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<h2> VIII </h2>
<p>Dick rose the next morning with a sense of lightness and content that sent
him singing into his shower. In the old stable which now housed both
Nettie and the little car Mike was washing them both with indiscriminate
wavings of the hose nozzle, his old pipe clutched in his teeth. From below
there came up the odors of frying sausages and of strong hot coffee.</p>
<p>The world was a good place. A fine old place. It had work and play and
love. It had office hours and visits and the golf links, and it had soft
feminine eyes and small tender figures to be always cared for and looked
after.</p>
<p>She liked him. She did not think he was old. She thought his profession
was the finest in the world. She had wondered if he would have time to
come and see her, some day. Time! He considered very seriously, as he
shaved before the slightly distorted mirror in the bathroom, whether it
would be too soon to run in that afternoon, just to see if she was tired,
or had caught cold or anything? Perhaps to-morrow would look better. No,
hang it all, to-day was to-day.</p>
<p>On his way from the bathroom to his bedroom he leaned over the staircase.</p>
<p>"Aunt Lucy!" he called.</p>
<p>"Yes, Dick?"</p>
<p>"The top of the morning to you. D'you think Minnie would have time to
press my blue trousers this morning?"</p>
<p>There was the sound of her chair being pushed back in the dining-room, of
a colloquy in the kitchen, and Minnie herself appeared below him.</p>
<p>"Just throw them down, Doctor Dick," she said. "I've got an iron hot now."</p>
<p>"Some day, Minnie," he announced, "you will wear a halo and with the
angels sing."</p>
<p>This mood of unreasoning happiness continued all morning. He went from
house to house, properly grave and responsible but with a small song in
his heart, and about eleven o'clock he found time to stop at the village
haberdasher's and to select a new tie, which he had wrapped and stuffed in
his pocket. And which, inspected in broad day later on a country road,
gave him uneasy qualms as to its brilliance.</p>
<p>At the luncheon table he was almost hilarious, and David played up to him,
albeit rather heavily. But Lucy was thoughtful and quiet. She had a sense
of things somehow closing down on them, of hands reaching out from the
past, and clutching; Mrs. Morgan, Beverly Carlysle, Dick in love and
possibly going back to Norada. Unlike David, who was content that one
emergency had passed, she looked ahead and saw their common life a series
of such chances, with their anxieties and their dangers.</p>
<p>She could not eat.</p>
<p>Nevertheless when she herself admitted a new patient for Dick that
afternoon, she had no premonition of trouble. She sent him into the
waiting-room, a tall, robust and youngish man, perhaps in his late
thirties, and went quietly on her way to her sitting-room, and to her
weekly mending.</p>
<p>On the other hand, Louis Bassett was feeling more or less uncomfortable.
There was an air of peace and quiet respectability about the old house, a
domestic odor of baking cake, a quietness and stability that somehow made
his errand appear absurd. To connect it with Judson Clark and his
tumultuous past seemed ridiculous.</p>
<p>His errand, on the surface, was a neuralgic headache.</p>
<p>When, hat in hand, he walked into Dick's consulting room, he had made up
his mind that he would pay the price of an overactive imagination for a
prescription, walk out again, and try to forget that he had let a chance
resemblance carry him off his feet.</p>
<p>But, as he watched the man who sat across from him, tilted back in his
swivel chair, he was not so sure. Here was the same tall figure, the heavy
brown hair, the features and boyish smile of the photograph he had seen
the night before. As Judson Clark might have looked at thirty-two this man
looked.</p>
<p>He made his explanation easily. Was in town for the day. Subject to these
headaches. Worse over the right eye. No, he didn't wear glasses; perhaps
he should.</p>
<p>It wasn't Clark. It couldn't be. Jud Clark sitting there tilted back in an
old chair and asking questions as to the nature of his fictitious pain!
