Part 13 (2/2)

Then we were tearing along the broad and beautifully clear concrete with the speedometer needle running into the one-fifteen region.

”Steve,” said Miss Farrow breathlessly, ”That man you hit--”

In a hard voice I said, ”He was getting to his feet when I drove out of range.”

”I know,” she said in a whimper. ”I was in his mind. He was not hurt!

G.o.d! Steve--what are we up against?” Her voice rose to a wail.

”I don't know, exactly,” I said. ”But I know what we're going to do.”

”But Steve--what can we do?”

”Alone or together, very little. But we can bring one person more out along these Highways and then convince a fourth and a fifth and a fiftieth and a thousandth. By then we'll be shoved back off the stage while the big wheels grind painfully slow but exceedingly meticulous.”

”That'll take time.”

”Certainly. But we've got a start. Look how long it took getting a start in the first place.”

”But what is their purpose?” she asked.

”That I can't say. I can't say a lot of things, like how, and why and wherefore. But I know that now we have a front tooth in this affair we're not going to let go.” I thought for a moment. ”I could use Thornd.y.k.e; he'd be the next guy to convince if we could find him. Or maybe Catherine, if we could find her. The next best thing is to get hold of that F.B.I. Team that called on me. There's a pair of cold-blooded characters that seem willing to sift through a million tons of ash to find one valuable cinder. They'll listen. I--”

Miss Farrow looked at her watch; I dug it as she made the gesture.

#Eleven o'clock.#

”Going to call?” she asked.

”No,” I said. ”It's too late. It's one in New York now and the F.B.I.

Team wouldn't be ready for a fast job at this hour.”

”So?”

”I have no intention of placing a 'When you are ready' call to a number identified with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Not when a full eight hours must elapse between the call and a reply. Too much can happen to us in the meantime. But if I call in the morning, we can probably take care of ourselves well enough until they arrive if we stay in some place that is positively teeming with citizens. Sensible?”

”Sounds reasonable, Steve.”

I let the matter drop at that; I put the go-pedal down to the floor and fractured a lot of speed laws until we came to Denver.

We made Denver just before midnight and drove around until we located a hotel that filled our needs. It was large, which would prevent overt operations on the part of the 'enemy' and it was a dead area, which would prevent one of them from reading our minds while we slept, and so enable them to lay counterplans against us.

The bellhop gave us a knowing leer as we registered separately, but I was content to let him think what he wanted. Better that he get the wrong idea about us than the right one. He fiddled around in Miss Farrow's room on the ninth, bucking for a big tip--not for good service, but for leaving us alone, which he did by demonstrating how big a nuisance he could be if not properly rewarded. But finally he got tired of his drawer-opening and lamp-testing and towel-stacking, and escorted me up to the twelfth. I led him out with a five spot clutched in his fist and the leer even stronger.

If he expected me to race downstairs as soon as he was out of ear-shot, he was mistaken, for I hit the sack like the proverbial ton of crushed mortar. It had been literally weeks since I'd had a pleasant, restful sleep that was not broken by fitful dreams and worry-insomnia. Now that we had something solid to work on, I could look forward to some concrete action instead of merely feeling pushed around.

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