call. Woodruff goes out and takes it.â
âWait. Donât tell me. While heâs out of the room the missus jumps you. She says she and the old man arenât making it anymore, and itâs been a long time since thereâs been a real man around the houseâ¦â
âThat was the last case,â Windrow said, grinding his teeth.
âOh.â Bdeniowitz lapsed back into his slightly puzzled state. âSo did she say anything?â
Windrow shook his head. âNot much,â he said. âShe was pretty stoned. Stared a lot, made a couple of obtuse remarks and sniffled once in a while. I finished my drink and she told me to help myself to another. I was doing that when Woodruff came back and told me Jodie had called.â
âDriving drunk, eh? So whoâs this Jodie?â
âThatâs the stepdaughter.â
âOh, yeah, I forgot.â
Bdeniowitz paused for a moment before his next question.
âWhen did you realize she was Sweet Jesus OâRyanâs granddaughter?â
Windrow almost permitted himself a smile. Max was never as ignorant as he pretended to be.
âWhen I read about it in the papers, same as you.â
âShe never mentioned him?â
âNever.â
âSo what happened to her?â
âWoodruff told me sheâs in a recording session, and running late. He said sheâs real excited about the session, apologetic about our date, and that sheâll be in touch.â
âSo how come she didnât ask the maid for you?â
âThatâs a good question.â Windrow didnât mention that he hadnât believed for one minute that the Ryan girl had been on the telephone at all. He said, âIâll have to ask her that when I see her,â and Bdeniowitz nodded.
Gleason came back in the room. âI got a hold of OâShaunessey,â he said. âSays thereâs a painting of an oil pump over the fireplace. An oil pump in the desert.â
âYeah,â Bdeniowitz nodded. âI didnât remember a boat up there.â
âThereâs something else,â Gleason added. âOâShaunessey thought it was funny you wanted to know about a sailboat over the fireplace, because they found what was left of a painting of a sailboat
in
the fireplace.â
Bdeniowitz turned to look at Gleason, then turned back to Windrow. Windrow screwed up his bruise and scratched where it met the corner of his eye. âThat picture of the boat was
ARCADIA
, the
ARCADIA
II.â
âLooks like somebody sank her,â Gleason said gravely. âThe frame and stretchers were broken up and the canvas was wrapped around them.â He made a twisting motion with his hands. âThe whole mess was laid in on top of some newspapers and woodscraps, partially burned.â
âBut it hadnât been completely burned?â Windrow asked.
Gleason shook his head. âNope. OâShaunessey said they could still make out most of the canvas when they spread it out. Thereâs a sunset, a sailboat with two masts and the name on the boat was, ahâ¦â He began to thumb through his spiral notebook.
â
ARCADIA II
,â Bdeniowitz said. He looked at Windrow. âWhatâs it mean, apple?â
Windrow shook his head. âBeats me, Max. When I got there the oil pump was on the way out, and the sailboat was on the wall. The kid told you that, right?â
âWe didnât know to ask him about the paintings. But weâll check on it. Hell, I believe you. The thing is, whatâs this got to do with the Neil woman?â
Windrow was silent.
Gleason scratched his head. âI guess someone just didnât like her taste in art?â he ventured, and shrugged.
âDo you think it was the same type that doesnât like private detectives?â Bdeniowitz said.
Windrow looked at him. âYou mean you believe that business about the limousine?â
Bdeniowitz
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