came to the break and clambered down to reach the slope below. Off to the
left he could hear the murmur of the swiftly running creek that tumbled down
the rocky ravine from the spring below the field.
The hillside plunged more steeply now and he led a way that angled
across the steepness.
Funny, he thought, that even in the darkness he could recognize certain
natural features-the crooked white oak that twisted itself, hanging at a
crazy angle above the slope of hill; the small grove of massive red oaks
that grew out of a dome of tumbled rock, so placed that no axman had even
tried to cut them down; the tiny swamp, filled with cattails, that fitted
itself snugly into a little terrace carved into the hillside.
Far below he caught the gleam of window light and angled down toward
it. He looked back over his shoulder and Lucy was following close behind.
They came to a rude fence of poles and crawled through it and now the
ground became more level.
Somewhere below a dog barked in the dark and another joined him. More
joined in and the pack came sweeping up the slope toward them. They arrived
in a rush of feet, veered around Enoch and the lantern to launch themselves
at Lucy-supenly transformed, at the sight of her, into a welcoming committee
rather than a company of guards. They reared upward, a tangled mass of dogs.
Her hands went out and patted at their heads. As if by signal, they went
rushing off in a happy frolic, circling to come back again.
A short distance beyond the pole fence was a vegetable garden and Enoch
led the way across, carefully following a path between the rows. Then they
were in the yard and the house stood before them, a tumble-down, sagging
structure, its outlines swallowed by the darkness, the kitchen windows
glowing with a soft, warm lamplight.
Enoch crossed the yard to the kitchen door and knocked. He heard feet
coming across the kitchen floor.
The door came open and Ma Fisher stood framed against the light, a
great, tall, bony woman clothed in something that was more sack than dress.
She stared at Enoch, half frightened, half belligerent. Then, back of
him, she saw the girl.
“Lucy!” she cried.
The girl came forward with a rush and her mother caught her in her
arms.
Enoch set his lantern on the ground, tucked the rifle underneath his
arm, and stepped across the threshold.
The family had been at supper, seated about a great round table set in
the center of the kitchen. An ornate oil lamp stood in the center of the
table. Hank had risen to his feet, but his three sons and the stranger still
were seated.
“So you brung her back,” said Hank.
“I found her,” Enoch said.
“We quit hunting for her just a while ago,” Hank told him. “We was
going out again.”
“You remember what you told me this afternoon?” asked Enoch.
“I told you a lot of things.”
“You told me that I had the devil in me. Raise your hand against that
girl once more and I promise you I’ll show you just how much devil there is
in me.”
“You can’t bluff me,” Hank blustered.
But the man was frightened. It showed in the limpness of his face, the
tightness of his body.
“I mean it,” Enoch said. “just try me out and see.” The two men stood
for a moment, facing one another, then Hank sat down.
“Would you join us in some victuals?” he inquired.
Enoch shook his head.
He looked at the stranger. “Are you the ginseng man?” he asked.
The man noped. “That is what they call me.”
“I want to talk with you. Outside.”
Claude Lewis stood up.
“You don’t have to go,” said Hank. “He can’t make you go. He can talk
to you right here.”
“I don’t mind,” said Lewis. “In fact, I want to talk with him. You’re
Enoch Wallace, aren’t you?”
“That’s who he is,” said Hank. “Should of died of old age fifty years
ago. But look at him. He’s got the devil in him. I tell you, him and the
devil has a deal.”
“Hank,” Lewis said, “shut up.”
Lewis came around the table and went out the door. “Good night,” Enoch
said to the rest of them. “Mr. Wallace,” said Ma Fisher, “thanks for
bringing back my girl. Hank won’t hit her again. I can promise you. I’ll see
to that.”
Enoch went outside and shut the door. He picked up the lantern. Lewis
was out in the yard. Enoch went to him.
“Let’s walk off a ways,” he said.
They stopped at the edge of the garden and turned to face one another.
“You been watching me,” said Enoch.
Lewis noped.
