<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_21" id="CHAPTER_21"></SPAN>CHAPTER 21</h2>
<p>In the month which followed, events transpired through a thickening
miasma of rumors, official communiques, journalistic conjectures,
and outright fabrications, fitfully lit by the glare of newsmen's
photo-bulbs, bulking with strange shapes, and emitting stranger noises.
There were the portentous rumblings of prepared statements, and the
hollow thumps of denials. There were soft murmurs of, "Now, this is
strictly off the record ..." followed by sibilant whispers. The unseen
screws of political pressure creaked, and whitewash brushes slurped
suavely. And there was an insistent yammering of bewildered and
unanswered questions. Fred Dunmore really had killed Arnold Rivers,
hadn't he? Or had he? Arnold Rivers had been double-crossing
Dunmore ... or had Dunmore been double-crossing Rivers? Somebody
had stolen ten—or was it twenty-five—thousand dollars' worth
of old pistols? Or was it just twenty-five thousand dollars? Or
what, if anything, had been stolen? Was somebody being framed for
something ... or was somebody covering up for somebody ... or what?
And wasn't there something funny about the way Lane Fleming got killed,
last December?</p>
<p>The surviving members of the Fleming family issued a few noncommittal
statements through their attorney, Humphrey Goode, and then the Iron
Curtain slammed down. Mick McKenna gave an outraged squawk or so, then
subsided. There was a series of pronunciamentos from the office of
District Attorney Charles P. Farnsworth, all full of high-order
abstractions and empty of meaning. The reporters, converging on the
Fleming house, found it occupied by the State Police, who kept them at
bay. Harry Bentz, of the New Belfast <i>Evening Mercury</i>, using a 30-power
spotting-'scope from the road, observed Dave Ritter, whom he recognized,
wearing a suit of butler's livery and standing in the doorway of the
garage, talking to Sergeant McKenna, Carter Tipton and Farnsworth; the
<i>Mercury</i> exploited this scoop for all it was worth.</p>
<p>On the whole, the Rosemont Bayonet Murder was, from a journalistic
standpoint, an almost complete bust. There had been no arrest, no
hearing, no protracted trial, no sensational revelations. Only one
monolithic fact, officially attested and indisputable, loomed out of
the murk: "... and the said Frederick Parker Dunmore, deceased, did
receive the aforesaid gunshot-wounds, hereinbefore enumerated, at the
hands of the said Jefferson Davis Rand and at the hands of the said
David Abercrombie Ritter ..." and "... the said Jefferson Davis Rand
and the said David Abercrombie Ritter, being in mortal fear for their
several lives, did so act in defense of their several persons..." and,
finally, "... the said Frederick Parker Dunmore did die."</p>
<p>The <i>Evening Mercury</i>, which sheet the said Jefferson Davis Rand had
once cost the loss of an expensive libel-suit and exposed in certain
journalistic malpractices verging upon blackmail, promptly burst into
print with an indignant editorial entitled <i>Trial by Pistol</i>. The
terms: "legalized slaughter," and "flagrant whitewash," were used, and
mention was made of "the well known preference of a certain notorious
private detective for the procedure of <i>habeas</i> cadaver." The principal
result of this outcry was to persuade an important New Belfast
manufacturer, who had hitherto resisted Rand's sales pressure, to
contract with the Tri-State Agency for the protection of his payroll
deliveries.</p>
<p>Then, at the other end of the state, the professor of Moral Science at a
small theological seminary caught his wife in <i>flagrante delicto</i> with
one of the fourth-year students and opened fire upon them, at a range of
ten feet, with a 12-gauge pump-gun. The Rosemont Bayonet Murder, already
pretty well withered on the vine, passed quietly into limbo.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Summer, almost a month before its official opening, was already a <i>fait
accompli</i>. The trees were in full leaf and invaded by nesting birds, the
air was fragrant with flower scents, and the mercury column of the
thermometer was stretching itself up toward the ninety mark.</p>
<p>They were all outside, where the long shadow of the Fleming house
fell across the lawn and driveway, gathered about the five parked cars.
