Read Joan Hess - Arly Hanks 03 Online
Authors: Much Ado in Maggody
Brother Verber mopped his shiny forehead. "That is not the issue. The Bible says women were made out of a man's rib, so they're supposed to be subservient and do what-all they're told. They're supposed to be modest, not vulgar. It says in the vows of holy matrimony that women are supposed to obey their husbands, and I think we can safely conclude that they therefore ought to be obedient all the time. This woman is making a disgrace of herself. Where's your husband? He ought to drag you home this minute and teach you how to behave."
Johnna Mae's fingers tightened around the stick of her sign. "My husband is home with the kids. Just who do you think you are, you pompous old fart, telling me how I ought to stay home and keep house? I'd like not to have to work, but I'd like to put food on the table every night, too."
"A woman's place is in the home," Brother Verber countered. Several of the pool hall hulks nodded, although I would have bet a week's salary that all of their wives were plucking feathers at a poultry plant in Starley City or waiting tables in Farberville. Someone had to pay for the custom pool cues and the longneck beers.
To my astonishment, Ruby Bee went to stand next to Johnna Mae. "Yeah, how's she supposed to feed her family and new baby if she stays home?"
Estelle completed the triumvirate. "Everybody knows her husband's disabled. You have no call to stand there and say that sort of thing about a woman who's trying to take care of her family."
"She's tempting the devil," Brother Verber replied smugly, if inanely. Mrs. Jim Bob scurried right over to him , her expression that of a hen anticipating an attack on one of her chicks.
Sherman Oliver cleared his throat. "I don't see why this needs to go any further. Why don't we all just go about our business?"
"Chauvinist pig!" Johnna Mae shouted at him.
"This is an outrage!" Mrs. Jim Bob shouted at me.
"Hussy," Brother Verber shouted at Johnna Mae.
"Old fart!" she shouted at him.
"Go home and diaper your baby!" someone shouted from the crowd.
"Who's supposed to pay for the diapers?" Ruby Bee shouted in the general direction of the last participant.
"Sherman Oliver is unfair to women!" Johnna Mae shouted.
"He is not!"
"Stuff it!"
"An abomination in the eye of the Lord!"
I could assign all this dialogue, but it doesn't much matter who was shouting what because all of a sudden everybody was shouting at the top of his or her lungs and the noise level was rising faster than Boone Creek after a thunderstorm. Elsie McMay was nose to nose with Raz, busily telling him how Johnna Mae was doing the right thing by bringing home a paycheck. Ruby Bee was doing the same with one of the hulks, while Estelle was shaking a finger and shrieking at another. Johnna Mae was exchanging remarks with Brother Verber. Mrs. Jim Bob was getting in her two cents' worth every other second or so.
Cars and trucks were crawling past now, the passengers in danger of terminal rubberneck from twisting to catch every bit of the scene. Kevin Buchanon almost lost his life to a camper when he stopped his bicycle in the middle lane to goggle. The hippies came out of the Emporium and stood on the porch, shading their eyes with their hands and poking each other when someone let out a particularly idiotic remark.
Sherman Oliver was turning more purple by the moment. He stormed over to Johnna Mae and began to bellow at her, which of course sent Ruby Bee and Estelle right back to Johnna Mae's side to bellow in her defense. Which isn't to say that she wasn't bellowing real well herself.
You might be wondering what the upholder of law and order was doing during all this. Nothing. Not a blessed thing. I suppose that I could have fired my gun into the air to stop everybody, but I hadn't thought to bring a bullet along. I was pondering the possibility of trying to make myself heard, or going inside the bank where it was bound to be cooler, when that which had been threatened took place, to wit: Johnna Mae Nookim grasped the broom handle of her sign with both hands, raised said sign above her head, and slammed it down on Sherman Oliver's bald spot.
Despite the fact that the sign was primarily posterboard, he stumbled backward and might have sprawled in the shrubbery had not Brandon Bernswallow caught him. "Arrest that woman for assault!" Oliver sputtered.
"And battery!" Mrs. Jim Bob added as she rushed forward to play Florence Nightingale.
I felt obliged to intercede. Johnna Mae had the sign reared back to bust him again as I grabbed the corner of it. "Hold your horses," I said. "You can't do this."
"Why can't I? He damn well was asking for it. I have every right to express my opinion, because this is the land of the free and we are guaranteed freedom of speech." She tried to tug the sign out of my grasp. "Hell, Arly, he's a pig. Lemme have one more swing."
