
A weary drifter wakes to a sudden knock at his door, his mind still tangled in the night’s quick scams and the echo of a cop’s gruff voice. He’s thrust into a bewildering lineup, a cold stage lit by blinding floodlights, and a woman’s cry that seems to name him as “the man.” The tension of the city’s underbelly and the uneasy looks of the other detainees set a tone of suspicion and dread.
Later, in an Evanston drugstore, a diminutive stranger with an oddly proportioned head asks for directions to a prominent house, then pays with a three‑dollar bill that looks impossibly real—an artifact that shouldn’t exist in 1954. The cashier’s bafflement and the narrator’s own curiosity hint at a deeper puzzle, a possible glitch in reality that may involve a dead man who isn’t really dead. The story teeters between gritty noir and a strange, almost sci‑fi mystery, inviting listeners to wonder what lies behind the counterfeit note and the whispered warning that “the little man knew Ben had been murdered.
Language
en
Duration
~45 minutes (44K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Greenleaf Publishing Company, 1953.
Credits
Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2021-09-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1909–1965
A lively early science fiction writer and editor, he helped shape the feel of pulp-era magazine SF with fast-moving stories and a strong presence in fan culture. He wrote under several names and became especially associated with The Hounds of Hell and the long-running "Club House" feature in Amazing Stories.
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