It was nearly four in the morning and nothing was moving. Even the dogs which had been prowling the neighborhood had stopped barking and had retired for the night. The Acock Motel's no vacancy sign threw a faint light onto the parking lot, which was empty except for Moon Dog's solitary car. He had parked beside a hedge in the deep shadows at the edge of the lot and the car was nearly invisible from the street beyond the motel lobby. Moon Dog had lowered the windows of his car so his breath wouldn't fog the windows in the cool night air; the interior was pitch black. Hunter was reaching for the door handle on the passenger side of the car, when, behind him, Moon Dog stepped out of the shadows and spoke in a low voice.
"Don't open the door, I rigged it to set off the horn and turn on the lights."
"Whoa, shit," Hunter gasped. "Don't sneak up on me like that, Dog, you scared the hell outa me."
"You're gettin rusty in your old age, Hunter, I heard you coming ten minutes ago. Could have shot your noisy ass three or four times, easy."
"No kidding, Dog, maybe that's because I been here for thirty minutes and already circled the damn motel twice making sure there wasn't anybody here but you and the girl, before I started over here to the car kicking' gravel and grunting like a pig in a hole, so's you'd hear me and not blow me full of holes."
"You're kiddin'; I didn't see you."
You weren't meant to, Dog. I stuck to the shadows. Every time you turned on that starlight scope of yours, your car filled up with green light, so I just stayed hid till it went out."
"I knew I was picking up too much light from that damn sign,â he snorted with a nod in the direction of the âno vacancyâ sign. âDamn scope's made to amplify starlight; too much artificial light just overwhelms it."
"I could have shot your ass twenty or thirty times, old man; you're just lucky I wasn't Caruthers."
"Hell, Caruthers isn't coming here tonight. There's no way he could have trailed us here that quick. Besides, we got no proof that he'd actually shoot anybody, do we?"
"We do now."
"No shit?"
"That's a fact, Dog; I've had quite a night."
"You want to get in the car and tell me about it?"
"Sure, if you disarm your alarm system first."
"Oh, hell, I was lying, it isn't rigged."
Hunter opened the car door and nothing happened. The interior remained pitch black, and he looked questioningly at Moon Dog.
"Well, I haven't forgotten everything I ever knew; I did take out the overhead bulb, so it wouldn't light up every time I got out to pee or something."
"Good man to share a foxhole with," Hunter laughed, and he slid into the car soundlessly. When they had taken up their positions, Hunter began to recount the night's events in a low voice.
âI left here and drove straight to the school. By the time I arrived the place was looking pretty well deserted, but I spotted a beat up old truck behind the building and called in the license plate. It was registered to an old fellow named Jackson, who is the janitor there. I figured he might have a pretty good idea about the things going on around there, and I thought the direct approach would be a lot faster than snooping around the principal's office in the dark, so I went in and found him mopping the halls. He was a little standoffish at first, but after I told him how I was there to help our little girl over there, he warmed right up.â
âWhat do you want to know?â he asked me.
âEverything,â I told him. âWhatever you think might help me protect Miss Anne. I donât even know what sheâs up against right now.
âWell, sir,â he said, âI can tell you this; Mr. Jerry, the mayor, now, heâs OK, but that wife of his and their no good kid, Archie, theyâre bad people, fer sur.â
âHowâs that, Jackson?ââ
â`Cause, theyâs the ones that got me fired up at the plant, and after Iâs been workinâ up there well nigh thirty years without hardly missinâ a day.â
âWhyâd they do that?â
âOn account of that boy lyinâ and tellinâ his mamma that I tore up his car, when he was up here visitinâ his daddy, when he knowed hit was him that got drunk and sideswiped a fence post. They said hitâas me that drove the forklift into the side of his car, but hit werenât me.â
âHow come you were fired, if it wasnât you?â
âOn account of that woman, Mrs. Nancy, thatâs why. She got all mad and come up here demanding Mr. Jerry fire that âgoddamn black bastardâ what scratched up her little darlinsâ car, so Mr. Jerry called me in and said they werenât nothinâ he could do but do as she says and let me go.â
âAfter thirty years?â
âYes, sir, thirty of them, but that werenât the end of the story either. Mr. Jerry said heâd been thinkinâ that Iâas gettinâ purty close to retirement and that he needed to find me somethinâ a lot easier than workinâ in that pallet factory, so he told me that I was cominâ down to the school to be the janitor starting the next day and that heâas givinâ me two times the pay.â
âSounds like a pretty good deal for you, Jackson.â
âI couldnât hardly believe my ears, and I asked him if that wouldnât make the missus madder than hell at him, if she ever found out what he done? He said she wouldnât ever know the difference `cause didnât neither of them, her or Archie, know what I looked like or even what my name was.â
âWas he right? I mean, didnât Archie recognize you here at the school?â
âShoot no, mister. That boy didnât no more know who this old nigger was than he knowed who his momma was. He did axe me once ifân he didnât knowed me from somewheres, anâ I jes tole him, âWhy no suh, Misser Archie, suh, you knows allân us niggers be lookinâ jes alike; hit mussa been summun `sides me,â anâ he jes scratched that empty ole haid of hisân and walked off anâ I ainât heered no more âbout it after that.â
âBut hadnât he seen you at the plant?â
âI `spect so, out the office window, whiles heâs in the air conditioning, maybe, but that no account boy ainât never got out where the work was goinâ on, so he ainât never seen me no closer than from here to town, just about.â
âArchie and his mamma sound like quite a pair, Jackson; you have anything else you can tell me about?â
âI `spect you done heard `bout him forcinâ hisself on Miss Anne down in the Lounge the other night.â
âI know about that.â
âDâjew know she put him up to it?â
âHow come you think that?â
â`Cause, she put him up to spyinâ on `em, and takinâ theyâs pictures offen my ladder, thatâs how come.â
âThatâs kinda thin, Jackson.â
âTheyâs more.â
âLike what?â