Part 2 (2/2)
Bill didn't draw but his hand never left his hip. His voice came clear and sharp and edged with cold insistence. ”Know anything about it, Kenny?”
Strain seemed to tighten Kenny's face, but there was no panic in his eyes, no actual glint of fear. ”What made you think I'd know?” he asked.
Bill didn't say a word. He just started staring at Kenny's shoes. He stood back a bit and continued to stare as if something vitally important had escaped him and taken refuge beneath the soggy leather around Kenny's feet.
”What size shoes do you wear, Jim?” he asked.
Kenny must have suspected that the question was charged with as much explosive risk as a detonating wire set to go off at the faintest jar.
His eyes grew shrewd and mocking.
”So the guy who did it left prints in the sand?” he said. ”Prints made by big shoes?”
”That's right,” Bill said. ”You have a very active mind.”
Kenny laughed then, the mockery deepening in his stare. ”Well,” he said, ”suppose we have a look at those prints, and if it will ease your mind I'll take off my shoes and you can try them out for size.”
Kenny and Bill and I walked slowly from Molly's shack to the well in the hot and blazing glare, and the whispering went right on, getting under our skin in a tormenting sort of way.
Kenny still wore that disturbing grin. He looked at the prints and grunted. ”Yeah,” he said, ”they sure are big. Biggest prints I've ever seen.”
He sat down and started unlacing his shoes. First the right shoe, then the left. He pulled off both shoes and handed them to Bill.
”Fit them in,” he said. ”Measure them for size. Measure _me_ for size, and to h.e.l.l with you!”
Bill made a careful check. There were eight prints, and he fitted the shoes painstakingly into each of them. There was s.p.a.ce to spare at each try.
It cleared Kenny completely. He wasn't a killer--this time. We might have roused the camp to a lynching fury and Kenny would have died for a crime another man had committed. I shut my eyes and saw La.r.s.en swinging from a roof top, a black hood over his face. I saw Molly standing in the sunlight by my side, her face a stony mask.
I opened my eyes and there was Kenny, grinning contemptuously at us.
He'd called our bluff and won out. Now the shoe was on the other foot.
A cold chill ran up my spine. It was Kenny who was doing the staring now, and he was looking directly at my shoes. He stood back a bit and continued to stare. He was dramatizing his sudden triumph in a way that turned my blood to ice.
Then I saw that Bill was staring too--straight at the shoes of a man he had known for three years and grown to like and trust. But underlying the warmth and friendliness in Bill was a granite-like integrity which nothing could shake.
It was Bill who spoke first. ”I guess you'd better take them off, Tom,”
he said. ”We may as well be thorough about this.”
Sure, I was big. I grew up fast as a kid and at eighteen I weighed two hundred and thirty pounds, all lean flesh. If shoes ran large I could sometimes cram my feet into size twelves, but I felt much more comfortable in a size or two larger than that.
What made it worse, Molly liked me. I was involved with her, but no one knew how much. No one knew whether we'd quarreled or not, or how insanely jealous I could be. No one knew whether Molly had only pretended to like Ned while carrying a torch for me, and how dangerously complex the situation might have become all along the line.
I stood very still, listening. The whispering was so loud now it drowned out the sighing of the wind. I looked down at my shoes. They were caked with mud and soggy and discolored. Day after day I'd trudge back and forth from the ca.n.a.l to the shacks in the blazing sunlight without giving my feet a thought until the ache in them had become intolerable, rest an absolute necessity.
There was only one thing to do--call Kenny's bluff so fast he wouldn't have time to hurl another accusation at me.
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