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“I doubt it. He came on duty at three and should have gone off again at midnight.”

“It’s imperative that we find him as soon as possible, Parker. Now that I’m onto the solution of this riddle, there’s no time to waste.”

“You have solved it?”

“I’m certain I have.” He hurried out of the shed.

I felt dazed as we crossed the rain-soaked compound, yet Gilloon’s positivity had infused in me a similar sense of urgency. We entered the administration building and I led the way to Rogers’ office, where we found him preparing to depart for the night. When I asked about Granger, Rogers said that he had signed out some fifty minutes earlier, at midnight.

“Where does he live?” Gilloon asked us.

“In Hainesville, I think.”

“We must go there immediately, Parker. And we had better take half a dozen well-armed men with us.”

“Do you honestly believe that’s necessary?”

“I do,” Gilloon said. “If we’re fortunate, it will help prevent another murder.”

The six-mile drive to the village of Hainesville was charged with tension, made even more acute by the muddy roads and the pelting rain. Gilloon stubbornly refused to comment on the way as to whether he believed Granger to be a culpable or innocent party, or as to whether he suspected to find Arthur Teasdale alive — or dead — at Granger’s home. There would be time enough later for explanations, he said.

Hunched over the wheel of the Packard, conscious of the two heavily armed prison guards in the rear seat and the headlamps of Rogers’ car following closely behind, I could not help but wonder if I might be making a prize fool of myself. Suppose I had been wrong in my judgment of Gilloon, and he was daft after all? Or a well-meaning fool in his own right? Or worst of all, a hoaxster?

Nevertheless, there was no turning back now. I had long since committed myself. Whatever the outcome, I had placed the fate of my career firmly in the hands of Buckmaster Gilloon.

We entered the outskirts of Hainesville. One of the guards who rode with us lived there, and he directed us down the main street and into a turn just beyond the church. The lane in which Granger lived, he said, was two blocks further up and one block east.

Beside me Gilloon spoke for the first time. “I suggest we park a distance away from Granger’s residence, Parker. It won’t do to announce our arrival by stopping in front.”

I nodded. When I made the turn into the lane I took the Packard onto the verge and doused its lights. Rogers’ car drifted in behind, headlamps also winking out. A moment later eight of us stood in a tight group in the roadway, huddling inside our slickers as we peered up the lane.

There were four houses in the block, two on each side, spaced widely apart. The pair on our left, behind which stretched open meadowland, were dark. The furthest of the two on the right was also dark, but the closer one showed light in one of the front windows. Thick smoke curled out of its chimney and was swirled into nothingness by the howling wind. A huge oak shaded the front yard. Across the rear, a copse of swaying pine stood silhouetted against the black sky.

The guard who lived in Hainesville said, “That’s Granger’s place, the one showing light.”

We left the road and set out across the grassy flatland to the pines, then through them toward Granger’s cottage. From a point behind the house, after issuing instructions for the others to wait there, Gilloon, Rogers, and I made our way downward past an old stone well and through a sodden growth of weeds. The sound of the storm muffled our approach as we proceeded single-file, Gilloon tacitly assuming leadership, along the west side of the house to the lighted window.

Gilloon put his head around the frame for the first cautious look inside. Momentarily he stepped back and motioned me to take his place. When I had moved to where I could peer in, I saw Granger standing relaxed before the fireplace, using a poker to prod a blazing fire not wholly composed of logs — something else, a blackened lump already burned beyond recognition, was being consumed there. But he was not alone in the room; a second man stood watching him, an expression of concentrated malevolence on his face and an old hammerless revolver tucked into the waistband of his trousers.

Arthur Teasdale.

I experienced a mixture of relief, rage, and resolve as I moved away to give Rogers his turn. It was obvious that Granger was guilty of complicity in Teasdale’s escape — and I had always liked and trusted the man. But I supposed everyone had his price; I may even have had a fleeting wonder as to what my own might be.

After Rogers had his look, the three of us returned to the back yard, where I told him to prepare the rest of the men for a front-and-rear assault on the cottage. Then Gilloon and I took up post in the shadows behind the stone well. Now that my faith in him, at least, had been vindicated, I felt an enormous gratitude — but this was hardly the time to express it. Or to ask any of the questions that were racing through my mind. We waited in silence.

In less than four minutes all six of my men had surrounded the house. I could not hear it when those at the front broke in, but the men at the back entered the rear door swiftly. Soon the sound of pistol shots rose above the cry of the storm.

Gilloon and I hastened inside. In the parlor we found Granger sitting on the floor beside the hearth, his head buried in his hands. He had not been injured, nor had any of the guards. Teasdale was lying just beyond the entrance to the center hallway. The front of his shirt was bloody, but he had merely suffered a superficial shoulder wound and was cursing like a madman. He would live to hang again, I remember thinking, in the execution shed at Arrowmont Prison.

Sixty minutes later, after Teasdale had been placed under heavy guard in the prison infirmary and a silent Granger had been locked in a cell, Rogers and Gilloon and I met in my office. Outside, the rain had slackened to a drizzle.

“Now then, Gilloon,” I began, “we owe you a great debt, and I acknowledge it here and now. But explanations are long overdue.”

He smiled with the air of a man who has just been through an exhilarating experience. “Of course,” he said. “Suppose we begin with Hollowell. You’re wondering if he was bribed by Teasdale — if he also assisted in the escape. The answer is no: he was an innocent pawn.”

“Then why was he killed? Revenge?”

“Not at all. His life was taken — and not at the place where his body was later discovered — so that the escape trick could be worked in the first place. It was one of the primary keys to the plan’s success.”

“I don’t understand,” I said. “The escape trick had already been completed when Hollowell was stabbed.”

“Ah, but it hadn’t,” Galloon said. “Hollowell was murdered before the execution, sometime between four and five o’clock.”

We stared at him. “Gilloon,” I said, “Rogers and I and five other witnesses saw Hollowell inside the shed—”

“Did you, Parker? The execution shed is lighted by lanterns. On a dark afternoon, during a thunderstorm, visibility is not reliable. And you were some forty feet from him. You saw an average-size man wearing a guard’s uniform, with a guard’s peaked cap drawn down over his forehead — a man you had no reason to assume was not Hollowell. You took his identity for granted.”

“I can’t dispute the logic of that,” I said. “But if you’re right that it wasn’t Hollowell, who was it?”

“Teasdale, of course.”

“Teasdale! For God’s sake, man, if Teasdale assumed the identity of Hollowell, whom did we see carried in as Teasdale?”