'He didn't give any excuse,' she snapped. 'He just-just-' Her heavy cheeks mottled with color. 'He called names.' 'Oh.' Anna and I exchanged glances. 'But what on earth got into him?' I asked. 'There must be some reason-' 'Well,' Anna squirmed a little. 'After all what can you expect-?' 'From a background like that?' I snapped. 'Well, Anna, I certainly expected something different from a background like yours!' Anna's face hardened and she gathered up her things. 'I've known him longer than you have,' she said quietly. 'Longer,' I admitted, 'but not better. Anna,' I pleaded, leaning toward her, 'don't condemn him unheard.' 'Condemn?' She looked up brightly. 'I didn't know he was on trial.' 'Oh, Anna.' I sank back in my chair. 'The poor kid's been on trial, presumed guilty of anything and everything, ever since he arrived in town, and you know it.' 'I don't want to quarrel with you,' Anna said. 'I'd better say good night.' The door clicked behind her. Mrs. McVey and I measured each other with our eyes. I had opened my mouth to say something when I felt a whisper of a motion at my elbow. Twyla stood under the naked flood of the overhead light, her hands clasped in front of her, her eyes shadowed by the droop of her lashes as she narrowed her glance against the glare. 'What did you buy his clothes with?' Her voice was very quiet. 'None of your business, young lady,' Mrs. McVey snapped, reddening. 'This is almost the end of the month,' Twyla said. 'Your check doesn't come till the first. Where did you get the money?' 'Well!' Mrs. McVey began to hoist her bulk out of the chair. 'I don't have to stay here and have a sassy snip like this-' Twyla swept in closer-so close that Mrs. McVey shrank back, her hands gripping the dusty overstuffed arms of the chair. 'You never have any of the check left after the first week,' Twyla said. 'And you bought a purple nylon nightgown this month. It took a week's pay-' Mrs. McVey lunged forward again, her mouth agape with horrified outrage. 'You took his money,' Twyla said, her eyes steely in her tight young face. 'You stole the money he was saving!' She whirled away from the chair, her skirts and hair flaring. 'Someday-' she said with clenched teeth, 'someday I'll probably be old and fat and ugly, but heaven save me from being old and fat and ugly and a thief!' 'Twyla!' I warned, truly afraid that Mrs. McVey would have a stroke then and there. 'Well, she is a thief!' Twyla cried. 'The Francher kid has been working and saving almost a year to buy-' she faltered, palpably feeling the thin ice of betraying a confidence, 'to buy something. And he had almost enough! And she must have gone snooping around-' 'Twyla!' I had to stop her. 'It's true! It's true!' Her hands clenched rebelliously. 'Twyla.' My voice was quiet but it silenced her. 'Good-by, Mrs. McVey,' I said. 'I'm sorry this happened.' 'Sorry!' she snorted, rearing up out of her chair. 'Sour old maids with never a chick or child of their own sticking their noses into decent people's affairs-' She waddled hastily to the door. She reached for the doorknob, her eyes narrow and venomous over her shoulder. 'I got connections. I'll get even with you.' The door shuddered as it emphasized her departure. I let the McVey sweep out of my mind. 'Twyla,' I took her cold hands in mine, 'you'd better go on home. I've got to figure out how to find the Francher kid.' The swift movement of her hands protested. 'But I want-' 'I'm sorry, Twyla. I think it'd be better.' 'Okay.' Her shoulders relaxed in acquiescence. Just as she left, Mrs. Somanson bustled in. 'Y' better come on out to the table and have a cup of coffee,' she said. I straightened wearily. 'That McVey! She'd drive the devil to drink,' she said cheerfully. 'Well, I guess people are like that. I've had more teachers over the years say that it wasn't the kids they minded but the parents.' She shooed me through the door and went to the kitchen for the percolator. 'Now I was always one to believe that the teacher was right-right or wrong-' Her voice faded out in a long familiar story that proved just the opposite of what she'd said, as I stared into my cup of coffee, wondering despairingly where in all this world I could find the Francher kid. After the episode of the gossip I had my fears. Still, oftentimes people who react violently to comparatively minor troubles were seemingly unshaken by really serious ones-a sort of being at a loss for a proportionate emotional reaction. But what would he do? Music-music-he'd planned to buy the means for music and had lost the wherewithal. Now he had nothing to make music with. What would he do first? Revenge-or find his music elsewhere? Run away? To where? Steal the money? Steal the music? Steal! I snapped to awareness, my abrupt movement slopping my cold coffee over into the saucer. Mrs. Somanson was gone. The house was quiet with the twilight pause, the indefinable transitional phase from day to night. This time it wouldn't be only a harmonica! I groped for my crutches, my mind scrabbling for some means of transportation. I was reaching for the doorknob when the door flew open and nearly bowled me over. 'Coffee! Coffee!' Dr. Curtis croaked, to my complete bewilderment. He staggered over, all bundled in his hunting outfit, his face ragged with whiskers, his clothes odorous of campfires and all out-of-doors, to the table and clutched the coffeepot. It was very obviously cold. 'Oh, well,' he said in a conversational tone. 'I guess I can survive without coffee.' 'Survive what?' I asked. He looked at me a moment, smiling, then he said, 'Well, if I'm going to say anything about it to anyone it might as well be you, though I hope that I've got sense enough not to go around babbling indiscriminately. Of course it might be a slight visual hangover from this hunting trip-you should hunt with these friends of mine sometime-but it kinda shook me.' 'Shook you?' I repeated stupidly, my mind racing around the idea of asking him for help in finding the Francher kid. 'A somewhatly,' he admitted. 'After all there I was, riding along, minding my own business, singing, lustily if not musically, 'A Life on the Ocean Waves,' when there they were, marching sedately across the road.' 'They?' This story dragged in my impatient ears. 'The trombone and the big bass drum,' he explained. 'The what!' I had the sensation of running unexpectedly into a mad tangle of briars. 'The trombone and the big bass drum,' Dr. Curtis repeated. 'Keeping perfect time and no doubt in perfect step, though you couldn't thump your feet convincingly six feet off the ground. Supposing, of course, you were a trombone with feet, which this wasn't.' 'Dr. Curtis,' I grabbed a corner of his hunting coat. 'Please, please? What happened? Tell me! I've got to know.' He looked at me and sobered. 'You are taking this seriously, aren't you?' he said wonderingly. I gulped and nodded. 'Well, it was about five miles above the Half Circle Star Ranch, where the heavy pine growth begins. And so help me, a trombone and a bass drum marched in the air across the road, the bass drum marking the time-though come to think of it, the drumsticks just lay on top. I stopped the jeep and ran over to where they had disappeared. I couldn't see anything in the heavy growth there, but I swear I heard a faint Bronx cheer from the trombone. I have no doubt that the two of them were hiding behind a tree, snickering at me.' He rubbed his hand across his fuzzy chin. 'Maybe I'd better drink that coffee, cold or not.' ''Dr. Curtis,' I said urgently, 'can you help me? Without waiting for questions? Can you take me out there? Right now?' I reached for my coat. Wordlessly he helped me on with it and opened the door for me. The day was
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