“I hope,” said the Judge, “I hope you’re proved right.”
Johnny lounged against the truck, waiting. How
It was Usher Peague, bursting out of the blackness of the swamp with his red hair flying like a banner, arms whirling in triumph.
They rushed with Peague up the old wagon road through the marsh, each with a flashlight scribbling nonsense on the dark, the sounds of the people and the machinery suddenly stilled.
They came to the end of the road. Flares had been set up, and they cast a cheap pink light over the scene. The derrick of Peter Berry’s wrecker was dangling the corpse of Ferriss Adams’s bogged coupé from its teeth like a dog. The wrecker was slowly pulling away from the quagmire. Men with two-by-fours and pulleys were maneuvering the car clear of the bog as the wrecker dragged it off. The women of Shinn Corners stood about in silence, watchfully.
“Set it down!” shouted Judge Shinn. “Never mind how! Just so we can get at the trunk!”
The coupé came down with a crash.
Men leaped from every direction.
In a moment the trunk compartment was open...
It was full of firewood.
Ferriss Adams sagged. He would have fallen if not for the Hemus twins.
“One, two, three, four, five—” Johnny kept flinging the sticks to the ground as he counted aloud.
Kowalczyk was there, too, beside Burney Hackett. His hands were still tied with a rope. He was gaping at the wood, his eyes glaring in the pink light.
“Fifteen, sixteen, seventeen—”
Samuel Sheare’s lips were moving.
“Twenty, twenty-one...”
Hubert Hemus stepped back. There was a look of enormous uncertainty on his gaunt face. He was blinking, grinding.
“Twenty-four,” said Johnny. “And that’s the last, good friends and kindly neighbors.”
Burney Hackett untied Josef Kowalczyk’s wrists. He took the rope over to Ferriss Adams and the Hemus twins jammed Adams’s wrists together and Hackett tied them.
Hube Hemus turned away.
Slowly the people followed.
The peepers and chugarums were really going at it in the Hollow. A calf bawled in Orville Pangman’s cow barn; the Scotts’ dog was howling faintly at the moon. The street light above Berry’s Variety Store on the east corner lit up the deserted intersection.
Judge Shinn puffed a smoke screen from his cigar and complained: “I really ought to screen this porch. Promise myself to do it every summer, but I never seem to get around to it.” He waved his arms at the insects.
“Quiet tonight,” said Johnny.
“Enjoy it while you can, my boy. With dawn’s early light come the reporters.”
The Hackett house, Prue Plummer’s, the Pangman farmhouse were dark. One window of the parsonage glowed.
They smoked peacefully, reviewing the noisy aftermath of the swamp... the arrival of the state police, the magical reappearance of Sheriff Mothless and Coroner Barnwell, Ferriss Adams’s twitching face in the studio as he re-enacted his crime, his hysterical confession, the silent villagers looking on and then melting away, Hube Hemus the last to leave, as if defying Captain Frisbee to arrest him for the wounding of the trooper... They were all gone now, the police and the officials and Adams and Peague and Casavant and Andrew Webster. Only Josef Kowalczyk remained; Samuel and Elizabeth Sheare had taken him into the parsonage, where they insisted he spend the night.
“Hard to believe it’s all past,” remarked the Judge.
Johnny nodded in the darkness. He was feeling empty and restless. “The stupidity is still with us,” he said.
“Always,” said the Judge. “But so are perception and the right.”
“But late,” grinned Johnny. “Anyway, I was referring to myself.”
“Your stupidity? Johnny—”
“For letting that trick alibi of his take me in.”
“What should I say?” growled the Judge. “I didn’t see it at all. Still don’t, entirely.”