“I suppose he’s here to see if the murderer is at the funeral,” Ben whispered. I rolled my eyes and poked him discreetly in the side.
Father Winfield mostly spoke about forgiveness and redemption in his sermon, although he did talk about Jack a little, describing him as a loving husband and father. I glanced at Ben, who kept his eyes focussed forward and his face blank. The funeral service came to an end and we sang the final hymn. Mr. Ferguson came forward to carry out the ashes with Father Winfield joining in behind him, followed by the altar-servers. Ben and I filed out of our pew with the rest of the mourners following us. I looked for Tremaine the back of the church, but he had already slipped out. We walked through the lobby and out the back door, pausing in the grey morning light at the top of the stairs. I thanked Mr. Ferguson and Father Winfield for their services, and we all watched silently as the funeral director placed the urn into the hearse and drove away.
I sidled over to Frank. “Frank,” I whispered, “I’d like to take us all out for an early lunch at The Diner. Is that okay with you?”
“No problem, Anna. We can handle that.”
“Thank you.” I turned to my friends and smiled. “You’re all wonderful for coming to be with Ben and me this morning. It’s good to be surrounded by friends at a time like this.” People nodded or ducked their heads and smiled. “Please join us for lunch us at The Diner.”
Everyone thought that would be very nice, so, after sorting out our cars, we formed a procession and drove the short distance to Main Street with Clive and his tractor bringing up the rear. As we cruised along at about twenty kilometres an hour, Ben in his car behind me, I thought myself lucky to have found this small town and all of these dear friends. I felt very happy on what had promised to be a sad and lonely morning.
Chapter Eighteen
Ben and I lingered at the restaurant after everyone else had left until Frank had to close up at 2:00. During our conversation, my son reminded me that the only other funeral he had ever attended had been my mother’s, who had died of a stroke when he was six. Ben and I had flown back to Ontario for the funeral, and while his memories of the flight and the airport were still quite clear, he had very little recollection of the service. Unfortunately, Ben’s memories of his grandfather were equally sketchy, since he hadn’t seen him since Mom’s funeral. Dad remarried two years after Mom passed, and became very attached to his new wife’s children and grandchildren. We ended up drifting even further apart than we had been when I left home to become an actress. Now I only heard from Dad when I called to wish him happy birthday or received a Christmas newsletter from his wife.
I told Ben that I was planning to pay for his university education when I received the money from his father’s insurance policy. “I’m sure that your father would have approved if he had known,” I said.
Ben said, “Let’s talk about it later, Mom. I really don’t want to talk about Dad today,” so I let the subject drop. I hadn’t heard what was going on about Ben’s alibi, however, so I asked if he had seen or heard anything from Tremaine.
“Yeah, I gave him some more information about what I did before I met Tracy on the night Dad died,” he said.
“What did you tell him?”
“That I went back to the drugstore a couple of times until I spotted the cashier who had waited on me. I got her name and asked her to give Tremaine a call.”
“That’s terrific, honey. Did Tremaine seem satisfied with that?”
Ben shrugged and said, “Who knows?” I groaned and rolled my eyes. “What? What else do you want from me?” Ben said, gesturing with both hands.
“Nothing, Ben. I’m just pleased that you’re sorting it out. Tremaine will take it from there,” I said, forcing a smile. I didn’t want to argue with him today, but I wished that Ben would take his alibi as seriously as I did. Instead of harping on the subject, however, I kissed him goodbye before he headed back to work in Calgary. His boss had told him to take all the time he needed for the funeral, but Ben didn’t want to abuse his boss’ good will by staying away for too long. It rained for the rest of the afternoon, and I spent the time reading one of my well-loved Miss Marple mysteries and making a pot of beef vegetable soup for supper.
I went back to work the next day, and life returned to normal. The funeral had provided some sort of closure, and I was having second thoughts about continuing my efforts to find Jack’s killer. I sure didn’t want my clumsy interference to screw up the police investigation. But I had already set up the film set visit with Amy, so I decided to go through with it. Amy had told me that they would be filming a big action scene with lots of extras on Thursday night, so if nothing else, it would be entertaining to watch. Besides, I had to admit that I was curious to have a look at the woman who had finally broken up my marriage.
I got home from work at 5:00 and scrambled to get ready in time so that I wouldn’t make Amy late. When her car pulled up out front at 6:00, I was outside waiting on the porch. It was a warmish evening, and I had changed into jeans and a sleeveless blue plaid shirt. Climbing into the car, I greeted her with a cheery hello, but received only a stiff nod in return. Obviously, Amy didn’t approve of my visit to the film set tonight. I noticed that her beautiful red hair was braided and woven into a bun.
“Is that for the movie?” I asked, pointing at her hair.
“Uh huh. The hair and make-up people let me do my own hair since I’m a professional. It saves time for all of us.”
“It looks really pretty on you.”
Her face softened and she smiled at me. “Thanks.”
