Every day when he finishes working, Enoch goes into the park and hides in some bushes, watching people swim at the public pool.
The woman pulls down her bathing suit straps, as if to signify that she knows the men are watching her, but otherwise shows no recognition.
Enoch uses Hazel's need of him to convince him to come see his secret with him, but Enoch cannot visit the secret without going through his usual ritual, which involves getting a milkshake at a diner called "The Frosty Bottle," walking past all the animals in a small zoo, and finally walking through the museum.
When the men get to The Frosty Bottle, they encounter Maude, a woman Enoch likes to flirt with who he believes is in love with him.
When they get to the back of the museum, they find Enoch's secret: a mummified, shrunken man who was tortured and killed by Arabs.
Enoch hits his head against a tree and lays there, when he sees a figure in blue pick up a rock and throw it at him.
[1] One of the most commonly cited threads of O'Connor stories is grotesque, and seemingly needless, violence.
This violence is meant to be disconcerting, and shows the random nature of chance, and how wrong Enoch was about having "wise blood," and thinking that something important to him would happen that day.
It is instead judged for its similarities and differences respecting the edited version that became a chapter of Wise Blood.