or less what they said, but other people seemed to use words as signals in another code they had agreed upon. For example, the womanâs questions and commands were evidently not to be considered as questions and commands, then answered accordingly with a yes, no, or maybe, but were rather to be considered like the many signboards in the street, such as Try Good Gulf for Better Mileage, then either ignored or acted upon, but even if acted upon, not as an immediate consequence of what the words commanded one to do.
Such a code, she reflected, may not be bad. Indeed, it seemed to cause people less trouble than words. At one time she must have known the code. It should not be hard to catch on to.
A man sat down on the bench beyond her knapsack. She couldnât tell if he was twenty-five or thirty-five. On the one hand, he was as slender as the first youth, but the curly hair which hugged his scalp was as dry and crinkled as a thirty-five-year-oldâs. A blue vein throbbed in his slightly hollow temple. He wore matching red sweatshirt and pants, with a white stripe running along the seam of the pants, and odd shoes which were like sneakers except that the sole ran up the back of the heel. He was breathing heavily. These details she had observed in one glance. Now from the corner of her eye she became aware that he was looking at her and wished to speak. It was also clear to her, though she could not have said how, that ordinarily he was shy but that some unusual circumstances had given him leave to speak to her.
âI just ran eighteen miles.â He closed his eyes and took a deep breath.
âWhy?â
âIâve been into running for three months.â
âYouâve been what?â What was the meaning of the expression âinto runningâ? Perhaps he was in trouble. He was on the run.
âItâs changed my life.â
She didnât understand him but it was clear that he was speaking of something commonplace, something she might be expected to understand if she had not been away for a long time.
âHow has it changed your life?â
âIt got me out of my head.â
âYou meanââ She was not certain what he meant. Had he gone crazy?
âIn another three weeks I expect to be up to twenty-six.â
âWhy twenty-six?â
âThatâs the marathon distance. But this is no ordinary marathon.â
âIt isnât?â
âNo. Iâm getting ready for the Richmond marathon, but Iâm doing it by running on the Long Trailâthatâs what it was originally called and is still called in Vermont. I like that better than the Appalachian Trail, donât you? You can run it from here north because once you get up itâs mostly flat, but very high. Youâre right on the crest of a ridge, with nothing but valleys and clouds on either side. By the way, Iâm Richard Rountree.â He held out his hand. She took it. It was very slender, dry, and fibrous. He seemed to be all gristle and bone.
âIâmââ She began and stopped. She wanted to look at her driverâs license.
He didnât notice. âWould you like to go to Hattieâs tonight?â
âHattieâs?â
âYou know, down the hill. Itâs nothing but a barn but the foodâs not bad. The music is country and Western. Runners hang out there.â
While he was talking, she was planning a declarative sentence. âI donât know what Iâm going to do,â she said, uttering one word after another. The sentence sounded flat but she finished it and her voice did not go up into a question. âI donât know where Iâll be staying tonight.â
Though her voice sounded flat to her, like a person recovering from a stroke, like Rip coming down from the mountain and speaking to a villager, he didnât seem to mind. In fact, he drew closer, crowding the knapsack, and crossed one thin leg over the other