Now You See It: A Toby Peters Mystery

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Book: Read Now You See It: A Toby Peters Mystery for Free Online
Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective
do the shopping this afternoon,” I said.
    She reached into the crocheted purse next to the wooden chair and came up with three one-dollar bills, which she handed to me along with the dreaded ration coupon book.
    I looked at the list:
     
     
Beef hearts, two lbs.
40 cents
20 oz. loaf, bread
10 cents
Hot dogs, one lb.
19 cents
Ritz crackers, one lb.
19 cents
Armour’s Treet, 12-oz. can
27 cents
Super Suds, large
23 cents
Cuticura skin ointment
37 cents
Squibb Aspirin (200)
69 cents
Miracle Whip 16 oz.
19 cents
     
    “The Cuticura is a necessity,” she said. “My hands.”
    “I’m sure,” I agreed.
    In truth, Mrs. Plaut did have delicate hands and long fingers.
    “The ration calendar,” she said.
    The dreaded ration calendar. There was no escape so I simply listened, mind growing numb.
    “Processed food,” she said, without reference to notes. “Blue A8 through V8, book 4, is now valid at 10 points each for use with tokens. You understand?”
    “Perfectly,” I said.
    “W8, X8, Y8, Z8, and A5 became good July 2.”
    “Got it,” I said. “Anything else?”
    “Meats and fats,” she said. “Red A8 through W8, book 4, are now valid at 10 points each for use with tokens, of course.”
    “Of course,” I agreed.
    “And you should know, Mr. Peelers, that A-10 coupons are now valid for gasoline. Rationing rules now require every car owner to write his license number and state on all gas coupons in his possession as soon as they are issued to him. And here.”
    She handed me about thirty additional sheets of lined paper.
    “A chapter about Wooley in England,” she said.
    “Wooley?”
    “My second eldest brother, now deceased,” she said, with a shake of her head to indicate that this was information I should have possessed. “I would appreciate your reading it this night.”
    “May I take a shower and change now?” I asked.
    “You won’t need any change,” she said. “The three dollars will be quite enough.”
    I didn’t answer. I went inside and headed for the steps. On my left were Mrs. Plaut’s rooms. Inside, her caged bird was screeching. She changed the name of the bird with cycles of the planets, the changing of the tides, the fortunes of war, the sudden emergence of long-forgotten friends. The current name of the bird, she had informed us at dinner the night before, was Admiral Nelson. It was as certain to change by breakfast tomorrow, as it was that Dewey would get the Republican nomination for president.
    On my left was the parlor, decorated in the latest furniture and fashion of the year right after the Civil War.
    I went up the steps and to my room where I put Mrs. Plaut’s grocery list, coupons, and the chapter of her book on the small table near the window. Then I took off my shirt, selected another one that seemed to have no missing buttons and was reasonably clean, and headed for the bathroom down the hall. Stripped, door secured by the flimsy hook and little eye, I showered and sang A Little On The Lonely Side , at least the words I could remember.
    When I finished, I headed back toward my room pausing at the door of Gunther Wherthman, my closest friend, who stood less than four feet tall and carried himself with a dignity that should have been the envy of every slouching congressman.
    I knocked. Gunther called for me to come in. The door wasn’t locked. No doors at Mrs. Plaut’s were allowed to be locked. Privacy, she believed, nurtured the possibility of perversion.
    Gunther’s room was the same size as mine, but that’s where the comparison ended. My room looked like a messy college freshman’s dorm closet. A worn sofa against one wall, a dresser near the door, a small table with two chairs. A box of a refrigerator the size of a peach crate, and a mattress against the wall. The mattress plopped down on the floor at night and so did I. My back is ever on the verge of rebellion and needs a firm thin mattress and the promise that I will never sleep on my stomach or

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