Jimmy had one foot up against the bottom of the door. He glared at us. Some people on the street looked over, but nobody stopped.
“Somebody stole my bank,” he said finally, his voice sounding far away. “One of you.”
Of course we told him, through the door, that we didn’t, that we wouldn’t. But there was no way he was letting us in.
We went to the pizza place and talked about who could have taken Jimmy’s two-dollar bills. He ran the place alone, aside from the forty minutes a day that we were there. Maybe someone had run in while he was in the bathroom, we thought. He usually put his Back in Five Minutes sign in the window and locked the door, but not every time. Sometimes he just ran into the back for a minute and if someone came in, they waited. Someone could have taken the bank then. But who in the world would have known to take it in the first place? It was a faded plastic bank in the shape of a cartoon character. It didn’t look remotely valuable.
“Let’s write him a letter,” Annemarie said. “Or no—we’ll get him a card!” She used her spoon to scrape up the last of her lunch, which her dad packed for her every day in a cleaned-out yogurt container. “Come on,” she said, standing up. “It’ll be my treat.”
So we went into Gold’s Stationery and bought Jimmy a greeting card. I wanted to get one that said With Sympathy, for Jimmy’s lost bank, but Annemarie said we should pick something that was blank inside. She picked a card with roses on it, which I thought was kind of strange, considering it was for Jimmy and roses are supposed to symbolize love. She said the card looked sincere, but I guessed that she liked it because it reminded her of her mystery rose.
“What do you think?” she asked Colin. She held up the card in front of him.
Colin raised his shoulders and dropped them. “I guess.”
Annemarie said nothing, but she looked like she’d been hoping for a more revealing answer. “Can you put this on my dad’s account?” she asked the cashier.
“Sure thing, Annemarie. Hey, where’s your pal Julia? Home sick today?”
Annemarie turned pink. “No, she’s around.”
The cashier smiled and handed Annemarie a spiral notebook with a beaten-up cover. Annemarie flipped it open and wrote her name and the date.
A charge account at Gold’s. I thought of the fat smelly markers that cost two-fifty each, the leather diaries that locked with little keys, the battery-operated fans that you could wear on a string around your neck on hot days.
“Hey, Annemarie,” Colin said. “Wanna buy me a pack of baseball cards?”
She turned pink again. “I can’t. I mean, I’m not allowed. Sorry.”
He shrugged and smiled. “No big deal.”
Sometimes I wanted to squeeze Colin’s cheeks until his teeth fell out.
After school, Annemarie and I went to her house. Her dad brought us some weird kind of thin ham rolled up so we could eat it with our fingers. We wrote on Jimmy’s card:
Dear Jimmy,
We did not take your Fred Flintstone bank. We don’t know who could have taken it (maybe someone came in when you went to the bathroom?).
Can we come back to work?
Signed,
Your employees,
Annemarie, Miranda, and Colin
I put the card in my knapsack so that I could slip it under Jimmy’s door the next morning on my way to school. Then we lay on Annemarie’s rug and planned all the stuff we were going to do over Christmas vacation: Annemarie wanted to start teaching me how to draw, even though I told her I was probably hopeless, and we were going to go to the movies, and her dad even said he would take us ice-skating in Central Park.
I tried not to wonder what Sal would be doing. I figured he’d be playing basketball right up until the first big snow.
Things That Fall Apart
The next morning on my way to school, I pushed our card under Jimmy’s locked door. At lunchtime, Colin, Annemarie, and I walked up to Broadway together. Jimmy was helping a customer, but he saw us through the glass door, made a face, and shook his head no.
“I guess he means it,” Colin said.
We stood there in front of the door for a minute, just in case. When the customer left with his sandwich, Jimmy glanced over at us again. Colin put his hands together under his chin like he was praying and made a puppy-dog face, which was a dumb joke but also pretty cute. Jimmy took a rag and started wiping down the counter, and then he raised one arm and waved us in without looking up.
“So we can come back to work?” Colin asked when we’d all crowded in the door.
Jimmy looked at us. “You’re good kids,” he said, “but you don’t know what you’re doing half the time.”
“We didn’t take the bank!” I started, and he waved at me to be quiet.
“I know. I been thinking about it. You can come back to work.”
“Yay!” Annemarie started clapping. Colin ran around slapping everyone five, including Jimmy, who even smiled.
“But here’s the thing,” Jimmy said after Colin had taken a victory lap behind the counter and through the back room. “Your friend, little Swiss Miss. Don’t let me find her in here again. Ever.”
“Who?” Annemarie said.
“I think he means Julia,” I said.
“You think Julia took the money?” Colin laughed. “Julia needs money like a fish needs a bicycle.”
Jimmy shook his head. “Some things are in the blood. All the money in the world can’t change a person’s blood.”
“What do you mean, ‘blood’?” Annemarie had her hands on her hips. “What blood?”
Jimmy pointed his big finger right at me. “Like you call her, Swiss Miss: hot chocolate.”
“Huh?” Colin looked at me and back to Jimmy. I was just getting it. Annemarie was way ahead of me.
“You … you pig,” she said. “You racist pig.” I had never seen Annemarie angry. She was scary and also obviously about to cry.
Jimmy shrugged. “It’s your life. I’m not having that little thief back in here. You don’t have to come back either.”
“I won’t!” Annemarie shouted, and she banged out the door.
“And that’s not why I call her Swiss Miss!” I said.
Jimmy shrugged again, and I banged out after Annemarie. Colin followed me. We found her crying halfway down the block, walking fast.
She was spitting words: “That. Big. Fat. Jerk. That. Pig. I. Hate. Him.”
Colin looked at me. “I don’t even get what just happened!”
Annemarie whirled around to face us. “He thinks Julia did it because she’s black.”
“No way” Colin said. “He’s crazy.”
Annemarie turned on me then. “Is that your name for her? Swiss Miss?”
“I—no! I said it one time, but I didn’t mean … I meant about how she’s always talking about Switzerland, her watch and the chocolate, and—”
“She is?” Colin asked. “I never heard her talk about Switzerland.”
“If anyone needs the money,” Annemarie said to me coldly, “it’s you, not Julia.”
“Are you serious? I didn’t take the stupid money!”
“Forget it,” she said. “I want to be alone.” And she stomped off toward school.
Colin raised his eyebrows after her and then showed me a rolled-up dollar. “Want to get a slice?”
So we went to the pizza place. But it wasn’t fun. And walking back to school, it occurred to me that Colin might not like me at all. He might just like pizza.
“Tell me something,” I said just before we got to our classroom. “That day the bread count was short by two rolls. Did you take them?”
“Yeah,” Colin said, starting to smile. “I thought it would be … Hey! I didn’t steal Jimmy’s bank, you know!” He looked at me through his bangs with his injured-puppy face.