matter?”
“David C. Bradshaw.”
Marilyn recoiled as if she’d been slapped. For a second sheer surprise contorted her face. Then she controlled herself. “Who?”
“David C. Bradshaw,” Steve repeated.
“I’m afraid I’ve never heard of him.”
“Then you couldn’t know he was dead.”
“What!”
Steve looked at her closely. The shock at his name had been genuine, he was sure of it. But her shock at hearing he was dead—Steve just didn’t know. It could have been real, or she could have been acting.
“Then you couldn’t know he was dead. For your information, Donald Blake, alias David C. Bradshaw, was murdered this evening, sometime between five and six. His apartment had been ransacked. A large carving knife had been stuck in his back.”
Marilyn Harding had gone white as a sheet. “That can’t be true.”
“Why not? You don’t know him.”
Marilyn bit her lip.
“Beginning to place the name now?” Steve said, dryly.
“No. The name means nothing to me.”
Steve shook his head. “It’s no good, Marilyn. You can’t get away with it. You called on Bradshaw Tuesday afternoon. You were shadowed by private detectives. Those detectives have a license to protect. As soon as they find out about the murder, they’ll report to the police. I don’t know how many other visits you made to Bradshaw’s apartment, and I don’t know if you were there today, but if you were it’s ten to one the detectives know it and will so inform the police.
“You see where that leaves you. The cops will figure you poisoned your father—that Bradshaw found out about it and tried to blackmail you—that when you realized that this was only the first bite and you would have to keep on paying forever, you killed him.
“Now then, before the police get here, why don’t you come down to earth and start talking sense?”
For a long moment, Marilyn just stared at him. Steve sat calmly, waiting for her to talk. He knew she would now. He had her boxed in a corner, and there was nothing else she could do.
She didn’t. Instead she got up, walked over to the telephone, and dialed an number.
“Hello,” she said. “Mr. Fitzpatrick? ... This is Marilyn Harding ... I’m sorry to call you at home, but I have a problem ... There’s a lawyer here, a Mr. Steve Winslow ... That’s right. He feels I’m going to be interrogated by the police concerning the murder of a blackmailer named David C. Bradshaw ... No, I haven’t ... That’s what I thought you’d say ... That’s fine. Goodbye.”
Marilyn hung up the phone. “That was my lawyer, Harold Fitzpatrick. He’s on his way over. He lives right up the road. He says I should have nothing to do with you and I should ask you to leave.”
Steve looked at her for a moment. Then he laughed sardonically and shook his head. “Well, that’s just fine. I should have known. Why the devil didn’t you tell me you’d consulted a lawyer?’
“You didn’t ask me.”
“No, I don’t suppose I did. Well, if that don’t beat all.”
Steve got to his feet. “All right. You have the information I wanted you to have. The only ethical thing for me to do at the moment is to wish you a good evening.”
Steve turned to leave just as Phyllis Kemper swept into the room, followed by her husband.
“Marilyn,” Phyllis said. “Why, I didn’t know you had company.”
Marilyn turned, saw them, and Steve saw a momentary flash of panic in her eyes. It’s all too much for her, Steve thought. Her mind’s going to give way.
“Oh. Oh,” she said. “Phyllis. Doug. Oh dear. This is Mr. Winslow. he’s leaving.”
“I should hope so,” Phyllis said. “I thought we left orders to let no one in. No offense,’ she added, with a glance at Steve, “but our family’s had a bit of a shock.”
Steve pounced on the opening. “I know,” he said. “That’s why I’m here. My name is Steve Winslow and I’m an attorney.”
“Oh?”
Up close, Steve revised his initial