“Thanks, but this is the last room, and I’m almost finished. Two girls, one boy. Expected
soon. This is the boy’s room.” She gestured at the posters and laughed. “As if you didn’t know.”
“Well, I thought I’d get some ice, but there’s no bucket in my room.”
“They’re stacked in a cubby next to the bin.” She straightened up, put her hands in the small
of her back, and grimaced. Luke heard her spine crackle. “Oh, that’s lots better. I’ll show you.”
“Only if it’s no trouble.”
“No trouble at all. Come on. You can push my cart, if you want to.”
As they went down the hall, Luke thought about his researches into Maureen’s problem.
One horrifying statistic in particular stuck out: Americans owed over twelve trillion dollars.
Money spent but not earned, just promised. A paradox only an accountant could love. While
much of that debt had to do with mortgages on homes and businesses, an appreciable amount
led back to those little plastic rectangles everyone kept in their purses and wallets: the
oxycodone of American consumers.
Maureen opened a little cabinet to the right of the ice machine. “Can you get one, and save
me stooping down? Some inconsiderate somebody pushed every damned bucket all the way to
the back.”
Luke reached. As he did, he spoke in a low voice. “Kalisha told me about your problem with
the credit cards. I think I know how to fix it, but a lot of it depends on your declared residence.”
“My declared—”
“What state do you live in?”
“I . . .” She took a quick, furtive look around. “We’re not supposed to tell any personal stuff
to the residents. It would mean my job if anyone found out.
More
than my job. Can I trust you,
Luke?”
“I’ll keep my mouth shut.”
“I live over in Vermont. Burlington. That’s where I’m going on my outside week.” Telling
him that seemed to release something inside her, and although she kept the volume down, the
words came spilling out. “The first thing I have to do when I get off work is delete a bunch of
dunning calls from my phone. And when I get home, from the answering machine on
that
phone. You know, the landline. When the answer-machine is full, they leave letters—warnings,
threats—in the mailbox or under the door. My car, they can repo that any time they want, it’s a
beater, but now they’re talking about my
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