Blaine drew in a long breath and slowly let it out.
“So that is it,” he said. “That is what he wants.”
“Wouldn’t you?”
“I suppose. If I had seen it.”
“Ask Godfrey. He will tell you. Or, come to think of it, don’t ask him. He’ll tell you anyhow.”
“He told you.”
“Yes.”
“And you are impressed.”
“I here,” she said.
The waitress came with their orders—great sizzling steaks, with baked potatoes and a salad. She set a coffee bottle in the center of the table.
“That looks good,” said Harriet. “I am always hungry. Remember, Shep, that first time you took me out?”
Blaine smiled. “I’m not apt to forget it. You were hungry that time, too.”
“And you bought me a rose.”
“It seems to me I did.”
“You’re a sweet guy, Shep.”
“If I recall correctly, you’re a newspaper gal. How come—”
“I’m still working on a story.”
“But—”
She put out a hand and laid it on his sleeve. “Shep, you don’t understand. There are a lot of different kinds of stories, a lot of ways to get them. There is the story of what a certain man may say about a certain situation. That is an interview. You do it in an hour or two. Or you cover a meeting of some board or council or commission. Then you sit down and write what happened there and that’s another story. But there are stores that may take months or years. You may not work at them all the time, but you keep your eyes open and you listen closely and talk to a lot of people. And some day the pieces come together and you have your story.”
“Fishhook,” said Blaine. “Fishhook is your story.”
“Part of it,” she said, returning to her steak.
They ate for a while with very little talk.
Eating, Blaine recalled Stone as he had sat and talked, with absolute conviction, of Fishhook obsolescence, of the need to free for the benefit of mankind the strange, far-reaching abilities locked inside the parries who were outside of Fishhook.
Like a man, Blaine thought, who had been stricken with a latter-day religion. And that essentially was what it was, although Stones social paradise was no religion, unless ethics could be considered a religion.
A man who had a glimpse of the glory that could be mankind’s, of the ultimate justice that had no need of justice.
“There is one other thing,” he said. “Just what gives with Finn? Godfrey said he was dangerous.”
“What do you know of Finn?”
“Not much of anything. He was out of Fishhook before I tied up with it. But the story went around. He came back screaming. Something happened to him.”
“Something did,” said Harriet. “And he’s been preaching it up and down the land.”
“Preaching?”
“Hell and brimstone preaching. Bible pounding preaching, except there is no Bible. The evil of the stars. Man must stay on Earth. It’s the only safe place for him. There is evil out there. And it has been the parries who have opened up the gates to this spawn of evil—”
“And the people swallow that?”
“They swallow it,” said Harriet. “They wallow in it clear up to their middles. They absolutely love it. They can’t have the stors, you see. So there’s satisfaction to them that the stars are evil.”
“And the parries, I suspect, are evil, too. They are ghouls and werewolves—”
“And goblins,” said Harriet. “And witches. And harpies. You name it and they’re it.”
“The man’s a mountebank,” Harriet shook her head. “Not a mountebank. He’s as serious as Godfrey. He believes the evil. Because, you see, he saw the evil.”
“And Godfrey saw the good.”
“That’s it. It’s as simple as all that. Finn is just as convinced Man has no business among the stars as Godfrey is convinced he’ll find salvation there.”
“And the both of them are fighting Fishhook.”
“Godfrey wants to end the monopoly, but retain the structure. Finn goes farther. Fishhook’s incidental to him. PK is his target. He wants to wipe it out.”
“And Finn’s been fighting Stone.”
“Harassing him,” said Harriet. “There’s no way to fight him, really. Godfrey shows little for anyone to hit at. But Finn found out about him and sees him as the one key figure who can prop the parries on their feet. If he can, he’ll knock him out.”
“You don’t seem too worried.”
“Godfrey’s not worried. Finn’s just another problem, another obstacle.”
They left the restaurant and walked down the strip of pavement that fronted on the units.
The river valley lay in black and purple shadow with the river a murky bronze in the dying light of day. The tops of the bluffs across the valley still were flecked with sunlight and far up in the sky a hawk still wheeled, wings a silver flash as he tilted in the blue.
They reached the door of the unit and Blaine pushed it open and stood aside for Harriet, then followed. He had just crossed the threshold when she bumped into him as she took a backward step.
He heard the sharp gasp in her throat and her body, pressed against his, went hard and tense.
Looking over her shoulder, he saw Godfrey Stone, face downward, stretched upon the floor.
XXI
Even as he bent above him, Blaine knew that Stone was dead. There was a smallness to him, a sort of essential withering of the human form, as if life had been a basic dimension that had helped to fill him out. Now he was something less than six feet of limp body clothed in crumpled cloth and the motionless of him was somehow very dreadful.
Behind him, he heard Harriet pulling shut the door and shooting home the bolts. And in the clatter of the bolts he thought he heard a sob.
He bent down for a closer look and in the dimness could make out the darker shine of hair where the blood had oozed out of the skull.