The new Fleming butler, a short and somewhat globular Negro with a
gingerbread-crust complexion and an air of affable dignity, was helping
Pierre Jarrett and Karen Lawrence put a couple of cartons and a tall
peach-basket into Pierre's Plymouth. Colin MacBride, a streamer of
pipe-smoke floating back over his shoulder, was peering into his
luggage-compartment to check the stowage of his own cargo, while his
twelve-year-old son, Malcolm, another black Highlander like his
father, was helping Philip Cabot carry a big laundry hamper full of
newspaper-wrapped pistols to his Cadillac. Pierre's mother, and the
stylish-stout Mrs. Trehearne, and Gladys Fleming, obviously detached from
the bustle of pre-departure preparations, were standing to one side,
talking. And Rand had finished helping Adam Trehearne pack the last
container of his share of the Fleming collection into his car.</p>
<p>"I see Colin's about ready to leave, and I'm in his way," Trehearne said.
He extended his hand to Rand. "No need hashing over how we all feel about
this. If it hadn't been for you, that offer of Kendall's would have had
us stopped as dead as Rivers's had. Five hundred dollars deader, in
fact."</p>
<p>Stephen Gresham, carrying a package-filled orange crate, joined him,
setting down his burden. His wife and daughter, with another crate
between them, halted beside him.</p>
<p>"Haven't you got your stuff packed yet, Jeff?" Gresham asked.</p>
<p>"Jeff's been helping everybody else," Irene Gresham burst out. "Come on,
everybody; let's go help Jeff pack! You're going to have dinner with us,
aren't you, Jeff?"</p>
<p>"Oh, sorry. I have some more details to clear up; I'm having dinner here,
with Mrs. Fleming," Rand regretted. "I'll pack my stuff later."</p>
<p>Mrs. Jarrett, Mrs. Trehearne, and Gladys came over; one by one the rest
of the group converged upon them. Then, when the good-by's had been said,
and the promises to meet again had been given, they parted. One by one
the cars moved slowly down the driveway to the road. Only Gladys and
Rand, standing at the foot of the front steps, and the gingerbread-brown
butler were left.</p>
<p>"My, my; that was some party!" the Negro chuckled, gathering up three
empty pasteboard cartons and telescoping them together. "Dinner'll be
ready in about half an hour, Mrs. Fleming. Shall I go mix the cocktails
now?"</p>
<p>"Yes; do that, Reuben. In the drawing-room." She watched the servant
carry the discarded containers around the house, then turned to Rand.
"You know, not the least of your capabilities is your knack of finding
servant-replacements on short notice," she told him.</p>
<p>"My general factotum, Buck Pendexter, is a prominent personage in New
Belfast colored lodge circles," Rand said. "When your cook and maid quit
on you, the day of the blow-up, all I had to do was phone him, and he did
the rest." He got out his cigarettes, offered them, and snapped his
lighter. "I notice you're having cocktails in the drawing-room now."</p>
<p>"Yes. I suppose, in time, I'll stop imagining I see Fred Dunmore's blood
on the library floor. I got used to what had happened in the gunroom last
December. Shall we go in?" she asked, taking Rand's arm.</p>
<p>The cocktails were waiting when they entered the drawing-room, off the
dining-room. The butler poured for them and put the glasses and the
shaker on a low table by a lounge.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid dinner's going to be a little later than I said, Mrs.
Fleming," he apologized. "Things were kind of stirred up, today, with all
those people here."</p>
<p>"That's all right; we can wait," she replied. "We won't need anything
more, Reuben."</p>
<p>Motioning Rand down on the lounge beside her, she handed him a glass and
lifted her own.</p>
<p>"Now," she began. "Just what sort of skulduggery has been going on? As of
Friday, the top offer for the collection was twenty-five thousand five
hundred, from some dealer up in Massachusetts. And then, on Saturday, you
came bounding in with Stephen Gresham's certified check for twenty-six
thousand. And I seem to recall that the late unlamented Rivers's offer of
twenty-five thousand straight had them stopped. Not that I'm inclined
to look askance at an extra five hundred—I can buy a new hat with my
share of that, even after taxes—but I would like to know what happened.
