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Authors: Linda Barnes

BOOK: Cities of the Dead
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“How long have you been here?”

“What is today? Thursday? Friday? A night like last night cannot be measured. I have been in this city since Saturday, but I did not realize what had prompted Denise to call for me until Tuesday. Now it seems to me I have been naive, stupid, but it was not until then that I realized why this man, this man Joseph Fontenot, is familiar to me. He is very different, you understand? More than a difference of years. He limps. My Jacques did not limp, nor did he wear those thick spectacles. This man is heavy; he has a stomach, and my Jacques was thin like a reed, a well-made man. This man has a mustache; he is balding. My Jacques was smooth-faced and his hair was curly like a boy's. But something is the same … And I know suddenly when I am seated near him at dinner, near Denise also, that he is not Joseph Fontenot, but he is my husband. And I know that this is why Denise has brought me here, although I cannot say from what well her thought sprang up. If she wants to hurt me I do not know why. If she wants to hurt the woman who is now Jacques' wife, I do not know why. But I know now that I had no marriage—”

“You said you married him—”

“Is a marriage legal in this country when one of the parties is already married? For last night, Denise is asking this man, who calls himself Joseph, questions. She and I have already spoken, you understand, when I recognize him, when I realize what is going on. And she says to me, I will ask him these things and you will see what is the truth. And I phone your aunt, beg her to join me. Never would I ask for such a favor, but I am, how do you say, in a quandary. I do not know what to do, what is the legal thing to do so that this man has no right to tell anyone that once I was his wife. And your aunt will know about lawyers and things. So Denise asks questions: How long are you married? And Jeannine, the wife, says, twenty-four years. So he was wedded to her long before he married me. And they have a child, also, a daughter eighteen years, and I would not wish a child to know that her father was the kind of man who would wed two women—”

“Did you ever get a divorce?”

She rubbed the palm of her left hand with her right forefinger, tracing the red marks where her nails had bitten her flesh. “No,” she said. “At first I did not want one. And then I did not need one. There was no one else I wished to marry.”

She averted her face in a vain effort to keep some privacy. Tears slid down her cheek. Years ago, when he'd been a private investigator, Spraggue had found the forced confidences of strangers painful. The pain of someone you knew was worse. So different from the comfortably fake anguish of actors. Actors blurted dark secrets with relish; that was their function. Real people covered wounds with scar tissue, or hid them till they festered.

“Okay,” he said gently. “Tuesday you realized that Joseph Fontenot could be Jacques, your missing husband. You spoke to your friend, Denise, about it. You arranged a questioning session for this banquet last night—”

“Yes.” She seemed strong again, recovered. “I asked your aunt particularly to remember the conversation so that later on we could find out the best thing to do, but I did not tell your aunt that the man had married me.”

“And after dinner, the man was killed.”

“Yes, and, oh,
monsieur
, listen to me closely, I may have hated that man once as I loved him once, but it is all so long ago. I think that it was a different woman entirely who loved and hated so passionately. A better woman perhaps, but not the person I have become. When I sit across from him at the table, he is like a stranger to me. I try to summon up the anger, to feel betrayed, as Denise says I am, but there is nothing, only a deep sadness for what I was and will never be again.”

Her voice was flat and bewildered, scarcely louder than a whisper. He knew what a good actress could do with lines like those, and he half believed her just because she hadn't used any of the vocal tricks. He didn't think he knew a liar good enough to serve that up without embellishment, without even a catch in the throat.

“You didn't kill him?”

“Oh, no. I didn't. Believe me. I am not the heroine of Greek tragedy. I am only the cook.” Her smile was wry, a touch bitter. “And,” she said, “I wish to hire you to prove me innocent.”

“I think my aunt has already hired me.”

“She has done enough for me. I will hire you myself.”

“I'll see what I can do.”

“Please.” She focused her attention on the gray cinderblocks, as if she were trying, by sheer force of will, to keep herself from seeing something else. She swallowed hard, opened her mouth, closed it without making a sound.

“Anything else I should know?” he asked.

She shook her head, her lips pressed tight.

“You're sure?”

“I've told you everything,
monsieur
. My whole life.”

