Robert Ludlum – Matlock Paper

to Matlock’s anticipation. Jeff Kramer wanted to part company. With his

four hundred dollars.

Matlock said he would phone Kramer in less than a week and return the

automobile. Kramer insisted on paying for the drinks and rapidly left the

Hogshead Tavern. Matlock, alone, finished his drink and thought out his

next move.

The hunted and the hunter were n~w one.

24

He sped out Route 72 toward Mount Holly in Kramer’s white station wagon. He

knew that within the hour he would find another pay telephone and insert

another coin and make another call. This time to one Howard Stockton, owner

of the Carmount Country Club. He looked at his watch; it was nearly eight

thirty. Samuel Sharpe, attorney at law, should have reached Stockton several

hours ago.

He wondered how Stockton had reacted. He wondered about Howard Stockton.

The station wagon~s headlights caught the reflection of the road sign.

mouNT iaoLLT. nswom-,oRATED jL896

And just beyond it, a second reflection.

MOUNT HOLLY ROTARY

HARPER’S REST

TUESDAY NOON

ONE MILE

Why not? thought Matlock. There was nothing to lose. And possibly something

to gain, even learn.

TuE mATLocK P”ER 241

The hunter.

The white stucco front and the red Narragansett neons in the windows said

all there was to say about Harper’s cuisine. Matlock parked next to a

pickup truck, got out, and locked the car. His newly acquired suitcase with

the newly acquired clothes lay on the back seat. He had spent several

hundred dollars in Hartford; he wasn~t about to take a chance.

He walked across the cheap, large gravel and entered the bar area of

Harpees Restaurant

“I’m on my way to Carmount,” said Matlock, paying for his drink with a

twenty-dollar bill. “Would you mind telling me where the hell it is?”

“About two and a half miles west. Take the right fork down the road. You

got anything smaller than a twenty? I only got two fives and singles. I

need my singles.”

“Give me the fives and well flip for the rest. Heads you keep it, tails I

have one more and you still keep it.” Matlock took a coin from his pocket

and threw it on the formica, bar, covering it with his hand. He lifted his

palm and picked up the coin without showing it to the bartender. “It’s your

unlucky night You owe me a drink-the ten~s yours.”

His conversation did not go unheeded by the other customers-three men

drinking draft beer. That was fine, thought Matlock, as he looked around

for a tele. phone.

“Men~s roones in the rear around the comer,” said a rustic-looking drinker

in a chino jacket, wearing a baseball cap.

“Thanks. Telephone around?”

“Next to the men~s room.”

‘Thanks again.” Matlock took out a piece of paper

242 Robert Ludlum

on which he had written: Howard Stockton, Carmount C.C., #2o3-421-lioo. He

gestured for the bartender, who came toward him like a shot. Tm supposed to

phone this guy,” said Matlock quietly. “I think I got the name wrong. rm not

sure whether Ws Stackton or Stockton. Do you know him?”

The bartender looked at the paper and Matlock saw the instant reflex of

recognition. “Sure. You got it right. Ies Stockton. Mr. Stockton. Hes

vice-president of the Rotary. Last term he was president. Right, boys?” The

bartender addressed this last to his other customers.

‘Sure.”

‘OlUes it Stockton.”

‘Nice fella.”

The man in the chino jacket and baseball cap felt the necessity of

elaborating. “He runs the country club. That’s a real nice place. Real

nice.”

“Country club?’ Matlock implied the question with a trace of humor.

‘Thales right Swimming pool, golf course, dancing on the weekends. Very

nice.” It was the bartender who elaborated now.

*Tll say this, Ws highly recommended. This Stockton, I mean.” Matlock

drained his glass and looked toward the rear of the bar. “Telephone back

there, you say?'”

‘Thaes right, Mister. Around the comer.’

Matlock reached into his pocket for some change and walked to the narrow

corridor where the rest rooms and telephone were located. The instant he

rounded the comer, he stopped and pressed himself against the wall. He

listened for the conversation he knew would be forthcoming.

“Big spender~ huh?” The bartender spoke.

I MATLOCK PAPEMM

‘rhey all are. Did I tell you? My kid caddied there a couple of weeks

ago-some guy got a birdie and give the kid a fifty-dollar bill. Che-rystl

Fifty dollarsl”

“My old woman says all them fancy dames there are whoores. Real whoores.

