George, Anne (22 page)

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Authors: Murder Runs in the Family: A Southern Sisters Mystery

Tags: #Crime & mystery, #Genealogists, #Mary Alice (Fictitious character), #Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Crime & Thriller, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Contemporary Women, #Women detectives - Alabama, #Mystery fiction, #Sisters, #Large type books, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective - General, #Women detectives, #Patricia Anne (Fictitious character), #Mystery & Detective - Series, #Alabama, #Detective, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #General, #Suspense

BOOK: George, Anne
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"Here." Sister took it from a drawer and handed it to me. "I wonder where a pencil is."

"There's one in my purse," I said. I opened the phone book to "Williams." I knew the odds were against Heidi Williams being listed, but maybe I would luck out. I didn't. There were several "H. Wil-

liams," and a few with another initial added to the "H." Any of them could be Heidi. Or her phone could simply be listed under her husband's name. And there were five pages of Williamses in the Birmingham phone book.

"Women's names ought to be in phone books," I called to Mary Alice.

"Mine is," she called back. She came in with a notebook and pencil and sat down at the counter again. "Could the shoes maybe be tan instead of white? It's not Easter yet."

"White," I declared. I looked at all the Williamses that lived in Birmingham, and it occurred to me that if by some miracle I found Heidi, I didn't know what I would tell her. If I said, "Georgiana Peach said to find you," she would say, "Why?" And what was I supposed to say? "Damned if I know?"

"I don't know why I'm supposed to be finding this Heidi Williams," I told Mary Alice. "And there are five pages of Williamses here."

Mary Alice looked up. "You promised a dying woman."

"She's not dying. Just on the verge."

"I'm going to write it down. Dying wishes must be honored."

"Who says?"

"Mama always said so."

"Mama never said any such thing." Bubba finished his bath, and hopped back up on the counter. "I'm telling you, Sister, this cat on this heating pad is a fire hazard."

Sister paused in her writing. "The blood spatters could be shaped like huge red flowers."

"How big are the shoes?"

"Little red flowers." Hie pencil swept across the page.

"Heidi Williams's number will have to be at The Family Tree. I'll see if Cassie's there. She probably knows it, anyway."

"Little anemones," Sister said. "Do you think enough people are familiar with anemones? You think verbena would be better?"

I shrugged and turned to the back of the phone book to the business section. "You have reached The Family Tree—" Georgiana's voice.

"Shit!" I looked up Cassie's number again and called. Another answering machine. I left word for her to call me.

"Listen to this," Mary Alice said. She held the notepad up and read, "He looked at her in surprise, the bullet hole a third eye. Then, as he fell, blood spattered like a garden of anemones across her size seven-and-a-half Keds."

"Size seven-and-a-half Keds?"

"The teacher said to sneak the description of the characters in. You don't want them looking at themselves in the mirror and describing what they see."

"Why not?"

"It's been done too much."

"God forbid. I liked that third eye, though."

"Thanks. I like it, too." Sister looked at the page admiringly.

"I've got to go fix supper," I said, sliding down from the stool. Thanks for the Black Cow."

"You want some Brunswick stew? I've still got some in the freezer we bought at the Elks' barbecue. All you'll have to do is make corn bread."

"I'd love it, and Fred will think he's died and gone to heaven." I didn't point out that she had bought the stew at the barbecue, not the freezer.

Sister walked with me to the car and waved as I started down the driveway. I saw her standing there, waving, and I slammed on my brakes and backed up. "What are you going to do tonight?" She had suddenly looked lonesome to me. That big house and her rattling around in it. No Fred. Just Bubba Cat.

Mary Alice grinned. "Buddy's coming over. The lady from By Request is bringing supper, and we're going to watch a movie in the hot tub."

"Dear God," I said, and floored the accelerator.

The phone was ringing when I came in from walking Woofer. "Philip's got the program figured out," Haley announced. "He's copied it on his little computer and we're going to bring it over after a while. Okay?"