On the way over to Longview, Amy told me the film’s plot and about the scene they were shooting tonight. “We’re using the Main Street set, Anna. It’s supposed to look like part of an old western frontier town. There’s a dirt road with fake storefronts on both sides, and a jailhouse. The bad guys are supposed to chase Miss Stacey – that’s the girl who’s in love with the sheriff but doesn’t get him in the end – into town on horseback and kidnap her. I’ll be one of the townsfolk on the street, reacting to what’s happening. Jessie will be doubling for the actress playing Miss Stacey. It should be pretty exciting.”
“Sounds like fun,” I replied. “And don’t worry about me, Amy. I’ll be on my best behaviour and stay out of everyone’s way. You won’t hear a peep out of me.” Amy smiled and looked relieved. I wondered if the questions she had been asking had created trouble for her on the set, but things were better now between us, and I didn’t want to bring it up.
We drove down a dirt lane and parked beside the set, which had been built on a private ranch outside of Longview. Amy signed me in with the security guard and led me over to the caterer’s table, which they call “craft services” for some reason. I helped myself to a bottle of juice and a cookie before Amy left for the costume trailer to get changed. I found an unoccupied bench in an out-of-the-way corner and watched the steady stream of actors coming and going out the costume trailer and the hair and make-up tent. There were a handful of women milling around in long skirts, shirtwaists, and bonnets, plus a couple of little boys in short pants and suspenders, but the majority of the cast were men. That made sense; there were more men than women occupying frontier towns in the old days. I wondered if any of the costumed women I was seeing were Jessie Wick, but I didn’t notice anyone who matched Erna’s description of her.
The crew was also bustling about purposefully, unrolling electrical cables and hauling equipment to the set on the other side of the preparation area. An intense, harassed-looking man strode by with a cell phone glued to his ear, a couple of anxious people rushing after him. Maybe he was the producer? Amy emerged in a long skirt, jacket, and bonnet from the makeup tent and hurried over to me.
“Come on, Anna, it’s time to go to the set. I’m going to introduce you to Rachel Miller, the assistant director. After that, they’ll find you somewhere to sit and watch.”
I followed in her wake as we were jostled by the crowd headed for the set. We wal
ked past the trucks and trailers and rounded a corner onto Main Street. Looking around me, I felt transported back in time to a frontier town complete with stores, wooden sidewalks, watering troughs, and hitching posts. White lace curtains fluttered out the open windows of what I assumed was a boarding house. There was also a smithy and barn, a saloon, a jail, and an undertaker’s parlour. Even though I could see that the buildings were only false fronts and twenty-first century film equipment and crew in modern dress were on the set, it was easy to ignore the intrusion of the modern world to imagine what it would have been like living in the old west.
Amy introduced me to Rachel Miller, a thin, earnest-looking woman in her early thirties, who shook my hand briskly and offered her condolences. She escorted me to a folding chair on the edge of the set and left me there to watch the action while she went to rehearse the extras. A young man with a clipboard hovered nearby on the sidewalk, muttering to himself and making notes. The director, a grizzle-haired man with a cigarette jutting from his lower lip, was talking to the crew over his head set. A camera man with a chase camera in a car with its motor running was waiting at the far end of the street, while lighting and sound crew were getting ready in strategic positions all along the set. The director walked over to a crane and climbed into a seat beside another camera man. A crew member snapped a clapboard in front of the camera, and the crane soared into the air for a comprehensive view of the street.
The director picked up the electronic megaphone strapped to his chair and started snapping orders. “Alright, people, we’re ready to begin. Cameras?”
“Camera One!” “Camera Two!” the camera crew shouted back.
“Sound?”
“Ready!” the sound crew called.
“Okay, let’s see some energy, everyone. Action!” the director shouted.
The extras started strolling down the sidewalks while the chase camera waited. Over top of the extras’ chatter, I could hear the rumble of horses galloping toward us. A beautiful golden horse appeared at the end of the street. A woman sat on its back – Jessie Wick, I presumed. Her long dress was hiked up around her knees, enabling her to straddle the horse. A straw hat bounced up and down by its ribbons on the back of her neck, strands of hair streaming in long tendrils behind her as she crouched over the horse’s neck. The camera car drove about fifteen feet ahead of her and her mount as she hurtled down the street. Four men with long coats flapping over their horses’ rumps came galloping hard behind her. A couple of townsfolk crossing the street raced to get out of the way.
As Jessie came closer, I saw her slap her horse’s flank with the reins she held gathered in one hand. Her pursuers were gaining on her, and the lead horseman caught her by the time they were half a block away from us. He grabbed the reins from Jessie’s hand and dragged her horse to a standstill. The horse reared up into the air, throwing Jessie back in the saddle. When the horse landed, the stuntman threw his arm around Jessie’s waist and dragged her from her saddle onto the front of his. Jessie flailed her arms and legs against him as she struggled to get down, but the horseman clamped her to his chest. One of the other horsemen rode forward to grab the golden horse’s reins. The head stuntman whistled, and the group galloped forward with their captive. The camera car rushed past us with the stunt people thundering after it, disappearing in a cloud of dust. The director shouted, “Cut,” and the extras on the street froze.
