The Ghost and the Femme Fatale (7 page)

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Authors: Alice Kimberly

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BOOK: The Ghost and the Femme Fatale
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“Excuse me?”

She wears skirts that defy gravity. She buys underwear with loose elastic. In other words, she’s a real

“Okay, okay!” I told the ghost. “I get it!”

“That girl not only resembles her granny,” Seymour said, “she attracts male admirers the way Hedda did back in the day. And let me tell you, the wolf pack was circling Harmony for hours—much to Hedda’s chagrin.”

“Oh, really? Hedda didn’t like it?”

“As soon as Harmony started flirting with the young men at the party, Hedda had some trivial reason to call the girl over and order her around. It seemed pretty obvious she didn’t like sharing the spotlight.”

Seymour struck a diva pose and assumed a falsetto. “Get me another punch, dear! I don’t care for this ballpoint they gave me; find me the one I brought to sign autographs! I need my wrap from the car!”

Seymour lowered his voice. “I’ll give the girl this: She never back- talked her grandmother. Just scampered around and did the woman’s bidding. Me? I would have told the old bag to go jump in the duck pond.”

“Maybe Harmony simply respects and admires her grandmother. And Hedda’s probably used to speaking to Harmony like a child—”

“More like an employee,” Seymour said. “Which would be more accurate, because Brainert told me that Harmony isn’t just a relative, she works full- time as Hedda’s assistant. And, boy, does Hedda work it!”

Now the mail carrier’s got me wondering...

“What Jack?”

When Grandma Hedda’s finally six feet under, what sort of inheritance will Little Miss Harmony get?

“You’re saying you suspect her of something?”

I suspect everyone of something, baby. The little miss I suspect of having a motive to off her grandmother. Last night’s “accident” with the falling speaker almost flattened Hedda Geist

a dame who treats this girl like a servant, which must chafe, even if the girl doesn’t let on. And didn’t you just notice Harmony talking to one of Bud’s employees?

“Yes, but there’s no way Bud Napp could be involved with a murder plot. Not Bud.”

Maybe not your auntie’s boyfriend, but how well do you know the kid working for him?

“I don’t know Dixon at all, except to see him behind the counter at Bud’s store.”

Well, Harmony seems pretty chummy with him.

“Or it’s simply an innocent flirtation—like the big, blond guy who drove up on the black motorcycle.”

Either way, I’d say the girl had a motive, and her little friend had the opportunity.

“To do what, Jack?”

To rig that speaker to fall smack on the old diva’s noggin, that’s what! Pay attention, doll!

“I
am
paying attention, but nobody’s saying that speaker was rigged to fall. We’d need evidence for that.”

So go get it. Talk to your aunt Sadie’s Buddy boy about it, if you trust him that much. Napp will give you the scoop whether something was hinky.

“Hey, look at that!” Seymour interrupted (not that he
kne
w
he was interrupting). He was pointing out a poster on the next block. “C’mon, Pen, let’s get a move on. I want a look at that poster.”

We strode quickly up the block and Seymour rushed toward a poster that someone had just put up. It advertised the screening of an old Gotham Features movie,
Mike O’Bannon of the Sea Witch
.

“Sweet!” Seymour said. “I’m a big fan of the Fisherman Detective! What about you, Pen?”

My brow wrinkled. “The
what
detective?”

“It’s a series of movies from the forties, starring stunt- man-turned- actor Pierce Armstrong. He plays a private detective who’s also a fisherman.”

Fisherman detective?
Jack snorted.
The gumshoes I knew only had one thing in common with fish

they drank like them.

“Rumor has it Pierce Armstrong’s going to be one of the surprise special guests this weekend,” Seymour said excitedly. “At least, according to Barry Yello’s Web site this morning—”

“Armstrong?!” I couldn’t believe it. “Pierce Armstrong is still alive? And he’s coming
here
. . . to Quindicott?”

Quick, baby, ask Dizzy Dean what he remembers about Act Two of the guy’s life.

“Yes, of course!” I turned to Seymour. “Wasn’t Pierce Armstrong mixed up in the death of Irving Vreen, the own er of Gotham Studios?”

