Authors: Terri Reid
Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense, #Ghosts
Mary let herself into Winneshiek Theater. She flipped on the
lights and walked backstage.
“Faye,” she called. “Faye, I need to speak with you.”
“I’m not here.”
The voice echoed throughout the theater.
“Well, that’s too bad,” she said, “because I’m thinking of
offering you the part of a lifetime. Excuse the pun.”
Faye appeared next to her.
“Really, the
part of a lifetime?”
Mary nodded. “I’m still working on the script, but I need
some input from you.”
“Will I get a writing credit?” she asked.
“Yes, as matter of fact, you can be a co-writer.”
She seemed to consider it. “Are you any good?” she asked. “I
really can’t have my name associated with dribble.”
Mary took a deep breath.
Count
to ten, Mary.
“I’m award-winning,” Mary said, neglecting to add that it
was a Distinguished Service award.
Faye smiled. “Well then, I’d be happy to collaborate with
you.”
Mary sat down at the edge of the stage and pulled out a notebook
and a recorder. “I want to be sure my notes are correct,” she explained to Faye,
“because I want the Faye McMullen story to be perfect.”
“The Faye McMullen story,” Faye repeated, clasping her hands
to her chest. “It’s bound to be an Oscar winner.”
“At the very least,” Mary agreed. “So how do you see the
main character?”
Faye floated across the stage. “As a lonely misunderstood
woman, unlucky in love, despised for her wealth and beauty, and only wanting to
do what’s right for all the little people.”
Mary jotted down some notes. “Okay, let’s focus on the
unlucky in love portion,” she said, “because people really love romance.”
Faye nodded. “You’re right, romance and tragedy,” she said.
“A single woman pregnant with a married man’s child.
She
knows he’ll never leave his wife and...”
She turned to Mary and shrugged.
“Quite frankly, she really didn’t want to marry him; she was
just looking for a distraction.”
Mary couldn’t believe what she was hearing. Faye had been
pregnant? Faye had an affair with a married man?
“So, what does she do?” Mary asked.
“Well, she went to Europe of course,” she said. “That’s what
all the wealthy girls in her situation did. They went overseas and took care of
their problem.”
She glided over to Mary and placed a hand on her abdomen.
“Except, for some reason, when she got there, she couldn’t quite bring herself
to take care of the problem the way most of the other girls did,” she said.
“She felt the baby move and something odd happened. She actually found
something she could love.”
“What did she do?”
“She stayed in Europe, in Tuscany, and pretended she was a
widow,” she said sadly. “She was all by herself. Her parents were not only
disappointed that she had been foolish enough to get pregnant, they were beside
themselves that she hadn’t seen reason and ended the pregnancy.”
“The baby was born,” she said, her voice grew soft. “He was
beautiful. He was tiny and pink and perfect.”
She sighed and Mary shivered at the intense sadness of the
sound.
“But, even though she was foolish enough to give birth to
the baby, she knew her parents would never allow her to keep him,” she
explained. “So, she contacted the faithful family retainer and gave him the
charge to discreetly contact the father and let him know he had a son.”
“She didn’t put him up for adoption?”
“No. She wasn’t unselfish enough to never see the baby
again,” she explained. “She made the father promise to adopt the child, or she
would tell his wife about the affair. And because his wife had the purse
strings, he felt it was an equitable trade. Besides, he and his wife had never
been able to have children of their own, so it was perfect solution for
everyone.”
Mary thought about it for a moment.
“Perfect
for everyone except the sad young woman who had to give up her baby.”
Faye smiled sadly. “Well, she grew up to be a cold,
demanding bitch; so it turned out well for everyone.”
She turned to Mary. “How’s that for drama and tragedy?” she
asked, and then faded away.
Hezekiah entered the back of the chapel. He was pleased; the
turnout for his funeral was quite large. The casket sat at the front of the
room, a lovely flower arrangement on top of it. The choir entered from a side
door and made their way up to the altar. The organist began playing and the
choir and congregation sang a moving rendition of “Amazing Grace.”
