Mountain Top(272)
Bob Kettleson’s paralegal had left me a note on the library door. I went to her cubicle where she handed me a memo instructing me to research the relative priorities of eminent domain for a parcel of riverfront property claimed by a private utility and the city, state, and federal governments. When I returned to the library, Julie was there.
“Oversleep?” she asked.
“No, I’ve already talked to Vince, Mr. Carpenter, and Zach this morning.”
“Not all at once, I hope.”
“No, although that could happen.”
“Yeah, if Mr. Carpenter served as mediator. Vinny has come by twice looking for you. I think he used a bathroom excuse to get out of a big important meeting with Mr. Braddock and a rich client.”
“What did he want?”
“I don’t know. I asked him if it had to do with lunch, and he shook his head. Have you hurt his feelings?”
“No.”
“You know how confident he always looks with that laptop under his arm, but he seemed worried about something. I offered to be a sounding board for him if he gets lovesick and needs a friendly ear.”
“No, you didn’t.”
“But I thought about it. I’ve helped more couples work through issues than a marriage counselor. My mother still wishes I’d become a psychologist.”
“Vince doesn’t need psychotherapy. He’s more stable than the hard drive of his computer.”
“That’s not bad,” Julie said approvingly. “I’m rubbing off on you.”
I BEGAN WORKING on the eminent domain project but kept a careful eye on the clock. Vince didn’t return, and Julie was engrossed in her own research. As soon as an hour and a half passed, I went to the receptionist desk. The car was available until noon, and directions to the storage facility in hand, I drove across town to a modern, three-story building with a reflective glass exterior. Microfilm can’t be kept in a miniwarehouse without climate control, and the storage company shared the space with two insurance companies, an investment adviser group, and a CPA firm. I took the elevator to a top-floor office. A nice-looking man about my age with dark hair and dressed in blue jeans and a casual shirt sat behind a tall desk. He wore a name tag with “Eddie” on it. The area was filled with rows of lockable file cabinets in the middle and small rooms around the edges.
“I’m from Braddock, Appleby, and Carpenter. I need access to their microfilm records.”
“Sign in,” Eddie said, sliding a logbook in front of me. “Have you been here before?”
“No. I’m a summer clerk.”
“Where are you in law school?”
“University of Georgia.”
While I wrote my name, Eddie typed on his computer. “There is a reader set up in their site,” he said. “If you want hard copies, it also serves as a printer. It’s a lot like the machines you find in a modern deed room.”
I’d not been in enough modern or old-fashioned deed rooms to know what he meant. I followed him to one of the enclosed rooms.
“This is it.”
I put the key in the door and opened it.
“Make sure you sign out at the front when you leave,” he said. I hesitated.
“Do you know how to use the reader?” he asked.
“No.”
We stepped inside. The walls were lined with lateral filing cabinets that had numbers on the front. The reader looked a lot like a computer.
“Slip the film in here,” he said, “then turn this knob until you reach the file you want. If you want to make a copy, press the Print button.”
The button was clearly marked.
“How do I find a particular file in the cabinets?”
He pointed to two cassettes lying beside the reader. “You can scroll through the index of files alphabetically and locate the numbers for the cassettes in the cabinets.”
It seemed easy enough. I sat down in a chair in front of the reader. “Thanks,” I said.
Eddie didn’t leave. “If you need specific help, I’ll be here,” he said. “I’m going to start applying to law schools after the first of the year. How do you like it?”
“It’s hard but a great education.”
“Do you have a business card?” he asked.
The fact that I was alone in the facility with a man I didn’t know made me feel suddenly uneasy. I turned in my chair and cleared my throat so I wouldn’t sound nervous.
“No, they don’t give those to summer clerks.”
“How about your home number or e-mail address?” he asked. “I’d like to chat sometime. You know, get your opinion about schools.”
“I don’t give out personal information to people I don’t know,” I said, trying to sound professional.