Rituals: A Faye Longchamp Mystery (Faye Longchamp Series)

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Rituals: A Faye Longchamp Mystery (Faye Longchamp Series) Page 17

by Evans, Mary Anna


  “Don’t act stupid, Faye. Of course, we’ll take our godson for a week. We were a little insulted you didn’t ask in the first place. Mike needs an excuse to drag his model trains out of the attic, and I need an excuse to play games that Rachel thinks she’s outgrown. And I solemnly swear not to let Mike teach him to shoot his service revolver. The child doesn’t need access to any more deadly weapons.”

  Faye said what best friends say when they see that it’s pointless to continue arguing. She said, “Thank you.”

  “Don’t thank me until you see whether I give him back.”

  Chapter Nineteen

  Why hadn’t she thought to lock the door?

  Amande did a mental face-palm. She had denied herself cappuccino so she could sit here and worry over whether Ennis was going to walk past her window again, but she’d left the service entrance unlocked. Stupid.

  There he stood in the closet door, with his hands jammed in his pockets like he didn’t know what else to do with them. Well, she couldn’t exactly make fun of him for that. She was sitting at her desk, fumbling with a pen, because she didn’t know what to do with her hands. Worse than that, she’d just smeared ink on her wrist. She dropped that hand to her lap.

  Ennis looked scared. That made two of them. She’d be scared of making a fool of herself, even if Ennis were nothing more than a decent-looking twenty-year-old who had told her she was pretty. Since he might also be a man who couldn’t be trusted with an old lady’s safety, she was also scared that she was being a fool. She should open the window and call for her mother.

  But maybe he wasn’t so bad. Maybe she’d met him on the worst day of his life and maybe he was as torn-up about his aunt’s near-death experience as she was. Maybe he was a nice-enough guy who loved his aunt, and he just wanted to talk to somebody his own age as badly as she did. Maybe.

  If she was going to let him stay, she needed to say something, because he seemed to have run out of ideas. Since she didn’t even know whether she liked him, she decided to treat these encounters as practice sessions for the time when she’d need to think of something to say to a man she did like.

  “Did you always live in Rosebower? Before boarding school, I mean.”

  “No. No. Small towns aren’t for me. I’m meant for the city. I come from Atlanta and I’m aiming to get back there when…when I can.”

  Amande gave him the tiniest bit of credit for realizing how poorly she would respond to something like, “I’m heading back to Atlanta as soon as my great-aunt kicks the bucket.”

  She said, “I’m not sure if I’d be happy in a city. I want to go to a good college next year, but I hope it’s not too far away from my family.”

  “I don’t want to waste my time in school, not when I’ve got a business to run. Sister Mama, she counts on me.”

  This did not make Amande feel good about Sister Mama’s situation, but Ennis kept talking. He had perked up, like a young man who thought he was impressing a pretty girl. He had also walked across the room as he spoke, stopping just on the far side of her desk.

  “She taught me how to run the greenhouse and take care of the garden before she got so sick. Now I’m taking care of all that and her website, too. And her patients, mostly. They come to me for their herbs.”

  “You’re prescribing their herbs? Their medicine? I bet Sister Mama spent a lot of time learning to do root medicine. My grandmother knew all about it. She gave people weird stuff all the time, but I wouldn’t. You can hurt somebody with that stuff.”

  “Relax, Baby.” He reached a hand toward her hair, and she drew back. The hand hung in mid-air, still reaching. “I told you Sister Mama taught me a lot, back when she was able, and she’s still pretty good at bossing me around. I only understand about half of what she says, but it’s enough. I’m not hurting anybody.”

  His hand moved forward. Her head moved back some more. Then she saw his eyes flick toward the window.

  “I’ve got some orders to deliver. I’ll talk to you later, Baby.” Ennis slipped out the delivery door about forty-five seconds before Faye walked in the front.

  Amande could see that her mother’s conversation with Magda had gone well, and she expected to hear about it, eventually. She wasn’t sure whether Faye needed to know that Ennis had started calling her “Baby,” or even whether she needed to know that Amande had been in the same room with him.

  Probably not.

  ***

  Toni headed for her usual seat at the diner for a late breakfast, as she had done every day since arriving in Rosebower. Toni had the habits of a scientist, so she’d done the math on breakfast economy. She knew there was no way to justify the cost of a restaurant breakfast.

  Eggs were running under two dollars a dozen, making them less than twenty cents apiece. Bacon was less than five bucks a pound these days, and there were twenty-ish slices in that pound, so maybe they cost a quarter apiece. The materials in a cup of bad coffee might as well be free, even if she added her customary spoonful of sugar. Any time she paid more than a dollar for bacon, eggs, and coffee instead of cooking them at home, she was hemorrhaging money. Even if the diner threw in a piece of toast and a pat of butter, she was getting no bargain.

