Harriet had turned around and was going out the door. Blaine hurried after her and caught her by the elbow, urging her along.
He reached his car and stooped to open the door. He pushed her to the seat.
But, Shep, my car is just a block —
No time. We’re getting out of here.
He ran around the car and got in. He jerked it from the curb and out into the street. Moving far more slowly than he wanted, he eased it down the block, turned at the intersection, heading for the highway.
Just ahead stood the gutted structure of the Trading Post. He had been holding the purse in his lap and now he gave it to her.
“How about the gun?” he asked.
“I was going to kill him,” she shouted. “I was going to shoot him dead.”
“No need to do that now. He is already dead.”
She turned toward him quickly.
“You!”
“Well, now, I guess that you could say so.”
“But, Shep, you know. You either killed him or you—”
“All right,” he said. “I killed him.”
And it was no lie. No matter by what hand Lambert Finn had died, he, Shepherd Blaine, had killed him.
“I had reason to,” he said. “But you?”
“He had Godfrey killed. That itself would have been enough.”
“You were in love with Godfrey.”
“Yes, I suppose I was. He was such a great guy, Shep.”
“I know how great he was. We were friends in Fishhook.”
“It hurts,” said Harriet. “Oh, Shep, how it hurts!”
“And that night . . .”
“There was no time for tears,” she said. “There’s never time for tears.”
“You knew about all this . . .”
“For a long time. It was my job to know.”
He reached the highway and turned down it, back toward Hamilton. The sun had set. Twilight had crept across the land and in the east one star was twinkling, just above the prairie.
“And now?” he asked.
“Now I have a story. As much of it as I ever can.”
“You’re going to write it. Will your paper run it?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “But I have to write it. You understand that I have to write it. I’m going to New York. . . .”
“Wrong,” he said. “You’re going to Fishhook. Not by car. From the nearest airport. . . .”
“But, Shep—”
“It’s not safe,” Blaine told her. “Not for anyone who has the faintest hint of parry. Even minor telepaths, like you.”
“I can’t do it, Shep. I—”
“Listen, Harriet. Finn had set up a Halloween outbreak by the parries, a sort of counterintelligence move. The other parries, when they learned about it, tried to stop it. They did stop part of it, but I don’t know to what extent. Whatever happens will be happening tonight. He would have used the outbreak to step up intolerance, to trigger rigid legislation. There would have been some violence, of course, but that was not, by and large, Finn’s purpose. But now, with Finn dead . . .”
Harriet drew in her breath. “They’ll wipe us out,” she said.
“They’ll do their best. But there is a way. . . .”
“Knowing this, you still killed Finn!”
“Look, Harriet, I didn’t really kill him. I went to bargain with him. I found a way to take the parries off Earth. I was going to promise to clean every parry off the Earth, clean out of his way, if he’d hold off his dogs for a week or two. . . .”
“But you said you killed him.”
“Maybe,” said Blaine, “I better fill you in. So when you come to write your story you can write it all.”
THIRTY-FOUR
Hamilton was silent and so empty you could feel the emptiness.
Blaine stopped the car in the square and got out of it. Not a light was showing, and the soft sound of the river came clearly to his ears.
“They are gone,” he said.
Harriet got out of the car and came around it to stand beside him.
“All right, pal,” she said. “Get onto your horse.”
He shook his head.
“But you have to go. You have to follow them. You belong with them.”
“Someday,” said Blaine. “Someday, years from now. There’s still work to do. There’ll be pockets of parries all up and down the land. Fearful and in hiding. I have to search them out. I have to save as many as I can.”
“You’ll never live to do it. You’ll be a special target. Finn’s men will never rest. . . .”
“If the pressure gets too bad, I’ll go. I’m no hero, Harriet. Basically, I’m a coward.”
“You’ll promise that?” she asked.
“Of course. Cross my heart. And you’re going back to Fishhook. You’ll be safe in Fishhook. Straight to the airport up in Pierre.”
She turned and went back to the car, started to get in, then turned back again.
“But you’ll need the car.”
He chuckled. “If I need one, there’s a village full of cars. I can pick the one I want. They couldn’t take their cars.”
She got behind the wheel and turned her head to say good-by.
“One thing,” said Blaine. “What happened to you when I was in the shed?”
Her laughter had a sharpness to it. “When Rand drove up, I pulled out. I went to get some help. I figured I should get on the phone to Pierre. There’d been men up there who’d helped us.”
“But?”
“The police stopped me and threw me into jail. They let me out the morning after, and I’ve been looking for you since.”
“Stout gal,” he said, and there was a faint throbbing in the air — a noise from far away.
Blaine stiffened, listening. The noise grew louder, deeper — the sound of many cars.
“Quick,” he said. “No lights. Slant across the bluff. You’ll hit the road up north.”
“Shep, what’s got into you?”
“That noise you hear is cars. A posse coming here. They know that Finn is dead.”
“You, Shep?”
“I’ll be all right. Get going.”
She started the motor.
“Be seeing you,” she said.
“Get moving, Harriet! And thanks a lot. Thanks for everything. Tell Charline hello.”
“Good-by, Shep,” she said, and the car was moving, swinging in a circle to head up a street that led toward the bluff.
She’ll make it all right, he told himself. Anyone who could drive those blind mountains out of Fishhook would have no trouble here.
“Good-by, Harriet,” he had said. “Tell Charline hello.” And why had he said that? he wondered. A hail and farewell to the old life, more than likely — a reaching out to touch hands with the past. Although there’d be no past in Fishhook. Charline would go on having parties, and the most peculiar people would continue showing up without having been invited. For Fishhook was a glamour and a glitter and a ghost. Without knowing it, Fishhook now was dead. And it was a pity. For Fishhook had been one of the greatest, one of the giddiest, one of the gladdest things that had ever happened to the human race.
He stood lonely in the square and listened to the furious sound of the coming cars. Far to the west he saw the flashing of their lights. A chill breeze came off the river and tugged at his trouser legs and jacket sleeves.
All over the world, he thought. All over the world tonight there’d be screaming cars and the slavering mobs and the running people.
He put his hand into a jacket pocket and felt the shape and the weight of the gun that had fallen from Harriet’s purse. His fingers closed around it — but that, he thought, was not the way to fight them.
There was another way to fight them, a long-range way to fight them. Isolate them and strangle them in their own mediocrity. Give them what they wanted — a planet full of people who were merely normal. A planet full of people who could huddle here and rot — never knowing space, never getting to the stars, never going anyplace or doing anything. Like a man who rocked away his life sitting in a rocking chair on a porch of some little dying town.