They Call Me Patrice

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A crumpled five-dollar bill, a ticket to San Francisco, a legal document terminating a marriage lost long ago in angry words— These were all she had. But between today and tomorrow a strange thing happened. She had a chance to build a whole new life, a life based on a lie.

Chapter One

She climbed the rooming-house stairs like a puppet dangling from slack strings. She was about twenty, with small, well-turned features, but her cheeks were a little too thin. Blond hair hung listlessly, as though no heed had been paid to it for some time past. The heels of her shoes were a little run over.

She managed the three flights, somehow, stopped at the door and took out a key. A wedge of white protruded under the door; it lengthened into an envelope as the door swept back above it. She picked it up. Her hand shook. She seemed to come alive a little.

“Helen Georgesson.”

Only her name, no address. She moved to the middle of the room, snapped on the light. She ripped hastily along the top of the envelope, and her hand plunged in. It held no message. She turned it over and shook it.

A flutter of paper came down on the table.

A five-dollar bill. Just an anonymous five-dollar bill, with Lincoln’s picture on it. And a strip of railroad tickets, running consecutively from starting-point to terminus, the way they do. The first coupon was marked “New York”; here, where she was now. The last was marked “San Francisco.” San Francisco, which she’d left one day two years ago.

There was no return. It was for a one-way trip.

The envelope fell to the floor. Her hands clasped each other nervously but somehow with purpose too. A little gold circle came off one of her fingers, and dropped to the floor. It rolled in a circle and came to rest under the edge of her foot. It was as though she were grinding it down into the shoddy carpet.

She brought out a battered valise, placed it on the bed, and threw back the lid.

Her face kept twitching intermittently, as if it were struggling to burst forth into some kind of emotion. For a moment or two it seemed that it might be weeping, when it came. But it wasn’t.

It was laughter.

Laughter should be merry and vibrant and alive.

This wasn’t.

The train had already left the Chicago station and she hadn’t yet found a seat. She struggled down car-aisle after car-aisle, swaying, jostled from side to side. The aisles were full of standees.

None of the seated men she passed offered her a seat. Their places had been too hard-won on a transcontinental train where anyone who stood, stood for hundreds of miles, through half-a-dozen states.

She’d been too late at the gate in the station, and too late getting on the train. The crowd had spilled past her. She’d been too slow, and too tired, and a little too helpless with her leaden valise. No more cars now. This was the last. Choked from end to end like all the rest. She stopped midway through the car. She could see there weren’t any seats vacant.

She set down the valise, and settled herself on its edge, the way she saw so many of the others doing. But it was lower than a seat would have been, and harder to settle down upon. She floundered badly and almost fell. Then when she’d settled down she let her head rest wearily against the nearest seat-back.

The tilt of her head gave her only a downward view into the little patch of floor-space in front of the seat. A pair of man’s brogues and a diminutive pair of kid pumps rested side by side. The brogues slung one above the other, the owner’s legs coupled at the knee. The pumps were cocked pertly, ankles crossed.

Nothing happened for a moment. Then one of the pumps edged over and dug sharply at the man’s ankle. A newspaper rattled. Both brogues swivelled slightly aisleward, as if their wearer’s upper body had turned in the seat to take a look.

Then they came down flat and he stood up. He came out through the seat-gap and motioned her in.

“Take my place for awhile.”

She tried to demur with a faint smile.

“No, go ahead,” he said heartily. “That’s quite all right.”

She stood up and accepted the offered seat.

The couple were both young, only a little older than she was, pleasant, friendly-looking. The girl had red-gold hair, fluffed out around her face. She had a beautiful mouth, which alone was sufficient to make her lovely looking, drawing all notice to itself as it did. When it smiled, everything smiled with it. Her nose crinkled, and her eyebrows arched, and dimples appeared in each cheek. She looked as though she smiled a lot.

She was smiling at Helen now, to put her at ease. Her fingers toyed with her wedding-ring. It had a row of diamonds, with a sapphire at each end of the row of stones. A lovely ring, one she was obviously proud of.

“I appreciate this very much,” Helen said.

The young husband said, “Guess I’ll go out on the platform for a smoke.”

His wife glanced around to make sure he’d left them. Then she dropped her voice confidentially. “I could tell right away. That’s why I made him get up.”

Helen didn’t say anything. What could she say?

“Me too,” the wife added. She turned her ring around a little more, gave it a caressing little brush.

They were both chatting away absorbedly by the time the husband reappeared ten minutes later. He acted mysterious. He looked cautiously left and right as if bearing tidings of highest secrecy, then whispered, “Pat, they’re going to open up the dining car in a couple minutes. One of the porters just tipped me off. I think we better start moving up that way if we want to make it. There’ll be a stampede on as soon as word gets around.”

The wife jumped to her feet.

He immediately soft-pedaled her with the flats of both hands, in comic intensity. “Sh! Don’t give it away, what are you trying to do?”

She tiptoed out into the aisle, as though the amount of noise would give away the secret.

She pulled at the sleeve of the girl beside her in passing. “You come with us,” she whispered.

“What about the seats? We’ll lose them.”

“Not if we put our baggage in them.” The girl still hesitated.

The wife seemed to understand; she was quick that way. She sent him on ahead, to break trail. Then as soon as his back was turned, bent low over the seat in whispered reassurance. “He’ll look after the check, I’ll see that he does.”

“No, it isn’t that—” the girl faltered.

“Hurry up, we’ll lose him.”

She guided Helen lightly forward with a friendly hand.

“You can’t neglect yourself now, of all times,” she remonstrated in an undertone. “I know.”

They secured seats together in the dining car, which was crowded as soon as the doors were opened, just as he had foreseen. The unlucky ones had to wait in the aisle outside.

“Just so we won’t sit down to the table still strangers,” the wife said, cheerfully unfolding her napkin, “he’s Hazzard, Hugh, and I’m Hazzard, Patrice.” The dimples showed up. “Funny name, isn’t it?”

“Be more respectful,” her young husband grumbled, without lifting his nose from the bill-of-fare.

“What’s your name?”

“Georgesson.”

She smiled at the two of them. It wasn’t a very broad smile, but it had depth and meaning.

“You’ve both been awfully friendly to me.”

She looked down at the menu card the steward had handed her, so they wouldn’t detect the emotion that made her lips tremble.

The lights had gone out in the car. All but those tiny, subdued ones over each individual seat. The three were already old friends by now.

“She just came out,” Patrice reported, eyes fastened watchfully on a door far down the aisle in the dim distance. “Come on, do you want to come with me, Helen? Quick, Hugh, the overnight-case.” She prodded him heartlessly in the ribs.

“All right, take it easy,” Hugh grunted sleepily.

“I’m going to make him take back his seat,” Helen murmured on their way down the aisle. “He can’t sit up all night on the edge of a suitcase.”

“You can’t either,” Patrice remarked, stepping carefully over somebody’s outstretched feet, and then stopping to give her companion a hand over the same hazard. “Don’t worry about it. We’ll take turns, all three of us; we’ll work it by relays.”

They closed the dressing-room door.

“I’m going to take as long as I want,” Patrice announced determinedly, snapping open the overnight-case and fumbling for facial tissues.

“We’re nearly the last ones in anyway,” Helen said.

After that they combed and creamed in silence for awhile, giving an occasional unsteady little lurch in unison.

“I hope Hugh’s people like me,” Patrice remarked suddenly.

“Haven’t you ever seen them before?”

“They’ve never laid eyes on me. I met Hugh in Europe, and we were married over there. We’ve lived there all this last year. We’re just coming from the other side now, you know. This is practically a continuation of the same trip. We went straight from the ship to the train. We made terribly close connections; we weren’t in New York more than two hours.”

“Didn’t you ever send them a picture?”

“No. I started to several times, but I was never quite satisfied with the ones I had. I knew I was going to meet them eventually, and snapshots are so...  so— How on earth do you make this water stay in?” she interrupted herself.

“You push that thing down, I think.”

“I have a horror of losing this. It slipped down a drain on the Other Side once, and they had to take out a whole section of pipe.” She stripped off her wedding-band before plunging her hands in the water.

“It’s beautiful,” Helen said wistfully.

“Isn’t it pretty?” Patrice agreed. She held the ring pinched between two fingers so Helen could look at it. “See what it says on the inside? His name and mine, together.”

She ran a flimsy-scarf-like handkerchief through the center of the narrow band, deftly knotted it, and dropped the ring into the open dressing-case.

“Isn’t it supposed to be bad luck to do that? I mean take your ring off?”

“I couldn’t have bad luck.”

The train pounded on in silence for a few more minutes, its hurtling roar deadened somewhat in the closed compartment where they were.

Patrice stepped back, her toilette completed. She hugged her own arms in a sort of half-ecstasy of delicious, shivering fright. “This is the last night. By tomorrow night this time we’ll already be there, the worst’ll be over.”

Helen saw her nervously steal a look at herself in the mirror.

“You’ll be all right, Patrice. They’ll like you.”

“Hugh says they’re very wealthy,” Patrice remarked. “My father and mother weren’t. When they died I had just enough to stake me until I got the job with UNNRA that took me to Europe in the first place. I know Hugh’s father had to send us the money for the trip home. We were always on a shoestring over there. We had an awful lot of fun, though. But I didn’t want to have the baby over there, and Hugh didn’t want me to either.”

Suddenly she reverted to their mutual topic of interest again.

“Are you frightened? About it, you know?”

Helen made the admission with her eyes.

“I am too. I think everyone is, a little, don’t you? Men don’t think we are. All I have to do is look at Hugh—” She grinned companion-ably. “I can see he’s frightened enough for the two of us, so then I don’t let on that I’m frightened too. And it reassures him.”

Helen wondered what it would be like to be so treasured.

“Do they know about it?” she asked.

“Oh sure. Hugh wrote them. They’re tickled silly. First grandchild, you know. They didn’t even ask us if we wanted to come back. ‘You’re coming back,’ and that was that. Heady? Shall we go back to our seats now?”

Helen’s hand was on the door handle, tussling with the little hand-latch which was hard to turn with the train’s movement throwing her off balance. Patrice was somewhere behind her, replacing something in the open dressing-kit. She could see her vaguely in the chromium sheeting of the door in front of her. Little things. Little things that life is made up of. Little things that stop—

Her senses played a trick on her. She had a fleeting impression, at first, of having done something wrong to the door, dislodged it in its entirety. The floor shifted to become the wall upright before her. The door was hopelessly out of reach, a sealed trap overhead, impossible to attain.

The lights went. All light was gone, and yet so vividly explosive were the sensory images whirling through her mind, that it took her a comparatively long time to realize she was in pitch-blackness, could no longer see physically. Only in afterglow of imaginative terror. The car seemed to go up and down like a scenic railway. A distant rending noise ground nearer, swelling in volume. It reminded her of a coffee-mill at home, when she was a little girl. But that one didn’t draw you into its maw, crunching everything in sight, as this one was doing.

“Hugh!” The single word from somewhere below her. And then silence.

Chapter Two

Whatever this moment was, it held pain in it; it was all pain, only pain. Her hand, moving at random beside her, found something light and soft, drew it toward her. A scarf-like thing, a handkerchief. It was knotted, and the knot was kept from slipping by a little metal circlet, by a ring it had been drawn through. She put the little bulge of the knot between her teeth and bit on it. That helped, the pain eased a little. The more the pain grew, the harder she bit.

She only wanted to sleep, to sleep some more. And they were making so much noise they wouldn’t let her. Clanging, and pounding on sheets of loose tin, and prying things away.

She cried softly in protest — no, it wasn’t her own voice, she knew now. She knew. And there was a sudden frightened flurry of activity, the pounding became faster, the prying became more hectic.

Then all at once a man’s voice sounded directly over her, strangely hollow and blurred.

“Steady. We’re coming to you. Just a minute longer. Can you hold out? Are you hurt? Are you alone down there?”

“No,” she said feebly. “I’ve...  I’ve just had a baby down here... ”

First she was dimly aware only of the small sphere immediately around her: the pillows behind her head, the bed covers under her chin, a dim face bending close. She was aware of a small form that was alive and warm and hers. She came more alive at those moments when she felt it nestled in her arms. It was her lifeline back to life. The rest remained unfocussed, lost in misty gray distances. Then visibility spread to the whole room around her. Then she noticed flowers in the room. There was fruit too, in a basket over by the window, with a big-eared satin bow standing up straight above its handle.

And the last phase of recovery was sitting up. She saw her own hands one day. And on the left hand something twinkled and caught her eye. She was suddenly looking at a slender circlet set with diamonds, a sapphire at each end. A wedding-band. Strange and yet she remembered it. Or did she?

The nurse came in and saw her looking at it. She called the doctor, who gave her something to drink.

It tasted salty and sent her to sleep.

She wanted one of the flowers. A small one, arching over in her direction, invited her. Her hand closed on its stalk. She started to draw it toward her, and that carried her hand high up over her head.

