check both Macdonald and Janet Crosby’s wills as soon as County Buildings opened. I
wanted to see Nurse Gurney again. I wanted to find out who Maureen Crosby’s lawyer was
and have a talk to him. If I could I wanted more information about Douglas Sherrill. If the
wills didn’t produce anything of interest, if Maureen’s lawyer was satisfied with the set-up,
and if there appeared to be nothing sinister about Douglas Sherrill then I decided I’d hand
back the five hundred dollars and consider the case closed. But I was pretty sure at the back
of my mind that I wouldn’t close the case, although I was open to be convinced I was wasting
my time.
I pulled up before the pine-wood hut that serves me as a garage, ploughed through hot loose
sand to open the doors. I got back into the Buick, drove in, switched off the engine and
paused to light a cigarette. As I did so I happened to look into the driving-mirror. A
movement in the moonlit bushes caught my eye.
I flicked out the match and sat very still, watching the clump of bushes in the mirror. It was,
at a guess, about fifty yards away, and in direct line with the back of the car. It moved again,
the branches bending and shivering, and then became motionless once more.
There was no wind, no reason why those bushes should move. No bird could be big enough
to cause a movement like that, and it seemed to me someone—a man or possibly a woman—
was hiding behind them, and had either pushed back the branches to see more clearly, or else
had lost balance and had grabbed at the branches to save himself from falling.
I didn’t like this. People don’t lurk in bushes unless they’re up to no good. In the past Paula
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had repeatedly told me the cabin was dangerously lonely. In my job I made enemies, and
there had been quite a few who had threatened at one time or the other to rub me out. I
reached forward and stubbed out my cigarette. This spot was temptingly isolated for anyone
with evil intentions. You could have started a miniature war right here without anyone
hearing it, and I thought regretfully of the .38 Police special in my wardrobe drawer.
After I had cut the car engine I had dowsed the headlights, and it was pitch dark in the
garage. If whoever was lurking in those bushes planned to start something, the time to do it
would be when I stepped out of the garage into the moonlight to shut the doors. As a target in
that light and from that distance I couldn’t be missed.
If I was to surprise the hidden hand I would have to do something fast. The longer I sat in
the car, the more alert and suspicious he would become—if it was a he. And if I didn’t buck
up he might even start blazing away at the back of the car in the hope a stray slug might find
me, always supposing he had a play-pretty, and I fervently hoped he hadn’t.
I opened the car door and slid out into the darkness. From where I stood I could see the
stretch of beach, the thick shrubs, the trees startlingly sharp in the moonlight. It would be a
crazy thing to walk out there into that blaze of white light, and I wasn’t going to do it. I
stepped back and ran my hands over the rough planks of the rear wall. Some time ago, after I
had had a night out with Jack Kerman, I had driven a little too fast into the garage and had
very nearly succeeded in driving right through it. I knew some of the planks had never
recovered, and the idea now was to force an opening and slide out that way.
I found a wacky plank and began to work it loose. All the time I was doing this I didn’t take
my eyes off that clump of bushes. Nothing moved out there. Whoever was lurking behind the
bushes was lying very, very doggo. The plank gave under my pressure. I pushed a little more
and then, turning sideways, edged through the opening.
At the back of the garage there was an expanse of sand, and then bushes. I legged it across
the sand and got under cover without making any noise, but losing a considerable amount of
breath. It was a little too hot for that kind of exercise, and, panting, I sat down on the sand to
figure things out.
The sensible thing to do would be to creep around to the back of the cabin, keeping out of
sight, get in and collect the .38 from my wardrobe drawer. Once I had that I felt I’d be able to
cope with anyone looking for trouble. A shot fired from my bedroom window a couple of feet
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above that clump of bushes would very likely take the starch out of whoever was lurking
there.
The only snag to this idea was that as I hadn’t appeared from the garage the hidden hand
might guess I had spotted him and he might be moving in this direction to cut me off. One the
other hand he might think I was still in the garage, scared to come out, and was prepared to
wait until I did come out.
I rose slowly to my feet and, keeping my head down, began a quiet creep towards the cabin,
sheltering behind the bushes and treading carefully. That was all right so long as the bushes