And I might add, that's only one of many things I'd like to know."</p>
<p>"The client is entitled to a full report," Rand said, tasting his
cocktail. It was a vodka Martini, and very good. "You know, none of that
crowd are millionaires. Adam Trehearne, who's the plutocrat of the bunch,
isn't so filthy rich he doesn't know what to do with all his money—what
the tax-collectors leave of it—and the rest of them have to figure
pretty closely. The most they could possibly scratch together was
twenty-two thousand. So I put four thousand into the pot, myself,
bringing the total to five hundred over the Kendall offer, and hastily
declared the collection sold. Of course, my getting into it meant that
much less for everybody else, but five-sixths of a collection is better
than no pistols at all. I imagine Colin MacBride is honing up his
<i>sgian-dhu</i> for me because I got that big Whitneyville Walker Colt, but
what the hell; he got the cased pair of Paterson .34's, and the Texas .40
with the ramming-lever."</p>
<p>"Why, I think the division was fair enough," Gladys said. "They'd agreed
to take your valuation, hadn't they? And all that slide-rule and
comptometer business.... But Jeff—four thousand dollars?" she queried.
"You only got five from me, and you can't run a detective agency on old
pistols."</p>
<p>Rand grinned as he set down his empty glass. Gladys refilled it from the
shaker.</p>
<p>"My dear lady, that five thousand I unblushingly accepted from you was
only part of it," he confessed.</p>
<p>"There was also a fee of three thousand from Stephen Gresham, for pulling
the bloodhounds of the D.A.'s office off his back in the matter of Arnold
Rivers, and there was five thousand from Humphrey Goode, which I suppose
he'll get the Premix Company to repay him, for engineering the
suppression of a lot of facts he wanted suppressed. And, finally, my
connection with this business brought that merger to my attention, and I
picked up a hundred shares of Premix at 73-1/4, and now I have two
hundred shares of Mill-Pack, worth about twenty-nine thousand, which I
can report for my income tax as capital gains. I'd say I could afford to
treat myself to a few old pistols for my collection."</p>
<p>"Well!" She raised both eyebrows over that. "Don't anybody tell me crime
doesn't pay."</p>
<p>"Yes. In my ghoulish way, I generally manage to bear myself in mind, on
an operation like this. I make no secret of my affection for money." He
lifted his glass and sipped slowly. "Look here, Gladys; are you satisfied
with the way this was handled?"</p>
<p>She shrugged. "I should be. When I started out as Lane's blood-avenger,
I suppose I expected things to end somewhere out of sight, in a nice,
antiseptic death-chamber at the state penitentiary. You must admit that
that business in the library was really bringing it home. There's no
question that you got the man who killed Lane, and if you hadn't, I'd
never have been at peace with myself. And I suppose all that chicanery
afterward was necessary, too."</p>
<p>"It was, if you wanted that merger to go through, and unless you wanted
to see the bottom drop out of your Premix stock," Rand assured her. "If
the true facts of Mr. Fleming's death had gotten out, there'd have been
a simply hideous stink. The Mill-Pack people would have backed out of
that merger like a bear out of an active bee-tree.... You know what the
situation really was, don't you?"</p>
<p>She shook her head. "I know Mill-Pack wanted to get control of the Premix
Company, and Lane refused to go in with them. I don't fully understand
his reasons, though."</p>
<p>"They weren't important; they were mainly verbal, and unrelated to
actuality," Rand said. "The important thing is that he did refuse, and
Mill-Pack wanted that merger so badly that it could be tasted in every
ounce of food they sold. They got Stephen Gresham to negotiate it for
them, and he was just on the point of reporting it to be an impossibility
when Fred Dunmore came to him with a proposition. Dunmore said he thought
he could persuade or force Mr. Fleming to consent, and he wanted a
contract guaranteeing him a vice-presidency with Mill-Pack, at forty
thousand a year, if and when the merger was accomplished. The contract
was duly signed about the first of last November."</p>
<p>"Well, good Lord!" Gladys Fleming's eyes widened. "When did you hear
about that?"</p>
<p>"I got that out of Gresham, a couple of days after the blow-up, when it
was too late to be of any use to me," Rand said. "If I'd known it from
the beginning, it might have saved me some work. Not much, though.
Gresham was just as badly scared about the facts coming out as Goode was.
