“It’s a straight line,” Della exclaimed. “Those fluorescent stones have been arranged so they make a straight line, and over here— Oh, look!”
Mason had swung the portable light over to the left so that an entirely new section of wall was brought into their field of vision. A whole series of luminous lines appeared, as though someone had etched a roughly rectangular diagram with a phosphorescent pencil.
Della said, “There’s some kind of flower with pointed petals. It’s hanging upside down.”
Mason frowned as he looked at the object: apparently a five-petaled flower, hanging downward from a slightly curved stem. Abruptly he exclaimed, “By George!”
“What?” Della asked.
“The Shooting Star,” Mason said in low tones. “That’s not a flower hanging upside down — it’s a shooting star, and those lines must be the boundaries of the claims, and this cross must mark the point where Banning Clarke discovered the evidence showing it’s the original Goler discovery.”
“That’s it,” Della exclaimed, excitedly. “Gosh, Chief, I feel as though we’d just located a valley full of gold. My knees are all trembly.”
Mason, apparently thinking out loud, said, “That’s why he wanted to put up a fight on the fraud case. You can see his position, Della. If he tried to get any property back from the mining company, that would be the pay-off — the clue that would enable Bradisson to go and locate the lost Goler claim. But, by pretending he was trying to beat a hopeless case, and trying to keep Mrs. Sims from getting her claims back, Clarke managed to pull the wool over everyone’s eyes — including my own.”
“Then Mrs. Sims will get her claims back?” Della asked.
“Hang it,” Mason muttered with exasperation, “I fixed it so she won’t. I trapped Bradisson on his deposition into making statements that changed that fraud case from a hopeless case to an ironclad cinch — and by doing it, deprived my client of a fortune. Now I’ve got to find some way of executing a legal flip-flop before they get wise to the real value... And there’s always the possibility someone else knows about this.”
“About the Shooting Star and the secret of the drowsy mosquito?”
“Yes.”
“You mean the prowler?”
“Yes.”
“But don’t you think the prowler was simply spying on Banning Clarke who was using the light to help arrange the rocks in the wall? And the prowler may have been frightened away before he learned the secret? After all, Banning Clarke could have stripped off his outer garments after he heard the shots the prowler fired.”
“That’s right,” Mason said. “But remember that this prowler could always come back. He shot after Velma had seen him, but to keep her from turning the flashlight on him. Therefore, he shot, not to prevent discovery but recognition, and—”
“Someone’s coming!” Della exclaimed.
“Quick, Della. We can’t afford to be caught here. Lucky we left our car away from the house.” Mason started around behind the cacti looking for a place of concealment as two dazzling headlights came crawling through the gate and turned into the driveway.
Della Street came to stand at his side, and Mason could feel her fingers digging into his arm as they stood waiting breathlessly.
The car rattled to a stop.
The motor quit its tin-pan rhythm. The headlights snapped off. After a moment, they heard the car doors open and then bang shut.
“Probably Salty coming back,” Della whispered. “Sounds like his car.”
“Wait a minute,” Mason cautioned in a low voice.
They heard Nell Sims saying, “Now then, Pete Sims, you march right in to that pantry. If you’ve made my daughter poison Banning Clarke, I’m going to lift the scalp right off your head.”
Pete’s voice had that pleading, apologetic whine which was so characteristic of him in his moments of explanation. “I tell you, honey, you don’t know anything about a man’s business. Now this mining business...”
“I know enough to know that when a man gives his wife arsenic to put in the pantry alongside the sugar bowl, he’s just crazy.”
“But listen, honey, I...”
The sound of the side door of the house opening and shutting swallowed the rest of the conversation.
Mason bent down, shoved the long box back under the heavy growth of a thick clump of spineless cactus. “We’ve got to see him, Della.”
“How do we arrange it?” Della asked.
“Bust right in the side door as big as Life. We’ve got to make a hit-and-run play. I want to see Sims and get out before the District Attorney arrives on the scene.”
They started up the walk which led to the back of the house, and reached the side door. Mason tried it, found it unlocked, and walked in; then, using Della Street’s flashlight, went back toward the kitchen.
Lights were on here, and they could hear the sound of voices. They heard Nell Sims say angrily, “Now you look at that bag, Pete Sims. That’s been opened and a whole lot of the stuff taken out.”
Sims said, “It isn’t my fault, Nell. I tell you—”
Mason opened the door, said, “Perhaps you wouldn’t mind if I asked a few questions.”
They turned to face him in surprise, Nell Sims holding a paper bag in her hand.
“Is that the arsenic?” Mason asked.
She nodded.
“Sitting in there next to the sugar container?”
“Well, not right next to it, but pretty close.”
“What’s that written on it?”
Sims said hastily, “That’s something I wrote on there so nobody would make a mistake. You can see for yourself. I printed on here: ‘GUARD CAREFULLY. PETE SIMS. PRIVATE.’”
Mason stretched out his hand. “Pete,” he said, “I want to ask you a few questions. I—” Abruptly he stopped and frowned down at the printing on the bag.
“I want you to be my lawyer,” Pete said. “I’m in awful bad, Mr. Mason and...”
The swinging door abruptly slammed open.
Mason whirled as he heard Della Street’s gasp.
Sheriff Greggory was standing in the doorway. For a moment, there was anger on his face. Then he smiled triumphantly.
“And now, Mr. Mason,” he said, “I am in my own bailiwick, vested with the full authority of the law. The District Attorney is waiting in his office. Either you can come along and make a statement, or I’ll hold you in jail, at least until you can get a writ of habeas corpus.”
Mason hesitated just long enough to make an accurate appraisal of the determination in Sheriff Greggory’s face. Then he turned to Della Street and said quietly, “You can drive the car up to the courthouse, Della. I think the sheriff prefers that I ride with him.”
District Attorney Topham was a cadaverous man with hollow cheeks, a haunted expression of nervous futility, and restless mannerisms. He fidgeted slightly in the big leather-backed swivel chair behind his office desk, regarded Perry Mason with large lackluster eyes, said in the voice one uses in reciting a memorized speech, “Mr. Mason, there is evidence indicating that you have committed a crime within the limits of this county. Because you are a brother attorney who has achieved a certain prominence within the limits of your profession, I am giving you an opportunity to explain the circumstances before any formal action is taken against you.”
“What do you want to know?” Mason asked.
“What have you to say to the charge that you committed larceny of a paper?”
“I took it.”
“From the desk of Banning Clarke in his residence in this county?”
“That’s right.”
“Mr. Mason, surely you must understand the damaging effect of such an admission?”
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