A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny. Chapter 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18

“True,” Larry said. “If anyone had to be done in, he’d seem the best choice.”

“Then they would give some credence to his vision.”

“Of course.” There followed a sigh. “I’m just venting a little spleen at those who make difficult things more difficult.” He sighed again. Then, “I noted he hadn’t his crossbow with him,” he added.

“Now _that_ would have raised a few eyebrows.”

They both chuckled.

“Larry,” Jack said suddenly. “I confess that I really don’t understand your part in this. That you are knowledgeable is obvious, that you know what you are doing, I am certain, and that you’ve been helpful, I can’t deny. And I am grateful for it. But you haven’t apparently been collecting the items necessary to assemble a structure of power to be focused one way or the other. Now, I admit that when you came out that first day and as much as proclaimed yourself a closer, I thought it a bit gauche. But even that, I suspect now, had a method to it. Still, so far as I can tell, you have done nothing that would further that end, let alone assemble defenses against the days ahead. If this be true, you are inviting disaster by announcing affiliation and continuing to reside in the precincts of the Game.”

“You are the only one I’ve told, Jack,” Larry replied.

“Why?”

“I’ve met most of the others, of course. But there was something about you, perhaps it had to do with the dog, that assured me I was safe in revealing my persuasion. I’ve told you that anticipation is my _forte_.”

“But your role in things, sir! What is it?”

“I never tell anybody everything. It might influence their actions and affect those things I’ve anticipated. Then I’d have to start over again, and it might be too late.”

“I confess you’ve almost lost me, but I can feel some rationale behind your words. Tell me what you would then, when you would.”

“Assuredly.”

I heard their palms strike together as they clasped hands, then Larry’s retreating footsteps.

Later, I went back to drag things along a little farther. I’d come to a place where the ground was mushy, and it was awful. He kept catching on brambles and getting knotted up in fallen branches and stuck between hillocks. He may have lost a few pieces in that area but I was too tired to look. Finally, I just gave up and went home. It was near noon, and chances were we’d be going out again that night, it being the Eve and all. I needed my rest.

On the way back, I looked for Quicklime on his stone, but he was nowhere in sight. There was a very twisty trail leading away, though.

Graymalk was waiting on the tree’s most popular branch, on my return. I noted that the pierced bat was missing, though the quarrel was still in place.

“Snuff,” she asked, climbing down, “have you done it yet?”

“Don’t ask me,” I said. “This is proving a major undertaking.”

“I’m sorry,” she said, “but I was at the constable’s this morning with the mistress, and I heard all the talk…”

“What did they say?”

“That they knew he came here and they know he didn’t come back, and they won’t leave a horse pie unturned till they find him or know what happened to him. Things like that.”

“Oh. Nothing new. How did the questioning go?”

“Fine, with us. The mistress did her crazy act and talked about him being carried off by fairies for a changeling. They had to ask her to be still. Rastov suddenly understood a lot less English than he used to. Morris and MacCab were very polite and said they knew nothing. Jack was quite urbane and seemed very sympathetic but also had nothing to add. The Good Doctor was indignant that the quiet hamlet he’d sought to do his research should suddenly be violated by things he’d wanted to get away from. Larry Talbot said he’d never seen the man. Owen said that they’d talked but he hadn’t seen him again after that, and didn’t know where he’d gone after he’d left him. He may have been the last to see him, though, according to a rough schedule the officer’d mentioned to the constable.”

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