Well, things were going pretty smooth for me at the beginning of 2020. I made it through the Christmas shoplifting season without being hit with a purse full of stolen bras, panties, and assorted expensive perfume. That's what happened the year before. The bras and panties weren't hard at all. The perfume was packaged in fucking glass bottles and they felt like rocks.
It took half a fifth...excuse me.... half a 750 milliliter bottle of Glenfiddich and half a pack of cigarettes before my head stopped hurting. I've never figured out why the fuck they changed from fifths to 750 milliliter bottles except to make me pay the same for 7 milliliters less scotch.
I don't like working store security, but during the Christmas season, people don't normally need a PI, and it pays the bills. Sometimes it's kind of fun to see people stealing when they don't think anybody is watching. Usually, it's boring as hell. The women are all wearing coats or heavy sweaters so you can't see how big their tits are and those coats and heavy sweaters make their asses look huge. I like wide asses on a woman, but not as wide as they look then.
Anyway, New Year's Eve rolled around and I was looking forward to another year of finding lost people and cheating spouses, and catching people claiming they'd been injured at work to the point they couldn't do much of anything while they secretly fucked their girlfriends and/or boyfriends.
Wouldn't you know some goddamned asshole in China was cooking up a big mess of stir-fried bats and ended up infecting the whole fucking world with a virus? That was the first theory proposed by the experts. There were others that followed. I don't think any of the experts know their asses from a hole in the ground about what really happened. It doesn't really matter anyway. The result was along about the end of March most governors and mayors went into panic mode and shut down everything not considered to be "essential". They said we had to "flatten the curve" so the hospitals weren't overrun with sick people.
I never read that PI's weren't considered to be essential in Tennessee, but I never read they were either. Since they couldn't decide, I decided for them. I decided I was pretty goddamned essential to me so I'd keep working. The problem was most people in the whole fucking state were staying home and hiring a PI was the furthest thing from their mind.
Nobody got lost because they were all at home. No spouse could cheat because they were home with their wife or husband and had no excuse to slip out for a little poke the peach on the sly. There was no way an employee could claim he or she was injured at work because they were either not working or were working from home.
Thank God they considered liquor stores and tobacco stores to be essential. The day Tennessee shut down, I bought four bottles of Glenfiddich and four cartons of cigarettes just in case there was a run on them. That was after I tried to buy toilet paper, but every place I checked was sold out. I hadn't read that the virus causes you to have the shits, but apparently a lot of housewives thought it might and considered toilet paper to be right up there at the top of their priority list. They bought as much as they could cram into a shopping buggy and then went back for a second load.
Being the logical guy that I am in spite of what my ex will tell you, I figured paper towels would work in a pinch. They were sold out too. It was the same with paper napkins, my third choice.
April didn't start out too bad actually. I stayed home, nursed my supply of scotch and cigarettes and toilet paper, and watched movies on TV. At the end of week two, I was down to one bottle of scotch so I went to the liquor store and bought three more. It's a good thing I don't drink vodka because they were out of that. The guy said people were buying vodka to make hand sanitizer.
I was also out of frozen pizza, so I stopped by Walmart for some more. Shopping was pretty easy because there weren't many people in the store. There was still no toilet paper or paper towels or napkins. I was going to have to ration my toilet paper a little tighter. I picked up two cartons of cigarettes while I was out.
Week three started to get boring. I was on the second re-run of several movies and what the networks called "marathons" where they played a series of old TV shows over and over. I tried the news a couple of times, but all they said was if I didn't stay home, I'd catch the virus and die. That was pretty depressing and caused me to drink more scotch than my daily ration, so I stopped looking at the news.
By the last week of April, I was going nuts. I'd stopped watching movies and old TV shows and was looking at amateur porn on my computer. Even that was a letdown. You'd think people being at home with nothing to do would result in a slew of pictures of women showing their tits and pussies or couples having an afternoon plug and chug, but it didn't.
Finally at the end of April, Tennessee said enough is enough and started to open back up. Well, bars and restaurants couldn't open, but I never go to those anyway. It was enough for me that people could get out of the house, fuck their fuckbuddies, and get lost. I might get some work and I needed it. My checking account was starting to screech for me to stop and I didn't want to tap into my savings.
For the next week, all I did was keep looking at porn because nobody walked through my office door and asked for help. I did start getting a few subpoenas to serve. The dedicated clerks down at the court house were back to work and trying to round up people with unpaid parking tickets and those who'd forgotten to pay their traffic tickets.
It was that way until the middle of May, though it was pretty easy to serve the subpoenas since most people were still at home because their jobs hadn't come back yet. They were even kinda nice about it. I think that's because I was the first person they'd seen in over a month who wasn't living with them. I never realized women don't really get dressed until they leave the house. There were a couple who were better than the porn I was watching.
I could understand how they felt the day Vivian walked into my office because she was a refreshing change.
Vivian Jeffers looked about forty and I had a feeling if she'd been into amateur porn, she'd have been a real hit. It was warm in Tennessee then, well, hot as hell actually, and Vivian was baring as much skin as she could in order to stay cool. Her T-shirt fit like a second skin over her big tits and her little shorts were showing some really smooth, really soft inner thighs. I was sitting there wondering how those thighs would feel against my face when she cleared her throat.
"Mr. Meers, I need you to find my husband. Can you do that?"
I grinned, partly because I finally had some real work and partly because she'd settled her weight on one hip and that cocked hip was reminding me of something else I hadn't done in way too long.
"Sure I can. It's what I do. Have a seat and tell me what happened. Oh, and call me Harry. If we're going to work together, we need to be on a first name basis. What's yours?"
"My name is Vivian Jeffers. My husband's name is Greg, well, he likes to be called Gregory, but I call him Greg. Gregory sounds so stuffy, don't you think it does? He only corrected me once and I told him he'd always be just Greg to me whether he liked it or not, but he corrects other people all the time. Well, he did before we got shut up in our houses at the end of March."
Why the fuck is it that when women get nervous about something they start talking a mile a minute about shit that doesn't matter? They all do it, and Vivian was doing it right then. I was used to it, but it still pissed me off. I didn't want to piss her off though, so I played nice and smiled.
"OK, Vivian. When did you see him last?"
She pulled out her cell phone and thumbed over the screen for a few seconds, and then frowned.
"Here it is on the fifteenth of April. Greg's a registered nurse, and he was working days at Memorial when the virus hit. First he was working his normal twelve hour shift -- seven in the morning to seven at night -- but when the cases started piling up, he said they were talking about making the nurses work every day instead of getting some days off.
"He called me that day to tell me that they'd gone over five hundred cases and he was going to have to work every day in order for the hospital to keep up. He called me the next day and said it didn't look like he'd be home for a while, and that he probably couldn't call me because they were getting almost a hundred new cases a day and he didn't have time.
"Well, I didn't hear from him again after that. I figured he was just busy, but you'd think they'd give him time to call his wife and tell her he was still alive, wouldn't you?"
"Well, yes, I'd think they would. Didn't you try to call him between then and now?"
Vivian frowned.
"I did call him, every day, but it always went to voice mail. His voice mail message said he'd call back as soon as he could, but he never did. I tried calling the hospital too, but all they'd do was leave him a message."
I stopped taking notes and looked up.