The voice brought Thurlow back from a far distance. Ruth"s voice? he wondered. He turned.
She stood at his left just behind the car, a slender woman in a black silk suit that smoothed her full curves. Her red hair, usually worn close around her oval face, was tied in a severe coil at the back of her neck. The hair bound so tightly -- Thurlow tried to put out of his mind all memory of the mother"s hair spread on the driveway.
Ruth"s green eyes stared at him with a look of hurt expectancy. She had the appearance of a tired elf.
Thurlow opened his door, slipped out to the wet gra.s.s beside the road.
"I didn"t hear your car," he said.
"I"ve been staying with Sarah, living with her. I walked up from the house. That"s why I"m so late."
He could hear the tears in her voice and wondered at the inanity of their conversation.
"Ruth . . . d.a.m.n it all! I don"t know what to say." Without thinking about it, he crossed to her, took her in his arms. He could feel her muscles resisting him. "I don"t know what to say."
She pulled out of his embrace. "Then . . . don"t say anything. It"s all been said anyway." She looked up at his eyes. "Aren"t you still wearing your special gla.s.ses?"
"To h.e.l.l with my gla.s.ses. Why wouldn"t you speak to me on the phone? Was that Sarah"s number they gave me at the hospital?" Her words were coming back to him, ". . . living with her." What did it mean?
"Father said . . ." She bit her lower lip, shook her head. "Andy, oh, Andy, he"s insane and they"re going to execute him . . ." She looked up at Thurlow, her lashes wet with tears. "Andy, I don"t know how to feel about him. I don"t know . . ."
Again, he took her in his arms. She came willingly this time. How familiar and right it felt for her to be there. She began to sob gently against his shoulder. Her crying felt like the spent aftermath of sorrow.
"Oh, I wish you could take me away from here," she whispered.
What was she saying? he asked himself. She was no longer Ruth Murphey. She was Mrs. Neville Hudson. He wanted to push her away, start throwing questions at her. But that wouldn"t be professional, not the right psychological thing to do. He decided it wasn"t what he wanted to do after all. Still, she was another man"s wife. d.a.m.n! d.a.m.n! d.a.m.n! What had happened? The fight. He remembered their fight -- the night he"d told her about the fellowship grant. She hadn"t wanted him to take it, to be separated for a year. Denver had sounded so far away in her words. "It"s only a year." He could hear his own voice saying it. "You think more of your d.a.m.n career than you do of me!" The temper matched her hair.
He"d left on that sour note. His letters had gone into a void -- unanswered. She"d been "not home" to his telephone calls. And he"d learned he could be angry, too -- and hurt. But what had really happened?
Again, she said: "I don"t know how to feel about him."
"What can I do to help?" It was all he could say, but the words felt inadequate.
She pushed away from him. "Anthony Bondelli, the attorney -- we"ve hired him. He wants to talk to you. I . . . I told him about your report on . . . father -- the time he turned in the false fire alarm." Her face crumpled. "Oh, Andy -- why did you go away? I needed you. We needed you."
"Ruth . . . your father wouldn"t take any help from me."
"I know. He hated you . . . because of . . . what you said. But he still needed you."
"n.o.body listened to me, Ruth. He was too important a man for . . ."
"Bondelli thinks you can help with the insanity plea. He asked me to see you, to . . ." She shrugged, pulled a handkerchief from her pocket, wiped her cheeks.
So that"s it, Thurlow thought. She"s making up to me to get my help, buying my help!
He turned away to hide his sudden anger and the pain. For a moment, his eyes didn"t focus, then he grew aware (quite slowly, it seemed) of a subtle brownian movement at the edge of the grove. It was like a swarm of gnats, but unlike them too. His gla.s.ses. Where were his gla.s.ses? In the car! The gnats dissolved away upward. Their retreat coincided with the lifting of an odd pressure from his senses, as though a sound or something like a sound had been wearing on his nerves, but now was gone.
"You will help?" Ruth asked.
Was that the same sort of thing I saw at Murphey"s window? Thurlow asked himself. What is it?
Ruth took a step nearer, looked up at his profile. "Bondelli thought -- because of us -- you might . . . hesitate."
The d.a.m.ned pleading in her voice! His mind replayed her question. He said: "Yes, I"ll help any way I can."
"That man . . . in the jail is just a sh.e.l.l," she said. Her voice was low, flat, almost without expression. He looked down at her, seeing how her features drew inward as she spoke. "He"s not my father. He just looks like my father. My father"s dead. He"s been dead . . . for a long time. We didn"t realize it . . . that"s all."
G.o.d! How pitiful she looked!
"I"ll do everything I can," he said, "but . . ."
"I know there isn"t much hope," she said. "I know how they feel -- the people. It was my mother this man killed."
"People sense he"s insane," Thurlow said, his voice unconsciously taking a pedantic tone. "They know it from the way he talks -- from what he did. Insanity is, unfortunately, a communicable disease. He"s aroused a counter-insanity. He"s an irritant the community wants removed. He raises questions about themselves that people can"t answer."
"We shouldn"t be talking about him," she said. "Not here." She looked around the grove. "But I have to talk about him -- or go crazy."
"That"s quite natural," he said, his voice carefully soothing. "The disturbance he created, the community disturbance is . . . d.a.m.n it! Words are so stupid sometimes!"
"I know," she said. "I can take the clinical approach, too. If my . . . if that man in the jail should be judged insane and sent to a mental hospital, people"d have to ask themselves very disturbing questions."
"Can a person appear sane when he"s really insane?" Thurlow said. "Can a man be insane when he thinks he"s sane? Could I be insane enough to do the things this man did?"
"I"m through crying now," she said. She glanced up at Thurlow, looked away. "The daughter"s had her fill of . . . sorrow. I . . ." She took a deep breath. "I can . . . hate . . . for the way my mother died. But I"m still a psychiatric nurse and I know all the professional cant. None of it helps the daughter much. It"s odd -- as though I were more than one person."
Again, she looked up at Thurlow, her expression open, without any defenses. "And I can run to the man I love and ask him to take me away from here because I"m afraid . . . deathly afraid."
The man I love! Her words seared his mind. He shook his head. "But . . . what about . . ."
"Nev?" How bitter she made the name sound. "I haven"t lived with Nev for three months now. I"ve been staying with Sarah French. Nev . . . Nev was a hideous mistake. That grasping little man!"
Thurlow found his throat was tight with suppressed emotion. He coughed, looked up at the darkening sky, said: "It"ll be dark in a few minutes." How stupidly inane the words sounded!
She put a hand on his arm. "Andy, oh Andy, what"ve I done to us?"
She came into his arms very gently. He stroked her hair. "We"re still here," he said. "We"re still us."
Ruth looked up at him. "The trouble with that man in the jail is he has a sane type of delusion." Tears were running down her cheeks, but her voice remained steady. "He thinks my mother was unfaithful to him. Lots of men worry about that. I imagine . . . even . . . Nev could worry about that."
A sudden gust of wind shook raindrops off the leaves, spattering them.
Ruth freed herself from his arms. "Let"s walk out to the point."
"In the dark?"
"We know the way. Besides, the riding club has lights there now. You see them every night across the valley from the hospital. They"re automatic."
"It"s liable to rain."