one.â
âPity she was hanged.â
âYes.â
âI remember from Lou that youâre a friend of Mrs. . . . the Calders. I take it Iâm here to talk about another murder trial.â
âLetâs call this a precautionary meeting.â
âItâs always wise to take precautions. Has Arrington talked to the police yet?â
âEarlier this afternoon.â
âI should have been there for that,â Blumberg said.
âI didnât want to appear to be running scared,â Stone said. âYouâd have been happy with the way it went.â He gave Blumberg a detailed rundown of Arringtonâs questioning.
âThat sounds okay,â Blumberg said. âYou handled it well.â
âThank you.â
âSounds as though they donât have another suspect.â
âThatâs how I read it. They went through the drill the night of the murder, and they didnât come up with anything, and that disturbs them. Cops like early indications, and when they donât find them, they look at the household.â
âAnybody in the house besides Arrington?â
âNo. The butler and maid were in their quarters; the butler found Vance and called the police.â
âWhat was the scene like?â
âVance was dressed in tuxedo trousers and a pleated shirt, no tie. They were going to a black-tie dinner at Louâs house a little later. He was found lying facedown in the central hallway of the house, one bullet here.â Stone pointed at the spot.
âYou used to be a cop, didnât you?â
âYes.â
âHave you got a scenario for this that doesnât involve Arrington shooting Vance?â
âHereâs how I read it,â Stone said. âArrington was in the bathtub; Vance was getting dressed. His safe was open, containing his jewelry box, a nine-millimeter automatic, and a box of cartridges. He either walked in on a burglary, or a burglar walked in on him, probably the former. The burglar took the jewelry box and the gun, walked Vance into the central hallway and shot him.â
âAny struggle?â
âLooks like an execution to me. My guess is, Vance saw it coming and turned away. Thatâs why the wound in the back of the head.â Stone stood up, held out his hands in the âno, noâ position, then half turned away from his imaginary assailant.
âMakes sense,â Blumberg said.
âFor Arrington to have done it, she would have to have gone to the safe, taken out the gun, cocked it, flipped off the safety, then either marched her husband out into the hall, or gone looking for him and found him there. That doesnât fit a domestic quarrel.â
âIt fits a cold-blooded, premeditated murder,â Blumberg said. âHow do you figure the chances of that?â
âUnlikely in the extreme.â
âIâm glad to hear it. So what weâve got is an innocent woman who loved her husband, who is a suspect only because the police havenât done their job and found the real killer.â
âIn a nutshell,â Stone said. âA couple of other things you should know: I got the impression from the detectives that they might have other evidence we donât know about. They refused to disclose it to me, said theyâd talk to a California lawyer.â
âWeâll get it; donât worry. Whatâs the other thing?â
âThe police talked to a woman named Beverly Walters, who told them Vance was screwing an actress named Charlene Joiner; they took that as Arringtonâs motive for the shooting.â
âI know her; sheâs a complete bitch, and she could give us trouble at a trial. Charlene Joiner, huh? If itâs true, Vance was a lucky guy.â
âYeah, Iâve seen some of her pictures.â
âTell me, Stone, whatâs your role in all this?â Blumberg asked. âFamily friend?â
âThat, and for
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