owner could detect not only that fact, but by the missing note in the musical scale could immediately determine the identity of the truant.

Ostrander, it seemed, had made a hobby of Swiss cowbells, and said he had two large cartons filled with a collection which he hoped would be the basis for a series of informal talks that he intended to make before various clubs on his return to the United States.

So plausible, so convincing and so charming was Ostrander's conversation, that Rob Trenton began to fight against becoming an inanimate chattel, a hundred and thirty-six pounds of weight to be distributed in the right rear of the car, balancing the boxes of cowbells which Ostrander had so painstakingly collected.

lt was irritating to Rob to feel that he was forcing himself, trying desperately to invest himself with a cloak of conversational charm which was ill-fitting, but he was damned if he was going to sit there and let himself, as well as Linda, be carried away by Ostrander's magnetism. So he talked and the others listened - Ostrander politely, Linda with a little smile twitching at the corners of her mouth.

Rob felt there was little of merit in what he had to say, but at least he had the satisfaction of knowing that, while he was talking, sheer politeness forced Merton Ostrander to be silent.

Yet well before they had reached the border it was taken for granted by all concerned that Merton Ostrander was to go with them - at least as far as Paris.

CHAPTER THREE

At the hotel in Paris, Rob Trenton found himself sharing a double room with Menon Ostrander, and then, for the first time, realised the enormous amount of personal baggage which Ostrander had managed to pack into the little car.

Not only were there the two canons of cowbells, as well as a steamer trunk loaded with personal belongings, but there was a heavy chest which Rob had at first thought contained painting materials. However, when Ostrander opened this box, it proved to be a complete set of tools, including an electric drill, files, wrenches and various other mechanical paraphernalia.

All the morning Merton had been puttering around with his baggage, and then in the afternoon a telephone call summoned him to the floor below on a mission about which he did not see fit to consult Trenton.

Ostrander did not immediately return and when Rob entered the bathroom he noticed there were smudges of oil on the washstand. A round, metallic shaving on the floor rolled beneath his foot. The place from which this shaving had dropped was a complete mystery.

Rob decided Ostrander must have been drilling a hole in the frame of the mirror which hung over the washbowl. Then he realised that the shavings must have come from some other source.

Ostrander returned about three o'clock in the afternoon and entered the bathroom almost immediately. He seemed annoyed that Rob had made such a meticulous job of cleaning up.

. "You shouldn't have done that," he said somewhat impatiently. "You might have known I'd have returned and fixed things up."

"You didn't tell me just when you were returning," Rob said.

"I suppose I left something of a mess," Ostrander said. "I was oiling some tools."

Rob said nothing.

Ostrander walked over to the wastebasket, noticed the metal shaving, hesitated for a second or two, then explained. "I was trying out a drill bit. Linda wanted me to fasten the horn on the car more securely. It's been working loose. We're driving to Marseilles tomorrow and must get the car ready for loading. I wanted to be certain the drill was sharp."

"You've secured your transportation?" Rob asked.

"Just an hour or two ago," Ostrander said. "That's why I went dashing out. There was a chance to pick up a cancellation. I'm sailing an the same ship with you and Linda."

"Oh," Rob said tonelessly, "that's nice."

That night, about ten o'clock, Rob Trenton wakened from a sound sleep with a burning, metallic taste in the back of his throat. There were terrific pains across his abdomen, and even in the calves of his legs.

During the violent illness and retching which followed, Merton Ostrander was a good Samaritan and big brother rolled into one. He was a solicitous nurse, reassuring, cheerful, optimistic and unbelievably helpful, putting hot compresses on Rob's stomach, assuring him that it undoubtedly had been the lobster salad at dinner. There had been a piece of tainted lobster in his own salad, Merton remembered, and for that reason he had pushed the whole thing aside. He had been tempted to warn Rob but, since Rob seemed to be enjoying the salad so much, he had refrained, thinking that the one piece of tainted lobster was perhaps only a left-over which had been included by accident.

Rob, remembering that Linda had had a seafood cocktail, insisted that Ostrander should go down, knock on her door, and find out if she was all right.

At first Ostrander ridiculed this suggestion, but finally agreed to give her a ring and when it appeared, after some ten minutes, that there was not the faintest possibility of the hotel switchboard answering, he agreed to run downstairs and tap on her door,

Before he left, however, he opened his medicine kit, which he explained he always carried with him and gave Rob two large white capsules which he felt certain would settle Rob's stomach now that his system had rid itself of the tainted food.

But a violent fit of retching caused Rob to slip the two capsules into the pocket of his dressing-gown, and then, after a few minutes when Merton Ostrander called through the bathroom door to ask him if the capsules were 'staying down', Rob, rather than waste his waning strength in argument, merely grunted an answer which Ostrander accepted as an affirmative.

So then Ostrander went down to tap on Linda's door, and Rob, the two capsules still in the pocket of his dressing-gown, staggered over to the bed.

Linda, it seemed, had not only failed to experience any disagreeable symptoms, but she took Rob's illness much more seriously than either of the two men. Appearing in housecoat and slippers, she insisted that they send for a taxi and rush Rob to the American hospital.

Ostrander quite evidently felt this was a foolish measure as 'the worst was now over', and Rob, weak and shaken, disliked the idea of 'making a nuisance of himself'.

Ostrander managed to delay matters by some thirty minutes, but in the end Linda had her way, and Rob found himself bundled into a taxi which Linda had somehow managed to find, and transported to the American hospital, where a young doctor listened to his symptoms and prescribed remedies which Rob felt were merely cumulative.

The upshot of this treatment, however, was that Rob, still weak and sore the next morning, was forced to say goodbye to Linda and Merton Ostrander as they started out in the little car for Marseilles.

Ostrander, with genial optimism, patted Rob's shoulder and assured him he would be able to join them on the boat by catching the night train from Paris.

The doctor gravely shook his head, and for a moment Rob thought there was a hint of moisture in Linda's eyes as she turned towards the door, but she waved to him as casually as though she expected to see him again within the next hour or two.

That night Rob was still weak with pain, and the doctor seemed genuinely puzzled to account for his condition. The medical ukase definitely and finally forbade Rob to take the night train and the boat was due to sail the next afternoon at four o'clock.

In Rob's weakened condition, it seemed that the bottom had dropped out of everything. He managed to dictate a telegram to Linda, wishing her bon voyage, and, after some hesitation, included Merton Ostrander in the wire. Then he settled back miserably and tried to fight the black waves of disappointment. The next morning, experiencing a sudden definite resolution, he overcame his vertigo and nausea long enough to pack the necessities of travel, stagger to a taxicab, and catch a plane which deposited him in Marseilles thirty minutes before sailing time. As he wobbled up the gangplank, feeling more dead than

CHAPTER FOUR

Rob at first shared a stateroom with a quiet, taciturn individual who apparently disliked Rob's company, because the second day out this man was transferred to another cabin and a new room¬mate named Harvey Richmond, a broad shouldered, genial chap, moved into the room to occupy berth 'B'.

Almost from the start, Trenton found himself drawn to Richmond, and Richmond, in turn, seemed keenly interested in everything Rob had to say - about his European trip, particularly.

"How does it happen you're not sharing a room with Ostrander?" Richmond asked.

"Ostrander," Rob explained, "picked up a last-minute cancellation."

"I see. Still, those things can be arranged. A certain shuffling around, you know."

"I'm still under the weather," Rob admitted. "I can't seem to get any strength back. Ostrander is one of those athletic chaps who seems to get everything out of life as he goes along. I don't think he's interested in being tied up with an invalid."

Richmond threw back his head and laughed. "Invalid, my eye! You're a tough, wiry individual, and you can't help it if you had food poisoning. After all, anyone can run into an experience like that. It must have been quite a jolt."

"It was," Rob said. "Worst experience I've ever had and I can't seem to get back on my feet."

Richmond deftly turned the conversation to Ostrander. "You say he's interested in sketching?"

"Sketching and cowbells."

"What about the cowbells?"

"It's something that you might not notice unless your attention happened to be drawn to it," Rob explained. "The Swiss cowbells are a distinctive bit of local colour. Their sound is exceedingly musical. Ostrander has a nice collection."

"I didn't know that," Richmond replied. "Now you just stretch out there and take life easy. Here, let me cover you with this blanket. Keep good and warm. Here's a book you might like to read. The main thing you have to do is get your strength back. You say that he brought a collection of cowbells with him?"

"That's right, some distinctive bells with different tones."

"Where are they now?"

"In his baggage, I suppose. He may have them in his stateroom."

"I'm interested," Richmond said, "but I don't want him to think I'm too inquisitive, particularly if he's intending to use them as a prop in a series of lectures. By the way, Trenton, you don't remember the name of this inn where you were staying, do you?"

"No, 1 don't. It was above Interlaken and that's ..."

"Yes, yes, 1 understand. You told me about the general location. I was wondering if you remembered the name."

"No, 1 can't remember it."

"You say there had been a tragedy?"

"That's right. The woman who ran the place had died from eating toadstools."

"You didn't by any chance hear anyone describe the symptoms of her illness, did you?"

Trenton made a little grimace and said, "No, but 1 can imagine how she must have felt. 1 don't think I care to listen to .any symptoms of acute food poisoning right at the moment."

"1 dare say you don't," Richmond said, and having seen that Rob's blanket was properly tucked in around his feet, he left the room.

He returned in about an hour, bringing with him a small- boned, well-knit man whose piercing black eyes regarded Rob Trenton with penetrating appraisal.

"How are you feeling now?" Richmond asked.

Trenton smiled and said, "Much better. Just weak and wobbly."

"This is Dr Herbert Dixon," Harvey Richmond said. "Hefe having a little problem. I thought you might be able to help him."

"You're a doctor?" Trenton asked, shaking hands.

"I have an MD degree," Dr Dixon said, "but I specialise in an odd branch of the practice. 1 have a problem with a dog. I understand you're interested in dog training. I thought you might be able to help me."

Rob Trenton's eyes lit up. "What's the problem?"

"This German Shepherd," Dr Dixon said, glancing swiftly at Richmond, "is one that 1 purchased from an English chap who seemed to be very much attached to him. The dog seemed perfectly disciplined from all 1 was able to gather, and the Englishman, who had been living or the continent but who had to return for financial reasons in connection with a new exchange rate, confided to me he simply couldn't afford to keep him in Great Britain. He wanted the dog to have a good home. To be frank, the animal interested me ..."

"Where is he now?" Rob Trenton asked.

"Up in the kennels ... and 1 confess he's become something of a problem."

"In what way?"

"He barely seems to tolerate me, growls and shows his teeth and is developing a positively vicious streak. He snaps at people when they speak to him or try to pet him. If 1 hadn't jerked back hard on the leash he'd have had me in a couple of suits for damages by this time."

"How much of a period of transition was there in ownership?" Rob asked.

"What do you mean?"

"How long did you give the dog to become accustomed to you?"

"Oh, that," Dr Dixon said. "The owner thought that it would be better if they didn't drag the parting out. He told the dog to go with me, saw that the dog was willing to follow his instructions and took the plane for England that afternoon."

Trenton threw off the covers, started groping for his shoes. "I'd like to take a look at him," he said.

"I'd certainly like to have you, but, of course, 1 must warn you that he's vicious with strangers. I don't even dare to take him out for exercise on shipboard, and the more he's confined the worse he gets."

"That is only natural," Rob said. "What's his name?"

"Lobo."

"You have a leash?"

"Oh, yes."

Trenton said, "Bring him down to the deck aft of the swimming pool. Tie a rope on the end of the leash so that you have a good long leash and do exactly as I tell you."

"But I don't dare put him on a long leash. He'd certainly bite..."

"You just have the rope on the end of the leash. You don't use the rope until I tell you to. Hold the leash rather short. Meet me there at the back of the swimming pool."

Rob Trenton made his way to the deck, finding that he was even weaker than he had supposed. He seemed to be having great difficulty in shaking off the effects of his illness. However, the thought of being able to work with the dog buoyed him up.

It had been rough during the morning and the swimming pool had been drained. The deck at the back of the pool held no deckchairs and now that there was no swimming it was deserted. The sky was overcast and while the wind had died down there was a long, following swell which caused the ship to roll.

Rob Trenton waited until he saw Harvey Richmond and Dr Dixon approaching; Richmond at a safe distance and, to one side Dr Dixon holding the dog on a taut leash.

Rob Trenton seated himself on the deck, making certain there was plenty of room all around him.

"Now hold the leash rather tight," he said, "and walk past me. Keep the dog on the side that's away from me."

Dr Dixon, leading the dog, walked slowly by.

"Just keep circling around," Trenton instructed.

The dog, seeing Rob Trenton sitting there, sensing the crisp note in Rob's instructions, bared his fangs, growled and pulled on the leash.

"He seems to want to avoid me," Trenton said.

"That's because he's on this side," Dr Dixon pointed out, "but you let me put the dog on the side towards you and walk past, and he'll snap ..."

"No, no," Trenton interrupted hurriedly. "Don't do that. 1 don't want him to snap at me."

Dr Dixon's smile indicated that he felt one who was afraid of a dog would never do much towards training him.

"I'm not afraid of him," Trenton hurried to explain. "I don't want him to snap at me - not yet. Now keep walking past me, back and forth, don't circle so much, just walk straight on one side and then on the other, gradually increasing the length of the leash."

Dr Dixon followed instructions. The dog kept pulling away towards the extreme end of the leash.

Trenton studied the animal, a big deep-chested German Shepherd, with a worried pucker around the forehead over the centre of the eyes, a heavy coat which was sufficiently lacking in gloss to show that the financial difficulties of his former master had resulted in a curtailed diet, deficient in proper vitamins.

Rob Trenton waited for the propitious moment, then suddenly said to Dr Dixon, "All right, give me the end of the rope on the leash, then walk entirely away."

"You mean that you want ..."

"The end of the rope, please," Trenton said firmly.

"But, good Lord, man, he'll come after you and ..."

"Please, quickly," Trenton said, "the end of the rope."

Dr Dixon tossed him the end of the rope.

"Now get away," Trenton said.

The dog, suddenly finding himself leashed to the stranger who was sitting calmly in the middle of the deck, drew sharply back on the leash, stretching the rope taut.

"What's the matter, Lobo?" Rob asked.

The dog growled, bared his teeth.

Trenton merely laughed and said, "You're going to have to get accustomed to me, fellow," then turning away from the dog, addressed a remark to Harvey Richmond who was some distance away, an interested spectator.

"You can see the trouble with the animal," Trenton said, in a conversational tone. "The dog misses his master. He's probably never sailed on a ship, but he realises he is on a ship and that there's no chance of swimming back to rejoin his former master. Naturally he's nervous and irritable and he needs reassurance and a certain amount of affection."

Rob turned suddenly to the dog and said, "Don't you, Lobo, old man?"

The dog continued to pull back.

"Come, Lobo," Trenton said.

The dog bared his fangs.

"1 said come" Trenton repeated firmly.

The dog stood growling.

"Comel" Trenton said.

Abruptly, Trenton started hauling in on the rope, pulling the dog across the deck towards him. "I said come. Come, Lobo ... Come!"

The animal continued to pull back against the rope. The growling became more ominous.

"Good Lord," Dr Dixon said, starting forward. "He'll ..."

"Keep out of this," Trenton ordered. "Lobo, come."

He kept pulling on the leash, the dog holding back, and continuing to growl. The animals' claws scraped the deck for an inch or two, then he grudgingly yielded ground and advanced, pulled by the leash, one reluctant step after another. Rob Trenton reached out, hooked his left hand in the animal's collar, flung his right hand around the shoulders and said, "Down, boy," at the same time pressing down on the shoulders. "Down, Lobo."

The dog hesitated a moment, growling ominously, then lay down, his head within an inch or two of Rob's leg, fangs still bared.

Rob held his left hand on the collar, his right hand over the animal's shoulder. He looked up to Dr Dixon and Harvey Richmond and said, "Now please don't make any exclamations of surprise, or act as though there's anything out of order, just carry on, please, with an ordinary conversation."

Dr Dixon looked as if he might protest, but thought better of it and said, "I understand."

Richmond said, "It's hard to act natural about a thing like that. 1 certainly thought you were going to have your throat torn out."

Trenton kept his eyes on the two men, but the fingers of his right hand slowly began to twist in the hair along the dog's shoulder, moving over more to the animal's shoulder muscles and his throat. "Poor devil," Trenton said, "he's completely perplexed. He doesn't know whether his master left him with Dr Dixon and the doctor is stealing him, or whether he's been abandoned, or what has happened. In any event, he's all at sea ... and I don't mean that as a pun."

His hand moved around until he was stroking the animal's throat with a steady, easy gesture of caressing fingers that moved with calm assurance. Now, for the first time, he turned to the dog. "Too bad, boy," he said sympathetically. "You need a little reassurance, and you need a lot of affection."

The animal looked up at Trenton. He had ceased growling now. He moved his head a couple of inches so that his muzzle rested on Trenton's leg.

"Good dog," Trenton said.

Abruptly he heard a spatter of applause and looked up.

From the boat deck a dozen or so curious passengers had been watching the little drama which was being enacted on the lower deck. Now they expressed their appreciation and admiration spontaneously.

Trenton noticed only that Linda Carroll, her eyes wide, was standing close to the rail, looking down at them, and that beside her Merton Ostrander stood, completely fascinated. Linda's hands were moving rapidly in enthusiastic applause. Merton Ostrander clapped a half dozen times, then put his hands on the rail. His face held a puzzled frown. Quite evidently he was in deep thought.

Trenton turned his attention to the dog, caressing him now, soothing the taut muscles with the tips of understanding fingers, his voice conveying reassurance and affection.

.After some ten minutes, Trenton stood up. "1 think I'll take him to the kennel now, if you don't mind," he said to Dr Dixon. "You may walk alongside of me."

They walked up the stairs to the dog's kennel. The passengers who had been interested spectators started to crowd around, but Trenton waved them back. "Please," he said. "The dog's nervous. Please, everyone keep away."

They walked up to the kennel. Dr Dixon opened the door and Rob Trenton said, "All right, Lobo, in you go," and unfastened the leash as the dog entered the kennel.

Dr Dixon dropped the door shut.

Suddenly Rob Trenton felt his muscles begin to tremble convulsively. He realised that he had used more nerve energy, more vitality in the test than he had anticipated.

"I think, if you don't mind," he said, "I'll go back to bed. I didn't realise how weak I was."

Linda Carroll came pushing forward. "Rob," she said, "it was wonderful! You were simply marvellous!"

Her hand rested on his arm. Her eyes grew quick with alarm. "Why, Rob, you're ... trem ..."

His eyes pleaded with her for silence.

She caught herself in mid-sentence. "You're simply marvellous," she ended lamely.

"I'm still pretty much under the weather," Rob muttered. He felt as though he might be walking in his sleep as he moved along the ship's corridor, down the stairs, back to his stateroom, where he collapsed on the bed.

A few seconds later, Harvey Richmond and Dr Dixon were in the doorway.

"You all right?" Richmond asked.

Rob nodded.

"You shouldn't have undertaken anything like that while you're as weak as you are," Dr Dixon said. "It was wondertul. I never saw anything like it. How did you know he wasn't going to bite you?"

"I didn't," Rob admitted weakly. "He could have, but the dog needed someone to make him obey. He needed companionship, he needed to be given a sense of reassurance. You may have noticed I ordered you around rather sharply. I'm sorry, but that was part of the training When the dog heard you taking orders from me, it gave me a certain advantage. Good Lord, 1 didn't realise how weak I was!"

Dr Dixon stepped forward, felt Rob's wrist, placed a hand on Rob's shoulder. Now that Rob was lying down the fit of trembling with which he had been seized became even more enhanced.

"I think," Dr Dixon said, "I'm going to get in touch with the ship's doctor, and make a suggestion ... if you don't mind."

"Thank you," Rob said gratefully.

He felt Harvey Richmond covering him with a blanket, then the trembling seemed to get completely out of control. Rob shook as though with a chill. He heard the door open. The ship's doctor bared Rob's right arm. There was the odour of alcohol, then the sting of a needle.

A few seconds later, a delicious warmth flowed through his veins. The relaxed muscles ceased trembling. Drowsiness wrapped him in a warm, soft blanket of growing oblivion. He heard whispers as Dr Dixon and the ship's doctor tiptoed out of the room. He sighed, and became unconscious in the middle of the sigh.

And, while he slept, Harvey Richmond deliberately and thoroughly searched every nook and corner of the stateroom, every article in Rob Trenton's hastily packed and utterly inadequate baggage.

CHAPTER FIVE

It was a full three days before Rob Trenton had his strength back. By that time the ship had passed the .Azores and was wallowing through the Atlantic towards New York.

Despite his feeling of muscular insecurity, Trenton had managed to take the huge German Shepherd for regular periods of exercise, and by this time Dr Dixon had virtually surrendered control of the dog to Trenton. The animal had come to look forward to Robs visits, whimpering eagerly when he approached the kennels.

Trenton made it a point always to be glad to see the dog. As he pointed out to Dr Dixon, an animals treatment of you depends very largely on your treatment of the animal. "A dogs like a person," he explained. "It's pretty hard to work up enthusiasm over a person who greets you indifferently, or ignores you entirely. On the other hand, someone who is quite evidently glad to see you makes you feel that you're glad to see him."

Dr Dixon nodded thoughtfully. He seemed to be putting in a great deal of time these days sizing up young Rob Trenton, and was quite obviously interested not only in Trenton's ideas, but in his experiences.

Harvey Richmond, in the meantime, used his opportunity as cabin-mate to ask innumerable questions, many of which Trenton noticed were about Merton Ostrander.

Ostrander, however, seemed to take but little interest in Richmond, despite several attempts on Harvey Richmond^ part to get acquainted. Ostrander was more obviously interested in the attractive females on the ship than in the male passenger list. For the most part, he devoted his attention to Linda Carroll, monopolising her as much as possible, to the obvious disgust of some of the other men on the ship, who cut in at dances, squired her around the deck, and tried to inveigle her into shuffle-board, ping-pong and deck tennis. But Ostrander had the advantage of the earlier acquaintanceship and the mutual experiences of a tour through Switzerland. He pressed these advantages easily, naturally, ruthlessly, and, whenever he could, steered her into tete-a-tete which seemed so close and personal it would have been rude to intrude.

Rob's convalescence curtailed his social life, but Linda always made it a point to be up on the boat deck whenever Rob walked the dog.

Despite Ostrander's attempts to break into this schedule, Linda was obdurate and soon Lobo began to look forward to her companionship, his plume waving in friendly greeting as he heard her step.

Later on, as Rob became stronger and was feeling more like himself, he was pleased to find Linda always managed to save some time for him.

The second day before reaching New York, Linda was already in the kennels when Rob Trenton came to get the dog. "It's simply marvellous what you've been able to do with that dog, and in so short a time, Rob," she said.

Rob motioned the dog to his side. "A dog wants to love and to be loved. A dog is capable of great loyalty. In order to develop his own character to the best advantage, he needs an outlet for that affection, for that feeling of loyalty."

Linda looked at him thoughtfully.

"Isn't the same true of a woman?" she asked.

"I wouldn't know. I've never been a woman."

"You've never been a dog," she retorted.

"Well," he told her, "I've studied dogs."

"All right," she said, with an amused smile "You win."

They swung around the deck together, the dog needing no leash now. but keeping at Rob Trenton's side.

"What's going to happen when you get 10 New York and Dr Dixon takes over?" Linda asked.

Rob's eyes smiled at her. "Don't think id be so cruel as to have developed the animal to this point if that was going to happen."

"What is going to happen?" she asked.

"Dr Dixon gave the dog to me."

"Isn't the dog very valuable?"

"It depends on what you mean by value. A good many people would pay quite a sum for a dog with his breeding, build and intelligence. Most of them would want him fully trained, however."

"He isn't fully trained now?"

"Not what I would call fully trained."

"Dr Dixon is a peculiar individual. He keeps very much to himself, and yet he's always very affable. No one seems to know exactly what he does. 1 understand he specialises in some branch of medicine but no one knows exactly what it is."

"It's forensic medicine," Rob said.

"What's that?"

"Legal medicine. Medicine as applied to law; The sort of medicine that has to do with cases that come up in court."

"Murder?" she asked.

"All sorts of cases. However, I don't know that he cares to talk too much about it. People get the wrong ideas. If he hasn't told any of the other passengers, perhaps it would be just as well if you didn't tell them." "And when we get home you're going to plunge into your dog training?"

"I'd like to have you see my place," Rob said seriously. "I'd like to have you see my dogs, and ... well, I hope you don't walk out of my life. You live in Falthaven ...?"

"I'd love to see how you work your dogs," she interrupted quickly. "I have the address of your place. Would you permit a curiosity-seeker to call?"

"I'd like very much to have you call."

"Rob," she said, turning to him suddenly, "do you have a car?"

He laughed. "I have a battered old station wagon that 1 use to carry my dogs around in, but it is very decrepit."

"Is anyone meeting you ... at the dock, I mean?"

"No. Why?"

She said quickly, "I have just had a wireless. Some friends of mine are meeting me with a car and I'm driving home with them. How would you like to drive home in my car? You could carry all your baggage and ..."

"That would be wonderful," Rob said, "if it wouldn't inconvenience you."

"Not in the least. I'll have the car unloaded and put in the shed so you can get in it and drive off. You'll have to put gas in it. The tank is empty, you know."

"And I'll deliver it to you when ..."

"Don't bother delivering it," she said. "Just leave it at your place and I'll come there to pick it up. I'll be driving by within the next few days. You'll be there, will you?"

"I'll make it a point to be there."

"Don't do that. Don't wait around, Rob. Only I..." She broke off and frowned with annoyance as Merton Ostrander came swinging along the deck towards them.

"Hello, everyone," he said. "How's the dog this morning?"

"Fine, thanks," Rob said.

"Rob and I were talking," Linda said quietly.

"So I gathered," Ostrander announced affably, "and I'll bet you forgot about the ping-pong tournament."

"What about it?"

"You and I were scheduled to start playing five minutes ago," Ostrander said, tapping his wristwatch significantly, "The tournament is approaching the final stages, the ..."

"Oh, bother the tournament!" she said. "I'll be down later."

He shook his head. "You can't do that, Linda. The table is reserved for us at this hour. The other match was just completed and they want to have everything ready for the finals at two- thirty this afternoon."

She hesitated, not pretending to disguise her annoyance. "Oh, all right," she said. "1 warn you I'm going to be particularly ruthless."

"That's the way I like my women ... ruthless," Ostrander said. "See you later, Rob."

There was a frown on Rob's face as he watched them walk away. He felt he had been about to penetrate the barrier which Linda Carroll had erected whenever he had sought to discuss her personal affairs. The moment had been propitious. He even felt that Linda had been on the point of confiding in him.

Rob paced the exercise deck with the dog at his side, and then realised that Harvey Richmond had climbed to the upper deck and was watching him.

As Rob swung past the point where the genial, heavy set man was standing, Richmond said, "You certainly did a nice job with that dog, Trenton."

"Thanks."

"What's happened to your exercising partner? I saw her going down the deck with Ostrander a moment ago."

Rob started to tell the man to go to the devil but controlled himself. "1 believe they were in a ping-pong tournament," he said coolly, trying politely to rebuff the man's curiosity.

But Richmond seemed completely immune to any rebuff. "Ostrander did a funny thing last night," he went on.

"Yes?" Rob asked, his voice showing only the. amount of interest which ordinary politeness would require.

"That's right," Richmond said genially. "He had those cowbells in cartons down below - brought them up from storage and started throwing them overboard. Linda Carroll remonstrated with him and said he'd promised her four of them. She wants to put them on the cows she has on a little farm somewhere. He finally gave her the four, but she almost had to make a scene to get them. He dumped the rest overboard.'

"Dumped them overboard!" Rob exclaimed incredulously. "Why on earth did he do that?"

"Said they were too heavy to be packing around," Richmond said. "He said he'd changed his mind about lecturing on his European trip and using the bells as props. It seems he wants to travel light. Strange chap, that Ostrander."

"You're sure he threw the cowbells overboard?" Rob asked.

Richmond nodded. "Al! but the four he gave Linda Carroll."

"There were witnesses?"

Again Richmond nodded.

"I mean really credible witnesses?" Rob said.

"I was one," Harvey Richmond commented dryly. "I wondered if you knew anything about it."

"It's all news to me," Rob Trenton said.

"Well, I'll be seeing you," Richmond announced. "I'm interfering with your exercise of the dog."

He turned and descended to the lower deck.

Watching the man's shoulders, Rob Trenton suddenly realised that the sole purpose of Harvey Richmond's visit to the upper

deck had been to tell him about Ostrander having dumped the cowbells overboard, and to see if the news came as a surprise to Trenton or whether Trenton already knew something about it.

Why should Harvey Richmond be so interested in Merton Ostrander's private affairs? Come to think of it, Richmond asked questions, lots of questions.

Rob Trenton started to concentrate on Harvey Richmond, but the thought again popped into his mind that Linda Carroll had been on the point of confiding in him, of telling him something that he knew instinctively would have been of the greatest importance to him. And sheer coincidence had robbed him of the opportunity. The other ping-pong game had been finished at an inopportune time and Merton Ostrander had come to pick up Linda Carroll. If a little white celluloid ball on a ping-pong table had bounced just a few more times, Linda would at least have given him enough of an opening so that he could reopen the conversation later.

But the little ping-pong ball had not bounced enough times. The match had ended, Ostrander had shown up, and there was nothing left for Rob to do but continue walking the dog.

CHAPTER SIX

The big ship glided majestically past the Statue of Liberty, up into the harbour, and slowed its pace until it seemed barely to maintain headway, yet the two tugs which were racing alongside were pushing great waves of water under their bows, churning the ocean behind them into milky confusion as they tried to keep up with the iiner Then the tugs nosed in, lines were passed and gradually the ship eased its way in to the dock where fnends waved handkerchiefs and hats in a frenzy of happy greeting to returning travellers. Immigration officials had been busy examining passports, and Rob Trenton, his baggage all stamped with placards bearing a big letter'T, was preparing to go ashore when two men, smiling without cordiality, stepped up to him. "You're Robert Trenton?"

"That% right."

"You own a dog, 1 believe, you want to take ashore?"

"That's right. The dog was given to me while I was on the ship."

"So 1 understand," the spokesman said. "1 wonder if you would mind stepping back down to your cabin for a moment, Mr Trenton?"

"Why?"

"We'd like you to."

"I'm sorry, but I'm planning to go ashore immediately."

As though they had rehearsed the action, the two men simultaneously raised left hands to the lapels of their coats,

iy

moved the garments slightly aside and showed gold badges which loomed importantly large.

"We're with the Customs," one of the men said.

"But my baggage is all down on the pier."

"Oh, no, it isn't," one of the men said. "It's in your stateroom, and if you don't mind, we'll make the examination there. I think it will be less embarrassing to you if we examine you there."

"Well, of course, if you insist," Rob said reluctantly, looking to where Linda Carroll was going down the gangplank. "I thought..."

"I'm sorry, but this happens to be official," the larger man said curtly. "Let's go back to your stateroom if you don't mind."

They searched him to the skin. They searched his garments. They unpacked everything in his suitcases. They searched the baggage itself for false bottoms. They even inspected the heels of his shoes, and went so far as to remove the bottoms from the tubes of his toothpaste and shaving cream and squeeze out all of the contents.

Rob Trenton, white-faced with indignation, realised there was nothing he could do. The men went about the job carefully, painstakingly and efficiently.

"Will you please tell me why I am singled out for this sort of treatment?" Trenton asked, his voice cold with fury.

One of the men reached into the inside pocket of his coat, took out a typewritten letter.

"Of course," he said, "it's anonymous. Like to read it?" The letter was dated two days earlier, was sent to the United States Department of Customs, and read:

Gentlemen:

I understand it is your custom to pay rewards for

information leading to the arrest of persons violating

customs regulations.

I would like to call your attention to Robert P Trenton, who is a passenger on the steamship Exrabia which is docking at ten o'clock Monday morning.

This man poses as one who is interested in the training of dogs and has been touring Europe in a private car, taking occasion to stop at various out-of-the-way places. 1 have every reason to believe this man should be detained for a thorough search.

1 am fully familiar with his itinerary while abroad, and 1 have every reason to believe he is not what he seems.

At the present time I will not make my identity known but after the contraband has been recovered I will identify myself and ask for a reward. The identification will be made by means of a carbon copy of this letter which I will bring with me to your office.

The letter was signed merely a FRIEND.

"Good Lord," Rob Trenton said. "You don't pay attention to anonymous letters of that sort, do you?"

"You can bet your bottom dollar we don't ignore them." "But that's absurd ..."

"It seems to be absurd," the Customs man said, and then added grimly, "However, we're not finished yet."

"Why, as a matter of fact," Rob said angrily, "anyone could write a letter of this sort. It could be a practical joke ..."

"Sure it could be a practical joke," the Customs man said, "but Uncle Sam doesn't like the idea of playing practical jokes of that sort through the mail. It wouldn't be healthy to try it."

"Or, on the other hand," Trenton stormed, "just in case you wanted really to shake down some passenger and wanted an excuse, you could write that letter right in your office and drop it in the mail and use it to show the passenger to ..."

"Sure thing, Mr Trenton, so we could," the big Customs man interrupted, "but in case we wanted to shake him down, we

41

could do it without any letter. So cool off and sit down over there. We're not finished yet."

It was three-thirty in the afternoon before Rcb Trenton was cleared. Thoroughly indignant, he came down the gangplank, the ship's stewards behind him carrying his luggage, which had been completely examined even to the last pocket in the lining of the coat. A portable X-ray machine had even been used to penetrate the padding in the shoulders of the coat to make sure that no packages were concealed therein.

Lobo, securely muzzled to comply with municipal regulations, was on leash at Rob's side. The dog was glad to leave the cramped quarters of the ship and to be on land again. He had by this time completely accepted Rob Trenton as his master.

The Customs shed was deserted. The last of the travellers had* long since identified their baggage, checked over their declarations with an inspector, had stamps and chalk marks affixed, and been swallowed up in the big city.

