The Case of the Murdered Muckraker (14 page)

BOOK: The Case of the Murdered Muckraker
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Telltale ears red but undeterred, Lambert preceded her to the door, which was set back in an alcove from the pavement (
sidewalk
, Daisy reminded herself). Again he told her to wait. After once more scrutinizing the far side of the street, through the glass door, he opened it just enough to slip out. His hat pulled down over his horn-rims, his hand in the breast of his coat, he tiptoed to the corner and stuck his head around just far enough to be able to gaze up and down the street.
Glancing back, he gave Daisy a significant nod, which she interpreted as permission to join him. Lambert's desire to be a federal agent, she decided, stemmed not from any burning ambition to uphold the law but simply from a love of cloak-and-dagger adventure. She couldn't take the possibility of danger seriously while he was play-acting.
“Can you pull your hat down further?” he asked in an urgent whisper.
“Not without crushing my hair,” she said tartly, in a normal voice. “The villains can't possibly have much of a description of my face.”
“I guess not,” he admitted reluctantly. “O.K., let's go.”
“Would you mind very much taking your hand away from your gun? It makes me rather twitchy. People don't carry guns around in England, you see, not even the police. And I can't help feeling that wearing your hat so low may not only hamper your ability to see but draw unwanted attention.”
“Aw, gee, do you think so?” Crestfallen, he pushed it up.
“It's a frightfully good idea,” Daisy hastened to assure him. “It conceals your features jolly well. But perhaps this isn't quite the right situation.”
Lambert nodded. “I'm kind of new at this,” he acknowledged, “so I guess no one knows my features yet anyhow.”
“Exactly! I'm sure they'll be famous one day.”
“I don't know about that,” he said dubiously. “I figure agents are supposed to stay anonymous.” His hand moved towards his hat brim, but after a moment's uncertainty, he turned up his coat collar instead.
As the hotel, with its red-and-white-striped awning, was already in sight, Daisy held her tongue. After all, the breeze was quite chilly, if nowhere near biting enough to justify such a sartorial lapse. But if she had to go outdoors with him again, she would suggest a muffler to hide his ingenuous face in a more conventional manner.
The stout, black-faced doorman, instead of sheltering in the hotel's doorway, was standing out on the pavement gazing east with an anxious air. He brightened when he saw Daisy and Lambert.
“Glad you're back safe, ma'am,” he said. “No problems?”
Daisy blinked, then realized he must be one of Kevin's cohort of spies. She smiled at him. “No problems, thank you, Balfour.” It always struck her as odd to address a black man by the name of a British statesman. He ought to have
had some exotic African name, but of course he was as American as Lambert.
“Anyone been asking for Mrs. Fletcher?” asked Lambert officiously.
“Just one ge'man, suh.”
“Aha!” cried Lambert, swinging round to scan the street, his hand at his breast pocket, while Daisy, aghast, could only gape. She realized she had not for a moment credited that she was truly in danger.
B
alfour had not let the stranger enter the lobby, especially as he said he was a newspaperman and the manager had instructed that no reporters were to be admitted. Though he refused to give his name, the man also claimed to be a friend of Mrs. Fletcher's.
“I don't know any reporters in New York,” said Daisy.
“An obvious ruse,” Lambert declared in a superior voice, as they crossed the lobby towards the registration desk.
“It's a pity Balfour couldn't give a better description of him than that he was a white man and rather shabby. It was clever to ask him to leave a note, though. Presumably he didn't sign it, but maybe the handwriting will tell the police something.”
“He'll have disguised his writing, you betcha.”
“Well, then, maybe he's left fingerprints. It's difficult to get them off paper, but not impossible.”
“I'll go ask Balfour if he took his gloves off.”
Lambert dashed off, and Daisy continued to the desk. As usual no one was there—for that very reason she had taken her room key with her when she went out—but she
could see two folded papers in the cubbyhole with her number. She was tempted to slip through the gate at the side to retrieve them, rather than ring the bell and have to explain why the notes must be handled with care. She doubted that the manager or the desk clerk, Kevin's
bêtes noires
, had been apprised of her situation.
While she hesitated, Kevin's lift came down. Her unorthodox protector saw her as soon as he stepped out into the passage to usher out his passengers. Abandoning them, he dashed to Daisy's side.
“Geez, ma‘am, I'm mighty glad to see you. I been worrying. I shouldn'a let you go out to eat. You could've sent Stanley out to getcha sumpin, or I'da gone, for you.”
“Luigi gave us a very good meal.”
“Yeah, I tol' you. But a guy came round asking for you when you was gone.”
“So Balfour said.”
