So the school term, for Miss Palmer and her pupils, drew to an end.
“Now at last,” she told them one morning, beaming, “you are little ladies and gentlemen, and this is your graduating day. You have overcome, with my help the obstacles of your disadvantaged home lives and the unfortunate ministrations of the present school system and have become what you should have been in the first place — educated, cultured and well mannered young citizens.
“So,” still beaming, “be prepared to leave. And as I relieve you of the chains of ignorance which are no longer necessary, I will ask the little gentlemen to bow from the waist, as they have been taught, and the little ladies to curtsy, in farewell and gratitude to their Miss Palmer.”
She went to them, a happy woman at last, and unfastened their chains and stood back waiting for their obeisance.
When they fell upon her, there was no one to hear the sounds of her screams.
The Only Road to Glory
by C. G. Cobb
Rudell Foster was knocking the ashes out of his pipe when the first car of the day appeared over the top of the low hill to the east of Glory. He shaded his eyes against the early sun, squinted, and managed to make out a four-door sedan, gray, looking new, probably a Chevy. It parked in the visitors’ lot and let out a stocky man who moved, with a curious rolling gait, like a sailor, over to one of the dispensers.
The dispensers were marked FREE — TAKE ONE, and were kept filled daily by Ranger Warren. They held maps of Glory and historical facts about the old mining town. The man took one, opened it, studied it, looked around, then used his odd walk to come rolling down the path and into the town. In a moment, the man was lost from sight amid the ancient empty buildings, so Rudell studied the gray sedan.
It was new, all right. One of those short Impalas. It probably smelled new on the inside, too. Sometime Rudell would have a car like that. Maybe better. As he watched, two other cars drove in. A middle-aged couple emerged from one, a youngish couple with two yelling kids got out of the other.
Rudell almost felt like locking the house and going up to work the claim, even though it was his self-appointed day off. Kids carried a racket around with them that was enough to drive a man out of his mind. But he stayed put, looking at the people who came to look at his town.
Over the years, Rudell had come to know the signs of the tourist strain. It marked those people who were on their way
Well, not quite. That fella with the funny walk, he was different. Oh, he used his map, all right, but in a different way. He’d started at one corner of the township and moved from house to house, from yard to yard. Never missed a window or a door. Looked over every fence he came to. Moved on to the end of a row, passed over to the next, started back down it.
Now
Here he came, passing Rudell’s house and yard and door-step. In his forties. Stocky, all right — downright wide, in fact. Five foot nine or ten, maybe a hundred eighty-ninety pounds. Wide, wide shoulders, thick neck, small head with black hair. Plain blue windbreaker over a T-shirt. Big hands. Hard face. Wide-spaced eyes so dark they looked black.
Rudell had been with the Third Division in Europe and had seen eyes like that before, staring out of men’s faces who’d been killing Germans entirely too long. Cold eyes, dead eyes, eyes looking constantly for targets. Rudell got a good look into those eyes because the man stopped and stared at him, a neutral expression on his face.
Rudell stared back, nodded, cleared his throat, got ready to be civil. Rudell Foster had been around better than fifty years, and he knew it was important to be civil with this kind of man.
“Morning,” said the man. He had a high-pitched voice which was faintly startling at first. Rudell remembered from listening to the radio that Rocky Marciano had had a voice like that.
Rudell gave the man good morning and asked if he were enjoying his visit.
“Yeah,” said the man. “You get many people through here this time of year?”
Rudell found something needing his attention in the bowl of his pipe and inspected it before answering slowly, “Fair amount.”