For a moment, Rob had a fleeting hope that Linda had been delayed somewhat in connection wiLh the unloading of her car, and that he might still catch her, but on inquiry he learned that the cars were handled expeditiously, that Linda had driven away hours ago, and that she had left the necessary documents and instructions to enable Rob to pick up the little car.

In Rob Trenton's pocket was the anonymous letter which had been turned over to him at length, together with the apologies of the Customs officials.

So thorough had been their search, they had even found the two white capsules Merton Ostrander had taken from his medicine chest and given Rob during that long nightmare in the Paris hotel.

The men were interested in these capsules and kept them for further examination', asking Rob's permission to do so. Rob told them as far as he was concerned they could throw them in the ocean. They were simply some sort of a soda compound to be used in settling an upset stomach. They had, he explained, been given him by Merton Ostrander.

Rob Trenton was halfway across the Customs shed when he found himself gazing at a familiar pair of broad shoulders, a tall loose-jointed figure, clad in tweeds.

As though feeling the impact of Trenton's gaze, Merton Ostrander turned.

For a moment, when he saw Trenton, his lace set in hard lines of anger, then there was a flash of curiosity which caused him to ask guardedly, "Hello, what are you doing here this late?"

Trenton, a sudden suspicion crystallising in his mind, whipped the anonymous letter from his pocket. "I'm going to ask you a question," he said, "and be damned careful how you answer it because. I'm not going to take your word for it. I'm going to do some independent checking up. Do you know anything about this?"

Trenton shoved the anonymous letter under Ostrander's face.

For a moment, Ostrander looked curiously at the letter, then a quizzical frown appeared on his forehead. Abruptly he laughed.

Trenton, enraged, deliberately folded the letter, put it back in his pocket, doubled his right hand into a fist, picked out a place on Ostrander's jaw, and stepped forward.

"Hey, you little bantam," Ostrander said, backing away "Come down to earth. Here, take a look at this."

He was still laughing as he reached in his pocket and pulled out a typewritten letter. "For a minute," he said, "f was dumb enough to think this was some of your work."

He held the letter out at arm's length so that Trenton was forced to look at it, yet keeping Trenton at a distance as he did so.

Trenton saw a letter which, save for names, was the exact counterpart of the letter which had been delivered to him by the two Customs officials after they had finished their search.

Slowly the anger left Rob Trenton. "But who could have written two such letters as this?"

Ostrander laughed mirthlessly. "1 think I know the answer now," he said, "but I was too dumb to realise it until just now."

"A practical joker?"

"Could have been," Ostrander said, "but I think the Customs wanted some good excuse to tear us apart, and wanted to get our co-operation in doing it. A letter of this sort makes it very, very easy for them."

"i pointed that out to them," Ti Hon said. "They told me they didn't need any such excuse."

"They don't really need it," Ostrander said, "but it's a lot better if they have something which makes their actions look reasonable. You know how it is. If they just started picking on passengers without ostensibly having some excuse they'd get a terrific protest. A letter of this sort comes in very handy. I dare say the Customs officials didn't expect we'd compare notes. Who was that Harvey Richmond who was your cabin-mate?"

"A real estate operator from the Middle West."

"You sure?"

"Well, that's what he told me."

Ostrander's eyes narrowed. "He worked a little deal with the Purser to arrange a transfer so he'd be in your cabin. The man who was in there was moved out and the Purser made some rather elaborate explanations to him and Richmond moved in. My baggage was searched twice while I was on shipboard. I rather expected I'd be running into something like this when we docked, but I'll confess that letter made me plenty mad."

"Your baggage was searched?" Trenton asked.

"I'll say it was searched. I have no idea who did it, but 1 know that on at least two occasions it was given a thorough ransacking. Nothing was taken, but things were arranged a lot differently from the way I'd left them. Little things which ordinarily I wouldn't have noticed. The shirts were folded differently, the socks had been unrolled ... so I got rid of every single thing 1 had that could have caused the faintest comment."

"Perhaps that's what made them suspicious," Trenton said. "1 heard you threw the cowbells overboard."

"1 had the boxes sent up from the baggage-room and dumped every blessed one of them over into the drink," Ostrander said. "1 cut down every bit of surplus baggage 1 had, so 1 didnt have one dam thing left except wearing apparel, and a few curios that no one could question."

"But why on earth did you do that?"

"If they were going to get tough I wanted to have the situation simplified. I have an idea that your friend and cabin-mate, Harvey Richmond, is either a spotter for the Government or a freelance informer. 1 understand some of the fellows who want to stoop that low make a good thing out of travelling on the ocean liners. They strike up an acquaintance with as many passengers as possible, size up the men who may be smuggling something in and then see that the Government is given a tip. They don't stand to lose anything if things go wrong and in case things are right they make a killing. Some day I'll run across Mr Harvey Richmond again when I can ask him a little more about this real estate business of his in the Middle West. I'm free to confess that I thought you'd done some talking about something and ... well, the fact that he singled you out for an identical letter seems to cover the situation. Where's Linda? Did you see her?"

"I saw her going down the gangplank just before the Customs men asked me to walk back to the stateroom."

"You don't know what hotel she's staying at, do you?"

"I don't think she's staying. I think friends met her and are driving her to her - er - home?"

"1 wanted to say goodbye to her." Ostrander said, and then added casually, "Oh well, I'll drop her a note. 1 have her address in Falthaven. lt was certainly a great trip. How about sharing a cab?"

"No thank you ... I have a few things to attend to here," Rob said, some strange feeling causing him to refrain from mentioning the matter of the car. If Linda hadn't told Ostrander, Rob certainly wasn't going to tell him. Yet Ostrander apparently had Linda's address and ...

"Hang it," Ostrander answered. "1 wanted to see Linda. Oh well, that's all water under the bridge. Well, Rob, it was a great trip. Thanks for being so generous as to share it with me."

And Ostrander gripped Rob Trenton's hand, his eyes smiling and friendly. "Sorry you were so darned sick there in Paris."

That recalled a situation to Rob Trenton's mind. "Say," he said, "you remember those capsules you gave me?"

"Sure. They'd have fixed you right up if they'd stayed with you. They must have bounded off your stomach like a tennis ball off a cement court and ..."

"I didn't take them," Rob confessed. "I had a particularly violent spell of retching and dropped them in the pocket of my bathrobe. The Customs men searched every ..."

"Where are they now?" Ostrander interrupted.

"The Customs men took them."

Ostrander stood frowning, his face masking his feelings from Rob Trenton. Abruptly he turned, said, "Oh well, they'll probably be dumb enough to analyse them. Well, so long, Rob. I'm on my way"

He walked off, his long legs taking great strides - a big man going some place in one hell of a hurry.

CHAPTER SEVEN

Rob Trenton counted the minutes until he could get out of the congested lanes of city traffic and find less crowded roads. Curled up in the rear seat, Lobo slept with his head on his paws. The dog now had sufficient confidence in his new master to accept whatever his new environment might be with complete assurance.

The car whined on through the night. Gradually the lights of approaching automobiles became more infrequent. At first there were breaks in the procession of approaching cars, then gradually the distance between the cars themselves became greater, until finally there were intervals up to as much as several minutes at a time when Rob Trenton's eyes were spared the glare of approaching headlights.

Just as Rob Trenton dared to make an estimate as to the time he would arrive at the little farmhouse where he maintained his kennels, he felt the car swerve to the right, heard the bang of a blown-out tyre and then was fighting the wheel to hold the machine straight on the road while he angled off to one side, touching the brakes at intervals very gently until he had the car well over on the verge.

The dog, up on all fours at the unexpected swing, was peering through the windshield.

Rob brought the car to a stop, quieted the dog, got out tools, jacked the car up and started to work.

47

It was while he was changing the tyre that he first noticed the peculiar bulge on the underside of the car's frame.

It seemed to be a smooth swelling in the metal, evidently housing some sort of a gear box, but there was certainly no evidence to indicate that any mechanism was supposed to be concealed under the swelling. Rob conducted an exploratory tapping with the handle of the wrench. The metal 'blister' seemed to be hollow.

The little flashlight was getting dim, but curiosity and a certain cold suspicion brought decision to Rob Trenton's mind.

He drove to the next town where he was able to procure a cold chisel and hammer, a larger flashlight and fresh batteries.

Ten miles down the road he again stopped the car, waited until there was a complete break in the traffic, then crawled under the car, adjusted the flashlight and tapped at the border of the steel blister with the edge of the cold chisel held firmly in position.

The blister peeled off as though it had been half a melon and a cascade of packages wrapped in oiled silk dropped to the highway.

Rob Trenton had no need to examine these oiled silk packages to know what they were.

A disillusioning bitterness filled Trenton until there was even the taste of it in his mouth. So he had been used as an unwilling accomplice. There actually had been some foundation for those anonymous letters which had been sent to the Customs.

Yet Rob could hardly picture Linda Carroll as a smuggler. He felt that she herself must have been victimised. And, having reached that decision, he knew that he must protect her against a premature discovery. Not until he had unearthed the real criminal could Linda be permitted to know what had happened. And, in the meantime, no matter what the cost, the authorities must be kept from any further search. Their suspicions already aroused, it would only be a short time before they would think of the car in which Linda Carroll, Merton Ostrander and Rob Trenton had made their European tour.

Rob's palms were cold with perspiration as he thought of what would happen if some State Police patrol car, seeing his machine stopped by the side of the road, should pull up alongside and seek the cause of the trouble.

There was a short-handled shovel in the tool kit, one which had been carried through Europe in case of emergencies; and now in a frenzy of desperation Rob Trenton took the shovel from its place, moved over to the side of the road, near the fence, removed the sod, and quickly dug a hole some two feet deep, wrapped the oiled silk packages in a newspaper, shoved the whole thing down in the hole, placed the metal disc on top, and replaced the dirt as best he could. Then he fitted into place the circle of sod which he had carefully cut when he started the hole.

He checked the mileage on the speedometer of the little car, then with his pocket knife made a little blaze on a wooden fence post at the roadside.

Then he opened his notebook and drew a sketch map showing the exact location where he had stopped the car. A road sign some fifty feet ahead of the car gave mileages to the cities ahead and Rob carefully copied these distances in his book as well as the number of fence posts between the car and the sign.

He replaced the shovel and was just closing the toolbox when headlights coming along the road behind him suddenly swerved to the right, etching the little car in white brilliance. Abruptly a double red spotlight on the roof of the oncoming car sent an oscillating beam along the highway in both directions. The car drew up behind him and a uniformed state patrolman got out and walked forward.

"Having trouble?" he asked.

"Had a flat," Rob Trenton said, "but I have it fixed now. I just put the tools away." And then by way of confirmation, as though he might need something in the way of proof, he pounded his fist, into the mushy softness of the blown-out tyre which he had placed on the rack. "It certainly let go all at once," he said.

The trooper, following Rob's example, pounded the soft tyre, nodded, said, "All right. Good luck," and walked back to his car. He took a notebook from the front seat and started writing.

Trenton realised that with the new regulations motor patrolmen were called on to note every stop which they made on their run, and realised that the man would note the time, the place, and might well also make a note of the licence number on Trenton's automobile.

He opened the door and started to get in the car, but the patrolman, notebook in hand, was walking towards him once more. "Hate to bother you when you're having trouble," he said, smiling affably, "but since we're already stopped, I'll just make a check on your driving licence. I like to make a routine check every so often."

Wordlessly, Rob Trenton opened his pocket billfold, extracted the driving licence in its plastic container and handed it to the officer who checked it carefully, nodded, handed it back, and said, "Well, good luck."

"Thanks," Trenton said, and jumped in behind the wheel.

"Nice dog you have there."

"Yes, he is."

"Vicious?"

"He's all right ... only ... 1 wouldn't pet him," Trenton said.

He felt certain that if he had wanted to disclose his business, this man would know who he was. Some of the state troopers were familiar with the work that was being done with the training of their dogs and several of Rob Trenton's 'pupils' had gone to the State Police here. However, Rob was in no mood for conversation. He wanted only to get away from there.

The state trooper was at the rear of Rob's car. As Rob climbed in the driver's seat he felt the jar as the trooper's fist once more thudded on the deflated tyre. In the rear-view mirror he could see that the trooper was inspecting the gash in the casing.

"Okay?" Rob Trenton called.

"Okay" the trooper said.

Rob Trenton eased the car into gear, made time down the road, keeping an eye on his speedometer, taking great pains not to exceed the legal limit, watching in the rear-view mirror to see if the lights of the state patrol car followed.

But the State Police car remained where it was parked, the red spotlight shimmering a warning in both directions up and down the road. Two other motorists came whizzing along behind and their headlights drowned out the view Rob Trenton had in the rear-view mirror of what was taking place behind him.

Trenton devoted his attention to driving the car.

After a mile or so he slowed and let the two other cars come on past.

The road behind was clear now. There were no reflections of headlights in the rear-view mirror. The State Police car at least had not followed along behind. Rob hoped nothing had happened to arouse the suspicions of the officer.

Cautiously he depressed his foot on the pedal, bringing the quivering speedometer needle up above the legal limit. It would be approximately an hour before he could turn in to his own farm, where Joe Colton, the deaf caretaker, had been caring for the dogs while Rob had been away in Europe.

CHAPTER EIGHT

It was a new and disquieting experience for Rob Trenton to feel that he was dodging the law. However, he felt certain Linda could have had nothing to do with the cache of smuggled drugs and welcomed the opportunity to clear her by ascertaining the real culprit.

However, this ambition which seemed so thoroughly logical to him as he drove along began to present practical difficulties as he started planning his moves. Every mile that he covered brought new dangers to his mind. Quite obviously someone who would have used Linda Carroll as an unwitting tool in a smuggling operation running into the tens of thousands of dollars would hardly submit tamely to such amateurish outside interference as Rob Trenton could at the moment think up. A vague disquiet filled him with apprehension. He had a few hours of grace at the most. Then the smuggler would find that the cache had been disturbed. And then what?

Rob thought of several possibilities, none of which appealed to him. Quite obviously he could never go to the police. It was too late for that now. He had burnt his bridges so far as the police were concerned. Not only could he offer no adequate defence that would protect Linda, but he could never explain his actions in burying the oiled silk packages; and the date of the newspaper in which they were wrapped would be a damning link in the chain of evidence.

Rob realised that he was definitely and entirely on his own, realised also the very strong possibility that he was dealing not with one man, but a gang. There must have been more than three pounds in those oiled silk packages, and even Rob's comparative ignorance of values was not such that he failed to recognise a well-planned operation of considerable magnitude.

It was nine-thirty when Rob Trenton picked up the lights of the litde village which was so familiar to him. The T & C cafe was open and an oblong of light spread out from the window to splash in vivid orange on the sidewalk. A filling station was a blaze of white illumination. Aside from that the town was closed up for the night and the headlights of the little car danced along the road as Rob passed the town, went a mile and a half, turned to the right for two miles, then turned in at his little farm.

He had sent Joe Colton a wire stating that he would arrive late that night. There was a light on in the kitchen and one by the kennels.

Rob Trenton gave two rapid blasts of the horn as he turned in at the gate, and then realised that the horn would do no good because of Joe's deafness.

However, as Trenton piloted the car around the back circle of the driveway and the lights shone on the kitchen window, old Joe came hobbling out, his face wreathed with a welcoming grin.

Leaning heavily on his cane, Joe hurried over to the car. "How're you coming, boss?"

Knowing Joe's deafness, Rob waited until the door was open before he shouted, "Hello, Joe, how're you feeling?"

It was at the sound of Rob Trenton's voice that pandemonium broke loose in the kennels. The dogs had been carefully trained not to bark, but the sound of Rob's voice put too great a strain on their self-control and once the first bark of the younger dog broke the precedent, they were beyond all restraint.

Even Joe's calloused old ears took cognisance of that racket. He grinned at Rob Trenton as he shook hands and said, "Reckon you've got to speak to 'em now they've heard your voice."'

Lobo standing up in the back of the car, was growling throatily, then whining.

Trenton said to the big German Shepherd, "You wait there, Lobo, till I've gone over and paved the way."

There were ten dogs in the kennels, and ten eagerly whining canines greeted their returned master. Ten moist snouts had to muzzle against his hand and then, the greetings done, Rob returned to the car, brought Lobo back with him and introduced him to the dogs, one at a time, through the wire-meshed doors of the individual kennels. He then returned with Lobo to the house and said "1 hate to make the other dogs jealous, Joe, but this boy is strange and he'll have to sleep on my bed tonight until he gets accustomed to the place and knows the other dogs, then we'll fix a kennel for him and he can live with the others and lake training."

Joe, in the cracked monotone of a man who cannot hear the cadences of his own voice, said, "Things been going all right while you've been gone. Kept all the dogs on training, putting them through the regular routine every day. Kept them fed up nice, and they're all feeling pretty good. What kind of a trip did you have?"

He showed that he hardly expected an answer. Hearing was such an effort with him that he preferred to ramble on.

"How's Europe anyway?"

Rob nodded and smiled, motioned towards the car and said, "I'll get my baggage in."

"How's that?"

Joe cupped his hands back of his ears and Rob shouted, "I'll get my baggage in."

Joe hobbled out to give what help he could and the men carried Rob's bags in. Rob stacked them in the corner of his bedroom, leaving them unopened, taking only pyjamas and toilet articles from his overnight bag.

Lobo walked stiff-legged around the room, his nose inspecting every nook and corner, then, finally deciding that the bed belonged to that of his new-found master, looked inquiringly.

Rob nodded and said, "All right, boy," and Lobo jumped up on the bed with such light grace that his feet barely seemed to depress the covers.

"Got her all made up fresh for you," Joe said. "How about something to eat? Want to have a little bite?"

Rob shook his head.

"Well, I reckon you're tired. How about that car? I didn't understand about that."

"I'll tell you in the morning."

"How ..."

"Later on," Rob shouted.

"Okay," Joe said, and went hobbling about the kitchen getting things ready for the night, asking a hundred questions without waiting for the answers.

"Get to Paris? ... Did, eh? ... How's that Folies whatchamaycallit? ... Good, eh? ... Right up to specifications ... heh-heh-heh ... Bet you had a front seat. Liked that Switzerland scenery all right, eh? Thought you would ... Lots of lakes and mountains, I s'pose ..."

And so old Joe went on with a rambling interrogation, answering all the questions himself. So far as any contribution to the conversation was concerned, Rob might as well have remained in Europe. But his physical presence was all that was required to give Joe's answers to his own questions sufficient authenticity to satisfy him. For years now he had been too deaf to bother with the long drawn-out process of listening to the other man, save in matters of great importance, so he contented himself with a series of one-sided conversations.

It seemed good to Rob Trenton to be once more splashing in his own shower, working up plenty of suds in the soft water, then drying off, getting into pyjamas and climbing into bed.

The huge windows were wide open, and through the heavy screen came the myriad night noises of the country and a benediction of fresh, pure air which gave the tired traveller^ lungs a feeling of drinking in pure, cool refreshment.

Rob settled under the covers. Lobo adjusted himself so that he was curled against the feet of his new master, and Trenton slept.

Some time towards morning Trenton was aroused by the dog. The animal was growling throatily.

"That's all right, Lobo," Trenton assured him drowsily. "Lie down, it's just a new home."

But the dog stood stiff and rigid, growling. Then with his paw he scratched at the covers over Rob's legs. Annoyed, Trenton said, "Down, Lobo. Down, 1 say."

The dog sank back down on the bed, but his muscles were taut as springs.

Trenton fought his way back from a deeper bliss of refreshing slumber to put out a hand in the general direction of the dog. He patted the animal once or twice reassuringly, said, "It's all right, boy, keep quiet," and promptly went back to sleep.

In the morning he awoke with sunshine streaming through the windows, the lace curtains fluttering with the morning breeze. He felt that his blood had been washed clean in an oxygen bath, that he had been aerated, renewed and filled with vitality.

Lobo, stretched out on the bed in complete oblivion, seemed to be enjoying the advantages of his first day off the ship.

"All right, Lobo," Rob grinned. "It's time to arise and greet the dawn."

The dog opened his eyes, thumped his tail against the foot of the bed, then came crawling up for a morning greeting, putting his head on Rob's chest, letting Rob's fingers rough the hair of his forehead and around his ears.

"All right, boy, let's go," Rob said, and Lobo gained the floor with a quick leap.

Trenton stretched, yawned, kicked his feet into slippers, and went out into the kitchen where Joe, with a fire going in the wood stove, water boiling merrily in the kettle, was frying bacon.

Rob poured himself a cup of coffee from the big fire- blackened pot that was over in the back of the stove.

Joe grinned a greeting, and said, "Got you some orange juice in the ice-box."

Rob motioned that that would come later. He'd take a shower, then have fruit juice and breakfast, but now he wanted cofTee and a chance to relax.

He sipped the coffee, said to Joe, "I'm going to keep Lobo as a house dog, Joe. I'd like to make him a personal dog. I'll train the others but Lobo will be a companion."

Joe cupped his hands back of his ears, squinted his eyes with a concentration of effort at hearing, and Rob smiled, waved his hand and said, "Never mind, itfc nothing."

He walked to the door and inhaled the freshness of the air, looked out over the rolling acres of the countryside, out to the kennels where the dogs were eagerly awaiting their morning schooling, dogs that had been trained to maintain silence unless they had been specifically ordered otherwise.

Rob opened the doors, strolled out into the back yard, inhaled deeply, then suddenly stiffened to attention as he looked at the circle and the driveway.

The little car was gone.

Rob rushed back into the kitchen, put his hand on Joe Colton's shoulder, his mouth close to Joe's ear. "Joe, what happened to the little car?"

"The one you came home with? It's out there."

"No, it isnt."

"What?"

"I say it isn't out there."

Joe started for the door, then after the manner of a good cook, turned, carefully drained the grease from the bacon and set the fiying-pan over on the back of the stove. He grabbed his cane, hobbled to the door, and stood looking at the driveway. "Well, I'll be doggoned," he said.

The two men were silent for a moment.

"How about the keys?" Joe asked. "Didn't you lock her up?"

"Sure I locked it up," Rob Trenton said. He went swiftly to his bedroom, searched the pocket of his coat and came back with the keys to the car. "I locked the ignition," he said.

"Well, she's gone now," Joe told him, and seeing there was nothing for the moment that could be done about the situation he returned to the stove, gave a little shake to the coffee-pot, brought the frying-pan of bacon back over the warm part of the stove and carefully resumed his slow, methodical cooking. "The station wagon's out back of the barn. Anyhow, I hope she is. We'll take a look around as soon's I get this breakfast out of the way."

Rob Trenton dashed in to put on clothes, then out again to look at tracks. It was difficult to tell much about man tracks because Rob and Joe had made so many tracks the night before in unloading the baggage, but there were tyre tracks going in the driveway and there were tyre tracks going out of the driveway. These last tracks showed unmistakably, that the car had been turned north on the highway, in a direction away from town.

Trenton returned for breakfast and said, "I'm going to have to notify Linda Carroll. She has all the data on motor number, engine number and all that, and I suppose, of course, the car is insured."

Joe Colton didn't hear him, but he nodded with that vague agreement which characterises the gesture of a deaf man. "Now you're cooking with gas," he said. "That's the way to handle it."

CHAPTER NINE

The city of Falthaven was a typical city boasting a population of 10,000 despite the fact that the census figures insisted 7,134 represented the total citizenry which could officially be rounded up.

The soft-drink parlour where Rob Trenton asked for directions catered to the bobby-sox crowd. The interior was tilled with the incessant clatter of youthful voices, each voice raised enough to make itself heard above the din of the other voices, which were then in turn raised so as to be heard above the confusion. The result was that Rob Trenton had to lean well across the counter to make certain that he was heard.

"East Robinson Street?" the waitress said, while she was busy putting scoops of ice-cream on split bananas, covering the mixture with heavy syrups of crushed fruit, whipped cream and nuts. "The best way for you to get there is to go up to the next stop light, then turn right and go five blocks. What number did you want?"

"Two hundred and five East Robinson Street."

"Well, when you've gone five blocks, that'll be Robinson Street. Then you turn to your left and it'll be about five or six more blocks."

"All right," Rob told her, smiling. "1 guess I'll drive through it. Thanks."

"Don't mention it," she said, spooning thick marshmallow sauce out of the jar. "You won't have any trouble."

Rob Trenton thanked her, started for the door. "Say," she asked, "what's the name of the party you want? That isn't where Linda Carroll lives, is it?"

Rob nodded.

"Well, you won't have any trouble finding it. It's the second house from the corner on the right-hand side. A big two-storey house. She's an artist and she won't answer the telephone, so you'll have to go up and see if she's home. I saw her uptown an hour or so ago ... had some groceries with her. I guess she'll be back by this time."

Rob found East Robinson Street without difficulty, and following the directions which had been given him, came to the big grey house on the right.

It was an old-fashioned house evidently dating back to the turn of the century. There was about the place an atmosphere of spaciousness which, while lacking the efficiency of the modern small-spaced cottage, nevertheless was reminiscent of stability and that slower tempo which characterised a bygone era.

Rob's heart was beating more rapidly than usual as he parked the battered old station wagon, and climbed the wooden stairs to the porch, then pressed his thumb against the bell button.

He could hear the sounds of musical chimes from the interior of the house.

There was no other sound from within.

Rob once more pressed his thumb against the bell button, holding it there for several seconds.

This time as the sound of the chimes faded away he distinctly heard someone moving in one of the rooms, but no one came to the door.

Rob felt Linda Carroll would hardly leave him to stand on the front porch, regardless of what she might be doing. She certainly would look through one of the windows to find out who was calling, and when she had learned the identity of her visitor, Rob was sure that he would be admitted. His ears heard a faint sound immediately on the other side of the heavy front door. He had the feeling that he was being carefully scrutinised. Yet nothing else happened. He stood there on the porch until the seconds ripened into a full two minutes. Angry, he rang the chimes twice in rapid succession.

Suddenly the door burst open.

A woman in a smock stained with oil colours, red hair in stringy disarray over her ears, glasses perched on a sharp nose over a broad mouth, which might be capable of smiles but which was at the moment a thin line of indignation, glowered at him. She was slender, willowy, angry, and twenty years older than Linda Carroll.

"What do you mean ... ringing my doorbell four times like that?" she asked in a rapid fire of angry speech. "Can't you see I'm busy? I'd have come to the door if I'd wanted to. I heard you the first time. I'm not deaf. What do you suppose I put those loud chimes on there for? My goodness, you'd think I didn't have anything to do except answer the telephone and the front doorbell. Someone wants to sell something. Someone wants to get charitable donations for a fund. Someone rings up just to see how 1 am ..."

"I'm sorry," Rob managed to interrupt the tirade. "I want to see Miss Linda Carroll, please, and it's quite important."

"Of course you want to see Linda Carroll!" the woman stormed. "So does everyone else in town. This is one of those days. I do my shopping early so I can come back and settle down to a little uninterrupted painting, and what happens? The telephone rings, the doorbell rings, and now you come, and you 'want to see Linda Carroll'," she mimicked. "You and two thousand other people in town." "Please," Rob Trenton said, "1 have to see Miss Linda Carroll on a matter of considerable importance."

The woman tilted her head back so that it seemed her sharp nose was pointed directly at Trenton. Her shrewd eyes studied him carefully. "What's your name?"

"I'm Rob Trenton. I have just returned from a trip to Europe. I sailed on the same ship with Linda Carroll, both going over and coming back."

She held the door open and said, "Come on in."

Rob Trenton entered the house, went through a reception hall and was ushered into a front room which had at one time evidently been a parlour and living-room and which was now fixed up as a studio. There was a half-finished painting on an easel and dozens of other paintings, some in frames, some without frames, scattered around the place, hanging on the walls or simply propped up against the sides of the walls.

"This is my workshop," she said. "Sit down."

"I want to see Miss Linda Carroll."

"I'm Miss Linda Carroll."

"I'm afraid there's some mistake," Rob said. "I must have the wrong Carroll. Perhaps, however, you can help me out. 1 know that the Linda Carroll 1 want is an artist and lives here in Falthaven."

The woman shook her head, her lips tightly clamped together, her manner decisive. "You're either trying to spoof me or you're barking up a wrong tree. Now which is it?"

"The Linda Carroll whom 1 know is about twenty-five years old. She has chestnut hair, hazel eyes, is about five feet five inches tall, and weighs about a hundred and seven teen pounds."

"You say she's a painter?"

"That's right."

"And lives in Falthaven?"

"Yes ... I happen to know she gave this as her address. It was on her passport."

The woman slowly shook her head. "I'm Linda Carroll. I'm a painter. 1 live here in Falthaven, and there isn't any other Linda Carroll living here. Now suppose you tell me just what this is all about."

Rob Trenton, rather dazed, reached for his hat, said, "Well, if there's been a mistake ... I ..."

"Now just a moment, young man. Don't think you're going to come in here with a story like that and then just gel up and walk out. 1 want to know what it's all about."

"I'm afraid that the matter 1 have in mind is private and something which has to be discussed with the young woman in question."

"Now, I don't know what this is all about, but I don't like the way you come in here and tell your story. Apparently someone's been impersonating me and I want to know all about it. Why are you so anxious to see this woman? What's it all about? What makes you in such a rush?"

"Miss Carroll," Rob Trenton said with dignity, "let me have ... that is, she loaned me an automobile and it's been stolen."

"Gave you an automobile "

"No, loaned it to me."

"Well, make up your mind which it was. You said first she gave it to you, then you said she loaned it to you."

"1 beg your pardon. I may have said she let me have it. I certainly didn't say she gave it to me, and since you're not the woman 1 have in mind ..."

"Now don't try to back up," she interrupted. "Someone's been impersonating me, and I s'pose I should go to the police. However, I'll let you tell me the whole story so I can judge what I'm going to do.

"Now you just go right ahead, young man, and tell me the whole thing right from the start. How'd you meet this woman, anyway?"

"It's rather a long story."

"Well, I should think it would be. And what's happened to the automobile?"

"1 don't know. It was stolen from my place last night."

"You reported the theft to the police?"

"No, not yet."

"Why not?"

"Well, I ... I thought 1 should see her first and 1 haven't the data on the car, the serial number or ... well, it would all sound rather strange to go to the police with a story the way it is now. I'd like to have some details clarified before I report it."

"I should think you would want to have things clarified. It sounds terribly fuzzy to me. If someone's been impersonating me I want to know it."

"No one was impersonating you," Rob Trenton said. "I simply have to find the Linda Carroll who was on the ship with me. There must have been some mistake in the address. Certainly this city isn't so big but what ..."

"Well, I can tell you that it's small enough so I'd know if there was any other Linda Carroll in town, and particularly if she were a painter. Either someone's been spoofing you, or you're trying to spoof me!"

Despite the fact that words and voice were sharp, there was a certain twinkling kindliness about her eyes.

Rob Trenton tried to keep his voice sufficiently under control so that it would not show undue interest. "May 1 ask if you have a passport?" he asked.

"Of course I have a passport. What does that have to do with it?"

"I just wondered. Perhaps your passpon has been stolen."

"No, it hasn't." "Have you looked for it recently?"

"I'm telling you my passport hasn't been stolen. Now that's all there is to that. You don't need to start trying to cross-examine me, young man. The shoe should be on the other foot."

"I'm not trying to cross-examine you," Trenton said. "Quite evidently you feel someone was using your name, and in view of the fact that it takes a passport to get anywhere at all in Europe, I'm quite certain the passport must have had your name on it."

"And my photograph?"

"I don't know. I didn't see the photograph."

"Well, no one has taken my passport, I can assure you of that."

"Would you mind giving me definite assurance?"

"What do you mean by that?"

"Showing me your passport. I have a very firm conviction that you'll find the passport is missing."

"Nonsense!"

"Well, will you at least please look for it?"

She hesitated a moment, then said, "All right. You sit right there. Don't move out of that chair. Don't go snooping around. I don't like to have people prowling around here."

Rob smiled. "All right. I'll promise. You go and look for your passport and I think you'll be surprised."

She left the room, was gone two or three minutes then came back and triumphantly pushed a green-backed folder under Rob Trenton's nose. "Perhaps you'd like to look at it yourself."

So firmly had Trenton become convinced the girl he knew as Linda Carroll had been using the passport of this woman he could hardly conceal his surprise.

He took the passport and thumbed through the pages. There was no question that this was the passport of Linda Carroll of Falthaven, and that it had not been tampered with. The photograph in the front of the passport was undoubtedly that of the woman who was standing in front of him and could not, by any possibility, have been the photograph of the woman whom he had known as Linda Carroll.

"Satisfied?" she asked at length.

Robert Trenton handed the passport back to her.

She saw the expression in his eyes and suddenly softened. "I'm sorry," she said, "but I'm afraid someone has victimised you. Now suppose you tell me exactly what's wrong?"

Rob Trenton shook his head. "I'm afraid I can't tell you any of it."

"You said something about an automobile?"

"My story sounds absolutely incredible," Rob said. "I need time to think it over. I ... I'm very sorry that I intruded on you. Miss Carroll, and I hope I haven't been too much of a nuisance."

She placed a sympathetic hand on his arm. "Now don't you be all upset," she said in a motherly manner. "You met this woman who said she was Linda Carroll... and what happened?"

Rob just shook his head, dumbly.

"I want you to tell me."

Trenton said, "There is nothing to tell. The whole thing is beyond my comprehension. I'm sorry ... you'll excuse me."

He started for the door.

She followed him, again took his arm. "I think you'd better tell me," she said. "What is it? Did you fall in love?"

Rob didn't answer, and the woman with the sharp nose and the glasses stood in the doorway watching him as he walked dejectedly down the wooden steps to the sidewalk, walked to the battered, decrepit station wagon and climbed in.

Then, as he started the car, she quietly closed the door, her face wearing a thoughtful, puzzled frown.

CHAPTER TEN

Five blocks from the big frame house of Linda Carroll, the station wagon suddenly clattered into organised sounds of metallic distress and stopped abruptly. Rob Trenton tried to make an inspection. It seemed that something had torn loose in the differential and had stripped gears, then locked the whole driving mechanism. A garage with a tow car finally removed the station wagon and left Trenton with no alternative to return by bus.