“Brother, is
that
an understatement!” Seymour declared.

“Tell me what you know.”

“He stood trial for manslaughter, and they sent him to prison for five years.”

Lucky he didn’t get a dime
, Jack said.
Judges and the public liked red meat back in the day . . .

“I’m sure the district attorney would have stuck him for murder instead of manslaughter,” Seymour went on, “but there was a glitch. Vreen died from a stab wound, but Armstrong didn’t actually stab him. I don’t know a lot of the specifics—”

“It was Hedda,” I blurted out. “Armstrong tripped and fell in a restaurant. He knocked Vreen onto a large steak knife, which Hedda was holding.”

Seymour looked at me, puzzled. “How do you know that? I mean, it isn’t exactly in the mainstream. The only reason I know about Pierce Armstrong going to prison is because of a bio attached to his filmography in
Films of the Forties
. That’s the only thing in print about the man, as far as I know, and it’s been
out
of print for thirty years.”

“Oh... er ... someone told me last night—at the theater.”

“Well, Armstrong did hard time in Ossining—you might know it better as Sing Sing. And by the time he got out, his star turn was over.”

Tell your mailman pal to keep wagging his tongue
, Jack urged.
He’s giving us good gravy.

“So what did Armstrong do?” I asked Seymour. “After he got sprung from Sing Sing.”

“Well, people on the East Coast wouldn’t hire him, since they still remembered the Vreen murder and held it against him. So Armstrong went back to Hollywood, where he still had friends in the stunt profession. They helped him get back his old career as a stuntman in cowboy pictures. If you know what to look for, you’ll see him taking punches or bullets in just about every classic Western, from John Ford’s
The Searchers
to
The Gene Autrey Show
.”

“What about Hedda?” I asked.

Seymour shrugged. “She was never charged with anything, as far as I know. In fact, I’m pretty sure she testified against Armstrong at his trial.”

I frowned. That didn’t seem right at all. “But she was holding the knife.”

Seymour shrugged. “If you’re implying that Armstrong was railroaded, I won’t argue. He’s always been one of my favorite B-movie guys, so I’d be the first one to give him the benefit of the doubt. And Hedda paid another way. With Vreen dead, Gotham Features collapsed and her career was over.”

“Did you hear that, Jack?” I silently asked.

I heard, baby. If Hedda set up Vreen for murder, then she simultaneously set up her own career for sudden death.

“Then what possible motive could she have had to kill Vreen?” I quietly wondered. “It must have been a tragic accident . . .”

“Yeah,” Seymour went on, “today’s Tramp Pack of starlets and pop divas may thrive on bad- girl publicity, but back then, scandal was heavy baggage. Hedda’s ex- boyfriend had been sent to prison for the death of her married lover. It was obviously too much for the public to accept because no studio would touch Hedda after that. But I guess she made out okay, anyway.”

“How do you mean?”

“I chatted with Brainert’s soda pop academic pal last night—you remember, Dr. Pepper? He told me Hedda lived the life of Riley after her movie career was over. She married Lincoln Middleton, a televi sion executive. When he died, she inherited a ton of money, along with his family’s horse farm in Newport.” Seymour snorted. “Nice life, if you can steal it ...”

CHAPTER 5

An Explosive Notion

Thanks for the ride, the three cigarettes, and for not

laughing at my theories on life.

—The Postman Always Rings Twice,
1946

THE MAILMAN AND
I arrived at the Cooper Family Bakery to find it mobbed. Dr. Lilly hadn’t been exaggerating—the line of customers ran down the block. Some were locals, but most appeared to be festival attendees.

“Look, Pen!” Seymour elbowed me. “A friend of ours is almost up to the counter. C’mon!”

Seymour was fine with cutting the line. Me? I wasn’t so comfortable with the dirty looks we were getting until I saw who the “friend of ours” was: Bud Napp.

This is your chance, baby. Wait till Buddy boy’s all sweetened up with pastries, then grill him!

“Check!” I told Jack. But Seymour beat me to the lanky hardware store own er.

“Hey, Thor, where’s your mighty hammer?”