Hezekiah sang along, enjoying the timbre of his deep bass
voice. He had always felt he had the best voice in the congregation and it was
a pity he couldn’t both preach the sermon and sing a solo for the choir. But,
he reasoned, he had to let others have a chance to serve.
The eulogy was given by one of the senior members of the
congregation. He slowly walked down the aisle of the church and pulled himself
up the rail to the speaker’s stand. He was wearing a slightly worn suit, but it
had been cleaned and pressed for the occasion. Hezekiah glanced around, looking
at the younger men with their expensive suits and their positions of prestige
and power in the community. He would have chosen one of them, because they were
better suited to speak about him. But, well, there was nothing he could do
about it now.
The walk to Nine East Café was short, but cold. Mary entered
the small restaurant and was instantly assailed by the scent of hot coffee,
fresh pastries and cinnamon cookies.
“Hi Mary,” Brenda, the owner, said. “Bradley’s already in
the back. What can I bring you?”
“Hot chocolate,” Mary said.
“Whipped cream?” Brenda asked.
Mary lifted her eyebrows and Brenda laughed. “Yeah, why do I
even ask,” she said.
“Whipped cream and dark chocolate
shavings, coming up.
I just pulled some cranberry muffins out of the
oven, are you interested?”
“You know, you are a dangerous woman,” Mary replied. “And,
yes, I am very interested.”
“Okay, you get settled in and I’ll bring you your order in a
few minutes.”
Bradley stood up when he saw Mary coming. “So, how was your
meeting with Faye?” he asked.
“Well, much more enlightening than I thought it would be,”
she said, putting her briefcase on the table and slipping off her coat.
She and Bradley sat at the table. Mary glanced around to ensure
they could speak confidentially without anyone hearing them and said, “Did you
know that Faye had a child when she was younger?”
Bradley shook his head. “No, there’s no record of it.”
“Nope, the faithful family retainer took care of that,” she
said, “And blackmailed the father of the child, who happened to be happily
married to someone else, to adopt him.”
“Hmmm, I wonder how long Benjamin Middlebury has been the
attorney for the family,” Bradley mused. “I think I’ll pay the illustrious
attorney a visit tomorrow and see what I can dig up.”
“I felt so sorry for her,” she said. “I can see why an
experience like that could make you bitter.”
“Or it could make you stronger,” he said. “You get to choose
your attitude. She chose anger.”
Mary shrugged. “Yeah, well, I can’t judge her. I don’t know
what I’d do if I was in that circumstance.”
Brenda came over with her order. “Do you need anything else
for now?” she asked.
Mary shook her head. “No, this looks great, thanks.”
“Chief, you need a refill?” she asked, looking at Bradley’s
empty diet soda glass.
He shook his head. “No, I won’t sleep tonight if I drink
anymore caffeine, but thanks.”
Mary took a sip of the hot chocolate and felt the warmth
seep through her body. “This is just what I needed.”
Bradley sat back and just watched Mary for a moment. He
missed their closeness.
Missed holding her.
Could he
have been wrong?
She broke off a piece of muffin and popped it into her mouth.
She looked up at Bradley, who was staring at her. She stopped chewing. “What?
Do I have whipped cream on my nose?”
He chuckled. “No, sorry, I was just thinking.”
She nodded and pulled a file from her briefcase and opened
it. “Okay, this is all I have so far about Jeannine,” she said. “When I went to
your old house, I met one of your former neighbors,
Brian
Keller. Do you remember him?”
“Yeah, as I recall, he was a bit of a
jerk,” he said.
Mary laughed. “The term I preferred was
ass, but jerk will do. Anyway, I pretended I was an old high school friend
looking for you and Jeannine. He told me about the break-in and how he didn’t
know where either of you were anymore. But he did fill me in on something
interesting. He said all of the neighbors thought Jeannine was having an
affair, so they didn’t share a lot of information with you.”