He ate lunch at a little restaurant in the bus station.

A few minutes before the bus was due he walked down the street to the drugstore, called State Police Headquarters, failed to give his name, and reported the Rapidex sedan as having been stolen. He hung up in the middle of the conversation before embarrassing questions could be asked and then went back to the bus station.

A thin, nervous man who stood by the gate kept looking at his watch. He finally engaged Trenton in conversation. "Seems like that bus will never get here. Is that time right?"

He indicated a clock on the wall.

"That's the right time," Rob said, consulting his watch.

The man said irritably, "I'm doing a contracting job in Noonville. I have to get there. What I can't understand is what happened to the other fellows who are working on the job with me. They were supposed to show up in their car twenty minutes ago. 1 told them if they didn't get here I'd take a bus ... hang it, it's irritating."

Rob Trenton was in no particular mood to take on anyone else's troubles. He merely nodded.

A car drove up and the door opened. A squat, broad- shouldered man in overalls and jumper, a disarming grin on his face, pushed his way towards the gate. "Hello, Sam."

The nervous man whirled round. There was relief on his face. "Gosh, it's about time you got here. We're going to be late."

"We can make it," the man said, and then added, "We had a blowout but it's okay now. It's a good thing we fixed it. The bus is half an hour late."

"Half an hour late?"

"That's the report we got. Come on, let's go."

The man turned to Rob Trenton apologetically. "You heard what my friend said? The bus is half an hour late. We're going to Noonville, if you're going in that direction."

"Noonville is where I go," Trenton said.

"Well, come on. Get in with us. We'll have you there in an hour. If the bus is a half hour late it'll take two hours running time and ..."

"Have you got room?" Rob asked.

"Sure thing," the man in overalls said. "There are only four of us in a six-passenger car. Got any baggage?"

"No baggage."

"Well, come on. Let's go."

Rob didn't stop to think until he found himself in the back seat of the big sedan between two well-dressed, quiet-spoken men. His chance acquaintance at the bus depot and the man in overalls occupied the front seat.

Then certain matters caught Rob's attention and stirred him to vague uneasiness.

The car was too big, too powerful, too well-appointed to match the story which had been given Rob by the man at the bus terminal. The men on each side of Rob in the back seat were too competent, too quiet, too ominously unsocial.

For a moment Rob thought of the things he had heard about people who were 'taken for a ride'. Then he tried to dispel the vague feeling of uneasiness by cold logic. The man was a contractor. Naturally he would have men of money with him as well as some working men to do the heavy work. It was all right. Rob tried to convince himself that he must cease letting his imagination run away with him.

And then the rushing speed of the car, the odd silence of the men who were sitting on each side of him, brought Rob to a decision.

He looked at his wristwatch, snapped his fingers and said, "By gosh, fellows, 1 forgot ... 1 clean forgot ..."

There were two or three seconds of silence.

"What did you forget?" the driver asked.

"1 forgot a telephone call that I've simply got to make," Trenton said. "I knew there was something. I know you're in a hurry, so just let me out here and I'll put in the call and take a taxi back to the bus station. I can make it if the bus is going to be half an hour late."

"Oh, that's all right," the driver said. "We'll take him to a phone, eh, boys?"

"Sure," one of the men in the back seat said.

The car sped on, smoothly gliding through traffic.

"There's a telephone in that service station," Rob said.

"So there is," one of the men said. "Turn around, Sam. We'll run back there and let the guy phone."

Rob heaved a sigh of relief, turned around to look through the back window to make certain that the service station actually did have a telephone sign in front of it. Once in that service station he made up his mind he would go to the men£ room, turn the bolt in the door and refuse to come out.

The driver slammed on the brakes hard.

The men in the back seat all lurched forward. Rob particularly, since he was facing towards the rear of the car, was thrown off balance.

He hardly had time to appreciate the significance of the manoeuvre before the black rug in the back of the car descended over his head and handcuffs snapped on his wrist.

"Okay, Sam," one of the men said. "Keep going."

Rob Trenton, suffocating beneath the heavy, black rug, let out a yell for help at the top of his lungs.

Something crashed down on the top of his head. There was a blinding flash of light and then he felt himself falling through darkness.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Rob regained consciousness by degrees. He was first aware of the painful jolting of his head, then a dim light penetrated his eyes, and the sensation of suffocation returned. For the moment he could not recall what had happened or where he was, but protective instinct cautioned him to lie still.

Gradually memory returned.

He found that the rug was still over his head but that a fold of the cloth enabled a limited amount of air to pass to his nostrils. Any turning of the head would result in shutting off this flow of air. His wrists were pinioned by handcuffs, but, tensing the muscles of his lower legs, he could feel no restrictive bonds on them.

He realised that he was on the floor of the car, that the two men who had been in the rear of the car were on each side of the seat, their feet resting against his body so that they could batter him down or kick him into insensibility should he make any attempt to raise his body.

No one said anything, but from the odour of tobacco smoke which reached him Rob knew that one of the men was smoking a good cigar.

The car purred onward at steady speed. Rob Trenton felt that he had been unconscious for some time because the bones and muscles which were in contact with the carpeted floor of the car

were aching. He had the distinct feeling that any attempt to move would have disastrous consequences.

The minutes lengthened into what seemed to be an hour.

A voice finally broke the silence "Say, is that goof all right?"

"Sure."

"You conked him pretty hard."

"He's all right."

Rob sensed motion above him. A hand clapped itself on his forearm, then slid down to the waist. The middle finger, pressing in just the right place, counted the pulse. "Hell, he's doing fine."

The men settled back in the seat.

Rob Trenton could stand it no longer. He stirred and as soon as he changed position the folds of the rug fell about his nose, virtually shutting off the air.

"Air!" he muttered quickly, surprised at the sound of his own voice. "Air, give me air."

One of the men laughed. A foot kicked him at the base of the spine.

Rob tried to struggle erect. Anything was better than this suffocation.

He heard a voice say, "No more of that. Give the guy some air."

There was motion above him and the rug was pulled halfway back and cool air struck Rob's face, was drawn down deep into his oxygen-starved lungs.

"Don't try to get up," a voice said. "Don't try to see where you're going. Stay in that position. Don't talk."

"But what in the world is this ..."

"Shut up."

"Let him talk," an authoritative voice from the front seat said.

The man in the right rear promptly vetoed the suggestion. "Better let him do all his talking at once." His voice was ominous in its quiet contradiction.

. "Okay," agreed the man in the front seat, gruffly.

The car was moving rapidly now and Rob Trenton felt certain from the smooth purr of the wheels they were on a modern highway. The sounds of passing traffic indicated they were either approaching or leaving some large city.

A few moments later Rob decided they had left the city behind as the car rocketed into increasing speed.

He tried slowly shifting his position. There were no objections from the men in the back seat.

"Why the dickens can't you take these things off?" Rob asked, as the steel handcuffs bit into his wrists again.

"You're doing all right the way you are, buddy. It won't be long now."

"They hurt."

"Well, now, ain't that too bad?"

Someone laughed.

Abruptly, unable to endure the torture of lying in one cramped position any longer, Rob braced himself against the pain in his wrists and rolled completely over so that he was facing the back seat. He saw the feet of two men, their neatly creased and tailored trousers.

"Hey, none of that," one of the men said. "Go on back to where you were."

"I can't. I'm too cramped."

The man on the other side of the rear seat interposed a comment, "He's been down there quite a while. Let the guy roll over if he wants. Dont try to get up, buddy, or we'll kick you into a headache you'll remember as long as you live."

Rob, feeling easier now that he had rolled over on the side away from the tortured muscles, settled down to wait.

The car swung into a right-angle turn, jolted over a rough road. The smell of greenery, vegetation and dampness came to Rob's nostrils. The car slowed, jolted painfully, then, after some ten minutes, came to a stop.

One of the men opened the door, said, "Okay, buddy out you

go"

Rob tried to get to his feet but with his hands handcuffed behind his back he could only flounder around like an awkward fish in death-struggles on a wharf.

The other men partially lifted him to the ground. Rob had a brief glimpse of trees, the shimmer of afternoon sun on water, and then a blindfold was whipped over his eyes and tied tightly into position.

Rob wondered how prisoners ever endured the torture of handcuffs. The pressure of the metal against the bone had become a steady, insistent torture.

"For heaven's sake, take these handcuffs off!" he said.

"Take them off," the quiet voice ordered. "He's had a pretty rough time of it."

A man took Rob's right arm. Another moved over to take his left arm. The handcuffs were unlocked and clicked open.

"Now just walk quietly and straight," the quiet voice ordered.

They started walking. After a few minutes Rob realised he was walking on planks. The hollow sound led him to believe it was a pier of some sort. Then a moment later one of his guards said, "Take it easy now, Trenton. Lift your right foot high. Now a long step."

Trenton thrust out his right foot, afraid for the moment that he might find nothing but water underneath. Then this foot came on the deck of a boat. From the motion of the boat as the five men boarded it, Rob judged it was perhaps fifty or sixty feet in length - a big shallow-draft houseboat.

Rob was guided down a steep flight of stairs and into a room. The blindfold was removed. Rob found himself in a small, sparsely furnished room. Through a port-hole he could see the tops of a thick clump of trees and a patch of blue sky.

He rubbed his wrists, sparring for time.

The man who was wearing the overalls and the man who had occupied the right-hand corner of the rear seat remained in the room. The other left.

The man with the overalls did the talking.

"Well?" he asked.

"That's what I want to know," Rob said. "1 have no idea what this is all about."

"Forget it," the man with the overalls cut in. "We're interested in that Rapidex automobile. We took it from your place last night. Something had happened to it between the time it left the Customs shed and when it arrived at your place. Now I want to know what."

Rob tried to keep from showing that he had any idea of what the man was talking about. "You mean you took that car?"

"That's right."

"You had no right to touch it without my permission. That's theft, that ..."

"Sure it's theft," the man agreed. "Don't bother talking about that. We want to know what happened to the car."

"What do you mean? What happened to it? You've just admitted you stole it. That's what happened to it."

"You know what 1 mean."

"What time did you take the car?" Rob countered.

"What does that have to do with it?"

"It may have a lot to do with it," Rob said. "1 left that car parked in my driveway. And if all this fuss is over a blown-out tyre - but no, all this wouldn't be over a tyre. It couldn't be."

The men exchanged glances.

"Where was it when you had the blowout, Trenton?"

"I can't tell you. it was ... well, I can't remember the exact place."

The chunky man, who had been in the back seat, said, "When you come right down to it, Rex, someone could have beat us to it there at the driveway and ..

"Oh, nuts," the man in overalls said.

He got up out of the chair, took off the blue denim jumper, hesitated a moment, then took off his shirt and undershirt. Naked to the waist, he walked towards Rob and, suddenly pivoting on the hip, smashed Rob flush on the jaw.

Rob's head shot back on his neck. He saw a shooting procession of stars and staggered back against the wall. A red rage enveloped him. He went charging blindly at the blurred image of the man's naked torso, and a straight left snapped his head back.

Abruptly Rob became deadly cool.

The man stepped in, hooking a vicious right to the chin. Rob stepped back, avoided the blow, then moved forward with a swift left and had the satisfaction of feeling his whole arm tingle with the shock of impact.

The heavy-set man sat with one hip propped on the table. He was smoking a cigar and seemed to be enjoying the fight.

"Why, you little squirt," Rex said, and came forward, weaving back and forth with the unmistakable manner of a professional boxer.

He feinted with his left, his right whipped into Rob's ribs,

Rob swung slightly and crashed a straight right with lots of force behind it. He felt the fist strike squarely on his opponent^

nose.

The man who had been sitting on the table, watching the fight with amusement, carefully laid down his cigar, slid down off the table.

Rob's opponent stepped back.

A red stream came from his nose, down across his lips and chin, spattered to his naked chest.

His eyes narrowed with rage; he closed in, Rob ducked.

The heavy-set man kicked Rob in the stomach. Rob pivoted but the pain of the kick robbed his punch of its power. He hit the other man in his ribs, then went down.

The heavy-set man opened the door, whistled a shrill summons. Two men came running down the corridor. Rob heard an exclamation of incredulous surprise at the bloody nose of the man in overalls, then felt the bite of ropes on his arms.

They tied Rob with the thoroughness of sailors who are accustomed to doing a workmanlike job with ropes.

Rob was trembling now with the reaction of rage and physical effort. He saw a battered, bloody face and for a moment could hardly realise that his own fists had wrought that havoc. It was the first lime he could remember that he had smashed at a man with his fists in rage.

Somewhere above him a man said thickly through puffed lips, ' Now you damn little jerk, if ye think we're going to let you play ring-around-the-rosy with a half million dollars' worth of powder, you're nuts."

A foot crashed into his jaw and he lost consciousness.

Rob had no way of knowing how long he had been unconscious. As he came to, he heard low voices. Slowly the sounds made words. Almost unwillingly Rob's mind translated those word sounds into meaning. Two men were sitting at the table, a bottle of whisky, two glasses and a siphon of soda water between them. Rob heard the clink of ice and it emphasised the thick dryness of his tongue. His head was throbbing with one vast ache. His whole body was racked with pain. Having dared open his eyes just enough to see the men, he closed them again, lay motionless.

One of the men said casually, "I tell you, I think the guy's right. He isn't the type to have pulled a stunt like that. If he'd found it, he'd have gone to the police."

"Well, then," the other man said, "there's only one possible solution, and that is someone high-graded it while it was in the driveway before we got there, and 1 don't think that's possible."

Rob heard soda squirt into the whisky glasses, then one of the men said, "Well, we've got to figure it out inside a couple of hours. We have to think of a getaway."

"I'm not making any getaway that leaves all our profits behind."

"Forget it, we've made enough."

"You mean we will have made enough when we get this deal over. Until then we're just suckers. We've pyramided our profits on this. The big pay-off is all tied up in this deal."

"The big pay-off with me is keeping out of stir. You haven't done time. 1 have. 1 don't want any more of it."

There was silence save for the tinkle of ice against glasses, a sound which tortured Rob Trenton's ears, made him even more conscious of his burning throat.

Rob heard the sound of quick, excited steps in the passage outside the room. Then the doorknob was twisted and the door burst open.

One of the men at the table said angrily, "Knock when you come in here. What the hell ..."

A voice in the doorway interrupted in a hoarse whisper, "There's a man out in the bushes, over on the point, studying the place with binoculars, he's built a regular blind like a duck blind, right in the edge of the brush, and ..."

Two chairs scraped back as though the action had been rehearsed. A calmly authoritative voice said, "Well, take another one of the boys with you, sneak up behind him, throw down on him with a rod and bring the guy in. We want to talk to him."

Rob heard above the sound of feet on the bare boards someone saying, "How about this guy here?"

"Lock him in," someone said. It was a voice of command. Rob thought it was the voice of the heavy-set man who had been perched on the edge of the table smoking while Rob had been fighting, but he couldn't be sure. "Get that electric spark device connected with the gasoline," the voice went on. "If we clean out of here we want to be sure the boat isn't left for the bulls to prod around in. Shake the lead out and let's go."

The men hurried out, paused once more for a huddled conference in the corridor, then pounded upstairs.

Rob, his ears straining to listen, lay absolutely motionless, with his eyes closed, keeping his breathing slow and regular.

Two of the men remaining behind discussed strategy in a low voice.

"We're getting in deeper and deeper," an anxious voice said.

"Well, you can't help it now."

"We started out with dope, now we've gone in for kidnapping. You know what that means."

"All right. Quit now and get caught," the other voice said savagely and sarcastically. "You can figure it out lor yourself What we're going to do now, is to keep from getting caught ."

"Well, if we go on from here, let's be damned certain we don't get caught."

"I tell you this is the wind-up. We can get out but we've got to get this thing cleaned up and cashed in. Did you ever try being on the lam when your dough had run out? If I'm taking a powder 1 want to be dough-heavy. Now get your knees so they'll work and get the hell out of here."

The door closed and Rob heard the click of a key on the outside. Then he heard swift activity below decks on the boat and someone giving orders.

A man climbed to the deck, and Rob heard steps moving along the dock. After a brief interval a figure walked past the porthole on the outside, temporarily shutting out a bit of the late afternoon sunlight ... Four or five minutes later another man walked to the deck and moved casually along the planks. Then two more left quietly.

Rob opened his eyes, squirmed and tried to take stock of the situation.

His arms were tied behind his back, the rope running from his wrist down to his ankles. He couldn't straighten out but had too keep his knees slightly flexed in order to keep the rope from biting into the flesh of his wrists. He could, however, roll to his stomach and then stand on his knees; but this accomplished nothing, and after a few seconds the pain of supporting his weight on his knees against the bare floor caused Rob to settle back with his weight on one hip and then after a moment he fell down on his side.

He had had an opportunity to take stock of the room in which he found himself. It was evidently a species of storeroom, the shelves being well-stocked with canned goods. There was a table, two or three chairs in the room by way of furniture, and nothing else.

Rob tried to twist his wrists around inside the ropes but the ropes were knotted with a nautical cunning that made the knots tighter and firmer the more Rob moved.

Lying on his side, he tried to double his knees so that he could reach the knots at his ankles, but found that only the tips of his fingers could work on knots which were far too tightly tied to yield to any such treatment. He explored several different positions and finally found one where he was in a measure comfortable, and settled himself to waiting.

Outside the light lessened until dusk settled and deepened into darkness.

Rob heard running steps on the little wharf to which the boat was moored. Then he heard a bustle of activity aboard, which was followed by another long period of silence.

When it was completely dark, so that Rob could see stars through the porthole, he heard a shuffle of steps on the dock outside. It sounded as though a compact group of men were carrying something to the boat. The boat swayed slightly as men boarded it, and Rob heard a brisk struggle taking place on the deck directly above him. There was the pounding of feet, the noise of men straining and cursing, the sound of blows, then suddenly the struggle ceased. Rob heard something being dragged for a few feet, then the shuffle of steps and then another long period of silence.

CHAPTER TWELVE

Big Ed Wallington, known to fellow troopers in the State Police as 'Moose', hitched his chair around in front of the typewriter at the barracks and held big ham-like hands over the keyboard as he pounded out a condensed report of his activities on the previous day's patrol.

Never particularly adept at punching the keyboard, Moose Wallington paused from time to time to take the cramps out of his fingers.

Seated beside him, a fellow trooper, who had a flair for conversation but no gift for written reports, was finding the going tough.

"Getting so there's so much paper work in this organisation," he said, "they'll have to list writer's cramp as an occupational hazard."

"Uh-huh," Moose said, flexing his fingers. "Had a blow-out last night. Guess it was soft for a while before it went out. But she let go with a bang. Surprising how hot one of those tyres get when it lets go. Believe me, I could hardly handle the thing."

He returned to the keyboard, started writing names under the classification "Routine checks of driving licences."

He came to the name Trenton, aged twenty-five, Noonville. Then as he started to type the name in his report he suddenly stopped, his middle finger held poised over the letter he had been about to hit.

"What's the matter?" the other trooper asked. "Suddenly got a cramp, or is it an inspiration?"

"Darned if I don't think it's an inspiration," Wallington said thoughtfully.

"How come?"

"This business of the tyre getting hot when there's been a blow-out."

"Well, what about it?"

"1 came on this car last night," Wallington said, "pulled off to the side of the road, and the driver said he was just getting ready to move on after changing a tyre. He'd had a blow-out all right ... and something kept pounding away at the back of my mind about that guy all night. Something seemed to be wrong. I couldn't figure what it was. Now it's just occurred to me."

"What was it?"

"He'd put the blown-out tyre on the spare and apparently had just let the car down off the jack. When I drove up he was putting the tools away and was ready to move on. But there was something about him. You know how you get to playing hunches. You just have a copper's hunch that something is wrong and ... well, hang it, 1 kept thinking about this fellow."

"What did he look like?"

"It wasn't that. It was just the whole set-up. But do you know, Don, I went over and punched that tyre a couple of times, the one that had gone flat with a blow-out. Well, it was flat all right, and I looked at the big hole in the side where the tube had blown out, and somehow something wasn't right. And it was that blown-out tyre. It was cold as a rock."

The trooper at the adjoining table was regarding him with questioning eyes. "What did you do about it?"

"Not a darned thing," Moose Wallington admitted, crestfallen, "because I never noticed it ... that is, I noticed it, but I didn't think about it. Just when 1 touched that tyre 1 thought there was

something wrong, but for the life of me there a the time I couldn't think what it was." "You checked his licence?" "Uh-huh."

"Well, don't let Lieutenant Tyler know about it. Put it in as a routine licence check. Shucks, the guy had probably been driving slow and it was night, and ..."

"Nope, he was lying to me," Moose Wallington said. "That tyre hadn't blown out there. He'd had that blown-out tyre on the spare rim for quite a ways. Long enough so the cool night air had cooled the carcass of that tyre ..."

"Or he'd stopped to look at the moon," the other interrupted. "Go ahead, put it in as a routine licence check-up and let it go at that."

Wallington shook his head. He ratcheted the sheet of paper down to the place calling for remarks and typed:

Remarks: On state highway 72, about two miles past the junction with highway 40, came on a Rapidex sedan being driven by Robert Trenton of Noonville. Driving licence seemed to be in order and there's no pick-up order on his car. The party claimed to have stopped for change of blown-out tyre but there was no evidence on the ground that the stop had been for that purpose. Checked files again this afternoon just prior to going on duty to see if there was anything on the car.

Moose started to type 'found nothing had been reported', then with a grin decided he'd done enough faking and had better go and check the late bulletins.

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Routine procedure required that in case of anything at all suspicious, he should call in on his two-way radio at the scene of the inspection, to find if there had been any late bulletins on the car. He trusted that the fact he had not done so would not seem too apparent to the eagle eye of Lieutenant Tyler who would scan the report. But having listed Robert Trenton as subject worthy of'remarks' rather than under the routine licence check, Wallington decided it would be highly advisable to make a careful check of the bulletin board.

He found an entry which puzzled him. "Anonymous telephone call from Falthaven reported theft of light, two-door Rapidex sedan, presumably registered in name of Linda Carroll but with no data available on licence number or engine number Party hung up in middle of conversation."

Moose Wallington walked back to his typewriter and continued pounding out his report.

In view of bulletin on Rapidex from Falthaven, feel further investigation should be made of Robert Trenton and this occurrence.

Having signed the report, Big Ed Wallington picked it up and walked to the office of Lieutenant Tyler.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

Big Ed Wallington pulled the cruiser off towards the side of the road and slowed down. "Now it was right along in here somewhere," he said.

Lieutenant Tyler said, "I'd like to find the exact spot if we can do so."

"Well, 1 remember I went through a soft patch of earth just before 1 got out of the car. It should be ... right along in here ..."

"Take it easy," Tyler said. "Put it in low gear." The car crawled along. Suddenly Wallington said, "This is the place. There are my tracks. There's where I went through the soft verge."

"Okay. This is good," Tyler said. "Leave it here."

They stopped the car. Moose Wallington put on the red blinker which warned traffic coming from both directions that a Slate Police car was parked by the side of the road. The two officers got out, carrying flashlights, and walked slowly along the ground, studying the car tracks.

"This is where 1 parked. Right here," Wallington said. "When 1 pulled out you can see that I turned over to the left."

"All right. Now where was this other car?"

"Well, now, I'd say he was about fifteen feet ahead of me. 1 wanted to have it so my lights would show him up good ... and ... yes, there are his tracks right there."

"All right," Lieutenant Tyler said. "Let's look around."

They examined the ground carefully.

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"Don't see any signs of a jack having been put down here," Wallington said, "and there certainly wasn't any flat tyre on the car which pulled in here."

Lieutenant Tyler walked slowly and carefully. Wallington^ flashlight paused on a fence post. "Say," he said. "Look at this. There's a chip taken out of that fence post and it looks fresh."

The two officers moved over and studied the light-coloured surface of the fence post which showed in contrast to the dark, weathered exterior of the other portion.

"There's the chip on the ground," Wallington said. "Somebody cut it off very recently. It's good and fresh ... that's a marker."

Lieutenant Tyler examined the chip, took a can of pipe tobacco from his pocket, regretfully dumped out the tobacco and put the chip inside the can.

Wallington said, "I'm sorry I bungled this, sir."

"You haven't bungled it," Lieutenant Tyler replied. "I had a man in Noonville give us a report on Rob Trenton. He's pretty well-known there. Trains dogs. In fact he's sold us half a dozen dogs that he's given basic training. We've taken them on from there."

"What does Trenton have to say?" Wallington asked.

"He doesn't say anything. He isn't there. But the man who works for him and has charge of the dogs when Trenton is away, said Trenton drove this car home and left it in the driveway. In the morning it was gone. Trenton started out in his station wagon and hasn't been heard from since. He's just back from a European trip. I telephoned Customs to see if they knew anything about the car and they told me Trenton had been subjected to quite a search because of association with a man by the name of Ostrander who was thought to have been mixed up in smuggling drugs."

"What happened to Ostrander?"

88

"Ostrander was given a thorough search and a clean bill of health, but under the circumstances I'm not going to take any chances."

The trooper's flashlight moved slowly along the ground. Moose Wallington said, "Look here, Lieutenant. There's fresh dirt on top of the grass and here's a place where the sod has been cut."

"Get the shovel out of the car, Ed," Lieutenant Tyler snapped.

The trooper hurried over to the cruiser, raised the turtleback and returned with a short-handled shovel.

Lieutenant Tyler lifted the circular segment of sod, then dug cautiously downward. He stopped suddenly as the lip of the shovel rang on metal and a moment later he brought out the circular piece of metal and the packages wrapped in oiled silk.

Wallington whistled.

Lieutenant Tyler said, "Tune in on your radio. Give Headquarters code signal fourteen. That'll get four more men on the job. What's the co-ordinate here?"

"I'll look it up," Wallington said, taking his book from the glove compartment of the car.

A moment later he picked up the receiver from the hook on the two-way radio, said, "This is car seven calling Headquarters signal fourteen, co-ordinate AB north three hundred, and seventy-two east."

Wallington could hear the dispatchers' voice snap to quick interest, "Signal fourteen?"

"Right."

"Okay," the dispatcher said, then hung up.

Lieutenant Tyler said, "Now I want to put some of this stuff back in the ground. We'll keep the rest of it and ..."

"You mean we're going to leave some of this stuff here?"

"That's right. When the man who dug that hole comes back to pick up the stuff 1 want to be sure we have a charge against

him that'll stick. It's not a crime to dig a hole in the ground, but it is a crime to have dope in your possession. 1 want to see that he has plenty in his possession."

"Yes, sir."

"All right," Tyler said, filling his pockets with packages from the oiled silk cache. "We'll bury the rest and leave the ground just like it was. Then we'll get out of here so that these passing motorists won't wonder what we're doing. Of course, we're taking a chance that the man who buried it isn't one of these passing motorists ... 1 think it's a little early. I wish those reinforcements would show up. When they do, I'm going to station a man over in that field with a telephone. We'll plant cruisers down the road on each side. I don't want these boys to get away. 1 want to catch them red-handed."

They walked back to the police cruiser and sat down to wait, knowing that within a matter of minutes two more cruisers loaded with men prepared for any emergency would be on the ground.

The co-ordinates had located the position of car seven within two hundred feet.

The trap was ready to be set.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Rob ached to the bone. The parched dryness of his mouth was causing his tongue to swell. He determined to try shouting. At the moment, he felt that he could risk anything in order to get a glass of cool, refreshing water.

He took a deep breath - then held it as he heard steps outside, the sound of a key being turned in the lock. The door opened. A low candle power electric light clicked on. The big man, who had sat on the table, smoking, while amusedly watching Rob and the other man fight, walked across the stateroom to the porthole, pulled a curtain across it and stood looking down at Rob with eyes that were half-closed in thoughtful speculation.

"How about water?" Rob asked thickly.

"Sure," the man said. "Sure thing. I'll bet you are thirsty. You came out of it pretty easy though. You aren't marked up much."

"I feel as though I'd been put through a mangle," Rob said.

"Sure, you'll feel pretty tough. Okay, I'll get you some water."

He left the little room, taking care to lock the door behind him, was gone for some twenty or thirty seconds, then returned with a glass of water. "How about sitting up?" he asked.

Rob sat up. The man held the glass to Rob's lips, tilting it so that Rob would gulp down the water.

"How's that?" he asked.

Rob sputtered and choked on the last of the drink, but managed to say, "That's better. 1 could use more of that."

"Not right now," the man said, perching himself on the table, cupping his hands around one of his knees and studying.Rob thoughtfully. "You and I are going to have a little talk."

Rob said nothing.

"You're a tough little rooster," the man said admiringly, lighting a rich brown cigar. "Where did you learn to fight?"

"1 did some boxing in school."

"I'll tell the world you did. Put up a pretty good fight, considering that you had to give away forty pounds at the start. Now let's talk a little sense. Let's get over this business of being tough with each other. It isn't going to get us anywhere."

"What do you want to talk about?"

"Your name's Trenton, isn't it?"

"Yes."

"Rob Trenton?"

"That's right."

"Now look, Rob, let's be grown up and quit this kid stuff. You drove that Rapidex sedan from the dock to your place at Noonville. Now something happened to the car between the time you started and the time you arrived."

"Sure it did. I had a blow-out," Rob said.

"Something else happened to it."

Rob tried to look innocent.

"Now I'm going to tell you frankly," the big man said, "we're a pretty tough lot here. We don't try to be tough but we're playing for big stakes, and when a man gets to playing for big stakes he gets pretty impatient when something gets in his way. Do you understand what 1 mean?"

"I can appreciate the force of your statement," Rob said.

"Sure you can, sure you can," the big man said reassuringly. "Now look, Rob, things haven't been going too smoothly and we're going to have to clean up and make a getaway. Every minute that we're wasting cuts down our chances. Of course, the

boys think they can pull this thing and get away with it, but they're worried, they're anxious. We have a deadline of midnight. We've got to start scattering by midnight. We've got to be way out of the state on a plane before daylight tomorrow morning, and it has to be done in such a way that we won't be caught. Now just put yourself in the position of one of the boys, Rob, and you'd be pretty impatient, wouldn't you?"

"1 guess so."

"Sure you would. If you thought something was standing in your way, you'd get tough. You'd get awfully tough."

"Yes, 1 guess 1 would."

"Well," the big man said, "you're standing in our way, Rob. You've got information that isn't going to do you a damn bit of good, but it's information we need. We've got to get it. There are easy ways and there are hard ways. I don't like to think of ihe hard ways because the boys are too much on edge, i can't tell just where they'd stop once they started. 1 don't like it myself, but I'm damned if I'm going to get soft in a show-down and let you cheat us out of the profits after we've taken all the risks."

Rob said, "Why blame it on me? Do you know what happened there at the pier?"

"No, what?"

Rob said, "I was detained and searched to the skin. It was a matter of a couple of hours, I guess, and during all of that time the car sat out there in the shed - "

The man smiled and shook his head with easy good nature. "No, Rob," he said, "that isn't going to do. We weren't dumb enough to let the car sit there without having someone to keep an eye on it. To tell you the truth, we were good and worried when you didn't come down to drive it away. It bothered us a bit."

"How did you know 1 was going to be driving it away?" Rob asked, trying to keep the eagerness from his voice, yet dreading to hear the answer.

The big man merely smiled and shook his head again "We're wasting a lot of time and a lot oi words, Rob," he said. "Suppose you just break down and tell us. Give us the low-down and 1 can assure you that nothing more will happen to you. You'll be inconvenienced a little bit, but that's all. You'll have a chance to get away around midnight and ... well, we'll have to fix it so you can't communicate with the authorities for, oh, maybe eight or ten hours, but that's all that will happen to you."

"ThaL sounds like enough," Rob said.

The smile left the big man's face. "Look, Rob," he said, "if you cion't co-operate, things are going to be bad, they're going to be plenty bad. After the boys have gone so far, then you can't tell what'il happen. They'll get the information they want, but if they've had to go far enough to get it, they well, put yourself in their position. You wouldn't want to leave a witness behind you who could testify to kidnapping and diabolical torture and then make an identification. Now let's be reasonable about this thing."

Rob said, "From where I sit, my chances don't look too good anyway."

"Why not, Rob?"

"I can still make an identification."

For a moment the big man's eyes were cold and hard, then he said ominously, "You keep crowding your luck and you just might never show up in circulation again. This river's about forty feet deep out in the channel and we could put weights on you so that after the bubbles quit coming up nothing else would ever come up."

Rob said, "You could do that just as well no matter what I said. What assurance do 1 have that you'd play fair?"

"You'd have to take my word for it."

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"1 don't think your word's very good."

The big man slowly got down off the table, removed the cigar from his mouth, placed it carefully 011 the edge of the table, took off his coat, rolled up his sleeves, said, "All right, young fellow, you're going to get hun. You're asking for it. Any time you want to quit that's all you have to do, just say so."

The big man bent over him. His face had undergone a complete transformation. It was a hard, wicked, ruthless face, and the right hand, with the fingers open, was moving, towards Rob's face, paused for a moment with the thumb over Rob's left eye. Then abruptly the man stopped and said, "Say, you got a fountain pen in your pocket?"

"Well?" Rob asked, striving to keep his voice firm.

"What the hell. They haven't even frisked you," the big man said. "That's a hell of a way to ran a business The boys are getting on edge, and when they get on edge you can't seem to depend on them for anything. Let's take a look and see what you've got in your pockets, son."

He rolled Rob over, casually placed his right foot on Rob's bound wrists, bore down with so much weight that Rob winced with the pain of it.

His hands started through Rob's pockets. "Handkerchief," he said. "Money ... why, the damned fools, here's a knife. You know, Rob, I get tired risking my neck trying to do the brainwork for a bunch of dumb eggs like that ... the boys just do not think.

