![]() Mason finds a web of greed and treachery among the heirs, and has to put up with a most repulsive attorney who represents some of them. What is at stake in this one isn’t just whether a cat can stay in a house, there’s more: a million dollars in cash and some diamonds. I get a kick out of playing a no-limit game.” ![]() All that really counts is a man’s ability to live, to get the most out of it as he goes through it. Mason’s reply is “A man only has a lease on life. On a whim, Perry Mason takes the case, against the advice of his assistant and his secretary, Della Street. But Laxter’s grandson Sam says the deal doesn’t include the caretaker’s cat. ![]() In his will, Peter Laxter guaranteed his faithful caretaker a job and a place to live for life. This, the seventh of Gardner’s Perry Mason novels, has possibly the most convoluted plot of the books in the series so far. ![]() The 42nd in my series of Forgotten Books. ![]() By Erle Stanley Gardner, © 1935, edition read: Pocket Books, 1962 paperback – Perry Mason # 7 ![]()
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