
It was more, he told himself, like homesteading than colonising. Groups from home communities went
out to try their luck, even little villages sending out their bands as in the ancient past the eastern
communities had sent their wagon trains into the virgin west.
And he could be in on this great adventure if he could only break his contract, if he could walk out on
the village, if he could quit this petty job.
But he couldn't. There was nothing he could do. He'd reached the bare and bitter end of ultimate
frustration.
There was a knocking on the door and he stopped his pacing, stricken, for it had been years since
there'd been a knock upon the door. A knock upon the door, he told himself, could mean nothing else
but trouble. It could only mean that he'd been recognised back there on the road -just when he'd been
beginning to believe that he'd gone unrecognised.
He went slowly to the door and opened it and there stood the four of them - the village banker,
Herman Frobisher; Mrs Halvorsen, the wife of the Baptist minister; Bud Anderson, the football coach,
and Chris Lambert, the editor of the weekly paper.
And he knew by the looks of them that the trouble would be big - that here was something he could
not brush lightly to one side. They had a dedicated and an earnest look about them - and as well the
baffled look of people who had been very wrong and had made up their minds most resolutely to do
what they could about it.
Herman held out his pudgy hand with a friendly forcefulness so overdone it was ridiculous.
"Tobe," he said, "I don't know how to thank you, I don't have the words to thank you for what you did
tonight."
Tobias took his hand and gave it a quick clasp, then tried to let go of it, but the banker's hand held on
almost tearfully.
"And running off," shrilled Mrs Halvorsen, "without waiting to take any credit for how wonderful you
were. I can't, for the life of me, know what got into you."
"Oh," Tobias said uncomfortably, "it really wasn't nothing."
The banker let go of Tobias' hand and the coach grabbed hold of it, almost as if he had been waiting
for the chance to do so.
"Randy will be all right, thanks to you," he said. "I don't know what we'd have done without him, Tobe,
in the game tomorrow night."
"I'll want a picture of you, Tobe," said the editor. "Have you got a picture? No, I suppose you haven't.
We'll take one tomorrow."
"But first," the banker said, "we'll get you out of here."
"Out of here?" asked Tobias, really frightened now. "But, Mr Frobisher, this place is my home!"
"Not any more, it isn't," shrilled Mrs Halvorsen. "We're going to see that you get the chance that you
never had. We're going to talk to AA about you."
"AA?" Tobias asked in a burst of desperation.
"Alcoholics Anonymous," the pastor's wife said primly. "They will help you stop your drinking."
"But suppose," the editor suggested, "that Tobe here doesn't want to."
Mrs Halvorsen clicked her teeth, exasperated. "Of course he does," she said. "There never was a man
-"
"Now, now," said Herman, "I think we may be going just a bit too fast. We'll talk to Tobe tomorrow -"
"Yeah," said Tobias, reaching for the door, "talk to me tomorrow."
"No, you don't," said Herman. "You're coming home with me. The wife's got a supper waiting, and we
have a room for you and you can stay with us until we get this straightened out."
"I don't see," protested Tobias, "there's much to straighten out."
"But there is," said Mrs Halvorsen. "This town has never done a thing for you. We've all stood calmly
by and watched you stagger past. And it isn't right. I'll talk to Mr Halvorsen about it."
The banker put a companionable arm around Tobias's shoulder.
"Come on, Tobe," he said. "We never can repay you, but we'll do the best we can."
He lay in bed, with a crisp white sheet beneath him and a crisp white sheet on top and now he had the