"Sure. I'd ask you for supper, but we're just having a bowl of Brunswick stew."

"Oh, that's okay. We've got reservations at The Club. We'll bring it by before we go."

"Did he say anything about what's on it?"

"No. Just that he can get into it."

"Haley's happy," I told Fred, who walked in just as I hung up. "They're coming by in a little while to bring the computer disk. Philip figured out how the genealogy program works."

"Good." He hugged me. "I better go get a shower."

I followed him down the hall. "I went to University Hospital this afternoon. Georgiana Peach was asking to see me. She's in intensive care and looks awful, bless her heart."

"What did she want?"

"She wants me to find a woman named Heidi Williams who used to work for her. But the interesting thing she said was that Judge Haskins killed Meg Bryan."

Fred unbuttoned his shirt and threw it across the bed. "She was doped up, wasn't she?"

"Sure, but—"

"Then I wouldn't pay any attention to it." Fred reached into his back pants pocket and brought out an envelope. "Ta da!"

"What is this?"

"Open it!"

The outside of the envelope said Travel, Inc. I opened it and saw several brochures for Mexican and Caribbean cruises.

"We'll study them tonight," Fred said.

I fanned the brochures out. "I don't understand. Yesterday we were going bankrupt and today we're going on a cruise?"

"Is this not a wonderful country?" He laughed, patted me on the behind, and headed for the shower.

I looked down at the brochures in my hand. I knew I should be thrilled, but I felt like I did when one of the children came in past curfew. I'd been so worried, that I wanted to deck him. Instead, I went into the other bathroom and flushed the toilet. The yell I heard from Fred's shower made me feel better.

We had just finished supper when Philip and Haley came by. I cleared off the kitchen table and Philip put his notebook computer down and plugged it in.

"Let me show you how it works," he said. "It's mainly pedigree charts Meg was working on. She had a neat cross-referencing system, though."

We waited a moment while the computer made its groaning noises. Then a message flashed on the screen, "Margaret Anne March Bryan. Genius I."

"That's what she called her program," Philip explained. "I copied it and all of the 'gen' files so you can look at them."

"I don't know how," I said.

"Here's how you do it. First you hold down Alt F. Okay? Now what do you want to do? Look at your choices."

There was a list of about twenty things on the screen.

"I don't know what I want to do," I said.

"You can just wander around in it," Haley offered. "Mash the down cursor and when the one you want is highlighted, hit 'Enter.' "

"How do I know what I want?"

"Well, let's look at someone's pedigree chart. How about Efram Bates." Philip struck some keys and there was the Bates family tree. Another key listed them alphabetically. Philip selected a name, highlighted it, and said, "Let's see what Meg found out about John Harvey Bates."

John Harvey Bates was a fanner in Lowndes County, Alabama, and the father of thirteen children by three wives. He died at the age of eighty-two in 1870.

"That's great," Fred said, looking over my shoulder.

"See if there's an Atchison family in there," I said.

Philip obligingly tapped some keys. "Three. There's one listed as Atchison, Camille, one as Atchison, Camille Johnson, cross-referenced as Camille Victoria Johnson."

"Can you look at those charts?"

"Sure. I'll do Atchison, Camille first."

The same pedigree configuration came up on the screen that had been up for the Bates family. I looked · over it, all the marriages, children, deaths. So much living.

"Can you do the other Camille one?"

"Sure." The Atchison one disappeared and in its place was one with the heading "Camille Johnson Atchison." At first glance, they seemed to be identical.

"I wonder why Meg had three entries for this woman?" Haley said.

"Well, this woman married an Atchison, and that's what her children are. But she was born a Johnson. So Meg had to go back through the Johnson family."

"Oh, of course," Haley said. "So Mama is a Tate and not a Hollowell."

"I hate the way women have to change their names," I grumbled.

"You jumped at the chance," Fred said. We all ignored him.