“He did pretty good, Balfour. Got him to write you a note, like I tol' him. I didn't read it,” said Kevin virtuously. “There's another one, too, a message from Mr. Fletcher, called in by Western Union. I'll get 'em for you.” He swung open the gate in the counter.
“Hold the note by the edge, Kevin, in case the police can get dabs off it.”
“Dabs?”
“Oh, that's English police slang for fingerprints.”
“Gotcha! Wish I'd've thought of that, though. I didn't think to warn Balfour and Stanley. Betcha it's got their fingerprints all over.”
“The guy kept his gloves on, anyway,” reported Lambert, joining Daisy, “and he used a hotel pad that the doorman keeps in his pocket.”
“Blast!” Daisy took the two papers from Kevin without bothering about how she held them. The first one she unfolded was the message from Alec. “Oh, drat and double drat! An important meeting this afternoon—he's been delayed. He won't get here till nearly nine o'clock.”
“Aw, punk!” Kevin sympathized, leaning on the counter.
“What does the other one say?” Lambert asked eagerly.
Heart in mouth, Daisy opened it. Her eye went at once to the flamboyant signature, and she gave a half-hysterical giggle. “James Pascoli! You remember, the
Town Talk
editor. He wants to make sure the police aren't giving me any trouble, and to see if I have any information I don't mind giving him. All that fuss and bother for nothing!”
“You know the guy?” Kevin was once more disappointed. “Still, that don't prove nuttin. He still could've been paid to croak you.”
“I hardly think so. Anyway, I'll telephone him, and if he wants to meet, I won't go out. He can come here, and we'll talk in the lobby, and I'll ask Miss Genevieve to join us.”
“And me,” said Lambert, sounding hurt.
“Of course, I take that for granted,” Daisy soothed him.
“Oughta be safe enough,” Kevin agreed, frowning, “but it still don't prove there ain't some other guy after you.”
He looked round at the sound of a door opening, and scurried through the gate and back to his elevator as the manager appeared.
The manager, a dour man, glared after him, then turned to Daisy. “Can I help you, ma'am?”
“No, thank you.” Daisy waved the messages at him. “Kevin kindly gave me these.”
“Not his job!”
“I dare say, but it was most helpful of him, and made it
unnecessary to disturb you.” With a nod of dismissal, she headed for Kevin's elevator, Lambert close at her heels.
Daisy had a little lamb
, she thought with a sigh.
Having promised her persistent lamb not to leave the hotel without him, and to keep him apprised of her whereabouts inside, Daisy went to her room. She was fagged out after a morning of alarums and excursions and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, topped by a large lunch. After a longing look at her bed, though, she went to the telephone and asked for Pascoli's number.
Not that she had any particular desire to provide him with information for his news magazine, but she appreciated his concern. More important, she wanted to ask him for news of Thorwald, and she hoped he might give her an unbiased opinion as to whether she was truly in danger. Kevin and Lambert and even Miss Genevieve were all too keen for a little excitement for their judgment to be trusted.
Pascoli was not in his office. Daisy left a message for him to ring her back.
She sat on at the desk, chin in hands, wishing Alec was there with her. However modern and independent one might be, it was comforting to have someone nearby who cared deeply what became of one. Even if he ballyragged her for getting involved—as he was bound to, although it was
not
her fault—he would support her and defend her.
Home was such a frightfully long way away.
The thought of home brought the thought of her ten-year-old stepdaughter, Belinda. The poor child had been left with her Victorianly unbending grandmother while her father and her new mother jaunted off to America. Daisy had kept her promise to write often, but letters took a week
or longer. Bel must have felt quite deserted for the first few days, though she had expected to have to wait for the first letter. A gap now would make her feel even worse.
Writing a nice, cheerful letter would distract Daisy from her own woes, and Bel wouldn't mind if she typed it. She rolled a sheet of hotel notepaper into the protesting typewriter.
She was nearing the bottom of a second page when the telephone bell rang. “Mrs. Fletcher?” said the switchboard girl. “I got a Mr. Pascoli on the line. You wanna talk to him or shall I tell him you're out?”
One of Kevin's cohort, no doubt. “Put him through, please,” Daisy said.
“Mrs. Fletcher, you O.K.?”
“Yes, thanks. It's kind of you to ask.”
“We've all been concerned. Tell the truth, I've got Louella Shurkowski hanging over my shoulder right this minute. You remember Louella?”
“Certainly. Please give her my thanks. I wanted to ask you about Mr. Thorwald. He went to police headquarters?”
“Yeah. I guess he's still there, but his lawyer was going to meet him there, so we're not too worried. Not too worried. Say, listen, I'd like to have a word with you about the situation, only not on the phone. Too many ears, get me? Can we meet?”