Impossible. Nevertheless he was of a mind to clear the slate and get some
sleep that night, and having taken his prescription and paid for it, he
sat back and commenced an apparently casual interrogation.</p>
<p>"Two names on your sign, I see. Father and son, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"Doctor David Livingstone is my uncle."</p>
<p>"I should think you'd be in the city. Limitations to this sort of thing,
aren't there?"</p>
<p>"I like it," said Dick, with an eye on the office clock.</p>
<p>"Patients are your friends, of course. Born and raised here, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly. I was raised on a ranch in Wyoming. My father had a ranch
out there."</p>
<p>Bassett shot a glance at him, but Dick was calm and faintly smiling.</p>
<p>"Wyoming!" the reporter commented. "That's a long way from here. Anywhere
near the new oil fields?"</p>
<p>"Not far from Norada. That's the oil center," Dick offered,
good-naturedly. He rose, and glanced again at the clock. "If those
headaches continue you'd better have your eyes examined."</p>
<p>Bassett was puzzled. It seemed to him that there had been a shade of
evasion in the other man's manner, slightly less frankness in his eyes.
But he showed no excitement, nothing furtive or alarmed. And the open and
unsolicited statement as to Norada baffled him. He had to admit to himself
either that a man strongly resembling Judson Clark had come from the same
neighborhood, or—</p>
<p>"Norada?" he said. "That's where the big Clark ranch was located, wasn't
it? Ever happen to meet Judson Clark?"</p>
<p>"Our place was very isolated."</p>
<p>Bassett found himself being politely ushered out, considerably more at sea
than when he went in and slightly irritated. His annoyance was not
decreased by the calm voice behind him which said:</p>
<p>"Better drink considerable water when you take that stuff. Some stomachs
don't tolerate it very well."</p>
<p>The door closed. The reporter stood in the waiting-room for a moment. Then
he clapped on his hat.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm a damned fool," he muttered, and went out into the street.</p>
<p>He was disappointed and a trifle sheepish. Life was full of queer chances,
that was all. No resemblance on earth, no coincidence of birthplace, could
make him believe that Judson Clark, waster, profligate and fugitive from
the law was now sitting up at night with sick children, or delivering
babies.</p>
<p>After a time he remembered the prescription in his hand, and was about to
destroy it. He stopped and examined it, and then carefully placed it in
his pocket-book. After all, there were things that looked queer. The
fellow had certainly evaded that last question of his.</p>
<p>He made his way, head bent, toward the station.</p>
<p>He had ten minutes to wait, and he wandered to the newsstand. He made a
casual inspection of its display, bought a newspaper and was turning away,
when he stopped and gazed after a man who had just passed him from an
out-bound train.</p>
<p>The reporter looked after him with amused interest. Gregory, too! The
Livingstone chap had certainly started something. But it was odd, too. How
had Gregory traced him? Wasn't there something more in Gregory's presence
there than met the eye? Gregory's visit might be, like his own, the desire
to satisfy himself that the man was or was not Clark. Or it might be the
result of a conviction that it was Clark, and a warning against himself.
But if he had traced him, didn't that indicate that Clark himself had got
into communication with him? In other words, that the chap was Clark,
after all? Gregory, having made an inquiry of a hackman, had started along
the street, and, after a moment's thought, Bassett fell into line behind
him. He was extremely interested and increasingly cheerful. He remained
well behind, and with his newspaper rolled in his hand assumed the easy
yet brisk walk of the commuters around him, bound for home and their early
suburban dinners.</p>
<p>Half way along Station Street Gregory stopped before the Livingstone
house, read the sign, and rang the doorbell. The reporter slowed down, to
give him time for admission, and then slowly passed. In front of Harrison
Miller's house, however, he stopped and waited. He lighted a cigarette and
made a careful survey of the old place. Strange, if this were to prove the
haven where Judson Clark had taken refuge, this old brick two-story
dwelling, with its ramshackle stable in the rear, its small vegetable
garden, its casual beds of simple garden flowers set in a half acre or so
of ground.</p>
<p>A doctor. A pill shooter. Jud Clark!</p>
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