Then the telephone rang: a shrill sound that sounded sinister in the silent little apartment.
“I’ll get it,” I said, and walked stiff legged across the room and picked up the receiver.
“Malloy?” A man’s voice.
“Yes.”
“This is Sherrill.”
I didn’t say anything, but waited, looking across at Kerman.
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“I have your girl on board, Malloy,” Sherrill said. His voice was gentle; it whispered in my
ear.
“I know,” I said.
“You better come out and fetch her,” Sherrill said. “Say around nine o’clock. Don’t come
before. I’ll have a boat at the pier to bring you out. Come alone, and keep this close. If you
bring the police or anyone with you, she’ll be rapped on the head and dropped overboard.
Understand?”
I said I understood.
“See you at nine o’clock then,” he said, and hung up.
IV
Lieutenant Bradley of the Missing People’s Bureau was a thickset, middle-aged,
disillusioned Police Officer who sat for long hours behind a shabby desk in a small office on
the fourth floor of Police Headquarters and tried to answer unanswerable questions. All day
long and part of the night people came to him or called him on the telephone to report
missing relatives, and expected him to find them.
Not an easy job when, in most cases, the man or woman who had disappeared had gone
away because they were sick of their homes or their wives or their husbands and were taking
good care not to be found again. A job I wouldn’t have had for twenty times the pay Bradley
got, and a job I couldn’t have handled anyway.
A light still burned behind the frosted panel of his office door when I knocked. His bland
voice, automatically cordial, invited me to come in.
There he was, sitting behind his desk, a pipe in his mouth, a weary expression in his deep-set, shrewd brown eyes. A big man: going bald, with a pouch and bags under his eyes. A man
who did a good job, had no credit nor publicity for it, and who didn’t want any.
The placid brow came down in a frown when he saw me.
“Go away,” he said without hope. “I’m busy. I don’t have the time to listen to your
troubles; I have troubles of my own.”
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I closed the door and leaned my back against it. I wasn’t in the mood for a Police
Lieutenant’s pleasantries and I was in a hurry.
“I want service, Bradley,” I said, “and I want it fast. Do I get it from you or do I go to
Brandon?”
The pale brown eyes looked startled.
“You don’t have to talk to me like that, Malloy,” he said. “What’s biting you?”
“Plenty, but I haven’t time to go into details.” I crossed the small space between the door
and his desk, put my fists on his blotter and stared at him. “I want all you’ve got on Anona
Freedlander. Remember her? She was one of Dr. Salzer’s nurses up at the Sanatorium on
Foothill Boulevard. She disappeared on May 15th, 1947.”
“I know,” Bradley said, and his bush eyebrows climbed an inch. “You’re the second
nuisance who’s asked to see her file in the past four hours. Funny how these things come in
pairs. I’ve noticed it before.”
“Who was it?”
Bradley dug his thumb into the bell-push on his desk.
“That’s not your business,” he said. “Sit down and don’t crowd me.”
As I pulled up a chair a police clerk came in and stood waiting.
“Let’s have Freedlander’s file again,” Bradley said to him. “Make it snappy. This gent’s in
a hurry.”
The clerk gave me a stony stare and went away like a centenarian climbing a steep flight of
stairs.
Bradley lit his pipe and stared down at his ink-stained fingers. He breathed gently.
“Still sticking your nose into the Crosbys’ affairs?” he asked, without looking at me.
“Still doing it,” I said shortly.
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He shook his head.
“You young and ambitious guys never learn, do you? I heard MacGraw and Hartsell called
on you the other night.”
“They did. Maureen Crosby showed up and rescued me. How do you like that?”
He gave a little grin.
“I’d’ve liked to have been there. Was she the one who hit MacGraw?”
“Yeah.”
“Quite a girl.”
“I hear there was a shindig up at Salzer’s place,” I said, watching him. “Looks as if your
Sports fund’s going to suffer.”
“I’d cry about that. I don’t have to worry about sport at my age.”
We brooded over each other for a minute or so, then I said, “Anyone report a girl named
Gurney missing? She was another of Salzer’s nurses.”
He pulled at his thick nose, shook his head.
“Nope. Another of Salzer’s nurses, did you say?”
“Yeah. Nice girl: got a good body, but maybe you’re a mite old to bother about bodies.”
Bradley said he was a little old for that kind of thing, but he was staring thoughtfully at me
now.
“She wouldn’t be any good to you, anyway; she’s dead,” I said.
“Are you trying to tell me something or are you just being tricky?” he asked, an acid note in
his voice.
“I heard Mrs. Salzer tried to kidnap her from her apartment. The girl fell down the fire
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escape and broke her neck. Mrs. S. planted her somewhere in the desert, probably near the
sanatorium.”
“Who told you?”
“An old lady fooling around with a crystal ball.”