Black money
home."

    "I can use a little more time here. I understand Mrs. Bagshaw lives at the club."

    "She's in one of the cottages."

    He gestured toward the trees at the back of the lot.

    "Have you asked her any questions about Martel?"

    "No." "But you know Mrs. Bagshaw?"

    "Not that well. I know everyone in Montevista," he added without enthusiasm. "And they know me, I guess."

    I went through the eucalyptus grove and through a gate in a picket fence, which enclosed an expanse of lawn next to the pool enclosure. A dozen or so gray-painted brick cottages were dispersed around the lawn, shielded from their neighbors by patio walls and flowering shrubs. A small Mexican in a khaki coverall was manipulating a hose among the shrubbery.

    "Buenos dias."

    "It is a fine day," he said with a white flash of teeth, and turned the stream from his hose toward the sky, like a fountain. "You looking for somebody?"

    "Mrs. Bagshaw."

    "That's her cottage there."

    Its roof was half-hidden by a purple avalanche of bougainvillea. "She just came back a couple of minutes ago."

    Mrs. Bagshaw turned out to be one of the poolside bridge-players, the one who had ordered the coffee. She was an alert-looking seventy or so.

    "Didn't I see you talking to Stanley just now?" she asked me at the door.

    "I was, yes."

    "And then to Mr. Martel?"

    "Yes."

    "And now you come to me. It's an interesting progression."

    She shook her white curls. "I don't know whether to be flattered or discomfited."

    "Don't be either, Mrs. Bagshaw. My name is Archer, and I'm a detective, as you may have guessed."

    She let me into a sitting room, which contained too much furniture. The Oriental rug on the floor was so good I hated to step on it. She noticed my noticing it.

    "It doesn't go with this place at all. But I couldn't bear to leave it behind."

    Without changing her tone, she said: "Sit down. I suppose you're engaged in the current village sport of prying into Francis Martel's affairs."

    "It's my profession, not my sport."

    "Who brought you here?" she said brusquely.

    "A local family."

    "Marietta Fablon?"

    "She's interested in the outcome of my researches, yes."

    "Researches is a glossy word for what you do, Mr. Archer. You're driving Mr. Martel out of town. Is that your purpose?"

    "No."

    "I wonder about that. He's leaving, you know. He told me so not fifteen minutes ago."

    "Is Ginny Fablon going with him?"

    She lowered her eyes to her lap. "Miss Fablon was not discussed. She is in any case a young woman of twenty-four - at her age I had been married for five years - and she's perfectly capable of looking after herself and making her own choices."

    Her voice, which had faltered for a moment, regained its strength. "More capable than most young women, in my opinion."

    "So you think she's going with him."

    "I don't know. But this is a free country, I believe."

    "It is for people who know what and who they're dealing with. You can't make valid choices without facts."

    She shook her curls. Her face remained unshaken, like cement. "I don't wish to be lectured at. I brought Francis Martel into Montevista ah - circles, and I feel perfectly sanguine about doing so. I like him. It's true I can't provide you with a copy of his genealogical tree. But I'm sure it's a good one. He's one of the most distinguished young Frenchmen of my acquaintance."

    "He is a Frenchman, then?"

    "Is there any doubt of that?"

    "There's always doubt, until the facts are established."

    "And you are the great arbiter of the facts, are you?"

    "In my own investigations I naturally tend to be."

    It was a fairly sharp interchange, and it made her angry. She resolved her anger by laughing out loud at me. "You talk up don't you?"

    "I might as well. I'm not getting anywhere anyway."

    "That's because there's nowhere to get. Merely because Mr. Martel doesn't look like other people, they assume there's some dark secret in his past. The trouble with my neighbors is a simple one. They haven't

Similar Books

Stolen-Kindle1

Merrill Gemus

Crais

Jaymin Eve

Point of Betrayal

Ann Roberts

Dame of Owls

A.M. Belrose