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Authors: Robert R. McCammon

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BOOK: Gone South
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In the reception area was a sofa, a grouping of chairs, and a magazine rack. The secretary, whose name was Mrs. Faye Duvall, was on the telephone at her desk, a computer’s screen glowing blue before her. She was forty-nine, gray-haired, fit, and tanned, and Dan had talked to her enough to know she played tennis every Saturday at Lakeside Park. She had taken off the jacket of her peach-hued suit and draped it over the back of her chair, and a fan aimed directly at her whirred atop a filing cabinet.

Dan saw that the closed door behind her no longer had Mr. Jarrett’s name on it. On the door was embossed
MR. E. BLANCHARD.
“One minute,” Mrs. Duvall said to Dan, and returned to her phone conversation. It was something to do with refinancing. Dan waited, standing before her desk. The window’s blinds had been closed to seal out the sun, but the heat was stifling even with the fan in motion. At last Mrs. Duvall said good-bye and hung up the phone, and she smiled at Dan but he could see the edginess in it. She knew, of course; she’d typed the letter.

“ ’Afternoon,” she said. “Hot enough for you?”

“I’ve known worse.”

“We need a good rain, is what we need. Rain would take the sufferin’ out of that sky.”

“Mr. Jarrett,” Dan said. “What happened to him?”

She leaned back in her chair and frowned, the corners of her mouth crinkling. “Well, it was sudden, that’s for sure. They called him upstairs a week ago Monday, he cleaned out his desk on Tuesday, and he was gone. They brought in this new fella, a real hard charger.” She angled her head toward Blanchard’s door. “I just couldn’t believe it myself. Bud was here eight years; I figured he’d stay till he retired.”

“Why’d they let him go?”

“I can’t say.” The inflection of her voice, however, told Dan she was well aware of the reasons. “What I hear is, Mr. Blanchard was a real fireball at a bank in Baton Rouge. Turned their loan department around in a year.” She shrugged. “Bud was the nicest fella you’d ever hope to meet. But maybe he was too nice.”

“He sure helped me out a lot.” Dan held up the letter. “I got this today.”

“Oh. Yes.” Her eyes became a little flinty, and she sat up straighter. The time for personal conversation was over. “Did you follow the instructions?”

“I’d like to see Mr. Blanchard,” Dan said. “Maybe I can work somethin’ out.”

“Well, he’s not here right now.” She glanced at a small clock on her desk. “I don’t expect him back for another hour.”

“I’ll wait.”

“Go ahead and sit down, then. We’re not exactly crowded at the minute.” Dan took a seat, and Mrs. Duvall returned to her task on the computer screen. After a few moments, during which Dan was lost in his thoughts about how he was going to plead his case, Mrs. Duvall cleared her throat and said, “I’m sorry about this. Do you have enough money to make one payment?”

“No.” He’d gone through his apartment like a whirlwind in search of cash, but all he’d been able to come up with was thirty-eight dollars and sixty-two cents.

“Any friends you could borrow it from?”

He shook his head. This was his problem, and he wasn’t going to drag anybody else into it.

“Don’t you have a steady job yet?”

“No. Not that, either.”

Mrs. Duvall was silent, working on the keyboard. Dan put the letter in his pocket, laced his fingers together, and waited. He didn’t have to be told that he was up Shit Creek without a paddle and that his boat had just sprung a leak. The heat weighed on him. Mrs. Duvall got up from her chair and angled the fan a little so some of the breeze came Dan’s way. She asked if he wanted a cold drink from the machine down the hall, but he said he was fine.

“I tell you, this damn heat in here is somethin’ awful!” she said as she backed the cursor up to correct a mistake. “Air-conditionin’ busted first thing this mornin’, can you believe it?”

“It’s bad, all right.”

“Listen, Mr. Lambert.” She looked at him, and he winced inside because he could see pity in her expression. “I’ve gotta tell you that Mr. Blanchard doesn’t go for hard-luck stories. If you could make up for one payment, that might help a whole lot.”

“I can’t,” Dan said. “No work’s been comin’ in. But if I lose my truck, there’s no way I can get to a job if somebody calls me. That truck … it’s the only thing I’ve got left.”

“Do you know anythin’ about guns?”

“Pardon?”

“Guns,” she repeated. “Mr. Blanchard loves to go huntin’, and he collects guns. If you know anythin’ about guns, you might get him talkin’ about ’em before you make your pitch.”

Dan smiled faintly. The last gun he’d had anything to do with was an M16. “Thank you,” he said. “I’ll remember that.”

