In the dark second-floor hallway I shone the light on doors until I found 2-C. I had to try three keys before the door opened. I went right to work inside. There was no point in being subtle. I opened drawers and dumped their contents. I stripped the bed and dragged the mattress onto the floor. I opened the closet and threw the clothing item by item into the center of the room. I checked the baseboards, the pictures on the walls, the lighting fixtures, the radiant heat unit. I checked every possible place where Franklin might have hidden the money.

I found ten fifty-dollar bills lying openly in a bureau drawer, and that was all. Franklin had cached the bulk of the money elsewhere, and he was never going to tell me where. I hadn't realized how much I had geared all my planning to recovery of the Phoenix loot. Counting the money in Franklin's wallet and what I'd found in the room with what I'd brought with me, I had less than four thousand dollars. Hiding out was expensive, and four thousand dollars wouldn't last long enough for me to lay low until my appearance became more normal. I would have to drive on to Colorado to dig up the other jar, or pull a job a lot sooner than I would have liked.

The sun was above the horizon when I closed the boarding house front door and walked down the steps to the cruiser. I headed north on U.S. 19. The cruiser was the least likely car on the road to attract official attention as long as it wasn't reported missing. The fact that I wore a uniform wouldn't hurt either.

I passed out of range of the Hudson sheriff department's radio after forty minutes. New voices took up the routine police calls on the same wave band. I knew that all law enforcement agencies except the state police and the largest cities used a common wavelength. Nothing appeared to be disrupting the even tenor of police routine that morning. I put plenty of highway behind me for four hours at ten mph above the speed limit, then turned west at Capps on Route 90-A.

I stopped at a large carwash on the outskirts of Talahassee and got a sandwich from a vending machine, then set out again. When I came to the city limits of DeFuniak Springs, I slowed down and took the river road. A few miles along it I saw what I was looking for, a freshly painted sign that said, tom walker's cabins. I was happy to see the fresh paint because it meant that Walker, a blind Negro, was still operating his seedy cabin camp as an underworld underground railway.

I drove past the sign and stopped at a roadside stand down the road. I bought two washable sport shirts and two pairs of washable slacks from an elderly colored woman. She eyed my trooper's uniform but didn't say anything. The second turn beyond her stand I found a dirt road and turned into it. Within a few yards semitropical foliage hemmed in the cruiser on both sides. I parked in deep shade where the car was almost engulfed in big trees.

The sound of the engine died out to be replaced by the sound of insects. I relaxed my hands on the steering wheel and drew a deep breath. It was still only eleven thirty A.M. I had reached this point with a minimum of difficulty, and if I connected with Blind Tom as I was sure I could, I had it made.

I stripped off the uniform, climbed into the back of the cruiser, and Went to sleep. When I woke, the car was in even deeper shadow. It was nearly sundown. I was in a lather of perspiration from the buildup of heat in the car, but rather than expose my new skin to mosquitoes I kept the windows closed. I knew what I had to do, but I needed darkness to do it.

When the thick blackness of the Florida night suddenly enveloped the area, I wriggled into sport shirt and slacks. With the aid of backup lights I inched my way out to the highway. I headed toward Tom Walker's Cabins, but a quarter mile away I turned into a sandy lane.

There was no road. The headlights picked out a baseball diamond, a horseshoe court, and a tennis backstop in the nighttime-quiet of the county park. I drove on dead pine needles through widely spaced trees to the riverbank. I stopped on a slight downgrade, cut the headlights, pulled up the emergency, and got out of the car, leaving the motor running.

I checked everything twice. Cash in my pocket and extra slacks and sport shirt on my arm. Everything else in the cruiser including the trooper's uniform, Franklin's keys, the sawed-off shotgun, and the clothing Spider Kern had supplied, which I'd brought with me in case I needed to get out of the uniform suddenly. It was too dark to see the swift-running current below me but I could hear it. I leaned through the front window, put the cruiser in gear, then released the emergency brake.

