The Body in the Cast (18 page)

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Authors: Katherine Hall Page

BOOK: The Body in the Cast
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Faith was puzzled. She had assumed Millicent was there to pump her about the events on the set. Sandra Wilson's death had been old news in Aleford an hour after the fact. The phone had been ringing all afternoon and Faith was keeping an ear cocked for it now. Once again, she didn't know whether she had a job or not. She assumed the filming would be suspended for a while, but what after that? And here was Millicent. If she didn't want to talk about the murder, then what?
Millicent followed Faith into the kitchen and graciously accepted the offer of a cup of coffee. Tom cleared some space at the big round table and pulled out a chair for her next to Ben.
“That's a very nice house, Benjamin,” she said with her “children's smile” firmly pasted into place, “but why is the dog in the sky?”
“It's Superdog!” Ben chortled. He liked Millicent for some odd reason known only to himself.
“Oh,” she commented, then turned her attention to the Reverend. “I'd like to pick your brain, Tom.” She looked about the kitchen as if seeing it for the first time and not happy then. “Perhaps your study?”
Remembering the profusion of papers that had sprouted like mushrooms after a rainy spell, Tom hesitated. Good wife that she was—and she intended to store away the points—Faith immediately said, “Oh, it's so comfy in here. Stay where you are. I have to put the children to bed now, anyway.”
“So soon?” Millicent's voice rang with insincerity. “Good night, then, dears.” Amy beamed over Faith's shoulder and Ben gave her a big kiss. Millicent absently waved in their direction. As Faith left, she caught the first words: “ … a desperate situation and getting worse. We …” before the door swung shut.
Upstairs, the Fairchild children were washed, brushed, drained or diapered, and in their sleepers so fast, they barely had time to protest. Faith grabbed
Goodnight Moon,
which she knew by heart, and got to “Goodnight noises everywhere” before Ben could put up any token resistance to a “baby” book. It was short and it was good. She kissed him and sternly asked him what would happen if he didn't go to sleep immediately.
“A bad day tomorrow,” he said promptly.
“You got it. Now go to sleep so you'll have lots of energy for playing.” Sometimes it worked.
Amy was another matter entirely. She needed milk and a few verses of “Dream a Little Dream of Me,” the Mama Cass
version, not the Louis Armstrong one. Tom usually took care of that. Faith tucked the baby into her crib and was not fooled for a moment by the heavy-lidded drowsy smile her daughter gave her. She knew she would be back, but maybe she'd at least have enough time to find out why Millicent was downstairs monopolizing Faith's husband.
As she entered the kitchen, it suddenly occurred to Faith that perhaps Millicent had wanted a confidential chat with Tom as the Reverend Tom. This had not entered her thoughts before, because Millicent was a Congregationalist, as were her mother and father before her and theirs before them and so and on and so on—like the catsup bottle's label of a picture of a lady holding a catsup bottle with a label of a picture … .
Faith shook her head. It had been a long day.
Could it be possible that Millicent had come seeking advice for a personal problem, one she didn't dare confess to her own spiritual adviser? A secret sin? A burdened conscience?
Not. The spry elderly woman with the Mamie Eisenhower bangs who smelled discreetly of Dierkiss talc purchased by the boxcar load in 1958 may have had secrets—mainly other people's —but the only sin she would ever admit to was the original one, and that was the serpent's fault.
Millicent paused in what had evidently been a long harangue. Tom looked tired and did not hide the relief from his eyes when he saw Faith.
“Come join us, honey. This concerns you, too.”
“It concerns every man, woman, and child in Aleford,” Millicent clarified.
Faith poured herself a cup of coffee. She wasn't going to be able to sleep tonight, anyway. She grabbed the cookie jar and put it in the middle of the table, noticed Millicent's cup was empty, and went back for the pot. She also got Tom a tall glass of milk, although at this point, she was sure he would have preferred something stronger. But scotch didn't go with chocolate macadamia nut cookies, and even if it did, the prospect that Millicent would have him figuratively, if not literally, enrolled in AA by morning thoroughly discouraged the idea. Faith
could hear her telling one and all, “His hands positively shook, my dear. He
needed
the drink.”
“Are you talking about the murder?” Faith asked now that they all had something to consume, always the top priority.
“The murder? Oh, you mean that movie person? Sad.” Millicent's tone suggested murders and movie people went together like a horse and carriage and that if one would insist on pursuing such a career, one got what one deserved.
Faith was momentarily taken aback by Millicent's callousness—and also lack of interest. This was the woman who a few short days ago was ready to give Angela Lansbury, Jessica Tandy, Kate Hepburn, and any other actress over a certain age a run for her money. Yet, having moved from behind the footlights for the nonce herself, Millicent the extra had obviously passed on to other things—more important things. And she hadn't known Sandra Wilson. None of them had.
“No, we're talking about the election.” You silly goose, Faith finished for her.
“Has something new developed?”
Tom summed things up. “The Spaulding forces have started an old-fashioned whisper campaign against Penny. The kickoff was Daniel Garrison's leading question at the debate Monday night. Since then, it's been what I predicted. Penny—and Millicent—have had the unpleasant experience of walking into public places and immediately stopping all conversation.”
Faith knew the experience well.
“People are saying, ‘Where there's smoke, there's fire,' and that Alden wouldn't have brought the whole thing up if he didn't have something very specific in mind.”
Faith sincerely doubted anyone, even in Aleford, had said, “Where there's smoke, there's fire,” but she didn't question the intensity, or the potential viciousness, of the whispers.
“What does Penny have to say about all this?” she asked. “Is she still refusing to issue a statement?”
“Yes, and that's why I'm here. She won't say anything, and Tom has got to make her.”
No wonder her husband looked weary.
