
“Twenty for one? This was twenty for five.”
“Oh, well, you know, Bernie, inflation,” he said, laughing again. “And these days it’s more likely to be a television show.”
“Television? You should have seen the way the guy was dressed!”
“Just an extra, logical touch to make people refuse to take the offer seriously. University research people operate much the same way. A few years back, a group of sociologists began an investigation of the public’s reaction to sidewalk solicitors in charity drives. You know, those people who jingle little boxes on street corners: Help the Two-Headed Children, Relief for Flood-Ravaged Atlantis? Well, they dressed up some of their students …”
“You think he was on the level, then, this guy?”
“I think there is a good chance that he was. I don’t see why he would have left his card with you, though.”
“That I can figure—now. If it’s a TV stunt, there must be a lot of other angles wrapped up in it. A giveaway show with cars, refrigerators, a castle in Scotland, all kinds of loot.”
“A giveaway show? Well, yes—it could be.”
I hung up, took a deep breath, and called Eksar’s hotel. He was registered there all right. And he’d just come in.
I went downstairs fast and took a cab. Who knew what other connections he’d made by now?
Going up in the elevator, I kept wondering. How did I go from the twenty-dollar bill to the real big stuff, the TV giveaway stuff, without letting Eksar know that I was on to what it was all about? Well, maybe I’d be lucky. Maybe he’d give me an opening.
I knocked on the door. When he said, “Come in,” I came in. But for a second or two I couldn’t see a thing.
It was a little room, like all the rooms in that hotel, little and smelly and stuffy. But he didn’t have the lights on, any electric lights. The window shade was pulled all the way down.
When my eyes got used to the dark, I was able to pick out this Ogo Eksar character. He was sitting on the bed, on the side nearest me. He was still wearing that crazy rumpled Palm Beach suit.
