Hillman's sitting position changed to a kind of crouch. `You're going to be sorrier. I want to know who took my son out of here, and under what circumstances, and with whose connivance.'

`Your son left here of his own free will, Mr. Hillman.'

`And you wash your hands of him, do you?'

`We never do that with any of our charges, however short their stay. I've hired Mr. Archer here to help you out. And I've just been talking to Mr. Squerry here, our comptroller.'

The cadaverous man bowed solemnly. Black stripes of hair were pasted flat across the crown of his almost naked head. He said in a precise voice: `Dr Sponti and I have decided to refund in full the money you paid us last week. We've just written out a check, and here it is.'

He handed over a slip of yellow paper. Hillman crumpled it into a ball and threw it back at Mr. Squerry. It bounced off his thin chest and fell to the floor. I picked it up. It was for two thousand dollars.

Hillman ran out of the room. I walked out after him, before Sponti could terminate my services, and caught Hillman as he was getting into the cab.

`Where are you going?'

`Home. My wife's in poor shape.'

`Let me drive you.'

`Not if you're Sponti's man.'

`I'm nobody's man but my own. Sponti hired me to find your son. I'm going to do that if it's humanly possible. But I'll need some cooperation from you and Mrs. Hillman.'

`What can we do?'

He spread his large helpless hands.

`Tell me what kind of a boy he is, who his friends are, where he hangs out-' `What's the point of all that? He's in the hands of gangsters. They want money. I'm willing to pay them.'

The cab driver, who had got out of his seat to open the door for Hillman, stood listening with widening mouth and eyes.

`It may not be as simple as that,' I said. `But we won't talk about it here.'

`You can trust me,' the driver said huskily. `I got a brother-in-law on the Highway Patrol. Besides, I never blab about my fares.'

`You better not,' Hillman said.

He paid the man, and came along with me to my car.

`Speaking of money,' I said when we were together in the front seat, `you didn't really want to throw away two thousand dollars, did you?'

I smoothed out the yellow check and handed it to him.

There's no way to tell what will make a man break down. A long silence, or a telephone ringing, or the wrong note in a woman's voice. In Hillman's case, it was a check for two thousand dollars. He put it away in his alligator wallet, and then he groaned loudly. He covered his eyes with his hands and leaned his forehead on the dash. Cawing sounds came out of his mouth as if an angry crow was tearing at his vitals.

After a while he said: `I should never have put him in this place.'

His voice was more human than it had been, as if he had broken through into a deeper level of self- knowledge.

`Don't cry over spilt milk.'

He straightened up. `I wasn't crying.'

It was true his eyes were dry.

`We won't argue, Mr. Hillman. Where do you live?'

`In El Rancho. It's between here and the city. I'll tell you how to get there by the shortest route.'

The guard limped out of his kiosk, and we exchanged half-salutes. He activated the gates. Following Hillman's instructions, I drove out along a road which passed through a reedy wasteland where blackbirds were chittering, then through a suburban wasteland jammed with new apartments, and around the perimeter of a college campus. We passed an airport, where a plane was taking off. Hillman looked as if he wished he were on it.

`Why did you put your son in Laguna Perdida School?'

His answer came slowly, in bits and snatches. `I was afraid. He seemed to be headed for trouble. I felt I had to prevent it somehow. I was hoping they could straighten him out so that he could go back to regular school next month. He's supposed to be starting his senior year in high school.'

`Would you mind being specific about the trouble he was in? Do you mean car theft?'

`That was one of the things. But it wasn't a true case of theft, as I explained.'

`You didn't explain, though.'

`It was Rhea Carlson's automobile he took. Rhea and Jay Carlson are our next-door neighbors. When you leave a new Dart in an open carport all night with the key in the ignition, it's practically an invitation to a joyride. I told them that. Jay would've admitted it, too, if he hadn't had a bit of a down on Tom. Or if Tom hadn't wrecked the car. It was fully covered, by my insurance as well as theirs, but they had to take the emotional approach.'

`The car was wrecked?'

Вы читаете The Far Side of the Dollar
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