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Hidden Riches

Page 1

by Felicia Mason




  Also by Felicia Mason

  Enchanted Heart

  Testimony

  Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.

  HIDDEN RICHES

  FELICIA MASON

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Table of Contents

  Also by Felicia Mason

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Ahoskie Times & Union Report

  1 - The Wake

  2 - The Discovery

  3 - The Speculation

  4 - The Funeral

  5 - The Reading of the Will

  6 - Regrets and Recriminations

  7 - Let the Games Begin

  8 - The Legacy of Ana Mae Futrell

  9 - Secrets to Keep

  10 - Sweet Memories

  11 - Sibling Rivalry

  12 - That Fisher Boy

  13 - Digging Up The Past

  14 - Surprises from Ohio

  15 - New Interpretation for Old Realities

  16 - Reading the Tea Leaves

  17 - A Theory About Howard

  18 - The Lady Who Loved Little Kids

  19 - Secrets Revealed

  20 - The Gathering

  21 - Ana Mae’s Story

  22 - All the Pieces Together

  23 - A Lasting Legacy

  Teaser chapter

  Copyright Page

  For Tom Coe and Steve Kelner, who opened the windows

  so the light would shine on the artist

  and

  For Don Maass, who left the door unlocked

  and the phone line open.

  Forget what you’ve heard about the dead coming back to life. The dead are just gone. For good. All they leave behind is the mess that somebody else has to clean up. That’s when the dead get their due.

  Acknowledgments

  I have frequently noted in acknowledgments that no book is written in a vacuum. This one is no exception.

  First and foremost, to Karen Thomas, Selena James, Steve Zacharius, and the late Walter Zacharius, all of or formerly of Kensington Publishing Company/Dafina Books, thank you for your forbearance.

  From the long-time-coming department, the people who heard about Ana Mae before a word was put on a page, I’d like to thank Paula Barnes, Day Smith, and Carolyn Green. For quilting friendships, thanks to Debbie Moore, a die-hard reader, quilter, and all-around great lady with a welcoming smile and a comforting word, and in memory of Eva Washington, quilt teacher, mentor, and friend.

  Sylvester “Sly” Washington Jr. years ago uttered a line at a wedding that has always stayed with me; I gave it to Reverend Toussaint, Puddin’. Thank you to David Nicholson, who did a beta read and kept me honest with Clayton and Archer; and to Barista Steffan at Starbucks, who starts reaching for the Tazo Awake tea as soon as I hit the door.

  The Pagan River Writers group, Hugh Lessig, Diana McFarland, Sabine Hirschauer, and Tamara Dietrich: Thanks for our monthly Friday night pizza and page discussions near the Pagan, and a fun and productive weekend at The Porches. Of course, the cheering squad of writing pals gets a shout-out: Michelle Fronheiser, Denise Jeffries, Andrea Jackson, and Cheryl Wilson-Bonner; and to Lisa “Merlainne” Barman, it will happen for you.

  The staff and management at Chanco on the James (www.chanco.org) in Surry County, Virginia, provide a wonderful retreat and respite, the perfect setting in the woods to get a manuscript done. Chef Joe Mack fed me well, and the river was a comfort. And to Trudy Hale, proprietor of The Porches (www.porcheswritingretreat.com), the quiet of your central Virginia retreat center is just what I needed to get the final draft in shape.

  Thank you all.

  Mortui vivos docent.

  Let the dead teach the living.

  Ahoskie Times & Union Report

  Ana Mae Futrell

  Ahoskie, N.C.

  Ana Mae Futrell died Thursday, August 7, in Drapersville, outside Ahoskie.

  Ana Mae, a daughter of the late Russell and Georgette Futrell, attended Gibbs High School and worked as a domestic. She was known throughout the county for her quilting and for her prize-winning fried chicken. Ana Mae never had an evil word to say about anyone and always gave strangers a kind word and the benefit of her smile.

