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that a dive could be impersonal, but I had that feeling very definitely, that he was going into it as he would have done if anything had been drowning—a suicide off Brooklyn Bridge, a coolie off a sampan in the Yangtze, or a dog overboard . . . just because that’s the kind of person he is. I saw him strike out in a swift powerful crawl, his shirt sleeves molded to his arms making quick white arcs above the dark water. Then behind him was Andy. I was only reading into it again, probably, what I knew; but it seemed to me that there was a tensely emotional quality to the way he’d gone in and was fighting to reach Sandra first. I wouldn’t have been surprised in the least if he’d caught Jim and pushed him back out of the way.

      But he didn’t. He didn’t even catch him. I could still see him a few yards behind, picked out in the orange path of the searchlights playing frantically across the water. Behind me I could hear them shouting on the topside, and men pounding down the stone steps. Then I heard Sandra scream again, and all the laboring excitement in me went stone-dead.

      Someone shouted from above: “They’re hanging onto the boat!”

      I turned away, feeling curiously unmoved. Joe Bates, our life guard, pounded up. “Jeez,” he shouted breathlessly, “if she can hang on and bellow, why the hell doesn’t she swim?”

      I didn’t say anything. I guess I’m pretty hard-boiled about people like Sandra.

      “Why doesn’t he let her drown, anyway?”

      That was the voice of young Sally Parks, Lucy Lee’s oldest and best friend, and actually about as cruel and cynical as a newborn babe.

      “It’s not right to talk like that,” Joe Bates shouted.

      “I would if I was him. But I hope somebody saves George Barrol. I’d miss him.”

      As it happened, they saved them both. Jim brought Sandra in and Andy brought George. Sandra was much the same as she was after any hard swim, except that she clung to Jim saying, “My brave Jeem!” until he shoved her off and said, “Skip it, for —— sake!”

      But poor George! He was more dead than alive.

      Joe Bates grabbed him and started pumping him up and down on his stomach, saying, “One, two, three; one, two, three!” But not much water seemed to be coming out of his mouth.

      Everybody else was standing about in the deluge.

      “Andy and Jim look the worst to me,” Sally Parks remarked coolly, in her hard practical young voice. “I move we go up and give ’em a hot toddy.”

      “I’ll stay here with Joe,” Jim said stiffly. “Take Sandra up, will you.”

      “But, Jeem, you are wet, darling!”

      “Stow it, will you. Go on up.”

      They went. I stayed down, looking at Jim. His face was a grim tragic mask, and on it was the sort of bitter sardonic travesty of a smile that I don’t want ever to see on anybody’s face again for a long, long time.

      Joe Bates lifted George up and down. “Jeez,” he said. “This guy ain’t drowned, he’s fainted!

      “Throw some water in his face,” Jim said curtly.

      Joe looked at me, completely bewildered.

      “Pinch him,” I said.

      We eventually brought him around quite decently. He opened his eyes slowly, not sure apparently whether he was waking up in this world or the next. Then he struggled up, wiping the rain off his face, staring at me, the most utter and complete terror gradually dawning in his face.

      “Sandra! Where’s Sandra! Did they save her?” he gasped.

      “Sure they saved her,” Joe said cheerfully. “She’s the original water baby. Couldn’t drown her in the middle of the Atlantic.”

      “Where . . . where is she?”

      “Up top. Where we’re takin’ you. It’s your one chance for a free drink. You don’t want to miss it.”

      I don’t think the idea of free liquor was very tempting to George just then. He shuddered, felt tentatively for his heart, and breathed in a sort of experimental fashion to see if he was all right.

      “I guess that was a pretty close shave,” he said. His voice shook and his face was still white with shock. “Why, I might have been drowned!”

      “Sure,” Joe said. “That’s what some of ’em were countin’ on, all the time.”

      “Really!”

      “Don’t be silly, Joe,” I said. “Get him up.”

      Jim and I didn’t even go to the club.

      “They’ll take care of him,” Jim said. I imagine he didn’t want another scene with Sandra doing the clinging lily. We passed by the club porch, however. We could see a big crowd in the lounge and in the ballroom Rex Brophy’s Band Wagon was playing “The Music Goes Round and Round.” We got into my car.

      “What did she do it for, Jim?” I said.

      “You’ve got me.”

      “She might have drowned poor George.”

      “She had him by the collar, holding him up,” Jim said.

      We rounded the Corner and turned down our road. The rain had stopped as suddenly as it began. A star or two appeared in the cloud rift.

      “Why don’t you come over to my place and have a good stiff drink before you turn in?” I said.

      “O.K.”

      I turned in my back drive and we got out. Sergeant Buck opened the kitchen door and gave what in anyone less completely granite would have been a shuddering gasp. He must have thought I’d drowned his colonel.

      “This is Mr. Gould, Sergeant,” I said. “We’ve been swimming and we’re going to have a drink and a fire.”

      I almost added “if you don’t mind,” but I caught myself.

      “The Colonel’s dancing at the club. I suggest you take my car and go wait for him.”

      Sergeant Buck looked a little uneasy. Then he gave the impression of clicking his heels and saluting without actually doing either. “Yes, ma’am.”

      Jim and I lighted a fire in the living room and I got him a drink with hot water and lemon in it and a bathrobe. It was a quarter to twelve by the clock on the mantel. We sat there, Jim hunched down on the middle of his spine, his chin forward on his chest, thinking God knows what. We sat there from quarter to twelve until ten minutes of one, neither of us having spoken a word. We moved then only because we heard Sergeant Buck bringing the Colonel up the back drive.

      Jim got up. “I’ll be shoving,” he said, and grinned a sort of twisted grin at me that brought quick hot tears to my eyes. I let him out the front door and locked it again. Then I gathered up the glasses and ash tray and took them out to the kitchen.

      Colonel Primrose came in.

      “I’m sorry we don’t seem to have any other entrance to this house,” I said. “Did you have a nice time?”

      “Excellent.”

      “How about a nightcap?”

      I noticed he glanced a little cautiously at Sergeant Buck’s dead pan.

      “Perhaps you’d rather have it upstairs. There’s a tray on the sideboard. I’ll see you in the morning. Good night. Good night, Sergeant.”

      I don’t know about the Colonel, but I know Sergeant Buck was definitely and plainly relieved when I let the dog in and went upstairs, leaving them alone.

      CHAPTER FIVE

      I’m not quite sure now what woke me up. I thought as I waked that it was Sheila

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