'Sorry,' I said hastily. 'Can you tell me what '
'College kids,' he muttered, turning his head away as if to spit.
'Stumbling around, getting in the way, don't know what the hell you're supposed to do.'
'Well, that's what we're trying to find out,' snapped Henry.
The guard turned quickly, and somehow his gaze landed not on Henry but on Francis, who was standing staring into space.
'So it's you, is it?' he said with venom. 'Mr Off-Campus who thinks he can park in the faculty parking lot.'
Francis started, a wild look in his eye.
'Yes, you. You know how many unpaid violations you're carrying? Nine. I turned your registration in to the Dean just last week. They can put you on probation, hold your transcripts, what have you. Suspend your library privileges. If it was up to me they'd put you in jail.'
Francis gaped at him. Henry caught him by the sleeve and pulled him away.
A long, straggly line of townspeople was crunching through the snow, some of them swiping listlessly at the ground with sticks. We walked to the end of the queue, then fell into step with them.
The knowledge that Bunny's body actually lay about two miles to the southwest did not lend much interest or urgency to the search, and I plodded along in a daze, my eyes on the ground.
At the front of the rank an authoritative cluster of state troopers and policemen marched ahead, heads bent, talking in low voices as a barking German shepherd dog circled around them at a trot.
The air had a heavy quality and the sky over the mountains was overcast and stormy. Francis's coat whipped out behind him in theatrical billows; he kept glancing furtively around to see if his inquisitor was anywhere nearby and from time to time he emitted a faint, self-pitying cough.
'Why the hell haven't you paid those parking tickets?' Henry whispered to him.
'Leave me alone.'
We crept through the snow for what seemed like hours, until the energetic needle pricks in my feet subsided to an uncomfortable numbness; heavy boots of policemen, crunching black in the snow, night sticks swinging ponderously from heavy belts. A helicopter overhead swooped in with a roar over the trees, hovered above us for a moment, then darted back the way it had come. The light was thinning and people were trailing up the trampled hillside towards home.
'Let's go,' said Francis, for the fourth or fifth time.
We were starting away at last when a strolling policeman stopped in front of our path. 'Had enough?' he said, smiling, a big red-faced guy with a red moustache.
'I believe so,' said Henry.
'You kids know that boy?'
'As a matter of fact, we do.'
'No ideas where he might of went off to?'
If this was a movie, I thought, looking pleasantly into the pleasant beefy face of the policeman – if this was a movie, we'd all be fidgeting and acting really suspicious.
'How much does a television cost?' said Henry on the way home.
'Why?'
'Because I'd like to see the news tonight.'
'I think they're kind of expensive,' said Francis.
'There's a television in the attic of Monmouth,' I said.
'Does it belong to anyone?'
'I'm sure it does.'
'Well,' said Henry, 'we'll take it back when we're finished with it.'
Francis kept watch while Henry and I went up to the attic and searched through broken lamps, cardboard boxes, ugly Art I oil paintings. Finally we found the television behind an old rabbit hutch and carried it down the stairs to Henry's car. On the way over to Francis's, we stopped by for the twins.
'The Corcorans have been trying to get in touch with you this afternoon,' said Camilla to Henry.
'Mr Corcoran's called half a dozen times.'
'Julian called, too. He's very upset.'
'And Cloke,' said Charles.
Henry stopped. 'What did he want?'
'He wanted to make sure that you and I hadn't said anything about drugs when we talked to the police this morning.'
'What did you tell him?'
'I said I hadn't, but I didn't know about you.'
'Come on,' said Francis, glancing at his watch. 'We're going to miss it if you don't hurry.'
We put the television on Francis's dining room table and fooled around with it until we got a decent picture. The final credits of 'Petticoat Junction' were rolling past, over shots of the Hooter ville water tower, the Cannonball express.
The news was next. As the theme song died away, a small circle appeared in the left-hand corner of the newscaster's desk; within it was a stylized picture of a policeman shining a flashlight and holding a straining dog back by a leash and, underneath, the word MANHUNT.
The newscaster looked at the camera. 'Hundreds search and thousands pray,' she said, 'as the hunt for Hampden College student Edmund Corcoran begins in the Hampden area.'
The picture shifted to a pan of a thickly wooded area; a line of searchers, filmed from behind, beat in the underbrush with sticks, while the German shepherd dog we had seen earlier laughed and barked at us from the screen.
'Where are you guys?' said Camilla. 'Are you in there somewhere?'
'Look,' said Francis. 'There's that horrible man.'
'One hundred volunteers,' said the voice-over, 'arrived this morning to help Hampden College students in the search for their classmate, who has been missing since Sunday afternoon.
Until now there have been no leads in the search for the twenty four-year-old Edmund Corcoran, of Shady Brook, Connecticut, but Action News Twelve has just received an important phone tip which authorities think may provide a new angle in the case.'
'What?' said Charles, to the television set.
'We go now to Rick Dobson, live on the scene.'
The picture switched to a man in a trench coat, holding a microphone and standing in front of what appeared to be a gas station.
'I know that place,' said Francis, leaning forward. 'That's Redeemed Repair on Highway 6.'
'Ssh,' somebody said.
The wind was blowing hard. The microphone shrieked, then died down with a sputtering noise. 'This afternoon,' the reporter said, chin low, 'at one-fifty-six p. m., Action News Twelve received an important piece of information which may provide a break for police in the recent Hampden missing-persons case.'
The camera pulled back to reveal an old man in coveralls, a woolen cap, and a greasy dark windbreaker. He was staring to the side in a fixed manner; his head was round and his face as bland and untroubled as a baby's.
'I am now with William Hundy,' the reporter said, 'co-owner of Redeemed Repair in Hampden, a member of the Hampden County Rescue Squad who has just come forward with this information.'
'Henry,' said Francis. I was startled to see that his face had all of a sudden got very white.
Henry reached in his pocket for a cigarette. 'Yes,' he said tersely. 'I see.'
'What's the matter?' I said.
Henry tamped the cigarette down on the side of the pack. He didn't take his eyes from the screen. 'That man,' he said, 'fixes my car.'
'Mr Hundy,' said the reporter, 'will you tell us what you saw on Sunday afternoon?'
'Oh, my God,' said Charles.
'Hush,' said Henry.
The mechanic glanced shyly at the camera, and then away.
'Sunday afternoon,' he said, in a nasal Vermont voice, 'there was a cream-colored Le Mans, few years old, pulled up to that pump over there.' Awkwardly, as an afterthought, he raised his arm and pointed somewhere off camera. 'It was three men, two in the front seat, one in the back. Out-of-towners. Seemed in a hurry. Wouldn't have thought a thing of it except that boy was with them. I recognized him when I saw his picture in the paper.'
My heart had nearly stopped – three men, white car – but then the details registered. We were four, with Camilla, too, and Bunny hadn't been anywhere near the car on Sunday. And Henry drove a BMW, which was far from a Pontiac.