Cal, Calla, Callahan,Eddie thought, and sighed.
"Cal's a decent man in most ways, but he does not enjoy being taken to the woodshed. We did move down to the boathouse for a few days..." Deepneau paused, possibly engaging in a brief struggle with his conscience. Then he said, "Two days, actually. Only two. And then Cal said we were crazy, being in the damp was making his arthritis worse, and he could hear me wheezing. 'Next thing I'll have you in that little shitpot hospital over in Norway,' he said, 'with pneumonia as well as cancer.' He said there wasn't a chance in hell of Andolini finding us up here, as long as the young guy - you" - he pointed a gnarled and strawberry-stained finger at Eddie - "kept his mouth shut. 'Those New York hoodlums can't find their way north of Westport without a compass,' he said."
Eddie groaned. For once in his life he absolutelyloathed being right about something.
"He said we'd been very careful. And when I said, 'Well,somebody found us, this Callahan found us,' Cal said well of course." Again the finger pointed at Eddie. "Youmust have told Mr. Callahan where to look for the zip code, and after that it was easy. Then Cal said, 'And the post office was the best he could do, wasn't it? Believe me, Aaron, we're safe out here. No one knows where we are except the rental agent, and she's back in New York."
Deepneau peered at them from beneath his shaggy eyebrows, then dipped a strawberry and ate half of it.
"Isthat how you found us? The rental agent?"
"No," Eddie said. "A local. He took us right to you, Aaron."
Deepneau sat back. "Ouch."
"Ouch is right," Eddie said. "So you moved back into the cabin, and Cal went right on buying books instead of hiding out here and reading one. Correct?"
Deepneau dropped his eyes to the tablecloth. "You have to understand that Cal is very dedicated. Books are his life."
"No," Eddie said evenly, "Cal isn't dedicated. Cal isobsessed, that's what Cal is."
"I understand that you are a scrip," Roland said, speaking for the first time since Deepneau had led them into the cabin. He had lit another of Cullum's cigarettes (after plucking the filter off as the caretaker had shown him) and now sat smoking with what looked to Eddie like absolutely no satisfaction at all.
"A scrip? I don't..."
"A lawyer."
"Oh. Well, yes. But I've been retired from practice since - "
"We need you to come out of retirement long enough to draw up a certain paper," Roland said, and then explained what sort of paper he wanted. Deepneau was nodding before the gunslinger had done more than get started, and Eddie assumed Tower had already told his friend this part of it. That was okay. What he didn't like was the expression on the old fella's face. Still, Deepneau let Roland finish. He hadn't forgotten the basics of relating to potential clients, it seemed, retired or not.
When he was sure Rolandwas finished, Deepneau said: "I feel I must tell you that Calvin has decided to hold onto that particular piece of property a little longer."
Eddie thumped the unwounded side of his head, being careful to use his right hand for this bit of theater. His left arm was stiffening up, and his leg was once more starting to throb between the knee and the ankle. He supposed it was possible that good old Aaron was traveling with some heavy-duty painkillers and made a mental note to ask for a few if he was.
"Cry pardon," Eddie said, "but I took a knock on the head while I was arriving in this charming little town, and I think it's screwed up my hearing. I thought you said that sai...that Mr. Tower had decided against selling us the lot."
Deepneau smiled, rather wearily. "You know perfectly well what I said."
"But he'ssupposed to sell it to us! He had a letter from Stefan Toren, his three-times-great grandfather, saying just that!"
"Cal says different," Aaron responded mildly. "Have another strawberry, Mr. Dean."
"No thank you!"
"Have another strawberry, Eddie," Roland said, and handed him one.
Eddie took it. Considered squashing it against Long, Tall, and Ugly's beak, just for the hell of it, then dipped it first in a saucer of cream, then in the sugarbowl. He began to eat. And damn, it was hard to stay bitter with that much sweetness flooding your mouth. A fact of which Roland (Deepneau too, for that matter) was surely aware.
"According to Cal," Deepneau said, "there was nothing in the envelope he had from Stefan Toren except for this man's name." He tilted his mostly hairless head toward Roland. "Toren's will - what was in the olden days sometimes called a 'dead-letter' - was long gone."
"I knew what was in the envelope," Eddie said. "He asked me, andI knew! "
"So he told me." Deepneau regarded him expressionlessly. "He said it was a trick any streetcorner magician could do."
"Did he also tell you that hepromised to sell us the lot if I could tell him the name? That he f**kingpromised? "