7
Let the Games Begin
E
ddie Spencer looked up when the bell over the door to his place jangled. With a sigh, he put down the hot roast beef and cheese sandwich he was just about to sink his teeth into. He had a side of mashed potatoes and brown gravy steaming on the plate. Customers, rare as they sometimes were around here, weren't to be ignoredâeven for roast beef and potatoes hot from Junior's kitchen over at the grill.
“Well, I'll be damned,” he muttered when he saw who it was.
All three of the Futrellsâlooking like they'd just stepped off a spaceship and onto a foreign planet. Tall, snooty Delcine was still tall and snooty. She'd barely walked in the door and her nose was already turned up as if she smelled something bad.
Josephine Futrell was another story. He felt some rumblings down there just looking at her. She'd put on a lot of weight since he'd seen her last, but Eddie liked a woman with some meat on her bones. Doing Delcine would be like having sex with a brittle scarecrow. But JoJo. Now that was a lot of good woman.
He hoped she hadn't turned snooty like her sister. Since they'd been back in town, Eddie had heard some things about Ana Mae's relatives. None of it was good.
“Howdy. What can I do for you folks?”
“Good afternoon,” Marguerite said, designating herself as the official spokeswoman. “My name is . . .”
“I know who you are, Delcine. And your brother, Clayton, and this must be little Josephine.” He grinned at her, giving her another thorough once over from the big hair to the big tits and on down to the big hips. “You sure done growed up since I last saw you.”
JoJo peered at him, as if trying to place him. “Have we met?” she asked.
Eddie chortled.
“Now I ain't changed that much, have I, Josephine? Remember that time at Doc Henry's office?”
JoJo's eyes widened. Then on a squeal like a high school girl being asked out by the winning quarterback, she flung herself into his arms.
“Eddie Spencer! Oh, my, God. I didn't make the connection. Spence, just look at you.”
“Look at you, darling. You're a sight for these sore eyes. How've you been doing?” Before she could answer, he remembered the reason the Futrells were all back in town. “Oh, I'm sorry,” he said bowing his head for a moment. “I was real, real sorry to hear about Ana Mae. She was good people. Y'all all from some good blood.”
Clayton raised an eyebrow. As JoJo and Eddie Spencer reminisced, Clayton eased around to get a better look at the man.
Spence. That name he too remembered. And also in connection with Doc Henry's place.
Dr. Henry Miles was one of two black doctors back in the day. He made house calls and carried a black bag, just like Marcus Welby on television. He put quarantine signs on the doors when anybody came down with the measles or the mumps, and he carried peppermint sticks in that medical bag. If you didn't make a fuss during the examination, he'd give you one.
His office was an addition built onto his house. And next to it was a little shed that had been converted into a hangout for his son.
It was in that shed behind Doc Henry's place that Clayton first discovered he liked boys much better than he liked girls. But it was with an older man named Daniel. Was this Daniel Spencer's younger brother... or his son?
JoJo preened under Spence's gaze. Marguerite cleared her throat.
“Oh!” JoJo said, as if her sister had pinched her. “Eddie, we've come by looking for some things that we need . . .”
Marguerite interrupted. “They were mistakenly left in the place where apparently Ana Mae always put things out for you.”
JoJo nodded. “Spence, I didn't know that you and Ana Mae had a system. I was just trying to clear some things out of the house until we could sort them better.”
Spencer rubbed his chin. “Yeah, I picked up some stuff from the house. It's over there.”
As one, the Futrell trio turned, following the direction of his finger. Trying not to appear nervous or anxiousâand failing miserablyâthey dashed toward the corner.
Eddie chuckled. His sandwich forgotten, he sat back and watched them. He knew what they were looking for. Rosalee had called on her cell phone and said they'd all been running around like chickens with their heads cut off after throwing out that quilt. That's what they get for thinking ill of Ana Mae, God rest her soul.
The first shriek came from the snooty one who now called herself Marguerite and put on even more airs than she did back in the day.
“This is outrageous!”
“What?” Clayton said.
“Look at the price!” Marguerite shoved the tag on a patchwork quilt into her brother's face. “Five hundred dollars. For this!”
Clayton took the quilt and shook it out. It had nine blocks with pictures on it. “Are we sure this is the right one?”
“It's the right one,” Delcine said.
Eddie Spencer didn't blink an eye. “You're in the antiques section of the place. That quilt is an antique. Hand-stitched. Fine workmanship, too.”
Clayton lifted a brow, then peered at the stitching.
Marguerite narrowed her eyes and stalked back toward the counter where Eddie stood. “I happen to know antiques, Mr. Spencer.”
“Do tell.” He grinned at her. “Then I'm sure you know the value of that particular item. I'm giving you a bargain . . . considering the circumstances.”
Sure that they were being played but unable to prove it, Delcine gave him the evil eye.