I can't prove collusion between him and Goode, but Gresham was helping
spread the suicide story, too."</p>
<p>"Nice friends Lane had! But didn't anybody think there was something odd
about that accident, immediately after that contract was signed?"</p>
<p>"Of course they did, but try and get them to admit it, even to
themselves. Nobody likes to think that the new vice president of the
company murdered his way into the position. So everybody assumed the
attitudes of the three Japanese monkeys, and made respectable noises
about what a great loss Mr. Fleming was to the business world, and how
lucky Dunmore was that he had that contract."</p>
<p>She looked at him inquiringly for a moment. "Jeff, I want you to tell me
exactly how everything happened," she said. "I think I have a right to
know."</p>
<p>"Yes, you have," he agreed. "I'll tell you the whole thing, what I
actually know, and what I was forced to guess at:</p>
<p>"When this merger idea first took shape, last summer, Dunmore saw how
unalterably opposed to it Mr. Fleming was, and he began wishing him out
of the way. Some time later, he decided to do something about it. I
suppose Anton Varcek gave him the idea, in the first place, with his
jabber about the danger of a firearms accident. Dunmore decided he'd fix
one up for Mr. Fleming. First of all, he'd need a firearm, collector's
type and in good working order. It couldn't be one of the guns in the
collection. He'd have to keep it loaded all the time, waiting for an
opportunity to use it; he couldn't take a weapon out of the collection,
because it would be missed, and he couldn't load one and hang it up
again, because that would be discovered. So he had to get one of his own,
and he got it from Arnold Rivers."</p>
<p>"You know that? I mean, that's not just a guess?"</p>
<p>"I know it. The gun he got from Rivers was a .36 Colt, 1860 Navy-model,
serial number 2444," Rand told her. "Rivers had that gun last summer. He
had it refinished by a gunsmith named Umholtz. After Umholtz refinished
it, the gun was in Rivers's shop until November of last year, when it was
sold by Rivers personally. And that was the revolver that was found in
Lane Fleming's hand, and the one I got from the coroner, with a letter
vouching for the fact that it had been so found."</p>
<p>He finished his cocktail. Gladys picked up the shaker mechanically and
refilled his glass.</p>
<p>"Now we have Dunmore with this .36 Colt, loaded with powder, caps and
bullets from the ammunition supply in the gunroom, waiting for a chance
to use it. And also, he has this Mill-Pack contract in his safe deposit
box at the bank. That takes care of the weapon and the motive; only the
opportunity is needed, and that came on the 22nd of December, when Mr.
Fleming brought home that Confederate Leech & Rigdon .36 he had just
bought. It was just a piece of luck that both revolvers were alike in
caliber and general type, but it wouldn't have made a lot of difference.
Nobody was paying much attention to details, and Dunmore was on the scene
to misdirect any attention anybody would pay to anything.</p>
<p>"Now, we come to the mechanics of the thing; the <i>modus operandi</i>, or,
as it is professionally known, the M.O. You remember what happened that
evening. Nelda had gone out. You and Geraldine were listening to the
radio in the parlor, over there. Varcek had gone up to his lab. Mr.
Fleming was alone in the gunroom, working on his new revolver. And Fred
Dunmore said he was going to take a bath. What he did, of course, was to
draw a tub full of water, undress, put on his bathrobe and slippers, hide
the .36 Colt under the bathrobe, and then go across the hall to the
gunroom, where he found Mr. Fleming sitting on that cobbler's bench,
putting the finishing touches on the Leech & Rigdon. So he fired at close
range, wiped the prints off the Colt with an oily rag, put it in Lane
Fleming's right hand, put the rag in his left, grabbed up the Leech &
Rigdon, and scuttled back to his bathroom, deadlatching and shutting the
gunroom door as he went out. This last, of course, was a delaying tactic,
to give him time to establish his bathtub alibi."</p>
<p>He lifted the cocktail glass to his lips. These vodka Martinis were
strong, and three of them before dinner was leaning way over backward
maintaining the tradition of the hard-drinking private eye, but Gladys
was working on her third, and no client was going to drink him under.</p>
<p>"So, in the privacy of his bathroom, he kicked out of his slippers, threw
off his robe, hid the Leech & Rigdon, probably in a space between the tub
and the wall that I found while we were searching the house, the night
before the shooting of Dunmore, and jumped into the tub, there to await
developments. As soon as he heard Varcek's uproar in the hall, he could
emerge, dripping bathwater and innocence, to find out what the fuss was
all about.... Do you know anything about something called General
Semantics?" he asked suddenly.</p>
<p>"Yes. Before I married Lane, I went around with a radio ad-writer," she
told him. "He was a nice boy, but he'd get drunker than a boiled owl
about once a month, and weep about his crimes against sanity and meaning.