Spraggue just nodded. Nobody ever told you everything.

TWO

“She confess?”

The man who trumpeted the question looked like he'd been waiting in the wings to play the role of Southern sheriff. Pushing retirement age, he had the standard paunch, a gentle cloud of whitish hair, round cheeks, and a bulbous nose. His level gray eyes seemed to belong to another face.

Aunt Mary was waiting too. And even Southern sheriff-types deferred to Aunt Mary. Diminutive, elderly, she might be, but she exuded the authority that came with years of command. Underneath the charm, there was steel.

She offered the sheriff a dimpled smile and said, “May I speak to my nephew alone?”

Spraggue said, “Have you got a lawyer for Dora?”

“Of course.”

“Well, get him and let the cops in.” To the central casting sheriff he said, “Dora's ready to tell you everything she told me.”

“That so?” said the fat man. “And just why would ‘everything' be so touchy private before and so godawful public now?”

Spraggue shrugged. Any cop ought to know that repetition was less painful after the first time.

The fat cop said, “You can use the lieutenant's office. Hayes, show Miz Hillman and her nephew back there, okay? These hallways get you all turned around.”

The office was small. One metal desk sat two feet in front of a window graced with broken matchstick blinds. The window faced out on a brick wall.

Mary stood on tiptoe and planted a kiss on her nephew's cheek. She sat cautiously on the single spindly guest chair and motioned him to a cracked imitation-leather swivel job behind the desk. Her rumpled gray silk suit, pink bow askew—an evening outfit—meant she hadn't slept last night. Her smile erased the fine wrinkles in her skin and made her seem far younger than her seventy-odd years, her vitality more attuned to the red in her curling hair than the silver.

“I'm sorry, Michael,” she said. “I hope it wasn't too much trouble for you to get away.”

Trouble? Hell, no. No trouble. Just walked out on an Equity acting job. Left the director with a lame excuse and a moron of an understudy. Screwed my reliability rating in every theater in the known world. No trouble.

All he said out loud was “No,” and Aunt Mary beamed as if she'd known it all along.

“Quickly now,” she said. “What did Dora say?”

“Imagine my surprise to hear you were in New Orleans,” Spraggue replied, raising one eyebrow. “I leave you one night, safe and sound in Boston and—”

Mary fluttered her hands. “I know. I know. I should have told you. I apologize abjectly. Things happen. Now what did Dora say?”

“First you're going to tell me what's going on so that I can make some sense of what she said.”

“I don't know what's going on,” Mary protested. “I feel like someone who's been given one of those terrible, huge jigsaw puzzles to play, except it got all mixed up with another one, and I've got half the giraffe pieces and half the leopard pieces, and they've both got spots, sort of, but they'll never match up.”

“Do you want to get some sleep first, Aunt Mary?”

“Oh, darling. No. I don't really. I
am
tired, but I can talk. I'll stop babbling about giraffes and leopards and start at the beginning.” She closed her eyes and said, “Maybe this is the onset of senility.”

Spraggue said, “Garbage. I pity the police department that tangles with you, lady.”

She sat up straighter. “Okay. Report. Hillman to Spraggue. I shall try to be as factual and succinct as possible. If I stray, bear with me.”

Spraggue kept a grin off his face with effort. “Shoot.”

“Wednesday morning—let me see, it was ten o'clock because the stock exchange had just opened—I got a phone call that Pierce insisted I take. It was Dora, sounding quite odd. She's worked for me for what? eight years now, cooking beautiful food and only complaining when I don't entertain enough, and never getting persnickety about adding more garlic if I like. A gem. Well, in all that time she never asked for a vacation, just took her days off when I traveled. I mean, it must get so dull for her, cooking for an elderly widow, when she used to awe the New York restaurant critics. But she insisted she liked the slow pace after so many years of hullabaloo. I kept urging her to take a trip, put a little excitement in her life, and finally, last week she asked if it would be all right if she went to New Orleans for some cooks' get-together bash and, of course, I was delighted. Pierce and I can get by on our own, although my cooking is dull at best and his is distinctly bizarre. All that curry—”

Spraggue cleared his throat. Mary's cheeks grew pink and she said, “I'm wandering, aren't I? Well, back to basics: Dora's phone call. She asked me—begged me—to come down to New Orleans for a day or two. Now normally that would be out of the question, but there was something in her voice, and, well, when someone has worked for you for eight years and never said a word about her personal life and never asked even a tiny favor—well, I was intrigued. So I came. I said nothing to you because I assumed I'd be back long before our next dinner date with some fascinating tale, instead of being just old stick-in-the-mud me.