Something jangled and fell beside her, from the bed-frame. It was a chart.

It said at the top: “Section A.”

It said below that: “Room 9.”

It said: “Patient’s Name—”

And then it said. “Hazzard, Patrice (Mrs.).”

The nurse came into the room, and when she saw the chart, she came over and put it back in place. She took the girl’s temperature. Her brows rose. She put the thermometer down.

The girl in the bed asked tautly, “That chart? Why is it there?”

“Everyone has to have one,” the nurse answered soothingly.

“But it says—”

“You’re not supposed to look at it. Sh, don’t talk now any more.”

“But there’s something I...  I don’t understand—”

The nurse brought the doctor. He took the girl’s pulse. Then he shrugged. He took it down, the framed chart behind her head, and carried it out of the room with him.

They brought in the child. They gave it to her in her arms. Fear left slowly, unease and strangeness left slowly.

They watched her for awhile. She didn’t know when they took the small, warm bundle from her again, for she was asleep.

Something said to her: “Tread softly, speak slowly. Take care, take care.” She didn’t know what or why, but she knew it must be heeded.

The nurse said to her, “You can have a little coffee in your milk now. Won’t that be a pleasant change?”

Tread softly, speak with care.

She said, “What happened to—?”

“To whom?” the nurse asked.

Oh, careful now, careful. “There was another girl in the train washroom with me. Is she all right?”

The nurse shook her head reticently. She said, “No.”

“She’s dead?”

The nurse answered, “Did you know her very well?”

“No.”

“You’d only met her on the train?”

“Only on the train.”

The nurse had paved the way. She felt it was safe to proceed now. “She’s gone,” she said quietly. The nurse watched her face. No change. She ventured more. “Isn’t there anyone else you want to ask about?”

“What happened to—?”

The nurse took the tray away, as if stripping the scene for a crisis. “To him?”

Those were the nurse’s words. She adopted them. “To him?”

The doctor came in, with a second. She went to the door, opened it, and motioned to someone.

The doctor came in, and a second nurse. They stood waiting, as if prepared to meet an emergency.

The first nurse said, “Temperature normal.” She said, “Pulse normal.”

The second nurse was mixing something in a glass.

The first nurse, her own, stood close to the bed. She took her by the hand and held tightly. “Your husband — wasn’t saved either, Mrs. Hazzard.”

She said, “My husband? No, you’re making a mistake—”

The doctor and the second nurse closed in on her swiftly.

Somebody put a cool hand to her forehead, held her pressed downward, kindly but firmly.

She said, “No, please let me tell you!”

The second nurse was holding something to her lips.

“Please—!” she said listlessly.

She didn’t say anything more after that. They didn’t either.

Finally she overheard the doctor murmur, as if in punctuation: “She stood that very well.”

The nurse’s name was Miss Allmeyer. “Miss Allmeyer, does the hospital give everyone those flowers every day?”

“We’d like to, but we couldn’t afford it. It’s a standing order, just for you.”

“Well, who—?” Speak softly.

The nurse smiled winningly. “Can’t you guess, honey?”

“There’s something I want to tell you. Something you must let me tell you.” She turned her head restlessly on the pillows, first to one side, then to the other.

“Now, honey, are we going to have a bad day? I thought we were going to have such a good day.”

“Could you find out something for me?”

“I’ll try.”

“The handbag; the handbag that was in the train-washroom with me.”

“Your handbag?”

“The handbag. The one that was there when I was in there.”

The nurse came back later and said, “It’s safe; it’s being held for you. There’s about fifty dollars or so in it.”

That wasn’t hers, that was the other one.

“There were two.”

“There is another,” the nurse admitted. “It doesn’t belong to anyone now.” She looked down commiseratingly. “There was just five dollars in it,” she breathed almost inaudibly.

She didn’t have to be told that. She knew by heart. She remembered from before boarding the train. She remembered from the train itself.

“Could you bring it in here? Could I have it just to look at it? Could I have it here next to the bed?”

The nurse said, “I’ll see what they say.”

She brought it, though.

She was alone with it. She dumped the contents onto the bed. Five dollars. A railroad ticket, one way, from New York to San Francisco, partly used-up now. A copy of a divorce-decree, issued in Juarez, Mexico. Granting Steve Georgesson a divorce from Helen Georgesson.

The nurse came back again and smiled at her. “Now what was it you said you wanted to tell me?”

She returned the smile, wanly. “I’ll tell you some other time. Tomorrow maybe. Or the next day.”

There was a letter on the breakfast tray.

The nurse said, “See? Now you’re beginning to get mail, just like the well people do.”

It said: “Mrs. Patrice Hazzard,” She was afraid of it. The writing on it seemed to get bigger and bigger. “MRS. PATRICE HAZZARD.”

“Open it,” the nurse encouraged. She tried twice. The third time she managed.

“Patrice, dear:

Though we’ve never seen you, you’re our daughter now, dear. You’re Hugh’s legacy to us. You’re all we have now, you and the little tyke. I can’t come to you where you are, because the shock was too much. I’m under the doctor’s care and he forbids my making the trip. You’ll have to come to us, instead. Come home to us soon, dear, in our loneliness and loss. It will make it that much easier to bear. It won’t be long now, dear. We’ve been in constant touch with Dr. Brett, and he sends very encouraging reports of your progress.

Mother Hazzard.”

It was like train-wheels going through her head.

Though we’ve never seen you.

Though we’ve never seen you.

The nurse eased it from her forgetful fingers after awhile, and put it back in its envelope. She watched the nurse fearfully as she moved about the room.

“If I weren’t Mrs. Hazzard, would I be allowed to stay in this room?”

The nurse laughed cheerfully. “We’d put you out, we’d throw you right outside into one of the wards,” she said, bending over her in mock threat.

The nurse left, and returned with the baby. “Here, take your young son.”

She held him protectively.

Five dollars. Five dollars lasts such a short time, goes such a short way.

She was in a dressing robe, sitting by the window in the sun. There was a light tap at the door and the doctor came in. He drew out a chair and sat down opposite her. “I hear you’re leaving us soon,” he said genially.

The book she’d been reading fell and he had to pick it up for her.

“Don’t look so frightened. Everything’s arranged. Here are your tickets,” He took an envelope out of his pocket, tried to offer it to her. Her hands withdrew a little, each one around an arm of the chair. He put the envelope between the pages of the discarded book finally, like a bookmark.

“When?” she said with scarcely any breath at all.

“Wednesday, the early train.”

Suddenly panic was licking all over her, like a flame.

“No, I can’t! No! Doctor, you must listen—!” She tried to grab his hand with both of hers.

He held her hand between both of his consolingly. “I understand,” he said. “We’re a little shaky yet. We’ve just finished getting used to things as they are. We’re a little timid about giving up familiar surroundings for those that are strange to us. We all have it; it’s a typical nervous reaction. But you’ll be over it in no time.”

“But I can’t do it, doctor,” she whispered passionately. “I can’t do it.”

He patted her cheek to calm her. “We’ll put you on the train, and all you have to do is ride. Your family will be waiting for you at the end of the trip.”

“My family!”

“Don’t make such a face about it,” he said whimsically.

He glanced around at the crib.

“What about the young man here?”

He went over and lifted out the child. He brought him to her and put him in her arms.

“You want to take him home, don’t you? You don’t want him to grow up in a hospital?” He laughed at her teasingly. “You want him to have a home, don’t you?”

She held the baby to her.

“Yes,” she said at last, submissively. “Yes, I want him to have a home.”

Chapter Three

A train again. But how different. No crowded aisles, no jostling figures. A compartment, all to herself. A little table on braces, that could go up, that could go down. A closet with a full-length mirrored door. On the rack the neat luggage, brand new, glossy patent finish, “P.H.” trimly stenciled in red. A little shaded lamp to read by when the countryside grew dark.

And on the seat opposite her own, and more important by far than all this, her baby. Something to cherish, something to love. All there was in the world to love and live for.

The wheels of the train chattered, saying to her ear alone:

“You’d better go back,  you’d better go back, Clicketty-Clack,  clicketty-clack. Stop while you can, you still can go back.”

A light knock sounded at the door, and she started as violently as though it had been a resounding crash.

“Who’s there?” she gasped.

A porter’s voice answered, “Five mo’ minutes fo’ Caulfield.”

She opened the door. “No, wait! It can’t be—”

“It sho’ enough is, though, miss.”

“So quickly, though. I didn’t think—”

He smiled back at her indulgently. “We’ve been through Clarendon already, and Caulfield’s comin’ right after it. Ain’t never change since I been on this railroad.”

She closed the door. I can ride past without getting off, she thought.

The train ground to a stop.

A knock sounded right behind her back.

“Caulfield.”

Then someone tried the knob.

“Help you with yo’ things?”

She ran to the seat and picked up her baby boy.

People were standing just on the other side of the window. Their heads were low, but she could see them, and they could see her. There was a woman looking right at her.

Their eyes met, locked, held fast. She couldn’t turn away her head. It was as though those eyes riveted her where she stood.

The woman pointed to her. She called out in jubilation, for the benefit of someone else, unseen. “There she is! I’ve found her! Here, this car up here!”

The girl held the baby near the window and the woman outside raised her hand and waved. She waved to the little sleepy head in the blue blanket, looking solemnly out the window. Made her fingers flutter in that special wave you give to very small babies.

The look on her face was as when hope revives again, after hopelessness. It was as when the sun strikes through at the end of a bleak wintry day.

The girl holding the baby put her head down close to his, almost as if averting it from the window. Or as if they were communing together, exchanging some confidence in secret, to the exclusion of everyone else.

“For you,” she breathed. “For you. And God forgive me.”

Then she carried him over to the door with her, and turned the latch.

Sometimes, a dividing-line runs across life. Sharp, almost actual, like the black stroke of a paint brush. Sometimes, but not often.

One girl left the train window. Another girl came down the steps. A world ended, and another world began.

Patrice Hazzard came down those car-steps with her baby. Frightened, tremulous, very white in the face, but Patrice Hazzard.

She was aware of things, but only indirectly; she only had eyes for those other eyes looking into hers from a distance of a few inches away, All else was background. Behind her back the train glided on. Gone forever now, never to be retrieved.

The hazel eyes came in even closer to hers. They were kind and gentle, tender. It hurt a little to see how trustful they were.

She was in her fifties, their owner. Her hair was softly graying. She was as tall as Patrice, and as slim. Something about her clothes revealed that thinness to be recent, the result of the past few months of strain of heartbreak.

But even these details about her were incidental, and the man of her own age standing behind her was only a background too. It was the woman’s face that was immediate, saying so much without a sound.

She placed her hands lightly upon Patrice’s cheeks and kissed her on the lips. There was a lifetime in the kiss, the girl could sense it. The lifetime of a man. The many years it takes to raise a man, from childhood, through boyhood. There was bitter loss in the kiss, the loss of all that at a single blow. The end for a time of all hope, and weeks of cruel grief. But then too there was the reparation of loss, the finding of a daughter, the starting over with another, a smaller son. Going back and starting again from the beginning, in sweeter sadder sponsorship this time, forewarned by loss. And there was the rising of hope anew. This was not an ordinary kiss; it was a sacrament of adoption.

Then she kissed the child. And smiled as you do at your own. And a little crystal drop that hadn’t been there before was resting on the baby’s small pink cheek.

The man came forward and kissed her on the forehead.

“I’m Father, Patrice.”

He stooped and straightened, and said, “I’ll take your things over to the car.” A little glad to escape from an emotional moment, as men are likely to be.

The woman hadn’t said a word in all the moments the girl had been standing before her. She saw, perhaps, the pallor in the girl’s face — could read the shrinking, the uncertainty, in her eyes.

She put her arms about her in a warm embrace. Drew the girl’s head to her shoulder for a moment. And as she did so, she spoke for the first time to give courage, to give peace.

“You’re home, Patrice. Welcome home, dear.”

And in those few words, so simply and sincerely said, Patrice Hazzard knew she had found at last all the goodness there is or ever can be in this world.

Chapter Four

This was what it was like to be home; to be in a home of your own, in a room of your own.

She sat there waiting, her hand resting on the crib, the crib they had bought for him. The baby lay safe in it now. They’d thought of everything.

They had left her alone; she had to be alone to savor the feeling of home as fully as she was doing. A roof over your head. A roof to keep out rain and cold and loneliness. Not just the anonymous roof of a rented building, the roof of home. Guarding you, sheltering you, keeping you, watching over you.

Downstairs somewhere dimly perceptible was the soothing bustle of an evening meal in preparation. Carried to her in faint snatches now and then at the opening of a door, stilled again at its closing.

Someone was coming up the stairs now. She shrank back a little in the chair. She was a little frightened, a little nervous again. Now there would be no quick escape from the moment’s confrontation, as at the railroad station. Now came the real meeting, the real blending, the real taking into the fold. This was the real test.

“Patrice dear, supper’s ready whenever you are.”

