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Page 54Ruth put a hand on my arm. “I really have to pee. If I stand here one more minute I will wet my pants.”
“Go and pee,” I said.
She left the room. I could feel my own mental processes at work, ideas tumbling over one another as though escaping from a cage. I turned back to the refrigerator door. Dead center was the junk hauler’s flier, headline hand-drawn in mock-three-dimensional letters, fashioned after the messages left under bridges by a tagging crew. I pushed aside the magnets and freed the flier, which read:
No Taste for Waste? Want Junk Displaced?
Fifty Bucks in Cash Eradicates Your Trash
Call (805) 555-2999
Leave your name, address, and a list of the items you want removed. One-time offer, so don’t delay!
Cash only. No checks. No credit cards.
We accept carpet, scrap metal, discarded furniture, lumber, tires, appliances, leaf & garden waste, mattresses, and anything else you want to get rid of.
We’ll be in your neighborhood on Monday, October 24.
Ruth returned, saying, “Sorry about that.”
“This is the flier the junk man left?”
She nodded. “I kept it in case my neighbor needed him. I swear he cleans his garage every other month.”
“Didn’t the timing strike you as odd?”
“Are you kidding? It was perfect. I don’t know what I’d have done with all that crap if he hadn’t come along when he did.”
“So two days after Dietz and I searched the boxes, someone just happened to stick this in your screen door.”
“Yes.”
“You read the flier and did what in response?”
“Just what it said. I left a message telling him I had a garage full of stuff I needed to get rid of. I knew he’d be in the neighborhood the twenty-fourth, so all I had to do was give him my address. I had to be at work, so I put the fifty bucks in an envelope and taped it to the back door. I came home, he’d emptied the garage, and everything looked great.”
“I needed the garage cleaned. I wasn’t looking for a friend. What’s the matter with you?”
“I’m not a fan of coincidences. I know they happen in life, but you’ve been plagued with happy accidents and it seems off to me. You mind if I try the number?”
She seemed skeptical, but she gestured her assent.
I carried the flier as I crossed to the phone. I picked up the handset and punched in the number. The line rang twice, and then a three-tone signal sounded at an earsplitting pitch. I held out the handset so mine wasn’t the only hearing under assault. An automated operator in a singsong voice said, “I’m sorry, but the number you’ve dialed is no longer in service.” She went on to tell us what we could do about it, which was precious little.
“The number’s been disconnected. Why should I care?”
“Put the incident in context. This unseen guy carts Pete’s boxes away. Four months later you receive a letter from the IRS.”
“What’s one have to do with the other? I’m not getting it.”
“We’re talking about three men you never met. The junk dealer, the IRS agent, and the guy who broke in. Doesn’t that bother you?”
“No.”
“I agree it’s creepy.”
“Not my point. What if they’re the same man?”
“Like they’re in cahoots?”
“I’m saying one man instead of three. And not just any man. We’re back to Ned Lowe.”
Her expression was pained and included a rolling of the eyes.
“Don’t roll your eyes at me. Just listen. Two days after Dietz and I finish searching Pete’s boxes, this anonymous junk man leaves a note in your door and you jump at the chance to have the same boxes carted off. End of problem as far as you’re concerned. Meanwhile, the guy is now in possession of all Pete’s files. He goes through everything at his leisure, trying to find what he’s looking for.”