Yet Brett felt no enmity toward Rollie Knight. It was true that the young black worker was no innocent, but there were degrees of guilt, whether recognized in law or not. Wingate obviously believed - and Brett accepted - that Rollie had become enmeshed a little at a time, in part unwillingly, his freedom of choice diminishing like a weakening swimmer drawn toward a vortex. Nonetheless, for what Rollie Knight had done, there were debts he would have to pay. No one could, or should, help him escape them.

"The one thing we can't do," Brett said, "is help him get away from Detroit."

"I figured that, too." If the crime had been lesser, Wingate thought, they might have chanced it. But not with murder.

"What he needs is something he didn't have those other times - the best lawyer you can get with money."

"He doesn't have money."

"Then I'll raise it. I'll put some up myself, and there'll be others."

Brett was already thinking of people to approach - some, outside the usual ranks of charity bestowers, who felt strongly about social injustice and racial prejudice.

Wingate said, "He'll have to surrender to the police; I can't see any other way. But if we've a strong lawyer he can insist a protection in jail." He wondered - though not aloud - how effective the protection would be, lawyer or not.

"And with a good trial lawyer," Brett said, "he might, just might, get a break."

"Maybe."

"Will Knight do as we say?"

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Wingate nodded. "He'll do it."

"Then we'll find a lawyer in the morning. He'll handle the surrender.

Tonight, the two of them - the girl as well - had better stay with Barbara and me."

The Personnel man shot a glance across the car's front seat. "You sure?"

"I'm sure. Unless you've a better idea."

Leonard Wingate shook his head. He was glad he had found Brett DeLosanto.

Though nothing the young designer had said or done so far was beyond Wingate's own powers of reasoning and decision, Brett's presence and clearheadedness was reassuring. He possessed an instinctive leadership, too, which Wingate, with his training, recognized. He wondered if Brett would be content to remain designing all his years.

They were at the 12th and Blaine intersection. Outside the rundown, paint-peeling apartment house, they got out of the car and Wingate locked it.

As usual, the odor of garbage was strong.

Ascending the worn wooden stairway to the apartment house third floor, Wingate remembered he had told Rollie and May Lou he would identify himself from outside by name and voice. He need not have bothered.

The door he warned them to keep locked was open. Part of the lock was hanging loose where some force - undoubtedly a violent blow - had splintered it.

Leonard Wingate and Brett went in. Only May Lou was inside. She was putting clothes into a cardboard suitcase.

Wingate asked, "Where's Rollie?"

Without looking up, she answered, "Gone."

"Gone where?"

"Some guys come. They took him."

"How long ago?"

"Right after you went, mister." She turned her head. They saw she had been crying.

"Listen," Brett said, "if we get descriptions we can warn the police."

Leonard Wingate shook his head. He knew it was too late. He had a feeling it had been too late from the beginning. He knew, too, what he and Brett DeLosanto were going to do now. They would walk away. As so many in Detroit walked away or, like the priest and Levite, crossed over on the other side.

Brett was silent.

Wingate asked May Lou, "What will you do?"

She closed the cardboard suitcase. "I'll make out."

Brett reached into a pocket. With a gesture, Wingate stopped him. "Let me."

Without counting them, he took what bills he had and pressed them into May Lou's hand. "I'm sorry," he, said. "I guess it doesn't mean much, but I'm sorry."

They went downstairs.

Outside, when they came to the car, its nearside door hung open. The window glass was broken. The two topcoats which had been on the car's back seat were gone.

Leonard Wingate cradled his head in his arms on the car roof. When he looked up, Brett saw his eyes were wet.

"Oh, God!" Wingate said. He raised his arms beseechingly to the black night sky. "Oh, God! This heartless city!"

Rollie Knight's body was never found. He simply disappeared.

Chapter 31

"It's your life, not mine," Adam told Brett DeLosanto. "But I wouldn't be a friend if I didn't say that I think you're being hasty, and making an enormous mistake."