You take supper in the evening, when you’re home, in your own home. When you go out in public or to someone else’s home, you may take dinner. But in the evening, in your own home, it’s supper you take, and never anything else. Her heart accepted the trifling word as a talisman.

She jumped from the chair and ran over and opened the door. “Shall I...  shall I bring him down with me, or leave him up here in the crib?” she asked, half eagerly, half uncertainly. “I fed him at five, you know.”

Mother Hazzard slanted her head coaxingly. “Why don’t you bring him down just tonight, anyway? It’s the first night. Don’t hurry, dear, take your time.”

In the dining room Mother Hazzard was leaning forward, giving a last-minute touch to the table. Father Hazzard was returning his glasses to their case. A third person was in the room, somebody with his back half to her.

He turned when he heard her come in. He was young and tall and friendly-looking. A camera-shutter clicked in her mind and the film rolled on.

“There’s the young man!” Mother Hazzard reveled. “There’s the young man himself! Here, give him to me, let me put him in his own highchair. We’ll prop him up with pillows. You know Bill, of course.”

He came forward, and she half-offered her hand, hoping that if it was too formal the gesture would remain unnoticed.

He took her hand in both of his and held it warmly buried like that for a moment or two.

“Welcome home, Patrice,” he said quietly. Something about the straight, unwavering look in his eyes as he said it made her think she’d never before heard anything said so sincerely, so simply, so loyally.

And that was all. Mother Hazzard said, “You sit here, from now on. Do you think he’s high enough in that chair? I told them it’s coming right straight back if there’s the slightest—”

Father Hazzard said unassumingly, “We’re very happy, Patrice,” and sat down at the head of the table.

Whoever Bill was, he sat down opposite her.

The cook peeked through the door for a minute and beamed. “Now this looks right! This what that table’s been needing. This just finishes off that empty si—”

Then she quickly checked herself, and whisked from sight again.

Mother Hazzard glanced down at her plate for a second, then immediately looked up again smiling. The hurt was gone, it had not been allowed to linger.

They didn’t say anything memorable. You don’t say anything memorable across the tables of home. Your heart speaks, and not your brain, to the other hearts around you. She forgot after awhile to notice what she was saying, to weigh, to reckon it. That’s what home is, what home should be. It flowed from her as easily as it did from them. She knew that was what they were trying to do for her. And they were succeeding. Strangeness was already gone, never to return. Other things could come — she hoped they wouldn’t. But never strangeness, the unease of unfamiliarity.

“I hope you don’t mind the white collar on that dress, Patrice. I purposely saw to it there was a touch of color on everything I picked out; I didn’t want you to be too—”

“Oh, some of those things are so lovely. I really hadn’t seen half of them myself until I unpacked just now.”

“The only thing that I was afraid of was the sizes, but that nurse of yours sent me a complete list of measurements.”

“She took a tape measure to me one day, I remember now, but she wouldn’t tell me what it was for—”

“Which kind for you, Patrice? Light or dark?” Mr. Hazzard asked.

“It really doesn’t—”

“No, tell him just this once, dear; then after that he won’t have to ask you.”

“Dark, then, I guess.”

“You and me both.”

Bill spoke a little less frequently than the others. Just a touch of shyness, she sensed. Not that he was strained or anything. Perhaps it was just his manner; he had a quiet, unobtrusive way about him.

But who exactly was he? She couldn’t ask outright. She’d omitted to at the first moment, and now it was too late. No last name had been given, so he must be—

I’ll find out soon, she reassured herself. I’m bound to. She was no longer afraid.

Once she found he’d just been looking at her when her eyes went to him, and she wondered what he’d been thinking while doing so. And yet not to have admitted that she knew, that she could tell by the lingering traces of his expression, would have been to lie to herself. He’d been thinking that her face was pleasant, that he liked it.

And then after a little while he said, “Dad, pass the bread over this way, will you?”

And then she knew he was Hugh Hazzard’s brother.

There was a cake for the baby on his first birthday, with a single candle flame like a yellow butterfly hovering atop a fluted white column. They made great to-do and ceremony about the little immemorial rites that went with it. The first grandson. The first milestone.

“But if he can’t make the wish,” she demanded animatedly, “is it all right if I make it for him? Or doesn’t that count?”

Emily, the cake’s creator, instinctively deferred to in all such matters of lore, nodded pontifically from the kitchen doorway. “You make it for him; he’ll get it just the same,” she promised.

Patrice dropped her eyes and her face sobered for a moment.

Peace, all your life. Safety, such as this. Your own around you always. And for myself — from you, someday — forgiveness.

She leaned down, pressed her cheek close to the baby’s and blew softly. The butterfly fluttered, disappeared.

A great crowing and cooing went up, as though they had all just seen a miracle.

A lot of people had come in. And long after the baby had been upstairs to bed, the gaiety continued.

She moved about the lighted, bustling rooms, chatting, smiling. She was happier tonight than she ever remembered being before.

A great many of the introductions were blurred. There were so many firsts, on an occasion like this. She looked about, dutifully recapitulating the key people, as befitted her role of assistant hostess. Edna Harding and Marilyn Bryant, she remembered, were the two girls sitting one on each side of Bill, and vying with one another for his attention. She suppressed a mischievous grin. Look at him, sober-faced as a totem-pole. Why, it was enough to turn his head — if he hadn’t happened to have a head that was unturnable by girls, as far as she’d been able to observe.

Grace Henson? She was that stout-ish, flaxen-haired girl over there, by the punchbowl. Or was she? No, she was the less stout but still flaxen-haired one at the piano, softly playing for her own entertainment. One wore glasses and one didn’t. They must be sisters, there was so close a resemblance. It was the first time either one of them had been to the house.

She moved over to the piano and stood beside Grace, She might actually enjoy playing, for all Patrice knew, but she should at least have somebody taking an appreciative interest. The girl at the keyboard smiled at her. “Now this,” she said and switched into a new selection. She was an accomplished player, keeping the music subdued, like an undertone to the buzz of conversations.

But suddenly all the near-by talk stopped. The music went on alone for a note or two, sounding much clearer than it had before.

The girl’s sister suddenly stepped up behind her, touched her just once on the shoulder, as if in remonstrance or as a reminder. That was all she did. Then she went right back to where she’d been sitting. The whole little pantomime had been so deft and quick it was hardly noticeable at all.

The player broke off, uncertainly. She apparently had felt the tap, but did not get its meaning. The slightly bewildered shrug and the look she gave Patrice was evidence of that.

“Oh, finish it,” Patrice protested unguardedly. “It was lovely. What’s it called? I don’t think I’ve ever heard it before.”

“It’s the Barcarolle, from Tales of Hoffman,” the other girl answered quietly.

Standing there beside the player, Patrice became conscious of a congealing silence about her. Something wrong had happened just then.

I’ve said something wrong. I said something that was wrong just now. But I don’t know what it was, and I don’t know what to do about it.

She touched her punch-cup to her lips, there was nothing else to do at the moment.

They only heard it near me. The music left my voice stranded, and that only made it all the more conspicuous. But who else in the room heard? Who else noticed? Maybe their faces will tell—

She turned slowly and glanced at them one by one, as if at random. Mother Hazzard was deep in conversation at the far end of the room. She hadn’t heard. The flaxen-haired girl who had delivered the cautioning tap had her back to Patrice; she might have heard and she might not. The two girls with Bill hadn’t heard, it was easy to see that. They were oblivious of everything else but Bill.

No one’s eyes met hers. No one was looking at her.

Only Bill. His head was slightly down, and his forehead was drawn into a half-frown. He was gazing up at her with a strange intentness. Everything the girls were saying to him seemed to be completely ignored. She couldn’t tell if his thoughts were on her, or a thousand miles away.

She looked away. And even after she did, she could sense that his eyes were still upon her.

As they climbed the stairs together, after everyone had left, Mother Hazzard suddenly tightened an arm about Patrice’s waist, protectively.

“You were so brave about it,” she said, “You did just the right thing; to pretend not to know what it was she was playing. But, my dear, my heart went out to you for a moment, when I saw you standing there. That look on your face. I wanted to run to you and put my arms around you. But I took my cue from you, I pretended not to notice anything either. She didn’t mean anything by it, she’s just a thoughtless little fool.”

Patrice didn’t answer.

“But at the sound of the very first notes,” Mother Hazzard went on ruefully, “he seemed to be right back there in the room with all of us again. I could almost see him. The Barcarolle. His favorite song. He never sat down to a piano without playing it. Whenever and wherever you heard that being played, you knew Hugh was about someplace”

“The Barcarolle,” Patrice whispered, as if speaking to herself. “His favorite song.” And suddenly a chasm of uncertainly widened in her mind. So many little things she didn’t know. What day, what moment would trick her into confession?

It was only a week later, at supper one night, when the second test came.

“—Different now,” Mother Hazzard was musing comfortably. “I was there once, as a girl, you know. Oh, many years ago. Tell me, has it changed much since those days?”

Suddenly she was looking directly at Patrice, in innocent exclusive inquiry.

“How can she answer that, Mother?” Father Hazzard cut in. “She wasn’t there when you were, so how would she know what it was like then?”

“Oh, you know what I mean,” Mother Hazzard retorted indulgently. “Don’t be so precise.”

“I suppose it has changed,” Patrice answered feebly. She turned the handle of her cup a little toward her, as if about to lift it, and then didn’t lift it after all.

“You and Hugh were married there, weren’t you?” was the next question.

Again Father Hazzard interrupted before Patrice could answer, this time with catastrophic rebuttal. “They were married in London, I thought. Don’t you remember that letter he sent us at the time? I can still recall it; ‘married here yesterday’ London letterhead.”

“Paris,” said Mother Hazzard firmly. “Wasn’t it, dear? I still have it upstairs, I can get it and show you. It has a Paris postmark.” Then she tossed her head at him arbitrarily. “Anyway, this is one question Patrice can answer for herself.”

A moment before all had been security. Now she could feel nothing but the three pairs of eyes on her, waiting in trustful expectancy. In a moment, with the wrong answer, that trust could change to something else.

“London,” she said softly, touching the handle of her cup as if deriving some sort of clarivoyance from it. “But then we left immediately for Paris, on our honeymoon. I think what happened was, he began the letter in London, didn’t have time to finish it, and then posted it from Paris.”

“You see,” said Mother Hazzard pertly, “I was partly right, anyhow.”

“Now isn’t that just like a woman,” Father Hazzard marveled to his son.

Bill’s eyes had remained on Patrice. There was something almost akin to grudging admiration in them; or did she imagine that?

“Excuse me,” she said stiffly, thrusting her chair back. “I think I hear the baby crying.”

And then, a few weeks later, another pitfall. Or rather the same one, ever-present, ever lurking treacherously underfoot as she walked this path of her own choosing.

It had been raining, and the air was heavy with mist. A rare occurrence for Caulfield. They were all there in the room with her and she stopped by the window a moment to glance out.

“Heavens,” she said incautiously, “I haven’t seen everything look so blurry since I was a child in San Fran.”

In the reflection on the lighted pane she saw Mother Hazzard’s head go up, and knew before she turned to face them that she had said the wrong thing. Trodden incautiously again, where there was no support.

“In San Francisco, dear?” Mother Hazzard’s voice was guilelessly puzzled. “But I thought you were raised in — Bill told us you were originally from—” And then she didn’t finish it, withholding the clue; no helpful second choice was forthcoming this time. Instead a flat question followed, “Is that where you were born, dear?”

“No,” Patrice said distinctly, and knew what the next question was sure to be. A question she could not have answered at the moment.

Bill raised his head suddenly, turned it inquiringly toward the stairs. “I think I hear the youngster crying, Patrice.”

“I’ll go up and take a look,” she said gratefully, and left the room.

The baby was in a soundless sleep when she reached him. He wasn’t making a whimper that anyone could possibly have heard. She stood there by him with a look of thoughtful scrutiny on her face.

Had Bill really thought he heard the baby crying?

A single low-pitched voice was droning on as if somebody were reading aloud in the library. The three of them were in there, and a man she didn’t recognize was with them. He was reading aloud a mass of typed reports.

No one else was saying a word. Father Hazzard was following every word closely. Mother Hazzard was in an easy chair, a basket on her lap, darning something. And Bill, strangely present, sat with one leg dangling over the arm of his chair, his head tilted back.

She tried to get by the door without being seen, but Mother Hazzard looked up at just the wrong time and caught her. “There she is now,” she said, “Patrice, come in here a moment, dear. We want you.”

She turned and went in, with a sudden constriction in her throat.

“Patrice, do you know Ty Winthrop?”

“I don’t believe I do,” she said. The nervousness shook her voice. She forced herself to go and shake hands with him. She kept her eyes carefully away from the table. It wasn’t easy.

“Ty is Father’s lawyer,” Mother Hazzard said.

Bill had risen and drawn up a chair beside the table for her. “Sit down, Patrice, and join the party,” he invited.

“Yes, we want you to hear this, Patrice,” Father Hazzard urged as she hesitated. “It concerns you.”