The car crept toward the bank. The front wheels went over, and then it hung. I thought I was going to have to push, but the bank crumpled under its weight and the cruiser lunged forward. It dropped off into the darkness with a splash I could hardly hear. I knew the river was deep enough at that point so it was unlikely the cruiser would ever be found.

I walked out to the highway and on to Blind Tom's. All the known artifacts of Chet Arnold had disappeared with the cruiser. If I could stay out of sight for a while, the break would be clean. The big advantage I had now was that no one knew what the ex-Chet Arnold looked like in his new incarnation.

I turned in from the highway at the cabin-camp entrance. The same crazily tilted, hand-lettered sign I remembered hung on the wall of the building that served as a gatehouse. The sign said OFFIS. The gate was chained, barring traffic unapproved by the 'offis.' Tom paid off to avoid surveillance. It was this factor that brought him steady customers.

The only light in the gatehouse came from the dial of a desktop radio. I knocked once and entered. A white- haired, elderly Negro sat at the shabby desk. 'Hello, Tom,' I said. 'Can you take care of me for a while?'

His blind walleyes stared in my direction while his wrinkled features screwed up in concentration. Blind Tom

Walker had a fantastic memory for voices. 'Mought be,' he said cautiously at last. 'Dependin'.'

'I'd like to have the riverbank cabin with the full-size bed on the north branch of the Y, Tom.'

'Flood got that one three-four years ago,' he observed. 'But I rebuilt.' He was silent again, evaluating.

I remembered something. 'How's Cordelia, Tom?' Cordelia was a five-foot female alligator Tom kept penned at the river's edge.

'Cordelia in love,' Tom informed me solemnly.

'In love? Who with?'

'With love.' Tom chuckled unexpectedly, a high-pitched cackle. 'You take that cabin on the Y, the bulls courtin' Cordelia every night gonna keep you awake with their roarin'.' He leaned back in his chair. 'Drake,' he said. 'That's who you be. Drake. You fixed a thirty-two for me.'

Seven years ago I had passed as Earl Drake, itinerant gunsmith, during my stay with Tom. Earl Drake had never been in trouble with police anywhere. It was as good a name as any. 'That's right, Tom. Earl Drake. And this time I'd like to buy a thirty-two from you.'

'They come high,' he cautioned me.

'Like the cabin?'

He grinned toothlessly. 'Hundred a week.'

'Only if you fix me a mess of catfish Sunday evenings.' He cackled again, then sobered. 'Fixin' to stay awhile?'

'Yes.'

'Then mought be we could shave a mite off the rate.'

'What about the thirty-two?'

He fished a key from a ragged pocket of his tattered white pants and unlocked a drawer in the desk. 'How 'bout this one?' he inquired, pulling out an automatic and handing it to me.

It was a German-made Sauer, the 1930 model with three-inch barrel and duralumin slide and receiver, which reduced its weight to fifteen ounces. I turned the knurled block at the rear of the slide and eased slide and assembly forward from the barrel. It was reasonably clean. The standard thumb safety was on the left side of the receiver and the magazine release catch was in the butt. Magazine capacity was seven cartridges, and it was fully loaded. Although hardly a modern gun, the Sauer was a well-made weapon.

'You've sold a thirty-two, Tom,' I told him. 'How much?'

He rose to his feet. 'We'll settle up t'morra,' he said. 'C'mon.'

He led the way from the office and struck out surefootedly in the darkness along a dim path. No flashlight was ever necessary for Blind Tom. I stayed close behind the sheen of his once-white pants. We took the north fork of the branch of the Y in the path that I remembered, and I could hear the river again. Tom was unlocking the door of a cabin high on the riverbank before I could even see it in the blackness. He handed me the key. 'If Cordelia's beaus get noisy, throw a saucepan down,' he advised me.

'I'll do that,' I promised.

He went back down the path. I opened the cabin door, went in, and turned on the light. The flood that had

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