"Now you take that business of putting your car out of commission. Sticking something in the ring and pinion gears ... the stupid fools. They could have let the air out of your spare tyre and then loosened the valve in one of your rear tyres so the air would ooze out. Then they'd have happened along just when you were up against it with two Hats, it would have been a cinch then to have picked you up

"After they'd grabbed you, one of the boys could have screwed the valve back in the tyre, pumped it up, driven your car away, and that would have been all there was to it. Then your car would have been out of sight. The way it is now, what's the garage man going to think when he finds that somebody deliberately stuck something in the gears? You'll have disappeared and your car will be there.

"The other way, you'd have disappeared and your car would have disappeared and everyone would have figured you'd taken a powder. Of course, they tied you up pretty well, but you could easily have hooked your heels up on the table and jiggled until that knife fell out of your pants pocket. Then you could have twisted around and got your fingers on it and cut the ropes, without anyone knowing about it."

Rob felt his face getting red with self-anger as he realised how simple it would have been for him to have done exactly what the man had said. Yet he had never thought of it.

The big man removed the ball of his foot from Rob's wrists. "Okay, Rob," he said, "let's roll over and see what we've got in the other side . . Hold it a second, let's take a look in that inside coat pocket ... Oh, yes, a wallet, driving licence and ... hey, wait a minute. What's this? A notebook!"

The big man picked up the notebook, moved off a short distance and turned so that the light came over his shoulder. He said, "You're one of these meticulous chaps. You probably keep complete, accurate records. Yes, here we are. Expenses ... the numbers of your traveller's cheques, the number of your passport. Now, Rob, you know, if you'd hidden anything, I've a hunch you'd have made some note about it ... particularly if you'd had to hide it along the highway. Now let's see, Rob, we'll turn through all these pages of expenses and look for the last page in the notebook. The last one where ... well, well, well! Here's a little sketch map of a road intersection and - well, now,

S>6

Rob, I think we're beginning to get somewhere. If you'll just loosen up and tell me about what these marks mean - no, wait a minute. You don't have to. They're fence posts, and these numbers must be the numbers of the highways, just so far from the intersection. That must be the count of the fence posts, and this diagonal with distances on it - why, bless your heart, Rob, that will be a road sign, right on the highway, and we can locate that road sign mathematically from these distances. Well, now, Rob, that's better, that's a lot better. Just a whole lot better.

"Well, now, Rob, it's going to take a couple of hours for us to investigate this thing, but 1 think we're really on the right track now. 1 think we really and truly are. Of course, it could be a trap, but I don't think so. Now, look, Rob, I'll put it up to you. You're a grown man and we may as well be frank. I'm going to send one of the boys to take a look.

"If this is a trap it's going to be pretty bad for you, Rob You know, I don't want to be melodramatic and make a lot of threats, but if this is a trap, Rob, things are going to happen to you that you won't like. There are a couple of old drive shafts that weigh about eighty-five pounds apiece down in the engine-room, and there's lots of baling wire. We'll just wire you to these shafts so you'll stay there for ever, and drop you in about forty feet of good, deep river water, Rob. We're just going to risk one person on this. If the stuff is there, one person can find it. If it's a trap ... well Rob, we'll be here, and you'll be here."

The big man paused and looked down at Rob, then he pulled back his right foot and calmly and methodically kicked Rob in the ribs, hard.

"Speak when you're spoken to," he said.

"It's not a trap," Rob Trenton groaned.

"That's better," the big man said. He walked out and locked the door behind him, leaving the. light on.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

The state trooper lay crouched in the ditch, covered with a dark blanket, so that just his forehead, eyes and nose were exposed. He was cold. The damp chill of the ground seeped through his clothes and the blanket.

Out on the highway, cars went droning by, first making themselves audible by a distant whine caused by tyres and motor. The whine would grow to a snarl, then headlights would briefly become visible, flash past, and the car would hurtle on into the night.

The state trooper shifted his position two or three times to avoid cramped muscles. He looked at the luminous dial of his wristwatch, anticipating the hour when he would change places with Moose Wallington.

At the moment, Moose was sitting on a side road parked in a cruiser, and on another side road two miles below two men waited quietly, under orders so strict that not even the glowing tip ol a cigarette was permitted to betray their presence.

A car coming from the west slowed down perceptibly, then pulled to the side of the road, crawled along in low gear. The beam of a spotlight, dancing out across the irregular shoulder of grass, caused the state trooper in the ditch to drop down entirely under the blanket.

The military-type field telephone between bis feet was connected with another telephone by a black wire which ran

along the ditch for a couple of hundred yards, then ambled off aimlessly across a field until it followed the top of a barbed-wire fence.

The trooper turned the crank, raised the receiver to his ear. Almost instantly the voice of a waiting trooper said, "Hello, Larry, what is it?"

"I'm getting a customer," Larry said. "Get the cars alerted."

"Okay. Can you describe the car?"

"Not yet. All I can see are the headlights and a spotlight searching around. They're looking for something. Now hold the phone. I'll take a peek."

The trooper gently raised a corner of the blanket for a long look, then said, "They're getting closer. They've found the signpost and evidently they're counting fence posts. They're looking along the ground now. It's a black sedan ... a big one. Could be bullet-proof glass."

"How many of them?"

"There's one working the spotlight and I can see another one ... wait a minute, the other one looks like a woman."

"Okay. Hang on for just a minute," the man at the other end of the line said. He called Headquarters of the State Police fifty miles away and over the radio a signal went out. "Cars sixteen and nineteen special signal twenty-four."

Instantly the two state patrol cars switched on ignitions and started their motors so they would be warm and ready for the chase. The monitor came back on the telephone, and Larry, crouching as flat as possible, said, "The man's started to dig now. The woman seems to have moved on over to the other side of the road in that orchard. I can't see her at all now."

"Okay, keep me posted. I'll hang on."

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Larry could hear the monitor saying into the other telephone, to the radio dispatcher, "Okay, send out special signal twenty- five," and within less than a second after that, the waiting cruisers heard the voice of the dispatcher at Headquarters saying, in that peculiar monotone with which all radio dispatchers send out even the most exciting news, "Cars sixteen and nineteen special signal twenty-five, confirm back to Headquarters."

Within a matter of seconds both cars had reported, staling that they had special signals twenty-four and twenty-five and were all ready to go.

ILV-W^tl

Crouched on the ground, Larry waited uniil the shovel had struck the metallic protective covering. Then a moment later, he saw the flash light snap on and off and a figure started for the car. Larry said into the telephone, "I'd be ready to give the next signal if it weren't for that woman. She's over across the road and hasn't shown."

"Ready for twenty-six with the man?"

"That's right."

"Okay. He can't get away. We'll wait a minute and catch them both when the woman gets back."

"Say wait a minute, she isn't coming back," the trooper said. "She's gone scouting. You'd better get this man. He's starting the motor. Flash signal twenty-six."

Over the phone the trooper heard Moose Wallingtc t's voice addressing the central dispatcher. "Car seven to Headquarters, special signal twenty-six to cars seventeen and nineteen."

The trooper in the ditch had waited too long for the woman to return. The man in the driver's seat of the big sedan now had the car in gear.

Throwing off his blanket, hitching his gun into a favourable position, the trooper crawled through a hole in the barbed-wire fence.

He suddenly impaled the car with a flashlight.

"State Police," he called. "What's the trouble?"

"No trouble, officer."

"What have you stopped for?"

"Nothing."

"Hold it. I want to inspect your licence."

The car lurched forward.

Larry pulled out his gun, but grinning, held his fire.

The car literally rocketed off into the night, headed eastward. The man in the driver's seat, white-faced and tense, threw the car into second, then into high, keeping the throttle down to the floorboards.

The state trooper stood waiting. His flashlight shot its powerful beam into the orchard on the other side of the road. Once he thought he saw a swirl of swift motion, but he couldn't be certain. The orchard was on a slope. Behind it was a brash- covered hill thick with second growth.

The trooper kept swinging the beam of his flashlight in a questing circle. He picked up nothing.

The man in the getaway car exhaled his breath in a deep sigh. His heart was pounding and his mouth is as dry. It had been a close call, but he had made it. He was in the clear now.

Then the headlights of the fleeing car suddenly disclosed the body of a State Police cruiser broadside on the road. A red spotlight blazed into the eyes of the startled driver.

The man jerked a gun out of his hip pocket. His lips tightened. His foot slammed down on the brake pedal. The car screamed to a sliding stop.

Moose Wallington came walking up on the driver's side. The other officer walked up on the other side of the car, coming cautiously.

The driver roiled down the window and said, "What's all the trouble about?"

"That's what we want to know," Moose Wallington said. "Why didn't you stop for that other trooper?"

The driver laughed. "That guy wasn't a t rooper. That was just a bird playing a joke."

Moose opened the door on the driver's side. "Let's take a look at your driver's licence."

"Okay, copper. Here it is," the man said and shoved the revolver across his lap.

What happened next happened with incredible speed. Moose Wallington's big hand came down over the man's wrist. The gun was twisted, the man's arm doubled into helplessness. He screamed and came tumbling out of the car.

Moose Wallington kicked the gun to one side, methodically pulled handcuffs from his belt.

From behind, the other cruiser which had been closing in blazed its red spotlight over the scene.

"Everything's okay," Wallington said.

Two minutes later Headquarters received a signal, "Car nineteen special signal thirty-one, black sedan with one person, licence number on sedan 6LB4981."

The dispatcher repeated the number.

Moose Wallington reported, "We're bringing in the prisoner."

"Okay. Federal Narcotics has been notified and will x here. Any resistance?"

"Not to speak of," Wallington said casually. "Let me have fifteen minutes here before we start, in. We want to help comb she territory for a woman who seems to have made an escape. Apparently she didn't get back into the car when the driver did. She was scouting and something may have alarmed her."

"You got the evidence?" the dispatcher said.

"Yes, it's here."

"All right, search tor the woman. I'll put out a special broadcast."

Thereafter a veritable porcupine of light shafts from the trooper's flashlights combed the countryside and combed it in vain.

The voice of the dispatcher, however, blanketed the entire district, "Calling all cars. Near the junction of state highways 40 and 72 at co-ordinate AB north three hundred; seventy-two east, a woman escaped a dragnet and may be hitch-hiking. Study all cars with women riders, make routine checks. Hold all hitch¬hikers for questions. For the next half-hour this is of paramount importance."

Thereafter cruisers concentrated on the area. Hundreds of motorists were stopped for 'routine checks' on driving licences.

But the woman made good her escape. Two hitch-hikers were held by State Police for questioning, but neither was the one the police wanted. Each could prove she had been riding in a car at the exact time the state trooper had had a vague glimpse of a woman, whom he as described as "young and attractive - judging by her figure and the way she moved", emerging from the car when the cache of dope was being uncovered.

With what the police already had on Rob Trenton, however, they felt justified in checking on the young woman with whom he had made a recent European trip.

The only hitch was that Harvey Richmond, ace narcotic investigator, who had been working on that 'angle', couldn't be reached. He was, in the words of the reporting trooper, "Not immediately available." He was, in fact, investigating a 'hot lead', so that he expected to make a flock of arrests by midnight, and had asked for two loads of state troopers to be held in readiness at that hour.

Colonel Miller C Stepney paced the floor thoughtfully, studying reports which were pouring in from state troopers all over the country. The man who had been picked up had refused to talk. The driving licence showed thai his name was Marvus L

Gentry. He had in his possession every one of the oiled silk packages which had been left at the scene to act as bait for the persons who would return to pick them up. There was at the moment nothing to connect L Gentry with any person anywhere in the state. He had an out-of-state driving iicence, and while the classification of his fingerprints was being rushed in for comparison, it would be a matter of several hours before anything definite could be obtained. His manner, however, was that of the veteran crook, sitting completely tight and keeping his mouth clamped in a firm line of silence.

Colonel Stepney debated the possibility that the passenger list would give him more information about Rob Trenton's companions on the European tour. This matter had been within the exclusive province of Harvey Richmond and it was against the policy of Harvey Richmond to make a repott until the case was thoroughly in hand. Richmond was a special narcotic officer and his relationship with the State Police was thai of coordinating the narcotic work of the different law enforcement agencies. While he might make more, detailed reports to his immediate superiors, he certainly adopted an enigmatic policy with the State Police.

Under the circumstances, knowing how easy it is to flush game by being too eager, and how disastrous premature questioning may be, Colonel Stepney decided to hold off cn everything until he had heard from Harvey Richmond. After all. the State Police now had the entire cache of heroin which had been smuggled in and subsequently buried. There was no way of communicating this information to Harvey Richmond. However, Richmond would doubtless soon put in a call.

So Colonel Stepney paced the floor and waited.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

It had been dark for some hours when Rob Trenton heard the car driving up. Judging irom the sound of the motor, the machine was being operated at high speed.

A few moments later he heard quick steps on the planks of the mooring pier just outside the porthole of the room where he found himself confined.

There was something hauntingly familiar about those steps. The quick, nervous impact, the light, lithe footfalls. They were the steps of a woman. Could it be ...? Rob struggled to a sitting position and listened hopefully.

He heard the sound of excited voices, then the low hum of a conference. The steps of the woman were heard again as she ran back down the pier. Then Rob heard heavy steps coming towards his room They were steps made by men who seemed to be walking irregularly and with an effort , as though they were carrying something heavy.

The steps approached his room. Quite evidently they were the steps of men carrying some burden.

The key twisted in the lock. The door was kicked open, and Rob saw only two grim-faced men, each carrying a steel shaft which apparently weighed some seventy-five o>- eighty pounds. They also carried several lengths of baling wire.

The men were ominously silent as they dropped these articles on the floor, turned and started out without a word.

"What's the matter?" Rob asked.

"Matter enough," one of the men said. "You thought you were pretty damn siick. Okay, buddy, you'll pay for it when you start blowing bubbles."

"Look here," Rob said desperately. "That wasn't a trap

"Oh, no," one of the men said sarcastically. "That State Police just happened to be waiting there. They just happened to grab my buddy! Well, you've taken the first trick. Let's see how you do on the rest of the tricks."

The two men left the room, slamming the door behind them. The key once turned in the lock.

Rob knew from the expressions on their faces, from what he had already seen of their methods, that he could expect no mercy. These men were clearing out. They had played the game to the end of the string and now within a few hours they would be scattering to the four winds, hunting places of concealment, before the Slate Police and the Federal Narcotics Division could broadcast accurate information.

Rob gloomily contemplated the two steel shafts and the baling wire so mutely eloquent of the fate in store for him. He knew now that these men didn't intend him to leave the boat alive.

The knowledge gave him a certain desperation.

He thought back with self-anger to the opportunity he had missed, to the knife in his pocket. He had never had to cope with a situation such as this, and as a result he felt as though he were backing against a stone wall. At the same time he realised he either had to use every bit of concentration and ingenuity he possessed or it would be too late.

His eyes roamed over the room without finding anything that furnished the inspiration.

Then suddenly he thought of the glass. That glass was sitting on a corner of the table where the man had placed if when Rob had finished drinking and just before the smuggler had started to search Rob's pockets. The results of that search had been so important that the man had forgotten all about the glass.

Rob squirmed and twisted, snaking his way like a sidewinder, until he had his feet against the legs of the table. Then he flung himself up and around like a desperate floundering fish. The rope jerked at his wrists with a strain that threatened to part the skin as he kicked; he struck the water glass and it rolled to the floor but did not break.

Rob followed the glass, picked it up in the fingertips of his bound hands, then squirmed his way back to the nearest steel shaft and started pounding the glass on it.

The second smash cracked the glass into sharp fragments, and Rob wedged one of these circular, knife-edged fragments in between the shaft and the wall, then lying on his back, started sawing away at the rope which held his wrists.

He found it difficult to move his arms so as to keep the glass cutting in one place, but he kept sawing away until he had cut his wrists in half a dozen places, until he could feel the warm trickle of blood over his fingers, until it seemed his cramped muscles could no longer endure that tiresome pushing and pulling as he rubbed the strands of the rope across the glass.

Then, when it seemed almost impossible to carry on, the rope suddenly parted, and Rob, stretching his cramped arms, was able to untie his ankles, get to his feet and start flexing his muscles. Returning circulation made him feel that his extremities were full of pins and needles.

He could hear people moving around the interior of the big houseboat. Doors were slamming, steps sounding in the corridors, then climbing the stairs. So far, for the moment, Rob had been undisturbed, but he knew that at any moment they would he calling far him. He felt like a condemned man in death row, waiting for the tramp of the solemn death march.

Rob dragged the table over to the locked door, unknotted the rope which had been used to tie him, and then tied the cut pieces together. He found he had a strip of rope some ten feet long. He hastily knotted one end of this rope over one of the heavy steel shafts, stood on the table and managed to elevate the shaft so that it was balanced on a small beam which ran directly over the door, some two feet above the level of the door itself.

Then Rob quietly climbed down from the table, picked up the other shaft, and, by using great care, was able to get this shaft also in position, balanced on top of the other, both of them directly over the door, both looped with the slender rope.

Rob dropped the rope to the floor, got down, moved the table back, stepped over, took hold of the rope, and waited.

He didn't have long to wait.

He heard steps coming towards the door.

If the manner in which the key on the other side was turned was any indication of the emotions of the man who was entering the room, that man was in a violent and nasty temper. The bolt shot back with a vengeful click.

Rob stepped back so that he would be slightly behind the door as it opened.

The door shot back with a jerk. The heavy-set man standing on the threshold could not immediately see Rob. He took a half- step forward into the room said, "What the hell!"

Rob pulled the slender rope a hard, quick jerk.

The man sensed the menace about him, started a forward leap, but was too slow. A hundred and sixty five pounds of steel shafting descended unexpectedly on his head and shoulders. He went down with hardly a moan.

Rob sprang forward.

He had no time to engage in any of the niceties of deception. The prone, quiet figure of the heavy-set man lay motionless save for a heavy deep breathing. The lighted Havana, which had been

M. ( nH- - .*

in his mouth, had rolled a few inches away and, still glowing, sent up a spiral of blue, aromatic smoke.

Rob bent over the figure and for a moment seemed to be all thumbs. He realised how difficult it is to search someone else. A side trousers pocket yielded Rob's knife, which he knew was razor sharp, and then he turned back the man's coat and found a ,32-calibre automatic which he withdrew from a shoulder holster.

Rob listened and could hear nothing. He tried to drag the heavy-set man inside the door. It was too much of a job. Rob rolled him, pushed him entirely over the threshold, then shoved in the bars of steel.

Consciousness started to return to the sprawled figure. His muscles twitched. He groaned, flickered his eyes open, tried to sit up.

Rob slammed the door shut, locking it from the outside and pocketed the key which had been left in the lock on the outside. He grasped the captured gun in his perspiring hand and walked quickly to the bend in the corridor, then hurriedly climbed stairs to the deck of the boat.

There were no lights of any sort visible, and Rob gathered that the portholes had all been darkened, but in the starlight he could plainly make out the form of the boat and saw that it was as he had gathered, a big roomy houseboat.

There seemed to be no one on deck. Rob cat-footed to the gunwale and jumped to the dock, still holding the automatic in his hand. He had made certain there was a shell in the chamber, had slipped the safety off and was ready for business. He was under no illusions as to the stakes. He was now playing for his life.

The boat was moored to the dock, fore and aft, and there was a slight current gurgling against the little pier in the tree hidden alcove where the boat was moored. He decided to take a chance on gaining more time to perfect his escape.

Running to the stern, he used his razor-sharp knife, cutting through the light hawser which was holding the boat by the stem. Then he ran back to the bow line and pulling it over the bollard cast it into the water. Watching, he was pleased to see that almost instantly a black gap some few inches in width began to appear between the boat and the dock. The gap constantly widened.

He turned back to the trees, paused motionless as he heard an automobile coming from the direction of the road. Powerful headlights danced through the trees, then were turned down to dim and shut off. Rob heard the sound of the motor for a second or two, then silence. He was now squarely between two fires.

So absorbed had he become with this threat in his rear, that he momentarily took his eyes from the deck of the boat. When he looked up a figure was running along the deck.

"Hey!" the man shouted at him.

Rob knew that he was only an indistinct figure in the starlight, probably less distinct than that of the man who was running towards him. The bow had swung clear of the dock, but the stern was coming in close and there was still opportunity for the man to jump ashore, grab the stern line, tie the boat up, give the alarm, and take after Rob.

Rob turned and started to run.

"Hey, you!" the man on deck called. "Come back here."

"It's okay," Rob called back over his shoulder, racing for the land.

He looked back and saw that the man had turned and was rushing towards the rear of the boat, apparently preparing to execute the very manoeuvre which Rob feared. Rob knew that if he only had some way of holding the men's attention, of freezing him into immobility for even a few seconds, the boat would then have swung out into the current, and the gap would be so wide that the man would have to jump in the water and swim before he could gain the pier. By the time he did that, the boat would have drifted far out into the middle of the stream and it would he too late for reinforcements from below to head Rob off. It might be a matter of some fifteen or twenty minutes before the engines could be started, the boat brought back to the pier, and anything like organised pursuit placed in operation.

"Halt!" Rob shouted. "You're under arrest," he added as an afterthought.

The man kept running.

Rob squeezed the trigger on the automatic, firing twice, blindly. He saw tongues of blue-orange flame spurt from the muzzle of the gun, felt the reassuring jar of the recoil as the mechanism kicked fresh shells into the barrel, and saw that his ruse apparently was effective. As nearly as he could tell in the starlight, the man had ceased to run and had flung himself full length on the deck of the houseboat.

By this time, Rob was clear of the pier, and he could see that the boat had swung completely around and was now well out away from the dock, the current carrying it out towards the middle of the stream.

Rob turned and raced for the friendly protection of the shadows, holding the automatic in his hand.

At the point where the trees made deep shadows and where soft, black loam muffled his steps, Rob paused and waited, taking stock of the situation, trying to locate the motorists who had just driven up.

He could hear someone running, someone coming towards him from the direction of the road.

Rob slipped in closer to the trunk of a towering oak tree. As nearly as he could tell, there was only one person running down the trail. i

Rob looked back towards the houseboat and suddenly became rigid.

A shaft of ruddy light was coming up through the bow of the houseboat and, even as Rob looked, a streak of orange flame licked up into brilliance, extinguished itself momentarily, and then shot up once more, fiercer than at first. A moment later there was something similar to a muffled explosion and the flames seemed to blast a channel for themselves right up through the deck at the bow of the ship. Ten seconds more, and the whole front of the houseboat was a mass of flames.

Rob watched the boat as it drifted out into the river, the flames rearing skyward. The boat gradually drifted farther and farther out into the centre of the current, until a ruddy reflection was flung back, not only from the low clouds which were coming up from the south, following the course of the river, but also from the swirling waters of the river. The ruby-red glow outlined the pier to which the ship had been tied, as well as the over-hanging tree limbs. Then, even as Rob looked, a woman stepped out from the trees, to stand on the edge of the river, silhouetted against that red, flaming spectacle. A woman who, judging from her slender figure and easy grace, was young and lithe.

Rob could see only her back. Silhouetted against the glow from the burning boat, she seemed frozen into immobility by the blaze, apparently hypnotised, entirely oblivious to everything but the shooting flames roaring skyward from the river.

Rob slipped the safety catch on his stolen automatic, so that no unexpected stumble would cause the gun to discharge. Turning his back to the flames, using their light to guide him, he found the trail, slipped as quietly as possible through the rim of trees along the river bank, came to the driveway and found a big, black sedan standing there with the lights off, but with the motor running smoothly at idling speed.

Rob took advantage of the opportunity. He jumped into the car, slammed the door shut, groped for and found the light switch, turned on the headlights, eased the car into gear and drove away fast until he came to the main road.

He had no means of knowing which direction he wanted to turn, save that he had located north and south from the stars. The big river was on the west side of the state, acting as a boundary between it and the adjoining state, and Rob was on the west bank.

He turned north just on a hunch, and within two hundred yards came to a drawbridge. He turned east, crossed the river and then turned south. He felt certain now that he was well to the north of Noonville.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

The big sedan glided into smooth speed. Rob turned his eyes to the illuminated instruments on the dashboard and found that the car was full of petrol, that the oil was circulating, that the generator held the needle poised at zero even with all the lights on, and that the speedometer showed the car had been operated only some seven thousand miles

There were eager horses under the hood and at a slight pressure on the accelerator Rob felt the car fairly shoot ahead.

He came to an intersection, saw a road sign, learned he was on the right road, and started giving the car the gun.

Looking out to the right on the river he could see a huge red glow in the low-flung clouds. He heard the waii of a siren, saw the red blaze of a spotlight, as a rural fire-extinguishing apparatus came rocketing down the side road, turned back to the north and raced valiantly away in the direction of the roaring flames.

Rob settled the car down to legal speed, it took him something more than an hour to get to Noonville, and then, on impulse, he parked the car by the side of the road, some four hundred yards from the place where he had his little house and kennels.

He locked the car, slipped the key in his pocket, and started groping his way towards the house, taking the precaution to move quietly over familiar back paths, picking his way so that he could approach his kennels from the rear.

He saw them first as a long, low line of buildings looming against the scattered stars, heard the throaty growl of one of the dogs, the restless stirring of others.

Rob spoke to them quietly, trying to keep them from breaking out in a pandemonium of barking. "Steady boys, quiet."

The dogs recognised his voice. One dog barked gladly, a single short yelp of welcome, and then, under the influence of Rob's command, lapsed into silence.

The other, older dogs remained quiet, but Rob could hear the sound of motion and knew that tails were wagging. Occasionally he heard a low whining. The dogs sensed the tension in his voice.

Rob stood up, walked directly to the kennels, and stood by the meshed wire, speaking reassuringly to the dogs.

He started to walk boldly to the house but checked himself as he heard a low whine on his right.

It was too dark to see but there was a peculiarly urgent something about that whine, and Rob moved slowly through the darkness until he heard the rattle of a chain. A moment later he made out the form of a dog pulling against a chain, straining every muscle to reach him. The dog's muzzle was out-thrust, and a series of low, all but inaudible, whimpering whines came from the animal's throat.

Rob moved a step forward, put out his fingers to touch the dog's cold nose, then as he stepped closer, said, "Why, it's Lobo! What are you doing chained up, Lobo?"

Lobo pushed his muzzle under Rob's face, then crouched, waiting to be released.

Wondering what had caused Joe to tie Lobo out in the open with a chain, Rob released the catch, and the dog came forward, burrowing his head in Rob's hands.

Then, even as Rob petted him, the dog straightened and sniffed.

"Well, come on, old fellow. We'll go to the house."

He made a couple of steps in that direction.

Lobo held back and growled.

"What's the matter, fellow?" Rob asked, instantly suspicious.

Lobo stood motionless, his tail slightly elevated and straight out behind him, his nose forward, and every muscle tense, pointing directly towards the house. Again the dog gave a low, all but inaudible, grow!.

Rob suddenly realised that, in tying Lobo up by a chain out in the vicinity of the kennels, Joe had tried to convey a message.

In the event Rob approached the house cautiously, knowing at once that something was amiss. There could only have been one reason why Joe would have chained the dog outside, not under any shelter, but on the ground, with only the sky overhead. Someone had ordered him to chain the dog up. Someone who dared not have the dog running loose. Someone who was for the moment in a position of authority.

Rob crouched, keeping close to the ground. He moved silently towards the house, which was completely dark save for one light which was on in the kitchen. The kitchen blinds were drawn, but there was enough light coming through the high pantry window for Rob to tell the location of that single kitchen light.

Inching his way forward cautiously, Rob became rigid when a silhouetted figure moved between him and the illuminated oblong of the pantry window. There was something square- stiouldered and official about that figure and as it moved, Lobo, his every hair turned into stiff wire, crowded against Rob and growled ominously.

Instantly Rob Trenton revised his entire plan of procedure.

"All right, Lobo," he whispered, and turning, retraced his steps to the kennel, then around the back of the kennel to the dirt road which paralleled the highway some three hundred yards back from it and on which Rob quite frequently exercised his dogs.

He turned at right angles, came at length to the main highway and then walked cautiously down to the place where he had left the car.

He kept his hand on Lobo's neck in order to see if there was any danger ahead, if any tightening of the muscles or any low, warning growl should indicate that the darkness held some potential enemy.

But Lobo, stalking along quietly at Rob's side, his nose questing the mysteries of the deep shadows, gave no indication that anyone was ahead. He did not stop abruptly as he saw the parked sedan, raised his head and sniffed the air cautiously, then, convinced that there were no hostile odours in connection with the car, he permitted Rob to move forward. As he detected Rob's scent in the vicinity of the sedan, the dog's tail started wagging slowly, indicating that he now knew the danger had been passed.

Rob unlocked the front door and said, "All right, Lobo." The dog instantly jumped into the front of the car, hesitated only long enough on the front seat to leap gracefully over to the back seat, where he settled down with a deep sigh of contentment.

Rob closed the door, fitted the key to the ignition but didn't turn on the lights until he had swung the car in a complete circle and was headed back towards Falthaven. Then he switched on the lights and once more settled into steady speed.

A glance at the clock on the dashboard told him that his manoeuvres in connection with the surreptitious approach to his house had cost him approximately forty-five minutes of precious time. He knew that his hours of liberty were numbered. Soon he was going to be called upon to make some convincing explanation, and at the moment he realised all too painfully that any explanation he could make would be far from convincing.

Once he took the borrowed automatic from his hip pocket, lowered the window of the car, and started to throw it out at the side of the road. Then he thought better of it.

The police were undoubtedly looking for him on the one hand, and the members of the smuggling ring were looking for him on the other. He could expect short shrift, as far as his liberty was concerned, from the State Police, and he could expect still shorter shrift, so far as his life was concerned, from the smugglers. He was operating what in all probability was a stolen car, and since the .32 automatic was a confiscated weapon, he felt he might as well keep it for his own protection as go soft at this stage of the game and throw it away.

Fully conscious of the fact that the licence number of the car he was driving might even at that moment be listed on a general broadcast to all police cars, he turned once more into Falthaven and slid past the store fronts, now dark and silent.

At the intersection, the traffic signal was adjusted to blink merely an orange warning sign in both directions. Rob turned into Robinson Street, and slid the car to a stop in front of the big two-storey old-fashioned house.

The luminous dial on his wristwatch said that it was five minutes past one o'clock in the morning.

Rob opened the door of the car and said to Lobo, "All right, boy, come on out."

The dog bounded to the pavement, then stood to attention, ears cocked forward, waiting for his master's orders. He sensed with canine telepathy the extent of the emergency and the tension in Rob's voice.

"Come on," Rob said. "At my side."

They walked up the wooden steps to the porch, crossed over to the door and Rob held his finger against the doorbell.

He could hear the sound of chimes.

Four or five times Rob passed his finger against the bell button. Finally lights came on in one of the downstairs windows and a moment later he heard slippered feet moving towards the door.

The porch light clicked on and Rob blinked in the brilliance.

Abruptly the voice of the sharp-nosed woman on the other side of the door said, "What are you doing back here?"

"I have to see you," Rob said. "It's important. Terribly important."

"To whom?"

"To me. To you. To ... Linda."

"You're crazy."

"I'm not crazy. 1 have to see you. I have to talk with you. Do you want me to stand here and shout the news through the door so that the neighbours will all hear it?"

The last argument turned out to be a masterpiece of strategy. It resulted in a silence of some five seconds, during which the person on the other side of the door contemplated the possibilities of the situation, then a bolt shot back, the door was opened to the limits of a heavy chain which after a moment's manipulation dropped to one side.

The Linda Carroll whom Rob had met earlier in the day, with her glasses on the bridge of her sharp, inquiring nose, a heavy flannel wrapper thrown around her, said, "Well, come on in. 1 guess you're harmless enough. You ... good heavens, what's that?"

"Merely a dog," Rob said.

"He's big enough to ... will he bite? ... look out!"

Rob took advantage of her momentary panic at the sight of the dog to push on through the door. Lobo walked in at his side, stately, dignified, plume erect and waving very gently, very slowly as an indication that he was open to overtures of friendship but was as yet definitely not committing himself.

"Now then, young man, what do you want?" the woman said.

Rob caught the eye of the dog, moved his hand in a gesture of release, indicating that the animal was to go out on a search.

For a moment Lobo looked dubious, as though he might have misunderstood the signal, but Rob repeated the motion with his hand and Lobo padded out into the room.

Rob said, "I've become convinced that 1 was given a run- around this noon. Things have happened since that ..."

"What do you mean?" she interrupted.

"I think someone travelled on your passport and I think you know a great many facts which are vital to me and which you haven't told me."

"Well, 1 don't know why I have to tell you everything 1 know, and I certainly don't like the idea of being hauled out of bed at almost two o'clock in the morning to answer a lot of questions."

Rob said, "The State Police are working on this thing. There's a question of dope smuggling, and there's a question of attempted murder."

"Attempted murder? What are you talking about?"

"Someone very definitely tried to take me for a ride."

"Oh, good Lord! All the gangster jargon and all of that sensational stuff. What do you think I am? You come here and spout off all this stuff and..."

Rob interrupted. "1 want a definite answer to the question. Is there or is there not another Linda Carroll whom you know?"

"And you get me up out of bed at two o'clock in the morning to answer a foolish question like that, young man? I'm going to call the police if you don't get out of here immediately."

Lobo, who had been moving around the room sniffing more and more excitedly with his nose to the floor, suddenly raised his paw and scratched on a door which opened from the studio.

Rob Trenton pushed his way past the robed figure of the artist, and stole across the studio to join the dog.

The woman completely misunderstood his intentions.

"That right," she said. "You get that dog out of here. He's scratching up the place. Make him go lie down. Put him out on the porch. That's where a dog belongs."

Rob reached out arid jerked the door open.

The Linda Carroll whom he had known on the boat, attired in housecoat and slippers, was crouched on the inside of the door, her ear to the keyhole.

For a moment, sheer surprise held her motionless, and as Rob jerked the door open she retained that half-crouched position.

Lobo, whining eagerly, placed his muzzle within a fraction of an inch of her face.

"Oh!" she cried, and straightened.

Lobo thrust his head against her hand and the fingers mechanically rubbed the fur between his ears, but her eyes, startled and apprehensive, were fixed on Rob Trenton.