Her hand tried to stray betrayingly toward her throat. She kept it down by sheer will-power.

The lawyer cleared his throat. “Well, I think that about takes care of it, Donald. The rest of it remains as it was before, from there on.”

Father Hazzard hitched his chair nearer. “All right. Ready for me to sign now?”

Mother Hazzard bit off a thread with her teeth, having come to the end of her darning. She began to put things away in her basket. “You’d better tell Patrice what it is first, dear. Don’t you want her to know?”

“I’ll tell her for you,” Winthrop offered. “I can put it in fewer words perhaps.” He turned toward Patrice and gazed over the tops of his reading glasses, “Donald’s changing the provisions of his will, by adding a codicil. You see, in the original, after Julia here was provided for, there was an equal division of the residue made between Bill and Hugh. Now we’re altering that to make it one-quarter of the residue to Bill and the remainder to you.”

She could feel her face beginning to flame, as though a burning crimson light were focused on it. She felt agonizing sensations of wanting to push away from the table and make her escape.

She tried to speak quietly, “I don’t want you to do that. I don’t want to be included.”

“Don’t look that way about it,” Bill laughed. “You’re not doing anybody out of anything. I have Dad’s business—”

“It was Bill’s own suggestion,” Mother Hazzard let her know.

“As you know, I gave both the boys a cash sum to start them off, the day they each reached their twenty-first—”

Patrice was on her feet now, facing them, almost panic-stricken. “No, please! Don’t put my name down at all! I don’t want my name to go in the will!”

“It’s on account of Hugh, dear,” Mother Hazzard said in a tactful aside to her husband. “Can’t you understand?”

“Well, I know; we all mourn for Hugh. But she has to go on living Just the same. She has a child to think of. And these things shouldn’t be postponed on account of sentiment.”

She turned and fled from the room. They made no attempt to follow her.

She closed the door of her room after her. She stormed back and forth berating herself with bitter words. “Swindler!” She burst out. “Thief! It’s just like someone climbing in through a window and—”

A low knock came at the door about half an hour later. She went over and opened it, and Bill was standing there.

“Hello,” he said diffidently.

It was as though they hadn’t seen one another for two or three days past, instead of just half an hour before.

“He signed the will,” he said, “After you went up, Winthrop took it back with him, Witnessed and all. It’s done now, whether you wanted it or not.”

She didn’t answer. The battle had been lost in the room downstairs. This was no more than a final communique.

He was looking at her in a way she couldn’t identify. It seemed to have equal parts of shrewd appraisal and blank incomprehension in it, with just a dash of admiration added.

“You know,” he said, “I don’t know why you acted like that about it. And I don’t agree with you. I think you were wrong.” He lowered his voice a little in confidence. “But somehow or other I’m glad you did. I like you better for acting like that about it.” He shoved his hand out to her suddenly. “Want to shake good night?”

Chapter Five

In the light of the full moon the flower-garden at the back of the house was as bright as noon. The sanded paths gleamed like snow, and her shadow glided along them azure against their whiteness.

Eleven struck melodiously from the Reformed Church over on Beechwood Drive. The echo lingered in the still air, filling her with a sense of peace and well-being.

Bill’s quiet voice, seeming to come from just over her shoulder, said: “Hello. I thought that was you down there, Patrice.”

She turned, startled, and could not locate him for a minute. Then she saw him perched on the sill of the open window of his room.

“Mind if I come down and join you?”

“I’m going in now,” she said hastily, but he’d already disappeared.

He stepped down from the back porch and the moonlight silted over his head and shoulders like talcum as he came toward her. She turned In company with him, and they walked slowly on together side by side.

Bill didn’t say anything. Just walked beside her with one hand slung in his pocket. He kept looking down, as though the sight of the path fascinated him. He stopped once briefly to light a cigarette.

“I hate to tear myself away, it’s so lovely down here,” she said at last.

“I don’t give a hang about gardens,” he answered almost gruffly. “Nor walking in them. Nor the flowers in them. You know why I came down here. Do I have to tell you?”

He flung his cigarette down violently, backhand, with the same gesture he’d use if something angered him.

Suddenly she was acutely frightened. She’d stopped short.

“No, wait, Bill. Bill, wait— Don’t.”

“Don’t what? I haven’t said anything yet. But you know already, don’t you? I’m sorry, Patrice. I have to tell you. You have to listen.”

She was holding out her hand protestingly toward him, as if trying to ward off something. She took a backward step away, broke their proximity.

“I don’t like it,” he said rebelliously. “I was never bothered by girls before. I never even had the childish crushes all boys do. I guess that was just my way to be. But this is it, Patrice. This is it now, all right.”

“No, wait— Not now. Not yet. This isn’t the time—”

“This is the time, and this is the night, and this is the place. There’ll never be another night like this, not if we both live to be a hundred. Patrice, I love you, and I want you to marry me.”

“Bill!” she pleaded, terrified.

“Patrice,” he asked forlornly, “what’s so terrible about my loving you? I’m no lover. I can’t say it right, but—”

“Bill, please.”

“Patrice, I see you every day and—” He flung his arms apart helplessly. “I didn’t ask to fall in love. But I think it’s something good. I think it’s something that should be.”

She bowed her head for a moment as if in distress. “Why did you have to tell me? Why couldn’t you have given me more time? Please, give me more time. Just a few months—”

“I can’t take back what I’ve already said, Patrice,” he answered ruefully. “How can I now? How could I, even if I hadn’t spoken? Is it Hugh, is it still Hugh?”

“I’ve never been in love bef—” she started to say, penitently.

He looked at her strangely.

I’ve said too much, flashed through her mind. Too much, or not enough.

“I’m going in now.” The shadow of the porch dropped between them like an indigo curtain.

He didn’t try to follow. He stood there where she’d left him.

“You’re afraid I’ll kiss you.”

“No, I’m afraid I’ll want you to.”

In the mornings the world was sweet just to look at from her window. To wake up in her own room, to find her little son awake before her, and giving her that special smile of delight. To carry him over to the window and hold the curtain back, and look out at the world. Show him the world she’d found for him.

Then to dress herself and the baby and to go downstairs to the pleasant breakfast room, Mother Hazzard always there. The mirror-like reflections in the coffee-percolator showing squat, pudgy images sealed around the table. The baby loved that. He was the center of attraction in his high chair.

Even mail, a letter of her own, waiting for her at her place. She felt a pleased little sense of completion at sight of it.

“Mrs. Patrice Hazzard,” and the address. Once that name had frightened her. It didn’t now. In a little while she would no longer even remember that there had been another name, once, long ago.

“Now Hugh, not so fast, finish what you have first.”

She opened the envelope and for a moment she thought there must have been a mistake. Just blank paper. Then she saw three small words, almost buried in the fold of the papers.

“Who are you?”

In the mornings now the world was bitter-sweet to look upon from the window. To wake up in a room that wasn’t rightfully hers. That she knew — and she knew somebody else knew — she had no right to be in. The early sunlight was pale and bleak upon the ground. A man sprinkling the lawn a few doors down was a stranger: a stranger who might be an enemy. He looked up, and she hurriedly shrank back from the window lest he see her.

Was he the one? Was he?

The strain was beginning to tell on her. Her resistance was wearing thin. She was nearing a danger-point of some sort, she knew. She couldn’t stand much more of it. “Don’t let there be another letter. Don’t.”

Downstairs, Mother Hazzard eyed her solicitously. “Didn’t you have a good night’ dear? You look a little peaked.”

But she only had eyes for one thing.

She’d already seen them, waiting for her. Two white oblongs. The one on top was a department-store brochure, sealed in an envelope. The letterhead identified it, made it harmless. But there was something else under it.

She pulled the second letter out, took in everything about it with a sort of hypnotic fascination. It had been posted late; past twelve last night. Where in this city? By whom? She could see a furtive, ghostly hand in the dark reaching out to post the letter, then withdrawing again into the shadows. But she couldn’t see a body, couldn’t see a face.

Open it while you have the courage.

The paper made a shredding sound, her fingers were so hasty and erratic.

One more word this time.

“Where are you from?”

She stood up suddenly, stumbling a little over her chair.

“Patrice, aren’t you going to have your coffee?”

“I’ll be right back,” she called back from the stairs. “I forgot something.”

She got into her room and closed the door after her. Then she gave way. Not to tears — to anger, helpless anger.

She flailed upraised fists against the air. Her voice was low and choking, distracted, tormented beyond sanity. “Who are you yourself? Who? Why don’t you come out? Why don’t you come out in the open, where I can see you? Why don’t you come out and give me a chance to fight back?”

Then she stopped, wilted, all emotion spent. A sudden, new determination had come in the wake of anger. There was only one way, only one way to rob the attacks of all power to harm—

She was running down the stairs now, fast, headlong, holding the sheet of paper in her hand. She flared into the dining-room, her mouth a thin line of determination.

She moved swiftly around the table, stopped short at Mother Hazzard’s elbow. The accusing paper landed in front of her, right-side down.

“I want to show you this,” she said brittlely. “I want you to see this.”

“Just a moment, dear. Let me find my glasses.” Mother Hazzard probed here and there among the breakfast things. “I know I had them with me before, when I was reading the paper with Father.” She glanced over at the buffet on the opposite side of her.

She stood there waiting beside the older woman. She looked at Hughie. He smiled his gum-revealing smile at her. He flapped his spoon at her, entire fist folded possessively around it. Home. Peace.

She reached over to her own place across the table, picked up the department-store circular, put it in the place of the anonymous letter.

“Here they are, in my pocket. Right on me the whole time.” Mother Hazzard adjusted them, looked down at the table. “Now what was it, dear?”

Patrice stripped the brochure from its jacket and pointed. “This dressmaker’s pattern here. Isn’t it interesting?” She clenched her hand, down at her side.

Chapter Six

Quietly and deftly she moved about the dimly-lighted room, packing her clothes. Hugh lay sleeping in his crib, and the clock said almost one. There’d been movement and voices in the halls until about 11:30 and she hadn’t dared move any sooner.

She put on the hat and coat she’d left in readiness across the foot of the bed. She picked up her handbag, fumbled in its contents until she found a key, the key to this house, and put it down on the dresser. Then she brought out a small change-purse and shook it. A much-folded cluster of currency fell out, and a sprinkling of coins. She swept them all together, and then left them there on top of the dresser, all but a five-dollar bill.

She went over to the crib and kissed the child lightly. “I’ll be back for you in a minute,” she whispered. “I have to take the bag down first. I can’t manage you both on those stairs, I’m afraid.”

The clock said a little after one now.

She softly opened the door, and carried the valise outside with her. She started down the stairs valise in hand, with infinite caution.

Suddenly she stopped, and allowed the bag to come to rest on the step beside her. Father Hazzard and Dr. Parker were standing in the lower hall by the front door. She hadn’t heard them until now, for they hadn’t been saying anything. They broke the silence now, as she stood there unseen, above the bend of the stairs.

“Well, good night, Donald,” the doctor said, and she saw him put his hand to Father Hazzard’s shoulder as though in consolation, then let it fall heavily away again. “Get some sleep. She’ll be all right.” He opened the door, then he added: “But no excitement, no stress of any kind from now on, you understand that, Donald? That’ll be your job, to keep all that away from her. Can I count on you?”

“You can count on me,” Father Hazzard said forlornly.

The door closed, and he turned away and started up the stairs, to where she stood riveted. She moved down several steps around the turn to meet him, leaving the valise behind her, with her hat and coat hastily flung over it.

He looked up and he saw her, without much surprise, without much of anything except a sort of stony sadness. “Oh, it’s you, Patrice,” he said dully. “Did you hear him? Did you hear what he just said?”

“Who is it — Mother?”

“She’s had several spells over the past few years. A bad one when — when Hugh died. But she always has been touchy about them. Won’t admit they’re serious, or let anyone know she’s ill. Well, tonight she had another soon after we retired. The doctor’s been here for over an hour and a half. It was touch and go, for a few minutes at first—”

“But Father! Why didn’t you tell me?”

He sat down heavily on the steps. She sat down beside him.

“Why should I bother you, dear? I know what to do, and it was a matter for a doctor’s care anyway. This isn’t anything new. The spells have come before. And her heart’s always been weak. Way back before the boys were born—”

“I never knew. Why didn’t you tell me? Is it getting worse?”

“She’s sensitive about it, and won’t talk about it. But, of course, things like that don’t improve as you get on in years,” he said gently.

She put her head against his shoulder, in silent sympathy.

He patted her hand consolingly. “She’ll be all right. We’ll see that she is between us, won’t we?”

She shivered a little, and could find no words to answer.

“It’s just that we’ve got to cushion her against all shocks and upsets,” he said. “You and the young fellow, you’re about the best medicine there is for her. Just having you around—”

And if in the morning she had asked for Patrice, asked for her grandchild, he would have had to tell her they had deserted her. If she’d come out of her room five minutes later, she might have been responsible for bringing death into this house. A poor repayment for all the love that had been lavished on her. She might have killed the only mother she’d ever known!

