Erle Gardner - Beware the Curves

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Beware the Curves: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Unfettered, unfiltered, unorthodox Bertha Cool and Donald Lam have four of the least likely and most popular private eyes in the business — and they’ve never been in sharper focus!
It’s always exciting when Erle Stanley Gardner assumes his favorite pseudonym of A. A. Fair and lets her rip! This new mystery novel is exhibit A proving beyond the shadow of a doubt that Bertha Cool and Donald Lam are among the most ingenious and inventive characters in mystery fiction.
Here is all the old sweet-and-sour, plus the catchiest plot ever dissected by the intrepid twosome. Bertha is at her toughest and funniest, and Donald is at top form knowing and debonair.
Beware the Curves

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No charges had as yet been made against Elizabeth Endicott, but the district attorney of Orange County announced that he wanted to question her as a material witness and intended to do so. His questioning, he indicated, would seek to determine whether Mrs. Endicott had known that Ansel was alive and where he had been concealing himself during the past six years, the number of times Mrs. Endicott had seen Ansel, what steps if any she had taken to assist in his concealment, and whether she knew anything concerning the murder of her husband which had not previously been disclosed to authorities.

The newspapers pointed out that it was to be remembered Mrs. Endicott had left the house shortly before the murder. The time of the murder had been accurately fixed and Mrs. Endicott had an alibi of sorts in that apparently she had been purchasing gasoline for her automobile at a point some two miles from the house at the exact time the murder had been committed.

The district attorney stated, however, that a new and searching inquiry into this time element was going to be launched, that the entire case was going to be given a thorough and exhaustive investigation.

We had breakfast and drove back to Los Angeles. I went to a barber shop, had a shave, a massage and a lot of hot towels.

When I reached the office, Elsie Brand, my secretary, handed me a note with a number I was to call.

“Any name?” I asked.

“No name, just a seductive voice. She said she had met you in Reno, and would you care to call?”

I called.

Stella Karis said, “I wondered if you’d like to have breakfast with me?”

“I’m a working man,” I told her. “I had breakfast a long time ago.”

“How long?”

“Hours.”

“Then you could have a second breakfast.”

“Where are you?”

“In my apartment.”

“How did you get back?” I asked.

“I drove.”

“When did you get in?”

“About eleven o’clock last night.”

“Read the papers?”

“No.”

“Some news in connection with Citrus Grove,” I said. “You might like to take a look.”

“I’ll read them. The point is, do you come for breakfast?”

“When?”

“Now.”

“Where?”

“The Monaster Apartments.”

“I’ll be up,” I told her.

Elsie Brand, who had been listening to the conversation, had a poker face. “Do you want to dictate this correspondence now, Donald?” she asked.

“Not now,” I said. “I’m busy.”

“So I gathered.”

“Now look, Elsie, if Bertha wants me, I’ve been in and now I’ve gone out again. You don’t know where. You know Bertha well enough so you can tell whether it’s something important or whether she’s just checking up.

“If it’s something really important, call me at this number, but don’t let anyone have that number, and don’t call unless it’s something really important. Understand?”

She nodded.

“Good girl,” I told her and patted her shoulders as I went out.

The Monaster apartment house was a swank little place and Stella Karis had a nice apartment with sunlight pouring in eastern windows.

She had on some sort of a fluffy creation which kept popping open around the throat, and long bell-shaped sleeves that would have trailed in the coffee, across the fried eggs and into the toast if she hadn’t been some kind of an indoor acrobat and managed to grab the trailing cloth just in time.

I watched her with fascination.

It was a nice breakfast. I didn’t particularly need it, but it tasted good.

“Donald,” she said after I had cleaned up my plate. “You know something?”

“What?”

“I told you about this Nickerson.”

“Uh-huh.”

“He isn’t dead.”

“I told you to read the papers.”

“I didn’t need to. He called me at seven o’clock this morning.”

“Surprised to hear his voice?”

“I was terribly shocked. I — well, I had hoped I wasn’t going to have anything more to do with him.”

“You hate to come out and say you hoped he was dead, don’t you?”

“All right, I hoped he was dead.”

“That’s better.”

“He called and told me that he needed ten thousand dollars more. He said that the members of the city council had been a little more obstinate than he had expected, that there were five of them and it was going to take five thousand apiece. He said at that price it wouldn’t leave a cent for him, that he was embarrassed because he hadn’t been able to deliver the goods as promised, so he’d simply act as middleman and go between. He said he’d make me a present of his services and he wouldn’t take a cent.”

“Philanthropist, eh?” I asked.

“That’s what he said.”

“What did you do?”

“I told him I’d have to think it over.”

I grinned. “So then you cooked breakfast and baited me over here?”

She waited for a moment, then smiled and said, “All right, then I cooked breakfast and baited you over here.”

“I’m a professional man,” I said. “I have a partner. We have to sell our services.”

“I’m willing to buy your services.”

“I can’t sell them in this case. I can’t have you for a client.”

“Why not?”

“There might be a conflict in interests.”

“And I can’t become your client — no matter what I pay?”

“Not in regard to Nickerson.”

“As a friend, could you make a suggestion?”

“As a friend, yes.”

“What?”

“Tell him to go to hell,” I said. “Tell him you want your fifteen grand back.”

“That I want money back from a man like Nickerson?” she asked. “Are you crazy?”

“I’m not telling you you’re going to get anything back,” I said. “Tell him you want your money back.”

“Then what?”

“Then he’ll ask you what you’re going to do.”

“Then what?”

“Tell him that you have plans that will rip Citrus Grove wide open.”

“Then what do I do?”

“Hang up.”

“Then what happens?”

“The zoning ordinance gets passed and you can complete the deal with your factory.”

“You’re sure?”

“Hell, no, I’m not sure. It depends on how deeply the council members are mixed into the thing. It depends on how much Nickerson has been pulling your leg. It depends on whether he’s ever given a dime of the fifteen grand to anyone else.”

“Of course,” she said, “I don’t have a thing on him.”

“You paid the fifteen thousand in cash?”

“Yes.”

“How?”

“In three installments of five thousand each.”

“Where did you get the money?”

“From the bank, of course.”

“How?”

“I drew out checks payable to cash.”

“Five grand at a time?”

“That’s right.”

“Why the three installments?”

“That’s the way Nickerson wanted it.”

“How long an interval between the three installments?”

“One day each. He wanted five thousand on a Monday, five thousand on a Tuesday and five thousand on a Wednesday.”

“Where did you pay him the money?”

“Here.”

“In this apartment?”

“Yes.”

I said, “Tell me about this factory.”

She hesitated.

“Or don’t. Just as you see fit,” I told her. “And don’t tell me anything in confidence. I’m working on another matter. As long as it becomes advisable to play your case as a trump card in this case I’ll do it.”

“You mean the Endicott murder case?”

“I could mean that.”

“After all, I don’t know but what I’ve kept some things to myself that I should have publicized.”

I looked at my watch.

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