Black Evening

Black Evening by David Morrell Page B

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Authors: David Morrell
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mean Sam? Sure, I know her. She's been getting D's. She had a conference with me. Instead of asking how to get a better grade, though, all she did was talk about you, pumping me for information. She's got quite a thing for you. Too bad about her."
    "Why?"
    "Well, she's so plain, she doesn't have many friends. I doubt she goes out much. There's a problem with her father. She was vague about it, but I had the sense her three sisters are so beautiful that Daddy treats her as the ugly duckling. She wants very much to please him. He ignores her, though. He's practically disowned her. You remind her of him."
    "Who? Of her father?"
    "She admits you're ten years younger than him, but she says you look exactly like him."
    I felt heartsick.
***
    Two days later, I found her waiting for me — again at eight a.m. — outside my office.
    Tense, I unlocked the door. As if she heard my thought, she didn't shut it this time. Sitting before my desk, she didn't fidget. She just stared at me.
    "It happened again," she said.
    "In class, I didn't even look at you."
    "No, afterward, when I went to the library." She drew an anguished breath. "And later — I ate supper in the dorm. I heard your voice so clearly, I was sure you were in the cafeteria."
    "What time was that?"
    "Five-thirty."
    "I was having cocktails with the Dean. Believe me, Sam, I wasn't sending messages to you. I didn't even
think
of you."
    "I couldn't have imagined it! You wanted me to go to bed with you!"
    "I wanted research money from the Dean. I thought of nothing else. My mind was totally involved in trying to convince him. When I didn't get the money, I was too annoyed to concentrate on anything else but getting drunk."
    "Your voice — "
    "It isn't real. If I sent thoughts to you, wouldn't I admit what I was doing? When you asked me, wouldn't I confirm the message? Why would I deny it?"
    "I'm afraid."
    "You're troubled by your father."
    "What?"
    "My graduate assistant says you identify me with your father."
    She went ashen. "That's supposed to be a secret!"
    "Sam, I asked him. He won't lie to me."
    "If you remind me of my father, if I want to go to bed with you, then I must want to go to bed with — "
    "Sam — "
    " — my father! You must think I'm disgusting!"
    "No, I think you're confused. You ought to find some help. You ought to see a — "
    But she never let me finish. Weeping again, ashamed, hysterical, she bolted from the room.
    And that's the last I ever saw of her. An hour later, when I started lecturing, she wasn't in class. A few days later, I received a drop-slip from the registrar, informing me she'd canceled all her classes.
    I forgot her.
***
    Summer came. Then fall arrived. November. On a rainy Tuesday night, my wife and I stayed up to watch the close results of the national election, worried for our presidential candidate.
    At 3 a.m., the phone rang. No one calls that late unless…
    The jangle of the phone made me bang my head as I reached for a beer in the fridge. I rubbed my throbbing skull and swung in alarm as Jean, my wife, came from the living room and squinted toward the kitchen phone.
    "It might be just a friend," I said. "Election gossip."
    But I worried about our parents. Maybe one of them was sick or…
    I watched uneasily as Jean picked up the phone.
    "Hello?" She listened apprehensively. Frowning, she put her hand across the mouthpiece. "It's for you. A woman."
    "What?"
    "She's young. She asked for Mr. Ingram."
    "Damn, a student."
    "At three a.m.?"
    I almost didn't think to shut the fridge. Annoyed, I yanked the pop-tab off the can of beer. My marriage is successful. I'll admit we've had our troubles. So has every couple. But we've faced those troubles, and we're happy. Jean is thirty-five, attractive, smart, and patient. But her trust in me was clearly tested at that moment. A woman had to know me awfully well to call at 3 a.m.
    "Let's find out." I grabbed the phone. To prove my innocence to

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