Are you going to put your hand on my shoulder for all the killings in San Francisco from now on?"
Tom said:
"Aw, cut the comedy, Sam.
You know' damned well we don't hike this any more than you do, but we got our work to do."
"I hope you've got something to do besides pop in here early every morning with a lot of damned fool questions."
"And get danined lying answers," Dundy added deliberately.
"Take it easy," Spade cautioned him.
Dundy looked him up and down and then looked him straight in the eves.
"If you say there was nothing between you and Archer's wife," he said, "you're a liar, and I'm telling you so."
A startled look came into Tom's small eyes.
Spade moistened his lips with the tip of his tongue and asked:
"Is that the hot tip that brought you here at this ungodly time of night?"
"That's one of them."
"And the others?"
Dundy pulled down the corners of his mouth.
"Let us in."
He nodded significantly at the doorway in which Spade stood.
Spade frowned amid shook his head.
Dundy's mouth-corners lifted in a smile of grim satisfaction.
"There must've been something to it," he told Tom.
Tom shifted his feet and, not looking at either man, mumbled:
"God knows."
"What's this?" Spade asked. "Charades?"
"All right, Spade, w'e're going."
Dundy buttoned his overcoat.
"We'll be in to see you now' and then.
Maybe you're right in bucking us.
Think it Over."
"Uh-huh," Spade said, grinning.
"Glad to see you any time, Lieutenant, and whenever I'm not busy I'll let you in."
A voice in Spade's living-room screamed:
"Help!
Help!
Police!
Help!"
The voice, high amid thin and shrill, was Joel Cairo's.
Lieutenant Dundy stopped turning away from the door, confronted Spade again, and said decisively:
"I guess we're going in."
The sounds of a brief struggle, of a blow, of a subdued cry, came to them.
Spade's face twisted into a smile that held little joy.
He said, "I guess you are," and stood out of the way. When the police-detectives had entered he shut the corridor-door and followed them back to the living-room.
VIII.Horse Feathers
Brigid O'Shaughnessy was huddled in the armchair by the table.
Her forearms were up over her cheeks, her knees drawn up until they hid the lower part of her face. Her eyes were white-circled and terrified.
Joel Cairo stood in front of her, bending over her, holding in one hand the pistol Spade had twisted out of his hand.
His other hand was clapped to his forehead.
Blood ran through the fingers of that hand and down under them to his eyes.
A smaller trickle from his cut lip made three wavy lines across his chin.
Cairo did not heed the detectives.
He was glaring at the girl huddled in front of him.