The Pickle Jar Pact
Mabel Hawkins peered through her lace curtains, squinting at the unfamiliar pickup truck parked across the street. It was a rusted-out behemoth, all sharp angles and chipped paint, looking like it had rolled straight out of 1957. The driver’s door creaked open, and out stepped a lanky man with grease-stained hands and a five o’clock shadow. “Well, I never,” Mabel muttered, reaching for her rotary phone. Her arthritic fingers spun the dial with practiced efficiency. “Gladys? You’ll never guess who just moved into the old Peterson place. Some sort of… mechanic, by the looks of it. And you should see his truck! I haven’t laid eyes on such a rattletrap since Herbert Coolidge’s jalopy back in ‘62…” ...