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Harriet Bushrow
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f I ever do any more detecting, I'm going to make them give me a secretary to write it up afterward. Doing the detecting and all of that is fun. But I have never learned to type, and it gets awful tiresome writing all this out by hand. But we are getting on toward the end now.
The next morning after I arrived in Stedbury, I called Alice Hollonbrook as soon as etiquette would permit. “Dear,” I said, “if you're not too busy this morning, there is something I need to talk about.” She said that would be fine, and I went right over.
The poor child seemed very glad to see me, and she was even gladder when I told her I felt sure she would be able to collect on the life insurance in the near future. This was specially welcome news, because Dan Blake, her lawyer, had notified her that Estonia Savings and Loan had started foreclosure proceedings.
“After that,” she said, “the rest of the estate will be so little and divided among so many that it will be like nothing.”
It would be a comedown for her. She had gone so far and learned such expensive tastes. How much better if she had
married into something more stable! But everyone to her own fancy.
I told her about my interview with Ben Rawlings. She was very much surprised about dear Holly's getting his loans through blackmail, although she knew he had continued to get those loans long after he was in a serious financial scrape.
If Lamar had had trouble like that, he would have told me all about it, and we would have gone through it together. But then, Lamar was one in ten million.
I said I hoped she didn't mind that I had given the clipping to Mr. Rawlings, and she said she was glad I did it. I believe Alice Hollonbrook had good intentions from the beginning, but she could hardly live in that environment without being influenced for evil as well as for good.
At last I got down to what I really wanted to know.
“Darling, I hope you won't be offended,” I began, “but when we had our chat before, I believe you said you were not the cause of your husband's divorce. Still, I can't believe you were never intimate with Holly until after he separated from his wife.”
“We had a relation,” she said, “but Linda did not know about it until later.”
I had my doubts about this, but I let it stand. “And did you ever spend the night with him in a motel? I mean, before you were married?”
She almost laughed in my face.
I put my hand on her knee and said, “I have a reason for asking the questions in this way. The next thing isâafter you had your little ârelation,' did he take a sleeping tablet, roll over, and go right to sleep?”
Her eyes flashed. “How did you know?”
“There, there,” I said, “just tell me if I am right.”
“Yes. It used to hurt me the way he suddenly lost interest. Then it made me mad. He laughed at meâsaid I ought to be practicalâthat he had to have his sleep, because so many people make a racket leaving a motel in the morning.”
“And would you think the same thing would happen if he took some other woman to a motel for a ârelation'?”
“Yes.”
Well, there I had it. He took sleeping pills whenever he spent the night in a motelâwith or without a mistress. And any woman who had had very many rendezvous with him at motels would know all about his little habits.
I was very pleased with this brief interview. On the way back to Maud's house, in my mind I went on to the next thing. It was only a guess, but I thought it was a reasonable guess. You see an operatorâa sexual operatorâbut then I'm not supposed to know about that sort of thing.
Anyhow, it was most fortunate that Jay Bradfield had been an insurance manâvery successful. And the gentleman who has the agency nowâPelham Stafford is his nameâwas Jay's partner.
So Maud knew a lot about the insurance office, and we talked it all over and put two and two together and got the right answer. Maud called Pel on the phone at his home that evening and explained what we wanted. He knew the answer right off. Of course, it was office information and confidential, but when Maud explained the situation to him, he gave her the information.
Then Maud put me on the phone. It was a little difficult explaining what I wanted him to do, but he finally saw what I was up to, and he gave me an appointment for ten o'clock the next morning.
When I went into the insurance office, I announced myself in a good strong voice. “I am Mrs. L. Q. C. Lamar Bushrow,” I said. Everybody on the block could have heard me.
Mr. Stafford was ready for me, and the young woman escorted me to his office.
“Mrs. Bushrow,” he said apologetically, “I can't imagine Nellie Penn letting out confidential information. But as you explained it, it is very suspicious. And as you say, your little
scheme will prove whether she did or did not do it.” With that, he called his secretary on the office intercom.
“Nellie, will you please bring the complete file on the Hollonbrook policies.”
He released the button, and immediately Miss Penn's voice came on. “All of them?”
“Yes,
all
of them.”
Within seconds, the office door opened and a somewhat nondescript person came in. I saw immediately that her eyes were apprehensive, although that may have been my imagination. “Miss Penn,” he said, “this is Mrs. Bushrow, the lady who solved the DAR murder mystery. I am sure you have heard of her.”
“How do you do,” she said none too cordially as she handed the file to Mr. Stafford.
“Mrs. Bushrow hopes to prove that Chuck Hollonbrook was murdered.” He paused and gave his secretary an inquiring look. “That would allow Mrs. Hollonbrook to collect on her policy.”
There was a brief but awkward silence. Then Miss Penn was dismissed and left the room.
Mr. Stafford did not open the file but laid it on the desk. “The information that I gave you on the phone yesterday is correct, Mrs. Bushrow,” he said. “I'll lock this file in my desk drawer. I have the only key.”
I left Mr. Stafford's office about 10:20. That would give Nellie Penn an hour and forty minutes in which to stew before her lunchtime. I was very pleased with myself. I thought I had baited a trap pretty well.
