One Good Deed - David Baldacci Page 0,57

she said, looking at him warily.

“I spent time in prison with the likes of Dickie Dill and others like him. They’re hard men, and some of them live right here. And one of them followed you home.”

“But I took care of that.”

“And one of them wrote you that nasty note. So you need to lock your doors—that includes your front door and your bedroom door. Because if they get the jump on you, well.…”

She stared at him very deliberately for a long moment.

“I think you’re sincere,” she said at last.

“That’s because I am.”

She turned and led him inside.

The interior of the place was Spartanly furnished but it was neat and overly clean, at least to Archer’s mind. There were also a goodly number of books on the shelves. From a glance he could see novels by people named Faulkner, Brontë, Whitman, Wharton, Austen, Dickens, Twain, and Steinbeck. And there were quite a few legal tomes, too.

“Got a lot of law books there.”

“I actually wanted to be a lawyer once.”

“Pardon my ignorance, but can women be lawyers?”

“Of course they can! But I will admit, it’s unusual.”

“If you want to be one, then I say go for it. Sure you’d make a fine one.”

“Thank you, Mr. Archer,” she said, evidently pleased by his remark.

“You have relations who are in the law?”

“No, but my father—” She faltered.

“Your father was a lawyer?”

“No, he was—” She broke off and said, “Let me show you the door.”

Crabtree led him down a short, plain hall to her bedroom. She took off her hat, dropped it on the bed, and put her purse down on a dresser with a tilt mirror topping it.

“This is the problem, Mr. Archer.”

She attempted to close the door, but it caught on the floor.

“Okay, let me see this thing.”

He swung it back and forth until the door rubbed like before.

“It’s not the door. I believe the floor might be off a bit.” Archer took out a nickel and set it on one end on the floor, and they watched it roll right over to the closet door.

“Yep, I’d say the floor is definitely not plumb.”

He pointed to the door hinges.

“I think if I tighten the screws up enough on these hinges, it should clear the floor, warped though it is. You got a screwdriver?”

“Let me look. It might take a few minutes.”

“I got nowhere to be.”

After she left, he looked around and noted the perfectly made bed and the shade on the window that he had watched before she had cut the view off by closing the drapes. He looked in the corner and saw the pair of high heels that she had been wearing the night before.

As he glanced once more at the bed, Archer saw what looked to be the edge of a book poking out from under a pillow. He checked that she wasn’t coming back, and then hurried over to the bed. He had no right or business to be doing this, but he couldn’t seem to help himself. For Archer, more information was always better than less. And he just thought, at first, that it was a novel. But when he slid it out, he saw that it was a scrapbook. He turned the page and saw the old, yellowed news article. It was from a local newspaper in Amarillo, Texas.

It detailed the trial of Carson Crabtree, who had killed three men in separate encounters. There was a photo of Carson within the news article. It showed a huge man with a bald head and a fierce countenance. He had, surprisingly, worked as a police officer, and curiously enough considering his features and the crimes committed, had the reputation of being kind and considerate to all who knew him. Yet not only had Carson not blamed his actions on mental affliction, the report said, but he also had confessed to the murders. He had died in the electric chair leaving behind a wife, Jewell, and one daughter, Ernestine.

Archer flipped to the next page and saw the grainy image of Ernestine Crabtree, then only fourteen. She looked small, drab, and dour, and it was hard for Archer to believe that she had grown up into the tall, lovely woman he knew her to be. There were a few other stories about this incident, including ones about the three men killed. And their pictures were included, too. Archer studied the men, and then read about their backgrounds. Each was twenty and had been in and out of trouble with the

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