gentleness. âJust tell us what happened.â
She shook her head.
âSomething must have happened,â Robinson said. âYou called the police.â
She nodded vigorously.
âAll right, Mrs. Gonzales,â Robinson said, âso something happened that shocked you. We know about that. It upsets you, it makes you sick. You feel cold and feel like maybe you want to throw up. Do you feel cold now?â
She nodded.
Robinson took a sweater off a hook in the kitchen. âPut this on. Youâll feel better.â
She put on the sweater.
âAnyone in there?â McCabe asked, nodding toward the other rooms.
âNo,â she whispered.
âGot any brandyâwhiskey?â
She nodded toward a cupboard, and I went there and found a bottle of rum. I poured a few ounces into a glass and handed it to her. She drank it, made a face, and sighed.
âNow tell us what happened.â
She nodded and led the way out of the kitchen, through a room which served as a dining room-living room, clean, rug on the floor, cheap ornate furniture, polished and loved, to the door of the next room, which had two beds that served as couches, a chest of drawers, and a hole in the middle of the floor about three and a half or four feet across.
âGoddamn floor fell in,â said McCabe.
âThe way they build these places,â said Robinson.
âThe way they built them seventy-five years ago,â I said.
Mrs. Gonzales said nothing, stopped at the door to the room, and would go no farther.
âWho lives underneath?â McCabe asked.
âMontez. He is a teacher. No one is home nowâexcept the devil.â
Robinson entered the bedroom and walked gingerly toward the hole. The ancient floor creaked under his feet but held. He stopped a foot short of the edge of the hole and looked down. He didnât say anything, just stood there and looked down.
âThe building should be condemned,â said McCabe, âbut then where do they go? You want to write about problems, hereâs a problem. The whole goddamn city is a problem.â
Still Robinson stared silently into the hole. I envisioned a corpse below or the results of some unspeakable murder. I started into the room.
âTake it easy,â McCabe warned me. âThe floorâs rotten. We donât want you down there. What do you think?â he asked Robinson.
Still no answer from Robinson.
I moved carefully in on one side of the room, McCabe following on the other side. We both reached the hole at the same time. Robinson was in front of the hole, his back to the door. McCabe and I stood on either side of him.
Even before my eyes registered what was down there, I was conscious of the smell. It reminded me of the odor of jasmine, yet it was different. It was something I had never known before, as indescribable as it was different, and it came on a slow current of warm air that I can only think of as silver. Itâs not possible to explain why a breath of air should evoke the image of silver, but there it was.
And then I saw what I saw. I saw what McCabe saw and what Robinson saw, so I did not dream it and I did not imagine it. About ten feet beneath the hole was a grassy sward. Its appearance suggested that it had been mowed, the way an old English lawn is mowed, yet something about it argued that the thick, heavy turf grew that way and had never known a mowerâs blade. Nor was the grass green the way we know green; it appeared to be overlaid with a glow of lilac.
No one of us spoke. No one suggested that this might be the floor of Mr. Montezâs apartment and that the teacher specialized in horticulture; we knew it was not the floor of Mr. Montezâs apartment, and that was all we knew. The only sound in the apartment was the gentle sobbing of Mrs. Gonzales.
Then Robinson crouched down, sprawled his huge bulk back from the edge of the hole, and let his head and shoulders hang over, bracing himself
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