"Talk me through this one time," I asked Philip. "Show me exactly what to do to get the charts."

"Okay. I'm going to turn it off. You just follow the instructions I've written here."

I held my breath and went right to Atchison, Camille. My audience of three applauded. "Now how do I get out of this thing?''

Philip reached over and showed me.

"Just remember," he said as they were leaving, "you can't hurt a thing. Everything's saved, and if by some remote chance you erase the whole thing, I still have the disk. So just play with it." He started down the steps and turned. "And follow my instructions."

"What a nice man," I told Fred as I closed the door.

"And an ENT, too. Now come on, let's look at those cruises."

I did, and they all sounded wonderful. We narrowed our choices down to three, watched the ten o'clock news, and went to bed. But as soon as Fred was asleep, I was back at the kitchen table with the computer on. And under Camille Victoria Johnson, I found something very interesting. In trying to leave this file, though, and go to one of the Atchison ones, I did something wrong and the words "Fatal Error" came up on the screen. That'll get your attention. I turned the computer off immediately and unplugged it.

"Fred." I whispered as I crawled into bed beside him. "I think I just killed an expensive computer."

"That's okay," he said between snores.

Fourteen The The next morning when I went into the kitchen, Fred was sitting at the computer tapping keys, studying the screen like some kind of computer expert. "I thought you said you killed it," he said. "It's fine."

"What are you doing? And how come you remember my saying that? You were snoring."

"I'm just following the instructions Philip wrote down. Look, honey, here's old Darrell Dunaway married Carroll Ferguson. Named their first son Shank. I like Darrell and Carroll, but they could have done better than Shank."

I went over and looked at the screen. "How did you do that? Last night it said 'Fatal Error.' "

"The male's innate affinity with machines."

"Are you saying I messed it up because I'm a woman?"

"Something like that. The coffee's ready."

"Nice to know the affinity also goes for coffee machines. And I'll have you know I did exactly what Philip wrote down." I poured a cup of coffee and came back to the table. Fred was having a high old time.

"Ho," he said jovially. "It gets better. Shank named his daughter Shanklette."

"He did not!"

"Yes, he did. Look at this."

"Shanklette Ferguson," I marveled, looking at the screen.

"This is great," Fred said, moving the cursor down like a pro.

"Do me a favor. Pull up the Camille Johnson At-chison file."

"Okay." He did it as if there were no problem at all. The proud male and his orderly mind! "Now what?"

"Look back in the lineage chart. What I'm looking for would be in the 1860s, maybe 70s."

He scanned down the chart.

"Slowly," I said. Then, "Wait, here it is." I read over his shoulder, "Clovis Reed Johnson married Elizabeth Ann Sherman."

"So?"

"Who was her father?"

"It doesn't say. Just says Clovis and Elizabeth had six children."

I put my coffee down and looked over Fred's shoulder. "Now look up Camille Victoria Johnson and go back to that same spot."

Fred followed Philip's instructions and zoomed right into the other file and scanned down. "Here," he said. "Clovis Reed Johnson married Elizabeth Ann Sherman. Her parents are listed on this one, though. Her father is William T. Sherman."

"Now look him up in that biographical thing."

Fred hit the keys as if he had been doing it all his life. "Okay," he read. "Sherman, William Tecumseh, born Ohio, 1820, famous as a Civil War general for his 'March to the sea' through Georgia." He looked up and grinned. "How about that!"

I nodded. "Camille Atchison is General Sherman's great great something granddaughter. Apparently, she was not pleased with the news."

"And she was trying to get in that Confederate ladies' thing?"

"The UDC. Bless her heart." But I was grinning, too. Talk about irony!

"Looks like she'd know about an ancestor that famous."

"You mean infamous?" I sat down and picked up my coffee. "You think Clevis's mama bragged to her quilting circle about Clovis marrying General Sherman's daughter? No way. That knowledge got swept under the rug so quick the dust didn't fly."

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