Date with a Dead Man
she doesn’t nibble on her finger either. But I’ll also bet she just loves to chew on redheaded he-man detectives.”
    “Mrs. Meredith?” Shayne asked with a grin.
    “You’re so smart to guess, Mr. Shayne,” Lucy said with a bitter smile.
    “I’ll take it inside.”
    Shayne went through a door into his private office and lifted the phone there. “Hello.”
    “Matie… Michael.” There was a slight pause, and Mrs. Meredith went on rapidly, “How is the headache?”
    “Better, but… not good.”
    “I’m so sorry,” she purred seductively. “I just happen to have a terrific headache remedy here. My own private recipe.”
    Shayne said, “At the Biscayne Hotel.”
    “Suite twelve hundred A,” she told him matter-of-factly.
    Shayne said, “It’ll take me ten minutes,” and hung up.
    He sauntered out to the reception room and Lucy looked at him with snapping brown eyes as he unhooked a panama from a rack near the door.
    “I’ll just bet she’s got a private brew for headaches. A mixture of absinthe and benedictine and… and every aphrodisiac in the book.”
    Shayne said, “Tut, Lucy. You shouldn’t listen in on private conversations. I’ve warned you before.” He settled the hat carefully on his throbbing head and went out.

12
     
    Mrs. Meredith was waiting for Shayne in the living room of her hotel suite. She had changed to a clinging hostess gown of gray satin and her hair was brushed out in tiny ringlets that gave her a more youthful appearance. She took his hand warmly between both of hers and drew him into the room.
    Shayne held back a trifle, looking down at her with an odd look in his gray eyes. She tilted her head and asked, “Why are you looking at me like that?”
    “I’ve decided I had better be afraid of you,” Shayne told her bluntly.
    She gave his hand an extra pressure between her soft palms, and released it. “I like that very much. It’s every woman’s secret desire to be considered dangerously alluring. I assume that is what you meant, Michael Shayne?”
    “I suspect you’re intelligent along with the allure,” he told her. “Which warns me that I should get the hell out of here while I can.”
    “But you’re not going to.”
    “You know I’m not.” He prowled past her across the room to a low table in front of the divan. It held an ice bucket, a bottle of bonded bourbon, a small bowl with a teaspoon, two tall glasses full of shaved ice, and a squatty vase holding a bouquet of mint sprigs. Green crushed mint leaves floated in the bowl on top of a syrupy mixture of sugar dissolved in a small quantity of bourbon.
    She moved over and sat down in front of the table. “This is the headache remedy I mentioned.” She poured half the syrupy mixture into each glass of shaved ice, tilted the whisky bottle and filled both glasses to the brim with straight whisky. She looked up with a smile as she caught a look of mild amazement on Shayne’s angular face. “That’s the secret of a true mint julep. Don’t spare the horses when you pour the whisky.”
    “No aphrodisiacs,” muttered Shayne.
    She frowned slightly, decorating each glass with a sprig of mint. “I don’t understand.”
    “Just a little private joke between my secretary and me.”
    “She’s a charming girl,” Matie Meredith told him, offering him a glass with a direct look. “I’m sure you and she must have many private jokes. I’m afraid she doesn’t approve of me,” she added placidly.
    Shayne buried his nose in the mint and took a long, slow swallow of the liquid. He moved back to a deep chair and sank into it, stretching his long legs out comfortably. “This is the only civilized way to drink whisky. You are an excellent prescriber for headaches, Mrs. Meredith.”
    She said, “Thank you,” simply, as though accepting his statement not as flattery but as praise to which she was entitled. “Have you any idea who gave you the headache?”
    “Does that mean you decided to believe my

Similar Books

The Johnson Sisters

Tresser Henderson

Abby's Vampire

Anjela Renee

Comanche Moon

Virginia Brown

Fire in the Wind

Alexandra Sellers