He'd recite long excerpts from his professional creations, and show how
he had been deliberately objectifying words and identifying them with the
things for which they stood, and confusing orders of abstraction, and
juggling multiordinal meanings. He was going to lend me his Koran, a book
called <i>Science and Sanity</i>, and then he took a job with an ad agency in
Chicago, and I got married, and—"</p>
<p>Rand nodded. "Then you realize that the word is not the thing spoken of,
and that the inference is not the description, and that we cannot know
'all' about anything. Etcetera," he added hastily, like a Papist signing
himself with the Cross. "Well, some considerable disregard of these
principles seems to have existed in this case. Dunmore is seen in a
bathrobe, his feet bare and making wet tracks on the floor, his hair wet,
etcetera. Straightaway, one and all appear to have assumed that he was in
the tub, splashing soapsuds around, while Lane Fleming was being shot.
And Anton Varcek, who can be taken as an example of what S. I. Hayakawa
was talking about when he spoke of people behaving like scientists
inside but not outside their laboratories, saw Lane Fleming dead, with
an object labeled 'revolver' in his hand, and, because of his verbal
identifications and semantic reactions, immediately included the
inference of an accident in his description of what he had seen. That was
just an extra dividend of luck for Dunmore; it got the whole crowd of
you thinking in terms of accidental shooting.</p>
<p>"Well, from there out, everything would have been a wonderful success for
Dunmore, except for one thing. Arnold Rivers must have heard, somehow,
that Lane Fleming had been shot with a Confederate .36 that he'd bought
somewhere that day, and that the revolver was in the hands of this
coroner of yours. So Arnold, with his big chisel well ground, went to see
if he could manage to get it out of the coroner for a few dollars. And
when he saw it, lo! it was the .36 Colt that he'd sold to Dunmore about
a month before."</p>
<p>Gladys set down her glass. "So!" she said. "Things begin to explain
themselves!"</p>
<p>"You may say so, indeed," Rand told her. "And what do you suppose Rivers
did with this little item of information? Why, as nearly as I can
reconstruct it, he did a very foolish thing. He tried to blackmail a man
who had committed a murder. He told Fred Dunmore he'd keep his mouth shut
about the .36 Colt, if Dunmore would get him the Fleming collection. He
wanted that instead of cash, because he could get more out of it, in a
few years, than Dunmore could ever scrape, and in the meantime, the
prestige of handling that collection would go a long way toward repairing
his rather dilapidated reputation. Fred should have bumped him off, right
then; it would have been the cheapest and easiest way out, and he'd
probably be alive and uncaught today if he had. But he was willing to pay
ten thousand dollars to save himself the trouble, and that's what he told
you Rivers had offered for the collection. The ten thousand Dunmore told
you Rivers was willing to pay was really the ten thousand he was willing
to pay, himself, to keep Rivers quiet.</p>
<p>"Then I was introduced into the picture, and, as you know, one of my
first acts was to go to Rivers's shop and sneer scornfully at Rivers's
supposed offer of ten thousand. And, right away, Rivers upped it to
twenty-five thousand. You'll recall, no doubt, that Mr. Fleming had a
life-insurance policy, one of these partnership mutual policies, which
gave both Dunmore and Varcek exactly twenty-five thousand apiece. I
assume that Rivers had found out about that.</p>
<p>"I thought, at the time, that it was peculiar that Rivers would jump his
own offer up, without knowing what anybody else was offering for the
collection. I see, now, that it wasn't his own money he was being so
generous with. And there was another incident, while I was at Rivers's
shop, that piqued my curiosity. Rivers had in his shop a .36 Leech &
Rigdon revolver, and I had been informed that it was a revolver of that
type that Mr. Fleming had brought home the evening he was killed. I
thought at the time that it was curious that two Confederate arms of the
same type and make should show up this far north, but my main idea in
buying it was the possibility that I might use it, in some way as
circumstances would permit, to throw a scare into somebody. Rivers was
quite willing to let me have it until he found out that I would be
staying at this house, and then he tried to back out of the sale and
offered me seventy-five dollars' credit on anything else in the shop, if
I'd return it to him. Well, I'd known that Mr. Fleming had been about to
start suit against Rivers over a crooked deal Rivers had put over on him,
and I knew that if Mr. Fleming's death had been murder, there had been a