  She is survived by a son, Howard Futrell, address unknown. She is also survived by three siblings: Mary Josephine Coston and her husband, Lester, of Las Vegas, Nevada; Marguerite Delcine Foster and her husband, Winslow III, of Prince George’s County, Maryland; and Dr. Clayton Futrell and his life partner, Archer Futrell-Dahlgren Esq., of San Francisco, California; two nieces and a nephew; a good friend, Rosalee Jenkins, who was like a blood sister to her; and her cats, Diamond Jim and Baby Sue.

  The wake for Ana Mae will be Tuesday, August 12 from 6 PM to 8 PM at Rollings Funeral Home and Mortuary. The funeral will be held at the funeral home on Wednesday, August 13, with the Reverend Toussaint le Baptiste, associate minister of the Holy Ghost Church of the Good Redeemer, Drapersville, officiating, and Evangelist Buford Charles reading the Scripture.

  The family will be at 2725 Clairmont Road, Drapersville.

  1

  The Wake

  The thing that vexed people the most about the death of Ana Mae Futrell wasn’t the secrets she took to the grave with her, but the ones that would come to light after she died.

  And the thing that stunned people the most about Ana Mae’s passing on to glory wasn’t the fact that she’d dropped dead of a burst aneurysm while cleaning Doc Hardison’s toilet. What everybody wanted to know was, who the hell was Howard?

  Ana Mae’s obituary in the Ahoskie Times & Union Report said she had a son. But nobody had ever heard of him. And even fewer people than that believed that Ana Mae had ever lifted the hem of her holiness dress long enough to get knocked up.

  Then there was the business about the “life partner.” None of Ana Mae’s kin still lived in town. They’d all high-tailed it out of Hertford County as soon as they could legally get away—and at least one of them before even that. The baby in the family, Ana Mae’s brother, Clayton, was a homosexual. Of course, some folks, the ones who remembered when all the Futrells lived in the little house over on Clairmont where they grew up and that Ana Mae still called home, already knew that. That Clayton was kind of sissy-acting as a boy. But lots of people also carried a quite a bit of latent curiosity about him. Nobody had ever listed a “life partner” as a survivor in the local newspaper. To be honest, most folks were surprised they even let that sort of thing in a family publication.

  Needless to say, Ana Mae’s wake and funeral promised to be a spectacle—if for no other reason than plain curiosity.

  So for the better part of two hours, people from all over the county had been trudging into the Rollings Funeral Home on Maple Avenue in Ahoskie, the “big” town next to Drapersville, to pay their respects to the late Ana Mae Futrell. The family would arrive any minute now.

  Ana Mae’s kin offered some much-needed entertainment in the town. While many who showed up at the wake wondered about Ana Mae’s brother, the homosexual who lived in San Francisco and had the nerve to put it in the newspaper so everybody would know, just as many others wanted to know whatever happened to the two sisters. Nobody had seen skin or teeth of either of them for nigh on about twenty years, though Ana Mae always talked about them like they just ran out to get a pack of cigarettes or some milk from the Day-Ree Mart.

  And as at wakes all over the place, some people just wanted to see who all else was there.

  Ana Mae was so good at keeping secrets, not even her best friend knew about that Howard thing.

  Though she was one of the biggest gossips in town, Rosalee Jenkins prided herself on being able to keep a secret
when it mattered. It hurt her that Ana Mae hadn’t confided in her about this son of hers. So at Ana Mae’s wake, Rosalee stood near the casket and fussed at her friend.

  “I’m mad at you for dying, Ana Mae. And I’m mad at you for not telling me about that boy.”

  “She can’t hear you, you know, Sister Rosalee.”

  The gentle words came from the Reverend Toussaint le Baptiste. He stood tall, slim, and as good-looking as he had been back when they were young and before he’d found the Lord. Many a time, Reverend Toussaint, as most people called him these days, had been asked if he was related to the singers El DeBarge or Christopher Williams. He had the lighter than café au lait skin, the wavy “good” hair, and a slim moustache that added a dashing Errol Flynn touch to features that women gravitated to like honey.

  “I know, Too Sweet. I just miss her so much.”

  “Ana Mae is wearing a crown and walking the streets of gold right now.”