It was Seymour’s favorite joke with Bud, who used a ball peen hammer to maintain control over the Quindicott Business Own ers Association meetings. Bud used to have a real judge’s gavel, until someone lifted it. Now he carried his “good- as- a gavel” to and from our meetings on his tool belt.

“Hi, Bud!” I said brightly, hoping to make up for Seymour’s jibe.

“Hello, Pen,” Bud said, touching the brim of his Napp Hardware baseball cap. Then he frowned at Seymour. “Cut the crap, Tarnish. I’m not in the mood.”

Seymour’s eyes bulged. “My, we’re testy today. What’s eating you?”

Bud was silent as he eyed the people around us. “Nothing I care to talk about.”

Noting Bud’s surly mood, I quickly changed the subject by explaining my plight. Bud immediately offered to help me transport the coffee and pastries back to the bookshop in his hardware store van.

Ten minutes later, he’d downed two doughnuts and a large coffee, then rolled the truck up to the front of the bakery and unlocked the rear double doors. The crowd parted as Seymour and I loaded up the goodies. The three of us wedged ourselves into the front seat of the van. With my elbow jammed into Bud’s overalls, we were off.

During the short drive down Cranberry Street, Jack reminded me to get going with the grilling, and I cleared my throat.

“So, Bud, what did you think about that accident last night at the theater?”

Bud cursed and shook his head. “I won’t take the fall for that one. No way,” he declared.

“Who’s blaming you?” I asked.

“Who isn’t? Your pal the Brainiac for starters.” Bud’s calloused fingers squeezed the steering wheel. “That’s the thanks I get for stepping in at the last second when that fancy restoration firm in Newport couldn’t be bothered with final fixes.”

A bicyclist swerved into Bud’s path. He hit the van’s brakes and horn. The van lurched, throwing me and Seymour forward and back.

“Woah, Speed Racer, chill!” Seymour cried.

“I’ve got a good crew. The best!” Bud continued, ignoring Seymour. “Not a bunch of bums hired off the street. My guys know what they’re doing!”

“Including Dixon Gallagher?” I asked.

Bud frowned. “I know Dixon looks too young to be skilled, but believe me, he is. He’s been working for me part- time for more than ten years. I taught him some, but he already knew plenty because his dad’s a master electrician. When that boy finally gets over his rock- star fantasies and quits his garage band, you can bet he’ll quit me, too, and start earning serious money in the union.”

“So Dixon hung the speaker?”

“No, Pen. I hung that speaker
myse
lf
, and I know the job was done right.”

I watched that cyclist in front of us pedal casually off to the side of the street, as if he hadn’t almost been run over. Festival attendees took advantage of Bud’s situation and jaywalked in front of his van. Bud cursed and honked again.

“What did Chief Ciders say?” I asked.

“That moron with a badge? He claims crossed electrical wires sparked a fire, which damaged the support rack and caused the speaker to drop onto the stage.” Bud slammed the steering wheel. “That dog don’t hunt, I tell you! I’ve been saying we need a real fire marshal in this town, not a bunch of know- nothing volunteers who see two wires within fifty feet of one another and immediately cry ‘electrical fire.’ ”

The street cleared and Bud pushed the pedal to the metal. I was forced back into my seat again as we raced the final few blocks. Then the van screeched to a halt in front of Buy the Book. Seymour immediately popped the door and hopped out.

I stayed. “Tell me more.”

“There was no fire and no fire damage, Pen,” Bud asserted. “The ceiling wasn’t even scorched, and the fire alarm and sprinkler system never went off.”

“What do you think happened?”

“The speaker was hung from the ceiling on a metal brace. One of the struts actually broke. Truth is, Penelope, I think a small explosive was used.”

“What?!”

“I know it sounds crazy. But I also know construction materials. A short, electrical fire could not have generated enough heat to snap steel. A long fire might, but a fire of any duration would have left evidence. Smoke, scorching—and we’d have heard the fire alarms go off.” A shadow crossed Bud’s face. “I’m positive there was an explosion.”

“How could someone plant a bomb up there? On the ceiling?”

