Read All The Bells on Earth Online
Authors: James P. Blaylock
At home he climbed into the motor home. He was soaked, and before he caught his death he …
There was an envelope on the table. It was torn open, the contents gone. The return address paralyzed him with fear: it was from Myron Goldfarb, Jinx’s lawyer friend. So Jinx had gone to Goldfarb! She intended to serve him with papers. She’d had enough of him at last.
Henry turned straight around and went back out into the rain. The least he could do was to save Walt before these monsters got to him too….
He heard the front door of the house bang shut. Nora, Eddie, and Walt came out and headed up the street. Henry watched them from behind the shrubbery at the edge of the porch, and when they were gone, he headed up the driveway toward the garage.
W
ALT LET THE KIDS
go from door-to-door alone. It was nearly dusk, only fifteen or twenty minutes left till dark, but he couldn’t stop them from setting out on the fund drive for Mrs. Simms. There was something endearing about them going at it alone, like two guardian angels. He’d only be a fly in the ointment if he went along. With any luck, he and Jinx could kill the day tomorrow baking cookies for the neighbors.
He wondered suddenly if he were trying to salve his conscience with this thing. Well, so what if he was? It was good for the kids, and good for Mrs. Simms, too. In fact, it was probably good for Argyle—some kind of object lesson. Nora and Eddie stepped down off the porch of the last house now, turning to wave at old Mrs. Bord, who stood with her arms folded, beaming at them. Eddie waved the order form at Walt. By golly, they were doing it!
They headed up Maple Street, and Walt strolled down to the corner to keep an eye on them. There were only a couple of houses on Maple, and after that, if the day held up, they could hit a couple more on Cambridge….
An idea struck him just then, and he walked on down toward the next corner, watching the kids knock on the door of the Fillpots’ house. No one would be home. Fillpot’s Stationers, down on Glassell, didn’t close till six. “How’s it going?” Walt hollered at them.
Nora and Eddie stood on the sidewalk, looking uncertain where to go next. “Three,” Eddie said. He held up the order form for Walt to take a look at—thirty bucks; that was ten dollars a house! There were two checks and a ten-dollar bill. Eddie gave Walt the money to hold. “I told the lady that everybody was giving ten,” he said.
“Good,” Walt told him. “Keep it up. That’s called salesmanship.”
“I get three prizes,” Nora said, making the rabbit face.
“Well, not quite,” Walt said. “Not three prizes for each
kid
. What I meant was three prizes for each ten dollars. And if there’s one extra prize, you’ll have to share it.”
“Oh,” Nora said.
Walt pointed up the street, toward Argyle’s house. “See that big house down there?”
“The
really
big one?” Eddie asked.
“That’s right—with the big porch. That’s where the millionaire lives, the rich man. It’s getting late, but you’ve got time for one more house. Why don’t you try that one?”
“
I’ll
talk this time,” Nora said, setting out up the sidewalk and trying to pull the order form out of Eddie’s hand. He took off running, holding the form close to his chest where she couldn’t get at it. She caught up to him at Argyle’s porch and slugged him hard on the shoulder, then turned around and looked back at Walt, who shook his head at her. She and Eddie climbed the stairs and rang the bell.
Argyle’s car was in the driveway, so he was probably home. If Bentley was right about him, then his reaction to the kids’ homegrown “fund-raiser” would be interesting in about ten different ways….
His door swung open and Walt stepped back away from the corner, moving out of sight behind the corner house. There was no use letting Argyle see him there; this shouldn’t seem like a put-up job. After a moment he walked forward again and peeked down the street. They were just coming out through the door, and Nora was saying something to Argyle. She stopped suddenly, ran back to the open door, and he bent over so she could kiss him on the cheek. Then she ran off again, down the stairs and out to the sidewalk where both of them ran wildly toward the corner, Eddie carrying a check in his hand. Spotting Walt, Argyle waved cheerfully from the doorway, then disappeared back inside.