"1 thought you'd be here," Rob Trenton said with calm satisfaction.

The older woman, striding across the room, shrilled, "What do you mean coming in here like this? You listen to me, young man, you get out of here! Don't think you're going to be jerking open bedroom doors and ..."

Rob kept his back turned to her, his eyes locked with Linda Carroll^.

"Do you," he asked, "have any explanation to make before 1 call the police?"

"Before you call the police? Well, I like that," the older woman said. "I'm going to call the police. I ..." "Aunt Linda, please," the younger woman said. "Please don't. Let's go at this thing on a reasonable basis."

"Did you know," Rob asked, "that your car was being used as a vehicle for the smuggling of dope?"

"Rob Trenton, what on earth are you talking about? What do you mean?"

"Exactly what 1 said. Your car was used for the purpose of smuggling a lot of dope into this country."

"Why, Rob! 1 don't know a thing about it. 1 don't even know what you're talking about."

"You owe me an explanation," Trenton said, "and you might begin by explaining all this masquerade."

"All right," she said, her voice sharp with indignation, "I'll explain it, and then I'll ask you to leave here, and I don't care if 1 never see you again."

"Go ahead and explain it."

She said, "For reasons which I don't need to go into here, I didn't want anyone whom 1 met on the boat to know where I lived and ..."

"Exactly," Rob said. "Reasons which you don't want to go into here. Those are the reasons that I'm interested in, that I have a right to be interested in - under the circumstances."

The older woman, watching Rob with twinkling eyes, said, "You're certainly leading with your chin, young man. You're in for it now. But since you've made your play, you'll either have to go ahead and master her now, or be thrown in the ash can."

"Auntie! You keep out of this!" the girl stormed.

"I'm still waiting for an explanation," Rob pointed out.

Linda looked scornfully contemptuous. "I hardly expected all these dramatics from you, but since you choose to burst into the house with your trained-dog trick and all the rest of it, I'll tell you the story - and then you can leave and, so far as I'm concerned, never come back.

"Aunt Linda is my father's sister. We both have the same given name. Her middle name is Mae and in the family she's always been known as Linda Mae. I'm simply Linda. After my father died we went abroad last year and we each had our passports. At that time 1 was living with Aunt Linda, so the address on my passport was this same address here at Falthaven. Since that was still the address on my passport 1 used it as my address in travelling this summer. Now, does that explain matters?"

"It doesn't explain why your aunt deliberately lied to me this afternoon," Rob said.

"I didn't lie to you, I ... 1 swapped words with you. I didn't tell you all 1 knew and I didn't have to. I told you that I hadn't been abroad and that no one had been using my passport and that no other Linda Carroll was living here, and that's the honest truth - even if I did embellish it a little."

"She seems to be living here now," Rob said.

"She's visiting here. After 1 telephoned her about your visit and what you said about the stolen car, she came down to talk with me. If you want my opinion, young man, you're making a spectacle of yourself as well as being a fool. You've let her put you on the defensive now. That licks you."

"I don't want your opinion," Rob said. "I'm trying to get the facts. As soon as I get at the facts so I can protect myself I'm going to call the police and tell them the whole story."

"What story?" Linda asked.

"About the fact that your car was used for the smuggling of dope. 1 cant believe that you were a party to anything like that, but if you weren't, then Merton Ostrander ..."

Lobo suddenly growled.

"Well," a man's voice said from the staircase, "if you're going to talk about me, Rob, suppose you say it to my face."

Rob whirled, and Merton Ostrander, fully dressed in tweeds, a faintly cynical smile on his face, came down the stairs.

"All right," Rob said, "I will say it to your face. Someone has used Linda's car for the purpose of smuggling dope into this country and an attempt was made to make me the fall guy. I resent it ... Lobo, come over here and lie down."

"I don't blame you," Ostrander said, "if your facts are right. If they're not, you deserve to be thrown out in the street."

"My facts are right," Rob said grimly. "Only too right. And if there's going to be any throwing out, you'd better start calling in help because you'll need it. 1 discovered the cache of dope myself and buried it, thinking that would give me an opportunity to find out what it was all about."

"Did it?" Merton Ostrander asked mockingly.

"It did to this extent," Rob said. "Someone stole the car, and then when 1 started to investigate someone kidnapped me. 1 was taken to a place up the river and imprisoned on a houseboat. Now then, I want an explanation."

"I don't blame you," Ostrander said. "Only you've come to the wrong place to get it, but since you're here, there are a few things you should explain to us, Rob. How does it happen that you were turned loose and come wandering around here at this hour of the night with what quite evidently is a gun in your hip pocket?"

Rob pulled the gun from his pocket. "I confiscated this from one of my captors. I had to shoot twice to keep from being overpowered and recaptured."

"Kill anyone?" Linda Mae asked almost casually.

For the first time that possibility occurred to Rob. "I doubt it. I just shot in his general direction."

"But you don't know whether you hit anyone?" Ostrander asked.

"Frankly, I don't And at this point, I don't much care."

Ostrander's look of amused tolerance gave way to friendly laughter. "All right, Rob," he said, his voice natural for the first

M ( ,>»■ V

time, "let's have your story of what happened. Then we'll see what's best to be done."

Rob resented having Merton Ostrander act as master of ceremonies. He wondered how Ostrander happened to be there, but he realised there was little he could do except tell his story. It had been one of the basic principles of his dog training to order a dog to do something just when the animal was about to do it anyway. Now Ostrander, by insisting that he tell his story, was turning the tables on Rob. Yet, standing there with the gun in his hand, with all three of them waiting, Rob saw no alternative but to tell what had happened, starting with the time he drove away in the Rapidex sedan.

When Rob had finished, Ostrander, his face grave, said, "But this is serious, Rob."

"Of course it's serious."

"You made your escape from that houseboat and cut the rope that held it?"

Rob nodded. "1 cut one rope, cast the other loose."

"And as 1 understand it the boat started drifting down the stream. That was when you saw the figure on the deck and fired two shots?"

"That's right."

"Why did you shoot, Rob?"

"I wanted them to know 1 was armed and that it wouldn't be healthy to rush out after me, trying to hunt me down. And I wanted to keep this man from jumping to the pier."

"Did you shoot directly at him?"

Rob said, "Of course not. Even if I'd wanted to, 1 couldn't even see the sights. 1 just shot in the general direction of the boat. I don't think the bullets came within a mile of the man."

"You don't know who this man was?"

"The one who was running on deck when 1 shot?"

"Yes." "No. He was just a figure, a dim figure."

"But your shots caused him to quit trying to jump to the pier?"

. "That's right, he flung himself down on the deck."

"And when you dropped those shafts on the leader of the gang, you knocked him out, but his lighted cigar rolled out to one side?"

"Yes."

"It continued to burn?"

"Yes, I remember seeing the smoke spiral up from it."

"That's probably where the fire started," Ostrander said, "some gasoline must have been leaking and the lighted cigar ..."

Linda said with sudden feeling, "Well, I think Rob was wonderful! Only ... only 1 don't like the way he thought that we ... that I ..."

She blinked back sudden tears.

"I didn't, Linda," Rob said.

"You did so," she charged.

"Well?" Linda Mae asked. "Wouldn't you have done the same thing in his place?"

"No," her niece said. "If you have friends you must have confidence in them."

Ostrander nodded. "Now, you say the boat continued to bum, Rob?"

"It continued to burn for a while, but I don't think the fire got much worse. They may have controlled it. It made a red glow in the sky for a while. I think they deliberately started the fire."

Ostrander glanced at Linda Carroll.

It was the older woman, however, who stepped in and took charge of the situation. "We've got to do something about this," she said.

"I'll say we have," Ostrander said. "If anyone has discovered where Rob buried that dope ... Well, we've got to stand by him,

and we've got to find out how the dope came to be concealed in the car in the first place."

Linda Carroll moved forward, put her hand on Rob's arm. "Rob," she said, "please forgive me ... 1 tried to keep you from finding out where 1 was ... 1 wanted to call on you, not have you call on me, and that was the reason Aunt Linda ..."

"1 see," Rob said, stiffly. "If you wanted to take Merton into your confidence, but arrange with your aunt to have me kept in the dark, I suppose that's your privilege."

"But Rob," she said miserably, "I didn't take Merton into my confidence. Merton did the same thing you did, only he. . well, he had more luck than you did. When he came here ... well, it was shortly after you had left here, and Aunt Linda had telephoned me and told me all about you being here and about the fact that you had said the car had been stolen and ... well, I was nervous and upset and 1 decided to come here and talk with her, and Merton happened to get here shortly before I did. Aunt Linda made short work of him. She told him the same story she'd told you, but as Merton went out he ..." She laughed and said, "Well, he had a break, that's all. He met me coming in."

"You don't have to explain," Rob said with dignity.

"Rob Trenton, don't you dare be like that!" she flared. "Naturally, having been caught red-handed we owed Merton a sort of explanation.

"I had a dinner date for this evening, but I told Merton that if he wanted I d meet him here tomorrow. I told him that I'd talk with him then and explain. 1 arrived here about eleven-thirty, and - well, Merton showed up about ten minu;es after I arrived. He got Aunt Linda Mae out of bed He _ame on the bus, and the; last bus back had left we'] Aunt 1 nda offered him the guest; room, and that's all there is to tell. On, Rob, why do you put me- in such a position that 1 have to lell you all these things now?

"Aunt Linda Mae had offered Merton a room for overnight, but I'd been furiously angry at him. And now you come with all this ... and it seems we're all three of us in a mess ..."

.Ostrander interposed with a practical suggestion. "Look," he said, "let's forget the personalities, and forgo the dramatics. There isn't one -chance in ten thousand that Rob Trenton has done anything that was illegal or dishonourable. And he hasn't dragged us in. If dope was concealed in the Rapidex sedan, we're in already. Now let5s make up our minds that we're all going to stand together on this thing."

"1 don't want any help from anyone," Rob said. "All 1 want is to know the facts, and then I'll paddle my own canoe."

"The facts!" Ostrander exclaimed in surprise. "Why you told us the facts. Someone got hold of this automobile and used it as a means of getting dope smuggled into the country."

"I've been reading something about schemes of this sort," Linda said. "But I never thought I'd be mixed up in such a deal. It's a new development in smuggling. Nowadays a great many tourists are taking their own cars over to Europe with them. It's become quite a racket for garage employees to stand in with dope smugglers. When a car is left in a garage overnight, or perhaps stored for a day or two, the garage men get in touch with the head of the smuggling ring. From then on it's easy.

"The smuggling gang even furnishes its own mechanics. They're expert welders and they have receptacles that go on the car in places where no one would ever think to look. But even if anyone did look it would seem to be just a part of the car - something that had been installed when the car was built. No one even thinks that it might be a receptacle for anything. It's just a bulge in the frame where room was made for some revolving part or something of that sort.

"Then the smugglers take the licence of the car, the registration, and after that they don't even need to follow the car

around Europe. All they need to do is to wait until the car is loaded for shipment. Then they advise their accomplices in this country, who wait until the car is first put in a garage and then the drugs are removed and no one is ever the wiser.

"That's the way it would have been with my car, only because of that blow-out, Rob found and removed the part that had the drugs before the smugglers could get to the car."

Ostrander nodded. "Yes, we can see that all right, now. But the point is that Rob should have telephoned the State Police. That's where he's in bad. He should have reported finding the dope."

"1... well, I wanted to talk with Linda before I did anything," Rob said.

Their silence was a mute indication of their disapproval.

"Not that 1 thought she was mixed up in smuggling, or anything like that," Rob hastened to add, "but... well, it was her car and ... 1 thought she should know about it. I thought it would be a lot better if she telephoned the police."

"Well, anyway," Ostrander said cheerfully, "that's all water under the bridge. Now let's use our heads on this thing. How much have you handled that gun, Rob?"

"Why? 1 took it, put it in my pocket, and 1 fired it twice."

"Well," Ostrander said, "there may be a fingerprint of the smuggler on it. Something like that might well be damaging evidence. Let's put this gun under lock and key. Then let's back this car you grabbed into the driveway. As soon as it gets daylight we'll drive up and locate the place where this houseboat was tied up. We'll make a survey of the extent of the damage and then we'll notify the pohce."

"Why not notify them right now?" Rob asked.

Ostrander shook his head and smiled. "Let's see if we can't all keep out of it," he said. "After all, Rob, you haven't the faintest j

scintilla of proof at the present time. You've got to get some sort of evidence. You owe that to yourself - to Linda."

"The police can see where that cup-shaped thing was welded Oi\ to Linda's car."

"Sure," Merton said. "But where's Linda's car? And how are you going to convince anyone you didn't weld that thing on?"

Rob was silent.

"Her car may be anywhere," Ostrander pointed out. "It may be out of the state or in the bottom of the river. You've reported the theft to the police."

"But," Rob said, "my place is being watched and ..."

"Sure, your place is being watched," Merton Ostrander said. "You're not going back there. You can't afford to let the police grab you until you have enough evidence to clear yourself. You can't get evidence while you're in jail. And once the police get you in jail they'll only look for evidence that will hook you. But if we can keep you in the clear, the police may get evidence that'll lead 'em to this gang of smugglers."

He turned and looked significantly at the older woman.

"Oh, all right," she said, laughing. "There's another spare room that has a bed in it. It's not as comfortable as the guest room, but it'll do."

"All right," Ostrander said. "Let's lock up this gun, keep a record of the numbers, and preserve what fingerprints may be left on it. Tomorrow we'll give the police an anonymous tip that the houseboat was the headquarters of a gang of smugglers. That's all we can do. Rob didn't notify the police because he wanted to protect us. Let's now try to protect him."

With quick competence he examined the gun, counted the shells, noted the numbers.

Linda Carroll's eyes were grateful as she looked at Merton Ostrander. "That's the only logical course, Merton," she said.

"Well, young man, come on," the aunt said. "Let's get bedded down and get some sleep. You look as though you could use a few hours ... and a good hot bath."

"1 hate to impose on you," Rob said.

"No, it's all right. Linda is always getting herself involved in some sort of a scrape or other."

"This isn't my scrape, Auntie," Linda said, laughing.

"Come on, young man," the aunt said. "And I'm going to call you Rob. Now you can call me Linda Mae. My niece is plain Linda. She doesn't have any middle name. Come on, let's try getting a little sleep.

"Merton, we're going to lock that gun up. Here, put it in this desk. All right, now you keep the key.

"Rob, come with me. You're going to get a good bath and then some sleep. You certainly look as though you could use both!"

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

Rob felt that he would never be able to sleep but the relaxing effect of the warm bath, the glass of hot milk Linda Mae brought him, and the sheer mental and nervous fatigue, caused him to sink into deep slumber within ten minutes of the time he placed his head on the pillow.

He was wakened in the morning by sunshine filtering through lace curtains, striking his eyelids and bringing him back to blurred consciousness.

For a few moments he lay in the delightful warmth of the bed, wondering vaguely where he was, and then suddenly, with realisation dawning upon him there was a sense of apprehension as he wondered how he could ever have slept so well with so much at stake.

His head felt heavy from the effects of the beating he had received.

Lobo, who had been lying in the corner with his head on his paws, watching Rob's eyes with unwinking scrutiny, waiting for his master to waken, whimpered with eagerness, got to his feet and moved over to the bed, nuzzling Rob's hand.

The realisation of the dog's presence there in the room suddenly brought Rob back to a sense of his obligations. He looked at his watch, saw that it was past eight o'clock and jumped out of bed. Instantly his muscles, sore from the kicks he had received, registered a protest, but he managed to dress, ran

132

regretful fingers over the growth of stubble on his face and opened the door. The aroma of bacon and coffee came up from the lower floor.

Rob ran stiffly down the stairs and in the kitchen found Linda Mae, attired in her housedress, glasses well down on the tip of her nose, frying bacon.

She heard Rob walk in, pushed the glasses back up on her nose with the tip of her right forefinger and surveyed him speculatively.

"Well!" she said.

Rob said, "1 haven't any razor. I'm afraid I look disreputable, and I'm hungry."

"Don't tell me your symptoms," she snapped. "There's a dozen eggs over there. Break them into that bowl and add half a cup of cream, then beat them all up. We're going to have scrambled eggs, bacon, toast and coffee. You can get busy and help things along."

"I thought we were going to get an early start," Rob said. "I'm afraid I overslept."

"Nothing to break our necks about," she said.

"That car," Rob said. "Despite the fact that..."

"Don't you worry about that car, young man. After you went to bed, I had Merton Ostrander drive it up the street half a dozen blocks and leave it in a parking place in front of the Midget Market. It won't attract any attention there. Last place on earth anyone would think of looking for a car. Besides, as Ostrander pointed out, those crooks aren't going to claim the car was stolen. And it may have been their car. Come on, now, get busy with those eggs. What are you going to do with the dog?"

"I'll let him out in the back yard, if I may."

"He won't run away?"

Rob smiled and shook his head.

"All right. Go ahead then." "How about the others?" Rob asked.

"Linda's up and I heard Merton Ostrander stirring around up there. What do you think of him, young man?"

. "Who?"

"You know who. Merton Ostrander."

"He seems to be very ... very competent," Rob said.

"He seems to have a way of taking everything for granted - and getting away with it," Linda Mae said. "You'd get along better if you weren't so anxious to be fair all the time. Why don't you try a masterful approach some time? Come on now, put your dog out, and get those eggs broken ... and if you handle that dog, wash your hands over there in the sink before you start cooking. I don't want dog hairs all over my food."

Rob let Lobo out the back door for a few minutes, returned, washed his hands at the sink and started helping with the breakfast.

Linda joined them a few minutes later and then Merton Ostrander came in to say affably, "How's everything this morning with all the conspirators? I have a safety razor up there, Rob, if you want to remove the disguise."

"That'll be swell," Rob said.

"After breakfast," Linda Mae said, "we're leaving. We won't stop to clean up."

"I understand you moved the car," Rob said to Merton Ostrander. "I'm sorry I bothered you."

"No bother at all," Merton told him. "Just ran it down to a parking place at a market Linda Mae told me about and left the keys in the ignition. I was back here while you were still in the tub. I think Linda Mae is a pretty good conspirator. The fact that the keys are still in the car will make it appear the owner has just dashed into the market."

Linda Mae pointed her sharp nose at him. "Well, I'll tell you one thing, young man, I'd be a lot smarter than some of the people 1 read about if I should decide to commit a crime. You read the newspapers and see the dumb things they do. It makes me tired to hear the way police brag in the papers, when anybody with any sense can see it was the crooks who were dumb."

She kept her nose pointed at Merton Ostrander. "1 might even turn out to be a better detective than I would a mastermind crook. Don't be so glib when it comes to putting women in a classification. You might get fooled."

Her eyes seemed to mock him, but Merton Ostrander's assurance evaporated under her steady gaze. He became plainly embarrassed. "Yes, Ma'am," he said, with exaggerated deference.

"You're inclined to have things altogether too much your own way with women," Linda Mae went on. "It makes you conceited, which doesn't hurt you a bit, and sure of yourself, which irritates me to death. It's a good thing I'm not younger and you were making passes at me. I'd take you down a peg or two."

"Yes, Ma'am," Merton repeated, colouring slightly, and winking at the others.

"We'd better get started," Rob pointed out. "Do we have a car?"

Linda said, "1 have my convertible here."

"I'd like to know what's going on at my place," Rob said. "I know for sure there were people there last night watching it."

"Sure. The police want to nab you," Ostrander said. "And the crooks want you. You can't angle with a bunch of crooks like that without expecting them to do something about it."

They made a lark of starting out on the trip. By daylight things seemed far more reassuring to Rob Trenton. Linda drove her convertible. Her aunt sat on her right in the front seat. Rob Trenton and Merton Ostrander occupied the rear seat, with Lobo over in a corner on a blanket which had been carefully tucked into the cushions.

Merton Ostrander from time to time gave Rob low-voiced advice, apparently trying to keep Rob's spirits up. "Just sit tight," he said reassuringly. "Absolutely tight. Don't tell anyone anything. Don't admit anything. We'll get Linda's car back and we'll look over the place where they kept the houseboat. There's no need for you to tell the police anything at all about being kidnapped, about your adventures on that boat or anything of the sort. We'll get that houseboat located, and then we'll phone in an anonymous tip to the police."

"Suppose someone should remember me at the pay station? Suppose ..."

"They won't," Merton Ostrander said. "We'll pick out one of those booths that are out by the side of the road and I'll do the telephoning."

It took them less than an hour to reach the big drawbridge across the river, then another two or three minutes brought Rob to the side road which led to the landing where the houseboat had been moored.

"See," Ostrander said easily, "There's nothing to it. We're in another state. They don't even have a State Police system here. All we'll have to do is ring up the sheriff's office. Now let's not drive clean down to the landing, Rob, unless ..."

The car rounded a curve and Rob saw the group of curious spectators gathered by the pier.

"It's okay," Ostrander said reassuringly. "The fire has attracted a lot of people. Drive right up, Linda. We'll pretend we're just curiosity seekers wondering what it's all about. Everyone remember now, we were looking for a place to have a picnic. We saw the group of spectators and came over to see what was causing the excitement"

Linda parked the car alongside dozens of others. They opened the d.jors, piled out and joined the fifty or sixty spectators who were surveying the scene in idle curiosity.

Ostrander, genial, affable and a good mixer, circulated around and in a short time had the story. Police had baulked the efforts of a gang of smugglers. The houseboat which they used as a headquarters had been burned and the badly charred body of one unidentified man had been found aboard the burned boat. Police had apprehended at least one member of the gang and the sheriff and coroner were out on the boat making an inspection.

The boat, charred and blackened, was aground on a sand spit on the opposite side of the river. While Rob was watching, men appeared on the boat, climbed into a rowboat and started rowing across the river, back towards the place where the houseboat had been moored.

"Here comes the sheriff, the coroner, the deputy and the dope smuggler now," one of the local men said.

Rob watched them rowing towards the shore. When they were thirty or forty yards away he recognised the handcuffed man as one of his captors, the man who had posed as the contractor at the bus station and lured him into the automobile.

"Look here," Rob said to Ostrander, "I can identify that man. I'm really a material witness who would tie him up with the smugglers ..."

"It'll keep," Ostrander assured him in a low voice. "Don't be so damn civic-minded. Later on your testimony may be necessary. Not now. You don't want to drag Linda into a mess of this sort. Just keep quiet. They haven't anything on you."

Rob nodded dubious acquiescence.

"Well, I'm not so sure," Linda Mae said thoughtfully. Then after a moment she nodded her head, and said, "Yes, I guess you're right, Merton. We can't afford to have Rob sacrifice himself just to make an identification."

"The way I see it," Ostrander said, "the police have started off on the right trail now. They have one of the smugglers and they'll get a story out of him. They've located the houseboat and in no time at all now they'll have the whole story. If Rob can only keep out of circulation for a while he'll be sitting pretty. If he can't, why then his name will be smeared, and Linda's name will be dragged into it."

Linda Mae's lips clamped in a thin, straight line of firm determination. "You're right. We'll keep out of it."

The rowboat landed at the pier. The coroner jumped ashore with a rope and made the boat fast. The sheriff and deputy assisted the solemn, handcuffed man to the little pier and started towards the official car with its red spotlight.

Rob started to turn away so that his eyes could not meet those of the prisoner.

Suddenly he heard a voice saying, "There he is now. That's the man. The one with the dog."

Rob turned and saw a young woman pointing directly at him, saw people staring with curious, gaping interest.

For a moment there was no motion. It was as though some strip of moving film, running smoothly through the machine, had suddenly run off the track and stopped, and the action had suddenly frozen into immobility.

The young woman said, excitedly, "I'd know him anywhere. I saw him with that other man at the bus depot in Falthaven yesterday. They drove off together."

Then the big sheriff was coming towards Rob. His right hand dropped ominously to his holster.

"All right, young fellow," he said. "We want to ask you some questions. Now you can either fix it so that dog doesn't make any trouble, or else he's going to get hurt. Just take your choice."

Rob felt Linda's hand reaching for the leash. "I'll take him, Rob," she said, a catch in her voice.

"Not a word," Rob heard Ostrander caution him in a low voice. "Clam up. Don't talk. I'll get you a lawyer. One of my fraternity brothers is practising near here. You can trust him."

"Down, Lobo," Rob said, and stepped forward to meet the sheriff.

CHAPTER NINETEEN

Sun came pouring in through the west windows of the sheriff's office. A fly droned in lazy circles over the desk.

Rob Trenton sat motionless. The lawyer whom Merton Ostrander had secured to represent him was seated on Rob's right. He was a thin-faced, quick-eyed, fast-talking individual who interjected comments from time to time, always winding up his remarks with the same formula, "Of course, gentlemen, I'm merely pointing out a discrepancy. Anything 1 say is not binding on my client, and my client refuses to make any statement at this time."

The smuggler whom the sheriff held under arrest, the same one who had decoyed Rob into the car, who had helped overpower him and hold him prisoner, sat at the sheriff's right. There was an air of smug cunning about him. So far he had failed to make any statement within Rob's hearing, but from references made by the sheriff, the man had evidently told a detailed story of what had happened.

Rob wondered what that story was.

A stenographer entered the office, carrying a typewritten statement, which she handed to the sheriff The sheriff took it, cleared his throat and said to the smuggler, "I will now read your statement to you This isn't in your exact words. It's boiled down, but it's taken from what you said. If there's anything you want to change about it, you speak up right now and change it.

If it's wrong we want to fix it so it's right. Do you understand that?"

The smuggler nodded.

The sheriff read slowly so that there would be ample opportunity to make corrections:

My name is Sam Joyner. I am fifty-two years of age. I am the registered owner of a houseboat, the Lady-Lou.

About two months ago I was approached by a man whom I only know as Big Jim. He wanted to rent my houseboat. He said he wanted to do some entertaining. At the time, I thought it was just a question of a few wild parties, but after a while I began to believe it was something more sinister. I should have gone to the police right then, but I didn't. I rode along because the rent was good and because it was only my word against theirs. I didn't participate in any of the profits from smuggling. They paid me a flat rent for the boat, and permitted me to keep one cabin for my own use. However, I lived aboard and, by keeping my ears open, got to know what was going on.

Last night things came to a showdown. Harvey Richmond, who I now understand is connected with the State Narcotics Division, forced his way aboard and tried to make an arrest.

A man, whom I only met yesterday, who gave the name of Rob Trenton, had smuggled in a shipment of heroin that had been concealed by him in an automobile which he had arranged to drive for a young woman who was on the ship with him. After he had smuggled this dope shipment ashore he buried it. He told the smugglers where he had buried it and they went to get it. I understand one of the gang was arrested when he went to dig it up.

M. ( „H - M

This man Trenton was aboard my houseboat last night. Harvey Richmond evidently had been keeping the boat under observation. I didn't know this. I had decided to terminate the lease on the boat and notify the police. I went ashore but left my car parked clown under a little wooden shed on an adjoining farm which I rent as a garage. I had gone to it and then recalled some personal belongings I wanted on the boat.

It was as I was returning to the boat that 1 heard a car drive up at high speed. Then, when I was almost to the boat, 1 saw this man, Rob Trenton, run off the houseboat and to the pier. 1 saw him cast loose the lines that held the houseboat, then someone tried to stop him. I think it was Harvey Richmond, but 1 can't be sure. He called to Trenton to stop and surrender. Robert Trenton raised a gun and fired twice. Richmond, or whoever it was, fell back to the deck. 1 turned and started to run through the darkness to my car. I had gone about twenty yards when I looked back over my shoulder and saw the first flames coming up from my boat. I debated whether to notify the police and finally decided against it because 1 thought no one knew I had been aboard the boat, so I got in my car and went to my home.

That is all 1 know.

"Now that's true?" the sheriff asked.

"So help me, that's true," Sam Joyner said. The sheriff handed him a pen. Sam Joyner signed the statement.

"Now," the sheriff said, "write underneath that: 'I, Sam Joyner, have made the above statement as my free and voluntary act and without any coercion of any sort.' If that is the case, sign that declaration. If it isn't, just tear the thing up."

Hi

"That's the case," Sam Joyner said.

"All right. Write it."

Joyner wrote and signed the statement as requested.

Rob Trenton, who had been listening incredulously, said, "That's a lie! That whole statement is false. This man was one of the..."

"Hold it!" Rob's lawyer interrupted. "Don't say a word, Mr Trenton, not a word. If you do, you'll have to explain, have to answer questions. We'll make a complete statement later. Right now all I want you to say is that you deny this accusation and that it's false."

"Of course it's false! This man kidnapped ..

"That's all," the lawyer interposed. "You've denied the charge. That's enough."

"Every word of that is the truth," Joyner said doggedly.

"My client says it's false," Staunton Irvine, Rob's lawyer, said promptly.

"Your client's trying to lie out of a murder rap," Joyner said.

"How do you know?" Irvine shot the question at him.

"Because I saw him shoot this man. I think the man was Richmond. 1 don't know, but I'm pretty certain that's who it was. Trenton shot twice and hit him both times. Then the boat caught fire."

"Now then," Rob's attorney said, "you don't know it was Robert Trenton who fired those shots. You can't swear to it, can you?"

"I can swear to it," Joyner said.

"And," the attorney went on, "you don't know that any of the shots hit Harvey Richmond. You were on the shore, and ..."

"That'll do," the sheriff said. "Mr Joyner is not going to be cross-examined at this time. Now then, Mr Trenton, you've heard Mr Joyner's statement. Do you care to make any statement?"

Irvine said quickly, "My client denies shooting Harvey Richmond. The claim that he did is absurd. Joyneris statement is a lie. However, we are not prepared to make any statement of our own at this time."

"When will you make one?"

"Well, now," the attorney said, "that depends very much upon the circumstances. Has it ever occurred to you, Sheriff, that this is the wrong jurisdiction in which to try this case? The river is a state boundary. That boat burned and drifted aground ..."

"That doesn't make any difference," the sheriff said. "According to the testimony of Mr Joyner, the murder was committed right here in this state and in this county. We're taking charge. Now then, I'm going to tell you some more things. The charred body of Harvey Richmond was identified by a badge that he carried in his pocket, by a tattoo mark which was still visible, and by his dentist."

"No comment," the attorney said.

"Two bullets were found in his body. Either one of those bullets would have been instantly fatal."

"No comment."

"Two empty cartridges which had been ejected from an automatic were found on the ground by the pier this morning."

"No comment."

"And," the sheriff went on triumphantly, "the State Police from across the river have co-operated to the extent of making a search of the house of Linda Mae Carroll at 205 East Robinson Street, where your client apparently spent the night, and in the drawer of a locked desk there they found a .32 calibre automatic which had been recently fired, with two shells missing from the cartridge clip. 1 think you'll find that ballistics experts will identify the fatal bullets as having come from that gun."

"1 tell you we have no comment," the attorney said. "Not at this time."

"When will you have a statement?"

"1 can't tell you. That will depend on developments. I am protecting the interests of my client. He is the victim of a frame-

up,"

"Yeah. That's what they all say. You got any more comments?"

"We are making no statement at this time. 1 would like to point out to you, however, the utter absurdity of the claim that Harvey Richmond could or would have been aboard that houseboat freely and voluntarily and in a position to have tried to apprehend my client."

"Why not?" the sheriff asked.

"Because that houseboat had been rented by a gang of smugglers. If Harvey Richmond had been aboard that boat he would have been a prisoner."

"They weren't aboard the boat when the shooting took place," Sam Joyner said hurriedly. "The only two persons 1 saw were this man Trenton and the man who was killed."

"You don't know the others weren't aboard."

"Well ... no, of course, I didn't search the boat."

"And something happened which caused you to get out of there and decide you'd go to the police? Why didn't you?"

"That's all," the sheriff interposed. "Don't answer that question, Joyner. Dont answer any more questions. If Trenton isn't going to make a statement, we're not going to make any more statements. We've accused Rob Trenton of the murder of Harvey Richmond."

"And that accusation has been denied," the attorney said.

"Not specifically and categorically."

"Deny it," the lawyer said to Rob Trenton. "Deny it specifically and categorically."

"I deny it," Trenton said, "specifically and categorically."

The sheriff jerked a thumb. "Okay," he said to one of the deputies. "Lock him up. We'll file murder charges."

CHAPTER TWENTY

Colonel Miller C Stepney of the State Police surveyed the charred wreckage of the fire-swept houseboat.

"I don't give a hang where the murder was committed," he said. "The boat is within our jurisdiction. The body was within our jurisdiction. We're going to see that the evidence is preserved. Then at least we'll know what we've found and what we didn't find."

Captain Stanway Harmon said, "We're going to have some trouble with the folks on the other side. The coroner wants to get the body put in a coffin and sent to the relations. He says there's no use performing an autopsy because the X-ray showed the presence of two bullets in the body. Their doctor dug the bullets out and is prepared to state that either one of the bullets would have been instantaneously fatal. One of them went through the heart and the other was just above the heart."

"Neither bullet went all the way through the body?" Colonel Stepney asked.

"No, they were ,32-calibre and they were lodged inside the body."

"How did they happen to do such quick work with the X-ray? Itls a wonder they didn't claim the death was due to burning simply because they found a charred body."

"They found the two ejected cartridge cases and the owner of the houseboat told this story of the gun fight. So they X-rayed the charred body, found the bullets, and the doctor is willing to testify death was instantaneous and that's that."

Colonel Stepney stroked his jaw thoughtfully. "Makes it look pretty bad for that Trenton chap."

"I'll say it does."

"Well, Dr Dixon wants to check up on the cause of death. Harvey Richmond was not only a friend of his, but it seems that Narcotics had a tip-off a load of dope was to come over on that ship, and Richmond went along in an undercover capacity. He became acquainted with Trenton on the ship. Richmond seemed to think Trenton was just a fall guy who was apt to be on the receiving end. He felt he was being used as a cat's-paw.

"Well, Richmond!; dead now," Colonel Stepney went on, "and Dr Dixon wants to perform an autopsy. I've told the sheriff they'll either have to hold the body until Dixon gets here or that we'll demand its return. After all, it was removed from our jurisdiction."

"They're touchy about that," Captain Harmon said.