“But Millicent …” Faith thought she'd give it a try. She was married to the poor man. “How can Tom possibly do this? If Penny doesn't want to talk about it, that's her business.”
“It is not,” Millicent shot back in no uncertain terms. “Penelope Bartlett is running for office in our town and she has a responsibility to respond. Besides, she's going to lose the election if she doesn't.”
This put a different light on the matter. Faith saw Ben and Amy tripping gaily off to school in what would amount to a trailer park, with forty children in a class and no books. No art or music. These were “frills.” She found herself wishing, as Pix had, that they could use the encounter in the woods against Spaulding somehow, but it might backfire. Alden would claim he was exercising his constitutional right to walk freely in the town-owned wild, and his supporters would agree, making sure one and all heard that the minister's wife had a very dirty mind.
But they had to do something. They couldn't let Alden win!
“Tom …”
“I know, I know. It's a heck of a dilemma, Millie.” Tom and Charley MacIsaac were the only ones privileged to use the treasured childhood nickname. Faith envisioned her with iron gray pigtails on the playground, turning the double dutch jump rope faster and faster as her little playmates skipped to her tune, “Too fast, Millie! Too fast!”
Tom took another cookie. “If you can't convince Penny to clear the air, I don't know who can. I agree it would be better if she did write a letter to the paper or put out a flier, and I'll tell her, but …”
A thought struck Faith. “Maybe there is nothing. Maybe this is just campaign dirty tricks.” Aside from what made sense in terms of an Alden Spaulding campaign, Faith was sure Millicent, of all people, would have known everything about Penny's blameless past.
“I wish it was.” Millicent sounded almost pathetic. “Lord knows, I've tried to think what it can be—and it is something. I've known Penny since we were children, and she couldn't tell
a lie to save her life. I asked her straight out if there was any truth to what they were saying, and all she would say was, ‘Don't ask me that.' Oh, there's something all right.”
“Could you figure it out from what they said the other night? What was the year they claim the taxes were fraudulent?”
“The Bartlett's taxes were never fraudulent!” Millicent spoke as if Faith had started the rumor.
Faith protested. “I'm not agreeing with them! I'm simply trying to remember what they said!” She looked to Tom for support. No wonder he was tired. She began to toy with the idea of leaving to check on the baby, but there was still the possibility she might miss something. Tom was notoriously bad at remembering conversations.
Millicent was somewhat mollified. “The Spaulding campaign is alleging that Penny and Francis did not report ‘certain financial transactions'—I believe those are Mr. Garrison's words—on their state and federal tax forms for the fiscal year 1971.”
Miss McKinley, on the other hand, could repeat conversations from thirty years back word for word.
“Nineteen seventy-one, about twenty years ago. Do you remember anything that might have happened to the Bartletts then? Did they seem to be in any financial difficulty?” Faith was fishing, but if Penny wouldn't tell them what was going on, they'd have to figure it out themselves.
“Francis was dying. It was a terrible strain on Penny. He had cancer of the liver and was in a great deal of pain. I used to go and sit with him to relieve her. She didn't have a nurse until the very end. That was in the fall of 1972.”
Tom wondered aloud, “Do you think something could have been overlooked during his illness? They could have forgotten to report some income, but how would Alden have found out?”
“It's possible. Barry Lacey always did their taxes. He did mine, too, until he passed away. Playing tennis.” Millicent raised an eyebrow as if the CPA had been
en flagrante.
“If they had missed something that year, he would have straightened it
out for Penny the next. It's also extremely unlikely that Alden would ever have had access to the Bartletts' tax records.”
“Unless he saw something on somebody's desk or went into somebody's file. Did this Mr. Lacey do his taxes, too?” Faith had visions of Alden, a stocking pulled over his pudgy face, with a flashlight.
“Barry did everyone's taxes,” Millicent said smugly, not needing to add the “anyone who was anybody,” since it was in her voice.
“Then Alden might have picked up on something and tucked it away for future reference, say to blackmail his sister. Was this when they stopped talking, too?” Faith thought she had the whole thing neatly tied up.
“No, that was earlier. I think when their father died, but they were never close even before then.”
“Could they have quarreled over his will?”
“I doubt it—and that we would have heard about since everybody knew Jared Spaulding divided the bulk of his estate equally between the two of them. Penny's mother died when Penny was in college. Jared seemed to have a penchant for fragile women.” Millicent was slightly disapproving. To be once a widower was bad enough; twice was close to profligacy. She continued. “In any case, Penny would never have bickered over money.”
Faith knew what Millicent meant. It would have been beneath a lady like Penny, but then Francis Bartlett made a good living, and having money made it a whole lot easier to be noble about said commodity.
Millicent was positively loquacious on the subject of Penny and her half brother, especially in light of her closed lips the other day when Faith had been asking the very same questions.
“I never thought of Penny and Alden as brother and sister. They weren't really raised together. Alden is seven years older than Penny and he was mostly at boarding school and the university (this meant Harvard, Faith guessed) when she was growing up. Then when he came home to live, she was at
school. She married Francis shortly after she graduated from college. It was such a lovely wedding—in the Wellesley chapel. Sue Hammond caught the bouquet … and how we laughed. Poor Susan. Not the most winsome girl, but would you believe she was engaged before the year was out!”
Faith knew once Millicent got going, it would be impossible to change the course of the speeding locomotive that passed for conversation back to the matter at hand. She interrupted quickly and firmly.
“So, what we know is whatever the Spaulding campaign has on Penny happened when her husband was very ill and that's about all, except, as brother and sister, Alden and Penny were pretty distant.” Faith had already connected Alden's accusation with Penny's husband's death, but the rest was new.

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