Chapter XIV
THERE WERE in fact, two buses. One wide yellow vehicle was pulled up on the shoulder of the road. A black-and-white police car nosed against it from behind. Beside it stood a group of three, two policemen and the bus driver.
The other bus had stopped a few yards ahead and a group of people—ten or a dozen—were climbing on. These people seemed, all of them, to be looking back with crooked necks toward the policemen.
Paul made a wild U-turn. His car stuttered and bounced and stopped behind the police car. The time was 2:54. Mr. Gibson found himself limping after his companions over lumpy sod through tall dust-plastered weeds that grew between the road and a patched wire fence. It was an unexpected setting for a crisis. Most crises, thought Mr. Gibson, take place in unexpected setting.
“I’m Mrs. Gibson,” he heard Rosemary cry. “It was my husband. Did you find it? Is it here? The poison?”
Not one of the three men opened his mouth. So Mr. Gibson knew that they had not found it.
“Who are those people getting on that other bus?” cried Rosemary against their silence. “What’s happening?”
“Passengers,” said one of the policeman. “They don’t—none of them—know anything. We’re letting them go about their business.” He swung around. “You the man left this poison someplace in the olive oil bottle?” He had selected Mr. Gibson instead of Paul … and Mr. Gibson nodded.
“Well, we can’t find it on this bus.”
“Which seat did you sit in?” snapped the second policeman.
Mr. Gibson shook his head.
“How big was the package?”
Mr Gibson showed them mutely, using his hands.
“In a paper bag?”
Mr. Gibson nodded. This policeman, a young one, gave him a disgusted look, sucked air into the corner of his mouth, and swung up through the open door of the bus. He didn’t like any part of this situation. His partner, an older man, with a thicker mask on, helped Rosemary up by her elbow. Paul went, too. Four of them ducked and bobbed, searching in there, where the policemen must already have searched.
Mr. Gibson stood in the dusty weeds. This was the bus? He had ridden this bus? He had no recollection of any details at all. Now, here he was, standing in the sun, on the dusty earth, with a field spreading away from him and he, his own survivor.
The bus driver, a lean man in his thirties with a long and rather surprisingly pale ace, stood in the weeds, too, hands deep in trouser pockets, watching him. “So you would your own quietus make? Hey?” said the bus driver softly.
Mr. Gibson was immeasurably startled. “I botched it,” said he pettishly.
The bus driver poked out his hand and seemed to be touching his tongue up over his teeth. He moved back far enough to lean in at the door of the bus. “This man sat halfway back on the right side, near the window, alone,” he bawled.
The four inside responded by gathering together on the right side of the bus. The driver came orward far enough to lean on the high yellow bus wall.
“You botched it, all right,” he said to Mr. Gibson. “Hamlet made a mess of it, too. Hey? Going to try again?” He had sandy lashes.
“I doubt it.” snapped Mr. Gibson. “I’ll take what’s coming to me.” He pulled back his shoulders.
“Gibson, hey? Teach at the college, don’t you?” the man said. “What do you teach?”
“Poetry.”
“Poetry! Hah!” The man grinned. “There’s a million poems about death, I guess.”
“And about love, too.” said Mr. Gibson with frozen-feeling lips. This was the oddest, the most unexpected conversation he had ever gotten into.
“Sure—love and death,” the bus driver said, “and God and man—and all the real stuff.”
“Real?” Mr. Gibson blinked.
“You think it ain’t?” the bus driver said. “Don’t gimme that.”
The younger policeman came out of the bus. “Nope,” he said. “No soap. We’ll look again in a few minutes.”
“Yeah?” said the driver. “Whassa matter? Don’t you trust yourselves?”
“Eyes can do funny tricks,” the policeman said stiffly.
“O.K. by me. I don’t mind being out of service. Nice day.” The bus driver looked at Mr. Gibson again with contemplative eyes.
Rosemary jumped down out of the bus. “What can we do?”
Paul behind her, took her arm. “Better go home, Rosie,” he murmured. “The broadcast is the only hope, now. Nothing we can do but wait.”
