The Box
What to think of him? Whitfield smiled at Quinn but then looked away, so as not to see in case Quinn did not smile back.
    “You know, Quinn—uh, how to put this?”
    “How to put what?”
    “Of course. That’s the problem. What I mean, coming out of this thing—”
    “Box?”
    “Yes, that’ll do it. Coming out, it’s sort of like starting at the bottom. New chance and all that. You know, all new, everything. I mean, you look like that sometimes.”
    “Do I?” and Quinn did not know what else to say.
    The two men walked out and Quinn remembered that Ryder had said it would make a new man out of him.

Chapter 5
    The narrow main street looked pink and blue to Quinn, pink on the side where the sun hit and blue on the shadow side. There were not many people. There was an old woman who scraped camel dung into a basket. When Quinn passed he saw that the woman was a man. Three children looked at Quinn, because he was so pale, but one child looked with one eye only, because the other was covered with flies. And a man stared down from a balcony, watching the stranger walk. The balcony was birdcage thin and a little water dribbled down to the street. The man was holding a wet rag to the back of his head, and when Quinn passed the man closed his eyes again.
    “Peaceful town, eh?” said Whitfield.
    “I don’t know. Just lying still doesn’t mean peaceful.”
    Whitfield looked at Quinn for a moment but said nothing. Before driving out of here I’ll have a gin fizz. With ice this time.
    “We turn in here,” he said.
    Quinn saw the little trees on either side of the steps, and the big stone facade.
    “The bank?”
    “It’s the hotel. Between ten and two our mayor is at the hotel.”
    “He owns the hotel, too?”
    “Oh no. Owned by a Swiss couple. They always own hotels, you know.”
    “I didn’t know.”
    I must stop making these little remarks, thought Whitfield.
    There was a yellow dog on the bottom step, belly turned sunward. This was a thin, yellow dog, Quinn could see, and only his bare belly looked meaty. Quinn did not feel right about the dog.
    “Thin enough to survive,” said Whitfield.
    “What?”
    “They eat them, you know. When they’re fat. You like dogs?”
    “I’ve never eaten one.”
    Now I surely must stop, Whitfield thought.
    They went from the dry heat into a hall which was tiled and cool, thin brass columns going up and up, past the second-floor balcony which ringed the hall. They turned through an arch into a large room which seemed filled with nothing but little round tables. Then Quinn saw a big Arab get up in the dark corner. Somebody else sat there at the table with him.
    “Ah,” said Remal, and bowed. “Our strange traveler,” and he offered his hand like a European.
    When they got to the dark corner Whitfield said, “This is he, Beatrice, this is Quinn, and you’ll probably be disappointed.”
    Quinn saw a fine-shaped woman who looked up and shrugged, but she smiled with it. “What he means,” she said to Quinn, “is that he thinks I expected something non-human.”
    “I didn’t mean anything of the sort,” said Whitfield and sat down at the table. “You were wishing for something non-human. I think I’ll have…”
    “I know what you’ll have,” said Remal and clapped his hands. “And you, Mister Quinn?”
    “Pardon?”
    Still feeble-minded, thought Whitfield, and confused, thought Beatrice, and Remal reserved judgment while he kept smiling at Quinn. The smile meant, I’m watching you but you can’t see me.
    “What would you like to drink?” Remal asked.
    “Scotch. And water.”
    “I don’t suggest water,” said Remal. “Try Vichy.”
    “All right,” said Quinn. He did not care.
    “Don’t you want ice?” said Whitfield.
    “Of course.”
    “Then you have to ask for it, Quinn.”
    “Maybe Mister Quinn hasn’t traveled much,” said Beatrice. “I mean, not counting your last trip.”
    “That trip didn’t count, educationally,” said

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