An hour crept past. Dan paged through all the magazines, looking up whenever the door to the hallway opened, but it was only to admit other loan customers who came and went. He was aware of the clock on Mrs. Duvall’s desk ticking. His nerves were beginning to fray. At three-fifteen he stood up to go get a drink of water from the fountain, and that was when the door opened and two men entered the office.

“Hello, Mr. Blanchard!” Mrs. Duvall said cheerfully, cueing Dan that the boss had arrived.

“Faye, get me Perry Griffin on the phone, please.” Emory Blanchard carried the jacket of his light blue seersucker suit over his right arm. He wore a white shirt and a yellow tie with little blue dots on it. There were sweat stains at his armpits. He was a heavyset, fleshy man, his face ruddy and gleaming with moisture. Dan figured he was in his mid-thirties, at least ten years younger than Bud Jarrett. Blanchard had close-cropped brown hair that was receding in front, and his square and chunky face coupled with powerful shoulders made Dan think the man might’ve played college football before the beers had overtaken his belly. He wore silver-wire-rimmed glasses and he was chewing gum. The second man had likewise stripped off the coat of his tan-colored suit, and he had curly blond hair going gray on the sides. “Step on in here, Jerome,” Blanchard said as he headed for his office, “and let’s do us a li’l bidness.”

“Uh … Mr. Blanchard?” Mrs. Duvall had the telephone to her ear. She glanced at Dan and then back to Blanchard, who had paused with one hand on the doorknob. “Mr. Lambert’s been waitin’ to see you.”

“Who?”

Dan stepped forward. “Dan Lambert. I need to talk to you, please.”

The force of Blanchard’s full gaze was a sturdy thing. His eyes were steely blue, and they provided the first chill Dan had felt all day. In three seconds Blanchard had taken Dan in from shoetips to the crown of his head. “I’m sorry?” His eyebrows rose.

“Repossession,” Mrs. Duvall explained. “Chevrolet pickup truck.”

“Right!” Blanchard snapped his fingers. “Got it now. Your letter went out yesterday, I recall.”

“Yes sir, I’ve got it here with me. That’s what I need to talk to you about.”

Blanchard frowned, as if his teeth had found a fly in his chewing gum. “I believe the instructions in that letter were clear, weren’t they?”

“They were, yeah. But can I just have two minutes of your time?”

“Mr. Griffin’s on the line,” the secretary announced.

“Two minutes,” Dan said.
Don’t beg,
he thought. But he couldn’t help it; the truck was his freedom, and if it was taken from him, he’d have nothing. “Then I’ll be gone, I swear.”

“I’m a busy man.”

“Yes sir, I know you are. But could you just please hear me out?”

The chilly blue eyes remained impassive, and Dan feared it was all over. But then Blanchard sighed and said resignedly, “All right, sit down and I’ll get to you. Faye, pipe ol’ Perry into my office, will you?”

“Yes sir.”

Dan settled into his chair again as Blanchard and the other man went into the inner office. When the door had firmly closed, Mrs. Duvall said quietly, “He’s in a good mood. You might be able to get somewhere with him.”

“We’ll see.” His heart felt like a bagful of twisting worms. He took a long, deep breath. There was pain in his skull, but he could tough it out. After a few minutes had passed, Dan heard Blanchard laugh behind the door; it was a hearty, gut-felt laugh, the kind of laugh a man makes when he’s got money in his pockets and a steak in his belly. Dan waited, his hands gripped together and sweat leaking from his pores.

It was half an hour later when the door opened again. Jerome emerged. He looked happy, and Dan figured their business had been successful. He closed the door behind him. “See ya later on, Faye,” he told Mrs. Duvall, and she said, “You take care, now.” Jerome left, and Dan continued to wait with tension gnawing his nerves.

A buzzer went off on Mrs. Duvall’s desk, and Dan almost jumped out of his chair. She pressed a button. “Yes sir?”

“Send Mr. Lambert in,” the voice said through the intercom.

“Good luck,” Mrs. Duvall told Dan as he approached the door, and he nodded.

Emory Blanchard’s office was at a corner of the building, and had two high windows. The blinds were drawn but shards of sunlight arrowed white and fierce between the slats. Blanchard was sitting behind his desk like a lion in his den, imperial and remote. “Shut the door and have a seat,” he said. Dan did, sitting in one of two black leather chairs that faced the desk. Blanchard removed his glasses and wiped the round lenses with a handkerchief. He was still chewing gum. The sweat stains at his armpits had grown; moisture glistened on his cheeks and forehead. “Summertime.” He spoke the word like a grunt. “Sure not my favorite season.”

