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Piper, H. Beam, 1904-1964

"Murder in the Gunroom"


He was standing at the window as the big Packard moved out onto the
drive. Nelda was at the wheel, and Gladys, beside her on the front seat,
raised a white-gloved hand in the thumbs-up salute. Rand gave it back,
and watched the car swing around the house. Then he mopped his face with
a wad of Kleenex and went over to the room-temperature thermostat,
turning it down to sixty.
Sitting down at the desk, he dialed Humphrey Goode's number on the
private outside line. A maid answered; a moment later he was talking to
the Fleming lawyer.
"Rand, here," he identified himself. "Mr. Goode, I've been thinking over
our conversation of last evening. There is a great deal to be said for
the position you're taking in the matter. As you reminded me, I'm a
small, if purely speculative, stockholder in Premix, myself, and even
if I weren't, I should hate to be responsible for undeserved losses by
innocent investors."
"Yes?" Goode's voice fairly shook. "Then you're going to drop the
investigation?"
"No, Mr. Goode; I can't do that. But I believe a formula could be evolved
which would keep the Premix Company and its affairs out of it. In fact, I
think that the whole question of the death of Lane Fleming might possibly
be kept in the background.


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