The window shutters creaked and groaned, sliding home with a clatter as Harriet shoved the lever that controlled them.
“Maybe, now,” he said, “we can have a little light.”
“Just a minute, Shep.”
The lighting toggle clicked and light sprang from the ceiling and in the glare of it, Blaine could see how a heavy blow had crushed in the skull.
There was no need to hunt for pulse, no need to listen for a heartbeat. No man could live with his skull so out of shape.
Blaine rocked back and teetered, crouched upon his toes, marveling at the ferocity and, perhaps, the desperation, which must have driven the arm that had delivered such a blow.
He looked at Harriet and nodded quietly, wondering at her calmness, then remembering, even as he wondered, that in her reporting days violent death could have been no stranger to her.
“It was Finn,” she said, her voice quiet and low, so quiet that one could sense the checkrein she’d put upon herself. “Not Finn, himself, of course. Someone that he hired. Or someone that volunteered. One of his wide-eyed followers. There are a lot of people who’d do anything for him.”
She came across the room and squatted across the corpse from Blaine. Her mouth was set in a straight, grim line. Her face was pinched and stern. And there was a streak down her face where a single tear had run.
“What do we do now?” he asked. “The police, I would imagine.”
She made a restraining motion with her arm.
“Let me think,” she said.
It was impossible, Blaine told himself—impossible that this had happened. Less than an hour ago he’d stood here, talking with this man who lay upon the floor. Only a few hours before that they’d met for the first time after three long years.
He remembered the time, back in Fishhook, that he and Stone had spent together and the night the phone rang.
“Not the police,” said Harriet. “We can’t afford to get tangled up in this. That would be exactly what Finn and
his crew would want. What do you bet that someone has phoned the police already?”
“You mean the killer.”
“Certainly. Why not? Just a voice saying that a man has been killed in unit No. 10 out at The Plainsman. Then hang up real quick.”
“To put us on the spot?”
“To put whoever was with Godfrey on the spot. They maybe even know who we are. That doctor—”
“I don’t know,” said Blaine. “He may have.”
“Listen, Shep, I’m positive from all that’s happened that Finn is in Belmont.”
“Belmont?”
“That town we found you in.”
“So that’s the name of it.”
“There’s something happening,” she said. “Something happening right here. Something important going on. There was Riley and the truck and—”
“But what are we to do?”
“We can’t let them find Godfrey here.”
“We could pull the car out back and take him out the back door.”
“There’s probably someone watching. Then they’d have us cold.”
She beat her hands together in exasperation.
“If Finn has a free hand now,” she said, “he probably can pull off what ever he is planning. We can’t let him put us out of action. We have got to stop him.”
“We?”
“You and I. You step into Godfrey’s shoes. Now its up to you.”
“But I—”
Her eyes blazed suddenly. “You were his friend. You heard his story. You told him you were with him.”
“Sure I did,” said Blaine. “But I am starting cold. I don’t know the score.”
“Stop Finn, she said. “Find out what he’s doing and stop him in his (racks. Fight a delaying action—”
“You and your military thinking. Your delaying actions and your lines of retreat laid out.” (A very female general with enormous jackboots and a flock of medals.)
Cut that out!
A newspaper gal. And you are objective.
“Shop,” she said, “shut up. How can I be objective. I believed in Godfrey. I believed in what he was doing.”
“I suppose that I do, too. But it is ill so new, so quick—”
“Maybe we should just cut and run.”
“No! Wait an minute. If we cut and run we’d be out of it as surely as if they caught us here.”
“But, Shep, there is no way.”
“There just might be,” he told her. “Is there a town around here by the name of Hamilton?”
“Why, yes, just a mile or two away. Down by the river.”
He sprang to his feet and glanced about the room.
The phone sat on the night table between the single beds.
“What—”
“A friend,” said Blaine. “Someone that I met. Someone who might help us. A mile or two away?”
“Yes, Hamilton is. If that is what—”
“It is,” said Blaine.
He stepped swiftly across the room and picked the handpiece out of the cradle. He dialed for operator.
“I want to get a number in Hamilton. How do I go about it?”
“What is the number, sir?”
“276.”
“I will ring it for you.”
He turned his head toward Harriet. “Is it getting dark outside?”
“It was getting dark when I dosed the shutters.”
He heard the purring of the signal on the wire.
“They’ll need some darkness,” he said. “They couldn’t come in—”
“I don’t know,” said Harriet, “what you could be up to.”
“Hello,” said a voice in the phone. “Is Anita there?”
“Right here,” said the voice. “Just a moment.” Anita, for you. A man. And that was impossible, Blaine thought wildly. You simply couldn’t do it. Perhaps he’d imagined it.
“Hello,” said Anita Andrews.
“Who is this?”
Blaine. Shepherd Blaine. Remember. I was with the man who had the shotgun. With the silver shot.
Yes, I remember you.
And it was true, he thought. He had not imagined it. You could use telepathy on the telephone!
