Dashil Hammett Fullscreen Maltese Falcon (1929)

He was uptown on business.

That would mean he didn't expect her, or not at that time anyway.

She waited there till he came back at four o'clock.

They spent the time from then till meal-time in his cabin and she ate with him."

He inhaled and exhaled smoke, turned his head aside to spit a yellow tobacco-flake off his lip, and went on:

"After the meal Captain Jacobi had three more visitors. One of them was Gutman and one was Cairo and one was the kid who delivered Gutman's message to you yesterday.

Those three came together while Brigid was there and the five of them did a lot of talking in the Captain's cabin.

It's hard to get anything out of the crew, but they had a row and somewhere around eleven o'clock that night a gun went off there, in the Captain's cabin.

The watchman beat it down there, but the Captain met him outside and told him everything was all right.

There's a fresh bullet-hole in one corner of the cabin, up high enough to make it likely that the bullet didn't go through anybody to get there.

As far as I could learn there was only the one shot.

But as far as I couki learn wasn't very far."

He scowled and inhaled smoke again.

"Well, they left around midnight—the Captain and his four visitors all together—and all of them seem to have been walking all right.

I got that from the watchman.

I haven't been able to get hold of the Custom-House-men who were on duty there then.

That's all of it.

The Captain hasn't been back since.

He didn't keep a date he had this noon with some shipping-agents, and they haven't found him to tell him about the fire."

"And the fire?" she asked.

Spade shrugged.

"I don't know.

It was discovered in the hold, aft—in the rear basement—late this morning.

The chances are it got started some time yesterday.

They got it out all right, though it did damage enough.

Nobody liked to talk about it much while the Captain's away.

It's the—"

The corridor-door opened.

Spade shut his mouth.

Effie Perine jumped down from the desk, but a man opened the connecting door before she could reach it.

"Where's Spade?" the man asked.

His voice brought Spade up erect and alert in his chair.

It was a voice harsh and rasping with agony and with the strain of keeping two words from being smothered by the liquid bubbling that ran under and behind them.

Effie Perine, frightened, stepped out of the man's way.

He stood in the doorway with his soft hat crushed between his head and the top of the door-frame: he was nearly seven feet tall.

A black overcoat cut long and straight and like a sheath, buttoned from throat to knees, exaggerated his leanness.

His shoulders stuck out, high, thin, angular.

His bony face—weather-coarsened, age-lined—was the color of wet sand and was wet with sweat on cheeks and chin.

His eyes were dark and bloodshot and mad above lower lids that hung down to show' pink inner membrane.

Held tight against the left side of his chest by a black-sleeved arm that ended in a yellowish claw was a brown-paper-wrapped parcel bound with thin rope—an ellipsoid somewhat larger than an American football.

The tall man stood in the doorway and there was nothing to show that he saw Spade.

He said,

"You know—" and then the liquid bubbling came up in his throat and submerged whatever else he said.

He put his other hand over the hand that held the ellipsoid.

Holding himself stiffly straight, not putting his hands out to break his fall, he fell forward as a tree falls.

Spade, wooden-faced and nimble, sprang from his chair and caught the falling man.

When Spade caught him the man's mouth opened and a little blood spurted out, and the brown-wrapped parcel dropped from the man's hands and rolled across the floor until a foot of the desk stopped it.

Then the man's knees bent and he bent at the waist and his thin body became limber inside the sheathlike overcoat, sagging in Spade's arms so that Spade could not hold it up from the floor.

Spade lowered the man carefully until he lay on the floor on his left side.

The man's eyes—dark and bloodshot, but not now mad—were wide open and still.