CHAPTER TWENTY
At ten minutes to three I went out the back door
and around the corner to the front of the bank. Morph in his bronze
cage drew in the sheaf of money and checks, the brown envelope, and
the deposit slips. He spread the little bank books with a Y of
fingers and wrote small angled numbers with a steel pen that
whispered on the paper. As he pushed the books out to me he looked
up with veiled and cautious eyes.
“I’m not going to talk about it, Ethan. I know
he was your friend.”
“Thanks.”
“If you slip out quick you might avoid the
Brain.”
But I didn’t. For all I know Morph may have
buzzed him. The frosted-glass door of the office swung open and Mr.
Baker, neat and spare and gray, said quietly, “Can you spare a
moment, Ethan?”
No use to put it off. I walked into his frosty
den and he closed the door so softly that I did not hear the latch
click. His desk was topped with plate glass, under which were lists
of typed numbers. Two customers’ chairs in echelon stood by his
tall chair like twin suckling calves. They were comfortable but
lower than the desk chair. When I sat down I had to look up at Mr.
Baker and that put me in the position of supplication.
“Sad thing.”
“Yes.”
“I don’t think you ought to take all the blame.
Probably would have happened anyway.”
“Probably.”
“I’m sure you thought you were doing the right
thing.”
“I thought he had a chance.”
“Of course you did.”
My hatred was rising in my throat like a yellow
taste, more sickening than furious.
“Apart from the human tragedy and waste, it
raises a difficulty. Do you know whether he had relatives?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Anybody with money has relatives.”
“He had no money.”
“He had Taylor Meadow, free and clear.”
“Did he? Well, a meadow and a cellar
hole—”
“Ethan, I told you we planned an airfield to
service the whole district. The meadow is level. If we can’t use
it, it will cost millions to bulldoze runways in the hills. And
now, even if he has no heirs, it will have to go through the
courts. Take months.”
“I see.”
His ire fissured. “I wonder if you do see! With
your good intentions you’ve thrown the thing sky high. Sometimes I
think a do-gooder is the most dangerous thing in the world.”
“Perhaps you’re right. I ought to get back to
the store.”
“It’s your store.”
“It is, isn’t it? I can’t get used to it. I
forget.”
“Yes, you forget. The money you gave him was
Mary’s money. She’ll never see it now. You threw it away.”
“Danny was fond of my Mary. He knew it was her
money.”
“Fat lot of good that will do her.”
“I thought he was making a joke. He gave me
these.” I pulled the two pieces of ruled paper from my inside
pocket, where I had put them, knowing I would have to draw them out
like this.
Mr. Baker straightened them on his glass-topped
desk. As he read them a muscle beside his right ear twitched so
that his ear bobbed. His eyes went back over them, this time
looking for a hole.
When the son of a bitch looked at me there was
fear in him. He saw someone he hadn’t known existed. It took him a
moment to adjust to the stranger, but he was good. He
adjusted.
“What is your asking price?”
“Fifty-one per cent.”
“Of what?”
“Of the corporation or partnership or
whatever.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
“You want an airfield. I have the only one
available.”
He wiped his glasses carefully on a piece of
pocket Kleenex, then put them on. But he didn’t look at me. He
looked a circle all around me and left me out. Finally he asked,
“Did you know what you were doing, Ethan?”
“Yes.”
“Do you feel good about it?”
“I guess I feel as the man felt who took him a
bottle of whisky and tried to get him to sign a paper.”
“Did he tell you that?”
“Yes.”
“He was a liar.”
“He told me he was. He warned me he was. Maybe
there’s some trick in these papers.” I swept them gently from in
front of him and folded the two soiled pencil-written sheets.
“There’s a trick all right, Ethan. Those
documents are without a flaw, dated, witnessed, clear. Maybe he
hated you. Maybe his trick was the disintegration of a man.”
“Mr. Baker, no one in my family ever burned a
ship.”
“We’ll talk, Ethan, we’ll do business. We’ll
make money. A little town will spring up on the hills around the
meadow. I guess you’ll have to be Town Manager now.”
“I can’t, sir. That would constitute a conflict
of interest. Some pretty sad men are finding that out right
now.”
He sighed—a cautious sigh as though he feared to
awaken something in his throat.
I stood up and rested my hand on the curved and
padded leather back of the supplicant’s chair. “You’ll feel better,
sir, when you have got used to the fact that I am not a pleasant
fool.”
“Why couldn’t you have taken me into your
confidence?”
“An accomplice is dangerous.”
“Then you do feel you have committed a
crime.”
“No. A crime is something someone else commits.
I’ve got to open the store, even if it is my own store.”
My hand was on the doorknob when he asked
quietly, “Who turned Marullo in?”
“I think you did, sir.” He leaped to his feet,
but I closed the door after me and went back to my store.