You said that if I ever needed help.
Yes, I told you that.
I need help now. (A body on the floor: police car coming down the road, red light flashing, siren howling; a speedometer and clock that had sprouted legs and were racing for a tape; the sign that said The Plainsman, the unit number on the door) I swear to you, Anita. This is on the level. I can’t explain right now. But this is on the level. I can’t let them find him here.
We’ll take him off your hands.
On faith?
On faith alone. You were square with us that night.
Hurry!
Right away. I’ll bring some others.
“Thanks, Anita.” But she was already gone.
He stood there, holding the receiver out from his face, staring at it, then slowly put it in the cradle.
“I caught part of that,” said Harriet. “It isn’t possible.”
“Of course it’s not,” said Blaine. “Telly transmission on a wire. You don’t have to tell me.”
He stared down at the man lying on the Boor. “It’s one of the things he talked about. Greater than Fishhook could ever be, he said.”
Harriet didn’t answer.
“I wonder how much else they have,” said Blaine.
“She said they’d come for Godfrey. How will they come for him?”
There was a hint of hysteria in her voice.
“They fly,” he told her. “They are levitators. Witches.”
He made a bitter laugh.
“But you—”
“How did I know them? They ambushed us one night. Just out to raise some hell. Riley had a shotgun—”
“Riley!”
“The man in the hospital room, remember? The man who died. He was in an accident.”
“But, Shep, were you with Riley? How did you come to be with him?”
“I hitched a ride. He was scared at night. He wanted someone with him. We nursed that ramshackle truck—” She was staring at him, a startled look about her.
“Wait a minute,” he said. “You said something back there in the hospital. You said you were—”
“Looking for him. Godfrey had hired him and he was late and—”
“But—”
“What is it, Shep?”
“I talked to him just before he died. He tried to give me a message, but he couldn’t get it out. The message was for Finn. That was the first I heard of Finn.”
“Everything went wrong,” said Harriet. “Every blessed thing. There was the star machine—”
She stopped what she was saying and came across the room to stand beside him. “But you don’t know about the star machine. Or do you?” He shook his bead. “Like the ones in Fishhook? The ones that helped us to the stars?”
She nodded. “That’s what Riley was hauling in his truck. Godfrey had arranged to get it and he had to get it moved to Pierre somehow. So he hired Riley—”
“A bootleg star machine!” said Blaine, a little awed. “You know that every nation in the world has laws against possessing them. They’re only legal if they are in Fishhook.”
“Godfrey knew all char. But he needed one. He tried to build one, but he couldn’t. There aren’t any blueprints.”
“You bet your life there aren’t.”
“Shop, what is wrong with you?”
“I don’t know. There’s really nothing wrong. A bit confused, perhaps. At how, all along the line, I was pitchforked into this.”
“You can always run.”
“Harriet, you know better. I am through with running. There’s no place for me to go.”
“You could always approach some business group. They’d be glad to have you. They’d give you a job, pay you plenty for what you know of Fishhook.”
He shook his head, thinking back to Charline’s
party, with Dalton sitting there, long legs outstretched, his hair a rumpled mouse-nest, his mouth mangling the cigar. And Dalton saying: “In a consultive capacity you’d be worth a lot of money.”
“Well, you could,” said Harriet.
“I couldn’t stomach it. Besides, I made a promise. I told Godfrey I was with him. And I don’t like the way that things are going. I don’t like people taking me out to hang me because I am a parry. I don’t like some of the things I saw along the road and—”
“You’re bitter,” she said.
“And you?”
“Not bitter. Just scared. Scared down to the marrow.”
You scared! A lough newspaper gal—
He turned toward her, remembering something—the place where the old blind woman sold the roses. That night, he had seen the mask slip from Harriet Quimby and this was the second time.
Her face told him the truth—the tough newspaper gal also, at times, could be a frightened woman.
He half lifted his arms and she crossed the little space between them. He held her close against him and she was soft and pliant, not hard, not made of steely purpose, but very human flesh.
It’ll be all right, he said. Everything will be all right.
And wondered at the sudden tenderness and protectiveness he felt, which certainly was alien in any relation he might have with this girl within his arms.
But the truck is wrecked and the trucker’s dead and the police, or maybe even Finn, have the star machine. And now Godfrey’s lying dead and the police are coming . . .
We’ll lick them all he told her. There’s nothing that can stop us—
A siren sounded from far off, a wail torn by the prairie wind.
She sprang away from him. “Shep, they’re coming!”
“The back door!” Blaine said, quickly. “Run toward the river. We’ll get down into the breaks.”
He sprang toward the door and as his fingers found the bolt, there was a tapping on it.
He threw back the bolt and jerked open the door and standing in the fan of light that came pouring from the room was Anita Andrews and back of her other youthful faces.
“Just in time,” said Blaine.
“This body?”
“Over there,” he said.
They came in with a rush.
The siren was much closer.
The Complete Serials Page 73