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"Maybe," he agreeci. "Part of it. That Carl is fine, and gentle, and that he loves you — yes. And also, that it's time you stopped kidding yourself."
"Kidding myself!" It was a cry of anguish. Jerry was unmoved.
"I'm a doctor," he said. "It's a business that isn't entirely confined to giving pills. You get to know what's good for people— and not just for their upset stomachs. Oh, I know, you've told yourself a bunch of cock-and-bull stories about how you're in love with me and how sad it is and all the rest. But it's not the truth, the real truth. The real truth is that you were sheltered for too many years of your life, and when you reached the point where you could no longer be sheltered, you were hurt. Being hurt made you afraid of life — and that's the real point of it. Hanging onto a hopeless love for me is only an excuse to keep from facing life. By telling yourself that you love me and that's why you can't marry Carl no matter how much you like him, you're actually confessing that you're afraid of life and of what life offers."
Her face was drained of color. She swayed, and he was afraid for an instant that she was going to faint. "It isn't true — " she whispered shakily.
"It is true," said Jerry, more gently.
Carl was blissfully unconscious of the scene in the kitchen. Phyllis had seemed close to him that evening as never before, and this time he didn't want to check himself with common sense. He wanted to dream for a while.
He told Anne and Jerry that he was going for a drive, and then he got into his car and turned it toward the country. At a lonely and thickly wooded place, he stopped the car and began to walk, humming softly to himself. The bushes at the side of the road moved; his humming stopped.
"Who's there?" he asked sharply, and listened. He heard no sound at all at first, then the explosive outlet of breath held too long.
An apparition stumbled out of the bushes, a ragged, bearded, emaciated ghost of a man with burning eyes.
"Ledderbe!"
The man groaned. "They tried to kill me in the hospital," he whimpered. "I had to get away. But there are troopers — watching — every road — I haven't had any food — "
Carl had seen starvation, and desperation, before. He could not have, that night, turned the wild and desperate creature in for his own sake. But there was another^ stronger reason for doing what he did — Phyllis. Once Jerry — and Suggs — knew about Led
derbe, Roger Dineen's name would be smeared all over the state in type three inches high.
For several days he raided the Malone icebox, and drove out at midnight with his preferred food to the hunted man's hiding place. He was keeping Ledderbe alive, and gaining his confidence, but the problem wasn't solved. When Ledderbe agreed to give himself up. . . .
It was Hubert Suggs who, all unknowingly, showed Carl what might prove to be a way out. Suggs played detective in the city one afternoon, on the suspicion that Roger Dineen's henchmen, his secretary, Burke, and his butler, Connors, were deserting their master. He left Carl and Jerry in his office to await his call. When the telephone rang, Carl leaped ior it.
"They've done it!" Suggs shouted. "They've skipped! I saw the tickets! Connections straight through to Monterey, Mexico. Get going, Carl! Go straight to Dineen and tell him his boys have skipped."
"The thing to hammer at," said Jerry, after he, too, had talked with Suggs, "is that Burke and Connors have headed for Mexico because they're implicated in the kidnapping and possible murder of Ledderbe. Tell that to Dineen— in other words, find out what's happened to Ledderbe, or else this wonderful break for us is no good. We've got to find Ledderbe, or we fail. Understand?"
Carl understood all too well. He walked out of Suggs' office, got into his car, like a man condemned. And then, as he rang the bell of the big house on the hill, the idea, the barely possible solution, came to him. It was a chance, he thought, just a bare chance. But he would have to take it, for Phyllis. . . .
That night he told Anne and Jerry what he had done — that he had told Dineen he, Carl, had Ledderbe. The Malones were astonished at what seemed like duplicity, until Carl explained that he had hoped by this to force Dineen to resign. "And if he gives up, signs a confession, promises never to meddle again . . . won't justice be served as well as if he goes to prison? And Phyllis won't be as badly hurt. . . ."
They didn't know, until they heard her voice, that Phyllis had come into the room. "Don't worry about me," she said tightly. "I'll — I can go away. I couldn't have less of a life . . ." and suddenly she keeled over.
The front doorbell sounded. Jerry groaned. "A patient — now! It would happen. Carl — Anne — take Phyllis in
Romantic,
delightful songs
an(d music on the
THERE'S
ROMANCE IN
THE AIR
WHEN
JACK SMITH
SINGS
Read "The True Romance of Jack Smith" !n June True Romance Magazine on sale May 2lrf.
JACK SMITH SHOW
every nighl-, Monday thru Friday —
CBS