Overbrook grinned, like some big, overgrown Cupid, who had managed to bring a loving couple into each other’s embrace.
“I don’t suppose he had any baggage or anything,” Mason said.
“Came here just like you see him now,” Overbrook said. “I loaned him a razor and bought him a toothbrush.”
“Come on, William,” Mason said, going up and patting Fleetwood on the shoulder. “We’re here to take you home.”
“Home?” Fleetwood said suspiciously.
“Oh, William!” Gertie exclaimed. “Don’t you know me? Tell me, William, don’t you know me?”
“I’ve never seen you in my life,” Fleetwood said with some conviction.
Mason laughed heartily. “How do you know, William?”
Fleetwood looked at Mason with the eyes of a trapped animal.
“Of course, he doesn’t know,” Gertie said. “The poor boy can’t remember. Come, William, we’re here to take you home. You gave us an awful shock this time.”
“Where’s home?”
“William!” Gertie exclaimed reproachfully, and then after a moment added, “Don’t try to think of a thing. The doctor says that the thing to do is to get you home, get you around familiar surroundings and then let you rest. That familiar surroundings will do the trick.”
Mason said to Overbrook, “How much do we owe you?”
“Not a cent! Not a cent!” Overbrook exclaimed heartily. “He wanted to pay me, but I told him I’d do the best I could for him.”
Mason took a twenty dollar bill from his billfold. “Get yourself something,” he said, “a little something that you can remember the occasion by, something that will be a tangible expression of our gratitude. Come on, William, are you ready to go?”
“Go?” Fleetwood said, drawing back. “Go where?”
“Home, of course,” Gertie said. “Come on, darling. Just wait until I get you home.”
Fleetwood said, “You aren’t my wife. I’m not married.”
Mason laughed heartily.
“No, I’m not,” Fleetwood insisted.
“How do you know you’re not?” Mason asked in the amused tone of one dealing with a child who has taken some absurdly illogical position.
“I just feel that I’m not,” Fleetwood said.
“You won’t feel that way long,” Gertie promised, her voice husky with emotion.
Mason said with professional gravity, “I wouldn’t try to bring his memory right back now, Mrs. Raymond. I’d try and lead up to it gradually. These things take time.”
Fleetwood stood hesitant, trying to find some excuse by which he could refuse to go with these people, yet failing to hit upon any logical defense.
Mason shook hands with Overbrook. “It’s a shame we had to disturb you,” he said, “but you know how amnesia victims are. We didn’t dare to wait until tomorrow morning. He might have got up at any time during the night, had no recollection of where he was, and started out into the night.”
“Oh I remember being here, all right,” Fleetwood said. “You can leave me here. I’ll go back tomorrow.”
Mason smiled indulgently. “How did you get here, William?” he asked.
“I walked.”
“From where?”
“The highway.”
“And how did you get to the highway? Did you ride with someone?”
“I hitched a ride.”
“From where?” Mason asked.
Fleetwood met Mason’s eyes with sudden, cold hostility.
“From where?” Mason repeated crisply. “Come on, William, from where?”
“I don’t know,” Fleetwood said doggedly.
“You see,” Mason said to Overbrook, and then added, “I really shouldn’t have done that, but I thought perhaps I could push his mind back to some point where he could begin to remember. Let’s go, Gertie. Come on, William.”
Mason took Fleetwood’s right arm, Gertie his left. They started him for the door.
For a moment, Fleetwood hung back, then sullenly accompanied them.
“I don’t feel you’re my wife,” he blurted to Gertie, as he hesitated for a moment on the front porch.
Gertie laughed nervously and said, “You didn’t last time, either, and then for a while you thought you were living in sin.” She laughed hysterically. “You, after five years of married life! Come on, darling.”
They trooped out to the automobile. The dog, having accepted them now as visitors who had been given the approval of his master, stood to one side, gently wagging his tail. Overbrook, in the doorway, beamed at them with a broad, good-natured smile.
Mason opened the door of the automobile.
Fleetwood hesitated.
Gertie gave him a swift push that sent him scrambling into the machine.
“Come on,” Gertie said. “Don’t think you’re going to get away from me again. You poor darling.”
Mason said to Della Street, “You’d better drive the car, Della,” and climbed in the back seat with Gertie and Fleetwood.
Della Street turned the car, blatted the horn in three quick blasts by way of salute, waved at Overbrook, and started back along the dirt road.
“Just what do you folks want?” Fleetwood asked.
“We want you,” Mason said.
“Well, what right have you got to take me with you? I don’t want to go with you. Let me out of the car!”
Mason said, “Why, William, do you want to leave your wife?”
“She isn’t my wife!”
“How do you know she isn’t?”
Gertie leaned over and kissed him affectionately. “Just wait, darling.”
“Say, what is this?” Fleetwood asked.
Mason said, “Of course, there could be a mistake.”
“I’ll say there’s a mistake!”
“In case you aren’t William Raymond,” Mason said, “then your name is Robert Gregg Fleetwood, and there are a few things the police want you to explain. Now tell me, William, do you think you’re William Raymond, or do you think you’re Robert Gregg Fleetwood?”
“I tell you I don’t know who I am!”
“Well, we’ll do the best we can to straighten you out,” Mason said.
“Who is this Fleetwood?”
“Oh, just another man who disappeared, the victim of amnesia. The police are looking for him.”
“Well, I’ll tell you one thing. I’m not going to stay with you until I know who I am. I don’t like the idea of this woman claiming I’m her husband.”
“Do you think you’re Fleetwood?”
“No.”
“Then you must be William Raymond.”
“You stop the car and let me out of here. I guess I have some rights.”
Mason said, “Let’s look at it this way. Either you’re William Raymond or you’re Fleetwood. Now if you think that you’re being abused, we’ll take you right to police headquarters, and you can tell your story there. They’ll have a psychiatrist who will do the best for you. They’ll either hypnotize you or give you a good dose of scopolamine. That’ll start you talking and make you tell the truth. The drug lulls the conscious mind into oblivion and is the same as a hypnosis. It makes the subconscious take over. You’ll answer questions just as a person talking in his sleep will answer questions.”
“I don’t want to go to any police station,” Fleetwood said in sudden panic.
“Well, you’re either going to a police station or going home with Gertie. Just make up your mind which.”
Fleetwood said to Gertie, “Okay. This is a game two can play at. If you want to play married, it’s okay by me. You’re a nice looking dish at that.”
Mason said, abruptly, “Did you murder Bertrand Allred, Fleetwood?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about!”
“When did you last see Allred?”
“I don’t know any Allred.”