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"
I
vill
answer
questions
,
"
Ragen
said
.
Startled
by
the
accent
,
Ekey
hesitated
.
"
I
I
mean
we
were
asking
.
.
.
We
wanted
to
assure
the
community
that
you
that
Billy
isn
t
violent
.
"
"
I
vould
be
violent
only
if
someone
vould
try
to
hurt
Billy
or
to
harm
a
female
or
a
child
in
his
presence
,
"
Ragen
said
.
"
Only
in
such
case
I
vould
intervene
.
Let
me
put
it
this
vay
.
Vould
you
allow
person
to
hurt
your
child
?
No
.
You
vould
protect
vife
,
child
or
any
voman
.
If
someone
try
hurt
Billy
,
I
vould
protect
.
But
to
attack
without
provocation
is
barbaric
.
I
am
not
barbarian
.
"
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After
a
few
more
questions
,
the
reporters
asked
to
speak
to
Arthur
.
Caul
relayed
their
request
,
and
they
saw
Ragen
s
hostile
expression
change
as
if
melting
.
An
instant
later
it
hardened
into
a
haughty
,
thin
-
lipped
frown
.
Arthur
looked
around
,
preoccupied
,
took
a
pipe
from
his
pocket
,
lit
it
and
blew
a
long
stream
of
smoke
.
"
This
is
quite
mad
,
"
he
said
.
"
What
is
?
"
Dr
.
Caul
asked
.
"
Putting
William
asleep
to
bring
us
out
on
display
.
I
have
been
trying
my
hardest
to
keep
him
awake
.
Its
important
for
him
to
stay
in
control
.
However
"
he
turned
his
attention
to
the
reporters
"
to
answer
your
question
about
violence
,
I
can
assure
the
mothers
of
this
community
that
they
do
not
have
to
bolt
their
doors
.
William
is
improving
.
He
is
gaining
logic
from
me
and
the
ability
to
express
anger
from
Ragen
.
We
are
teaching
him
and
he
is
consuming
us
.
When
William
has
learned
everything
we
have
to
teach
him
,
we
shall
disappear
.
"
The
reporters
wrote
quickly
in
their
note
pads
.
Caul
brought
Billy
back
,
and
as
he
came
out
,
he
began
to
choke
on
the
pipe
.
"
God
!
That
junks
terrible
!
"
he
said
,
and
threw
it
on
the
table
.
"
I
don
t
smoke
.
"
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Answering
more
questions
,
Billy
said
he
did
not
remember
anything
that
had
happened
from
the
time
Dr
.
Caul
had
taken
him
into
the
other
room
.
He
spoke
hesitantly
about
his
aspirations
.
He
hoped
to
sell
some
of
his
paintings
and
put
part
of
his
money
into
a
child
-
abuse
-
prevention
center
.
As
the
Messenger
staff
left
the
room
,
Caul
noticed
all
three
looked
quite
dazed
.
"
I
think
,
"
he
said
,
walking
with
Billy
back
to
AIT
,
"
we
ve
got
some
more
believers
.
"
Judy
Stevenson
was
busy
on
a
case
,
so
Gary
Schweickart
Drought
the
head
of
the
public
defender
s
office
with
him
to
Athens
to
visit
Billy
.
Gary
wanted
to
know
more
about
the
writer
who
was
going
to
do
the
book
,
and
about
L
.
Alan
Goldsberry
,
the
Athens
attorney
Billy
had
hired
to
handle
his
civil
affairs
.
They
met
at
eleven
o
clock
in
the
conference
room
,
along
with
Dr
.
Caul
,
Billy
s
sister
and
her
fiance
,
Rob
.
Billy
insisted
he
had
come
to
his
own
decision
,
and
that
he
wanted
this
writer
to
do
the
book
.