“Official? Or just snooping?”
“Official, I’m afraid. My name is Claude Lewis. There is no reason I
shouldn’t tell you-I’m C.I.A.”
“I’m not a traitor or a spy,” Enoch said.
“No one thinks you are. We’re just watching you.”
“You know about the cemetery?”
Lewis noped.
“You took something from a grave.”
“Yes,” said Lewis. “The one with the funny headstone.”
“Where is it?”
“You mean the body. It’s in Washington.”
“You shouldn’t have taken it,” Enoch said, grimly. “You’ve caused a lot
of trouble. You have to get it back. As quickly as you can.”
“It will take a little time,” said Lewis. “They’ll have to fly it out.
Twenty-four hours, maybe.”
“That’s the fastest you can make it?”
“I might do a little better.”
“Do the very best you can. It’s important that you get that body back.”
“I will, Wallace. I didn’t know …”
“And, Lewis.”
“Yes.”
“Don’t try to play it smart. Don’t ap any frills. Just do what I tell
you. I’m trying to be reasonable because that’s the only thing to be. But
you try one smart move …”
He reached out a hand and grabbed Lewis’s shirt front, twisting the
fabric tight.
“You understand me, Lewis?”
Lewis was unmoved. He did not try to pull away. “Yes,” he said. “I
understand.”
“What the hell ever made you do it?”
“I had a job.”
“Yeah, a job. Watching me. Not robbing graves.” He let loose of the
shirt.
“Tell me,” said Lewis, “that thing in the grave. What was it?”
“That’s none of your damn’ business,” Enoch told him, bitterly.
“Getting back that body is. You’re sure that you can do it? Nothing standing
in your way?”
Lewis shook his head. “Nothing at all. I’ll phone as soon as I can
reach a phone. I’ll tell them that it’s imperative.”
“It’s all of that,” said Enoch. “Getting that body back is the most
important thing you’ve ever done. Don’t forget that for a minute. It affects
everyone on Earth. You and me and everyone. And if you fail, you’ll answer
to me for it.”
“With that gun?”
“Maybe,” Enoch said. “Don’t fool around. Don’t imagine that I’d
hesitate to kill you. In this situation, I’d kill anyone-anyone at all.”
“Wallace, is there something you can tell me?”
“Not a thing,” said Enoch. He picked up the lantern. “You’re going
home?”
Enoch noped.
“You don’t seem to mind us watching you.”
“No,” Enoch told him. “Not your watching. Just your interference. Bring
back that body and go on watching if you want to. But don’t push me any.
Don’t lean on me. Keep your hands off. Don’t touch anything.”
“But good God, man, there’s something going on. You can tell me
something.”
Enoch hesitated.
“Some idea,” said Lewis, “of what this is all about. Not the details,
just …”
“You bring the body back,” Enoch told him, slowly, “and maybe we can
talk again.”
“It will be back,” said Lewis.
“If it’s not,” said Enoch, “you’re as good as dead right now.”
Turning, he went across the garden and started up the hill.
In the yard, Lewis stood for a long time, watching the lantern bobbing
out of sight.
22
Ulysses was alone in the station when Enoch returned. He had sent the
Tuban on his way and the Hazer back to Vega.
A fresh pot of coffee was brewing and Ulysses was sprawled out on the
sofa, doing nothing.
Enoch hung up the rifle and blew out the lantern. Taking off his
jacket, he threw it on the desk. He sat down in a chair across from the
sofa.
“The body will be back,” he said, “by this time tomorrow.”
“I sincerely hope,” Ulysses said, “that it will do some good. But I’m
inclined to doubt it.”
“Maybe,” said Enoch bitterly, “I should not have bothered.”
“It will show good faith,” Ulysses said. “It might have some mitigating
effect in the final weighing.”
“The Hazer could have told me,” Enoch said, “where the body was. If he
knew it had been taken from the grave, then he must have known where it
could be found.”
“I would suspect he did,” Ulysses said, “but, you see, he couldn’t tell