All the combatants had quieted down by this time and were crowding in around us. Faces were still red, however, and the breathing was heavy. A few hands were curled into fists, including one of Ruby Bee's. "What about freedom of speech?" she demanded.
"You have to do your duty," Mrs. Jim Bob said, tapping me on the shoulder in case I didn't know to whom she was speaking. "This is a clear case of assault and battery, not to mention outrageous behavior on the streets of Maggody."
"And a sin against all of mankind," Brother Verber rumbled piously. "The Bible says that woman should obey man, and -- "
"Calm down, Johnna Mae," I said, ignoring everybody. "You can't bash people on the head, no matter how justified it seems to you. Why don't you let me have the sign and go on home and cool off?"
Brandon Bernswallow got Oliver steadied, then he came over to peer down his nose at me. "There has been a criminal act, and we intend to press charges. This woman, in front of witnesses, attacked Mr. Oliver with the intent of causing him bodily injury. I demand that you arrest her."
Sherman Oliver looked uncomfortable as all eyes turned on him. "Well, now, I wouldn't say there was any bodily injury, Brandon. She whacked me with a piece of cardboard, not a two-by-four. If she'll promise to stop this childish nonsense and stay home, I think we can forget about this."
"Okay, Johnna Mae?" I said.
"No, it is not okay. I am not some worthless person who can be demoted like I was trash or hadn't spent eleven years working at this bank. Mr. Oliver and this fellow think they can cheat me, but I ain't going to roll over and play dead just because they say so."
"Right on," came a low voice from the crowd.
One would like to think one's mother was not a seasoned agitator, but one would find oneself in error. I glared over my shoulder, then turned back to give Johnna Mae a grim look. "I understand your frustration, but you cannot cause a riot on the street or attack someone simply because you're unhappy with your position. Mr. Oliver is entitled to file charges against you. Now, he's said he'll forget this if you'll promise to stop protesting."
"I won't stop," Johnna Mae said as her eyes filled with tears. "I got to do what I got to do."
"Please," I hissed at her.
"No, Arly. There's no reason for me to go home and watch my children eat beans and corn bread until the money runs out. I have plenty of free time on my hands now that he" -- she scowled at Bernswallow -- "has relieved me of my duties. I might as well be here as lying on the sofa in front of the television, especially since they'll cut off the electricity before too long. I'm going to be right here every day from nine until five, just like it was a regular job. If he doesn't like it, he can lump it."
Bernswallow clearly didn't like it. After a hushed conversation, he announced that Mr. Oliver would press charges once he'd had an aspirin and a few minutes to rest. He then took the branch manager's arm and led him into the bank. I pulled Johnna Mae aside and told her that she would have to come back to the police department so that I could do the necessary paperwork.
The crowd drifted away, leaving Ruby Bee and Estelle in one corner of the metaphorical wrasslin' ring, and Mrs. Jim Bob and Brother Verber in the other. Mrs. Jim Bob leapt into the lull. "I must say that I am sorely disappointed in you, Rubella Belinda Hanks. I never once thought you were one of those women's libbers who burn their bras and mock the church and turn into lesbians if they're not careful."
"Nobody's a women's libber, Barbara Buchanon Buchanon, and you know it. You can stand there and spout all those pious things about a woman staying at home, but Johnna Mae has to work."
"Well, it's not right for her to boss men around," Mrs. Jim Bob said, bristling at the very idea.
"That's right," Brother Verber added. "Women weren't created in order to run the world and tell men what to do. Adam came first, not Eve. She was put in the Garden to be a helper, to bear children and fix supper."
Estelle put her hands on her hips. "And we all know what God made man out of, don't we? Dirt. That's the gospel truth and you know it. Man was made out of your common variety of dirt."
That didn't sit well. I could see we were on the verge of a tagteam event, so I took Johnna Mae's arm and got her into the police car before the actual violence broke out. She was sniveling by this time, and big, plump tears rolled down her cheeks to plop into her lap. As I turned around in the bank parking lot, I saw a tableau that did nothing to ease my conscience one bit: Putter Nookim, a blackhaired scarecrow in faded denim overalls, stood in the shade, a blanketed bundle in his arm. Behind him were two small figures, clutching his legs and peering out from either side. I hated my job.
