Erle Gardner - The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Erle Gardner - The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: New York, Год выпуска: 1952, Издательство: William Morrow, Жанр: Классический детектив, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

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Perry Mason, world-famous lawyer and sleuth, keeps a lady in mink under wraps in...
Perry Mason and Della Street were in the middle of a rare steak when the mink coat appeared in the hands of a puzzled restaurant proprietor.
The coat belonged, he said, to a waitress who had just taken it on the him... and he didn’t mean food. Now what to do with the coat?
Perry Mason examined the mink he decided there was more than a moth-eaten patch to meet the eye — particularly when the cops arrived...

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Having satisfied himself there was no one there, Mason went back and closed the door. This time he gave the room a more careful survey.

It was illuminated with a reddish glow from a glass bowl which hung from the center of the room and was supported by a chain of brass-colored links, through which ran electric wires down to the single bulb.

The bed was an iron bedstead with a thin mattress, carefully covered, however, with a smooth but somewhat threadbare white bedspread. A reading lamp was clamped to the head of the bed.

Mason noticed the indentation near the head of the bed where someone had evidently been sitting. Then he noticed another indentation near the center of the bed.

The lawyer stooped so that he could see this indentation to better advantage.

It looked very much as though someone had thrown a gun onto the bed. The gun had been picked up, but it had left an imprint in the white spread.

Something the color of gold, glittering in the light, caught Mason’s eye. He stooped and picked up a lipstick.

The lipstick was worn flat, and from little ridges at the edges looked as though it might have been drawn across some hard surface.

The lawyer searched the room carefully, studied the lipstick once more, then turned up the small square table.

On the underside had been lettered in lipstick, “ Mason Help 262 V 3 L 15 left.”

Mason was standing looking at the lipstick and the message on the bottom of the table when he heard a faint squeaking noise from across the room. The knob of the door was slowly turning.

Hastily thrusting the lipstick into the side pocket of his coat, Mason put the table back into position, and was standing poised thoughtfully, one foot on the chair, in the act of taking a cigarette from a cigarette case as the door slowly, cautiously opened.

The woman who stood in the doorway was about twenty-five years of age, with a good figure, raven-dark hair, large dark eyes, and olive skin, against which the vivid red of her mouth was a splash of crimson.

She drew back with a quick intake of breath, half a scream.

Mason, regarding her with calm, steady eyes, said nothing.

The woman hesitated in the doorway, then slowly entered the room. “You — Who are you?”

“Is this your room?” Mason asked.

“I–I came here to meet someone. Who are you?”

“I came here to meet someone. Who are you?”

“I–I don’t have to give you my name.”

Mason, watching her, said slowly, “My name is Perry Mason. I am an attorney. I came here to meet a client. The client told me he was registered in this room. Now, tell me whom you expected to meet.”

“Oh, thank heaven! You’re Mr. Mason. Where’s Morris? I’m Dixie Dayton. I came here to meet Morris Alburg. He telephoned me that you were coming, but he said he’d be here with us. He said he was going to have you represent me, so I want to tell you frankly...”

Mason seated himself, gestured her to a chair. “Now, wait a minute,” he said, “it may not be that simple.”

“What do you mean?”

“In the first place, you may have had a wrong impression of what Mr. Alburg wanted to say to me.”

“No, I didn’t, Mr. Mason. I know it was that, honestly it was.”

“In the second place,” Mason said, “regardless of what anyone might say, I might not want to represent you.”

“Why? Morris — Mr. Alburg will pay you whatever it’s worth.”

“What makes you think he will?”

“He promised me he would.”

“You might be guilty of something.”

“Mr. Mason, don’t let them pull the wool over your eyes.”

“I’ll try not to,” Mason said, “but, after all, I have to pick and choose my cases. I can’t possibly take all the work that’s offered to me. I have to know a good deal about the facts in any given case before I commit myself. And I frequently turn down cases.”

She dropped down to the floor at his feet. “Mr. Mason, if you only knew what it meant; if you only knew what I’m up against.”

Mason said nothing.

“Mr. Mason, tell me, how much do you know? How much has Mr. Alburg told you?”

“Not very much,” he said.

She said, “All right, I’ll tell you the truth, Mr. Mason. I’ll tell you the facts in the case.”

“I may not be free to listen,” Mason told her. “At the moment I’m not free to receive any confidential communication from you. If you tell me anything I can’t treat it as a professional confidence.”

“Oh, don’t be so cagey,” she said. “After all, why should you and I sit here and spar with each other? Let’s get down to brass tacks.”

She quickly reached up and took his hand in hers. “I suppose I’m being terribly impulsive and you must think I’m a ninny, but I’m in an awful jam, Mr. Mason, and you’re going to have to get me out.”

“I’ve already explained to you,” Mason said, “that I can’t talk with you, and I’d prefer not to listen until after I’ve seen Morris Alburg. I have to know where I stand before I...”

“Oh, Mr. Mason,” she wailed. “Please — I’m going to put my cards on the table for you, Mr. Mason.”

“I can’t even let you do that at the moment,” Mason said.

She sat silent for a few minutes, thinking. She still held onto his hand. Gripping it, she said, “You mean so much to me, Mr. Mason. I can’t begin to tell you what it means to have you working on the case.”

“I’m not working on it.”

She met his eyes with laughing challenge and said, “Yet.”

“Yet,” Mason told her, half-smiling.

“And you certainly are one cautious lawyer.”

“I have to be.”

She lightly kissed the back of his hand. “For the moment that will have to serve as a retainer,” she said. “You stay right there. I’m going to see if I can’t get a line on Morris Alburg. You just wait here and I’ll bring him within fifteen minutes, and then we’ll get started right.”

She walked quickly across the room, opened the door and vanished.

Mason came out of the chair almost at once, hurried to the telephone, and gave Paul Drake’s private, unlisted number.

It seemed minutes before Mason heard Drake’s sleepy voice.

“Wake up, Paul,” Mason said. “This is important. Get it, and get it fast.”

“Oh, Lord, you again,” Drake said thickly. “Every time I try to get a little sleep...”

“Forget the sleep,” Mason barked into the telephone. “Snap out of it. I’m up here in the Keymont Hotel, room 721. There’s a brunette girl, about five feet two, who weighs one hundred and fifteen, age twenty-five or twenty-six, olive skin, large round eyes, a vivid red mouth, up here with me — that is, she will be here inside of a minute or two, and...”

“Well, congratulations,” Drake said. “You sure do get around!”

“Can the wise stuff,” Mason snapped. “Get hold of some operatives and send them up here... First, I want a woman, if you can find one, to make the original contact. Try and have her in the corridor when this girl leaves the room. You’ll have to work fast, Paul. The woman can put the finger on this girl and identify her so that the men who are on the outside can pick her up when she leaves. I want her tailed and I want to find out where she goes.”

“Have a heart, Perry,” Drake begged. “It’s three o’clock in the morning. Good Lord, I can’t pull people out of a hat. It’ll take me an hour or two to get anybody on the job. I’ll have to get someone out of bed, get him dressed, give him time to get down there...”

“Who’s at your office?” Mason asked.

“Just a skeleton crew. I keep a night switchboard operator, a night manager, and there’s usually one man available...”

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