He misunderstood her abstraction, and patted her chin comfortingly. “Now don’t take it like that; she wouldn’t want you to, you know. And Pat, don’t let her know you’ve found out about her illness. Let her keep on thinking it’s her secret and mine. I know she’ll be happier that way.”

She sighed deeply. It was a sigh of decision, of capitulation to the inevitable. She turned and kissed him on the cheek. Then she stood up.

“I’m going up,” she said quietly. “You forgot to put out the hall light, Dad.”

He retraced his steps momentarily. She picked up the valise, the coat, the hat, and quietly re-opened the door of her own room.

She closed the door softly behind her, and in the darkness on the other side she stood still a minute. A silent, choking prayer welled up in her.

“Give me strength, for there’s no running away. I see that now. The battle must be fought out here where I stand, and I dare not even cry out.”

The anonymous notes stopped suddenly. The days became a week, the week became a month. The month lengthened toward two. And no more plain white envelopes came. It was as though the battle had been broken off, held in abeyance, at the whim of the crafty, shadowy adversary.

She clutched at clues — any little bits of news that would give her comprehension — and they all failed her.

Mother Hazzard said; “Edna Harding got back today. She’s been visiting their folks in Philadelphia the past several weeks.”

But no more came.

Bill remarked: “I ran into Tom Bryant today. He tells me his older sister Marilyn’s been laid up with pleurisy. She only got out of bed for the first time today.”

“I thought I hadn’t seen her.”

But no more came. Things like that didn’t just happen and then stop. They either never began at all, or else they ran on to their shattering, destructive conclusion.

But in spite of that, security crept back a little, tentatively, reassuring — incomplete, but there.

In the mornings the world was bitter-sweet to look at, seeming to hold its breath, waiting to see—

Mother Hazzard knocked on her door just as she’d finished tucking Hugh in. The filching of a last grandmotherly kiss just before the light went out was a nightly ritual. Tonight, however, she seemed to want to talk to Patrice herself. And she didn’t know how to go about it.

She lingered on after she’d kissed the little boy and the side of the crib had been lifted into place. There was a moment’s awkwardness.

“Patrice.”

“Yes, Mother?”

Suddenly she’d blurted it out. “Bill wants to take you to the country club dance with him tonight. He’s waiting down there to find out if you’ll go.”

Patrice was so completely surprised she didn’t answer for a moment, just stood there looking at her.

“He told me to come up and ask you.” Then she rushed on, “They have one about once each month, you know, and he’s going himself. He usually does, and— Why don’t you get dressed and go with him?” she ended on a coaxing note.

“But I...  I—” Patrice stammered.

“Patrice, you must begin to go out sooner or later. It isn’t good for you not to be with young people more often. You haven’t been looking as well as you might lately. We’re a little worried about you. Hugh wasn’t the kind— He’d be the last one to want you to become a recluse. You do what Mother says, dear.” It was an order. Or as close to an order as Mother Hazzard could summon.

She had opened Patrice’s closet-door, meanwhile, and was peering helpfully inside. “How about this?” She took down a flowered linen with a gay contrasting jacket, and held it up appraisingly. “It’ll do nicely.” The dress landed on the bed. “They’re not very formal there. Bill will buy you an orchid or gardenia on the way, that will dress it up enough. You just go and get the feel of the place tonight. You’ll get back in the swing of things little by little. I’ll tell Bill you’re getting ready.”

He was standing waiting for her just inside the door when she came downstairs.

“Am I all right?” she asked.

He was suddenly shy with her. “Gee, I...  I didn’t know how you could look in the evening,” he said haltingly.

For the first few moments of the drive, there was a sort of tenseness between them, almost as though they’d met tonight for the first time. He turned on the radio in the car. Dance music rippled back into their faces. “To get you into the mood,” he said, a little self-consciously.

He stopped, and got out, and came back with a corsage of gardenias. “Somehow these seemed to suit you better than an orchid,” he said with a grin. “Mother always did think orchids wow the girls... ”

“They’re beautiful Bill. Here, pin them on for me.”

Abruptly, he balked at that — all but shied away. “Oh no, that you do yourself,” he said. “I might stab myself,” he added lamely as an afterthought. The pause was a little too long.

“Why, you great big coward.”

His hands were a trifle unsteady, she noticed, when he first put them back to the wheel. Then they quieted.

They drove the rest of the way through open country, the stars only finger-tip distance above them.

“I’ve never seen so many!” she marveled.

“Maybe you haven’t been looking up enough,” he said gently.

Toward the end, just before they got there, a peculiar sort of tenderness seemed to overcome him for a minute. He slowed the car a little, and turned his head toward her.

“I want you to be happy tonight, Patrice,” he said earnestly. “I want you to be very happy.”

“I’ll try, Bill,” Patrice said. “And I know I will be.”

And she was happy. For dance after dance. She always remembered that afterward. She was dancing with Bill. For that matter she’d been dancing with him steadily ever since they’d arrived. She wasn’t watching, she wasn’t looking around her. She wasn’t thinking of anything but the two of them.

Smiling dreamily, she danced. Her thoughts were like a little brook running swiftly but smoothly over harmless pebbles, keeping time with the tinkling music.

I like dancing with him. He dances well, you don’t have to keep thinking about your feet. He’s turned his face toward me and is looking down at me. I know it. Well, I’ll look up at him, and then he’ll smile at me. But I won’t smile back at him. Watch. There, I knew that was coming. I will not smile back. Oh, well, what if I did? Why shouldn’t I smile at him, anyway? That’s the way I feel about him — smilingly fond.

A hand touched Bill’s shoulder from behind. She could see the fingers slanted downward for a second, without seeing the person they belonged to.

A voice said, “May I cut in on this one?”

And suddenly they’d stopped. Bill’s arms left her. A shuffling motion took place, Bill stepped aside, and there was someone else there in his place. Someone like a bad dream out of the past. It was like a double exposure, where one person dissolves into another.

Their eyes met, hers and the new pair. They had been waiting for hers, and hers had foolishly run into them. They couldn’t move again after that.

The rest was sheer horror. Horror such as she’d never known.

“Steve Georgesson’s the name,” he murmured unobtrusively to Bill. His lips hardly seemed to stir at all. His eyes didn’t leave hers.

Bill completed the ghastly parody of an introduction. “Mrs. Hazzard, Mr. Georgesson.”

“How do you do?” he said to her.

She felt his arms close about her, her face sank into the concealing shadow of his shoulder. Bill’s face faded away in the background.

“We’ve met before, haven’t we?”

Keep me from fainting, she prayed.

“Who’d he say you were?” he asked sardonically.

“Don’t—” she whimpered. “Don’t.”

The music stopped. They stopped.

His arm released her, but his hand stayed tight about her wrist, holding her there beside him for a moment.

He said, “There’s a veranda outside. Over there, out that way. I’ll go out there and wait for you, and we can — talk.”

She hardly knew what she was saying. “I can’t— Don’t ask me to.” Her neck wouldn’t hold firm; her head kept trying to lob over limply.

“I think we can. We were once married to one another, remember? Perfectly proper for an ex-husband to talk over old times with his ex-wife.”

Bill was coming back toward them from the sidelines.

“I’ll be out there where I said. Don’t keep me waiting too long, or— I’ll simply have to come in and look you up again.” His face didn’t change. His voice didn’t change. “Thanks for the dance,” he said, as Bill arrived.

“Are you all right?” asked Bill. “You look pale.”

“It’s the lights. I’m going in to powder. You go and dance with someone else.”

He grinned at her. “I don’t want to dance with someone else.”

“Then you go and — and come back for me. The one after.”

“The one after.”

She watched him head for the bar. Then she turned and went the other way.

She walked slowly over to the doors leading outside onto the veranda, and stood in one of them, looking out into the blueness of the night. Wicker chairs, in groups of twos and threes, circled small tables.

The red sequin of a cigarette-tip rose high in a beckoning motion from far down at the end of the porch.

She walked slowly down that way and came to a halt before him. He perched sidewise on the ballustrade, in insolent informality. He repeated what he’d said before. “Who’d he say you were? I didn’t quite get the name.”

The stars were moving. They were making peculiar eddying swirls like blurred pinwheels all over the sky.

“You deserted me,” she said with leashed fury. “You divorced me without my knowledge, left me with only five dollars and a railroad ticket. Now what do you want?”

“What do I want? I don’t want anything. I’m a little confused, that’s all. I’d like to be straightened out. The man introduced you under a mistaken name in there.”

“What do you want? What are you doing out here?”

“Well, for that matter,” he said with insolent urbanity. “What are you doing down here?”

She repeated it a third time. “What do you want?”

“Can’t a man show interest in his ex-wife and child? There’s no way of making children ‘ex,’ you know.”

“You’re either insane or—”

“You know that isn’t so. You wish it were,” he said brutally. “That child is ours.”

She turned on her heel. His hand found her wrist again, flicked around it like a whip. Cutting just as deeply.

“Don’t go inside yet. We haven’t finished.”

She stopped, her back to him now. “I think we have.”

“The decision is mine.”

He let go of her, but she stayed there where she was.

“You still haven’t cleared things up,” he purred. “I’m as mixed-up as ever. This Hugh Hazzard married...  er...  let’s say you, his wife, in Paris, two years ago last June fifteenth. I went to considerable expense and trouble to have the exact date on the records there verified. But two years ago last June fifteenth you and I were honeymooning in our little furnished room in New York. I have the receipted rent-bills to prove it. How could you have been in two such far-apart places at once?” He sighed philosophically. “Somebody has his dates mixed. Either he had. Or I have.” And then very slowly, “Or you have,”

She winced unavoidably at that. Slowly her head came around; she moved as though hypnotized.

“It was you who’s been sending those—?”

He nodded with mock affability, as if on being complimented on something praiseworthy. “I thought it would be kinder to break it to you gently.”

She drew in her breath with an icy shudder of repugnance.

“I first happened on your name among the train-casualties, when I was up in New York,” he said. He paused. “I went there and identified a body as yours, you know,” he went on matter-of-factly. “You have that much to thank me for, at any rate.”

He puffed thoughtfully on his cigarette.

“Then I heard one thing and another, and put two and two together. I went back for awhile first — got the rent-receipts together and one thing and another — and then finally I came on the rest of the way out here, out of curiosity. I became quite confused,” he said ironically, “when I learned the rest of the story.”

He waited. She didn’t say anything. He seemed to take pity on her finally. “I know,” he said indulgently, “this isn’t the time nor place to — talk over old times. This is a party, and you’re anxious to get back and enjoy it.”

She shivered,

“Is there anywhere I can reach you?”

He took out a notebook, clicked a lighter. She mistakenly thought he was waiting to write as she dictated. Her lips remained frozen.

“Seneca 382,” he read from the notebook. He put it away again. His hand made a lazy curve between them. In the stricken silence that followed he suggested after awhile, casually: “Lean up against that chair so you won’t fall. You don’t seem very steady on your feet, and I don’t want to have to carry you inside in front of all those people.”

The rose-amber haze in the open doorway down at the center of the terrace was blotted out for a moment, and Bill was standing there looking for her.

“Patrice, this is our dance,” he said.

Georgesson rose for a second to bow.

She wavered toward Bill, the dim light of the terrace covering her uncertainty of step. She went inside with him and his arms took charge of her from that point on, so that she no longer had to be on her own.

“You were both standing there like statues,” he said. “He can’t be very good company.”

She lurched against him in the tendril-like twists of the rumba; her head drooped to rest on his shoulder.

“He isn’t,” were the only words she could find.

And she knew, inevitably and finally, that peace for her had ended.

The first phone call came the following evening, with remorseless precision.

He’d timed it well. He couldn’t have timed it better if he’d been able to look through the walls of the house and watch their movements on the inside. The two men were out. She’d just finished putting Hugh to sleep. She and Mother Hazzard were both upstairs in their own rooms. Which meant that she was the logical one to go down to answer.

She knew at the first ring who it was, what it was. She knew too, that she’d been expecting this call all day, that she’d known it was coming, it was surely coming.

Chapter Seven

She stood there rooted, unable to move. Maybe the ringing would stop if she didn’t go near the phone, maybe he would tire. But then it would ring again some other time.

Mother Hazzard opened the door of her room and looked out.

Patrice had swiftly opened her own door, was at the head of the stairs, before she’d fully emerged.

“I’ll go, dear, if you’re busy.”

“No, never mind, Mother, I’ll see who it is.”

She knew his voice right away. Fear quickens the senses.

“Is this the younger Mrs. Hazzard? Is this Patrice Hazzard?”

“This is she.”

“I suppose you know this is Steve.” She didn’t answer.

“Are you where you can be heard?”

“I’m not in the habit of answering questions like that. I’ll hang up the receiver.”