"I'm touchy about it myself," Colonel Stepney snapped. "It's surprising that a chap like Trenton could have fooled a veteran investigator such as Harvey Richmond."

"You think he did?"

"Sure he did. Remember we have the goods on Rob Trenton because of the work that Trooper Wallington did in checking on the location where Trenton had a blow-out.

"Rob Trenton pulled off to the side of the road and buried the shipment of heroin. He intended to dig it up later. Trooper Wallington was on patrol duty, stopped him and checked his licence. Trenton told him he'd stopped to change a tyre. He showed a blown-out tyre on the rear of the car. It just happened, however, that Wallington in handling the tyre remembered later that it wasn't warm. The cold tyre showed Trenton had given a false story. Later on Wallington checked up on it and found where something had been buried and found a cache of heroin."

Captain Harmon nodded thoughtfully

"All that ties Trenton right into the dope smuggling," Colonel Stepney went on, "and if Ballistics ties those two bullets up with the gun we recovered in the desk at Linda Mae Carroll's place, it!s the electric chair for Trenton. A perfect case."

Til say it's a perfect case," Captain Harmon agreed fervently.

"But," Colonel Stepney went on, "1 don't like the way they're jumping at conclusions over there and getting the cart all in front of the horse. I want to go about the thing methodically and I want to have this evidence preserved so that we'll know just what we have and what we don't have."

Captain Harmon pointed up the river to where a speed launch was clipping through the water at a fast rate, spreading a bow wave on each side of the prow in a huge, curling V of sheeted water. "This looks like Dr Dixon now," he said.

The two officers stood waiting until the launch veered and slowed down, then crept alongside and Dr Herbert Dixon climbed aboard.

One look at the doctor's face and Captain Harmon said, "He's mad."

Dr Dixon nodded a curt greeting, said, "We seem to be up against a question of jurisdiction here. What's the answer?"

"We dont want to make any trouble," Colonel Stepney said. "The thing isn't worth it. We need the co-operation of those folks across the river from time to time, just as they need ours. We can get all worked up over this thing and there'll be repercussions that will impair our joint efficiency for the next ten years. Let's keep our heads."

"Well," Dr Dixon said, "it looks like an open-and-shut case. This man Trenton certainly fooled me, but they're acting on the assumption that they know everything that is to be known. The coroner is satisfied he knows the cause of death, and he probably does. But I want a complete necropsy performed and 1 either want to do it or I want to be there when it's done."

"You do it," Colonel Stepney said. "Thai much we're entitled to."

"The coroner's been in touch with the relatives. He's a mortician, you know, and he's more concerned right now with the type of casket he's going to sell and the type of funeral service, than he is with anything else."

Colonel Stepney said, "You go and make a post-mortem on that body. If you want to make an issue of it, go make an issue of it."

"I want to make an issue of it."

"All right, go ahead."

"I can tell you one thing," Captain Harmon said. "It won't make a darned bit of difference what you find out. They're going ahead with a murder prosecution against Robert Trenton. The prosecutor wants to be a judge and this looks like a good stepping stone."

"Well, it probably is," Dr Dixon said. "It bothers me that Trenton was able to pull the wool over my eyes the way he did. It's too bad the fire consumed so much of the evidence. What do you make of it, Colonel?"

Colonel Stepney said, "Captain Harmon has made a rather complete examination. Suppose you tell him, Captain."

Harmon said, "Well, the situation is a little peculiar. We aren't dealing with anything stationary like a house. We have to take into consideration the fact that a drifting boat will swing around in the river and the wind might blow the flames from several different directions, but the fact remains that from my examination of the boat my conclusion is this fire started up in the bow in what evidently was a locker room."

"In the bow?" Dr Dixon said. "But the engine is in the stern and the gasoline tanks are in the stem."

Captain Harmon nodded.

"Yet the fire started in the bow?" "That's my best belief."

"What caused it?"

"The theory of the sheriff it that is was a short circuit between two wires. 1 asked him what caused the short circuit and he just looked at me. My own theory is that it was a fire of incendiary origin that started near the bow and I'm going to take photographs that'll prove my point. There's an unequal area of charring, and quite evidently parts of the structure there in the bow were subjected to greatly varying degrees of heat. It's as though there had been some inflammable liquid used in starting the fire. Then the flames swept back towards the stern."

"We're taking photographs?" Dr Dixon asked.

"We're taking photographs and we're preserving bits of evidence."

Dr Dixon said, "There were several people aboard this boat. The sheriff thinks he's only concerned with what happened up to the time the shots were fired. I think we have to know everything that happened in order to get a complete explanation."

"So do I," Colonel Stepney said. "I've just been talking about that."

"You'd be surprised how uninterested the sheriff is going to be in all this stuff," Captain Harmon said.

"Yes, 1 suppose so," Colonel Stepney admitted, smiling. "However, Captain, I want you to have the men work this case up just as though there were no problems of jurisdiction. I want every bit of evidence discovered and preserved. I want a complete file made so we can refer to it at any time."

"How about a post-mortem?" Dr Dixon asked. "If they try to bluff me out, how tough can I get?"

"Just as tough as is necessary," Colonel Stepney said. "You make a post-mortem."

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

Captain Harmon rang Colonel Stepney's office. "The sheriff from across the river is here, Colonel."

"What does he want?"

"Wants to talk with us about co-operation."

"That's fine. Bring him up."

Captain Harmon hung up the telephone, said to Sheriff Landes, "Come on up, Sheriff. The colonel will see us."

They climbed the stairs of the barracks, went through an office containing a secretary, who motioned them to go on into the private office. Colonel Stepney came around the desk to shake hands with Sheriff Landes. "How's everything coming over on your side of the river, Sheriff?"

"Fine," Landes said, sitting down, and accepting one of Colonel Stepney's cigars. "I want to see you folks about a little co-operation."

"What?"

"You have a man under arrest, Marvus L Gentry"

Colonel Stepney glanced at Captain Harmon.

Harmon nodded and said, "He's the man we caught digging up that dope."

"Oh, yes," Colonel Stepney said.

"Now then," Sheriff Landes went on, "we've got pretty much Qf an open-and-shut case against this Robert Trenton for murdering Harvey Richmond, but we want to sew it up just as tight as we can."

"You think he's guilty?" Colonel Stepney asked.

"1 know darn well he^ guilty. In fact we've got a real case."

Colonel Stepney nodded.

"But you know how those things are. Trenton has a lawyer who's pretty slick and we want to get it sewed up so there's no possible loophole."

Colonel Stepney nodded once more.

"Now then," Sheriff Landes went on, "this man Gentry would turn stated evidence if we could give him a break."

"How much of a break?"

"Immunity."

Colonel Stepney shook his head.

"Now, wait a minute," Sheriff Landes went on quickly. "When you come right down to it, you haven't so much of a case against him."

"We caught him with about forty thousand dollars' worth of dope in his possession."

"I know, but he didn't know it was dope at the time."

"Oh, sure," Colonel Stepney said sarcastically. "He just went out at that particular place on the road to dig up some gladioli bulbs, and when he dug down to where he thought the bulbs would be, imagine his surprise to find a lot of oiled silk packets. He put them in his pocket because he didn't know what else to do with them and then decided what was the use of trying to get the gladioli bulbs. He ..."

"Now, wait a minute," Sheriff Landes interrupted. "We've always co-operated with you and we want to co-operate with you. This man is an important witness for us. Why not hear his story?"

"What is his story? He's refused to talk to our men."

"Well, a lawyer came to us and told us a very sketchy outline of what his story would be in case we co-operate by giving him immunity.

"Gentry had been in the dope racket about two months. He was a new man. At first he didn't know what the racket was. He knew it was smuggling, but thought it was diamonds.

"The gang was marking time waiting for a shipment to come from Europe. Last week they all got tense because they knew they'd have a small fortune if everything went all right. The ship was due to dock Monday.

"Monday afternoon the gang got word that everything was all right. Then early Tuesday morning they received word everything was all wrong.

"Gentry knows that Robert Trenton was the one who was supposed to have the dope. Then he was told Tuesday afternoon that Trenton was aboard, and shortly after dark he was sent to the place where Trenton had buried the dope. He was given a sketch map. You people have that map. It was on Gentry when you arrested him. It's in Trenton's handwriting.

"Gentry wants immunity. That seems a small price to pay for sewing up a murder."

"How did Richmond happen to be aboard that houseboat?" Stepney asked.

"Because he found out that was Trenton^ headquarters."

"How do you know it was Trenton who killed him?"

"We have an absolutely dead open-and-shut case on that. Trenton had a gun in his possession. A .32 automatic. We've traced it from the numbers. It was a gun that was stolen from a house about a year ago in a burglary."

"Any fingerprints?"

"We've got it all tied up, I tell you," Sheriff Landes said. "You know you don't get fingerprints on a revolver, particularly if it's well-kept and oiled, but with an automatic the situation is different. You do get fingerprints on the cartridge clip, usually the print of a thumb.

"In this case that's exactly what we have. A thumbprint of Robert Trenton.

"What's more, we can prove Trenton had the gun in his possession. Thanks to the good work your men did, that gun was found in a desk where Robert Trenton had locked it. We have three witnesses. Linda Mae Carroll, Linda Carroll, her niece, and Merton Ostrander. They're all of them friendly to Robert Trenton. They'll dislike very much to testify anything against him, but they'll have to admit that the gun was in his possession, that it was locked in the desk."

"Who had the key to the desk?" Colonel Stepney asked.

"Merton Ostrander."

Colonel Stepney glanced at Captain Harmon, cocked a quizzical eyebrow.

Sheriff Landes interpreted the glance and said hurriedly, "Now look. I know what you're thinking, but let's be reasonable about it. Suppose Trenton tries to claim Merton Ostrander waited until he'd gone to sleep and then went down, opened the desk, and got possession of the gun."

"Well?" Colonel Stepney asked.

"It couldn't have happened that way."

"Why not?"

"The bullets that were fired into Harvey Richmond's body were immediately and instantly fatal. They were fired right under the heart. That is, one of them was in the heart and the other was just above the heart, severing the big artery. Now remember the time at which the shooting took place. Remember the time at which the fire started. Remember the place at which the fire started.

"Robert Trenton admitted to these witnesses that he fired two shots at a man on the boat. He says that he couldn't even see the sights, but he admits that he fired two shots.

"It. was immediately after that that the boat caught fire. Now then, when the boat caught fire it drifted down the river and came to a rest on that sandbar. The men aboard the boat finally got the fire out using hand extinguishers and a power pump. Then they cleared out. The boat was badly damaged. Fire trucks saw the blaze, rushed to the location, found it was on a boat in the river and turned back because they weren't equipped to handle anything like that, and because they could see through binoculars that the crew were getting the fire under control.

"I didn't hear about it until this morning. I went down shortly after daylight. I found the charred body. The boat was owned by Sam Joyner. I hunted him up. I didn't like his story, so 1 put him under arrest.

"Then he cracked. He saw Trenton fire the fatal shots. Now there's no question about the time when Trenton left the boat, no question about the time the shots were fired in relation to the time of the fire on the houseboat.

"But we need a motive. If we can prove Trenton was smuggling dope and that Richmond was on his trail, we have a perfect motive. All you need to do is to dismiss the charges against Gentry."

Colonel Stepney said, "There was a woman with Gentry at the time he went to dig up the dope."

Sheriff Landes was quick with an explanation. "That was his girl friend. She was out with him for the ride. She had nothing to do with it and wasn't anywheres around when the dope was being dug up. That's why your man lost her. She was over by the car, and as soon as she knew there was trouble she beat it into the grove on the other side of the road and made her getaway. She's out of the case and she's going to stay out of it. There's no good to be achieved by bringing her into it. And the minute you try to do that Gentry is going to dry up like a clam."

Colonel Stepney arose from his chair and paced the office floor, giving the matter frowning consideration.

"Look," Sheriff Landes said, "I've fixed it all up with everybody. The Narcotics Division is all ready to play ball because they're anxious to get a case against the man who murdered Harvey Richmond. All you have to do is just play ball with us and we'll be sitting pretty."

"Does Gentry have a record?"

"No, he doesn't. He's completely in the clear. We co-operate with you boys all the time and I don't see why you won't co¬operate with us."

"How long was it after the boat was turned loose from the moorings that the fire broke out?"

"Just two or three minutes."

"How do you know?"

"Well, I'm figuring the way it must have been from what the witnesses say. Judging about the time they began to notice the red spot in the sky and the reflection of burning on the water, it couldn't have been over two or three minutes."

"I don't like it," Colonel Stepney said.

Sheriff Landes' face darkened. "You fellows are always asking us ..."

"Now, wait a minute," Colonel Stepney interrupted. "Don't get off on the wrong track. I'm simply saying there are some aspects of the case I don't like. As far as this man Gentry is concerned, we'll play ball. If thatfc the way you want it, that!; the way it'll be."

Sheriff Landes' face broke into a broad smile. He crossed the office and shook hands with Colonel Stepney. "You aren't going to regret this," he said. "This is going to mean a big thing to me, personally. It's going to mean a big thing to the prosecuting attorney."

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

Sam Joyner sat in conference with his lawyer.

The attorney counted the sheaf of hundred-dollar bills Joyner had given him. He nodded, pocketed the money.

"Don't think you're getting that for nothing," Joyner said grimly. "That's not for just being a mouthpiece. That's for a spring."

"Shut up," the lawyer told him. "You know 1 can't guarantee a case. But you do just exactly as I tell you and you'll be okay nine chances out of ten. Now do you want to buy that or not?"

"I've bought it."

"1 just wanted to be sure you understood what you'd bought."

"Go ahead."

"I've rigged a deal for Gentry. They'll give him immunity if he'll sing."

"If he sings? Why you dope, if he sings he'll have both of us..."

The attorney interrupted. "Don't be foolish. He'll sing the tune I tell him to and I'm writing the words for the music."

"What do I do?"

"You do just exactly as I tell you. First you talk to everyone. You tell them that you rented your boat to men who impressed you as being all right. When you began to realise there might be something fishy about it, you were afraid to accuse them of any wrongdoing because of laying yourself open to a suit for slander.

St. (on - II

"So you decided to keep quiet but try to get some evidence that would enable you to take definite action. You got that straight?"

"That's what I've told 'em," joyner said.

"Now get this. After you've told that story so that it gets well distributed, all of a sudden you clam up. 1 don't want you to get where you have to answer questions about being seen with Trenton in the bus station until we can get a fix on that woman witness. You can say that you're entirely innocent, but there's a technical irregularity that's worrying your attorney. Say your lawyer told you to refuse to answer any questions. Say, '1 refuse to answer on the ground that anything I may say might incriminate me.' Then you smile wistfully and say that it's just a technicality, but nevertheless, when you have an attorney you have to do what he says. You say it seems a foolish precaution to you because the thing your attorney is afraid of is just a little irregularity in connection with an incidental matter. And then you squirm a bit and call me on the phone and tell me that you're being questioned and you want to tell your story and plead with me to let you. I'll tell you to sit tight, and you'll get mad, but finally you'll agree that you promised me you'd follow my advice.

"You hang up the phone, but you're still mad. You want to talk the worst way, but you can't. So you cuss me and make it look as if you're sore as a boil ... but you don't talk. You don't answer any question from anyone.

"You think you can do that all right?"

"1 just refuse to say anything?"

"Yes. You read from a paper, '1 refuse to answer this question on the advice of counsel and on the ground the answer might incriminate me.'"

A smile of relief spread over Joyner's face. "That," he said, "is the best legal advice I've ever had."

The attorney nodded. "I'm glad you're getting wise. They have a murder they're going to have to clean up. They've elected Trenton as the one who did it. They want a conviction. They want a conviction right now. This is our chance to climb aboard for free. You get me?"

"I get you," Joyner said, relief in his voice. "And," he added, "I'm damn glad I got you."

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

Colonel Stepney walked into the laboratory where Dr Herbert Dixon had his office.

"Hello, Herb."

"How's everything coming, Colonel? Have a chair."

"What did you find out in that Richmond murder, Herb?"

Dr Dixon said, "The coroner had his pet physician dig into the body to recover the bullets and determine the course of the bullet wounds. That had all been done before I got there. There wasn't much left."

"Did you see the bullets?"

"I saw the bullets, but not in the body. However, the physician knows where he found them and moreover he had the sense to take a series of X-rays showing the bullets in place."

"Sheriff Landes tells me the shots would have caused instant death, either one of them."

Dr Dixon nodded. "I think he's right on that, but I wish I'd been there when he cut the body open."

"Why?"

"There are some things about it 1 don't like."

"What?"

Well, on account of the fire, the body had been pretty well cooked, but 1 found a blood clot inside the skull."

"Anything unusual about that?"

"It depends." "What else?"

"Just routine. I took a sample of blood from that blood clot, and 1 searched around trying to find some blood from the body. I finally got a little from the liver, enough to make a test. I also picked up some of the lung tissue."

"What's that for?"

"Well ... I just wanted to have it."

"If you got blood from the blood clot in the brain isn't that enough to give you a grouping or whatever it is you want?"

"Probably."

"Then why take some from the liver as well?"

"1 want to see if they match."

"What are you getting at? The blood from a body is all in the same group, isn't it?"

"Yes, of course."

"Well, why all the blood samples?"

"Lots of things. We can learn a lot from blood - extent of intoxication, things of that sort. Don't think I'm being mysterious, Colonel. I'm just being cautious and I hate to stick my neck out until I'm sure."

"When will you be sure?"

"1 haven't completed my tests yet. Let's take a look."

The doctor opened a door. Several assistants were engaged in making tests. Dr Dixon indicated a burner, a tall glass tube with several rubber tubes leading from it to other tubes, and said, "We're testing the blood of that fellow who was killed in the automobile accident. I think we'll find enough percentage of alcohol to indicate extreme intoxication."

He raised his voice. "Dick, what have we done with those blood samples from Harvey Richmond?"

"I'm just getting ready to run them."

"I'll run them with you," Dr Dixon said. "Want to wait, Colonel?"

"No thanks, I'll come back. I'm trying to make sure we don't overlook any bets. You know if that murder was committed while the boat was within two hundred feet of the dock, it's outside of our jurisdiction, but if the boat had drifted more than two hundred feet the murder would have been committed in our state."

"You've made experiments?"

"Yes. We used blocks of wood and then we got a boat of about the same size and tried it."

"How soon did the fire break out?"

"Not until after the boat was one hundred feet from the dock."

"You're certain?"

"We have a witness who swears that he saw the first flickering flame coming up and thought at first it was a bonfire. Then as the flames became larger, the burning object drifted behind a hill and all he could see was the reflection of the flame in the sky.

"Ed Wallington is rather handy with a transit. We got him to run a line on the course indicated and see where it would intersect the line of the current. Then we measured the distance from the landing float in terms of driftage and time. It would have taken between two minutes and thirty-eight seconds, and three minutes and fourteen seconds for the boat to have covered that distance. We made a whole series of tests. The variable factor depends upon just when the bow line was cast loose with relation to the time the stern line was cut. The distance is approximately one hundred feet."

Dr Dixon said, "I'd like to know the exact sequence of events. However, those shots were fired from close range."

"Powder stains on the garments?"

"No. Not anything quite so tangible. However, I've been able to salvage some of the charred cloth and I find in it distinct evidence of lead particles. Nothing you can get with the naked eye, but stuff that the X-ray picks up."

"How close was the killer when the shots were fired, Doctor?"

"I'd say under eight feet and more than two feet."

"What's that?" Stepney exclaimed. "That hardly ties in with the story anyone tells."

"That's why I want to do some more checking of facts. Suppose I should come up with something that would prove Trenton didn't do it?"

"You couldn't. He may not have done it when they claim he did it, or how they claim he did it, but he's the murderer. He has to be."

"Suppose he isn't?"

"Gosh, Herb, they've picked him over there as a natural. Look at the evidence against him!"

"That's just what I'm doing."

"Their political careers may depend on a speedy conviction on open-and-shut evidence."

"Suppose they're wrong?"

"Well, we'd have to be mighty certain of our facts. The way things are now ... I'm satisfied it'!! all tie in when you get the evidence lined up, Herb."

"Suppose it doesn't?"

"We'll cross that bridge when we come to it. There's a lot at stake - co-operation between the police of two states for one thing."

"And a human life for another," Dr Dixon said.

"Sheriff Landes tells me they have one of Robert Tremens fingerprints on the cartridge clip. It's his thumbprint beyond any question."

Dr Dixon said, "I'm having photographs made of the ejected cartridge cases. Apparently there's no question but what ncy were fired in and ejected by that .32 automatic."

Colonel Stepney shook his head. "We've go to be careful and objective, Herb. You knew this chap on the ship and he made you like him. You're going to have to put all that to one side."

"Of course. But I'm not going to put my conscience to one side."

"No one's asking you to ... but if it should go the other way, Herb, we'd have to be so sure of our facts that we could go all the way. We'd have to demonstrate Trenton's innocence. To do what would be virtually impossible. He had the gun. It had two shots fired. He admits he fired them."

"I know," Dr Dixon said. "1 can t tell what I'm going to find - probably nothing."

"If you find anything, find a lot."

"I'll try to find everything that remains, Colonel."

Colonel Stepney paced the floor for a few minutes. "All right," he said at length. "We'll hew to the line, Doctor. To hell with the chips."

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

Sheriff Landes and Norton Berkeley, the prosecuting attorney, sat in conference.

There was a gleam of triumph in the eyes of Sheriff Landes, and the district attorney, making notes, would from time to time nod his head approvingly.

Landes said, "We have it all sewed up and wrapped in cellophane. We've made a deal with the State Police. They're going to release Marvus Gentry and he's going to give us everything we need to tie Robert Trenton right up with the dope shipments."

Berkeley nodded.

"And," the sheriff went on, "that's just peanuts. We now have a bombshell you can spring in court, a perfect motive for the murder."

"What is it?" Berkeley asked.

"When we searched the room of Harvey Richmond, we found he'd been cabling the authorities in Switzerland. There's a little inn run by a man named Ren£ Charteux. Madame Charteux died very suddenly, apparently of poisoning from eating a toadstool which had been included in mushrooms she'd used as a sauce for meat.

"Apparently Richmond was suspicious, for some reason or other. He first sent a ship's wireless to the Swiss authorities. The Swiss authorities started work. What do you think they found?"

"What did they find?"

"Madame Charteux died because she ate enough arsenic to kill a horse."

"Can we check that up with Robert Trenton?"

"Robert Trenton stayed at the inn."

"What dates?"

"Well," Sheriff Landes admitted, "there's a little discrepancy there. He apparently was at the inn a couple of days or so after the funeral. But he was pretty thick with the husband. And Harvey Richmond got the tip to work on the murder angle because of stuff he learned on the ship when he was investigating Trenton. The copies of the wireless messages show all that.

"Now what I figure is that you can throw all this into your opening statement, or you may want to hold it in reserve."

The prosecutor said, "It's hard to get the evidence from Switzerland in a form we can use."

"Does that mean our hands are tied?"

"Not at all. There are lots of ways of skinning a cat. 1 might wait until Trenton gets on the stand and then start throwing questions at him on cross-examination, asking if it isn't a fact that he stayed at this inn, and if it isn't a fact that this Madame Charteux died very suddenly, and if he didn't know that Harvey Richmond was investigating the facts concerning her death at the time Richmond met his death."

The sheriff nodded. "That should do it."

Berkeley said, "Incidentally, there's no reason why you have to keep quiet about this, you know."

"You mean the newspapers?"

"I don't mean anything," Norton Berkeley said sharply, "but I see nothing about it that's confidential. You say you found the evidence there in Harvey Richmond's things?"

"That's right. There were copies of the wireless messages he sent, and there was a cable that was received from. the authorities in Switzerland the day he died. The Swiss authorities are launching an investigation."

"Well," Berkeley said, fixing his eyes significantly on the sheriff, "1 don't see anything about it that necessarily needs to remain confidential so far as we are concerned."

"Well, that's fine," the sheriff said, "The metropolitan papers have asked me for a statement, and ..."

"Better let me handle that end," Berkeley interposed quickly. "There are some fine legal points to be considered."

"Okay. Just as you say. Now here's something else that ties right in on that poisoning plot. When the Customs men searched Trenton they found two capsules filled with white powder in his bathrobe pocket."

"The deuce they did! Where are they?"

"Harvey Richmond asked for them. The Customs men gave them to him and they've disappeared. We can't find 'em."

Berkeley's manner showed excitement. "That's why Trenton killed him. He had this evidence that would tie Trenton in on this Swiss killing, so Trenton killed him and got the capsules. Get one of the Customs men to say he's seen powdered arsenic and these capsules contained a powder that was the colour of arsenic."

"The colour of arsenic?" the sheriff asked. "Those Customs men never even opened the capsules. They didn't taste, smell, or..."

"The colour of arsenic," Berkeley repeated.

"There are too many things that colour. Flour, soda, baking powder ..."

"Never you mind that," Berkeley said. "You get those Customs men on the line. Get 'em to say the capsules contained a powder that was just like arsenic in appearance."

"Okay," Sheriff Landes said. "Now I've made arrangements to get Gentry all cleaned up on that dope possession charge. He's going to co-operate with us."

"Does he understand that?"

"Sure he does. I thought it might be a good idea for us to talk with him together."

Berkeley toyed with his pencil. "It's better to have all the preliminary matters cleared up before such a witness actually talks with the district attorney."

"I know, I know," Landes said. "I know how you feel about that, but this is one time where we just can't afford to have any misunderstanding. I thought it would be a good idea if they checked with me on this thing. In that way we could both ... well, we'd sort of be together on it."

"Where is he now?"

"Waiting outside in the other room, in the custody of one of the deputies."

"All right," Berkeley said. "Let's get him in."

Jk

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

Dr Herbert Dixon, closeted with Rob Trenton in the visitors' room of the little country jail, said, "Trenton, I'd like you to have confidence in me."

Trenton nodded.

"1 want you to tell me what happened. I want you to begin at the beginning and tell me your whole story, from the time you first met Linda Carroll on the ship until you found yourself under arrest."

Rob Trenton thought things over for a moment, then said, "I'm sorry. Doctor, but my attorney tells me I shouldn't talk to anyone."

"And who's your attorney, Trenton?"

"Staunton B Irvine."

"Do you have confidence in him?"

"Naturally."

"You've known him for a long time?"

"No."

"How did you get him?"

"A friend got him for me. That is, he put Irvine in touch with me."

"Who's this friend?"

"Merton Ostrander."

"You have confidence in Ostrander?"

"Not too much."

"Then why do you have confidence in the attorney Ostrander selected for you?"

"Because when you're in a mess of this sort you have to hire a lawyer. Just the same as when you're sick and need an operation, you have to consult a doctor."

"And why doesn't your attorney want you to say anything?"

"Well, I suppose ..."

"Are you afraid that you might get tripped up, might get caught in some lie?"

"Of course not."

"Then why shouldn't you tell your story?"

"I think he wants it to come as a surprise when 1 tell it in court."

"It may be a surprise all right, and you may be the one who gets the surprise."

Rob said nothing.

"I'm going to tell you this," Dr Dixon went on. "There's something strange about the facts in this case. They don't tie in the way they should. 1 want you to tell me your story. 1 want you to recite every single fact, even the facts which seem to you to be utterly insignificant."

"Why?"

"Because 1 think in some insignificant fact, some little thing which doesn't seem to you to have any particular bearing or importance on the case, the key to the whole situation may be concealed."

"When you have a lawyer you must do what he tells you."

"Not always. Are you afraid to talk to me - afraid you'll betray yourself?"

"Of course not."

"Then why not talk?"

"I've told you that."

"I'll promise to keep the information as confidential as possible. I'm actually a physician, you know."

"And you're tied up with the State Police."

"What does that mean?"

"It means that police always hang together and in the long run you'll try to stick me."

"I'll try to find the real criminal. If you're the murderer, don't talk with me."

"Just what do you want to know?"

"You took that .32 automatic to the home of Linda Mae Carroll in Falthaven, didn't you?"

"Yes. I'll admit that. I'll have to. They all saw the gun."

"Where did you get that gun?"

Rob said, "I took that gun from the man I overpowered there on the houseboat. If the gun had been used to kill somebody, it had been used before I got it. And if that's the case, the person was already dead."

"You fired that gun?"

Rob hesitated a moment, debating whether to answer.

"Please," Dr Dixon said. "This may mean a lot to you."

"Yes, 1 fired it," Rob Trenton said, "but 1 didn't hit anything, and I didn't kill anyone."

"Will you tell me the circumstances under which you fired it, Trenton?"

"Well, I got off the houseboat and got to the wharf, and then I was afraid that the others might pursue me and catch me, so 1 cut the lines loose that held the boat to the wharf. There was a current running past there, and the boat very gently, very slowly started out into the current."

"It didn't scrape against the dock?"

"No."

"There was no bump? Nothing to warn the people aboard that they were drifting?" "Well," Rob said thoughtfully, "there must have been something, because someone came up on the deck and looked around. By that time the bow of the boat had drifted out and started to swing. The stem of the boat was coming in so that it would almost touch the little landing dock. The figure started to run towards the stem of the boat - I shouldn't be telling you this."

"I think you should, Rob. I think you're coming to the part 1 want right now."

Rob Trenton shifted his position uneasily in the stiff-backed prison chair, then said, "Well, t fired the gun."

"How many times?"

"Twice."

"Why?"

"To keep the man from running to the stem of the boat."

"Did you hit him?"

"1 know 1 didn't hit him."

"How do you know?"

"Because he didn't act as though he was hit. He flung himself down."

"He didn't fall down?"

"It wasn't a fall. Anyhow, I don't think it was. I think he just flung himself flat on the deck."

"Did you sight the gun?"

"No, I just pointed it."

"And fired twice?"

"Yes."

"Are you sure that you didn't hit him?"

"1... I don't know for sure," Rob blurted. "I wish I did. 1 keep kidding myself by saying that I'm sure he flung himself down. But how do 1 know how a man acts when he's received a fatal bullet in the heart? I've seen men shot in war, but those circumstances were different. Anyhow, this man seemed to fling himself down on the deck."

"Did he move after that?"

"1 didn't see him move. We may as well face it, Doctor, 1 can't tell for sure whether 1 hit him. I don't think I did, but 1 can't tell."

"Now let's think carefully," Dr Dixon went on. "When you shoot a gun there's a split second between the sound of the explosion and the sound of the hitting of the bullet, particularly with a relatively low velocity hand gun, and if the distance is great enough to allow such an appreciable interval. There were three things you might have struck with those bullets. One was the figure of the man, the other one was wood, such as the hull of the boat or the pier, and the other one was water. Now did you hear any thud that would indicate the bullet had struck wood - either of the bullets?"

"I ... I can't remember. I didn't notice if 1 did."

"Did you hear any smacking sound that would indicate the bullet had struck water?"

"The same answer. I can't remember whether 1 did. If I did, I didn't notice it at the time, and therefore don't remember it now."

"All right, you shot twice. Then what happened?"

"Well, the boat swung around and after the bow had swung into the current the stern came out, the current hit the boat broadside on, and it started drifting downstream."

"So what did you do?"

"Put the safety on the gun and ran towards the shelter of some trees - because I'd heard a car coming."

"And then what?"

"Well, when I'd gone a short distance 1 heard steps. 1 listened and then I could hear very distinctly the sound of steps. A woman's steps."

1/. <»K / >

"So what did you do?"

"1 crouched down, turned around and waited."

"And what happened?"

"Then all at once there was a flare of light which shot up from the houseboat. The boat started to burn. A big pillar of flame shot up as though gasoline or something had been ignited. I crouched there watching, and 1 saw this woman standing out at the edge of the pier, her figure silhouetted by the burning boat. There was a ruddy reflection on the water, and after a moment, the sky, which was overcast, began to reflect back the flames."

"How far was the boat from the dock at that time?"

"A little way. 1 can't tell how far."

"A hundred feet?"

"Wei! ... it's hard to estimate distance at night, and with a burning object. It could have been a little over a hundred feet."

"The last you saw of this man you shot at, he was lying prone on the side of the boat that was drifting towards the current?"

"Yes."

"Which side?"

"7"hat would be the left side. The port side."

"All right. And you fired while the figure was on the port

side?"

"Yes."

"Fired twice?"

"Yes."

"Fired to frighten him?"

"Yes, sir. That's right. So he wouldn't run towards the rear of the boat and be able to jump ashore. I fired those two shots as a warning."

"And the figure stopped moving?"

"That's right, flung himself down."

"And was then on the port side of the boat?"

"Yes, sir." "Lying still, the last you saw of him?"

"Yes, sir."

"And how long was it after that when you saw the boat burst into flames?"

"Oh, I'd say it was ... well, I don't know. You lose track of time on an occasion of that sort. 1 think perhaps it could have been as much as two minutes. I don't know."

"Where were you standing when you lired the shots, Rob?"

"1 guess that part of it is all right. They found the ejected shell cases where the automatic had thrown them out. 1 was standing about ten or fifteen feet from the shore line, from the end of the pier where it touches the land."

"You were standing on land?"

"Yes."

"Some ten or fifteen feet from the end of the pier?"

"Yes."

"And how long is that pier?"

"Oh, it must be thirty or thirty-five feet."

"And the boat was out away from the dock?"

"Yes."

"So the distance from where you were standing, to the figure on the boat, must have been at least sixty or seventy ieet?"

"Yes."

"Sixty feet would be twenty yards. That's some K. ' distance to shoot and put two bullets in such a close grouping.

"I guess so. 1 didn't aim. I just pointed and shot."

"All right," Dr Dixon said. "Now that you've told me this, 1 don't want you to do any more talking. Your preliminary examination is this afternoon. Have your attorney call me as a witness."

"My attorney isn't going to put on any evidence," Trenton said. "He says he'll cross-examine the prosecutions witnesses, get all the information he can, and then let the judge bind me over. He says that's what the judge will do anyway, and we'd be foolish to disclose our hand."

"Nevertheless," Dr Dixon said, "1 want you to insist that your attorney call me as a witness."

"What can you do if we call you?"

