“Arnie La Pointe usually knows where I am,” Handy answered.
“Right.”
Parker turned the Ford around, and headed back for the bridge. In the rear-view mirror, he saw the green Dodge come out of the turnoff and go up the road towards the ferry. He took a long way around to get to the farmhouse, not wanting to be too near the diner. He went around through New Brunswick, and it was nearly two o’clock before he got there.
He walked in and the first thing he saw was that the automatic was gone from the card table. The second thing he noticed was that the door to the fruit cellar was still barred. He backed out, looking all around him, and walked around the farmhouse until he came to the ragged hole in the outside wall where Stubbs had knocked the clapboard through and crawled out. He walked over to the dirt road and saw where Stubbs had walked on the soft clay between the tyre tracks. He grimaced and went back to the farmhouse and saw that Stubbs had even taken time to shave.
He couldn’t wait one more day, thought Parker. He had to go complicate things again. He looked around at the empty slopes around the farmhouse, dotted with scrub. Where the hell have you got to, Stubbs? he thought. Where did you go, Stubbs?
PART THREE
Chapter 1
DARKNESS. Pitch-black darkness, and no sound other than the sounds you make yourself. Blackness and silence and absolute solitude, twenty-two hours a day for two weeks.
Stubbs was lucky. Up and down the country roads of California in the ‘thirties, travelling with the migrant crop-pickers, fighting with the scabs and being stomped every once in a while in a back room by the deputies, had dulled Stubbs’s brain. Whole areas of emotion and understanding were muffled for him now, and his brain was no longer capable of complicated thoughts or abstract ideas, and that was lucky. He could stand up under the silent solitary darkness a lot better than a man with a whole brain.
He didn’t panic, and he didn’t talk to himself, and he didn’t concoct crazy complicated schemes that would have forced Parker to kill him. He didn’t butt his head against a wall like a rat in a maze. He stopped shaving and he stopped fighting back, because his brain was good enough to tell him there was no reason to shave and no reason to fight back. But other than that he didn’t do anything that a more sensitive man might have done.
Since he was starting with only part of a mind anyway, it was easier for Stubbs to revert to the animal. A man with a whole brain would panic first, do all the idiotic things that come from panic, and if he survived the panic then he would be reverted to the animal. For Stubbs it was simpler and more direct.
When an animal is enclosed, he concentrates on only one thing — getting out. And the first way he tries is by digging. Sometime after Parker left on the third day, Stubbs felt his way across the concrete floor to the nearest wall, and then crawled along the wall, feeling the concrete floor and the concrete blocks of the wall where they angled together, looking for a break in one or the other, but he couldn’t find a thing. Then he went around again, and this time he found a place where the floor had crumbled a little bit, just at the edge of the wall.
He tried to remember the place without being able to see it, and stumbled away to the broken-down shelves where the farmer’s wife had once kept her canning. He got a chunk of wood and went back and for a while he couldn’t find the tiny place where the floor had crumbled; but then he did. He poked at the broken place in the floor with the jagged end of the piece of wood, and for a long while he didn’t seem to be getting anywhere at all. It would have been easier if he could see what he was doing. Every once in a while he felt the broken place with his fingers, and a few more grains of concrete would brush away, and he’d poke at it some more.
By the time he was too exhausted to work any more he had a hole in the floor the size of his fist. Then he fell asleep, and the next thing he knew, Parker was kicking at the door and telling him to come out, and it was the fourth day.
The fourth day and the fifth day and the sixth day he worked on the concrete with chunks of wood, and by the sixth day he had a hole more than a foot in diameter, and he’d started scooping out the dirt. Parker never came into the fruit cellar, because there was no light in there and no reason to go in, so Stubbs didn’t try to hide the dirt or the broken rubble of concrete. But on the seventh day he thought to check outside, when Parker let him out, to see just how much digging he had to do.
The land slanted, so that there were only three steps up from the basement level at the back, but around at the side where he’d been working the land slanted up. He judged where the spot would be, and saw that it was impossible. The ground was up the wall on the outside to about shoulder height, judging from inside, and Stubbs knew he’d never be able to get through that. He’d have to dig down first, to get under the wall, and then over, and then up maybe five feet or more. He didn’t have any tools, and he didn’t have any light, and he wouldn’t know whether he was digging in the right direction or not.
After Parker left, that seventh day, Stubbs didn’t do anything at all. He sat on the floor in the blackness, listening to his own breathing because that was all there was to listen to, and after a while he felt like crying but he didn’t. Even with half a brain, an important failure can affect a man.
The eighth day he stopped shaving, and he stopped looking for an opening when Parker let him out for his two hours in the air. He stopped shaving because he felt despair after the failure of the digging, and he stopped looking for an opening because Parker had never given him one and never would. The ninth day, he didn’t do anything.
If an animal can’t dig out, it will try to break out, to force its way through the enclosure. The tenth day, after Parker left, Stubbs tried battering down the door. He hit it with his shoulder, and then he backed off and hit it again. That was the closest he came to panic, because of the rhythmic pattern of the movement against the door and because of the pain it made along his arm and shoulder and because the door didn’t give at all. When he came close to panic, he stopped hitting the door and stumbled across the black room and sat down.
First the animal tried to go under, and then through, and then over. The eleventh day, Stubbs attacked the ceiling. It was just low enough so Stubbs could strain up on tiptoe and touch the wood between the beams. He knew the farmhouse was sagging and old, and he thought the flooring might be rotten. He got another piece of the shelving and spent a while ramming at the ceiling, trying to break a hole. Because he couldn’t see, he sometimes hit the beams instead, and it would jar both arms and sometimes make him drop the piece of wood. Dust and dirt fell down on him as he struck upwards, and he couldn’t break through.
Then, on the twelfth day, one of the others gave him a flashlight. At first, he couldn’t really believe it, and he kept the joy in, because he was afraid it was a joke or something and they’d take it away again before putting him back in the fruit cellar.
But then he realized it wasn’t a joke; Parker was impersonal, not cruel. He never did anything without a reason, and there was no reason to taunt Stubbs, so the flashlight was really his. Parker didn’t feel sorry for him because he didn’t feel anything for him at all, with the possible exception of irritation. But Handy felt sorry for him and that was the break.
They put him back in the fruit cellar, and then they left. Stubbs switched on the flashlight and looked at the enclosure. He found the little pile of rubble and dirt where he’d tried to dig his way out, and when he looked for it he saw the scarred place on the ceiling where he’d tried to force his way out. He saw the broken-down shelving he’d been stumbling over from time to time, and he saw his way out.
If he’d had a light before, he’d have been out by now. The wall was concrete block, practically all the way up. But for the last foot, along the outer wall, it wasn’t concrete block. The beams rested on the top row of blocks and between them the wall was just wooden siding, ordinary wooden siding. Stubbs inspected that part of the wall all the way along, and saw how old and rotten and warped the wood looked.