“Meet me on the corner of Fourth and First,” I said. “Park the car and walk.”

I turned away and went on down to the drugstore and bought cigarettes, then came back to the store. I didn’t know what I was doing. I was afraid to speak to anybody, for fear I’d just talk a lot of mishmash. I went straight through the store, and the shop, and out back to the parking lot. I took the car and drove downtown. I had asked her to meet me on one of the busiest corners in town. I parked the car, and walked fast over there. She was walking up and down, waiting, working her fingers on a shiny black purse, as if she were playing a piano.

“Well,” I said. “I’ll be damned. You downtown, shopping?”

“Don’t fool with me, Jack.”

I shot it at her. “Make it seem like we met accidentally.”

Pedestrians streamed past.

“He wants to go to the hospital.”

“What?”

“Doctor Miraglia’s there right now,” she said. “I told him I had some shopping to do, that I’d only be gone a few minutes. I’ve been driving up and down past your darned store for over a half an hour.”

She was nervous and scared. “Why didn’t you call me?”

“You said not to call.”

“I told you if something unforeseen....”

She broke in. “All right.” She scraped at her lower lip with her teeth. “I was afraid to call, Jack. I didn’t know what to do. I thought if I could just catch your eye—I wasn’t thinking.”

I tried to act calm. “What do you mean, he wants to go to the hospital?”

“He’s been at me all day. How good he feels, stuff like that. He wants to go to the hospital for a complete physical check-up.”

“Can’t the doctor give that to him at home?”

“It’s not that. He doesn’t carry all the facilities around in his pockets. They use machines on him, all sorts of things.”

It hit me hard. It was very bad and for a second there I saw the whole thing exploding soundlessly in our faces. Her face was wrung. “Take it easy,” I said. “Try to smile and make it look good. You never know who might come by. I know a lot of people in this town.”

“That’s not all,” she said. “There’s more.”

“Naturally.”

“Doctor Miraglia talked with me privately. He says this is a miracle. He says it’s his chance—once he gets Victor to the hospital, he thinks he can talk him into staying there.”

I rubbed one hand across my face, hanging onto my jaw.

“Jack.” She whispered it tightly. “What will we do?”

“Easy, now,” I said. “Here’s what you’ll have to do. First, you get back there as fast as you can. And be sure to stop at the market and buy some stuff, so it’ll look as if you really went shopping.”

“Yes. But what—?”

“Ten to one, Miraglia will leave. He’ll plan to come back for him. Maybe an ambulance. Anyway, it’s up to you to get to Victor. He’s always been scared about hospitals. You’ll have to make him think that way again. Scare the hell out of him. Only you’ve got to do it so Miraglia won’t get wise. Play it careful—kid him, make it look good. If you fail, we’re done.”

She didn’t speak. She was staring at the front of a jewelry store, thinking. You could almost see the wheels winding up.

“All right,” she said. “I think I can do it.”

“But be careful.”

“Don’t worry.”

The way she said it, she would scare anybody.

“Jack,” she said, looking at me. “I love you so. Why must it be like this?”

“You know why.”

“I do love you so.”

“Easy. We’re on the street,” I said. “Now, get moving. And remember, I’m with you every minute.”

“It’s just that we have so much, so very much, Jack.”

“Yeah. Now, get—”

A horn beeped lightly by the curb. It was Mayda Lamphier, driving a dusty Pontiac convertible, with the top down. The maroon paint job was scratched, dented.

I spoke fast to Shirley from the side of my mouth.

“Make it look right. We met on the street.”

She looked a little worried, but otherwise okay. We went over to Mayda’s car.

“Well,” Mayda Lamphier said with a shade of insinuation. “What are you two doing downtown?”

I gave her the story of bumping into each other on the street. She believed it, but made with the eyes anyway. I didn’t like any part of it. She possessed that knack of being in the wrong place at the right time.

“I’m shopping,” Shirley said. “I’m afraid I’ll have to run along. I only have a few minutes. Bye, now.”

She was gone before either of us could speak.

“Busy girl,” I said.

“Yes, isn’t she?” Mayda said. “Can I give you a lift somewhere?”

“I was on my way back to the store. Just had lunch.”

“Hop in, then.”

Horns blared behind her. She had begun to tie up traffic. We cut off down toward the bay. Things seemed just a little tense. Anything more I might say about “accidentally” meeting Shirley on the street would be punching a flat bag. I let it go and sat there worrying. If Mayda had any suspicions at all, it could go very bad later on.

“How’d you like to take a little ride?” she said.

There was something in her voice. She had on a red skirt. She had allowed it to creep up, revealing an inch of bare thigh above rolled stockings. Her legs were slim and racy looking. Her hair streamed in the wind as she eyed me.

I grinned. “Got to get back to the store.”

We stopped for a light. She didn’t touch her skirt. She didn’t look at me, either.

“I know a nice place,” she said. “We could take a quick little ride.” She looked at me and smiled with her teeth tight together, and it was in her eyes. Her idea of subtle suggestion was to hit you in the face with a bare breast.

This was a perfect chance to reassure her there was nothing between Shirley and myself. She wasn’t Shirley, but on the other hand, she wasn’t repulsive, either. If I didn’t go with her, she would add things up damned quickly.

“Okay,” I said. “Let’s. I think I’d like it.”

“I know I will.”

She drove away from the light. I turned toward her, reached over and ran my palm up her thigh, under her skirt, squeezing the flesh. She began to move her hips and she really laid on that gas pedal.

“Don’t,” she said. “I can’t stand it. Wait’ll we park. I’ll smash into something.”

I took my hand away.

“I couldn’t be sure,” I said.

“Well, you can be sure, now.”

She drove hard and reckless, down along the bay, till we were on the outskirts of town. Then she took a dirt road and parked the car in the first thick clump of trees we reached, along the shore of the bay. She came into my arms with a hot little moan.

We never got out of the front seat of the car. I didn’t think about Shirley even once, and we were there over an hour. Sometime along in there, she stripped herself naked, and she sure as hell was starved for it.

She didn’t know what she was saying half the time.

“Kiss me,” she’d say. Then she’d say, “Marry me, marry me, marry me....” She carried on a lot, and it was a hot time, and it was good.

Finally we just sat there, smoking, staring out at the bay. She talked a little about her husband, and how

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