“How about the others?”
“Kramer was so-so. The other three…” Fielding rolled his eyes skyward.
“No good?”
“Bunglers. You know. Tripped over their own feet. I guess they were all amateurs.”
“Young then?”
“Two of them were. Let me see if I can remember their names. One of them had a real queer name, foreign sounding. Just give me a minute…Do you want another drink?”
“Thanks, no,” Hawes said.
“Will you be staying for dinner?”
“I don’t think so. Thanks a lot.”
“Be a pleasure to have you.”
“I really have to get back to the city. I’m overdue now.”
“Well, if you want to stay, speak up. Won’t be any trouble at all. Gets lonely as hell here when the house is empty. Now, let me see. This fellow’s name. José? Was that it? Something Spanish like that…but not his second name. That was hundred-per-cent pure white American Protestant. Joaquim! That was it. Joaquim. That’s the way it’s pronounced, even though you spell it with a J. Ho-ah-keem. Joaquim Miller, that was it. Some combination, huh?”
“He was one of the young ones, is that right?”
“In his thirties. Married fellow. An electrical engineer, I think. Or an electronics engineer, one of the two. His wife had gone to California to visit her mother, who he didn’t get along with. So he came up here to hunt. God, he should have stayed in the city. I don’t think he liked the hunting at all. Didn’t get a damn thing but a cold in his head.”
“How about the others?”
“The other young fellow was about forty, forty-two, pretty well-fixed. Partner in an advertising firm, I think. I got the feeling his wife and him were headed for the divorce courts. I think his getting away from her for a week was a sort of a trial separation. That was the feeling I got, anyway.”
“What was his name?”
“Frank…something. Just a minute. Frank…Reuther, Ruther, that was it Without an E. Just Ruther. That was his name.”
“And the old man? What about him?”
“Sixtyish. Tired businessman. Got the feeling he’d tried everything from skiing to water polo. This was his week to try hunting. It was quite a week, I’m telling you.”
“How do you mean?”
“Oh, nothing, except that Kettering got a little bored with the beginners’ talk, that’s all. He and Kramer hit it off pretty well because he had some inkling of what it was all about. These other fellows, well. Not that they couldn’t shoot. They could shoot, all right. Any damn fool can hit a tin can on a back fence. But shooting and hunting are two different things. These men just weren’t hunters.”
“Was there any trouble that week?”
“How do you mean, trouble?”
“Any fights? Arguments?”
“Yes. One. Kramer got into a little tiff with one of the fellows.”
“Which one?” Hawes asked, moving quickly to the edge of his seat.
“Frank Ruther. The advertising man.”
“What was the argument about?”
“Clams.”
“What?”
“Clams. Kramer was talking about how good steamed clams were. Ruther told him to please change the subject because it made him ill just to think about clams. We were all at the dinner table, you see. Well, Kramer wouldn’t change the subject. He began telling about how to prepare them, and how to serve them, and I guess Ruther got a little sick.”
“What happened?”
“He got up and yelled, ‘Will you shut your goddamn mouth?’ He was a little touchy to begin with, you understand. Either that divorce theory of mine, or something else. Whatever it was, he was real touchy.”
“Any blows exchanged?”
“No. Kramer told Ruther he could go straight to hell. Ruther just left the table.”
“Who’d the other men side with?”
“Funny thing there. I told you Kettering and Kramer had hit it off pretty well, mainly because Kramer knew a little bit about hunting. Well, this was the day before Kettering was supposed to leave. He got pretty p.o.’d at Kramer. Told him he should have had the decency to shut up when he saw the talk was making another man sick. Kramer told him to go to hell, too.”
“Sounds like a lovely fellow, Kramer does.”
“Well, I think he knew he was on the wrong end of the argument. Lots of fellows, when they know they’re wrong, they just plunge ahead and try to make it right by making it wronger.”
“What happened when he told Kettering to go to hell?”
“Kettering got up from the table and said, ‘Would you care to repeat that outside, Sy?’ The other fellows—Miller and the old man—finally cooled off Kettering.”
“Was Kramer ready to fight?”
“Sure. He was committed. The only way he could stop making an ass of himself was to make a bigger ass of himself. But I think he was glad Miller and the old man stepped in.”
“What’s the old man’s name?”
“Murphy. John Murphy.”
“He from the city, too?”
“Sure.” Fielding paused. “A suburb, but that’s the city, ain’t it?”
“This thing between Kramer and Kettering? Did Kettering seem very angry?”
“Very. It lasted through the next day. He didn’t even say good-by to Kramer when he went off into the woods.”
“He did say good-by to the other men, though?”
“Yes.”
“Then what happened?”
“He loaded his bags into the trunk of his car, and took off. Drove his car around the lake a ways. Said he’d head for the highway as soon as he’d bagged a few that morning. He’d come down for breakfast very early. The other men went off hunting about an hour later.”
“Kramer go with them?”
“No. He went into the woods, but alone. He was pretty surly that morning. He resented Kettering’s interference, and I guess he felt the other men had sided with Ruther, too. In any case, Miller and Murphy went with Ruther. Kramer went alone.”
“Can we get back to Kettering for a moment?”
“Sure. I’ve got all the time in the world. Sure you won’t stay for dinner?”
“I’m sorry, I can’t. Did Kettering threaten Kramer in any way?”
“You mean…threaten his life?”
“Yes.”
“No, he didn’t. Why?”
“Do you think…do you think his anger was large enough to last from September to now?”
“I don’t know. He was pretty damn sore at Kramer. He’d have beat him up sure if Kramer had stepped outside with him.”