“You remember him?” cried Rosemary to the bus driver.
“Sure do, ma’am.”
“Did you see the paper bag?”
“Might have,” said the bus driver, narrowing his eyes. “Seems to me I get the impression he shifted a little package to his other hand when he put his fare in. It’s just an impression but I got it. Might mean something.”
“Did you see it in his hand when he got off?”
“No, ma’am. People getting off have their backs to me.”
“Did you see who took the seat he’d been sitting in …?”
“No, ma’am. Lessee. He got off at Lambert? Well, I had a little poker game with a green Pontiac there—where he got off. This Pontiac and me was outbluffing each other, so I paid no attention.…”
“Was the bus full?”
“No, ma’am. Not at that hour.”
“Do you understand?’’ said Rosemary. “It’s a deadly poison. In the wrong bottle. Do you understand that?”
The bus driver said sweetly. “I understand.”
“Did you notice anyone getting off with a green paper bag?”
“I can’t see their hands when they’re getting off, ma’am,” he reminded her patiently.
Rosemary clasped her own hands and looked off across the field.
Paul said, “Somebody picked it up and took it and there’s no way of finding out who.… The broadcast warning will either reach him or it won’t.”
The two cops were listening quietly. The older one shifted his weight.
“Maybe,” said Rosemary. “Maybe there is something we can do. You were there,” she said to the bus driver. “Did you recognize anybody else who was on the bus then?”
“Hey?” said the bus driver, wrinkling his brow.
“Anyone else we could find and ask? Somebody who was also there and might have noticed?”
“Wait a minute.” The driver seemed to bristle up. “This stuff’s poison, hey?”
Paul said. “Damned dangerous,” and looked angry. “He took it from my lab. He knew what it was. He should never … Oh, come home, Rosie.”
“A stranger,” said Rosemary, still addressing the bus driver, “trusting in a label. Some stranger to us, who doesn’t want to die. People do trust labels.…”
“Yes,” he said, “they got a right to. And there was my blonde.”
“Blonde?”
“Yeah, and while she wouldn’t … I don’t think. … Nobody,” said the bus driver forcefully, heaving himself away from his leaning position, “is going to poison my blonde!” He grew taller. “Is that your car?”
“Who is this blonde?” the young policeman said moving in.
“I don’t know her name.”
“Where does she live?”
“I don’t know where she lives.”
“She was on the bus?”
“Yen, she was on the bus.”
“If you don’t know her … how come …?”
“She doesn’t know that she’s my blonde—not yet. One of these days … Aw, I was biding my time. Now look,” the bus driver said, “I’m going. One thing I do know and that’s the stop she gets off at. I can find her. And nobody’s going to poison my blonde.”
He set off toward Paul’s car.
“Oh yes! Paul,” Rosemary cried, “Kenneth, come on! We’ll all go, find her. She might have noticed … Hurry, come on!”
The whole group was streaming toward Paul’s car.
The older policeman said, “Wait … I can call in, you know. I can get a prowl car there in seconds …”
“Where?” said the driver. “When I don’t know where myself? All I got is the stop. Corner of Allen and the Boulevard. What can you do with that? Thanks, anyway, but I guess I got to go find her myself. I’ll know her when I see her, see?”
“What about this bus?”
“Life and death,” said the driver, with his hand on Paul’s car. “Let them fire me.” Paul was right behind him. “Give me the keys,” the driver said.
“My car … I’ll drive.” Paul looked as if he were suffering. His mouth was grim.
“You are an amateur,” said the bus driver, and took the keys out of Paul’s hand.
Mr. Gibson knew only that Rosemary’s hands were pulling and hustling him. He and she got into the back seat. Paul got in beside the bus driver.
“Good luck,” said the older policeman, rather kindly. “Call in, now.” The younger one was chewing grass.
The bus driver was moving levers. Paul’s car surged backward, slipped out into traffic. It seemed to respond with pleasure to a master’s hand. “I can make better time, that’s all,” the bus driver said. “Driving’s my business. Every business has its skills.”
“That’s all right,” Paul murmured.
They were sailing back toward town.