One Good Deed(16)
“Aloysius Archer, but just call me Archer.”
Tuttle looked him up and down with a practiced stare. “You’re the right age. And you look like a tough cookie, for sure. Did you serve, Archer? Did you do your patriotic duty?”
Archer thought this an odd departure, but if it kept the man’s mind off the Remington? “I did my bit. Over three years in Europe.”
“Who under?”
“For most of the war, the Fifth Army, General Mark Clark. I was part of Second Corps, Thirty-Fourth Infantry Division.”
“That was the Mediterranean Theater, was it not?”
“Yes, sir. Salerno, Bologna, Genoa, Milan, the Barbara, Volturno and Gustav Lines, Anzio Beach. Names I couldn’t say before, and places I never thought I’d be. And I truly have no desire to go back.”
“That was some fierce fighting, I understand.”
“You could say. The Fifth had over a hundred thousand casualties when all was said and done. Lost a lot of good men and good friends.”
“Were you wounded, Archer, fighting?”
“Most everybody was wounded, Mr. Tuttle, and I was no exception.”
“Your medals, sir? Did you distinguish yourself? Be detailed.”
Now Archer’s features set firm, like cement going from fluid to hard. “I killed folks I didn’t know, because they were trying to kill me. I left the Army with metal inside me I didn’t start out life with. I got a box of medals and ribbons somewhere, and they don’t amount to a hill of beans now. That’s my piece, so you can just pull the damn trigger if you got to and be done with it.”
The muzzle dropped a shade lower but then held on Archer’s knees.
“I like your spirit, Archer. What I do not understand is your alliance with that scoundrel Pittleman.”
“I needed a job and he gave me one. A hundred dollars if I deliver the Cadillac to him. He advanced me forty dollars with the rest to come on him getting that car.”
“He has sent others before you.”
“That I’ve heard.”
“They came at night. They did not wish to face me.”
Archer eyed the over-under. “I can see why they might have done it that way.”
“Trespassing is a crime hereabouts, as it should be in every democratic union that holds property rights as sacred. Thus, I furnished them exactly what they deserved.”
“Okay. I’m one who doesn’t think property is worth a man’s life, but that may just be me.”
The emerald eyes blazed at this comment. “However, you, sir, show up in broad daylight and knock on my door and admit your mission to my face. Explain yourself.”
“Pretty simple. I wanted you to tell me to my face whether you owe that debt or not.”
“Why is that important to you?”
“Well, if you don’t owe it, I have no further business here.”
“And if I do owe the debt?”
Archer said nothing.
Tuttle appraised him, running his gaze from the top of the hat to the heels of the shoes.
“Come on inside, Archer, and let’s talk.”
He moved aside so Archer could enter and led him down a long, tiled hallway to a small, plainly furnished room with wood paneling and a plank floor with a colorful rug laid over it.
“Sit down over there,” he said, motioning with his shotgun to a chair.
Tuttle took the chair opposite, his shotgun muzzle pointed to the floor.
“I borrowed the money from Hank Pittleman. I had need to do so at the time.”
“Do you owe the man five thousand dollars plus interest?”
“Yes. And it’s also true that I gave my 1947 Cadillac as collateral for that loan.”
“Why’d you do that? Seems like you have a good deal of prosperity going on here.”
“Prosperity sometimes does not equal folding money, Archer. And my suppliers do not barter in wishful thinking.”
“So you owe the debt but won’t pay it back?”
“Do you think life is that simple?”
“Life has never struck me as being simple unless you’re determined to make it so.”
“Pittleman has stolen from me. That is why I have not repaid the money.”
“What’s he taken from you?”
“Something far more precious than the sum of five thousand dollars.”
“Can you be more specific?”
“He has taken my daughter.”
That was a new one on Archer, and his face showed it to be so. “How’s that exactly?”
“He has convinced my beautiful daughter that she should no longer be a part of her father’s life. She has fallen in with his evil and sick ways. For all of her life, I saw her sweet face every day. Now, I have not seen her for over a year.”
“How’d he do that?”
“By giving her things, Archer. By turning her head with materialistic offers. By introducing her to the shallow pleasures of his hedonistic lifestyle. And he treats her roughly, or so I have been told.”
“What’s her name?” Archer asked, though he was reasonably confident of the answer.
“Jackie.”
“I’ve met her.”
“Indeed? And she was no doubt in the company of this heathen.”