Dr Dixon said, "I think 1 can help a lot, Rob. 1 want to find the real murderer. I'm going to talk with your lawyer now. I'm going to give him a list of questions that I want him to ask me, and a list of questions that I want him to ask the doctor who originally examined the body and removed the bullets. But you're going to have to help me. I want you to insist that your attorney does exactly as 1 have outlined."

"He won't want to?"

"1 don't know. I've tried to talk with him. He wouldn't see me. He said he didn't want to talk about the case. I'm going to try to see him again. I'm going to tell him that if he's going to really help you in your case, he's going to have to see me. I'm going to need your co-operation."

"The way things are right now, I've been too credulous," Trenton said.

"And so," Dr Dixon observed sarcastically, "you've decided now to go to the other extreme, is that right?"

Trenton thought the matter over for a moment or two, then said, "All right, go ahead. You play ball with me and I'm going to play ball with you. Where's Linda Carroll? Do you know?"

Dr Dixon shook his head.

"Have you tried to see her?"

"Quite a few people are trying to see her."

"Where is she?"

"No one seems to know."

"Her aunt knows."

"If her aunt knows, she isn't telling. She swears she doesn't know."

"Linda's testimony should be able to help me."

"She's disappeared."

"Deliberately?"

"Apparently so."

Rob Trenton said morosely, "All right, I've given you what you wanted. Go ahead and do something. What are you sticking around here for?"

"To answer questions," Dr Dixon said smiling.

"Well," Rob said, getting up out of the chair and walking over to the barred window, "you've answered them."

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

A big State Police laboratory truck was parked under the shade of a huge oak on the east side of the river.

Down by the wharf, across the river, a mile away, two uniformed men were moving slowly, studying every inch of the wood.

At length, one of the men said, "Look here, Gerry. See what you make of this."

He indicated a section of one of the upthrust piles to which mooring lines had been fastened. There was a section of rotted wood above the place where the lines were tied, and a very careful, very close inspection showed that there had been some disturbance in this rotted wood.

Using the tip of his finger, the police officer scraped away this rotted wood until he came to wood of a firmer consistency, then carefully using a knife, he uncovered a round hole.

A field telephone wire ran up to and across the bridge and communicated with the laboratory truck. "Looks like we've found a bullet," Gerry said over the wire. "Better take a look."

A few moments later, Dr Dixon, in company with one of the technicians from the laboratory truck, drove across the stage bridge and out to the pier. They examined the hole, then Dr Dixon nodded.

The men carefully sawed through the pile below the hole. When they removed the section of pile it was split with wedges until a .32 calibre bullet could be seen embedded in a hole which had been neatly split into two parts.

Dr Dixon handed the bullet to the technician. "Let's take a look at this," he said.

They hurried back to the truck. The comparison microscope was mounted so that electric lights furnished an even illumination.

The technician centred a bullet marked 'test bullet' on one side of the comparison microscope, and the bullet which had been recovered from the cross-section of pile on the other side. He placed his eyes at the eyepieces of the comparison microscope and began slowly turning a knob which rotated one of the bullets. Abruptly he stopped, turned the knob back a fraction of an inch, then raised his fingers to the screw which adjusted the focus of the microscope.

"Well?" Dr Dixon asked anxiously.

"They're the same," the technician said, "fired from the same gun. Take a look."

Dr Dixon settled himself on the stool vacated by the technician, applied his eyes to the microscope, studied the two bullets carefully. "That does it," he said. "We've had to stretch our jurisdiction to get the evidence, but this is it. They were both fired from the same gun."

"Where does that leave us?" the technician asked.

There was the ghost of a twinkle in Dr Dixon's eyes. "That leaves us with three bullets and two empty cartridge cases."

"Then we're short one cartridge case."

"On the contrary," Dr Dixon said, "we're long one bullet."

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

The preliminary hearing of Robert Trenton for the murder of Harvey Richmond was very much of a cut-and-dried procedure so far as the People's case was concerned.

Having proven the identity of the charred corpse by a chart of the teeth and the testimony of a dentist, Norton Berkeley, the prosecutor, called Dr Nathan Beaumont to the stand.

Dr Beaumont, crisply professional, testified that he had been called to the burned houseboat, that he had been shown the charred remains of the deceased by the sheriff; that he had at first decided death was from burning, but in order to make certain, had taken X-ray photographs of the charred body. These X-ray photographs had disclosed the presence of two bullets. He had, therefore, carefully probed for and located the bullets. From their position in the body, he would say that one of them had completely perforated the heart, the other had been immediately above the heart, puncturing a large blood vessel. In the doctor's opinion, either bullet would have been instantly fatal.

The doctor testified that he had marked these bullets so he could identify them, and had delivered them to the coroner. The two bullets, which he now produced to be introduced in evidence, were the same bullets he had taken from the charred body. He would give it as his opinion that death was produced

by gunshot wounds, that in fact he would go further and state death was caused by the two bullets he had produced.

On cross-examination, Staunton Irvine, the attorney representing Rob Trenton, having studied the list of questions which Dr Dixon had told Trenton to deliver to his attorney, launched a somewhat half-hearted cross-examination.

"Had the investigation stopped when the bullets were found?"

Dr Beaumont fixed the attorney with a scornful eye and said patronisingly, "I was employed to find the cause of death. I found the cause of death."

"And then you ceased to investigate, Doctor?"

"Having found that for which I was searching, I ceased searching - which is a natural thing to do."

"Was there evidence of haemorrhage in the vicinity of the bullets?"

"There was. That is, there was as much evidence as you could expect. The body had been charred, literally cooked."

"You're certain that these bullets were the cause of death?"

"As certain as I am that I'm sitting here."

Dr Beaumont impatiently glanced at his wristwatch.

"That's all," Irvine said.

The doctor was excused. The next witness was a ballistic expert who introduced the .32 automatic into evidence, produced a test bullet which had been fired from it and identified the two bullets as having been fired from that particular .32 automatic

"Call Merton Ostrander," the district attorney said.

Merton Ostrander arose and said, "I feel that I can contribute nothing and ..."

"Come forward and be sworn," the district attorney said.

"I prefer not to."

"Your preferences have nothing whatever to do with it," the judge said. "Come forward, young man, hold up your right hand and be sworn."

Ostrander hesitated, then, with quite obvious reluctance, walked down the aisle, opened the swinging gate in the bar which separated the litigants, witnesses and attorneys from the others, and advanced towards the witness-stand, where he was sworn.

"Sit right down there," the judge said..

"Now then," District Attorney Berkeley said in a loud, dramatic voice, "I have here, Your Honour, a hostile witness. It's going to be necessary to ask him some leading questions. He is testifying with obvious reluctance and ..."

"Go ahead," the judge said. "1 will be able to see the attitude of the witness without having someone point it out to me."

The district attorney said, "Mr Ostrander, I'll call your attention to the night of the twentieth. Did you know the defendant at that time?"

"I did. Yes, sir."

"Did you see the defendant on that night?"

"Yes, sir."

"Did he have some weapon with him?"

Ostrander hesitated.

"Answer the question," snapped the district attorney.

"Yes, sir, he did."

"Have you ever seen this .32 automatic before?" the district attorney asked, and then added, "Let the record show that 1 am handing the witness People's exhibit number three."

"1 ... 1 believe I have."

"Don't you know?"

"Yes."

"Have you?"

"Yes." "Where?"

"I saw it late on the evening of the twentieth, or rather earlier, on the morning of the twenty-first." . "At about what time?" "Around two o'clock in the morning." "And who had that weapon?" Ostrander changed position.

"Mr Ostrander, I asked you a question. Who had that weapon?"

"Robert Trenton." "The defendant?" "Yes, sir."

"Did he make any statement in connection with it?" "He said that he had been held a captive and had made his escape, and that he had taken this weapon with him to protect himself."

"And did he say anything about having shot it?"

"Yes. He said he had fired it."

"How many times?"

"Twice."

"At what?"

"At ... well, in order to force someone on the houseboat to keep his distance; to keep that person from coming ashore." "And where was it this conversation took place?" "At the home of Linda Mae Carroll." "What's the address?"

"Two hundred and five East Robinson Street, Falthaven."

"Who was present?"

"Linda Mae Carroll, her niece Linda Carroll, Robert Trenton and I."

"Anyone else?" "No one else."

"How did it happen that you were there, Mr Ostrander?"

"I had been in contact with Miss Linda Carroll earlier in the day. I decided to try and locate her at the residence of her aunt, Linda Mae Carroll. At that time it was quite late in the evening and ..."

"How late?"

"Well, 1 would say it was around eleven o'clock or eleven- thirty, perhaps a little later."

"Very well, go on. What happened?"

"And Linda Mae Carroll, that's Miss Carroll's aunt, had retired for the night. She got up, however, and very graciously insisted that 1 stay all night, when it later appeared I'd missed the bus."

"Cross-examine," the district attorney said.

Staunton Irvine said belligerently, "How do you know this is the same weapon that you saw?"

"There was a question about notifying the police," Ostrander said, "and after some discussion it was decided to wait until morning, and go back to the place where the ... well, where the trouble had occurred, and look around a bit."

"Why?"

"Well, it was ... it was late, about two o'clock in the morning and we thought things would keep. Robert Trenton was labouring under a misapprehension."

"What was the misapprehension?"

"He thought that ... well, it seemed that the automobile which ... I guess I hadn't better go into that."

"What 1 am getting at is, how do you know it is the same gun?"

"Because we wrote down the numbers on the gun, and then it was locked in the desk at the suggestion of one of the parties."

"Who made that suggestion? Do you know?"

"I think Linda Mae Carroll did."

"And who had the key to the desk?"

"Why, I believe ..." "Did yauT

"Yes."

"You're certain of that?"

"Yes."

"No further questions," Irvine said, and, turning to Trenton whispered, "I'm afraid to cross-examine him. He keeps making it worse."

"Just a moment," the district attorney said, as Ostrander started to leave the witness-stand. "There are a few questions on re-direct examination. You said something about an automobile which had been a subject of discussion. What was that about?"

"Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and not proper re-direct examination," Irvine said.

"But," the district attorney announced suavely, "you brought out the facts concerning this conversation in your cross- examination. Having shown a part of the conversation, I'm certainly entitled to show all of it."

"Objection overruled," the judge said. "Answer the question."

Ostrander said, uncomfortably, "Robert Trenton thought perhaps the automobile, which had been loaned him by Miss Carroll, had been used in connection with some sort of... well, some illegal activity."

"Do you mean the smuggling of narcotics?"

"Yes."

"Well, why didn't you say so then?"

"1 ... it's a subject 1 don't care to go into."

"We're investigating a murder," the judge reprimanded. "Your personal feelings are to be relegated to the background, sir. You're a witness. Do you understand that?"

"Yes, Your Honour," Ostrander said.

"Proceed," the judge ordered.

"Just what was that conversation?"

"Well, after we arrived in port. Miss Linda Carroll wanted Robert Trenton to drive the automobile. Some friends were meeting her and she suggested that he drive the automobile home and then she would pick it up later. Well, Trenton told us he'd had a flat tyre and in looking around on the underside of the car he'd found a bulge. He told us he purchased a cold chisel and removed this metallic pocket which had been welded to the car, and ... well, there was some dope in there."

"Indeed?" the district attorney said sarcastically. "And at this conversation did Mr Trenton say what he had done with this dope?"

"He buried it."

"And he accused Miss Caroll of having been guilty of smuggling?"

"Not that, but he ... he said he was trying to get an explanation."

"And you conveniently forgot to tell the police all about this, didn't you?"

"I haven't been asked before."

"1 see," the district attorney said significantly, and then added, "Do you know where Miss Linda Carroll is now?"

"No, sir. I do not."

"Very well, that's all," the district attorney said, and then, with something of a sneer at counsel for the defence, said, "Does counsel lor the defence have any further questions on re-cross- examination?"

"None, Your Honour," Irvine said uncomfortably.

"Call Linda Mae Carroll to the stand," the district attorney announced triumphantly.

Linda Mae Carroll took the oath, seated herself on the stand, pointed her nose at the district attorney and clamped her lips together.

"You've heard Mr Merton Ostrander's testimony?" "Yes."

"Is it correct?"

"Yes, 1 suppose so."

"What time did this conversation with Mr Trenton take place?"

"Right around two o'clock in the morning, I think it was."

"And Trenton produced this gun for your inspection?"

"Well, he produced it."

"And what did you do with it?"

"Told Merton Ostrander to lock it up right away. I didn't want to have a gun hanging around the house. 1 asked him if it was loaded and he took out the clip and showed me that it was loaded. I believe the clip was full except for two shells. I told him to put the clip back and lock that gun up somewhere."

"Then what did you do?"

"I remembered the desk had a lock on it, so I had him put it in the desk and 1 suggested Merton Ostrander keep the key."

"Was there any conversation about your niece having been a party to smuggling?"

"Certainly not."

"You heard what Mr Ostrander said, didn't you?"

"That," Linda Mae Carroll said with dignity, "is something else again. Robert Trenton was merely describing something that had happened to the automobile. It didn't have anything to do with my niece."

"Your recollection of the conversation is approximately the same as that of Mr Ostrander? You have nothing to add to his testimony?"

"I guess that's about it," she said, "but don't you think for a minute that Rob Trenton aimed that gun at this man, fired and hit him. He just pointed it in the man's general direction and fired to frighten that man; and don't you think for a minute that he's a good enough shot to put two shots within a space no bigger than the size of your hand, at night... that's absurd."

"We are not asking you for your opinion, Madam," the judge said sharply.

"Do you know where your niece, Linda Carroll, is?" the district attorney asked.

"i do not," she snapped at him. "All I know is that she's been hounded to death by policemen and newspapermen until she's on the verge of a nervous breakdown, and she's gone to some place to try and get a little privacy. I dont know where it is, and if 1 did I wouldn't tell you. She'll show up at the proper time, don't worry about that."

"This is the proper time," the district attorney said.

"That may be what you think, but I don't need you to do my thinking for me. I'll know when's the proper time, and so will she."

"You know, do you not, that we have made every effort to locate her?"

"I do not."

"Well, I'm telling you that we have."

Linda Mae eyed him with shrewd twinkling eyes. "Well, if it's going to count as evidence, you'd better take the oath and trade places with me."

Even the judge smiled as her sally rocked the courtroom with laughter.

"Well, you know police have been to your house searching for your niece," the district attorney shouted.

"Of course I do," Linda Mae said. "They trampled the flowers, wore out the doorbell and left cigar butts all over the lawn."

"Well," the district attorney countered, "they were officers, perhaps no better, but certainly no worse than the average, and, under my orders, they were searching for your niece, Linda Carroll, and they failed to find her."

Linda Mae nodded pertly. "It takes a better than average cop to find someone at a place where they ain't."

Again laughter swept the courtroom before the judge could pound it to order.

"Cross-examine," the district attorney said with a wry smile.

"Miss Carroll," Staunton Irvine said, "what happened after the weapon, People's exhibit number three, was locked in the desk?"

"We talked for a while and then we went to bed."

"And was there some discussion about an automobile ... that is, an automobile other than the one that had been loaned to Mr Trenton by your niece?"

"There was. Mr Trenton had an automobile that he'd picked up and in which he made his escape. We parked it at a place where the police would find it eventually."

"Why didn't you notify the police?"

"Well, at the time I didn't see that any good could come of it."

"Now then," Irvine said, "who had the key to the desk?"

"1 believe Mr Ostrander took the key and put it somewhere, or maybe he kept it. He said that we should take great pains to see that the gun was kept so it could be turned over to the police ... that is, that nothing happened to it. Of course, at that time no one, not a single one of us, had any idea a man had been killed. We thought it was just another smuggling gang."

"That's all."

The district attorney called Sam Joyner to the stand, then abruptly changed his mind and said, "No, 1 don't think that will be necessary."

He turned to the judge and said, "Your Honour, I think we have made out a prima facie case; one which is more than amply sufficient to bind the defendant ovu. The victim was killed by two bullets fired from an automatic weapon which was concededly in the hands of the dticndant and which the defendant admitted firing when it was pointed towards the deceased. Any question of premeditation or any difference between manslaughter, second-degree murder or first-degree murder will be threshed out at the trial. At the present time it would seem that there is only one course open to Your Honour, and that's to bind the defendant over on a charge of first-degree murder and let the higher court decide the legal aspects of the situation."

The judge nodded.

"Therefore," the district attorney said, "the prosecution rests."

"Well, I guess there's reasonable cause here to connect the defendant with the crime," the judge said, "I ..."

"Call our witness, quick," Rob whispered to his lawyer.

Irvine shook his head.

"Just a moment, Your Honour," Rob Trenton said in a sudden burst of desperation, surprising even himself by his daring. "I wish to confer for a moment with counsel concerning my case."

The judge frowned, waited briefly.

Irvine said in angry whisper, "He's made up his mind to bind you over. There's nothing else he can do. Now sit still and let me handle this."

"You mean you won't call Dr Dixon?"

"Exactly. We can't afford to waste our valuable ammunition at this time aiming at an impossible target. The judge has his mind all made up."

The judge rapped with his gavel. "There certainly seems no alternative to the Court at this time but to find the defendant..

"Just a moment," Rob Trenton interrupted, "I want to call one witness to the stand."

Staunton Irvine whispered frantically in his ear, "Don't do it, you fool. He's going to bind you over anyway, and you'll simply be tipping your hand. Your witness will go on the stand and the district attorney will cross-examine him up one side and down the other, then when the case is on trial in the higher court, the district attorney will have a record to confuse him with, asking him if he didn't say this, or fail to say that, and ..."

"Nevertheless," Trenton said, "1 want to call him."

"Who's your witness?" the judge asked irritably.

"Dr Herbert Dixon," Trenton said.

The district attorney smiled. "No objection. Your Honour, no objection. Let the defence call him, by all means."

"All right," the judge said, "if you want to call a witness that's a right that you have. If Dr Dixon is still in the courtroom he'll come forward and be sworn."

Dr Dixon came forward and was sworn.

Acting with manifest reluctance, Staunton Irvine qualified him as an expert, then took the written list of questions which Rob Trenton handed him.

"Doctor, did you have occasion to examine the body of Harvey Richmond?"

"1 did."

"When?"

"On the afternoon of the twenty-first."

"Did you make a post-mortem examination?"

"I made the best post-mortem examination I could. I was unable to make a complete examination."

"Why?"

"Because an earlier post-mortem had been made. The body had been cut open in order to extract two bullets. However, the skull had not been opened and there were other parts of the burned body which remained undisturbed."

"Did you determine the cause of death?" Irvine asked listlessly.

"I did."

"What was it?"

"Death was caused primarily by burns," Dr Dixon said.

"By burns?" Irvine echoed in surprise "That's right."

"What about the bullets?" the lawyer blurted in surprise.

"Well," Dr Dixon said, "1 didn't have an opportunity to see the bullets in place, but nevertheless, I believe that the cause of death was not from gunshot wounds but from burns."

Staunton Irvine turned the sheet of paper. The second page was blank, there were no more questions.

Irvine hitched forward in his chair.

"That's all," Rob Trenton whispered.

"But now we're just getting started," Irvine said.

"Then stop," Rob told him.

"But why? We may stand a chance now."

"I don't know why. That's the way Dr Dixon planned it."

"The district attorney will rip him to pieces on cross- examination," Irvine whispered.

"Come, come, gentlemen," the judge said, "let's get on with the trial."

"That's all, Your Honour."

The judge looked at the district attorney.

Norton Berkeley, with something of a sneer, arose and said, "Well, Doctor, you have presumed to testify that Harvey Richmond died because of the fire. Is that right?"

"That's right."

"Yet you didn't see the location of the fatal bullets?"

"1 presume," Dr Dixon said, "by the fatal bullets you are referring to People's exhibits one and two?"

"That's right."

"No sir, I didn't see the location of the bullets."

"You didn't see the X-ray pictures?"

"No, sir. ! haven't seen them."

' fake a look at them now, then," Berkeley invited. "I will show you Feople's exhibits four and five. Do you see what these are? That is, can you get yourself oriented, Doctor? Can you determine the anatomical structure from these photographs?"

"I can do so very well, thank you."

"And do you see the bullets as shown in these photographs?"

"I do."

"Do you believe those bullets could have been discharged into the body of a living, breathing human being without causing death?"

"No, sir."

"Almost instantaneous death?"

"That's right."

"And yet you say that your examination of this body led you to believe that the man died as the result of the fire?"

"1 am certain of it," Dr Dixon said slowly. "And now if you will let me explain that answer, I will add that I am certain that Harvey Richmond was engaged in a fight, a physical struggle, shortly before death took place, that he received several blows about the body, that thereafter he was clubbed over the head and that his skull was possibly fractured, that he became unconscious, and while he was unconscious the. houseboat was set afire, and that Harvey Richmond lived, although he was unconscious, for some time after that fire started, long enough for the fire to cause his death."

"And do you mean to tell us that you can deduce all of that from an examination of the charred remains of a body?" Berkeley asked with heavy sarcasm, "or did you use a crystal ball, Doctor?"

"I deduced it solely from the pathological data 1 found when I examined the body."

"Well, then, by all means just tell us how you know all that."

"To begin with," Dr Dixon said, "I was acquainted with Harvey Richmond in his lifetime. I know that he was of stocky build and that he was fleshy. What is not generally realised is that almost everyone has a layer of subcutaneous fat, that this varies with the individual. In the case of Harvey Richmond, there was a very well defined layer of subcutaneous fat."

"And what does that have to do with it?" Berkeley asked.

"Simply this. In the event of a person receiving violent blows on his body, some of the subcutaneous fat cells are broken loose from the general fat structure and enter the bloodstream in the form of globules. Once these fatty globules have entered the bloodstream, they are carried to the lungs by the natural circulation. But in the lungs some of the blood vessels are so small that the fat globules clog the small vessels. By examining the lung tissue under a microscope these fat globules can readily be identified."

Berkeley said, "Doctor, that sounds incredible to me."

"It is, nevertheless, a fact."

"And you found such fat globules in the capillaries of the lungs?"

"I did."

"Doctor, could you produce any competent authority that would sustain that position?"

"Certainly," Dr Dixon said. "It's generally understood among the best pathologists. However, if you wish authority. I can give you authority."

He opened a briefcase, reached in, took out a book and said, "Here is a book entitled Homicide Investigation by Dr LeMoyne Snyder. Dr Snyder says on page 170, 'Everyone has a certain amount of fat deposited underneath the skin in the abdominal cavity and in the bone marrow. If he is struck a violent blow some of this fat will be dislodged and it will be taken up by the bloodstream and carried back to the heart. From there it goes to the lungs, but here the blood passes through blood vessels so small that these fat globules are strained out. When the pathologist examines the lung tissue under the microscope, these fat globules can readily be identified by means of a special stain. The skin and underlyingfat where the deceased suffered the blow may have been entirely destroyed by the subsequent fire, but if the fat globules are found in the lungs, it means two things: - One. That the deceased suffered direct violence to some portion of his body. Two. He was alive when the wound was inflicted.'"

The district attorney endeavoured to dispose of the testimony casually. "I see," he said, smiling, "and simply because you found a few fat cells in this man's lungs, you came to the conclusion that he had suffered violence before death."

"That's right."

"And therefore the fatal bullets had no particular significance?"

"There were other reasons which entered into my opinion," Dr Dixon said. "For instance, when a body is exposed to fire, there are certain means of determining whether a person was alive or dead at the time the fire started. If the person was alive, he was breathing. If he was breathing, certain particles of soot are necessarily inhaled, and they can be found by a careful examination in the air passages. I made such an examination and found many of these particles in the air passages of the deceased. Therefore, I know that he was alive and breathing during the time the fire was raging aboard the houseboat."

"But you don't know whether he was conscious or not?"

"I am virtually certain he was unconscious."

"Unconscious because he. was dying from bullet wounds, which, perhaps due to some freak, were not immediately fatal," the district attorney said as though finally disposing of the doctor's testimony.

"You'll pardon me," Dr Dixon said, "but I know that the man had received a blow on the head prior to the outset of the fire and was undoubtedly unconscious at the time the fire was started."

"Some more of your clairvoyant medicine, ! suppose," Berkeley said, trying by sarcasm to destroy the damaging effect of the doctor's testimony

"There is nothing clairvoyant about it at all. It is a matter of scientific determination. When ..."

"Well, I don't think we're interested in all this so-called scientific prattle," the district attorney interrupted. "It's been established by competent and unchallenged medical testimony that this man was shot, that he was shot with bullets fired from a certain gun, and that those bullets would cause almost instant death. I don't think we need to waste the Court's time with any further dissertations on abstract science."

"You'll pardon me," Dr Dixon said, "but you asked me how 1 knew that the man had received a blow on the head and was unconscious prior to the time the fire started. I want to answer that question."

"Well, 1 don't care about hearing it," the district attorney said. "That's all."

The judge interposed. "It seems the Doctor is trying to tell us something here, and we should know what it is."

"I withdraw my question," the district attorney said. "I recognise a desire on the part of Dr Dixon to show his medical erudition, and while I am perfectly willing to stipulate that he is a man of great scientific qualifications, 1 see no reason why we should obscure the issues in the case merely in order to enable him to make a public display of his knowledge, a knowledge which I am quite willing to concede."

"I think," Dr Dixon said coldly, "you have entirely misunderstood the purpose of my testimony."

"Well, in any event, my examination is concluded," the district attorney said. "That's all the cross-examination I have."

The judge looked over at the defence. "Any re-direct?" he asked.

Staunton Irvine shook his head, but before he could say "No re-direct," Rob Trenton interposed a question. "How do you know the man received a blow on the head prior to the fire?" he asked.

"Just a moment, just a moment," Berkeley interrupted. "1 object, Your Honour, to such an examination. The defendant is represented by counsel and be can certainly trust to the ability of his own attorney. He doesn't need to step in here with comments, interpolations and questions. The attorney has signified there are no further questions."

"1 think the attorney should ask the questions," the judge ruled.

"Ask that question then," Rob Trenton said to his lawyer.

"1 object to that," Berkeley said. "The attorney has already signified there was no re-direct examination. He shook his head."

Rob Trenton said, "Your Honour. 1 feel that 1 have some rights in this case. I ..."

"Just a minute," the judge interrupted. "The attorney may have shaken his head, but that doesn't mean anything so far as the record is concerned. Counsel has to say something so the court reporter can hear it in order to keep the records straight. Now then, Mr Irvine, is there any redirect examination?"

Irvine hesitated.

"Ask that question," Trenton said.

Irvine whispered, "I think we're just getting into a ..."

"Ask that question," Trenton reiterated.

"Very well," Irvine said with poor grace. "How do you know the man received a blow on the head and was unconscious prior to the fire, Doctor?"

"Because," Dr Dixon said, "when 1 opened the skull, I found a blood clot inside of the skull which had been quite evidently caused by violence. Probably a blow which had been inflicted on the skull."

"That's all," Irvine said. "No further re-direct."

Dr Beaumont whispered excitedly to the district attorney, and the district attorney, with a triumphant smile, said, "Just a moment, Doctor. I have some re-cross-examination. Now you've testified that you found some blood in the skull when you opened the skull of the deceased."

"I did."

"And do you think that is the result of a blow sustained on the head?"

"1 do."

"Don't you know, as a matter of fact, Doctor, that in cases of burning, the heat may cause the skull to crack open and frequently does cause fractures of the skull, so that the relatively inexperienced pathologist - and 1 say this with no personal implications, but merely for the purpose of establishing a scientific fact - will accept the evidence of such heat fracture as an indication that direct violence had been suffered before death?"

"I'm quite aware of all of that," Dr Dixon said, "but I analysed the blood in the brain for the presence of carbon monoxide and found none. 1 was able to gather a sample of blood from the liver and analysed that and found a high percentage of carbon monoxide. It is, therefore, a fact which is not subject to serious question, that the blood which formed the clot in the head had been formed before the fire, because this blood had ceased to circulate when the fire started. Whereas the blood which was circulating through the heart and the respiratory system did become contaminated with carbon monoxide. I know, therefore, that the injury sufficient to cause this rather substantial blood clot was inflicted before the fire. Therefore, 1 am forced to the conclusion that the man was unconscious at the time the fire started and that he lived long enough after the fire started to inhale particles of soot in the smoke and to have the blood which was circulating impregnated with a high percentage of carbon monoxide., enough to cause unconsciousness and probably to bring about death before the flames actually reached the body. I also know that he had received violent blows on the body prior to the time of death. It is, therefore, my conclusion that the two bullets which were found in the body in a place which would ordinarily have caused instant death, were deliberately fired into the body after death had taken place."

"But that couldn't have been, Doctor," the district attorney shouted. "Your testimony is against all the evidence. The gun was fired twice, prior to the time the fire started, and after that the gun was accounted for all the time."

"How do you know it was accounted for all the time?" Dr Dixon asked.

"It was locked in a desk."

"And who had the key to that desk?"

The district attorney said, "But that's an absurd situation, Your Honour. It assumed a weird, bizarre sequence of events for which there is no evidence."

Merton Ostrander, on his feet, said from his place in the front row of spectators. "Your Honour, I had that key. It did not leave my possession all night. 1 resent any implication which is being made and demand an opportunity to vindicate myself."

"Just a minute," the judge observed, banging his gavel for order. "You've already testified, and if the Court wants any more testimony from you, it'll call you to the witness-stand where you'll be under oath and we'll find out what all this is about. I don't want any comment from the spectators."

The judge ran his hand over his forehead, then scratched at the back of his head thoughtfully.

Staunton Irvine said, "Your Honour, I think we are all overlooking one very significant factor in the situation. There was present at that house a young woman, Linda Carroll, the niece of Linda Mae Carroll. This young woman was present throughout the entire European trip. It was on the car of this young woman that the concealed heroin was found. This young woman was at the house when the defendant arrived with this automatic weapon and this young woman has now mysteriously vanished. I have tried to serve a subpoena on her and have been unable to locate her. It is in evidence that police have searched for her, and searched in vain. I now believe that my client is entitled to ..."

"Don't you say a word against my niece," Linda Mae snapped, getting to her feet. "She's a good girl, she'll show up when it's time for her to show up. She isn't going to have her name dragged through the mud, and what's more she's nervous. She ..."

The judge banged his gavel furiously. "I've repeatedly admonished the spectators," he said, "not to interject comments."

"I'm not interjecting a comment," Linda Mae said. "I'm trying to keep this Court from making a fool of itself."

Despite the excitement of the spectators and the decorum of the Court, there was a burst of laughter.

The judge pounded with the gavel for a moment, then suddenly smiled, and himself seemed to have some difficulty in refraining from laughing. However, he said, "That will do. Sit down, Miss Carroll. The Court will consider this matter in an orderly way."

Staunton Irvine said, "Your Honour, 1 feel that Merton Ostrander's comments are very definitely in order. While it is true that I am representing the defendant in this action, 1 have known Merton Ostrander for years and can vouch for ..."

"What are you here for?" the judge interrupted.

"Why, Your Honour, I'm trying to see that justice is done."

"You're supposed to be representing this defendant," the judge said.

"I am, Your Honour, but I cannot help but state that I have known Merton Ostrander and can vouch for his integrity."

"You don't have to vouch for anyone's integrity," the judge said. "You're supposed to be representing this defendant, and if there's any explanation for what's happened that makes him blameless, you're supposed to call that explanation to the attention of the Court."

"Even if I know that it is too absurd to be tenable, Your Honour? I too wish to point out the same point which was previously raised, that there was another person present in that house, and ..."

Rob Trenton suddenly pushed his chair back, got to his feet. "Your Honour," he asked, "do I have the privilege of making any comment?"

"Not as long as you have an attorney to represent you."

"Do 1 have the privilege of discharging that attorney?"

"You do if you wish," the judge said.

Trenton turned to the attorney. "You're discharged," he said.

"1 resent that," Irvine said. "I've consistently endeavoured to protect your interests in a way that ..."

"Never mind talking about what's gone before," Trenton said. "1 want to conduct my own defence from now on, and in order to do it 1 have to discharge you. Therefore, you're discharged. Do you understand that?"

"I understand it, but I feel that such action, particularly taking place as it does in a public manner, is derogatory to my professional dignity and reputation and ..."

"All right," the judge interrupted, "you're discharged. Now, young man, you want to say something. What is it?"

Trenton said, "I want to ask Dr Dixon some more questions."

"Go right ahead. The Court also has a few questions it would like to have answered. This procedure is probably a little irregular, but we're going to try and get to the bottom of this thing."

Trenton said to Dr Dixon, "Are there any further facts you have, Doctor, which shed any light on what happened?"

Dr Dixon's voice was deadly cold in its scientific accuracy. "There are several things. In the first place one wonders why the bullets, exhibits one and two, did not go entirely through the body. They very conveniently remained lodged in the vital organs.

"If you will examine these bullets carefully you will find certain marks upon them which are virtually identical, yet which were not made by the grooves or lands of the barrel of the weapon, exhibit three.

"It seems obvious that these are the marks made by pliers; that the bullets were first extracted from the cartridge cases so that some of the powder charge could be removed, that the bullets were then replaced in these weakened cartridge cases and then fired into the body of the deceased.

"It will be remembered that the fire was out shortly after midnight, that the authorities did not find and inspect the boat until well after daylight.

"I may further state that this morning 1 recovered a bullet from one of the piles on the little wharf to which the houseboat had been moored. That bullet was apparently a fresh bullet and it had been fired from the automatic which has been introduced in evidence as People's exhibit number three. 1 personally examined that bullet and compared it with a test bullet under a comparison microscope, and as a result, I know that it was fired and fired recently from the same weapon.

"The Court will also note that in the event the deceased met his death at some appreciable interval after the fire started, the death was outside of the territorial limitations of this state, because the boat, according to the testimony of witnesses, and according to surveys that 1 have made very carefully, drifted out into the current and then across the stream where it lodged on a sandbar which is actually outside of this state."

"Isn't there a statute providing for joint jurisdiction in crimes which occur within a reasonable distance of state boundary?" the judge as.K-j

"lm a doctor, not a lawyer" Dr Dixon said.