  Even worse, her favorite breakfast, French toast, contained a fraction of an egg, a splash of milk, a couple of slices of bread, and a dusting of sugar. Paying somebody to make it for her was sheer stupidity. Besides, her own French toast tasted better, because she was prodigal with the vanilla extract. Nevertheless, here she sat, throwing money around, because people are social beings and they don’t like to eat alone. She never would have expected to feel nostalgic in retirement about all the meals she ate in the school cafeteria.

  As she passed the cluster of retired dudes who always homesteaded the corner of the diner nearest the restrooms, she nodded and said, “Good morning, gentlemen.” For the first time on record, she received utter silence in response.

  This was new. These men were twenty years her senior, which meant two things: she looked like a young chick to them, and they were old enough to have lived in an era when sexual come-ons from strangers were considered goodhearted compliments. Sitting down to breakfast without being greeted by “Hey there, Sweet Lips,” was unsettling.

  Julie, the ponytailed waitress whom Toni had always envied for her ability to be happy working double-shifts at her dead-end job, left a napkin-wrapped knife and fork on the table with neither a comment nor a smile. This was hard to believe, considering that Toni overtipped her on a daily basis. Dwight, the owner, violated his policy of greeting every customer with a handshake, staying in the kitchen.

  Toni sat in silence, wondering when Julie was going to take her order. She might as well have been at home, enjoying a fifty-cent breakfast of homemade French toast.

  Time passed, and Toni wasn’t even offered a cup of coffee. She found it difficult to face inexplicable social ostracism without the aid of caffeine. When Julie returned, arms loaded with breakfast for the old dudes, Toni tried to flag her down, but the woman disappeared quickly.

  An instant later, Dwight appeared, smartphone in hand. “Is this you?”

  Nothing in cyberspace ever really goes away. The phone’s screen displayed the website Toni had decommissioned when she retired her magic act a year before. It featured a five-year-old publicity photo in which Toni looked far more glamorous than a fifty-ish woman has a right to look, but glamour is good business for a magician.

  “Yes,” she said. “That’s me. Or it was me. I’m retired.”

  “Are you also retired from this?”

  He hit a couple of links on the phone’s screen, pulling up a series of articles she’d written for a high-profile journal for science educators. Publishing those articles had earned her quite a bit of praise from her graduate advisor, late in the twentieth century and long before the emergence of the Internet. She’d had no idea that they were available online. This was not good.

  In those articles, she had spelled out exactly how fake
psychics did their tricks, then she had developed in-class activities that let kids see the physics behind mysterious phenomena like floating séance tables. She’d even explained the Pepper’s Ghost illusion. And, since she’d been younger and more fiery in those days, she had spared no scorn for the fakers she was exposing.

  Worse, she had specifically targeted Spiritualism as a form of organized religion. Having spent face-time with Spiritualists since arriving in Rosebower, she wished she hadn’t been quite so snide in debunking the faith of real people with real feelings, but the laws of physics couldn’t be bent to spare people’s feelings. Toni still stood behind the things she’d written in those articles.

  Julie stood beside Dwight. Her order-taking tablet remained in her apron pocket and her hands hung by her sides. She said, “My father is an elder at the church down the street. He’s never lied to anybody in his life.” She turned on her heel and walked into the kitchen.

  One of the old dudes said, “My wife still gives readings. I guess she’ll keep on giving ’em till she passes to the other side herself. She can’t retire, because people depend on her, and you know what? Her work put our children through college. Working for the county, it was all I could do to keep us fed. You’re an insult to everything my wife stands for.”

  The man sitting next to him only looked up from his breakfast long enough to say, “What he said. If you was a man, I’d punch you in the mouth.”

  Dwight leaned down close and said, “You listen to me. Both my parents, God rest their souls, spent their lives serving people on both sides of death. They weren’t fakers. They didn’t cheat nobody. They used the talents God gave ’em, and I don’t see anything wrong with earning a living by using your talents. It’s what you did when you was a schoolteacher and it’s what you did when you was ‘Toni the Astonisher.’” His tone grew nasal and mocking as he pronounced her stage name. “How much good were you doing for the world when you charged people to watch you pull rabbits from hats? How much?”

  A magician never really lets go of her preference for misdirection, even when she would be better served by going straight to the truth. Toni instinctively answered his question with a non-answer. “I never pulled a rabbit from a hat. Using animals as entertainment is abusive.”

  Dwight’s voice grew quieter and he leaned even closer to Toni’s face, as if he were afraid his restraint would make it harder for her to hear him. “And it’s not abusive to insult people’s beliefs? It’s not abusive to attack the way they make a living? I bet Tilda Armistead is spinning in her grave to know that a person like you is here in the town her family built. You need to go home now.”

  He left her alone at a table made of chrome, sitting on a vinyl-upholstered seat. The linoleum floor was sticky under her feet. The diner, which had always seemed so inviting, suddenly went sterile. There was nothing in the room with Toni but hard, reflective surfaces and people who didn’t like her.

