One Good Deed(29)



Whether consciously or not, his strides took him to the blocky Poca City Courts and Municipality Building. He walked up to the correct floor and knocked on the door.

“Enter,” said the stern voice.

He swung the door open, and there sat Ernestine Crabtree clacking away on her Royal typewriter. She had a pencil stuck through her hair bun. She stopped typing when she saw him.

“What are you doing here?” she asked. “It’s not your time yet.”

She was attired in a similar fashion as before. Prim dress, same shell glasses, low chunky heels that he could once more see through the kneehole, thick stockings, but very nice ankles and calves.

He noted a cigarette smoldering in the ashtray.

He came in, pulled the chair in front of her, and sat down.

“I could use some advice, Miss Crabtree.”

“About what?”

He eyed the lit smoke.

She saw this and said, “No, I can’t. I’m sorry.”

“No problem, brought my own.”

He pulled out his pack of Luckys, tapped it against the desk, shook out a cigarette, and lit it. She took her smoke from the ashtray and had a puff, too.

“What advice?” she said curiously.

“You know my debt collection job?”

“Yes, you mentioned it.”

“Well, I’ve gone out there twice now.”

“Who owes the debt?”

“Lucas Tuttle.”

“Wait, the other night, weren’t you with—”

“That’s right. Jackie Tuttle. You know her?”

She shook her head. “Not really. Did you collect the money?”

“Well, no. Lucas Tuttle says he has the money to pay Hank Pittleman back.”

“Hank Pittleman?”

“You know him?”

She shook her head a second time. “But I know he is very wealthy and owns a lot of property around town.”

“Anyway, Tuttle won’t pay back the debt unless Jackie comes back home.”

“And she doesn’t want to do this?”

“No.”

“Then how will you collect the money?”

“Well, Mr. Tuttle signed over as collateral for the loan his 1947 Cadillac.” He added, “It’s all legal. Pittleman showed me the papers. And Mr. Tuttle confessed to owing the money.”

“So you could take the car in repayment of the loan?”

“I could, except I found out last night the man burned it up.”

She sat forward and put her cigarette down. “He burned up his own car?”

“Looks that way.”

“Where does that leave you?”

“In a pickle of sorts. You know Mr. Pittleman advanced me forty dollars. And if I can’t get the loan repaid or the car now, I’m sort of up the creek, so to speak.”

“You mean Pittleman will want his forty dollars back?”

“Right.”

“But surely you still have the money.”

“Well, I spent some of it.”

“How much?”

“Actually, most of it.”

She looked at him in disbelief. “You spent nearly forty dollars since we last met!”

“Well, I bought some new clothes to replace these. I wore these to prison some years ago. And I have to eat and all. Though I earned a dollar doing some lifting, I’m not eager to use my back for my daily bread.”

She shook her head and looked cross. “See, this is why I was prepared to have you go out on job interviews. If you had, you wouldn’t be in this kind of dilemma.”

“Yeah, I see that. But I can’t take it back now.”

“But it’s not too late, you know. You can earn money other ways. I can help you with that.”

“Yes, ma’am. And it may come to that. And for that I thank you.” He smoked down his Lucky and then ground it in the speckled glass ashtray. “What book were you reading at dinner?”

“It was by Virginia Woolf. Have you ever heard of her?”

Archer shook his head.

“She was from England. She died back in 1941. I admire her work greatly. And her, personally.”

“I might try something of hers then.”

“I could loan you a book here and there. If you’ll really read it.”

“I guarantee you I will. I like detective stuff the best. But I’ll read most anything. So you’re trying to write, too?”

“Again, I just…scribble.” She paused and considered him in an appraising light. “Dan Bullock? You were afraid he was going to try something with me, weren’t you?”

“Well, he was, wasn’t he?”

“It wasn’t the first time a parolee has…approached me.”

“I would expect not. But that doesn’t make it right. And, well, there’s something else.”

“What?”

In answer, he took out the paper he’d found on her office floor and explained that fact to her before handing it over. “I wouldn’t normally give such trash to a lady, but maybe it’s best you know about it.”

She only briefly glanced at it before tossing it into the waste bin next to her desk.

“You’re right, it is trash.”

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