Talk of the town - By Charles Williams Page 0,16

was cool and quiet, with the curtains closed against the sun, and furnished with quiet good taste. The rug was pearl-gray, and there was a double bed covered with a dark blue corduroy spread. I placed her on it.

“I’m all right now,” she said, trying to sit up. I pushed her gently back onto the pillow. Framed in the aureole of dark and tousled hair, her face was like white wax.

Dr. Graham placed his bag on a chair and was taking out the stethoscope. He nodded for me to leave. “You stay,” he said to Josie.

I went back through the outer room. It had a fireplace at one end, and there were a number of mounted fish on the walls and some enlarged photographs of boats. I thought absently that the fish were dolphin, but I paid little attention to them. I was in a hurry. I grabbed up the phone in the office and called the Sheriff.

“He’s not here,” a man’s voice said. “This is Redfield. What can I do for you?”

“I’m calling from the Magnolia Lodge-” I began.

“Yes?” he interrupted. “What’s wrong out there now. The voice wasn’t harsh so much as abrupt and impatient and somehow annoyed.

“Vandalism,” I said. “An acid job. Somebody’s wrecked one of the rooms.”

“Acid? When did it happen?”

“Sometime between two a.m. and daylight.”

“He rented the room? Is that it?” In spite of the undertone of annoyance or whatever it was, this one obviously was more on the ball than that comedian I’d talked to yesterday. There was a tough professional competence in the way he snapped the questions.

“That’s right,” I said. “How about shooting a man here?”

“You got a license number? Description of the car?”

“The car's a green Ford sedan,” I replied, and quickly repeated her description of the man. “The number was phony. The plates were stolen.”

“Hold it a minute!” he cut in brusquely. “What do you mean, they’re stolen? How would you know?”

“Because they were mine. My car's in the garage, being worked on. The big garage with a showroom—”

“Not so fast. Just who are you, anyway?”

I told him. Or started to. He interrupted me again. “Look, I don’t get you in this picture at all. Put Langston on.”

“She’s collapsed,” I said. “The doctor’s with her. How about getting a man out here to look at that mess?”

“We’ll send somebody,” he said. “And you stick around. We want to talk to you.”

“I’m not going anywhere,” I said.

He hung up.

I stood for a moment, thinking swiftly. The chances were it was sulphuric. That was cheap, and common, easy to get. And if I could neutralize it soon enough I might save a little something from the wreckage. The woodwork and furniture could be refinished if the stuff didn’t eat in too far. But I had to be sure, first. Turning, I hurried back into the room behind the curtained doorway, and took the door on the left this time. It was the kitchen. I began yanking open the cupboards above the sink. In a moment I found what I was looking for, a small tin of bicarbonate of soda.

Grabbing it, I went out and up to Room 5 at the double. I stood in the doorway and rubbed my handkerchief into the sodden ruin of the carpet until it was damp with the acid. Then I spread it on the concrete slab of the porch, sprinkled a heavy coating of soda over one half of it and waited. In a few minutes the untreated part tore at a touch, like wet paper, but that under the soda was merely discolored. I kicked it off onto the gravel and went back. My hand itched where it had been in contact with the acid. I found a tap in front of the office and washed it.

I could take her car if I could find the keys. But I wanted to talk to the doctor before he left, and I had to be here when the men from the Sheriff’s office showed up. I went inside and called a taxi. When I hung up I could hear the professional murmur of the doctor's voice in the bedroom. With nothing to occupy my mind for the moment, I was conscious of the rage again. The yearning to get my hands on him was almost like sexual desire. Cool off, I thought; you’d better watch that. In another minute or two a car stopped outside. I went out.

It was Jake, with his keyboard of grave and improbable

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