“Don’t do that, Patrice,” he said calmly. “I’ll ring back again. That’ll make it worse. They’ll begin wondering who it is keeps on calling so repeatedly. Or, eventually, someone else will answer — you can’t stay there by the phone all evening — and I’ll give my name if I have to and ask for you.” He waited a minute for that to sink in. “Don’t you see that it’s much better for you this way, Patrice?”

She sighed in suppressed fury. “We can’t talk very much over the phone. I think it’s better not to, anyway. I’m talking from McClellan’s Drugstore, a few blocks from you. My car’s just around the corner from there, where it can’t be seen. On the left side of Pomeroy Street, just down from the crossing. Can you walk down that far for five or ten minutes? I won’t keep you long.”

She tried to match the brittle formality of his voice with her own. “I most certainly cannot.”

“Of course you can. You need cod-liver oil capsules for your baby, from McClellan’s. Or you feel like having a soda. I’ve seen you stop in there more than once, in the evening.”

He waited.

“Shall I call back? Would you rather think it over awhile?”

He waited again.

“Don’t do that,” she said reluctantly, at last.

She could tell he understood. She hung up and went upstairs.

Mother Hazzard didn’t ask her who had called. They weren’t inquisitive that way, in this house.

She came out of her room again in about ten minutes. Mother Hazzard’s door was closed. She could have gone on down the stairs unquestioned. She couldn’t do it.

She went over and knocked lightly.

“Mother, I’m going to take a walk down to the drugstore. Hughie’s out of his talc. And I’d like a breath of air. I’ll be back in five minutes.”

“Go ahead, dear. I’ll say good night to you now, in case I’m asleep by the time you get back.”

She rested her outstretched hand helplessly against the door for a minute. She felt like saying. Don’t let me go. Keep me here.

She turned away and went down the stairs. It was her own battle, and no proxies were allowed.

She stopped beside the car, on darkened Pomeroy Street.

“Sit in here, Patrice,” he said amiably. He unlatched the door for her, from where he sat, and even patted the leather cushion.

She settled herself on the far side of the seat. Her eyes snapped refusal of the cigarette he proffered.

“We can be seen.”

“Turn this way, toward me. No one’ll notice you. Keep your back to the street.”

“This can’t go on. Now once and for all, for the first time and the last, what is it you want of me? What?”

“Look, Patrice, there doesn’t have to be anything unpleasant about this. You seem to be building it up to yourself that way, in your own mind. It’s all in the way you look at it. I don’t see that there has to be any change in the way things were going along — before last night. You were the only one who knew before. Now you and I are the only ones who know. It ends there. That is, if you want it to.”

“You didn’t bring me out here to tell me that.”

He went off at a tangent. Or what seemed to be a tangent. “Every once in awhile I find myself in difficulties, every now and then I get into a tight squeeze. Little card games with the boys. This and that. You remember. You know how it is.” He laughed deprecatingly. “It’s been going on for years. It’s nothing new. But I was wondering if you’d care to do me a favor — this time.”

“You’re asking me for money.”

She turned her face away.

“I didn’t think there were people like you outside of — outside of penitentiaries.”

He laughed. “You’re in unusual circumstances. That attracts ‘people like me.’ ”

“Suppose I go to them of my own accord right now and tell them of this conversation we’ve just been having? My brother-in-law would go looking for you and beat you within an inch of your life.”

“We’ll let the relationship stand unchallenged. I wonder why women put such undue faith in a beating? Maybe because they’re not used to violence themselves. A beating doesn’t mean much to a man. Half an hour after it’s over, he’s as good as he was before.”

“You should know,” she murmured.

He tapped a finger to the tips of three others. “There are three alternatives. You go to them and tell them. Or I go to them and tell them. Or we remain in status quo. By which I mean, you do me a favor and then we drop the whole thing. But there isn’t any fourth alternative.”

He was too cold about the whole thing, that was the dangerous feature. No heat, no impulse, no emotion to cloud the issue. Everything planned, plotted, graphed, charted. Every step. Even the notes. She knew their purpose now. Not poison-pen letters at all. They had been important to the long-term scheme of the thing. Psychological warfare, nerve warfare, breaking her down ahead of time, toppling her resistance before the main attack had even been made.

“There’s no villain in this. Let’s get rid of the Victorian trappings. It’s just a business transaction. It’s no different from taking out insurance, really.” He turned to her with an assumption of candor that was almost charming for a moment. “Don’t you want to be practical about it?”

“I suppose so. I suppose I should meet you on your own ground.” She didn’t try to project her contempt: it would have failed to reach him.

“If you get rid of these stuffy fetishes of virtue and villainy, of black and white, the whole thing becomes so simple it’s not even worth the quarter of an hour we’re devoting to it now.”

“I have no money of my own, Steve.” Capitulation. Submission.

“They’re one of the wealthiest families in town; that’s common knowledge. Why be technical about it? Get them to open an account for you. You’re not a child.”

“I couldn’t ask them outright to do such a—”

“You don’t ask. There are ways. You’re a woman, aren’t you? It’s easy enough. A woman knows how to go about those things—”

“I’d like to go now,” she said, reaching blindly for the doorhandle.

“Do we understand one another?” He opened it for her. “I’ll give you another ring after awhile,” He paused a moment. The threat was so impalpable there was not even a change of inflection in the lazy drawl. “Don’t neglect it, Patrice.”

She got out. The crack of the door was the slap in the face she would have loved to administer.

“Good night, Patrice,” he drawled after her amiably.

“It was perfectly plain,” she was saying animatedly. “It had a belt of the same material, and then a row of buttons down to about here.”

She was purposely addressing herself to Mother Hazzard, to the exclusion of the two men members of the family. Well, the topic in itself was excuse enough for that.

“For heaven’s sake, why didn’t you take it?”

“I couldn’t do that,” she said reluctantly. She stopped a moment, then added: “Not right — then and there.”

They must have thought the expression on her face was wistful disappointment. It wasn’t. It was self-disgust. How defenseless those who love you are against you, she thought bitterly.

Father Hazzard cut into the conversation. “Why didn’t you just charge it up and have it sent?”

She let her eyes drop. “I wouldn’t have wanted to do that.”

“Nonsense—” He stopped suddenly. Almost as though someone had trodden briefly on his foot under the table.

“I think I hear Hugh crying,” she said, and flung down her napkin and ran out to the stairs to listen.

But in the act of listening upwards, she couldn’t avoid overhearing Mother Hazzard’s guarded voice.

“Donald Hazzard, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Do you men have to be told everything? Haven’t you got a grain of tact in your heads?”

In the morning Father Hazzard lingered on at the breakfast table, instead of leaving early with Bill. He sat quietly reading his newspaper while she finished her coffee. There was just a touch of secretive self-satisfaction in his attitude, she thought.

He rose when she did. “Get your hat and coat, Pat. I want you to come with me in the car. This young lady and I have business downtown,” he announced to Mother Hazzard. The latter tried, not altogether successfully, to look blankly bewildered.

“But what about the baby’s feeding?” Patrice protested.

“You’ll be back in time for that. I’m just borrowing you.”

She got in the car next to him a moment later and they started off.

“Did poor Bill have to walk to the office this morning?” she asked.

“Poor Bill indeed!” he scoffed. “Do him good, the big lug. If I had those long legs of his, I’d walk every morning.”

“Where are you taking me?”

“Now just never you mind. No questions. Just wait’ll we get there, and you’ll see.”

They stopped in front of the bank. He motioned her out and led her inside with him.

They went toward a door marked “Manager, Private.” A pleasant-faced, slightly stout male wearing horn-rimmed spectacles was waiting to greet them.

“Come in and meet my old friend Harve Wheelock,” Father Hazzard said to her.

They seated themselves in comfortable leather chairs in the private office, and the two men lit cigars.

“Harve, I’ve got a new customer for you. This is my boy Hugh’s wife.” He off-handedly palmed an oblong of light-blue paper onto the desk, left it there facedown.

“Sign here, honey,” the manager said to her, reversing his pen.

Forger, she thought scathingly. She handed the form back, her eyes downcast. The strip of light-blue was clipped to it and it was sent out. A midget black book came back in its stead.

“Here you are, honey.” The manager tendered it to her across his desk.

She opened it and looked at it, unnoticed, while the two men concluded their friendly chatting. At the top it said “Mrs. Hugh Hazzard.” And there was just one entry, under today’s date.

Five thousand dollars.

Chapter Eight

His arm was draped negligently atop the car door, elbow out. The door fell open. He made way for her by shifting leisurely over on the seat, without offering to rise. His indolent ignoring of manners was more insulting than any overt rudeness would have been.

“I’m sorry I had to call. I thought you’d forgotten about our talk. It’s been more than a week now.”

“Forgotten?” she said. “I wish it were that easy.”

“I see you’ve become a depositor of the Standard Trust since our last meeting.”

She shot him an involuntary look of shock, without answering.

“Five thousand dollars.”

She drew a quick breath.

“If you get around enough in the right circles you find out interesting things.” He smiled. “Well?”

“I haven’t any money with me. I haven’t used the account yet. I’ll have to cash a check in the morning and—”

“They give a checkbook with each account, don’t they? And you have that with you, most likely—”

She gave him a look of unfeigned surprise.

“I have a fountain pen right here in my pocket. I’ll turn on the dashboard lights a minute. Let’s get it over and done with. The quickest way’s the best. I’ll tell you what to write. To Stephen Georgesson. Not to Cash or Bearer. Five hundred.”

“Five hundred?” she repeated.

“That’s academic,” he replied.

She didn’t understand what he meant, and was incautious to let him go on past that point without stopping him.

“That’s all. And then your signature. The date, if you want.”

She stopped short. “I can’t do this.”

“I’m sorry, you’ll have to. I don’t want it any other way. I won’t accept cash.”

“But this passes through the bank with both our names on it, mine as payer, yours as payee.”

“There’s such a flood of checks passing through the bank every month, it’s not even likely to be noticed. It could be a debt of Hugh’s, you know, that you’re settling up for him.”

“Why are you so anxious to have a check?” she asked irresolutely.

A crooked smile looped one corner of his mouth. “Why should you object, if I don’t? It’s to your advantage, isn’t it? I’m playing right into your hands. It comes back into your possession after it clears the bank. After that you’re holding tangible evidence of this — of blackmail — against me if you should ever care to prosecute, which is something you haven’t got so far. Remember, up to this point, it’s just your word against mine. I can deny this whole thing happened. Once this check goes through, you have proof.”

He said, a little more tartly than he’d yet spoken to her, “Shall we get through? You’re anxious to get back. And I’m anxious to pull out of here.”

She handed him the completed check and pen.

He was smiling again now. He waited until she’d stepped out and he’d turned on the ignition. He said above the low throb of the motor, “Your thinking isn’t very clear, nor very quick, is it? This check is evidence against me, that you’re holding, if it clears the bank and returns to you. But if it doesn’t — if it’s kept out, and never comes up for payment at all — then it’s evidence against you, that I’m holding.”

The car glided off and left her standing behind looking after it with shattered consternation.

It seemed months, years of agony before their next meeting. Actually it was only three weeks.

She all but ran toward the car along the night-shaded street, as if fearful it might suddenly glide into motion and escape her. She clung to the top of the door with both hands when she’d reached it, as if for support.

“I can’t stand this! What are you trying to do to me?”

He was smugly facetious. His brows went up. “Do? I haven’t done anything to you. I haven’t seen you in the last three weeks.”

“The check wasn’t debited.”

“Oh, you’ve had your bank statement. That’s right, yesterday was the first of the month I imagine you’ve had a bad twenty-four hours. I must have overlooked it—”

“No,” she said fiercely, “you’re not the kind who would overlook anything like that, you vicious leech! Haven’t you done enough to me? What are you trying to do, drive me completely out of my mind?”

His manner changed abruptly, tightened. “Get in,” he said crisply. “I want to talk to you. I’ll drive you around for a quarter of an hour or so.”

“I can’t ride with you. How can you ask me to do that?”

“We can’t just stand still in this one place, talking it over. That’s far worse. We’ve done that twice already. We can circle the lake drive once or twice, there’s no one on it at this hour and no stops. Turn your collar up across your mouth.”

“Why are you holding the check? What are you meaning to do?”

“Wait until we get there,” he said. Then when they had, he answered her, coldly, dispassionately, as though there had been no interruption.

“I’m not interested in five hundred dollars.”

She was beginning to lose her head. Her inability to fathom his motives was kindling her to panic. “Give the check back to me, then, and I’ll give you more. I’ll give you a thousand. Only, give it back to me.”

“I don’t want to be given more. I don’t want to be given any amount. Don’t you understand? I want the money to belong to me, in my own right.”

Her face was suddenly stricken white. “I don’t understand. What are you trying to say to me?”

“I think you’re beginning to get it, by the look on your face.” He fumbled in his pocket, took out something. An envelope, already sealed and stamped for mailing. “You asked me where the check was. It’s in here. Here, read the address. No, don’t take it out of my hand. Just read it from where you are.”

