stroking the pin butterfly hinge on the door from the death room with patient avarice. But Ferriss Adamsâs question brought her mouth to a point, and Prue Plummer told him avidly about the man who had begged for food at her back door.
âI saw a tramp,â Adams said.
âWhere?â asked Constable Hackett.
Mr. Sheare said suddenly, âI ask you to remember that youâre Christians. Iâm stayinâ with the body,â and he went into the studio. His stout wife sat down in a corner.
âI saw the tramp!â said Adams, his voice rising. He was a tall dapper businessman with thinning brown hair and close-shaven cheeks that had grown pink and blotchy. âI was on my way over from Cudbury just now to call on Aunt Fanny and I passed a man on the road ⦠Miss Plummer, what did this tramp look like?â
âHad on dark pants,â said Prue Plummer, making a smacking sound, âand a light sort of old tweed jacket, and he was carrying a cheap suitcase tied with a rope.â
âThatâs the man! It was just a few minutes ago! What time is it? Heâs still up there somewhere!â
âTake it easy, Mr. Adams,â said Burney Hackett. âWhereâd you see this feller?â
âI got here just about three-thirtyâI passed him only a few minutes before that,â cried Adams. âIt was on the other side of Peepers Pond, the Cudbury side, about three-quarters of a mile beyond it, Iâd say. He was headed towards Cudbury. Thought he acted queer! Jumped into the bushes when he saw my car coming.â
âLessân four miles from here, itâs three thirty-five ⦠say you passed him ten-twelve minutes ago â¦â Hackett thought deliberately. âCanât have got much moreân half a mile past where you saw him. Your carâs outside here, Mr. Adams, ainât it?â
âYes.â
âI got to stay here, get my posse together and make sure everybody keeps his mouth shut. Judge, Iâm deputizinâ you and Mr. Shinn and Mr. Adams to start out after that tramp. Heâs likely dangârous, but you got two guns. Donât use âem âless you have to, but take no chances, neither. Got enough gas in your tank, Mr. Adams?â
âGassed up this morning, thank God.â
âDonât figger weâll be moreân five-ten minutes behind you,â said Constable Hackett. âGood huntinâ.â
And then they were in Ferriss Adamsâs old coupé, rattling furiously up the hill in the rain, Johnny and the Judge bouncing around in the jump-seats clutching their guns.
âI hope this windshield wiper holds out,â said Adams anxiously. âDo you suppose heâs armed?â
âDonât worry, Ferriss,â said the Judge. âWe have a manhunter with us. Fresh from the wars.â
âMr. Shinn? Oh, Korea. Ever kill anybody, Mr. Shinn?â
âYes,â said Johnny.
They knew it was the same man the moment they saw him. He was slogging along the streaming road at a fast shuffle, the roped satchel bumping off his knees as he shifted its weight from one hand to the other, the absurd velour hat a cloche now clinging to his ears. He kept glancing over his shoulder.
âThatâs him!â yelled Ferriss Adams. He stuck his head out of the car, squawking his horn. âStop! In the name of the law, stop right there!â
The man dived off the road to his right and disappeared.
âHeâs escaping!â screamed the lawyer. âShoot, Mr. Shinn!â
âYes, sir,â said Johnny, not moving. It was hard to keep her shattered head in focus; already she was part of his dreamworld. All he could see was a live man, running to stay alive.
âShoot where, you idiot?â cried Judge Shinn. âFerriss, stop the car. You canât drive into that muck. Itâs swamp!â
âHeâs not getting away from me,â grunted
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