She works a few parties there, my old woman does. Real whoores. . . ”

“I’d like to get my hands on some of them. jee. awl I swear to Christ most

of ’em got no brazzieresl”

‘Real whoores. . . ”

‘Who gives a shit? That Stocktods O.K. He’s O.K. in my book- Know what he

did? The Kings. You know, Artie King who had a heart attack–dropped dead

doin~ the lawns up there. Old Stockton not only give the family a lotta

dough-he set up a regular charge account for ’em at the A&P. No shit. Hes

O.K*

‘Real whoores. They lay for money. . . .”

“Stockton put most of the cash up for the grammar school extension, don’t

forget that. You’re fuckin7 right~ he’s O.K. I got two kids in that

schooll”

“Not only-y’know what? He give a pocketful to the Memorial Day picnic.”

“Real, honest-to-Christ whoores. . .

Matlock silently sidestepped his way against the wall to the telephone

booth. He closed the door slowly with a minimum of noise. The men at the

bar were getting louder in their appreciation of Howard Stockton,

proprietor of the Carmount Country Club. He was not concerned that they

might hear his delayed entrance into the booth.

What concerned him in an odd way was himself. If the hunted had

instincts-protective in naturethe hunter had them also-aggressive by

involvement. He understood now the necessity of tracking the scent,

following the spoor, building a fabric of

244 Robmt Ludluln

comprehensive habit It meant that the hunter had abstract tools to

complement his weapons. Tools which could build a base of entrapment, a pit

in which the hunted might fail.

He ticked them off in his mind.

Howard Stockton: former president, current vicepresident of the Mount Holly

Rotary; a charitable man, a compassionate man. A man who took care of the

family of a deceased employee named Artie King, who financed the extension

of a grammar school. The proprietor of a luxurious country club in winch

men gave fifty-dollar tips to caddies and girls were available for members

in good standing. Also a good American who made It possible for the town of

Mount Holly to have a fine Memorial Day picnic.

It was enough to start with. Enough to shake up Howard Stockton if–as

Sammy Sharpe had put it”It came-tD that” Howard Stockton was not the form-

less man he was fifteen minutes ago. Matlock still didnI know the maes

features, but other aspects, other factors were defined for him. Howard

Stockton had become a thing in Mount Holly, Connecticut.

Matlock inserted the dime and dialed the number of the Carmount Country

Club.

“It suhtainly is a pleasure, Mr. Matlockt” exclaimed Howard Stockton,

greeting Matlock on the marble steps of the Carmount Country Club. “The

boyl take your car. Heahl Boyl Doet wrap it up, nowl”

A Negro parking attendant laughed at his southern gentlemaes command.

Stockton flipped a half-dollar in the air and the black caught it with a

grin.

‘Thank you, suhl”

“Treat ’em good, they’ll treat you good. That right, boy? Do I treat you

good?1”

TnE MATLOCK PAPER 245

“Real good, Mister Howardl”

Matlock thought for a moment that he was part of an odious television

commercial until he saw that Howard Stockton was the real item. Right up to

his gTayish blond hair, which topped a sun-tanned face, which, in hum, set

off his white moustache and deep blue eyes surrounded by crov/s nests of

wrinkles belonging to a man who lived well.

“Welcome to Carmount, Mr. Matlock. les not Richmond, but on the other hand,

it ain’t the Okefenokee.”

rhank you. And the name is Jim-

“Jim? Like that name. les got a good, honest ring to itl My friends call me

Howard. You call me Howard.n

110 Carmount Country Club, what he could see of it, reminded Matlock of all

those pictures of anteo. bellum. architecture. And why not, considering the

owner? It was rife with potted palms and delicate chandeliers and light

blue toile wallpaper depicting rococo scenes in which cavorted prettified

figures in powdered wigs. Howard Stockton was a proselytizer of a way of

life which had collapsed in 1865, but he waset going to admit ft. Even the

servants, mostly black, were in liveries-honest-to-god liveries, knickers

and all. Soft, live music came from a large dining room, at the end of

which was a string orchestra of perhaps eight instruments gracefully

playing in -a fash. ion long since abandoned. There was a slowly winding

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