“Mr. Donald Hazzard Hazzard and Loring Empire Building Caulfield”

“No—” She couldn’t articulate, could only shake her head convulsively.

“I’m mailing it to him at his office, where you can’t intercept it.” He returned it to his pocket. “The last mail collection, here in Caulfield, is at nine each night. You may not know that, but I’ve been making a study of those things recently. There’s a mailbox on Pomeroy Street, just a few feet from where I’ve been parking the last few times I’ve met you. It’s dark and inconspicuous around there, and I’ll use that one. It takes the carrier until nine-fifteen to reach it, however. I’ve timed him several nights in a row and taken the average.”

He silenced her with his hand, went on: “Now, if you reach there before the carrier does, this envelope stays out of the chute. If you’re not there yet when he arrives, I drop it in. You have a day’s grace, until nine-fifteen tomorrow night.”

“But what do you want me to be there for—? You said you didn’t want more—”

“We’re going to take a ride out to Hastings — that’s the next town over the state line. I’m taking you to a justice of the peace there, and he’s going to make us man and wife all over again.”

He slowed the car as her head lurched back against the top of the seat for a moment.

“I didn’t think they swooned any more—” he began. Then as he saw her straighten again with an effort he added: “Oh, I see they don’t. They just get a little dizzy, is that it?”

“Why are you doing this to me?” she asked in a smothered voice.

“There are several good reasons. It would be a good deal safer, from my point of view, than the basis we’ve been going on so far. There’s no chance of anything backfiring. A wife, the law books say, cannot testify against her husband. That means that any lawyer worth his fee can whisk you off the stand before you can so much as open your mouth. Then there are more practical considerations. The old couple aren’t going to be around forever, you know. The old lady’s life is hanging by a thread. And the old man won’t last any time without her. Old Faithful, I know the type. When they go, you and Bill are due to inherit a sockful of money. Don’t look so horrified: it stands to reason they’d take care of their dead son’s wife and their only grandson. I can wait a year until that happens, or even two or three. The law gives a husband one-third of his wife’s property. Half of — I may be underestimating, but roughly I’d say four hundred thousand, that’s two hundred thousand. And then a third of that again— Don’t cover your ears like that, Patrice. You look like someone out of a Marie Corelli novel.”

He braked the car. “You can get out here, Patrice. This is close enough.” And then he chuckled a little, watching her flounder to the pavement. “Are you sure you’re able to walk? I wouldn’t want to have them think I’d plied you with—”

The last thing he said was, “Make sure your clock isn’t slow, Patrice. Because the United States mail is always on time.”

It seemed hours they’d been driving like this, in silence yet acutely aware of one another. They passed a self-lighted white sign, placed so that it could be read as you came up to it. It said “Welcome to Hastings.”

“That’s across the state line,” he remarked. “Travel broadens one, they say.”

He turned up one of Hastings’ side-streets and stopped in front of a dimly lit house.

“Get out,” he said.

She didn’t move; she didn’t answer.

“We had this all out before, back at Caulfield. Move. Say something, will you?”

“What do you want me to say?”

He gave the door an impatient slap-to again, as if in momentary reprieve. “Get yourself together. I’ll go over and let them know we’re here.”

She watched him go, in a sort of stupor, as though this were happening to someone else.

She wondered. How does he know I won’t suddenly start the car and drive off? She answered that herself. He knows I won’t. He knows it’s too late for that. As I know it. The time for stopping, for drawing back, for dashing off, that was long ago. Long before tonight. That was in the compartment on the train coming here, when the wheels tried to warn me. That was when the first note came. That was when the first phone call came, the first walk down to the drugstore. I am as safely held fast here as though I were manacled to him.

She could hear their voices now. A woman saying, “No, not at all. You made very good time. Come right in.”

Steve was at the car door now, standing there.

“Come on, Patrice,” he said casually.

“I can’t do it. Steve, don’t ask me to do this.”

“Get out.”

“Steve, I’ve never pleaded with you before. In all these months, I’ve taken it without whimpering. Steve, if there’s anything human in you that I can appeal to—”

“I’m only too human. That’s why I like money as much as I do. But your wires are crossed. It’s my very humanness that makes your appeal useless. Come on, Patrice. You’re wasting time.”

She cowered away edgewise along the seat. He drummed his fingers on the top of the door and laughed a little.

“Why this horror of marriage? Let me get to the bottom of your aversion. Maybe I can reassure you. There is no personal appeal involved. You haven’t any charms for me. That went long ago. I’m dumping you on the doorstep of your ever-loving family just as soon as we get back to Caulfield. Our second marriage is going to be a paper marriage, in every sense of the word. But it’s going to stick; it’s going to stick to the bitter end. Now does that take care of your mid-Victorian qualms?”

She raised the back of her hand to her eyes as though a blow had just blinded her.

He wrenched the door open. “They’re waiting for us in there. Come on, you’re only making it worse by stalling.”

He was beginning to harden against her. Her opposition was commencing to inflame him against her. It showed inversely, in a sort of lethal coldness.

“Look, my friend, I’m not going to drag you in there by the hair. The thing isn’t worth it. I’m going inside a minute and call the Hazzard house from here, and tell them the whole story right now. Then I’ll drive you back and they can have you — if they want you any more.” He leaned toward her slightly across the door. “Take a good look at me. Do I look as if I were kidding?”

It might be a threat that he would prefer not to have to carry out, but it wasn’t an idle threat. She could see that in his eyes, in the cold sullenness in them, the dislike of herself she read in them.

He turned and left the car and went up the plank walk again, more forcefully, more swiftly, than before.

“Excuse me, but I wonder if I might use your phone for a minute—” she heard him say as he entered the open doorway. Then the rest was blurred as he went deeper within the room.

She struggled out, clinging to the flexing car door like a woman walking in her sleep. Then she wavered up the plank walk and onto the porch. The ivy rustled for a minute as she brushed against it. Then she went on toward the oblong of light projected by the open doorway, and inside. It was like struggling through knee-deep water.

A middle-aged woman met her in the hallway.

“Good evening. Are you Mrs. Hazzard? He’s in here.”

She took her to a room on the left, parted an old-fashioned pair of sliding doors. He was standing in there, with his back to them, beside an old-fashioned telephone box bracketed to the wall.

“Here’s the young lady. You can both come into the study when you’re ready.”

Patrice drew the doors together behind her again. “Steve,” she said.

He turned around and looked at her, then turned back again.

“Don’t — you’ll kill her,” she pleaded.

“The old all die sooner or later.”

“Has it gone through yet?”

“They’re ringing Caulfield for me now.”

It wasn’t any sleight-of-hand trick. His finger wasn’t anywhere near the receiver hook, holding it shut down. He was in the act of carrying out his threat.

A choking sound broke in her throat.

He looked around again, almost casually. “Have you decided once and for all?”

She didn’t nod, she simply let her eyelids drop for a minute. The ultimate defeat.

“Operator,” he said, “cancel that call. It was a mistake.” He replaced the receiver slowly and smiled at her.

She felt a little sick and dizzy, as when you’ve just looked down from some great height and then drawn back again.

He went over to the sliding doors and opened them vigorously.

“We’re ready,” he called into the study across the hall.

He crooked his arm toward her, backhand, contemptuously tilting up his elbow for her to take, without even looking around at her as he did so.

She came forward and they went toward the study together, her arm linked in his.

Chapter Nine

Not a word passed between them during the drive back. He didn’t say anything, for he was content. She didn’t say anything, for she felt completely destroyed.

Nothing was left, no recourse remained. Even flight with the child, that was futile, meaningless now. Her withdrawal from the scene would abet his purpose, rather than hinder it. He would remain behind, to batten on those she had turned over to his mercies. He didn’t need her any more; she was his legal accessory now, whether present or absent.

She didn’t even feel much pain, any more. Struggle was ended. She was numb.

She rode with her eyes held shut, like a woman returning from a funeral at which everything worth keeping has been interred. They stopped, and she heard the car door open. She raised her eyelids. He was sitting there, waiting for her to get out. They were two blocks down from the house. He was being tactful, letting her out at distance far enough from it to be inconspicuous.

She stepped down.

The door closed.

He spoke then. He tipped his hat. “Good night, Mrs. Georgesson,” he said ironically. “Pleasant dreams to you.”

The car went on. Its red tail light coursed around a lower corner and disappeared.

She was at her own door now. She must have walked up to the house, though she couldn’t remember doing so.

She opened her handbag and felt inside it for her door-key. Hers, was good. The key they’d given her. It was still there. For some reason this surprised her. Funny to come home like this. To still come home like this.

My baby’s asleep in this house, she thought. I have to go in here.

She put on the lights in the lower hall. It was quiet, so quiet in the house. People sleeping, people who trusted you. People who didn’t expect you to bring home treachery and blackmail to them.

She got as far as the foot of the stairs. Then the last desperate strength that had brought her from the car to this point died out. She stood there immobile.

Nothing left. Nothing. No home, no love, no child. She’d even forfeited her child’s love, tarnished it for a later day. She’d lose him too, when he was old enough to know this about her.

This had to end. This couldn’t go on. This had to end, right tonight. Now. There was one way left of stopping it—

She turned aside and went into the library, and lighted that. She wondered why. She didn’t know yet. She thought she didn’t know yet, but there must have been something making her do it, already guiding her subconscious mind.

They’d signed the will in here, she remembered that. The table where the lawyer sat. The chairs they’d sat in. She in this one. The desk over there, the drawers in it. Father Hazzard sitting under the reading-lamp here one night, lingering late over a book.

No, I won’t forget to lock up. But don’t be nervous, there’s a revolver in one of the drawers here. We keep that for burglars. That was Mother’s idea, once, years ago—

Now she knew why she’d come in here.

She opened the upper drawer. Some papers were in a confused mass on top. But then she found it; it was under them.

This was the way. This was what you got for waiting so long. This was the price of earlier indecision. This was the compounded interest for cringing, for cowardice, in the past. This was the ultimate. This was the pay-off.

She wondered if the revolver would fit into her handbag. She tried it side-wise, the flat way, and it did. She closed the handbag, pushed the drawer shut, and came out of the room.

She put out the hall light, and went on out of the house.

She could see the thin line the light made under his door. She knocked again, softly as she had the first time. But clearly enough to be heard.

They said you were frightened at a time like this. They said you were keyed-up to an ungovernable pitch. They said you were blinded by fuming emotion.

They said. What did they know? She felt nothing. Neither fear nor excitement nor blind anger. Only a dull, aching determination.

He didn’t hear, or he wasn’t answering. She tried the knob, and the door was unlocked; it gave Inward. Why shouldn’t it be? What did he have to fear from others? They didn’t take from him, he took from them.

She closed it behind her.

The room was warm with occupancy. The coat and hat he’d worn with her in the car just now were slung over a chair. A cigarette that he’d incompletely extinguished a few short moments ago was wrinkled and bent into a V, but one end of it was still stubbornly smouldering in a dish. The drink that he was coming back to finish in a moment, the drink with which he’d celebrated tonight’s successful enterprise, stood there on the edge of the table. But he wasn’t in the room. He must have stepped into the next one, beyond, just as she arrived outside at the door. He must be in there now, offside light was coming through the open doorway.

“Steve,” she said quietly in the stillness, “come out here a second.”

No fear, no love, no hate, no anything.

She opened her handbag, and took out the gun, and fitted her hand to it.

Then she went forward.

“Steve,” she said dully, “your wife is here.”

She made the turn of the doorway. The second room was at a right angle to the first. The light was less in here, just a shaded nightlamp over by his empty bed.

The rug bunched up around her foot, impeding her. She tried to dislodge it. She looked down and it wasn’t the rug. He was lying there, still, looking up at her, Indolence, his attitude seemed to express — too much trouble to get up. There was a cigarette between his outstretched fingers, she noticed. It had burned down to the skin, adhered, and then gone out, and miraculously failed to ignite the carpet.

You could hardly tell anything was the matter. There was a little dark line by the outside of his eye, where something had run down— His eyes seemed to be fixed on her, watching her, with that same mockery they’d always shown toward her.

It was that that made her cower back and strangle on a scream. The way his eyes seemed to be fixed on her. Not the thin dark line, nor the way he lay there, relaxed and still.

She was in the outside room now. She must have gone into it backward, not daring to take her eyes off that empty doorway, for she was still facing that way, when it came, The knock came.

It wasn’t soft and tempered, as hers had been. It didn’t space itself, and wait between. It was aggressive, demanding, continuous — already angered, and feeding on its own anger at every second’s added delay. It drowned her second choked scream, the scream that held real fear. Agnonizing fear, trapped fear such as she’d never known existed before. For the voice that riddled it, that sounded through it and with it and over it, in stern impatience, was Bill’s. She would have known it anywhere.

“Patrice! Open this door. Patrice! Do you hear me? I know you’re in there. Open this door and let me come in there, or I’ll break it down—”

In a moment, in a second, he’d discover that it was unlocked, just as she had earlier. She flung herself bodily against it, with a cry of despair, just as the knob turned and the door started to spring open.