substitution of revolvers. So I showed the gun I'd bought from Rivers to
Philip Cabot, who had seen the revolver Mr. Fleming had bought, and he
recognized it. It hasn't been established just how Rivers got the Leech
& Rigdon, and never will be; the only people who knew were Rivers and
Dunmore, and both are in the proverbial class of non-talebearers. I
assume that Dunmore gave it to Rivers as a sort of down payment on
Rivers's silence, and to get rid of it.</p>
<p>"Well, you remember Dunmore's angry incredulity when I told him that
Rivers was offering twenty-five thousand instead of ten thousand. One
would have thought, on the face of it, that he would have been glad;
as Nelda's husband, he would share in the higher price being paid for the
collection. But when you realize that Rivers was buying the collection
out of Dunmore's pocket, his reaction becomes quite understandable. I
daresay I signed Arnold Rivers's death-warrant, right there."</p>
<p>"I'll bet your conscience bothers you about that," Gladys remarked.</p>
<p>"Oh, sure; it's been gnawing hell out of me, ever since," Rand told her
cheerfully. "But, right away, Dunmore decided to kill Rivers. He called
him on the phone as soon as he left the table—here I'm speaking by the
book; I walked in on him, in the gunroom, as he was completing the call,
though I didn't know it at the time—and arranged to see him that
evening. Probably to devise ways and means of dealing with the Jeff Rand
menace, for an ostensible reason.</p>
<p>"So that night, Dunmore killed Rivers, with a bayonet. And here we have
some more Aristotelian confusion of orders of abstraction. The bayonet
is defined, verbally, as a 'soldier's weapon,' so Farnsworth and Mick
McKenna and the rest of them bemused themselves with suspects like
Stephen Gresham and Pierre Jarrett, and ignored Dunmore, who'd never had
an hour's military training in his life. I'd like to check up on what
picture-shows Dunmore had been seeing in the week or so before the
killing. I'll bet anything he'd been to one of these South-Pacific
banzai-operas. And speaking of confusing orders of abstraction, Mick
McKenna and his merry men pulled a classic in that line. They saw
Dunmore's automobile, verbally defined as a 'gray Plymouth coupé' in
Rivers's drive at the estimated time of the murder. Pierre Jarrett has
a car of that sort, so they included the inferential idea of Pierre
Jarrett's ownership of the car so described.</p>
<p>"Well, that's about all there is to it. Of course, I showed Fred Dunmore
the Leech & Rigdon, and told him it was the gun I'd gotten from the
coroner. That was all he needed to tell him that I was onto the murder,
and probably onto him as the murderer. But he had evidently assumed that
already; that was after he'd assembled my .38 and that .25 automatic, and
was planning to double-kill me and Anton Varcek. At that, he'd have
probably killed me, if I hadn't been wearing that bulletproof vest of
McKenna's. I owe Mick for my life; I'll have to buy him a drink,
sometime, to square that."</p>
<p>"Well, how about Walters, and the pistols he stole?" Gladys asked.
"Didn't that have anything to do with it?"</p>
<p>"No. It was a result of Mr. Fleming's death, of course. I understand that
the situation here had deteriorated rather abruptly after Mr. Fleming's
death. Walters was about fed up on the way things were here, and he was
going to hand in his notice. Then he decided that he ought to have a
stake to tide him over till he could get another buttling job, so he
started higrading the collection."</p>
<p>Gladys nodded. "I suppose he decided, after Lane's death, that he didn't
owe anybody here anything. Too bad he didn't wait, though. The situation
has remedied itself, and that's something else I owe you."</p>
<p>"Yes? I noticed that there was nobody here but you," Rand mentioned.</p>
<p>"Oh, Anton's gone to New York. The Rockefeller Foundation is financing
the major part of his research work, and he's well enough off to finance
the rest himself. Geraldine went with him. Nelda is still recuperating
from the shock of her sudden bereavement at a high-priced sanatorium—I
understand there's a very good-looking young doctor there. And she's
been talking about going to New York herself, in order, as she puts it,
to lead her own life. I don't know whether she was afraid I'd be a
restraining influence, or a dangerous competitor, but she feels that her
own life could be best led away from here." She set down her glass and
leaned back comfortably. "Peace, it's wonderful!"</p>
<p>Reuben, the gingerbread butler, appeared in the dining-room doorway.
"Dinner's served now, Mrs. Fleming," he announced.</p>
<p>Rand rose, and Gladys took his arm; together, they went into the
dining-room.</p>
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