-- ==+== --
Lottie Estes sat behind her desk in the home ec room, rereading the letter for the tenth or maybe the twelfth time. No matter how much she squinted at the words, they still seemed ominous. Lottie Estes had never been late in her life. She'd been born on schedule, and she wasn't the sort who'd ever missed the previews at the picture show, the opening hymn at the Assembly Hall, or even the very first notes of the theme songs of her favorite television shows. Never once in her thirty years of teaching had she not been the first in the classroom or the first in the cafeteria for a teachers meeting. Whenever a friend had a baby shower or a small gathering, Lottie was there in time to help set the food out while the hostess finished dressing.
But now this letter was telling her that she was late. What's more, she couldn't have avoided this accusation because she didn't know she'd ever borrowed money from some bank in Farberville, much less missed a payment. It didn't make one whit of sense.
"Miss Estes?" said a timid voice from the doorway. "We're ready to start the Future Homemakers of America meeting. Heather wants to know if we should go ahead and read the minutes or wait for you.
Lottie Estes stuffed the letter in a drawer and hastily rose. "Please tell Heather I am on my way, Grace Ellen. I have never arrived late to a meeting, and I do not intend to do so today."
"No, ma'am -- I mean, yes, ma'am," Grace Ellen murmured, properly abashed.
-- ==+== --
Carolyn McCoy-Grunders threw down the file and picked up another from the stack. Except for her inner sanctum, the office was dark and quiet, which was the way she preferred it when she was not in a good mood. Carolyn was in a foul mood. And it wasn't her fault: Monty had had the nerve to take his wife to Las Vegas and had made sure everyone in the county bar association heard about it at the last luncheon. He'd known Carolyn would be there, of course, and that certain bitches would be sure to tell her the news. And just when she was trying to be mature about her ex-husband's marriage to that little slut young enough to be his daughter. Or kid sister, anyway. Carolyn dearly hoped the newlyweds drank the water in Acapulco and got their just deserts. And she didn't mean tortillas dipped in brown sugar.
She tossed aside the file and snatched up the next. Maybe Monty would lose his BMW at the blackjack table; God knew he had trouble counting to twenty-one unless he took off his shoes and socks and dropped his pants. She glanced at the complaint form.
"So we think we were passed up for promotion, do we?" she said, dropping the file on the floor and taking yet another. "Maybe we ought to stop whining and expecting people to rush over and wipe our noses."
She almost threw the last file in the pile. The handwriting was laborious, almost illegible, and in pencil. Carolyn preferred forms written in ink, if not typed neatly and with a minimum of corrections. This one was smudgy. The spelling was atrocious. The complainant had managed to cover almost every bit of the white space with her long, tedious gripe about maternity leave and demotion and how much the baby weighed, for pity's sake. Carolyn had no use for babies. Or crybabies, for that matter.
With a martyred sigh she settled her glasses on her nose and squinted at the form. Some idiotic little podunk town nobody had ever heard of, much less had any interest in. Some two-bit branch bank. God, who'd want to be head teller of such a vile little operation?
It was about to join the pile on the floor when Carolyn spotted a familiar name. It was very much as if she'd inserted one of her manicured fingertips into an electrical socket. Once she'd stopped waggling her jaw and blinking, she leaned back and began to reread the complaint very, very carefully, her lips curling upward in a smile.
4
I got Johnna Mae settled in the PD, centered her lethal weapon on my desk, and proceeded to tell her all sorts of things she wasn't real happy to hear, such as the fact she'd committed a class A misdemeanor that carried penalties of as much as a thousand-dollar fine and a year in jail. In my best cop voice, I recited the Miranda warning and took out an arrest form.
"I can't go to prison," she wailed. "Who's going to take care of Putter and the kids? Who's going to get him his prescription from Farberville? How's he going to pay for Earl Boy's braces or P.J.'s first pair of hightop shoes?"
"Very possibly not the person who refused to go home and forget about picketing the bank every day from nine until five," I said, slapping down the pencil. "You should have thought of that earlier. Sherman Oliver was willing to forget the whole thing, you know. All you had to do was shut up and go home."
She held out two pudgy wrists. "Arrest me and drag me off to prison. Will they let Putter bring the kids when he comes to visit on Sunday afternoons?"
"We haven't quite gotten to that stage, Johnna Mae. I'll fill out the complaint, release you on your own recognizance, and then go over to the bank to talk to Mr. Oliver. He may not want to appear in front of the municipal judge any more than you do, and he may agree to tear the complaint up and let things slide -- if I can assure him that you're sorry and that you won't come back to the bank to picket."