“What?” his mouth dropped open.
“Jeannine wasn’t having an affair!” he
exclaimed.
“Well, of course she wasn’t,” she
replied, shushing him. “That’s ridiculous. But, that was the perception of the
neighbors, which is why you never got good information from them.”
“But why would they think she was
cheating?”
“Well, did some of the other cops drop
by to check on her for you?” she suggested. “Dad used to have his buddies check
on us when he was working weird hours.”
Bradley shook his head. “You know, I
really can’t remember, but we had a lot of friends who stopped by,” he said.
“But an affair...”
Mary reached over and placed her hand
over his. “Bradley, I already asked Jeannine, she never had an affair,” she
said. “She was in love with you and only you.”
He turned his hand over and clasped her
hand. “Thank you,” he said.
Mary felt the jolt of electricity from
the contact. She pulled her hand out of his grasp and busied it by breaking off
another piece of muffin. But this time the delicious treat tasted like sawdust in
her mouth.
“So, what have you been looking at?”
she asked, injecting cheerfulness into her voice.
Bradley pulled out his file. “I’ve been
looking through some of the old photos, trying to find something I missed the
first time through.”
He opened the file and Mary looked at
the photos of the home in Sycamore. Furniture was overturned, pictures on the
walls were askew,
books
were ripped from bookcases,
photo albums...
She paused and looked down at the photo
albums. “Do you have any close ups on the photo albums?” she asked.
“Yeah, I think so,” he said, picking up
the file and flipping through the photos.
Finally, he stopped. “Here, these are
all the close shots taken of the crime scene.”
Mary slowly examined each photo,
nodding to herself. Then she laid them out on the table in front of Bradley.
“Look at the pictures in the albums,” she said.
He looked at them and shrugged.
“They’re all ripped,” he said. “Someone destroyed all the photos.”
She shook her head. “No, look again,”
she said. “And this time, notice whose face is in all of the photos.”
He was a little confused, but did what
she suggested. Each photo, either on the floor or in the album only had his
picture left. The part of the photo that had held Jeannine’s image had been
torn away.
“Jeannine’s missing,” he said, finally
seeing it for the first time. “Every photo is missing Jeannine’s image.”
Mary nodded. “And I would venture a
guess those pieces of photos were never recovered,” she said. “That you never
found the other half of your photos.”
He shook his head. “There were no other
pieces of photos in the house,” he said. “They were only in this room.”
“So, someone wanted to rip you and
Jeannine apart,” she said.
“And he wanted to keep Jeannine to
himself,” he said, as the idea coalesced in his mind. “This was a kidnapping
that was meant to look like a break in.”
“This was a murder that started with
kidnapping,” she reminded him.
He looked up at her. “Thank you. This
sheds a whole new light on the investigation.”
Mary sat back in her chair, not quite
trusting where the conversation might be heading. “And now?” she asked.
He ran his hand through his hair.
“Mary, I’ve studied these photos for eight years,” he said, his voice strained.
“And you look at them and see something I never even considered. I know I’m
asking for a lot, but would you be willing...?”
“I told you that Jeannine is now my
client,” she said, interrupting him. She didn’t want her work on this
investigation to be considered a favor or anything that could be construed as return
to their former relationship. “You are not asking me for anything. It makes
sense to work together. I’m glad a fresh pair of eyes can add new insight.”
Taken a little aback by her business
approach to the investigation, he gave himself a mental shake. He had been so
delighted with her assessment, he had wanted to pull her into his arms and kiss
her. Obviously their new relationship didn’t allow that kind of behavior. “Well,
it will be great getting your professional insight,” he said.
“Thank you,” she said, scooting her
chair back. “It’s late, I’d better get going.”
“Mary, you walked here,” he said. “Let
me give you a ride. Professional courtesy, that’s all.”
“Thanks, I’d appreciate it.”