“No!” she breathed. “No!” She threw the full weight of her body against the door.

“Patrice, you must let me in. You must!”

He could see her now, and she could see him, through the fluctuating gap the opening door made, now narrow, now wider. And still she tried to bar him, pressing against it, hands straining to hold it on the inside.

“No, Bill, no!” she wailed. “Stay out of here. Oh, if you love me, don’t come in here! Don’t Bill, don’t!”

Then suddenly she was swept back on the arc of the whole door, like a leaf, and he was standing beside her.

“Where is he? I’ll kill him—” he said breathlessly.

She clung to him now, and his arm went around her, tight, firm. There is a point beyond which you can’t be alone any more. You have to have someone to cling to. You have to cling to someone, even if they are to reject you again in another moment or two.

“Somebody has — already.” She shuddered, hiding her face against him. “He’s in there, dead, Bill!”

Suddenly his arm dropped and he’d left her. It was terrible to be alone, even just for a moment. She wondered how she’d stood it all these months, these years.

Then he reappeared in the doorway. She saw his head give a grim nod, before her face had found refuge against him again. That sanctuary that all her life she’d been trying to find.

He was turning her, propelling her, within the curve of his protective arm. “Come on, you have to get out of here! You can’t be found here. You must be out of your mind to do such a— What the devil got into you to make you—?”

She was struggling against him a little now, short of the door. She pried herself away from him suddenly, and stood there facing him.

“No, wait! Listen to me! There’s something you must hear first. Something you have to know.”

“Not now! Can’t you understand? Any minute somebody’s likely to stick his head into this place— Let me get you out of here! Patrice, if you won’t think of yourself, think of Mother, Don’t you know what it means if you’re found here?”

“No — this is the time, and this is the place. Before we go a step further. I’ve waited too long to tell you. I won’t move an Inch over that doorstep. Bill, I’m not entitled to your protection—”

“I’ll pick you up and carry you out of here, if I have to!” His hand suddenly clamped itself to her mouth, sealing it. His other arm gripped her waist, viselike, as he forced her toward the door. Her eyes strained at him in mute pleading, above his stifling hand.

“I know,” he said almost impatiently. “I know what you’re trying to tell me. That you’re not Patrice. That you’re not Hugh’s wife. Isn’t that it?”

He swept her through the doorway with him.

“I know that already. I’ve always known it. I think I’ve known it ever since the first few weeks you’d been here.”

Chapter Ten

She heard the brakes go on, and felt the car stop. She lifted her head from his shoulder and looked up. He took his sheltering arm from around her.

He’d stopped in front of their own house. His own. How could it ever be hers again, how could she ever go in there, after what had happened tonight?

“Bill,” she whispered, “I didn’t— You don’t think I—” His face swam before her eyes. She struggled to suppress her sobs. “How can I expect you to think otherwise—? I went there, and you found me—”

He took something out of his pocket, on the side away from her, something she couldn’t see. A hollow click sounded. Then he put it away again. “I know you didn’t, Patrice. I’ve been spared that added complication, at least. This gun’s been empty for years. It’s just a stage-prop, left around to make Mother feel more secure.”

She turned toward him with desperate urgency, forcing her voice to be steady. “Bill, you simply must listen to me!”

“Sh, Patrice,” he said soothingly. “You’ll wake them up in there.”

“My name isn’t Patrice. Bill, don’t stop me. I can’t go in there again. I can’t go in that house. It’s too late now, but at least let me tell you. Patrice Hazzard was killed on the train. I’d been married to this same man Georgesson—”

Again his hand went over her mouth, as it had in Steve’s apartment. More gently now. “I don’t want to know, I don’t want to hear,” he said stubbornly. “Can’t you understand, Patrice?” He looked around him helplessly. “This is no time for love-speeches, I know. Didn’t it mean anything to you, what I tried to tell you that night in the garden? What difference if there was another Patrice, a girl I never knew, some other place, some other time? A girl named Patrice came into my life one day. She would have only begun then — for me — no matter what her name was. I’m not in love with a name on a birth certificate, I’m in love with a girl who’s Patrice to me. My love calls her Patrice, and my love doesn’t want any other name.”

Suddenly he swept her to him violently. His lips found hers.

“You’re Patrice. You’ll always be Patrice. You’ll only be Patrice. What more can I say?”

“Bill, you knew, and you never—”

“Oh, not right away, in a flash. Life doesn’t go that way. It’s a slow thing, it’s gradual. I think I was pretty sure within a week or two. My first reaction was resentment, hostility. I didn’t say anything, because of Mother. And I wanted to see what your game was. I thought if I gave you enough rope — I gave you rope and rope, and there was no game. You were just you. And every day it became a little harder to be on guard against you, a little easier to look at you, and think of you, and like you. Then that night of the will—”

“You knew what you did, and yet you let them go ahead and—”

“There was no real danger. Patrice Hazzard was mentioned, and it would have been easy enough to prove— The law isn’t like a man in love, the law values names. But what it did for me once and for all, was show me there was no game, no ulterior motive. Patrice, the fright and unwillingness I read on your face that night couldn’t have been faked. That gave me the answer, the key. I knew from that night on what it was you really wanted — safety, security. It was on your face a hundred times a day. I’ve seen it over and over. Every time you looked at your baby. Every time I saw that look, it did something to me. And I loved you a little more than the time before.”

He stopped a moment, and then he added in a low voice. “And I wanted you to have that permanently, as my wife. And I still do.”

“I can’t now,” she said brokenly.

“You can, but we won’t talk about it any more tonight.” Abruptly he asked her: “What was he doing to you, Patrice?”

“Money.”

“I’m glad he’s—” he said grimly. He didn’t finish it.

“Bill, he made me re-marry him tonight — at Hastings.”

She saw his hand tighten up on the wheel-rim, until it seemed to be trying to wrench it apart.

“Did you give him any money?”

“A check, a month ago.”

He was talking more tauntly now. “You destroyed it, after it cleared?”

“It never came back, He must have it over there some place.”

She saw by the convulsive start he gave that she’d frightened him.

“Go inside, Patrice,” he said curtly. “Here, here’s the key. Hurry up.” He floored the accelerator, and the engine whined to life again.

She suddenly clung to his arm, “No, darling — what are you going to do?”

“I’m going back there. I have to. I have to find that check.”

She tried to hold him. “No, Bill! They’ll find you there! You’ll be involved—”

“Don’t you understand, Patrice? Your name has to stay out of this. That man’s dead. He’s been shot to death!”

He pulled her hands free. He opened the door and armed her out, with the side of his arm.

“Bill,” she pleaded. “Bill — for me — don’t go near that place again!”

“There may still be time, I may be lucky. No one may have found him yet. Patrice, was there anything else but that? Pull yourself together. Was there anything else?”

“No, only that.”

“Did you sign your name out at Hastings?”

“I had to. The Justice of the peace who married us out there is mailing the certificate to his address, in a day or two. Bill, they’ll hold you for it—”

“Let them,” he said. “I know I didn’t do it, and when you know that, you’re not afraid.”

Her helplessly-clutching hands slipped off the rim of the door as the car pulled away from her.

“Go back in the house, Patrice,” he said over his shoulder. “Keep watching from the window. Wait there in your room.”

She tottered a little, pulled forward by the momentum of the car, and then she was standing there alone, by the roadway, in the middle of the night.

All night by the window, until it grew light. Sitting there, staring, waiting, hoping, despairing, dying a little. Seeing the stars go out, and the dawn at last creep slowly toward her from the east, like an ugly gray pallor.

Motionless as a statue in the blue-tinged window, forehead pressed forward against the glass, making a little white ripple of adhesion across it where it touched. Eyes staring at nothing.

I’ve found my love at last, only to lose him. Why did I find out tonight I loved him, why did I have to know? Couldn’t I have been spared that at least?

The day wasn’t just bitter now. The day was ashes, lying all around her, cold and crumbled and consumed.

If there is such a thing as penance, absolution, for mistakes that can never be wholly righted she performed it and she gained it on that long vigil. The day was dead and her hopes were dead, and she couldn’t atone any further.

She could only watch and wait, somehow knowing that she would be waiting forever.

She turned her head and looked behind her. Her baby was awake, smiling at her. For once she had no answering smile to give him. She couldn’t smile, a smile would be too strange a thing upon her mouth after all she’d seen.

She turned her face forward again, so that she wouldn’t have to look at the baby too long. Because, what good did crying do? Babies cried to their mothers, but mothers shouldn’t cry to their babies.

The man came out on that lawn down there, pulling his gardenhose after him. He raised his arm and waved to her — why? How odd!

But he wasn’t looking the right way, somehow, to wave to her. He was turned too far around, as if looking somewhere past her.

Then quietly, unassumingly, the car glided to a stop in front of the door, directly below her. With Bill sitting in it.

He was so very real, so photographically real down there, that paradoxically, she couldn’t quite believe she was seeing him. The very herringbone weave of his coat stood out, as if a magnifying glass were being held to the pattern. The haggardness of his face, the faint trace of shadow where he needed a shave. She could see everything about him so clearly, as if he were much nearer than he was. Maybe it was fatigue. Or perhaps her eyes were dilated from long straining...  from a watch she had thought would never end that somehow, incredibly, was ended now.

He got out slowly, and came in toward the door. And just before he took the step that would have carried him out of sight below her, his eyes lifted and he saw her.

“Bill,” she said silently through the glass, and her two hands flattened to the pane, as if framing the unheard word.

“Patrice,” he said silently, from down below. And though she didn’t hear him, didn’t even see his lips move, she knew that was what he said.

He didn’t smile, nor stop. He went on to the door, his face set, tired.

Suddenly she’d fled from the room, madly rushing. The baby’s wondering head turned after her far too slowly to catch her in her flight.

She ran, then she stopped short below the turn of the stairs, and stood there, unable to move any further.

He was standing talking to Father Hazzard, just inside the open doorway. Father Hazzard must have been downstairs already, and had let him in.

He left his father and came over toward the stairs, and came on up them to where she was standing.

His father went back into the dining room and closed the door.

The two of them were alone there on the stairs.

“Here, Patrice,” he said softly, “I found the check. God was very good to a fellow like me, over there in that room last night. Better than I deserved. I found it in the pocket of the coat he’d had on when he came in. I’ve had it on me all night, and if they’d put their hands into my pockets—”

He was here beside her, real and safe. But she couldn’t find a word to say. She couldn’t even question him. They stood looking at each other for what were endless minutes of silence.

Then he took out a crumpled ball of light-blue paper and put it in her hand and pressed her hand closed over it. She didn’t open her fist to look at it. She didn’t move. Just stood there against him, exhaustedly, gratefully.

“It’s a funny thing, Patrice,” he said. “You didn’t want me to go back there. And if it hadn’t been for what you told me about the check, I probably wouldn’t have. But when I opened the door and went in the second time there was my own hat, lying there on the floor just inside the door. Initials on the band and everything. I must have dropped it when I was getting you out of the room and never even missed it in the excitement.”

She shuddered. “But Bill— Now what will happen?”

“Nothing. It’s over already. They’ve already found her. I was still there, around six, when they brought her in.”

“Her?” she whispered.

“Some poor thing who had the misfortune to love him too deeply for her own good. They always do, that kind of a guy. Don’t ask me why. She must have followed him here, and not understood what he was up to. She never even gave him a chance to explain.”

“And they?” she faltered.

“The police? They won’t know about you. I drove all the way out to the other place, after I left Georgesson’s. To Hastings, to that Justice. I explained part of the situation, that duress was used and a town-wide scandal might result. The record itself can’t be altered, of course, but the certificate won’t be mailed out. He gave me his promise not a word will ever be said about the matter by him to anyone. Just forget it as if it had never happened, Patrice.”

“And you stayed in that room and waited for the police, Bill?” she marveled.

“At his flat? I was the one who notified them to come over there. I had to. That was what I naturally would have done if I’d actually happened to drop by there, to remind him he owed me five or ten dollars. That’s what I told them had taken me there. I wouldn’t have just walked out again and left him for somebody else to find.”

“Bill, you’re so...  so honest and decent. And it’s time I tried to be too—”

She left him suddenly, went down the stairs and over to the closed door. He watched her go, watched her put her hand to the knob.

“What are you going to do?”

“I’m going in there now and tell them, Bill. About me, about that part of it. I should have long ago, I’ve waited too long.”

“Wait just a little longer,” he said. He came after her and took her by the shoulders and turned her away. “A day or two. We’ll go to them together and tell them then. When we tell them about — us.”

His arms slipped around her waist.

The sense of peace, of safety, of belonging, that had been woven about her when she had first come to this house, that had been torn so rudely asunder, was returning. Nothing would ever tear its fabric apart again. The world was made right.

“Come on, walk upstairs with me, Patrice,” Bill said. “I’d like to take a look at the boy before I turn in.”

His arm still about her, they turned together up the stairway.

“Our boy,” he added softly.