"He ain't a bad fellow," she allowed with a drawn-out sigh. "We've gotten along real good all the years I've worked at the bank. His wife always sends over a fruitcake or a plate of cookies around Christmastime, and she even dropped off a little baby present for P.J. It's that Bernswallow guy that's causing all the trouble."
"Why'd he fire you?" I asked curiously.
Johnna Mae's martyred expression vanished in a blink, although I didn't know how to interpret its replacement. After a moment of studying the floor, she gave me an innocent look and said, "He just told me a bunch of stuff about how my attitude was poor and how I was all the time making errors in my drawer. He acted like a few cents off in the long-and-short was some kind of federal offense. I reckon I said some things back. He got puffed up worse than a horny bullfrog and told me to clean out my work area."
"Did he offer any severence pay?"
"No, he said I'd already missed so much work I was lucky he wasn't sending me a bill. Then he said get out and I got out."
"Did you try to discuss this with Mr. Oliver?"
"Yeah, I did. I even went over to his house and tried to explain that I was upset about losing my position. Mr. Oliver got all squirmy and apologetic, but he said that Bernswallow was in charge of personnel matters. He was pretty nice about it, so I guess I shouldn't have hit him on the head like that. What I should have done is run Bernswallow down in the truck. Over and over again, until he was flatter than a tabletop and too dead to skin. The highway department would've had to scrape him up with a cake spatula."
"Don't say things like that, Johnna Mae," I said, rubbing my face and wishing I were on the road to Juneau. Or the Emerald City. Or a nice padded room with bars across the window. "You're in deep enough trouble as it is. Let's fill out the complaint and then I'll try to talk Mr. Oliver into ripping it up for old times' sake. But I want you to promise me that you'll go back to the mobile home and stay away from the bank."
Her lower lip went in and out for a long while. "And I get to leave on my -- what'd you call it? Recognizance? How much is that?"
"All it means is that I'm trusting you to stay in town and out of trouble. Okay?"
"I suppose," she muttered.
We made it through name, address, and various tidbits. I asked her if she wanted a ride home, and she said the walk back to the Pot O' Gold Mobile Home Park might help her cool off. I didn't point out that the temperature was in triple digits, and after eliciting one last promise from her I let her go. I did not allow her to take her picket sign.
I drove to the bank, thinking all the while that I was spending so much time there that I ought to open an account. Then again, Kevin Buchanon would be protecting my zillions of dollars. Not a comforting concept, to say the least. I parked next to the slinky Mercedes and went through the glass doors into the charmingly cool air.
Miss Una stared at me from her window. "I must admit, Arly, that in my opinion you might have taken action to prevent this dreadful tragedy from happening." Her voice was a good ten degrees cooler than the inside of the bank.
"I'm not sure we're up to the level of dreadful tragedy," I said. "Johnna Mae's sworn to stay away from the bank, and I'm hoping Mr. Oliver will agree to drop his complaint. Is he in his office?"
"Mr. Oliver has gone home to lie down. The poor man was most disturbed about being attacked in front of half the town. What's more, he has a lump where Johnna Mae whacked him, and I imagine he'll have a bruise before morning. I am as fond of her as I am of my kitties, but we can't have that sort of unseemly behavior at the bank. It's undignified. I didn't know what to think when I saw her smack Mr. Oliver. She could have caused a serious physical injury."
"Posterboard can be deadly," I said soberly.
At this moment Lottie Estes came out of the back office, an envelope in her hand. Brandon Bernswallow followed her. "We at the Maggody branch will clear this up," he said in a voice oily enough to do a lube job on a tractor trailer. "We're committed to community service."
Lottie beamed at him. "You have been most helpful, young man. It's such a relief to have this taken care of by someone with nice manners. As I told you earlier, it has preyed on my mind since the moment it came in the mail. I have never before been accused of such a ridiculous thing, and I was floored. As if I would borrow five hundred dollars! I have always paid cash for my purchases. My father used to say that credit was the work of Satan hisself."
Brandon gave me a quick look as he placed his hand on Lottie's shoulder. "Your attitude is what makes banks like ours work for the community. You just keep building up that savings account, and I'll deal with this mistake."