  Rosalee sniffed.

  The minister pulled a tissue from a box discreetly tucked at the side of the coffin. Pressing it into her hand, he said, “I miss her too, Sister Rosalee. I miss her too.”

  Across the room, a small group huddled, surveying the survivors. “Ana Mae never had no kids,” someone whispered loudly.

  “Shoot, far as I know she was so holy she never spread her legs for anybody.”

  The person who said that blanched when the comment earned her an evil-eyed look from Zenobia Bryant. “Y’all ought to respect the dead,” Zenobia hissed. She glanced around trying to make sure none of Ana Mae’s immediate family had heard the nasty remark.

  Truth was, though, townsfolk in Drapersville and Ahoskie, North Carolina, weren’t the only ones asking who the hell Howard was. Ana Mae’s family wanted to know too.

  JoJo, a former showgirl in Las Vegas, stood near the door waiting for a cue from the funeral parlor staff. Her husband, Lester, glanced over his shoulder at his brothers-in-law getting out of the car.

  “I was expecting your brother’s, uh, er, well, his boyfriend . . .”

  “His life partner,” JoJo said, as if explaining—again—to a none-too-bright child.

  Lester snorted. “Yeah, his partner. I expected him to be more faggy. But he’s like a regular guy. Even played some football in college.”

  JoJo narrowed her eyes at her husband. “You can be so vile.”

  He raised an eyebrow. “What?” he asked, as she stomped away. “What’d I say? I was giving the man a compliment. For a homo he’s not all that bad.”

  “Don’t know what she’s all in a huff about,” Lester muttered as he patted his breast pocket for his smokes. He might have time for one before they had to go inside. “She told me to be nice to her relatives.”

  Twenty minutes later, the Reverend Toussaint le Baptiste cleared his throat at the lectern—for the third time. No one in the funeral chapel paid him any mind.

  “Our Father, who art in heaven,” he yelled above the din of the mourners come to pay respects to the Futrell family.

  By the time he got to “Thy kingdom come . . . ,” the place had quieted down, and others intoned the old and sacred prayer with him. After the Amen, the minister clasped his hands around his Bible.

  “On behalf of the Futrell family, I want to thank you all for coming out tonight. Sister Ana Mae was a faithful member of the church, and she truly loved her some God.”

  Heads bobbed in agreement. In the back, near a display of mums and gardenias nearly as tall as he was, Lester muttered to JoJo.

  “That’s the preacher? What they got in the water down here? Would you look at that? Wrist just as limp as your brother’s.”

  JoJo poked him in the ribs with her elbow.

  “Hey!”

  “Shh,” several people said, turning to glare in his direction.

  “Can’t you just hush up for half an hour?”

  Blood rushed to Lester’s neck. “I don’t see why we have to do this. Why we even had to come out here. You didn’t even like Annie Mae.”

  “Her name is Ana Mae. And just because we weren’t close didn’t mean I didn’t love my sister. And, Mr. High Roller, I didn’t ask you to come here with me.”

  With a scowl toward the back of the room, an indication that JoJo and Lester’s hushed conversation wasn’t so shushed, Reverend Toussaint extended his hand toward Delcine.

  “Sister Marguerite Futrell—some of you all might remember her as Delcine—is going to say a few words.”

  Lester rolled his eyes. “Ah, now, here we go. Queen Delcine.”

  JoJo, with her big teased hair, long false eyelashes, and too-tight, sequined red dress, cussed under her breath, then inched away from her husband.

  “Excuse me,” she said to a man wearing a camouflage green hunter’s jacket. She needed to put some distance between her and Lester before they got into a fight right here in the funeral home.

  She paused next to her brother-in-law, Delcine’s husband, who silently switched places with her. Clayton took her hand in his and squeezed it.

  JoJo offered her brother a thankful smile, then turned her attention to their sister.

  Dressed in a royal blue fitted suit that looked like it was tailored just for her and that probably cost more than the trailer that JoJo and Lester lived in, Delcine went to the center of the room, where she could address the crowd of about eighty or so mourners who had ventured out to come to the wake.