“Pierce arranged everything. The airplane. The suite at the Imperial Orleans. I was delighted at the prospect of meeting all those marvelous chefs, tasting their cooking. Dora must have been quite a rising star when she cooked in New Orleans to be included in such select company. Denise Michel—you know, the one who wrote
A Taste of France in New Orleans
—and Paul Armand and Joseph Fontenot—the things that trio does with oysters alone! Well, Dora said she couldn't meet me at the airport because she was helping her friend, Denise, by giving a workshop, something to do with knives, worse luck. But Pierce thought of everything and I had a lovely limo ride to the hotel and got settled in and then there she was.

“Now I expected Dora to be forthcoming in New Orleans. I thought she hadn't wanted to talk about her difficulties on the phone, but would certainly spill the beans in person. Then, when I saw her in the hotel, she clammed up. Said absolutely nothing, except that presently I would understand and I should please be patient. I suspected her of some sort of practical joke. If it had been my birthday, I would have assumed she was in league with you and Pierce to do something drastic, pop me out of a cake, or worse. She invited me to attend the chefs' annual dinner, an awards banquet, that night—Thursday night, you see, I couldn't get out on Wednesday. Too much to finish up—and she said I should dress nicely and the food would be superb and I would be seated at her table and would I please listen closely to the conversation.
Take special note of the conversation
, she said.”

Aunt Mary pushed a wayward curl off her forehead. “How detailed do you want me to get?”

“If you're too tired—”

“If I did it for the police, I can do it for you. It's just that I don't know if I'm remembering what happened, or parroting what I told the police. It's all muddled.”

Exactly, Spraggue thought. Just what that cop should have known. The first time is always the hardest. The second time, you turn into a bad actor, repeating the words instead of reliving the action.

“Close your eyes,” he said gently, “and put yourself back into the time right before the banquet.”

“Actor stuff,” Mary said, suspiciously.

“Yep,” Spraggue said. “It works.”

“I feel silly. Like I'm pretending to go off into a trance.”

“Try it.”

Mary pressed her hands against her head. “Michael, it's all whirling and confused—colors and lights and people—”

“You're doing too much at once. Where were you when you first saw Dora on Thursday night?”

“Let me see … She knocked on my door, a quiet sort of knock. I was early, already dressed in my gray suit, this one. I remember I had trouble tying the bow, but finally it came out right. I was sitting on the sofa, hoping I wouldn't wrinkle—the suit, that is. I was—”

“Try it in the present tense, Aunt Mary. I
am
—” Spraggue kept his voice low, unobtrusive, an “actor-coaching” voice. He remembered the first director who had used it on him, back in his Royal Academy of Dramatic Art days. After a while it became part of you, a subconscious voice … part of you, and separate.

“I
am
reading Lillian Hellman.
Pentimento
. And Dora knocks. I'm expecting the knock. Hoping she'll tell me more about this ‘conversation' I'm supposed to note so carefully. I open the door. She looks very nice. No makeup, but a touch of lipstick, which means she considers the occasion as formal as an occasion can be—and she's wearing her beige crepe dress. A very good dress, must have cost a great deal, but not her color at all. Just one of Dora's fade-into-the-background outfits.…”

“Does she come in?” The words slipped in easily, prompting, but not breaking the flow of information.

“She says we should start on down. The banquet is in the grand ballroom, on the mezzanine. My suite is on the sixth floor. I remember looking—no, I look into the mirror while we're waiting for the elevator, and Dora's face seems, oh, kind of strained and gray. I put my hand on her shoulder, and, Michael, she clutches my arm, holds it so hard I wince. But then her grip loosens. Still, she keeps her hand on my arm—here—as if I'm her anchor, as if she's a little girl afraid of getting lost in the crowd.… And there was—”

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