  She picked up her purse and, disoriented by the act of walking out of a restaurant without paying, reached into it for her wallet. Feeling stupid, she slipped her money back into her purse, but reached for the napkin-wrapped cutlery, because her brain had absorbed a certain restaurant routine: Sit down, eat, then deal with the bill left on her table. But there was no bill on the table, only silverware. Having never been kicked out of a restaurant—or a bar or a store or a school or anything else—Toni felt a confusion that made her sympathetic to aging people who behaved strangely because they lived in a world that had changed.

  She left the silverware where it was and left with nothing but her purse. When she got home, she found a shattered bay window and a rock in her living room.

  Who would do this? Ennis? He was her first thought because his actions merited suspicion, but also because of his youth. Rosebower showed an elderly face to the world for good reason. The town was graying, mostly because there weren’t many jobs there, but also because its social structure favored age.

  A psychic could practice until late old age and, unlike most jobs, wrinkles and cataracts were an asset. Age signified wisdom and long experience in esoteric matters like contacting the dead. To a person looking for a guide through one of life’s tough spots, Sister Mama’s frailty made her look like a woman who’d already been around the same block. In Rosebower, age brought political power with it, too, resulting in a town council full of people who would be long-retired anywhere else.

  Dara and Willow were by far the youngest successful practitioners around, even though Rosebower itself had denied them the right to practice inside the city limits. Ennis, Dara, and Willow were the most visible members of the younger generations in town, but they weren’t alone. Younger people were outshone by the elderly Spiritualists who still ran the place, but they were there, if you knew where to look.

  In any tourist town, there are service employees. In this town, they served an unusually old ruling class. These service employees, people like Julie and Dwight, were plenty young enough to hurl a rock through her window or to set Tilda’s house afire. Toni was not fooled by Avery’s silence on the matter of Tilda Armistead. Something about the woman’s death made all Toni’s logic circuits misfire. She could think of no rationale that would prompt someone to both kill Tilda and try to intimidate a meddling, nonbelieving physics teacher, but maybe she needed to think harder.

  She wondered whether it was wise to stay in Rosebower, now that her secret was out. Maybe it wasn’t just unwise to stay. Maybe it wasn’t even safe. That rock could have cracked her skull open, if she’d been at home and sitting in the right place.

  But could she write the book she wanted to write if she left? She had told Faye the truth when she said she wanted to write about the foibles of a little town whose residents believed they could talk to the dead, but she hadn’t told her the whole truth.

  Her intent was to expose hucksterism in all its forms, using Rosebower as a weird little case study. If she was able to parlay her (admittedly minor) showbiz connections into a contract with the right agent, this book could be big. And if she failed to grab the interest of a traditional publisher, no worries. She was pretty sure she would be just as good at building an Internet empire as Ennis LeBecque. She had an interesting hook—fake psychics—and her expertise as a magician gave her a very sturdy platform on which to build an online reputation.

  Oh, yes, she could sell this book. But did she really need to spend a year as Rosebower’s pariah to do it?

  Working notes for Pulling the Wool Over Our Eyes:

  An Unauthorized History of Spiritualism in Rosebower, New York

  by Antonia Caruso

  I don’t know why they called this place “Rosebower.” I think they should have named it “Hornets’ Nest.” It would have been more honest.

  Think about it. Main Street is lined with cute little Victorian houses and almost every one of them was originally built with a private entrance to a “reading room.” Next to the door of the reading room is a tasteful sign announcing the name of the psychic who works inside. The sign usually also gives some notion of the proprietor’s specialty. Tarot. Palmistry. Aura reading. Tea leaf discernment.

  Hell. For all I know, somebody in town is advertising a preternatural ability to read chicken guts.

  How can these people’s gullible devotees fail to see the obvious? Why would a person with true supernatural powers need props? Wouldn’t a real psychic be able to look a person in the face and just know?

  From Faye’s description of the séance she attended, I know that Tilda Armistead used props, but simple ones, just a crystal ball and some incense. Then she closed her eyes and didn’t even look at the crystal ball. I see a lot more honor in her style than I do in the antics of someone sloshing wet tea leaves around in a cup. Right or wrong, Tilda’s readings came from inside her, not from a randomly flipped assortment of cards. Or from a steaming pile of chicken entrails.

  Rosebower is going to miss Tilda and her unshakeable good sense. Specifically, she’s going to be miss
ed in her lifelong role as a local politician. The town council has ruled this place with an iron fist since God was a girl, and Tilda’s death will not diminish its political power. Her loss will, however, obliterate its ability to govern credibly.

  Imagine, if you will, the most head-in-the-clouds and daydream-believin’ hippie you’ve ever met. Feel free to imagine three of the original hippies, grayed and wrinkled but still waving a fist at the establishment that provides their Medicare. Or perhaps you’d rather imagine a thirty-something neo-hippie who has never worked for anyone but his father. Or maybe you’re pondering the image of a middle-aged woman who embraced the New Age and its mystic crystals instead of dealing with the emotional fallout of her empty nest. Even better, imagine all these people and two more like them, then try to imagine that they are able to run a small town.

  You can’t do it, can you? Well, neither can I. Without Tilda Armistead on its council, I think the town of Rosebower is in deep, deep trouble.

 

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