gesture of helplessness. âI donât really know. I only know what he told Mrs. Romanâwhat he told me. It doesnât make any sense.â He sighed. âWell, this is what he says. Sometime aftermidnight, he heard people at his door. Heâd spent most of the evening trying to bathe her, but after that he fell asleep. He didnât wake up until these people began acting like they wanted to tear the door down.
âHe didnât have to ask them what they wanted. I guess heâs been expecting something like this ever since Joan showed up. He went and got his shotgunâdid you know he had a shotgun? Had Mrs. Roman buy it for him last week. For self-defenseâas if being a leper wasnât more defense than he ever had any use for.â Seeing Lindenâs impatience, he went back to his story. âAnyway, he got his gun, and turned on all the lights. Then he opened the door.
âThey came inâmaybe half a dozen of them. He says they wore sackcloth and ashes.â Dr. Berenford grimaced. âIf he recognized any of them, he wonât admit it. He waved the shotgun at them and told them they couldnât have her.
âBut they acted as if they wanted to be shot. And when it came right down to it, he couldnât. Not even to save his ex-wife.â He shook his head. âHe tried to fight them off by main strength, but one against six, he didnât have much chance.
âSometime early this morning, he came to long enough to call Mrs. Roman. He was incoherentâkept telling her to start a search, only he couldnât explain whyâbut at least he had sense enough to know he needed help. Then he passed out again. When she got here, she found him unconscious on the floor. There was blood everywhere. Whoever they were, they must have bled an entire cow.â He gulped coffee as if it were an antidote for the reek in the air. âWell, she got him on his feet, and he took her to check on Joan. She was gone. Restraints had been cut.â
âThey didnât kill her?â interjected Linden.
He glanced at her. âHe says no. How he knowsâyour guess is as good as mine.â After a moment, he resumed, âAnyway, Mrs. Roman called me. When I got here, she left to see what she could do about finding Joan. Iâve examined him, and he seems to be all right. Suffering from exhaustion as much as anything else.â
Linden shrugged aside her doubts about Covenantâs condition. âIâll watch him.â
He nodded. âThat was why I called for you.â
She drank some of her coffee to steady herself, then inquired carefully, âDo you know who they were?â
âI asked him that,â Dr. Berenford replied with a frown. âHe said, âHow the hell should I know?â â
âWell, then, what do they want with her?â
He thought for a moment, then said, âYou know, the worst part about the whole thing isâI think he knows.â
Frustration made her querulous. âSo why wonât he tell us?â
âHard to say,â said the doctor slowly. âI think he thinks if we knew what was going on weâd try to stop him.â
Linden did not respond. She was no longer prepared to try to prevent Thomas Covenant from doing anything. But she was equally determined to learn the truth about Joan, about himâand, yes, about the old man in the ochre robe. For her own sake. And for Covenantâs. In spite of his fierce independence, she could not shake the conviction that he was desperately in need of help.
âWhich is another reason for you to stay,â the older man muttered as he rose to his feet. âIâve got to go. But somebody has to prevent him from doing anything crazy. Some daysââ His voice trailed away, then came back in sudden vexation. âMy God, some days I think that man needsa keeper, not a doctor.â For the first time since her arrival, he faced
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