Jimmy stood for a moment, watching. The night was cold. A frigid wind blew around him, chilling him through his clothing. He thought suddenly of dinner and his father stretched out on the couch, reading the newspaper. His mother in the kitchen fixing dinner. The warmth, the friendly yellow homey warmth.
He turned and made his way through the people to the edge of the street. Behind him the charred stalk of the tree rose black and smoking into the night. A few glowing remains were being stamped out around its base. The buggie was gone, it was over, there was nothing more to see. Jimmy hurried home as if the buggie were chasing him.
"What do you say to that?" Ted Barnes demanded, sitting with his legs crossed, his chair back from the table. The cafeteria was full of noise and the smell of food. People pushed their trays along on the racks in front of them, gathering dishes from the dispensers.
"Your kid really did that?" Bob Walters said, across from him, with open curiosity.
"You sure you're not stringing us along?" Frank Hendricks said, lowering his newspaper for a moment.
"It's the truth. The one they got over at the Pomeroy Estate – I'm talking about that one. It was a real son-of-a-gun."
"That's right," Jack Green admitted. "The paper says some kid spotted it first and brought the police."
"That was my kid," Ted said, his chest swelling. "What do you guys think about that?"
"Was he scared?" Bob Walters wanted to know.
"Hell no!" Ted Barnes replied strongly.
"I'll bet he was." Frank Hendricks was from Missouri.
"He sure wasn't. He got the cops and brought them to the place – last night. We were sitting around the dinner table, wondering where the hell he was. I was getting a little worried." Ted Barnes was still the proud parent.
Jack Green got to his feet, looking at his watch. "Time to get back to the office."
Frank and Bob got up also. "See you later, Ted."
Green thumped Ted on the back. "Some kid you got, Barnes – chip off the old block."
Ted grinned. "He wasn't a bit afraid." He watched them go out of the cafeteria onto the busy noonday street. After a moment he gulped down the rest of his coffee and wiped his chin, standing slowly up. "Not a damn bit afraid – not one damn bit."
He paid for his lunch and pushed his way outside onto the street, his chest still swelled up. He grinned at people passing by as he walked back to the office, all aglow with reflected glory.
"Not a bit afraid," he murmured, full of pride, a deep glowing pnde. "Not one damn bit!"
The Commuter
The little fellow was tired. He pushed his way slowly through the throng of people, across the lobby of the station, to the ticket window. He waited his turn impatiently, fatigue showing in his drooping shoulders, his sagging brown coat.
"Next," Ed Jacobson, the ticket seller, rasped.
The little fellow tossed a five dollar bill on the counter. "Give me a new commute book. Used up the old one." He peered past Jacobson at the wall clock. "Lord, is it really that late?"
Jacobson accepted the five dollars. "OK, mister. One commute book. Where to?"
"Macon Heights," the little fellow stated.
"Macon Heights." Jacobson consulted his board. "Macon Heights. There isn't any such place."
The little man's face hardened in suspicion. "You trying to be funny?"
"Mister, there isn't any Macon Heights. I can't sell you a ticket unless there is such a place."
"What do you mean? I live there!"
"I don't care. I've been selling tickets for six years and there is no such place."
The little man's eyes popped with astonishment. "But I have a home there. I go there every night. I -"
"Here." Jacobson pushed him the chart board. "You find it."
The little man pulled the board over to one side. He studied it frantically, his finger trembling as he went down the list of towns.
"Find it?" Jacobson demanded, resting his arms on the counter. "It's not there, is it?"
The little man shook his head, dazed. "I don't understand. It doesn't make sense. Something must be wrong. There certainly must be -"
Suddenly he vanished. The board fell to the cement floor. The little fellow was gone – winked out of existence.
"Holy Caesar's Ghost," Jacobson gasped. His mouth opened and closed. There was only the board lying on the cement floor.
The little man had ceased to exist.
"What then?" Bob Paine asked.
"I went around and picked up the board."
"He was really gone?"
"He was gone, all right." Jacobson mopped his forehead. "I wish you had been around. Like a light he went out. Completely. No sound. No motion."
Paine lit a cigarette, leaning back in his chair. "Had you ever seen him before?"
"No."
"What time of day was it?"
"Just about now. About five." Jacobson moved toward the ticket window. "Here comes a bunch of people."
"Macon Heights." Paine turned the pages of the State city guide. "No listing in any of the books. If he reappears I want to talk to him. Get him inside the office."
"Sure. I don't want to have nothing to do with him. It isn't natural." Jacobson turned to the window. "Yes, lady."
"Two round trip tickets to Lewisburg."
Paine stubbed his cigarette out and lit another. "I keep feeling I've heard the name before." He got up and wandered over to the wall map. "But it isn't listed."
"There is no listing because there is no such place," Jacobson said. "You think I could stand here daily, selling one ticket after another, and not know?" He turned back to his window. "Yes, sir."
"I'd like a commute book to Macon Heights," the little fellow said, glancing nervously at the clock on the wall. "And hurry it up."
Jacobson closed his eyes. He hung on tight. When he opened his eyes again the little fellow was still there. Small wrinkled face. Thinning hair. Glasses. Tired, slumped coat.
Jacobson turned and moved across the office to Paine. "He's back." Jacobson swallowed, his face pale. "It's him again."
Paine's eyes flickered. "Bring him right in."
Jacobson nodded and returned to the window. "Mister," he said, "could you please come inside?" He indicated the door. "The Vice-President would like to see you for a moment."
The little man's face darkened. "What's up? The train's about to take off." Grumbling under his breath, he pushed the door open and entered the office. "This sort of thing has never happened before. It's certainly getting hard to purchase a commute book. If I miss the train I'm going to hold your company -"
"Sit down," Paine said, indicating the chair across from the desk. "You're the gentleman who wants a commute book to Macon Heights?"
"Is there something strange about that? What's the matter with all of you? Why can't you sell me a commute book like you always do?"
"Like – like we always do?"
The little man held himself in check with great effort. "Last December my wife and I moved out to Macon Heights. I've been riding your train ten times a week, twice a day, for six months. Every month I buy a new commute book."
Paine leaned toward him. "Exactly which one of our trains do you take, Mr -"
"Critchet. Ernest Critchet. The B train. Don't you know your own schedules?"
"The B train?" Paine consulted a B train chart, running his pencil along it. No Macon Heights was listed. "How long is the trip? How long does it take?"
"Exactly forty-nine minutes." Critchet looked up at the wall clock. "If I ever get on it."
Paine calculated mentally. Forty-nine minutes. About thirty miles from the city. He got up and crossed to the big wall map. "What's wrong?" Critchet asked with marked suspicion. Paine drew a thirty-mile circle on the map. The circle crossed a number of towns, but none of them was Macon Heights. And on the B line there was nothing at all.