What the hell did
that
mean? That Argyle was being
gracious
about it? Walt nearly laughed out loud. The man had to be seething inside, confounded, wondering what this was all about. The best he could do was to put on a good face. His smile was some kind of terrible rictus. Maybe Walt could slip some arsenic into his raisin cookies tomorrow and just do away with him completely.
“It was Mr. Argyle!” Eddie shouted, out of breath from running.
“Really?” Walt said. “
The
Mr. Argyle?”
“From school!” Nora said. “He gave us
money
! Show him, Eddie! Oh, he’s … !” She jigged with excitement, bouncing from one foot to the other. “He’s such a good one!”
Eddie handed over Argyle’s check, and Walt stared at it for a moment, unable to make immediate sense of it. He looked back down toward the house, but Argyle had gone back inside.
The check was for twenty thousand dollars, made out to Walt Stebbins.
“How many prizes is it?” Nora asked.
W
ALT SENT THE
kids inside and headed straight into the garage where he tore the check to pieces, then threw the pieces into the tin pail, resisting the urge to spit on them. Argyle wasn’t going to get away with it, whatever it was he was trying to get away with, him and his dirty money.
Walt packed boxes, crumpling newspaper and slamming the tape dispenser onto the box tops, zipping them shut, and slapping on mail labels. The afternoon had been a dead loss—first Maggie Biggs and then this damned encounter with Argyle. And that reminded him—tomorrow morning he had to fix the Biggsmobile! He ripped open a carton hard enough to tear half the flap loose. Inside lay a gross of bug catapults along with bags of rubber beetles. He shoved the box toward the garage door, separating it from the rest. Tomorrow he’d by God take it down to the preschool and hand a bug flinger out to every kid there. Every doggone one of them would get a prize. And not because they were day laborers, either, scraping together hatfuls of money for stinking creeps like Argyle, but because they were kids, damn it, and they
deserved
a prize.
Shit! The dirty son-of-a-bitch! Walt threw down the tape dispenser and kicked the leg of the bench. Argyle had done this on
purpose
, to throw it into their faces! First he murders Simms; then he turns the murder into a sort of monstrous joke, hosing everyone down with money. Well, it wouldn’t wash. Twenty thousand bucks was
nothing
to Argyle. Argyle blew his nose on twenty thousand bucks. That’s what this meant, wasn’t it? The finger. Up yours.
He kicked the bench again, and his coffee mug fell over, spilling out a pool of cold coffee. And of
course
the check won’t be any damn good anyway. The damned thing would have bounced over the moon, and Walt would have looked like some kind of criminal idiot.
The door swung open and Walt jumped. It was Ivy, smiling and happy, full of pep.
“What’s this about a fund-raiser?” she asked. “Nora and Eddie are out of their minds with it.” She came in and kissed him on the cheek.
Walt decided not to mention the Christmas wrap fundraiser at all. “Just an idea I had. I wanted to put together a little something for Mrs. Simms.”
“Well, I think that’s wonderful. The kids are all full of talk about Robert Argyle. Nora tells me he gave them a million dollars.”
“Not quite,” Walt said. “Everything’s a million dollars to Nora. You know how she is.”
“How much, then?”
“Well, he wrote out a check, which I guess was a kind of joke. It pisses me off, too, because he obviously did it to needle me, and now the kids are all excited. I guess he didn’t consider their feelings at all.”
“What are you talking about?” The smile disappeared from her face.
“See for yourself.” He gestured at the bucket, which was empty except for the torn-up check.
Ivy bent over and picked out the pieces, getting them about half arranged on the bench top before she made out the amount. She looked at him in disbelief.
“Obviously it’s a joke,” Walt said.
“A joke? Why would it be a joke?”
“Of
course
it’s a joke. You don’t know the whole story. Argyle’s running this bogus fund-raiser at school. Get this, he drags in
thousands
of dollars with these scams, putting children to work selling worthless crap door to door. Then he spends the money on computer equipment and Lord knows what-all. I’m sorry, but I just wouldn’t stand for it. I won’t play the man’s games.”
