Heâd taken one bullet here,â he tapped his own head at the right rear, âfrom about three feet. He was still breathing when the patrol car got there, but dead when the detectives arrived.â
âThe gun?â
âNine-millimeter automatic; Calder owned one, and it hasnât turned up, in spite of a very thorough search.â
âWhere was Arrington when it happened?â
âIn the bathtub, apparently. They were going out to dinner later. The butler heard the shot and sent the maid to find her. She was still in a robe when the detectives arrived. They noted the strong smell of perfume; there was a large bottle of Chanel No. 5 on her dressing table.â
âAnd that made them suspicious, I guess.â
âYeah.â
âBut how would Arrington know that perfume can remove the residue from the hands of someone whoâs fired a gun?â
Rick shrugged. âItâs the sort of thing that pops up on the news or in a television movie. Anybody could know it.â
âDid Arrington say anything to the detectives?â
âShe was distraught, of course, but she seemed willing to talk; then she fainted. By this time, an ambulance had arrived, and the EMTs revived her. When she came to, she seemed disorientedâgave her name as Arrington Carter and didnât recognize the maid or her surroundings. The maid called her doctor, and he arrived pretty quickly. He had the EMTs load her up and take her to a toney private hospital, the Judson Clinic, in Beverly Hills. After the crime scene team arrived, they went to the clinic to question Arrington but were told sheâd been sedated and would be out for at least twenty-four hours.â
âAnything missing from the house?â
âCalderâs jewelry box, which, the butler said, had half a dozen watches and some diamond jewelry in it, and the gun. None of Arringtonâs stuff had been taken, according to the maid.â
âSo, Calder could have interrupted a burglary and gotten shot with his own gun for his trouble.â
âThatâs one scenario,â Rick said.
âAnd I guess another is that Arrington shot Vance during a quarrel, hid the gun and the jewelry box, scrubbed her shooting hand and arm with Chanel No. 5 and jumped into a tub, just in time to be found by the maid.â
âThatâs about it.â
âAny other scenarios?â
âNope, just the two.â
âHowâs the voting going?â
Rick shrugged. âIâd say the burglar is losing, at the moment.â
âAre you serious?â
âI think the detectives would have felt better about her, if sheâd kept her head and told them a convincing story. They werenât too keen on the hysterics and fainting.â
âThey think she was acting?â
âThey think itâs a good possibility. Iâd find her a shrink, if I were you, and a lawyer, too. A good one.â
The two men rode along in silence for a few minutes. Shortly, Rick turned off the freeway and onto Sunset Boulevard. A couple of minutes later he turned left onto Stone Canyon, toward the Bel-Air Hotel.
âIs there anything else you want to ask me, Stone?â Rick said. âNext time we meet, we might not be able to talk to each other so freely.â
âI canât think of anything else right now. Any advice?â
âYeah, get Centurion Studios involved; theyâre equipped to handle something like this, and I understand that Calder was a major stockholder, as well as their biggest star.â
âIâll call Lou Regenstein tomorrow morning,â Stone replied.
Rick turned into the hotel parking lot and stopped at the front entrance. âGood luck with this, Stone,â he said. âDonât hesitate to call, but donât be surprised if I clam up or canât help. Iâll do what I can.â
âThanks for all youâve done, Rick, and thanks for meeting my flight,