She looked around—we were alone. A light breeze filled the sails and flicked the end of a scarf she wore against my face.
“The key to the captain’s cabin,” she said, very low.
That was what they wished to buy: the incriminating key to the storeroom, found on Turner’s floor, and access to the axe, with its telltale prints on the handle.
The stewardess saw my face harden, and put her hand on my arm.
“Now I am afraid of you!” she cried: “When you look like that!”
“Mrs. Sloane,” I said, “I do not know that you were asked to do this—I think not. But if you were, say for me what I am willing to say for myself: I shall tell what I know, and there is not money enough in the world to prevent my telling it straight. The right man is going to be punished, and the key to the storeroom will be given to the police, and to no one else.”
“But—the other key?”
“That is not in my keeping.”
“I do not believe you!”
“I am sorry,” I said shortly. “As a matter of fact, Burns has that.”