“Easy. There’s a ladder in the wings. It goes right up to a catwalk, which runs along the ceiling above the stage. The speaker mount was within easy reach of anyone standing on that catwalk.”

“But if it’s vandalism, who did it? And why?”

Bud couldn’t answer that one, but I was sure someone else had some theories.

“Jack? Are you hearing this?” I quietly asked the ghost.

Yeah, baby. If someone blew the speaker to kill Hedda, they almost succeeded. It could have been little Harmony who’d arranged it. She was probably the only one who knew her granny was going to make a last- minute appearance.

“You’re right, Jack, but if the explosion had a remote device, it could have been triggered by anyone in the audience that night. You heard Seymour—he said Pierce Armstrong might be showing up at the festival. What if he’s here already? Hedda testified against him at his trial. What if he was in the audience last night and rigged the speaker to kill Hedda in some kind of long- overdue revenge scheme?”

Good call, baby. After all, old Hedda’s been out of the spotlight for de cades. Your pal Dr. Lilly said few people even knew she was still alive. It’s darn coincidental that the first night she steps into the public light again, bam!

“Hey!” Seymour cried from the sidewalk. “Are we gonna unload here or what?”

I climbed down out of the van, then turned and leaned through the open window. “We’ll talk about this later, Bud.”

Bud nodded, then left the cab and unlocked the rear doors. Despite the bumpy ride, everything looked fine. Seymour carried the thermal containers to the front door of the bookshop and set them down on the sidewalk. Rather than fumbling in my purse for the keys, I rang the bell. Sadie would show Seymour where to put the coffee when she came to the door. Meanwhile, I went back to retrieve the neat stack of boxed donuts from the back of Bud’s van.

Before I could grab the goodies, Bud jerked his head in the direction of the street. “Here comes trouble,” he warned.

I peered around the van’s rear door—and my heart sunk.

It was Councilwoman Marjorie Binder-Smith. She’d recently abandoned her wannabe- Hillary hairstyle for a “Nancy Pelosi look” (according to Colleen at the beauty shop). Her formerly short, blonde hair had been dyed chestnut brown and grown to her shoulders; her ubiquitous pantsuits were gone, replaced with calf- length skirts and sweater sets.

A uniform of dark blue followed the woman as she charged across Cranberry Street, her hair rigid in the spring breeze. The Quindicott police officer had his hat pulled low, his gait was much slower than Marjorie’s, his broad shoulders slumped.

Abandoning the donuts, I moved to defuse what looked like a ticking bomb. “Good morning, Councilwoman,” I said brightly. “You’re looking senatorial today or should I say Madame Speaker- ish?”

The councilwoman ignored my greeting, swung around to face the cop. Only then did I realize the policeman was my friend Eddie Franzetti.

“Look at the condition of this sidewalk,” the councilwoman told Officer Eddie with theatrical outrage. “There’s garbage everywhere. It’s just a disgrace, and a clear violation of the town’s sanitation ordinances. I want you to issue a littering ticket to this business, right now.”

I looked down at the pavement around my feet. Okay, there were a few gum wrappers, paper cups, and napkins blowing around, but there was still more than an hour before we opened our doors—plenty of time for me to sweep the sidewalk.

“Excuse me!” I interrupted. “We have an entire hour to deal with this little bit of rubbish, and we will.”

I was proud of taking a stand, but Marjorie Binder-Smith didn’t appear impressed with my little protest. In fact, she was wearing the same smirk she’d worn the day she’d temporarily halted the restoration of the Movie Town Theater over some minor ordinance violation. It had taken an entire month for Brainert to straighten out the red tape—and it had cost him and his investors quite a bit of cash, too.

“The ticket stands,” the councilwoman declared with a note of finality. But her eyes were still boring into mine, as if waiting for me to challenge her. I was about to open my mouth when Bud Napp stepped between us.

“Now wait just a doggone minute, Councilwoman,” Bud said. “Everyone knows that storefront businesses have until opening hours to clean their sidewalks. It’s standard practice around here.”

