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This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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He hunched the chair forward and wrote a check on the edge of my desk with a translucent ballpoint pen. Bartlett Construction was imprinted in the upper left corner of the check—I was going to be a business expense. Deductible. One keg of 8d nails, 500 feet of 2x4 utility grade, one gumshoe, 100 gallons of creosote stain. I took the check without looking at it and slipped it folded into my shirt pocket, casual, like I got them all the time and it was just something to pass along to my broker. Or maybe I'd buy some orchids with it.
Promised Land
Healy I knew of . He was chief investigator for the Essex County DA”s office. There were at least two first-run racketeers I knew who stayed out of Essex County because they didn't want any truck with him.
Healy said, ‘Didn't you used to work for the Suffolk County DA once?”
I said, “Yes.”
“Didn't they fire you for hotdogging?”
“I like to call it inner-directed behavior,” I said.
“I'll bet you do.” Healy said.
The Godwulf Manuscript
noir
God Save the Child
Susan Silverman wasn't beautiful. but there was an intangibility about her a physical reality, that made the secretary with the lime-green bosom seem insubstantial. She had should-length black hair and a thin dark Jewish face with prominent cheekbones. Tall, maybe five seven, with black eyes. It was hard to tell her age, but there was a sense about her of intelligent maturity which put her on my side of thirty...When she shook hands with me, I felt something click down the back of my solar plexus.
I said hello without stammering and sat down.
I had just finished washing my hands and face when the doorbell rang. Everything was ready. Ah, Spenser, what a touch. Everything was just right except that I couldn't seem to find a missing child. Well, nobody's perfect. I pushed the release button and opened my apartment door. I was wrong. Susan Silverman was perfect.
It took nearly forty years of savior faire to keep from saying “Golly.”...
“Come in,” I said. Very smooth. I didn't scuff my foot; I didn't mumble. I stood right up straight when I said it. I don't think I blushed.
So, sticking your nose into things and getting it broken allows you to live life on your own terms, perhaps.
“Why do you want to know?” [Susan asks]
“Because it's there. Because it's better to know than not to know in my line of work.”
know
God Save the Child