It was close to midnight, and the five of them - Adam and Erica, Barbara and Brett, and Leonard Wingate - were in the Country Club Manor apartment.

Brett and Wingate had joined the others half an hour ago, having driven from the inner city. The conversation had been gloomy. When they had exhausted all that could be said about Rollie Knight, Brett announced his intention to leave the automobile industry and to submit a letter of resignation tomorrow.

Adam persisted, "In another five years you could be heading up Design-Styling."

"There was a time," Brett said, "when that was the only dream I had - to be a Harley Earl, or a Bill Mitchell, or Gene Bordinat, or an Elwood Engel.

Don't misunderstand me - I think they've all been great; some are still. But it isn't for me, that's all."

Leonard Wingate said, "There are other reasons, though, aren't there?"

"Yes, there are. I don't think car manufacturers, who do so much long-range planning for themselves, have done more than a thimbleful of planning and service for the community they live in."

Adam objected, "That may have been true once; it isn't any more.

Everything's changed or changing fast. We see it every day - in management attitudes, community responsibility, the kind of cars we're building, relations with government, acknowledgment of consumers. This isn't the same business it was even two or three years ago."

"I'd like to believe it," Brett said, "if only because obviously you do.

But I can't, and I'm not alone. Anyway, from now on I'll be working on the outside."

Erica asked, "What will you do?"

"If you want the truth," Brett told her, "I'll be damned if I know."

"It wouldn't surprise me," Adam said, "if you got into politics. I'd like you to know that if you do, I'll not only vote for you, I'll contribute to your campaign."

Wingate said, "Me, too." It was strange, he thought, that only this evening he had sensed Brett's leadership and wondered how long he would stay in design.

Brett grinned. "One of these days that may cost you both. I'll remember."

"One thing he's going to do," Barbara told the others, "is paint. If I have to chain him to an easel and bring his meals. If I have to support the two of us."

"Speaking of support," Brett said, "I've thought of starting a small design business of my own."

"If you do," Adam predicted, "it won't stay small because you can't help being a success. Also, you'll work harder than you ever did."

Brett sighed. 'That's what I'm afraid of."

But even if it happened, he thought, he would be his own man, would speak with an independent voice. That was what he wanted most, and so did Barbara. Brett glanced at her with a love which seemed to increase day by day. Whatever unknown quantities were coming, he knew that they would share them.

"There were rumors," Barbara said to Adam, "that you might leave the company too."

"Where did you hear that?"

"Oh, around."

Adam thought: It was hard to keep any secret in Detroit. He supposed Perce Stuyvesant, or someone close to him, had talked.

Barbara pressed him. "Well, are you leaving?"

"An offer was made to me," Adam said. "I thought about it seriously for a while. I decided against it."

He had telephoned Perce Stuyvesant a day or two ago and explained: There would be no point in going to San Francisco to speak of terms and details; Adam was an automobile man and would remain one.

As Adam saw it, a good deal was wrong with the auto industry, but there was a great deal more that, overwhelmingly, was right. The miracle of the modern automobile was not that it sometimes failed, but that it mostly didn't; not that it was costly, but that - for the marvels of design and engineering it embodied - it cost so little; not that it cluttered highways and polluted air, but that it gave free men and women what, through history, they had mostly craved - a personal mobility.

Nor, for an executive to spend his working life, was there any more exciting milieu.

"All of us see things in different ways," Adam told Barbara. "I guess you could say I voted for Detroit."

Soon afterward they said goodnight.

***

On the short drive from Maple and Telegraph to Quarton Lake, Adam said,

"You didn't say much tonight."

"I was listening," Erica answered. "And thinking. Besides, I wanted you to myself, to tell you something."

"Tell me now."

"Well, it rather looks as if I'm pregnant. Look out! Don't swerve like that!"

"Just be glad," he said, as he pulled into a driveway, "you didn't tell me on the Lodge at rush hour."

"Whose driveway is this?"




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