“If you'd like to come here, to the hotel.”
“Sure. I can't get away till around five.”
“Right-oh, I'll meet you in the lobby a bit after five.” With my cohort, Daisy thought. “I hope you'll bring news of Mr. Thorwald. Cheerio till then.”
“Uh … ? Oh,
ciao
,” said Pascoli.
Chow? Daisy puzzled over it for a minute before deciding that either Pascoli had misheard her, or it was the American pronunciation of cheerio.
Daisy finished the letter to Belinda, then handwrote a brief note to Mrs. Fletcher, who would undoubtedly object to a typed personal letter. So would Daisy's mother, to whom she next composed a note almost as brief. The Dowager Lady Dalrymple would complain about its brevity but would be equally displeased if forced to wade through pages of Daisy's handwriting. Somewhat longer letters to her sister and Lucy, her former housemate, left her satisfied with having done her duty by all.
In none of her epistles had she mentioned the murder. She had managed almost to forget it herself, for over an hour.
Feeling rather an ass, she rang down to the switchboard and asked to be put through to Lambert's room. “I'm going downstairs,” she told him, “to see if they have any postage stamps at the desk and leave some letters to be posted, and then I'm going to pop in to see the Misses Cabot. I
don
't need an escort, but I promised to let you know.”
“But what if they don't have stamps?” Lambert said in alarm. “You mustn't go out looking for a post office.”
“I'll send Stanley.”
“Who?”
“The buttons. Bellhop.”
“O.K. I guess. I'll meet you down below at the elevator.”
“It's really not necessary,” Daisy protested, but he had rung off.
He was waiting for her, when she stepped out of Kevin's lift. “I came down the stairs,” he panted, “to get here before you.”
Daisy sighed.
He accompanied her to the Cabots', where Miss Cabot was much too tenderhearted to make him wait outside. Daisy told Miss Genevieve about Mr. Thorwald being hauled off to police headquarters.
“As long as he has his lawyer with him,” Miss Genevieve assured her, “he won't come to any harm.”
Daisy wondered just what sort of harm her editor might come to if he had gone without his lawyer. The police in America seemed to be quite as dangerous as the criminals. She wasn't sure whether to be more afraid of Gilligan or the suppositious assassin who might or might not be after her.
Miss Genevieve eagerly agreed to be with Daisy in the lobby when she met Pascoli. “Not that I believe you have anything to fear from him,” she added.
“Nor do I,” Daisy agreed.
“Better safe than sorry,” Lambert said firmly.
“Oh yes,” said Miss Cabot, “so very true!”
“Poppycock,” Miss Genevieve snorted. “If everyone thought like that, we'd still be living in caves. Or at least walking everywhere, instead of riding in trains and automobiles.”
“Oh dear, those newfangled automobiles, so dangerous! Papa would never set foot in one.”
“But you have frequently travelled with me in a motor taxicab, sister and have come to no harm,” Miss Genevieve pointed out. “Now, what I could bear to do is go up in an airplane. Have you ever flown in an airplane, Mrs. Fletcher?”
“No, but Alec has promised to take me up one day. He was a pilot in the Royal Flying Corps in the War. He flies
an aeroplane now and then to preserve his skills. My stepdaughter, Belinda, has flown with him more than once, I believe, much against her grandmother's will.”
“Oh dear!” Miss Cabot shuddered. “A little girl up in the air, it doesn't bear thinking of.”
“Have you ever flown?” Daisy asked Lambert.
“Who, me? In one of those kites? Oh boy, not hardly! An airship, now, that's different. You can understand why a dirigible stays up, helium being lighter than air. That's where the future of flight is, you betcha.”
“Oh dear, it's simply not natural. If God had intended us to fly before we get to heaven, he would certainly have given us wings here below instead of trains.”
Daisy blinked and decided this curious proposition was not worth refuting. “I'm quite looking forward to it,” she said, “if Alec ever has time to take me when we get home. The view must be breathtaking.”
“As long as you don't do it while I'm trying to take care of you,” said Lambert.
“That'll soon be over,” Daisy reminded him. No doubt he'd be almost as happy as she would when Alec arrived.
They stayed with the Cabot sisters until it was time to go down to the lobby. Miss Genevieve, struggling to her feet, suggested she should be the one to give Pascoli information on the case, assuming that was really what he came for.
“Please do,” said Daisy. “You'll know what he should be told, much better than I.”
“And what's better not told,” Miss Genevieve agreed.
Kevin took them down. “This Pascoli guy,” he said sternly to Daisy, “you know him?”
“I've met him.” How on earth did Kevin know Daisy was meeting Pascoli?

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