After a few more empty threats and posturing to no avail, JoJo and Delcine looked at Clayton, who sighed and paid the manâin cash. Eddie wrote up a receipt and beckoned JoJo closer for a private word.
“You need anything, Josephine, anything at all while you here,” he said, his eyes dipping to her bosom, “you just give ole Spence a call, you hear.”
He slipped her a piece of paper ripped from the edge of a lined notebook. “Anything,” he repeated. “You know, for old times.”
JoJo glanced at the paper, saw a phone number, and gave him a smile like they were the only two people in the place.
“I'm married now, Spence.”
He grinned. “Shoot, honey. So am I.”
After the Futrells had been gone about five minutes, Eddie Spencer was still grinning when the bell on the front door of his shop jingled again, and Rosalee bustled in.
“Did they get it?” she called out.
Spencer waited until she got to the counter. Then he held out and ticked off the crisp one-hundred-dollar bills. “One. Two. Three. Four. Five.”
“Get out of here!”
He handed her two of the Benjamins. “You were right. They came in here like hell on fire.”
Rosalee held up the bills. “You sure?”
“If you hadn't of called me letting me know what was up, they'd have gotten it for nothing,” Eddie Spencer said. “I didn't mean to pick up something that weren't meant for me.”
“Ana Mae sure would get a chuckle out of one of her quilts selling for five hundred dollarsâand to her own kin, to boot. She always gave them away.” After another look at the two hundred-dollar bills, Rosalee tucked the money into her bra. “Who paid?”
“He did. You know, Rosalee, he looks more like a tennis player or one of them dudes who rides around on a horse saying âtallyho.' ”
Rosalee shrugged. “You should see his . . .” She wrinkled her brow, uncertain. “I wonder what they call themselves.” Shrugging again, she added, “You'd never guess by looking at him that his boyfriend is like that. Ana Mae always said Archer just hadn't met the right woman before Clayton found him.”
“Well, I ain't got nothing against them dudes,” Eddie said. “You know my brother was like that. Couple of years before he died I went to one of them marches with him. I got a button that said âMy bro's gay, and that's OK.' I wore that button to his funeral.”
Rosalee patted his hand, and they both gave a little moment of silence to Danny Spencer's memory.
“I don't think Clayton is the type who'd go to them marches with the men dressed up like women,” he said.
“You're probably right.” Then, perking up, Eddie grinned. “I thought Delcine was gonna have a stroke right here on the floor when she saw that five-hundred-dollar tag.”
“You know, she's all fancy now,” Rosalee said. “Goes by Marguerite.” She held up her pinkie and adopted what she supposed was a French accent to pronounce the name.
Eddie Spencer rolled his eyes at that. “Yeah, and my name is Eduardo. I wish she hadda been the one to pay. I'll gladly lighten her stuck-up load.”
“So, how'd it go down?”
“I'd just gotten over there and changed the tag from five bucks to five hundred. I was trying to change the five to a dollar sign and ended up adding a couple of zeroes. I just barely got back to the counter before they came in. Clayton didn't look too happy about it. But I knew he was gonna be the one to pony up the cash.”
“How'd you know?”
“Delcine and JoJo both looked at him with this . . .” He put his hands on his hips and cocked his neck imitating a pissed-off woman. “ âAnd you don't expect me to pay for that, do you?'”
Rosalee chortled. “Good for you.”
She finally took note of the congealed gravy on the mashed potatoes on his plate and wrinkled her nose. “Eddie, I think I'm gonna treat you to a fine meal over at Junior's tonight.” She whipped the money from its hiding spot. “I can afford it.”
“It's a date,” he said. Then, apparently remembering who she saw from time to time, “Well, you know what I mean. I ain't stepping on Junior's toes.”
Rosalee grinned and waved a hand, letting him know no harm had been done. “I better get back on over to Ana Mae's and see what they're up to now.”
Rosalee left Eddie Spencer's place. Outside, she squinted as she looked up the street, trying to figure out which way to go. Since the Futrells had the quilt in hand and all of them were together, she figured they wouldn't go to the lawyer's first. That would be after they'd had a good look at Ana Mae's treasure map.
Rosalee chuckled at that thought, then looked up toward the heavens. “A treasure map. Girl, you sure are keeping things lively down here.”
Gripping the steering wheel on her Cavalier, she fussed at her friend. “Ana Mae, you let me see all your quilts. How come I didn't know nothing was special about this one? The most important one. This don't make any sense, girl.” She let out a loud hoot. “But you sure 'nough made a profit on that quilt.”
She fell silent at a stoplight, then nodded.
“I know, I know,” she said, as if Ana Mae were sitting right beside her, riding shotgun. “Ten percent belongs to the Lord. And if it'll make you happy, I'll drop fifty in the offering plate on Sunday.”
A bark of laughter followed that. She glanced around, looking to see if anybody had been looking at her talking to herself. Tears welled in Rosalee's eyes, and she shook her head.
“Ana Mae, girl, I sure do miss you.”