“So you tore up a twenty-thousand-dollar check?”
“You’re damned right I tore it up!”
“Don’t cuss at me. Maybe you don’t know this, but
every
school does fund-raisers.”
“Non-profit schools, maybe. That makes sense. And that’s what pisses me off. That’s how he takes people, sending kids around. People trust the kids, and so they don’t think anything through. Money for a good cause, they think, and they fork it over. They don’t know that Argyle’s a filthy rich hoser who’s charging six prices already at his so-called school. He’s making a
mint
. But he can’t buy his own computer? The kids can’t have a slide, for God’s sake, unless they earn it themselves?” Walt shook his head. “What a stinking pig.” He picked up the tape dispenser again, looking for another box to go after, but there was nothing more packed.
“I think we’ve drifted from the point,” Ivy said evenly. “I don’t know anything about Robert’s so-called fund-raiser. What I
do
know is that you tore up Mrs. Simms’s twenty thousand dollars and threw it in the trash.”
“It isn’t that easy.”
“It isn’t easy being Mrs. Simms right now, either.”
“I’ve had a bad day, all right?”
“How bad was it?”
He gestured, unable to answer. He knew he’d been talking like a lunatic.
“Let me tell you about my day.”
“Go ahead.”
“I sold the property.”
“Which one? I thought she already bought it.”
“Who?”
“Mrs. Fabulous. I don’t remember her name.”
“You mean Linda Marvel. I don’t mean that one. I mean the two commercial properties that Robert let me represent. Remember? I
must
have told you about it.”
“All right, all right. Don’t get ironic. Of course you told me about it.”
“Because of Robert Argyle I—
we
—made something like
sixty thousand dollars
today.”
“Bring it in here,” Walt said, “I’ll tear it up for you.”
She stood there staring at him, as if for two cents she’d knock his teeth loose. After a moment she turned around and walked out.
“
I’M SORRY,”
W
ALT SAID
, sitting down at the foot of the bed. “I was worked up. I lost my mind.”
She didn’t look up from her book. “Sorry is as sorry does.”
“Yeah,” he said. “I guess so.” Clearly she was still pissed, saying insane things to avoid saying anything at all. “Anyway, I don’t know why I tore up the check. I honestly thought it was some kind of … ploy, I guess.”
“Ploy to accomplish
what
?” she asked after a long silence. “Do you really think he’d go to that length to humiliate you in some weird way that nobody but you can figure out? The truth is, he’s not half as bad as you say he is.”
“You don’t know what you’re saying.”
“Do you?”
“I’m pretty sure.”
“You’re pretty sure. You’re so pretty sure that you tore up Mrs. Simms’s check?”
“What can I do about it now, tape it back together?”
“Take it back to Robert and ask for another check. It’s easy.”
“Easy?”
“Okay,
I’ll
take it over there.
I’ll
ask Robert to replace it.”
“No,” Walt said hastily. “I’ll do it. I’ll see him tomorrow morning anyway, at the preschool.”
“I’d do it now.”
“You’re right. I’ll do it now.”
Walt walked out, down the stairs and into the family room, where Nora and Eddie sat on the floor playing “Uncle Wiggly.”
“The Pipsawa nearly got me,” Nora said.
“Pipsisewa,” Eddie told her.
“Nuh-
uh
, Pipsawa.”
“He nearly got me too,” Walt said. “I think he
did
get me.”
Out in the garage he gathered up the pieces of the check, and, forcing himself not to think too much about where he was going, he set out down the driveway.
Then an idea came to him, and he turned around, heading back into the garage and climbing up into the rafters in order to yank out the tackle box. Argyle could have the phony parakeet after all, as payola for his generosity. He grinned at the thought of it. Climbing down, he set the box on the bench and opened the latch. The parakeet was gone.