“What you people collectively do for your own convenience has nothing to do with the
official
rules on the town’s books, Mr. Napp,” the woman shot back. “And if it’s not on the books, it doesn’t exist. Not where I come from.”

Where’s that? Down in the bunker with Eva and Adolph?

“Shut it!” I told Jack.

The councilwoman wheeled. “What did you say to me, Mrs. McClure?”

Uh- oh. “Did I say that out loud?”

Don’t fold now, baby. Show some backbone!

I knew Jack meant well, but I suspected arguing would only make things worse.

“Write that ticket, Officer Franzetti,” Marjorie commanded.

Eddie frowned as he opened his ticket book. He began to scribble, his eyes avoiding mine.

“Come on, Marjorie,” Bud said, stepping up to the woman. “Cut Pen a break. A warning is all she should get. She doesn’t know about the town’s ordinance.”

“Ignorance of the law is no excuse!” Marjorie asserted.

Bud turned crimson. “Having an ignoramus like you write our laws is no excuse, either!”

Now we’re getting somewhere!
Jack boomed in my head.

I ignored Jack and jumped between the two. “Look, it’s no big deal. Take it easy.”

An elbow dug into my ribs and I was thrust aside. “What did you call me?” the councilwoman cried.

“I called you an
ignoramus
,” Bud said. “I’d also like to add that you are a petty bureaucrat on some kind of twisted power trip!”

I tried to step between them again, but Seymour pulled me back. “Let Bud go, Pen. Someone should have put a stake in that woman’s heart and filled her mouth with garlic a long time ago.”

“I heard that!” Marjorie cried, wheeling on Seymour. “You’ll be very sorry you said that, Mailman. And that goes double for you, Mr. Napp.”

I heard paper tear. Eddie Franzetti slipped the ticket into my hand.

“What’s going on here?” Aunt Sadie finally made an appearance, but not from inside the store. She was hurrying up to our group from down the street, carrying a Bogg’s Office Supply and Stationery bag. “What’s this?” she asked, snatching the ticket from my fingers.

“It’s a littering citation,” Officer Franzetti informed her.

“A two- hundred- dollar fine!” Sadie cried.

Eddie shrugged. “I don’t make the rules.”

Marjorie Binder-Smith was still sputtering. Finally she managed a coherent sentence. “I am going to sue you for slander, Bud Napp. You wait and see!” Then she faced Seymour. “And let’s just see where you can park that ice cream truck of yours after the
next
town council meeting!”

“You leave my ice cream truck out of this!” Seymour shot back.

Bud stepped up to the councilwoman again. “You have more to worry about that an ice cream truck, Marjorie. I’ve decided. Right here and now—I’m going to run against you in the fall election.
You
wait and see—”

The woman blinked. “What?”

“I’m going to run against you and I’m going to beat you, too,” Bud declared. “And when I take charge, I’m going to teach that band of parasites called a town council that you don’t have to stick it to the small- business own ers to raise town revenues. Got it?!”

For a moment, it was so quiet you could have heard a gum wrapper drop (which probably would have earned me a second ticket). Marjorie glared at Bud for a good ten seconds but said nothing more to him. Instead, she whirled to face Eddie. “You come with me now. The sidewalk in front of that baker up the street is a mess, and so is the area around your family’s pizza kitchen—”

Eddie stopped in his tracks. The councilwoman placed her hands on her hips. “Or you can forget writing tickets, and I’ll have a conversation with Chief Ciders about how one of his officers shows favoritism in how he applies the law.”

Marjorie spun around and headed for Cooper Family Bakery. Eddie hesitated for a moment—no doubt thinking about his wife and children, and pondering what they’d do if he lost his job.

With an air of defeat, he followed the councilwoman across the street.

“That witch,” Sadie hissed, narrowing her eyes at the departing sweater set.

“I prefer
vampir
e
,” Seymour noted.

I turned to Bud. “Did you mean what you said, Bud? Are you really going to run against Marjorie?”

Bud watched the councilwoman’s back, squinting like a sniper taking aim. “You bet I am!”

Sadie exchanged glances with me. “Good!” we both said.

I retrieved the donuts and as Bud locked up his truck, I thanked him again.

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