  “My sister, brother, and I thank you for coming tonight. We know you loved Ana Mae very much. Her passing will leave a void in many hearts.”

  “Spoken like a true diplomat,” JoJo said out of the side of her mouth.

  Clayton Futrell smirked. “At least we all showed up. I doubt Ana Mae even expected that.”

  Delcine cut a glance at her siblings, her eyes narrowed and her lips curved up in her familiar smile-snarl.

  Both JoJo and Clayton recognized it as a clear sign that their murmuring was reaching her ears. Flushing, they both looked down at the floor. While JoJo was genuinely contrite, she doubted if Clayton was. He’d never minced words on his feelings about either their hometown or the sister he didn’t really know. There were a lot of years separating them. Clayton had always had a closer relationship with JoJo, who was just eighteen months older.

  Clayton was gorgeous. He’d gotten the best of the family’s genes, and JoJo was proud of all he’d accomplished. From the subtle whiff of an expensive aftershave to the custom suit, he exuded the wealth and the privilege that came of being a successful doctor out in California.

  Delcine lived with her family in upper-middle-class suburban luxury outside Washington, D.C. She and her husband both had important and high-ranking government jobs that afforded them a lifestyle JoJo envied only when she was feeling sorry for herself. And that was even though it was never quite made clear just what it was that Winslow—or Delcine, for that matter—did for a living. As far as JoJo was able to determine, Winslow had something to do with government contracts, and Delcine worked as the director or assistant director in some kind of government office.

  JoJo was a Futrell who, like Ana Mae, hadn’t made much of her life. Yeah, she lived in Las Vegas and used to be a sought-after dancer in the top shows on the Strip, but that was fifty or sixty pounds ago and before she’d hooked up with Lester. He’d promised her the world, and he’d given her a trailer park and a pack-a-day cigarette habit. She’d kicked the cigarettes to the curb. Now if she could just do the same to Lester.

  Too many times now she’d heard tourists exclaim that she looked like a black Peggy Bundy. She couldn’t help thinking that that had once seemed like a compliment, but that now, compared to her living-high-on-the-hog and well-put-together siblings, she looked like what she was: trailer trash.

  Years as both a bureaucrat and a Beltway wife had taught Marguerite Delcine Futrell Foster how to sound sincere without meaning a word of what she said.

  In a way, she was sorry that Ana Mae had died. But part of her was glad. Her las
t tie to this dismal little town was finally severed and she was freed from the past. Of course, her present didn’t rank as anything to be proud of—or to write home about, even if she’d wanted to.

  Ana Mae had always been mean to her, as far as Marguerite was concerned. She steadfastly ignored the fact that had it not been for her older sister’s little white envelopes arriving a few times every semester, she’d have never made it through college.

  But that was neither here nor there now. Water under the bridge. Ancient history. Buried, just like Ana Mae would be before long.

  “The services will be here,” Marguerite said. “Tomorrow, at eleven.”

  The preacher cleared his throat.

  “Uh, pardon me, Sister Futrell.”

  “Foster,” Marguerite corrected.

  He bobbed his head, pulled out a handkerchief, and dabbed his forehead. “Sister Foster. The funeral tomorrow will be at the church. Sister Ana Mae wanted a church funeral.”

  Marguerite bit back rising panic. She glanced at her brother and sister. Clayton was eyeing a young man across the room. JoJo gave her a “don’t even think about it” look.

  Marguerite gestured for the undertaker. Mr. Rollings glided toward the front of the parlor and sidled next to Marguerite.

  She gestured for him to lean down so she could consult with him privately.

  “We will not pay for limousine and hearse services to cart that casket all over town.”

  Rollings opened his mouth, apparently thought better of whatever he was about to say, then bowed his head ever so slightly.

  “Transportation is included in the cost of our services, Mrs. Foster.”

  Marguerite brightened. “Oh, well, in that case.” She looked back out at the crowd and a little too cheerfully announced, “Tomorrow morning at eleven at . . . ,” she looked at Reverend Toussaint le Baptiste.

 

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