“It’s been a hot one, all right.” Dan glanced around the office, noting how this man had altered it from Bud Jarrett’s homey simplicity. The carpet was a red-and-gold Oriental, and behind Blanchard on oak shelves that still smelled of the sawmill were thick leather-bound books, meticulously arranged tomes that were for display more than for reading. A stag’s head with a four-point rack of antlers was mounted on a wall, and beneath it a brass plaque read
THE BUCK STOPS HERE
. Prints of fox hunts were hung on either side of the stopped buck. On the wide, smooth expanse of Blanchard’s desk were framed photographs of an attractive but heavily made-up blond woman and two children, a girl of seven or eight and a boy who looked to be ten. The boy had his father’s cool blue eyes and his regal bearing; the girl was all bows and white lace.

“My kids,” Blanchard said.

“Nice-lookin’ family.”

Blanchard returned the glasses to his face. He picked up the boy’s picture and regarded it with admiration. “Yance made all-American on his team last year. Got an arm like Joe Montana. He sure raised a holler when we left Baton Rouge, but he’ll do fine.”

“I’ve got a son,” Dan said.

“Yessir.” Blanchard put the photograph back in its place next to a small Lucite cube that had a little plastic American flag mounted inside it. Written on the cube in red, white, and blue were the words I Supported Desert Storm. “You wait about nine more years, you’ll see Yance Blanchard breakin’ some passin’ records at LSU, I guarandamntee it.” He swiveled his chair around to where a computer screen, a telephone, and the intercom were set up. He switched the computer on, pressed a few keys, and black lines of information appeared. “Okay, there’s your file,” he said. “You a Cajun, Mr. Lambert?”

“No.”

“Just wonderin’. Sometimes you can’t tell who’s a Cajun and who’s not. Alllllrighty, let’s see what we’ve got here. Carpenter, are you? Employed at A&A Construc— oh, you
were
employed at A&A Construction until November of last year.”

“The company went bankrupt.” He’d told Mr. Jarrett about it, of course, and it had gone into his file.

“Construction bidness hit the rocks, that’s for sure. You free-lancin’ now, is that it?”

“Yes sir.”

“I see Jarrett was lettin’ you slide some months. Delinquent two payments. See, that’s not a good thing. We can let you get by sometimes if you’re one payment behind, but two payments is a whole different story.”

“Yes sir, I know that, but I … kind of had an understandin’ with Mr. Jarrett.”

Even as he said it, Dan knew it was the wrong thing to say. Blanchard’s big shoulders hunched up almost imperceptibly, and he slowly swiveled his chair around from the computer screen to face Dan. Blanchard wore a tight, strained smile. “See, there’s a problem,” he said. “There is no Mr. Jarrett at this bank anymore. So any understandin’ you might’ve had with him isn’t valid as far as I’m concerned.”

Dan’s cheeks were stinging. “I didn’t mean to be—”

“Your record speaks for itself,” the other man interrupted. “Can you make at least one payment today?”

“No sir, I can’t. But that’s what I wanted to talk to you about. If I could … maybe … pay you fifteen dollars a week until a job comes along. Then I could start makin’ the regular payments again. I’ve never been so long between jobs before. But I figure things’ll pick up again when the weather cools off.”

“Uh-huh,” Blanchard said. “Mr. Lambert, when you lost your job did you look for any other kind of work?”

“I looked for other jobs, yeah. But I’m a carpenter. That’s what I’ve always done.”

“You subscribe to the paper?”

“No.” His subscription had been one of the first items to be cut.

“They run classified ads in there every day. Page after page of ’em. All kinds of jobs, just beggin’.”

“Not for carpenters. I’ve looked, plenty of times.” He saw Blanchard’s gaze fix on his snake tattoo for a few seconds, then veer away with obvious distaste.

“When the goin’ gets tough,” Blanchard said, “the tough get goin’. Ever hear that sayin’? If more people lived by it, we wouldn’t be headin’ for a welfare state.”

“I’ve never been on welfare.” The pain flared, like an engine being started, deep in Dan’s skull. “Not one day in my life.”

Blanchard swiveled to face the computer’s screen again. He gave a grunt. “Vietnam vet, huh? Well, that’s one point in your favor. I wish you fellas had cleaned house like the boys did over in Iraq.”

“It was a different kind of war.” Dan swallowed thickly. He thought he could taste ashes. “A different time.”

“Hell, fightin’s fightin’. Jungle or desert, what’s the difference?”

The pain was getting bad now. Dan’s guts were clenched up. “A lot,” he said. “In the desert you can see who’s shootin’ at you.” His gaze ticked to the Lucite cube that held the plastic flag. Something small was stamped on its lower left corner. Three words. He leaned forward to read them.
Made in China.

BOOK: Gone South
11.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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