months.' Except it felt more like I had to know, Andy. Findin out how he'd fooled me made me feel sick to my stomach, and that was bad, but not knowin if he'd pissed it all away somehow . . . that was killin me.
'If he's. . . that's privileged information!' he says, and by then you'da thought I'd told him I'd touch his if he'd touch mine.
'Ayuh,' I says. 'Figured it was. I'm askin you to break a rule. I know just lookin at you that you're not a man who does that often; I can see it runs against your grain. But that was my kids' money, Mr Pease, and he lied to get it. You know he did; the proof's right there on your desk blotter. It's a lie that wouldn't have worked if this bank - your bank - had had the common courtesy to make a telephone call.'
He clears his throat and starts, 'We are not required -'
'I know you ain't,' I says. I wanted to grab him and shake him, but I saw it wouldn't do no good -not with a man like him. Besides, my mother always said you c'n catch more flies with honey than you ever can with vinegar, and I've found it to be true. 'I know that, but think of the grief and heartache you'da saved me with that one call. And if you'd like to make up for some of it - I know you don't have to, but if you'd like to - please tell me if he's opened an account here or if I've got to start diggin holes around my house. Please - I'll never tell. I swear on the name of God I won't.'
He sat there lookin at me, drummin his fingers on those green accountants' sheets. His nails were all clean and it looked like he'd had a professional manicure, although I guess that ain't too likely - it's Jonesport in 1962 we're talkin about, after all. I s'pose his wife did it. Those nice neat nails made little muffled thumps on the papers each time they came down, n I thought, He ain't gonna do nothin for me, not a man like him. What's he care about island folk and their problems? His ass is covered, n that's all he cares about.
So when he did speak up, I felt ashamed for what I'd been thinkin about men in general and him in particular.
'I can't check something like that with you sitting right here, Mrs St George,' he says. 'Why don't you go down to The Chatty Buoy and order yourself a cruller and a nice hot cup of coffee? You look like you could use something. I'll join you in fifteen minutes. No, better make it half an hour.'
'Thank you,' I said. 'Thank you so very much.'
He sighed and began shufflin the papers back together. 'I must be losin my mind,' he says, then laughed kinda nervous-like.
'No,' I told him. 'You're helpin a woman who don't have nowhere else to turn, that's all.'
'Ladies in distress have always been a weakness of mine,' he says. 'Give me half an hour. Maybe even a little longer.'
'But you'll come?'
'Yes,' he said. 'I will.'
He did, too, but it was closer to forty-five minutes than half an hour, and by the time he finally got to the Buoy, I'd pretty well made up my mind he was gonna leave me in the lurch. Then, when he finally came in, I thought he had bad news. I thought I could read it in his face.
He stood in the doorway a few seconds, takin a good look around to make sure there was nobody in the restaurant who might make trouble for him if we was seen together after the row I made in the bank. Then he came over to the booth in the corner where I was sittin, slid in acrost from me, and says, 'It's still in the bank. Most of it, anyway. Just under three thousand dollars.'
'Thank God!' I said.
'Well,' he says, 'that's the good part. The bad part is that the new account is in his name only.'
'Accourse it is,' I said. 'He sure didn't give me no new passbook account card to sign. That woulda tipped me off to his little game, wouldn't it?'
'Many women wouldn't know one way or the other,' he says. He cleared his throat, gave a yank on his tie, then looked around quick to see who'd come in