The district attorney said, "There are several statutes. I don't know whether they cover this case or not. There is a statute that when a person intending to commit a crime does anything in this state which culminates in the commission of a crime without the state, the effect is the same as though the crime had been committed entirely in this state, and there% also a statute providing that when an offence is started without the state but is consummated within the boundaries, even though the defendant was out of the state at the time of the commission of that crime, the defendant is liable just as though he were in this state."

Rob Trenton said, "Well, Your Honour, I'm neither a doctor nor a lawyer, but it seems to me that the conditions mentioned by the district attorney have not been met in this case. If Harvey Richmond was killed by bullets fired before the fire took place, that murder may well have taken place in this state, but if he was killed by fire, even despite the fact there had been a previous blow on the head, it's a question of where the man was killed."

"Or whether the fire was set deliberately," the judge said.

The judge pursed his lips, frowned and once more scratched his head, then suddenly turned to the district attorney and said, "Mr District Attorney, as 1 understand it, the Court has the power in this case to bind the defendant over for trial and then, in the event it wishes to do so, release him on bail, or the Court has the power to dismiss the case entirely. Now, as 1 understand it, if the case is dismissed, that doesn't constitute any bar to arresting this man all over again in the event there should be other evidence uncovered which connects him with the crime."

"No," the district attorney said somewhat dubiously, "I don't suppose it would be any bar, but of course, there is the moral effect, Your Honour. And murder is not a bailable charge."

"Also," the judge pointed out, "there's another thing you want to take into consideration, Mr Prosecutor, and that is that if the Court binds this man over on this charge, and then you uncover evidence which points to someone else, the fact that an order was made binding this defendant over is also going to have a moral effect. If I were in your shoes I'd rather just forget about this thing for a while and make a further investigation."

"Of course, Your Honour," the district attorney said, "Dr Beaumont is thoroughly convinced as to the cause of death."

"Of course he is," the judge said, "and I'm not saying anything against Dr Beaumont. He made a post-mortem until he found what he thought was the cause of death, and then he quit looking because he had found what he was looking for - or he thought he had; but if he'd looked a little farther, he'd have found the same things Dr Dixon did and probably would have reached the same conclusions.

"The thing that the Court wants to point out to all concerned is the fact that if it hadn't been for Dr Dixon entering the picture and performing a further investigation which disclosed these peculiar facts, which I take it are uncontroverted, the defendant in this case would have been bound over for murder, would undoubtedly have been convicted of first-degree murder and probably executed. The fact that Dr Dixon performed a further post-mortem points a lesson that 1 don't think we should overlook, not any of us.

"Now then, the Court is going to refuse to bind this defendant over, and as far as the Court is concerned, he is released from custody. The Court feels there's opportunity for a lot of further investigation in this case; and I think this is the fair way to see that such an investigation is conducted in an unbiased and efficient manner. The defendant is released from custody and the Court is adjourned."

The judge banged his gavel in a form of finality, effectively shutting off the half-hearted protests of the district attorney.

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

Rob Trenton observed the surge of spectators crowding towards him, intent upon shaking his hand.

He moved over quickly to Dr Dixon before the physician could leave the space reserved for attorneys and witnesses. "1 want to thank you," he said.

"You don't have to," Dr Dixon told him. "I merely performed a complete post-mortem, which I contend should invariably be done in every case of unexplained death, particularly where the circumstances indicate a homicide."

Rob led him to one side. "I have a favour I want to ask of you."

"What's that?"

"Isn't there some way 1 can get out of here without going through that crowd of people?"

"They're waiting to shake hands with you," Dr Dixon said, his shrewd eyes studying the young man's face. "They want to congratulate you, and make something of a hero of you."

"I know it," Trenton said, "and if the judge had ruled the other way and bound me over for murder, they'd have been looking at me as though I were a snake."

Dr Dixon's eyes softened. "What do you want me to do?"

"I think there's a side door out of here," Rob Trenton said. "I want to get out. Can you show me where it is?"

Dr Dixon hesitated only briefly, then nodded. "You could go into the door over there which leads to the judge's chambers, as though you were intending to thank the judge for what he'd done, and then you could go down through the corridor and there's a door there that opens on a side street. Come on with me if you want."

Rob Trenton moved towards the door to the justice's chambers.

On the other side of the rail, Merton Ostrander gestured that he wanted to see Rob, and Rob, smiling, nodded vaguely, made an ambiguous gesture of his hand, and accompanied Dr Dixon through the door to the judge's chambers.

"It just happens," Dr Dixon said smilingly, "that 1 have my car parked out here and I'll give you a ride across the bridge. Something seems to tell me it will be a little better for you to get out of the state."

"Flight?" Rob asked.

"Changing your base of operations," Dr Dixon said. "And incidentally leaving the jurisdiction of a hostile district attorney who has sustained wounds to his vanity and his political prestige, and who may, therefore, try to recover lost ground by having you rearrested if he can only find some 'new' evidence. After an hour or two he'll remember that the two smugglers who are in custody are only too willing to buy themselves immunity by turning 'state's evidence'. When that happens it'll be well for you to be in another state, and to resist extradition."

They moved down the corridor, out of the side door and found that as yet no one, not even the reporters, had anticipated such a move. The crowd was still either in the courtroom or milling around the doors on the main street, and Dr Dixon and Rob Trenton entered the physician's car and glided down the road without attracting any attention.

"I hope you realise," Rob said, "that, regardless of what the district attorney may do, I'm just starting on this thing."

Dr Dixon looked at him in a sidelong glance of shrewd appraisal, then said conversationally, "I presume you know that Harvey Richmond was investigating the death of Madame Charteux. The body was exhumed and it was found there was enough arsenic in it to have killed a horse."

"So 1 understand," Trenton said.

"And," Dr Dixon went on, "just in order to keep the record straight, you'll remember that the Customs men took two capsules containing a white powder from your bath robe, capsules which you said Merton Ostrander had given you to settle your stomach?"

Trenton glanced at him sharply.

Dr Dixon's face was enigmatic, completely without expression. His eyes were concentrated on the road ahead.

"Go on," Trenton said.

"1 don't know exactly what you have in mind," Dr Dixon went on, "but the Customs men turned those capsules over to Harvey Richmond. When we searched his effects we couldn't find those two capsules."

"Good heavens!" Rob said. "1 hope you didn't think I thought the solution would be that simple."

Dr Dixon flashed him a keen-eyed glance. "I'm glad to hear you say that, young man. I'm afraid the solution isn't simple at all, but rather complex."

"What else do you know?" Trenton asked.

"Very little for certain," Dr Dixon said. "We have, of course, investigated all of the parties concerned, to the best of our ability. Linda Mae Carroll and Linda Carroll were in South America two years ago. Linda Mae Carroll was in Europe a year ago, and Linda Carroll was in Africa. They evidently like to travel."

"Where did they get their money?"

"Apparently Linda's father died, left her some money and some money to his sister, Linda Mae Carroll."

"Just money?" Trenton asked.

"Well, there was a fair amount of cash, quite a few stocks and some savings bonds, and there were three pieces of property, farm property of three hundred and twenty acres, and the Londonwood apartment building, which went to Linda Carroll, and the house in Falthaven which went to Linda Mae Carroll."

"How much of a search has been made for Linda Carroll?"

"No very great search. She has an apartment at 1940 Chestnut Avenue, Londonwood, the apartment house where her father lived. Linda Carroll went there immediately after she returned from her European trip. For some reason she seemed to want privacy and apparently gave that address to no one. When she obtained her passport she had been living with Linda Mae at the Falthaven address, so she used that passport address in this European trip.

"It would seem that both you and Merton Ostrander went to call on her at the Falthaven address. Linda Mae gave you both a run-around, but Ostrander was more lucky than you. He actually ran into Linda when she came to call on her aunt, presumably to give the aunt some instructions."

"What sort of instructions?"

Dr Dixon's face was completely impassive. "I'm afraid that that's as far as we can go. You apparently know the rest of it as well as we do."

Dr Dixon eased his car across the big concrete bridge, said, "Well, you're now in a new state. Where do you want to get off?"

"I think I'd like to get off in Londonwood, if it's all right with you."

"She isn't there," Dr Dixon said.

"I know. 1 think I'd like to get off there just the same." "Any place in particular?"

"Well," Rob Trenton replied, "perhaps ... no, just let me out anywhere."

Dr Dixon drove in silence until they entered Londonwood, then stopped the car near the centre of the town. "How's this?" he asked.

"That's fine," Rob Trenton said.

Dr Dixon shook hands.

"1 can't begin to tell you how grateful I am," Rob Trenton said.

"You don't have to be grateful," Dr Dixon said. "I merely performed a medico-legal necropsy to determine the cause of death."

"And what you found proved me innocent," Rob reminded him.

Dr Dixon nodded. "That's fine as far as you're concerned, but we have a responsibility. We have to find the real murderer."

Rob Trenton looked at him sharply. "Any clues?" he asked.

Dr Dixon said, dryly, "You may use your own judgment, young man. Harvey Richmond didn't go aboard that boat voluntarily. From what you have told me and what the police have been able to find, I know that Richmond had a line on the smugglers. He had constructed a blind from which he could watch the houseboat with binoculars. He was planning to make a raid on it that night. I think he'd have had the raid sooner if the boat hadn't been moored across the river, which put it out of the jurisdiction of the State Police.

"The smugglers happened to locate that blind. They crept up behind Richmond, rushed him and overpowered him. It's my idea that that's when he was hit over the head and when that blood clot formed in the skull.

"Now we can begin to fit certain things together into a pattern. You know from what you overheard the smugglers say they had planned to get this dope, to abandon the houseboat, and start a fire that would bum up all the evidence. Now suppose you quit looking at it from your angle, and consider the facts from the viewpoint of one of the smugglers.

"It obviously couldn't have been Harvey Richmond who was running down the deck when you shot. I think Harvey Richmond was unconscious at the time. But the man you shot was running aft on the port side of the houseboat. He would, therefore, have his right side towards you and be running slightly away from you, but the bullets which penetrated his body were fired a little more from the front and they were fired at close range.

"You'll remember that you shouted at the man on the boat to stop, and then added that he was under arrest. Then you fired twice. The man flung himself fiat on the deck.

"Now suppose you had been one of the smugglers waiting on the boat. What would you have thought?"

"That it was a police raid?" Rob asked.

"Exactly," Dr Dixon said. "So the smugglers threw the switch that set off the incendiary device which they intended to use to start a fire in the boat and consume the evidence. Then they started to abandon the boat, but then the man who had flung himself down on the deck got to them and reported he had only seen one person. They looked for you and found you had escaped. So then they started trying to put out the fire, probably because they still had stuff they wanted to get off the boat. Before they got the fire out, Harvey Richmond, lying unconscious in a cabin probably near the bow of the boat, inhaled enough smoke and carbon monoxide to cause his death."

"I see," Rob said, eagerly. "Then before they abandoned the boat the smugglers fired the two bullets into his body."

Dr Dixon's shrewd eyes gimleted their way into the innermost recesses of Rob's consciousness. "Shot him with the gun you had in your possession, Rob?" he asked.

"But they must have! They ... No, they couldn't. And they couldn't have shot him before the fire broke out because then he wouldn't have been breathing to inhale the smoke. They ..."

Dr Dixon said, "Start using your head, Rob. Those people on the other side of the river are a little chagrined. They're a little punch groggy from the sudden turn of events, but 1 think within an hour they'll have another warrant issued for you and perhaps a new theory of approach. Remember, they still have two members of the smuggling gang who will swear to anything that's necessary in order to gain immunity for themselves.

"Within the next hour you'll either be under arrest again, or else be a fugitive from justice. Don't waive extradition and return voluntarily to face that second murder charge. You sit tight on this side of the river and fight extradition every step of the way. And don't say that I gave you that advice.

"All right, Rob, this is where you get out," and Dr Dixon extended his hand in farewell.

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

Rob didn't waste any precious minutes on Linda's empty apartment, but took a taxicab to the courthouse in Londonwood, the county seat. He hunted up the clerk's office and said, "1 want to look up the probate record in an estate."

"What was the name?" the clerk asked.

"The last name," Rob said, "was Carroll, and I believe the estate was probated about four or five years ago. Aside from that 1 haven't much to go on."

"Well, we can find it," the clerk said.

Twenty minutes later Rob Trenton was busy copying the description of three hundred and twenty acres of property, which under a decree of distribution in the estate of George Hammond Carroll had been distributed to his daughter, Linda Carroll. Immediately after doing that, Rob hurried to an agency which made a business of renting cars.

Some time later, and just as the sun was dropping behind distant rolling hills, Rob turned off the main road and rattled along a gravelled roadway.

He was looking for names on the mail-boxes, but suddenly he braked the car to a stop.

From the pasture on the hill below came the sound of a musical chime, followed after a moment by another one, the second being deeper in tone, but both being mellow and musical. Swiss cowbells, arousing nostalgic memories, causing a tug at the heartstrings.

Rob Trenton found a wide place at the side of the road where he could park the car. He shut off the motor.

The cowbells were drifting up now from the hill below in musical cadences. There were four cowbells and the effect of the harmony was as pleasing to the ear as the rolling scenery was to the eye.

Rob Trenton slipped through a barbed-wire fence, crossed under some shady trees and emerged on the upper end of the pasture where the four cows were grazing contentedly.

Up in the south-west corner of the pasture on a high knoll near the road was an old-fashioned, two-storey frame farmhouse built of honest oak; and from its ragged, weather-beaten appearance, it had been standing for many years.

There was no sign of life about the house and Rob Trenton took up a position near the trunk of one of the trees, where he could observe the house through the lower branches and at the same time be all but invisible to any person peering from the house windows.

The countryside seemed peaceful and contented. The musical notes of the Swiss cowbells drifted up on the calm air. The shadows deepened into dusk, and then finally into darkness.

Rob Trenton kept his position by the tree until he could see stars overhead, until the huge two-storey farmhouse showed only as a dark silhouette against a sligh'ly luminous sky.

The cows stopped grazing and with the stilling of the cowbells the countryside lapsed into impenetrable silence.

Rob Trenton left his s'ation by the tree and moved forward cautiously along the edge of the pasture, feeling his way

There was no sign of life in the hu.^e farmhouse.

Under cover of darkness Reb slowly approached the building.

He came ai length to a gravel driveway where an ancient woodshed had been converted into a garage. The swinging doors were propped open, showing only an empty interior. Rob walked around to the back door of the farmhouse, stood on the back porch and listened. He could hear no sound from within.

Carefully he tried the screen door. It was hooked on the inside. By pulling gently against it, Rob was able to determine the position of the hook.

Rob's knife cut down through the screen, just where it joined the door, making an eight-inch cut. Through this he thrust his hand and wrist, found the hook on the inside, gently lifted it, opened the door, crossed the back screen porch and gently tried the back door.

It was locked from the inside.

Rob took a small flashlight from his pocket, pushed his handkerchief under the door. Pulling straws from a broom on the screen porch he was able to spread the handkerchief out on the inner side of the door. There was a large crack at the bottom of the door, sufficient, Rob felt certain, to suit his purpose.

Using the small fountain-pen flashlight to guide his operations, he inserted the point of his knife in the lock and manipulated the key until it was in a straight up-and-down position. Then he pushed with the point of his knife, and heard the key drop on the inside of the door. He gently pulled his handkerchief towards him, and had the satisfaction of feeling the key slide along on the handkerchief.

As soon as Rob's flashlight glinted on a bit of metal under the door, he slipped the blade of his knife through the crack, pressed down on the key, and then by pulling at the same time on both the penknife and the handkerchief, pulled the key through from the underside of the door.

After that it was a simple matter to insert the key in the lock, gently turn it; open the door and step inside.

Rob's small flashlight sent an exploratory beam around the kitchen. He moved quietly across the kitchen to a door which led to a back stairway leading to the upper rooms.

Rob inched his way up these stairs, keeping well over to the sides to avoid creaking boards.

Once in the upper corridor, he paused to reconnoitre.

He dared not use his flashlight now, but inched his way down the corridor, listening for any sound which would indicate human occupancy, and listening in vain. The big house was silent as a cave. Rob could hear only his own breathing and the pounding of his heart.

Midway down the corridor for the first time doubt stabbed Rob Trenton's mind with a dagger of discouragement.

Quite apparently the house was empty. The chain of reasoning on which Rob had staked everything must have somewhere in it a weak link which made it fail to hold. And because Rob knew he was working against time, that every minute was precious, his failure could become all the more cause for bitter self-reproach.

Standing there in the corridor of the deserted farmhouse, Rob checked over in his mind the various mental stepping stones which had led him here. He could find nothing wrong with any of them, yet the fact remained he had apparently followed his reasoning to a entirely erroneous conclusion.

Then suddenly as he stood there, his nostrils detected the odour of fresh tobacco smoke.

There was no faintest sound, no ribbon of light coming under any of the doors which opened on the corridor, no other sign of human occupancy, but plainly and unmistakably the fresh tobacco smoke indicated someone had just lit a cigarette.

Rob felt his skin crawling with nervous suspense. His mouth felt dry. His heart began to pound.

He moved slowly, cautiously down the corridor, trying to find the room from which the tobacco smoke was coming.

The aroma of the fragrant tobacco was all through the corridor now. It seemed impossible to trace it to any one particular source. Then, so suddenly that it startled Rob, he heard the sound of a woman's voice, a voice that apparently was asking some question.

It was a man who answered, and the answer was evidently in the negative, a rumbling, gruff few words which effectively silenced any further conversation.

Rob moved forward, so anxious now to test the accuracy of his conclusions that he forgot to keep to the side of the corridor, away from the possibility of creaking boards.

One of these boards creaked under his weight and the sound was so sharp in that silence that it frightened Rob into jumping quickly to one side.

For a moment there was that tense silence which precedes dramatic, drastic action.

Then Rob heard the sound of a chair scraping back.

A woman screamed, "Look out!"

A man's heavy voice muttered a threat, a door swung open, and Rob found himself dazzled by the blinding glare of a flashlight which was shining full on his face.

For a moment sheer surprise robbed the man who was holding the flashlight of the power to take action.

Rob took advantage of that split second of frozen immobility. Despite the fact that his eyes were so dazzled he could see nothing, he lowered his head, charged, and after three running steps flung himself forward in a football tackle.

Above him, a long, spitting, orange-blue flash of flame was followed by the roar of a revolver, then Rob had his arms around the man's legs. He crashed into him in the most approved tirk'ing style and the two men went down with a fall that jarred the house. The flashlight fell from the manfe hand, rolled over for half a dozen lopsided turns, then came to rest with its beam illuminating the opposite wall of the corridor, sending back a reflected light which furnished a dim, weird illumination. By this light, Rob was able to recognise the features of the man whom he had heard called Rex, the one with whom he had had the fist fight on the houseboat. The fact that one of the man's eyes was swollen almost shut and badly discoloured somehow gave Rob a feeling of confidence.

They wrestled around on the floor of the hallway in a sudden mad scramble, Rob fighting for either a good hold or a knock¬out punch, Rex pushing himself clear, trying to get room to use his right arm.

Rob caught the glint of light on blue steel and grabbed for the gun.

He missed and flung himself to one side. The gun roared, and even in the heat of the combat, Rob's keyed-up senses took note of the chunk knocked from the ceiling, felt the small particles of powdered plaster raining down on his head.

He ran his hand along the hot barrel of the gun, shoved two fingers in between trigger and trigger guard, effectively jamming the mechanism of the double-action revolver.

The man wrestled and pulled, trying to work the trigger of the gun. He was not able to pull the trigger as long as Rob's finger kept it from moving back far enough to cause the double-action mechanism to function.

Rex freed his left hand, rained blows on Robs head. Rob, still hanging on to the gun, jerked his head forward blindly, and the impact of the top of his head smashing against the other man's features all but stunned him.

However, the blow did the trick. Rex released his grasp on the revolver and Rob jerked it out of his hand

Then of a sudden the house was filled with running steps, with voices that were shouting, with the shrill of police whistles.

Too late, Rob sensed Rex's intention. He tried to dodge, but the heel of the man's shoe crashed into his jaw.

Rob was conscious of flinging his left arm over and around, locking the leg, holding the foot under him. He felt a black wave of nausea but hung on to the man's foot and leg with dogged persistence and kept a firm grip on the gun with his right hand.

Some unconscious inhibition kept him from using the gun, even when the man freed his right foot and poised it for another kick.

At that moment Rob's head cleared slightly. He raised the gun and brought the banel down sharply on his antagonist's knee.

He heard a yell of agony and then flashlights were in the corridor like fireflies in the trees in summer. Men seemed to be all around him, business-like, uniformed men who knew exactly what to do and how to do it.

Rob felt himself jerked to his feet. The gun was yanked from his hand with an expert twist which came as such a surprise that the gun was gone even before he realised the importance of hanging on to it. Someone said, "He's all right," and Rob was pushed to one side.

He heard a vicious string of oaths from Rex, the sound of a blow and then the click of handcuffs.

CHAPTER THIRTY

Di Dixon's voice came out of the darkness, "Are you hurt?"

Rob's own voice sounded strange to him, "I guess I'm a little

g^ggy"

, "Come in here."

There were lights now and Rob was in a bedroom, plainly but comfortably furnished.

In a chair by a window, her hands tied behind the back of the chair, was Linda Carroll. Her ankles were tied to the legs of the chair, and Rob was conscious of the pallor of her face.

"Rob. Oh, Rob!" she said, and then was silent.

Lieutenant Tyler clicked on more lights.

Moose Wallington wrapped his big hand around the arm of the prisoner, said, "Don't start anything now. You might get hurt."

Dr Dixon, moving across the room, said, "It's all right, Miss Carroll," and stooped to untie the knots which held her ankles to the legs of the chair. A moment later, he had brought out his knife and quickly cut the bonds which tied her wrists. "How are you? All right?"

"Yes," she said. "I ..." She laughed nervousiy, became silent.

Dr Dixon said, "We're State Police. Would you care to tell us ..."

"1 have nothing to say."

Dr Dixon's face darkened. "You can't afford to adopt that attitude, Miss Carroll. After all, it was your car that was used for smuggling."

"I'm sorry, I have nothing to say. There's no statement I care to make."

Rob stepped forward. "I think I can tell you all the essential facts," he said.

Dr Dixon cocked a quizzical eyebrow at him, said, "The State Police were under orders to follow you when I let you out of my car. You probably didn't know you were being shadowed, but you seemed to know just where to go and just what to do whei\ you got here." \

Rob, somewhat crestfallen, said, "1 suppose 1 should have'1, confided in the police."

"You didn't need to," Dr Dixon said with a smile. "1 think we know pretty generally what happened. 1 think our reasoning parallels yours, Rob, but I don't know how you knew about this place and what you were going to find here."

Rob said, "After all, it's rather simple. There had to be some woman involved. Some woman who knew the people at that Swiss inn Some woman who could count on easy access to the Rapidex sedan, I knew it wasn't Linda Carroll. There was only one other person it could have been, Linda Mae. She locked up the desk that had the gun in it and gave a key to Ostrander. She always referred to it as the key, but it's quite reasonable to suppose that there were two keys to that desk."

"Of course there were," Dr Dixon said. "It's the only explanation. I can appreciate that Miss Carroll dislikes to testify against, her own family but I think it will simplify matters if she'll tell her story."

"Al! right," Linda said dispiritedly. "I guess there's no use trying to conceal things any longer.

"My aunt has always been eccentric and decidedly unconventional. She has a certain amount of talent but a limited imagination. She can paint like nobody's business, but she has a hard time finding things to paint.

"A year ago when she was over in Switzerland she found a very fine painting by some little-known Swiss artist. A painting of dawn on a lake, with a campfire by the lake and the smoke coming up in a straight shaft and then spreading out into a long, hazy cloud.

"Well, Linda Mae simply stole that picture. That is, she didn't touch the painting itself, but she studied the composition, the colouring and the general theme of the painting. Then she came home and duplicated it and it was sold to a calendar company. That was her undoing, because the calendar attracted so much attention and was so popular that eventually a copy found its way into Switzerland and ... well, the thing was hushed up, but people who were in a position to make or break an artist's reputation learned about it.

"That was a terrific blow to Aunt Linda Mae. She was all set to really capitalise on the reputation that painting had made for her. I can appreciate something of the shock and how it must have thrown her off balance. She went to Europe. At the time I didn't suspect a thing, but suddenly Aunt Linda Mae became exceedingly affluent. I suspected there might have been some smuggling, although 1 had absolutely no idea it could have been anything like drugs. 1 was thinking entirely in terms of jewellery.

"This year 1 decided I'd go to Europe. Somewhat to my surpnse, Linda Mae made no attempt to accompany me, but she did insist that 1 stop at this inn and pay her compliments to Madame Charteux and her husband.

"Looking back on it, I can see it all now. Aunt Linda obviously decided to use me as a cat's-paw Rene Charteux was her accomplice in the smuggling. It was only necessary for him to get possession of the car for a few hours to weld a secret receptacle on the under part of the car which would hold enough dope to make a small fortune when it was smuggled into the United States and sold at retail.

"I presume that his wife had learned what he was doing and threatened to tell the police, which was the reason she suddenly succumbed to what apparently was a case of mushroom poisoning.

"I admit that I was dumb. I just didn't put two and two together, even after Rob had told me about what he had found on the car. It wasn't until after Rob was arrested and charged with murder that I suddenly realised what must have happened. And then I was too foolish to go to the police. I thought I could handle it.

"I tried to play it smart. I pretended that I was still completely unaware of all the sinister implications. I tried to treat Aunt Linda Mae just as though nothing had happened, and as though I knew nothing. But she's cunning as a serpent. She must have read my mind. I think she knew almost the exact instant when I began putting two and two together. She insisted we should have a cup of tea. I realised the tea was drugged within five minutes of the time I had drunk it. I tried to hold on to my consciousness long enough to get to the telephone, but my legs seemed to turn to water and my hands were like lead. 1 simply couldn't raise them. I collapsed in a heap on the floor and went to sleep.

"When I woke up I was here. I don't know what Aunt Linda Mae intended to do with me finally. Perhaps she didn't know."

Dr Dixon looked at Lieutenant Tyler.

Lieutenant Tyler said, "Well, I guess everything's all right now. We're going to have to ask you to come to Headquarters and make a report and we'll want you to sign a statement."

Linda said, "It's not so much what I actually know as what i suspect. For instance, that night when Merton Ostrander and I arrived at the house, Aunt Linda Mae told us she'd been in bed. Her hair was down and her face was devoid of make-up, and ... well, she fooled me. I really thought she had been in bed."

Lieutenant Tyler frowned at Rob Trenton. "I still don't see how you got in on this."

Rob said, "After I analysed Dr Dixon's testimony it was quite obvious that someone must have fired two bullets into Harvey Richmond's body with the gun that I had in my possession when I left the boat. Since those bullets were fired after the fire was started they must have been discharged after the gun had been locked in the desk. There was simply no other way out of it.

"Then 1 began to do a lot of thinking. Some woman had to be mixed up with the gang. I had seen a woman at the time the fire started on the boat. I had heard of a woman aboard the boat prior to that time. There had been a woman who went with the man to dig up the buried dope. She had escaped and it must have been through her that the smugglers learned so promptly police had been waiting at the place where I had buried the smuggled shipment.

"I then remembered I had been all keyed up with excitement when I had reached Linda Mae's house, yet she gave me a drink of hot milk and I almost immediately fell into a deep slumber and didn't wake up until late the next morning. There must have been a drug in that hot milk.

"And Linda Mae had instructed Merton Ostrander to drive the car to a parking place at the Midget Market and leave it there with the keys in the ignition.

"She could very easily have drugged both Linda and Merton Ostrander just as she did me with some dope in a glass of hot milk. It was her desk and doubtless she had a duplicate key. U would have been easy for her to have opened the desk, taken the gun, gone to the Midget Market, driven to meet with her accomplices - and thanks to my blabbing my story in such detail she knew everything that had happened.

"When she had been aboard the boat earlier she had learned that Harvey Richmond had been slugged and carried aboard the boat. I certainly played right into her hands.

"When the gangster went to dig up that dope, Linda Mae was smart enough to keep clear of the car just in case anything happened. She probably got to a telephone, contacted another of her accomplices who came with a car to pick her up, and because the State Police were looking for a woman hitch-hiker she was able to elude them and get back to the boat.

"Having gone that far and knowing that Linda Carroll had disappeared - well, you can see the thing from my viewpoint."

Lieutenant Tyler nodded, then turned to Linda Carroll and said, "1 want you to come to Headquarters and talk with Colonel Stepney. He'll be getting the whole thing lined up. As a matter of fact, your aunt is already in custody."

"The deuce she is!" Rob Trenton blurted.

Dr Dixon smiled at him. "Good Lord, young man," he said dryly, "1 hope you don't think that you're the only one who can put two and two together. The State Police started working on the right theory almost as soon as I had completed my report on the cause of death."

Rob Trenton, somewhat crestfallen, said, "I ... I guess I made a mistake. 1 should have kept out of this."

"Well," Lieutenant Tyler said, "we couldn't help but wonder just how much you were mixed up in this, and we wanted to give you a little rope to see whether you'd get all tangled up or not. As it is, you seem to have done a pretty good job."

"What about Ostrander?" Rob Trenton asked.

"I don't think we need to go into that at this time," Lieutenant Tyler said.

Dr Dixon gave him a glance that was filled with significance, then looked towards Linda Carroll, turned his head slightly, to take in Rob Trenton, and said quietly, "if I may make a suggestion, Lieutenant, I think the people here are entitled to an explanation. 1 had already talked with Rob Trenton about the disposition of those capsules that had been found in the pocket of his bathrobe by the Customs officials."

Lieutenant Tyler, somewhat in surprise, looked up at Dr Dixon.

The pathologist caught and held the gaze of the police official.

A faint smile twisted the corners of Lieutenant Tyler's mouth. He nodded acquiescence to Dr Dixon and said, "I stand corrected, Doctor," then turned to address himself to Rob Trenton, taking care that what he said was distinctly audible to Linda Carroll, but that his remarks were definitely not addressed to her.

"Merton Ostrander," he said, "is apparently a none too scrupulous adventurer, an opportunist, and a drifter. He stayed at the inn with Rene Charteux. It is difficult to determine just how much he learned of Charteux's smuggling activities, but he did learn something. It seems, however, that Charteux definitely did not confide anything about the smuggling conspiracy relating to the Rapidex sedan. It would also seem that some of Rene Charteux's associates did approach Ostrander, and Ostrander decided he could do some smuggling by boring out the metal plugs in Swiss cowbells and inserting contraband.

"And then for some reason Ostrander lost his nerve. He never did go through with it, and when he began to realise he was being investigated on shipboard, he was so afraid the holes he had drilled in the clappers of the cowbells would be discovered, that he dumped the whole shipment overboard. All except four bells which Miss Carroll asked for and received, bells which he

could not very well refrain from giving her, and which because they were in her baggage passed unchecked through Customs."

Rob Trenton thought that over. "And the capsules?" he asked.

Dr Dixon smiled. "As 1 told you the capsules were taken by the Customs and given to Harvey Richmond. Then they seemed to disappear. No one knew what had happened to them. They weren't among his personal effects. Then we thought of the obvious, and I'm free to confess our faces were a little red."

"What was the obvious?" Rob asked.

"He'd sent them to a chemist to have them analysed. We found them in the chemist's laboratory. It might interest you to know their contents."

"Bicarbonate of soda, pepsin and a little peppermint," Dr Dixon said dryly.

Lieutenant Tyler turned to Linda Carroll. "I think we had better start, Miss Carroll You can ride in with us and

Dr Dixon interrupted. "I hope you'll pardon me if I make another suggestion, Lieutenant. Rob Trenton has a car here. If its all the same with you, Miss Carroll might ride in with Trenton and they can go over the past events in the light of their present knowledge. I feel certain that if this is done each will help the other to recall some bit of evidence which may be significant."

Lieutenant Tyler hesitated.

"I'll take the responsibility," Dr Dixon added.

The Lieutenant nodded. "All right, go ahead."

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

Rob Trenton, using his little flashlight, piloted Linda Carroll along the path at the edge of the pasture, down through the trees, towards the place where he had left his automobile.

The night was calm and silent. There was no breath of wind, no faintest cloud. The stars blazed down with steady brilliance.

Linda Carroll put her hand on Rob's arm. "Don't be in too big a rush, Rob," she said. "There's something so majestic about the night. Oh, Rob, I've always loved this place."

"And that, I suppose," Rob said, "was why you wanted the four cowbells."

"Of course. I came out here, put the bells on the cows, the first thing I did after getting unpacked. Listen!"

Some night noise startled the sleeping cattle. A deep, musical cowbell broke the silence, followed almost immediately by the other bells. For a moment they sounded in rapid, mixed cadences as the animals ran from whatever it was that had alarmed them. Then, as they settled down once more, the bells came in a slow rhythm of musical harmony.

"It's like Switzerland," she said softly. "Oh, Rob, how I wish we were back there, and that all this that has happened could just be a nightmare."

"I wish so, too," Rob said. "But there's nothing we can do about it. I presume the. information about Merton Ostrander came as a terrific shock to you."

"Oh, in a way," she said. "But in another way I had him sized up all the time."

"You did!" Rob exclaimed in surprise. "I ... why, 1 thought you liked him."

"1 do like him," she said, smiling, "but the reason 1 liked him was because he drew you out. He started you talking, Rob. 1 love to listen to you. Merton knew the country and the people and he was very observing, but ... well, you knew more of the underlying philosophy of people and of life. But if it hadn't been for Merton to sort of start you going, you'd have just sat there and soaked up the scenery."

Rob Trenton thought that over. Then he took Linda's arm and piloted her to the automobile.

"Dr Dixon," he said firmly, "wanted us to compare notes. I'm quite certain there's no great rush about our getting back and since you like it here, we may as well ... I'm quite certain Dr Dixon wants us to canvass the entire situation."

"Yes," she said demurely. "He seemed most ... most ..."

"Helpful," Rob said.



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