The Case of the Lazy Lover (22 page)

Read The Case of the Lazy Lover Online

Authors: Erle Stanley Gardner

Tags: #Legal, #Mystery & Detective, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #General, #Crime, #Fiction

BOOK: The Case of the Lazy Lover
7.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"We'll identify this right now, if you want, with the testimony of the surveyor who made the…"

"I don't think that's necessary,". Mason said. "You can put the surveyor on later, but we have Fleetwood on the stand now and we may just as well finish with him."

"Very well. And here are some photos of the tracks."

"I'll call your attention to this map," Mason said, "and ask you if this seems to be a correct map or diagram showing the vicinity of Overbrook's house?"

"Yes, sir. That is."

"And where did you leave the car?"

"At this point."

"And where was the luggage compartment of the car located?"

"Right about here. Right where you see the footprints of this woman – the dots marked here as 'Woman's Footprints Running.'You see they start here. That's where the luggage compartment was located. They run down to the road."

"And then you see a series of dots marked 'Woman's Footprints Returning'?"

"That's right."

"And what are those?"

"Well, of course, I don't know what they are. I think that's where Mrs. Allred and…"

"Never mind what you think," Danvers interrupted. "Just confine your answers to what you know, and I'll make Mr. Mason confine his questions to the issues. I object, Your Honor, to Counsel's question on the ground that it calls for a conclusion of the witness and…"

"The objection would have been sustained, but the question was already asked and answered."

"Not completely answered, Your Honor."

"Very well, the objection is sustained. The answer of the witness will be stricken from the record. Go ahead, Mr. Mason."

"Why," Mason asked, "didn't you complain to the police?"

"I didn't have an opportunity."

"You had an opportunity to get to a telephone and call Donnybrook 6981, didn't you?"

"Yes."

"The number of someone in whom you are interested?"

"Yes."

"And you wanted to appeal to this person for help?"

"Well, I wanted to get away from the predicament in which I found myself."

"And did you, or did you not, tally with this person at Donnybrook 6981?"

"I did not That was the number of Miss Bernice Archer, a friend of mine."

"A close friend?"

"Yes."

"And you wanted to advise her of what was happening?"

"Yes. I didn't intend to ask her for help or to notify the police, but I didn't want her to think I skipped out with a married woman."

"You placed a call to her from a service station telephone, while Mrs. Allred was in the women's rest room at the service station?"

"Yes, sir."

"And then didn't wait for the call to be answered?"

"No, sir. There was some clay. Then Mrs. Allred came out and I didn't want her to see me at the telephone."

"That was the first opportunity you'd had to use a telephone?"

"Well, just about the first opportunity, yes."

"You were in a motel all day Sunday?"

"Yes."

"And Monday morning?"

"Yes."

"There was no phone there?"

"No, sir."

"Did you try to find a phone?"

"Yes."

"Was Mrs. Allred there all that time?"

"Not all the time, no. But she was right close. I don't think she was ever away from me over, well, over ten or fifteen minutes at a time."

"You could have got up and walked out any time you wanted to?"

"Well, I guess I could have. Yes."

"You didn't want to?"

"Well, I wanted to see how the situation was going to adjust itself."

"Yet you realized that Allred might show up at any moment?"

"To tell you the truth, Mr. Mason, I didn't want to do anything that would make a scene, because I didn't want to be put in a position of having to explain my actions."

"Why not?"

"Because I thought that if I could fool everyone, and if Allred thought that I thought Patricia's car had struck the blow that knocked me out, I might turn the situation somewhat to my advantage."

"In what way?"

"I could lull Allred into a feeling of false security and have a chance to communicate with Mr. Jerome and explain matters to him."

"Had you made any attempt to communicate with Jerome?"

"Yes."

"When?"

"While we were there at the motel at Springfield."

"And what did you do?"

"I called Mr. Jerome on the phone."

"Oh you did, eh?"

"Yes, sir."

"And what did you tell him?"

"I didn't talk with him. I left a message for him. He was out."

"What did you say in this message?"

"Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and hearsay," Danvers said "Not proper cross-examination."

"Sustained," Judge Colton snapped.

"Now just a moment," Mason said. "Your attitude toward the defendant in this case, Mrs. Allred, is influenced in some way by your business connections?"

"Well, only in a way."

"You know that as the surviving partner, Mr. Jerome will be in charge of winding up the partnership business?"

"Well, generally, yes."

"And you expect to be employed by Mr. Jerome?"

"Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial," Danvers said.

"I beg your pardon," Mason snapped 'This is going to the motivation of the witness, his bias, his interest in the testimony which he is giving. I am entitled to show that on cross-examination."

"You're right," Judge Colton said. "The objection is overruled."

"Well," Fleetwood said, and hesitated. "I guess I'd thought of that."