He turned and retreated into his office. Lottie came to Miss Una's window, nodded vaguely at me, and said, "He is such a nice young man, Una. He'd be a perfect catch for some Maggody girl, who could see that his shirts stay ironed and his shoes polished." She leaned forward and lowered her voice to a whisper. "Is it true what I heard in the teachers' lounge about Johnna Mae Nookim chasing Sherman Oliver down the middle of the highway with a broom? It's not the least bit difficult to believe. I had her in several of my classes fifteen years ago, and I always suspected she cheated on the small appliance final. One of my better students swore Johnna Mae had the blender manual taped to her thigh."
Miss Una bobbled her head. "She attacked poor Mr. Oliver right out there in front of the building. She was frothing like a rabid dog and calling him all kinds of terrible names."
I departed before I heard further escalations. The Olivers lived in the Maggody version of a subdivision, which meant there were twenty-odd houses jammed together in the middle of a flat, treeless cow pasture. I drove past the high school and the Dairee DeeLishus, turned across from the football stadium, and found their house at the end of an honest to goodness cul-de-sac (we used to call 'em dead ends, but the developer wasn't having any of that). Their house was larger than those surrounding it, but hardly imposing enough to qualify for "mansion" or "palace."
Clutching the complaint in my sweaty little hand, I parked in the driveway and walked up the sidewalk to the front door. Before I could knock, ring, or holler, the door opened. Mrs. Sherman Oliver seemed startled momentarily, but she regained her composure. "Arly Hanks, isn't it? Ruby Bee's girl?" she said.
Anonymity, not to mention life itself, is tough in Maggody. "Yes," I said. "I'd like to speak to Mr. Oliver if it's convenient."
She came out onto the porch, carefully closing the door behind her. She was an attractive middle-aged woman with tidy hair, soft brown eyes, and fluttery hands. She fluttered them for a moment, then said, "I'm afraid Mr. Oliver isn't feeling well. He is deeply distressed by what happened earlier. He came home, took two aspirins, and told me he would prefer to be left alone in the den until supper time. Perhaps you might come back tomorrow?"
"I'd like to get this settled as quickly as possible. Johnna Mae is rather distressed herself, especially by the possibility of being sent to jail for a year over this silly little incident."
Truda smiled sadly. "It is silly, isn't it? I told Sherman as much, and I think by tomorrow he'll be willing to forget about it. Brandon can be a bit of a hothead, but Sherman really prefers to avoid any kind of conflict. He says it throws off his golf game."
"I can see how it might," I said, trying to maintain a sympathetic tone. "When would be a good time for me to return?"
"Sherman goes to the main branch every morning. He's still in charge of the portfolio purchases, even though he requested the transfer out here in order to enjoy the tranquillity of country life. He'll leave at nine or so. He usually plays golf in the afternoons, but he ought to be home by supper time."
"I'll try to catch him before he leaves," I said. We exchanged pleasantries and then I drove back to the highway, feeling enormously relieved. I certainly had no desire to see Johnna Mae behind bars, even for a few days. In my professional capacity, I wasn't supposed to enjoy watching one citizen batter another. At a more personal level, however, I'd found the incident most amusing. Cheap thrills. More exciting than when Hiram Buchanon's barn burned.
There I was, smirking and grinning and having a right good time as I pulled into the gravel lot of Ruby Bee's Bar and Grill. I parked next to an unfamiliar subcompact, but you never know when some unwary tourist is going to make a serious mistake and stop by for cold beer and sparkling conversation with the locals. It only takes one time to learn better.
The Closed sign was still hanging from a thumbtack, but I ignored it and was reaching for the door when it flew open. Jim Bob Buchanon would have stomped right over me if I hadn't jumped back at the last second.
"About time you did something," he growled at me. He seems to grow at me a lot, but it's appropriate in that he reminds me of a bulldog. He's got the infamous clan features, along with a stubby gray crew cut and a soft belly cantilevered over his belt. As far as I can tell, his upper lip stays glued in a perpetual sneer.
"About time I ate lunch," I said. "And what's better than Mom's home cooking? Ruby Bee fixes the best fried okra in the county."
"That is not what I meant, Chief of Police Hanks. I heard what happened earlier at the bank. It seems to me there was a clear case of dereliction of duty. You should have been down there in the first place, and you should have put a stop to that crazy Nookim broad's 'protest' before things got out of hand."
"Is that what I should have done? Gee, Jim Bob, I guess I was confused. I thought I was supposed to protect the constitutional rights of the citizenry. Silly me."