had forgotten about him. The women had fared better. A couple of them had been allowed to bring Sanjar down to eat, and Luella said they’d gone back with enough food for a week. Arslan had come out just long enough to claim Sanjar. The boy had been in his father’s room nearly two hours now.
The sentry let me pass with hardly a look. Downstairs the house was deserted. Rusudan was gone. There was a clean afghan on the couch.
My coffee tasted very good, rich and warm and heartening. There was no use fretting over the hours I’d wasted. The thing now was to get out and try to find out. I’d enjoyed the comfort of ignorance as long as I wanted to.
I had more to tell the KCR that morning than they had to tell me. But there were a few items of information. She had been found in the edge of the woods on the old Karcher place, not far from the road. That whole area had been sealed off, and Nizam’s men had been in and out all night. Dr. Allard’s off-the-cuff diagnosis wasn’t the only evidence that she’d been beaten with tire chains; a set of them had disappeared yesterday from the camp. Just about anybody could have picked them up. The Russians tended to get sloppy whenever they were allowed to, and the chains had just been piled in a heap of gear outside their fence.
The Turkistanis had been very busy. They were going over the district with a fine-tooth comb, questioning everybody. Whether they’d found the tire chains, or anything else, nobody knew. Nobody was allowed to budge out of his home without special permission—apparently I’d been granted the special permission. Nevertheless, news was getting around. The KCR was functioning, like the lungs of a sleeping man.
The Russians were confined to camp. Maybe they were getting the same comprehensive once-over as the civilians, or maybe Arslan just wanted them out of the way. If a Russian soldier had done it (and nobody would have had a better chance), we would have to write him off; the Russians were, for the moment, totally out of our hands, and at best they were too numerous and too anonymous. We had to work on the assumption that this murder was a native product.
One thing you could just about bet on: when there was anything really nasty going on, Ollie Schuster was going to be involved in it.
Kraftsville had always had pretty nearly its share of shiftless no-accounts. Ollie had been no good even when he was young, and age had made him meaner without making him any smarter or more industrious. A lot of people, including me; thought he had been mixed up in what we still referred to as Kraftsville’s crime wave, a few years before Arslan appeared, when quite a series of local businesses had been hit by vandalism and even arson. He had certainly been arrested, at one time or another, for everything from drunkenness to indecent exposure. He lived now with his widowed niece in one of the shacky little houses on the north edge of town, not far from Torey McArthur, not far from Leland Kitchener.
I visited Jack Allard, and he made a house call to the McArthurs—as a doctor he was able to get the necessary permission—and somehow word seeped across the back yards from there. By midafternoon Susie Mitchell’s house had burned to the ground, and Susie, with a wet rag on her forehead, was resting on her neighbor Leland Kitchener’s couch, while her Uncle Ollie sat in the kitchen with Leland. It was a pretty drastic method of winning half an hour’s direct conversation, but we were pressed for time.
That was Tuesday. After the fire, we sat tight. But Arslan’s machine rolled on, through that day, through that night. “I don’t think he’s eaten anything since breakfast yesterday,” Luella said to me Wednesday morning. “And he surely hasn’t slept at all.”
“Don’t tell me you’re worrying about Arslan,” I said.
“Well, I suppose he’s human.”
He hadn’t left the house. He hadn’t spoken to me or to Luella since Monday night. We had never been questioned, and nobody had offered to restrict my movements in any way. In all likelihood, Arslan was eager to have me play detective; I might serve as a telltale to lead them to the quarry, or as a sponge to soak up information and then be squeezed.
But that morning the sentry at the front door sent me back to my room. And when all the breakfasts were over with, Luella was sent up to join me. She came and stood beside me at the window, and together we watched.
The town was filling up, the way it used to do on Saturdays when I was young, when all the farmers would come in for the week’s trading and gossip. But today people weren’t coming by choice. They were being herded. There was a cordon of soldiers around the schoolground, standing along the far sides of all four streets with their guns at the ready. They made a very deadly-looking cage. And from all four directions people were pouring into that cage.
“We can go out any time now,” Luella said after a little while. “We’re supposed to go over there.”
“Where’s Hunt?”
“In his room, I suppose. I don’t know, Franklin.”
She sounded very subdued. I asked her if she’d heard anything new downstairs, and she shook her head.
“I just feel like it’s the end. What’s he going to do now?”
“Let’s find out.”
Everybody I talked to had the same story. Arslan’s men had routed them out of their houses and fields and ordered them to go to the school. They were coming in waves—the folks from Baptist Creek, the folks from Reeves Mill, the whole town of Carey in a solid line of wagons. It looked like a clean sweep. Even the bedridden had been loaded into the wagons, and now they had to be unloaded and carried onto the schoolground. All the horses and wagons had to be hitched along the side streets. It was going to be another hot day; the whole neighborhood was already starting to smell like a barnyard. I wondered if it was physically possible to get the entire population of the district into the two square blocks of the schoolground and the adjacent streets.
The sun was high. The early-comers were getting restless—thirsty and sweaty and wanting to go to the toilet. There was still no word of what was going to happen, except for the rumors that churned the crowd. Maybe Arslan was going to produce the murderers. Maybe we were just going to be exhorted, or more likely threatened. Or maybe he was preparing to do a really thorough job of local extermination.
Lieutenant Z appeared at my shoulder, gently urging Luella and me along onto the east walk. Rusudan’s women stood in a dejected knot, with a little space left clear around them, and then a circle of curious and hostile faces. Hunt stood at the edge of the space, not quite a part of the crowd. He looked pale and haggard, but cheerful enough. We nodded to each other.
Then a little procession came down my front walk and speared its way into the crowd. First two soldiers with dogs on leash, then Arslan with Sanjar in his arms, then Nizam, then Arslan’s bodyguards. The crowd split frantically, almost silently, to let them through. They reached the east steps, and the men with the dogs cleared them of people in a matter of seconds. Arslan mounted the steps without pausing and turned to face us. A stillness rolled out over the crowd, and we stood waiting. Now the guards were spreading out, pushing people back, clearing an open space in front of the steps. I put an arm around Luella and held my ground in the jostling, so that when the movement stopped we were near the front rank of people. Nizam mounted the steps to stand a little behind his master, and, as he passed, Arslan put Sanjar into his arms.
He looked at us a few moments longer. He lifted his arms a little way and flexed them in a curious gesture and let them fall. His face, from where I stood, looked like a mask of sorrow, drawn and bleak. Then he lifted his head a little, and his voice rang out: “Ollie Schuster!”
The crowd quivered, as a flash of horrible relief ran through it:
“Bill T. Carmichael!” Uncertain eddies of sound and movement were beginning here and there. “Fred Gonderling!” Beside me Luella gasped. “Morris Schott!”
That was all. He stood easy and quiet, his arms barely swaying at his sides, and minute by minute his face cleared, as the crowd milled and twisted and muttered, and here and there his men worked their way through it, and at last, across from where Luella and I stood, Ollie Schuster was disgorged into the open space.
Fred Gonderling came forth under his own power and stepped out on the walk, being careful to keep his distance from Ollie. But it took about ten minutes more, and a lot of poking through the crowd with bayonets, before Morris Schott and finally Bill Carmichael were brought out. Fred had tried to say something two or three times, but a gun in front of his face had stopped him.
Now the crowd was quiet again, quieter than ever. People were straining themselves into a desperate