Read Ebook: A trace of memory by Laumer Keith
Font size: Background color: Text color: Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev PageEbook has 1703 lines and 65619 words, and 35 pages"Thanks, Mr. Foster," I said. "I'll get out of your hair now." Foster had his hand on the door of a deceptively modest-looking cabriolet. I could smell the solid leather upholstery from where I stood. "Why not come along to my place, Legion," he said. "We might at least discuss my proposition." I shook my head. "I'm not the man for the job, Mr. Foster," I said. "If you'd like to advance me a couple of bucks, I'll get myself a bite to eat and fade right out of your life." "What makes you so sure you're not interested?" "Your ad said something about adventure. I've had my adventures. Now I'm just looking for a hole to crawl into." "I don't believe you, Legion." Foster smiled at me, a slow, calm smile. "I think your adventures have hardly begun." I thought about it. If I went along, I'd at least get a meal--and maybe even a bed for the night. It was better than curling up under a tree. "Well," I said, "a remark like that demands time for an explanation." I got in the car and sank back in a seat that seemed to fit me like Foster's jacket fit him. "I hope you won't mind if I drive fast," Foster said. "I want to be home before dark." We started up and wheeled away from the curb like a torpedo sliding out of the launching tube. I got out of the car in the drive at Foster's house, and looked around at the wide clipped lawn, the flower beds that were vivid even by moonlight, the line of tall poplars, and the big white house. "I wish I hadn't come," I said. "This kind of place reminds me of all the things I haven't gotten out of life." "Your life's still ahead of you," Foster said. He opened the slab of mahogany that was the front door, and I followed him inside. At the end of a short hall he flipped a switch that flooded the room before us with soft light. I stared at a pale grey carpet about the size of a tennis court, decked out with Danish teak upholstered in rich colors. The walls were a rough-textured grey; here and there were expensively framed abstractions. The air was cool with the heavy coolness of air conditioning. Foster crossed to a bar that looked modest in the setting, in spite of being bigger than those in most beer joints. "Would you care for a drink?" he said. I looked down at my limp, stained suit, and grimy cuffs. "Look, Mr. Foster," I said. "I just realized something. If you've got a stable, I'll go sleep in it--" Foster laughed. "Come on; I'll show you the bath." I came downstairs, clean, showered, and wearing a set of Foster's clothes. I found him sitting, sipping a drink and listening to music. "I read something else into it," Foster said. "Sit down and have a bite to eat and a drink." I sat in one of the big soft chairs and tried not to let my hand shake as I reached for one of the sandwiches piled on the coffee table. "Tell me something, Mr. Legion," Foster said. "Why did you come here, mention my name--if you didn't intend to see me?" I shook my head. "It just worked out that way." "Tell me something about yourself," Foster said. "It's not much of a story." "Still, I'd like to hear it." "Well, I was born, grew up, went to school--" "What school?" "University of Illinois." "What was your major?" "Music," I answered at once. Foster looked at me, frowning slightly. "It's the truth," I said. "I wanted to be a conductor. The army had other ideas. I was in my last year when the draft got me. They discovered I had what they considered an aptitude for Intelligence work. I didn't mind it. I had a pretty good time for a couple of years." "Go on," Foster said. Well, I'd had a bath and a good meal. I owed him something. If he wanted to hear my troubles, why not tell him? "I was putting on a demonstration. A defective timer set off a charge of HE fifty seconds early on a one-minute setting. A student was killed; I got off easy with a busted eardrum and a pound or two of gravel imbedded in my back. When I got out of the hospital, the army felt real bad about letting me go--but they did. My terminal leave pay gave me a big weekend in San Francisco and set me up in business as a private investigator." I took another long pull at a big pewter tankard of ale and went on. "I had enough left over after the bankruptcy proceeding a few months later to get me to Las Vegas. I lost what was left and took a job with a casino operator named Gonino. "I stayed with Gonino for nearly a year. Then one night a visiting bank clerk lost his head and shot him eight times with a .22 target pistol. I left town the same night." I swallowed some more of Foster's ale. It was the best. Foster was a pretty good egg, too. "After that I sold used cars for a couple of months in Memphis; then I made like a life guard at Daytona; baited hooks on a thirty foot tuna boat out of Key West; all the odd jobs with low pay and no future. I spent a couple of years in Cuba; all I got out of that was two bullet scars on the left leg, and a prominent position on a CIA blacklist. "After that things got tough. A man in my trade can't really hope to succeed in a big way without the little blue card in the plastic cover to back his play. I was headed south for the winter, and I picked Mayport to run out of money." I stood up. "I sure enjoyed the bath, Mr. Foster, and the meal, too--not to mention the beer. I'd like real well to get in that bed upstairs and have a night's sleep just to make it complete; but I'm not interested in the job." I turned away, started across the room. "Legion," Foster said. I turned. A beer bottle was hanging in the air in front of my face. I put a hand up fast and the bottle slapped my palm. "Not a bad set of reflexes for a man whose adventures are all behind him," Foster said. I tossed the bottle aside. "If I'd missed, that would have knocked my teeth out," I said angrily. "You didn't miss--even though you're weaving a little from the beer. And a man who can feel a pint or so of beer isn't an alcoholic--so you're clean on that score." "I didn't say I was ready for the rummy ward," I said. "I'm just not interested in your proposition--whatever it is." "Legion," Foster said, "maybe you have the idea I put that ad in the paper last week, on a whim. The fact is, I've been running it--in one form or another--for over eight years." I looked at him and waited. "Not only locally--I've run it in the big-city papers, and in some of the national weekly and monthly publications. All together, I've had perhaps fifty responses." Foster smiled wryly. "About three quarters of them were from women who thought I wanted a playmate. Several more were from men with the same idea. The few others were hopelessly unsuitable." "That's surprising," I said. "I'd have thought you'd have brought half the nuts in the country out of the woodwork by now." Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev Page |
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