But a baited trap does not always spring on its prey immediately. In fact, two days went by. Then on Friday, the phone rang for me.
It was a muffled voice. I was not sure whether it was a man trying to talk like a woman or a woman trying to talk like a man, but I was betting on a man rather than a woman.
The voice, of course, wanted to know whether I was Mrs.
Bushrow. And when that was out of the way, there were only two sentencesâand I'll remember them till I dieâwhich won't be very far off now. The voice said, “If you want to learn who killed Mr. Hollonbrook, meet me at the bandstand in the park on Black's Mill Road tonight at eight o'clock. Come alone.” That was all.
Black's Mill Road.
Maud explained that the city had a park at the edge of town. They never really took care of the park very well, but there was a baseball diamond out there, where the church teams and all that practiced and played their games. But more recently, the Dad's Club had put in lights on the field at the high school because the effluent from Featherstone Plastics has so polluted Black's Creek that the old ball field is no longer popular.
So the park would be deserted by eight even though it wouldn't be quite dark then.
“You must not go over there,” Maud said.
“I'd like to know why not!” I said.
She said there was a road on the back side of the park that was used for access, but that with the pollution and chug holes in the Black's Mill Road hardly anybody ever used it unless absolutely necessary. And all along the creek, the banks are grown up in brush and trees and weeds.
“Why they could grab you and drag you into those bushes and no telling what they would do to you.”
Well, that made me stop and think. I wanted the manâyes, it would have to be the manâthe one with that blasting gelatinâto make some kind of move so I could identify him and connect him with what had happened to my car, which would also connect him with the murder. And here he had made his move. Now that I was face-to-face with the thing I had been hoping forâdon't you seeâit was just too scary.
I had thought about the danger before I left home, and I had taken Lamar's revolver and some shells out of the right-hand
drawer of my secretary bookcase. So I had put that in my suitcase.
Well, I had this opportunity to identify the man, and I just couldn't let it slip through my hands. I told Maud about the pistol. I would have it right there in my purse, which was a good-sized purse, and I felt sure I still knew how to shoot if I found it necessary.
She wouldn't have any of that. She wanted to call the police.
I said, “Absolutely not!”
She wanted to know why not.
In the first place, the police would never believe an old woman who said there was somebody lying in wait for her down by the creek. And in the second place, they wouldn't let me go down there if they believed it. And in the third place, if a police car came anywhere near the park, the man wouldn't show up and the officers would just laugh at us. And there wasn't a fourth place, because I wasn't going to call any police.
If there had ever been any chance that I would back down and not be at that park at eight o'clock, by the time I got through with all those first, second, and third places, that chance was gone and the matter was settled.
Dinner was not very pleasant that night. Maud was just sure I was eating my last meal. She didn't say so, but I knew that was what she thought. And the fact is, I wasn't very hungry myself.
Well, I got out there. The sun had already sunk below the big old dark trees along the creek. It was about the dreariest place you ever want to see.
There was a parking lot for the carsânone there, of courseâweeds coming up through the gravel except where oil had leaked. I pulled my car in and got out.
Should I lock it or not? It was not the place to leave an unlocked car, and I wasn't sure the Baker Street boys would be best pleased if I lost this Buick. But on the other hand, I might want to get into the car in a hurry. So I left it unlocked and put
the keys in my purse, taking the opportunity to look at my revolver, just for comfort. I said, “Lord, if you'll see me through this one, you can do as you please next time.”
Isn't that awful!
Well, to go on about that park. Over to the left were some ramshackle bleachers by the baseball diamond, and over in the other direction I could see some swings and slides for the children. Directly ahead of me was the bandstand, and not too far from that was a small brick building.
I saw no sign of the man I had come to meet. But there were some benches around the bandstand and some bushes, so I couldn't see whether the benches were all empty or whether someone might be sitting there hidden by one of the shrubs.
The man had said I was to meet him by the bandstand, which meant, I supposed, I would have to go over there if I expected to see him.
So I started out walking over the grass toward the bandstand. I'm sure my heart was beating faster than it had done in a long, long time.
I was about halfway to the bandstand, I suppose, when I felt I just had to look behind me. And there, crossing the road, was the big old lumbering figure of a heavyset man. Yes, it was the man I had seen throw that blasting gelatin under my DeSoto.
It's all very well to be brave when you are sitting in Maud's living room telling her you don't want the police, but when you're alone in that huge, vacant park with a creature like that behind you, it's different.
I quickened my pace. After all, I had done what I had wanted to do. I had seen the man clearly enough to identify him. But now I was not quite sure I knew what to do.
I quickened my pace still more and looked back again. Then I realized why the man had such a lumbering walk: He was lame.
Well, that gave me hope. An old lady eighty-eight years old
can't run very fast, but maybe she could keep ahead of a lame man. So I began to run.
I got almost to the bandstand when I thought I had better take my gun out of my purse. I was fumbling around with that and not paying enough attention to where I was going, and suddenly my foot went into a rabbit hole and I fell to my knees. Fortunately, my fall was softened by the thick grass, and I didn't break anything. But the man gained on me as I scrambled to my feet againâscared to death.
I got past the bandstand. Ahead of me was the little red brick building. I could see now that it was a public toilet. If I could just get in there and close the door!