"And the real reason, the underlying, reason that you didn't simply get up and walk out on Mrs. Allred there at that motel, was because you felt that at some time in the future you'd be able to turn the tables on Bertrand C. Allred and kill him, and that George Jerome with his money and his connections would stand back of you. Isn't that right?"

"No."

"Not even generally?"

"No."

"Then why didn't you simply wait until a propitious moment, smile at Mrs. Allred and say, "I'm sorry, Mrs. Allred, but this is all an act on my part. I'm going to leave you now'?"

"Well… because of certain complications. I wanted to stall along until Jerome could have a chance to catch Allred redhanded. The message I left for Jerome would tell him what to do. I wanted to keep Allred occupied with me until Jerome had the evidence sewed up."

"You were then working hand-in-glove with Jerome?"

"In a way. I expected to co-operate with him, and have him co-operate with me."

"That's all," Mason said.

"No further questions. Call P. E. Overbrook."

Overbrook, attired in overalls and jumper, strode up to the stand, a big, good-natured giant, embarrassed by the crowd in the courtroom and his strange surroundings.

He took the oath, gave his name and address to the clerk, and turned uneasily to face Danvers.

"You're the P. E. Overbrook who has the property described as the Overbrook ranch? You have seen this diagram and can identify this as marking the location of your house on that diagram?"

"Yes, sir."

Mason said to Danvers, "As I understand the rule, Counselor, leading questions are permitted on direct examination when they are preliminary, merely; but I would suggest that if you don't want me to object, you had better let the witness himself testify from here on."

"My question was merely preliminary. I was trying to save time."

"You could save more time if you gave all the testimony for this witness," Mason said. "Time is important, but there are other matters more important."

Danvers grinned and said, "I'm trying to save time, and you're trying to save the defendant's neck."

"That will do, gentlemen," Judge Colton said. "Please get on with the case, Mr. Danvers."

"You've seen the witness, Fleetwood, who just testified?"

"Yes, Sir."

"When did you first see him?"

"Why, he came to my place Monday night."

"About what time Monday?"

"Well, now, I can't tell. It was after I'd gone to bed, and I woke up because the dog was barking. I never looked at the watch."

"All right. What wakened you?"

"First I heard the dog bark, and then I thought I might have heard a car."

"So you were awake, then, when Fleetwood came to the house?"

"Yes, Sir."

"And what happened?"

"Well, the dog barked real loud and I knew someone was right out in the yard. Then I heard one speak to the dog and then there was the sound of knuckles on the door."

"The dog didn't bite?"

"No. The dog doesn't bite. He barks, and he runs up and smells people, and I don't know what would happen if a person tried to do something he wasn't supposed to do. But as long as a person is going directly to the house and knocking on the door, the dog just keeps on barking, and that's all."

"So you went to the door and let Fleetwood in?"

"Yes, Sir."

"Then what happened?"

"Well, this man told me that he found himself wandering around, that he guessed he'd been in an automobile accident, that he didn't know who he was and couldn't remember anything about himself. So, naturally, I took him in."

"Where did you put him?"

"Well, Sir, I didn't know anything at all about who he was, and thinking I might have heard a car motor stop down there made me kind of suspicious."

"You didn't say anything to this man about hearing the car stop?"

"No. I wasn't even certain I had heard a car. I thought I might have – and the way the dog acted I thought a car had stopped"

"Did the man tell you anything about having driven up in an automobile?"

"No. He said he just couldn't remember a thing, that he just found himself walking along the road."

"You knew that was a lie?"

"Well, to tell you the truth, I thought the guy was hot."

"So what did you do?"

"Well, it was a cold, drizzly night and I didn't want to turn him out, but I didn't want to take any chances. I had a spare room with a cot in it and some blankets were there. I told him that I ran a bachelor's place, and that he'd have to get in a bed without sheets, just some blankets."

"And what did he say?"

"He seemed tickled to death. So I put him in that room."

"And then what?"

"And then," Overbrook said with a grin, "I took Prince, that's the dog, and put him in the living room, and I told Prince to watch him and keep him in there, and then I went back to bed and went to sleep. I knew that that fellow could never get out of that room without Prince nabbing him."

"You feel absolutely certain that he didn't leave the room after he once entered it?"

Overbrook grinned and said, "When I tell Prince to keep somebody in a place and to watch him, why you can gamble Prince is going to do it."

"How big a dog is Prince?"

"He weighs about eighty-five pounds. He's a lot of dog."

Other books

Forbidden Lessons by Noël Cades
The Secret Princess by Rachelle McCalla
Se armó la de San Quintín by Nieves Concostrina
Hell or Richmond by Ralph Peters
The Last Time I Saw You by Eleanor Moran
What He Desires by Violet Haze
Simon Says by Lori Foster
No Strings Attached by Hilary Storm
Game Over by Fern Michaels
Last Days With the Dead by Stephen Charlick