He had come to the edge of the wood and could now see the lake, calm save close in shore where little waves broke with monotonous regularity against the beach. Across the silvery water, a chain of hills, heavily wooded, were nowadays a sanctuary for small game . . . too many gun-happy hunters had all but exterminated the wildlife there. Edward had hunted as a youngster, accepting it as a sport because his father and grandfather did. But he was responsible for the bill that ruled slaughter out of the district for fifty years to come. There were deer there now . . . the beavers were at work again, the skunks and squirrels and porcupines had ventured back . . . there were even a few red foxes and small bear . . .
Edward slid down a bank, crossed the beach and went out to the end of the Easterly dock. He stood there for a long time, unaware that the sun was almost gone, and that a chill current of air had begun to drift along the shore, trailing with it shreds of night mist. He heard the chuckle of water around the piles beneath him but didn’t look down. It was deep this far out and would be cold. He began involuntarily to imagine drowning . . . the plunge, the struggle, the final letting go.
Then he saw that someone had come along the beach and was trying to attract his attention. It was a girl wearing slacks and a bulky red sweater. She was dripping wet, as if she had just stepped out of the lake. Even from where he stood he could hear the slush of water in her rubber-soled sneakers.
She called up to him: “Will you help me? A man’s hurt, His car turned over. He’s trapped. He’ll drown if we don’t get him out!”
“Drown?”
“The car rolled into the lake. Please come. Please hurry!”
Edward ran back along the dock and jumped off into the sand beside her. She ran ahead and there was nothing to do but to follow her. Apparently she hadn’t recognized him and for this he was grateful; he hated being pinned like a specimen to some stranger’s collection of celebrities. This girl was intent not on him but on the car which had righted itself and now stood half-submerged about fifty feet off shore. The driver was under the wheel, his left arm across the door, a bloody hand trailing in the water.
The nausea of shock was at the pit of Edward’s stomach again, and he hesitated at the water’s edge, debating whether to go to the injured man’s rescue or to turn and run for help.
“I tried,” the girl said. “I couldn’t! But I tried . . .”
So. There was no help for it. Edward peeled off his coat, removed his shoes. The first step into the icy water made him recoil and stooping to conceal his reaction he tugged at his socks. Then, barefoot, he waded out, the girl splashing, half-swimming beside him.
“Go back!” he shouted.
She shook her head and kept right on.
The man in the car was only half-conscious, but he attempted a jaunty grin when he saw Edward.
“Fancy meeting you here!” he said. Then, with a wash of pallor, he fainted.
As Edward struggled to release and lift the heavy body, he thought that if anyone were trapped it was he, himself. He got the man back to the beach and put him down where a bank of sand offered some protection and support. The girl followed. Her teeth were chattering, her lips blue beneath the smeared-on crimson of her lipstick. She brought Edward’s coat and he covered the unconscious fellow as well as he could. Then she went back for the shoes and socks and handed them to Edward.
“What were you doing on this road?” he demanded. “Didn’t you see the sign back there?”
“Yes. We saw it.”
“Then why didn’t you turn around? What were you after?”
“A story,” she said. “You, of course! We’re reporters.”
“I see,” he said, “very well. There’s a doctor in the village. I’ll call him from the house. It won’t take long. Wait here.”
He turned abruptly and hurried back toward Easterly along an old shortcut he knew that by-passed the pines. Almost obliterated by a tangle of frozen weeds and thorny bushes, the path was steep and rough. Edward crashed through, taking long strides. It was almost dark now and the lake mist was drifting up, clinging, breaking loose again, leaving torn shreds as if a company of tattered ghosts had passed. A castanet-rattling of frogs in a damp hollow ceased abruptly, then began again. Of course those two on the beach were scout ants staking out a lump of sugar for their colony! No use to ask them for a few days’ grace; the rest of the horde would arrive tomorrow and the public flaying would begin again: that pitiless exposure which was like being skinned alive . . . a laying bare of lungs, heart, viscera, veins, nerves. And he recalled a statue he had seen somewhere of a martyred saint neatly and expertly deprived of his flesh which he held like a toga, and with a certain elegance, over his arm.
Edward had reached the top of the slope when he heard the girl behind him. He didn’t look back or speak, since he had expected this to happen: she would try to get into the house. Let the man on the beach bleed to death; this was a scoop . . . she’d get in, or else! Edward heard again the sloshing sneakers, her quick panting breath. “My dog’s in this thicket somewhere,” she gasped. “He was frightened. He swam ashore and ran off . . . His name’s Murphy.”
Edward made a contemptuous sound, a sort of snort of disbelief. He heard her calling: “Murphy! Murphy!” And hoped that she had turned back. Cutting across the rose garden to the brick walk, he saw Easterly glowing with lights. As he hurried up the steps and across the verandah to the door, the girl caught up with him again.
Eithne was warming herself at the fire in the hallway. She held a cup of coffee which she stirred slowly, the gesture expressing annoyance, indignation and resolve. She was wearing her furs. A pillbox the size of a cake of Pear’s Soap was poised behind the silver upsurge of her pompadour.
“I’m driving back to New York tonight,” she said before Edward could explain. “I can’t take the responsibility . . .”
She broke off, suddenly aware of her brother’s extra-ordinary appearance and of the girl who had come in with him.
“Edward! Where on earth . . .?”
Edward veered away from the word “accident.” He used a strangely dated substitute: “There’s been a . . . mishap. A car overturned on the lake road. A man’s hurt. Badly, I’m afraid.”
He made an awkward gesture, glancing quickly at the shivering girl.
“My sister, Mrs. Wade.”
The girl would have offered her hand but the coffee cup presented an obstacle. She smiled at Eithne instead. She had very white teeth and Edward was aware of a flash of mischief and good humor.
“My name’s Megan,” she said. “Megan Donahue. I wonder could I stand in front of the fire? I’m frozen.”
Eithne moved quickly.
“Of course. Edward . . .?”
It was a cry for help, but Edward had no intention of coming to his sister’s rescue. He snatched up the telephone and while he struggled with the mysteries of area codes and information the two women watched him, Eithne with amazement as if he had changed character, the girl with shining eyes as if she were looking at an archangel.
It was after midnight when he finally went