PAGE 12
Nightmare Town
by
The place had been ransacked thoroughly if not expertly. Drawers stood out, their contents strewn on the floor; the bed had been stripped of clothing, and pillows had been dumped out of their cases. Near the door a broken wall-light—the obstruction that had checked Steve’s stick — hung crookedly. In the centre of the, floor lay a gold watch and half a length of gold chain. He picked them up and held them out to the girl.
“Dr. MacPhail’s?”
She shook her head in denial before she took the watch, and then, examining it closely, she gave a little gasp. “It’s Mr. Rymer’s!”
“Rymer?” Steve repeated, and then he remembered. Rymer was the blind man who had been in the Finn’s lunchroom, and for whom Kamp had prophesied trouble.
“Yes! Oh, I know something has happened to him!”
She put a hand on Steve’s left arm.
“We’ve got to go see! He lives all alone, and if any harm has —”
She broke off, and looked down at the arm under her hand.
“Your arm! You’re hurt!”
“Not as bad as it looks,” Steve said. “That’s what brought me here. But it has stopped bleeding. Maybe by the time we get back from Rymer’s the doctor will be home. ”
They left the house by the back door, and the girl led him through dark streets and across darker lots. Neither of them spoke during the five-minute walk. The girl hurried at a pace that left her little breath for conversation, and Steve was occupied with uncomfortable thinking.
The blind man’s cabin was dark when they reached it, but the front door was ajar. Steve knocked his stick against the frame, got no answer, and struck a match. Rymer lay on the floor, sprawled on his back, his arms out-flung.
The cabin’s one room was topsy-turvy. Furniture lay in upended confusion, clothing was scattered here and there, and boards had been torn from the floor. The girl knelt beside the unconscious man while Steve hunted for a light. Presently he found an oil lamp that had escaped injury, and got it burning just as Rymer’s filmed eyes opened and he sat up. Steve righted an overthrown rocking-chair and, with the girl, assisted the blind man to it, where he sat panting. He had recognised the girl’s voice at once, and he smiled bravely in her direction.
“I’m all right, Nora,” he said; “not hurt a bit. Someone knocked at the door, and when I opened it I heard a swishing sound in my ear — and that was all I knew until I came to to find you here. ”
He frowned with sudden anxiety, got to his feet, and moved across the room. Steve pulled a chair and an upset table from his path, and the blind man dropped on his knees in a corner, fumbling beneath the loosened floor boards. His hands came out empty, and he stood up with a tired droop to his shoulders. “Gone,” he said softly.
Steve remembered the watch then, took it from his pocket, and put it into one of the blind man’s hands.
“There was a burglar at our house,” the girl explained. “After he had gone we found that on the floor. This is Mr. Threefall. ”
The blind man groped for Steve’s hand, pressed it, then his flexible fingers caressed the watch, his face lighting up happily.
“I’m glad,” he said, “to have this back — gladder than I can say. The money wasn’t so much — less than three hundred dollars. I’m not the Midas I’m said to be. But this watch was my father’s. ”
He tucked it carefully into his vest, and then, as the girl started to straighten up the room, he remonstrated.