“That was terrific, everyone. Okay, let’s shoot another master. Lose the chase vehicle. Everyone back to ones. Check the gates,” the director roared.
It seemed as if everyone was talking at once as the extras hurried back down the street and a crew member began scuffing up the horse tracks in the street with his feet. The stunt people came trotting back toward us. Jessie still sat in the saddle with the stuntman, his arm encircling her waist and her head bent back as they laughed over a joke. They stopped in front of the director who was hovering at street level on the crane. Jessie jumped down lightly from the saddle.
“How was that, Gene?” she called to the director.
“Beautiful, sweetheart. Do exactly the same thing over again.”
“No problem,” she said with a grin as the hair and makeup team converged on her and the rest of the stunt crew.
Now that she was only yards away from me, I had my first opportunity to get a good look at Jessie. Her beautiful black hair was her most striking feature, with a chiseled nose and broad jawline making her handsome rather than pretty. Jessie was tall with an athletic build and a confident way about her. She snapped her fingers, and the makeup women handed her a mirror before reapplying blush to Jessie’s olive-toned face. Nodding her satisfaction, she handed the mirror back to the woman without even looking at her, and strode back to her horse. Jessie whispered something in the animal’s ear and stroked its neck before hiking up her skirt and vaulting into the saddle.
The stuntman who had snatched her from her horse rode up and said something to her. She laughed and slapped him on the shoulder before cantering off down the street ahead of him. I shook my head. She looked like she had a lot of personality, and I wondered how Jack had handled her when the two of them were together. I almost felt sorry for him in retrospect. I was glad that I had decided not to fight for my marriage. She would have been a powerful adversary, and the fight wouldn’t have been worth it.
I watched them do a second shot just as exciting as the first, and then the shoot was over for the night. The extras surged up the sidewalk headed for the trailers and Amy appeared, looking pleased and flushed. “What did you think, Anna? They were great, weren’t they?” she asked.
“It was wonderful, Amy. Those stunt people sure are talented. Everything seemed so real. I really enjoyed watching that.” She beamed and talked nonstop about the scene until we arrived at the costume trailer and she left me to change out of her clothes. It wasn’t until we were alone in her car together headed home to Crane that she broached the subject of Jessie Wick.
“What did you think of Jessie, Anna?” she asked.
“She seems like a strong, competent woman, Amy. She looks like she can really handle herself.”
Amy glanced at me and whispered, “But, does she look capable of murder?”
I hesitated. “I don’t know, Amy. Who can say? She looks like she can do anything she sets her mind to. On the other hand, she doesn’t seem like the kind of woman who’d be devastated by a break-up with Jack. I just can’t see her pining over him, can you? Besides, what sane woman kills a man four years after the affair is over?”
Amy nodded her agreement. “Yes, she’d have to be obsessed to do that. And – come on – she was having an affair with a married man in the middle of a film shoot, after all. Most women wouldn’t expect anything permanent under those circumstances.”
“No, you wouldn’t think so.”
“And Jessie has a solid reputation. I haven’t heard of any problems with her,” she added.
“What do people say about her, Amy?”
“That she’s smart and ambitious. Whenever I see her, she’s hanging around with the stuntmen rather than with the women. That’s natural, I guess, given her business. I guess you’d call her a man’s kind of woman.”
“Right, which means that she’s low maintenance and not too much trouble. Someone who wouldn’t get all clingy when the affair was over. That still doesn’t fit with the revenge angle. I’ll have to give this a lot of thought, Amy.”
Amy pursed her lips and nodded. As I looked at her, I wondered how Jack could have been involved with three such very different women. Had Clive been right when he said that Jack had chased anything in a skirt? I had spent seventeen years with him, and Jack was still a mystery to me. I mulled that over for the rest of the evening, and it was my last thought as I fell asleep that night.
Back at the university the next morning, I decided to ask our mail carrier for her opinion on men. Alice was a down-to-earth, salt-of the-earth kind of person – well, to be truthful, she was just plain
earthy – and she had no illusions about men after thirty years of marriage. She barrelled into my office at the usual time on her Birkenstock-clad feet.
“Morning, Anna, how’s it going?” she asked, plunking down the mail and picking up an outgoing envelope.
“Just fine, Alice. Hey, do you have a minute? I want to ask you your opinion on something.”
There was never much mail to deliver in the spring term, so Alice hoisted herself up onto the table beside the mail trays and made herself comfortable.
“Sure I have a minute – shoot.”
“It’s a male/female relationship kind of question. In your experience, do men go for a variety of women, or do they mostly stick to the same type?”
“Hey, that’s a good one, Anna. Let me think about that for a moment,” she said. Alice leaned back on her arms and stared at me. “Hmm, judging by my husband and my brothers, I’d say that men like to stay within a certain league, you know? Basically, I think men are kind of lazy when it comes to romance. They don’t want to try too hard if it means risking failure. Or maybe they’re just scared, eh? Nah, they’re lazy. My Mike used to date one of my girlfriends before he dated me, and we were both from the same neighbourhood, the same school, the same circle, you know? We all grew up together. Even now he likes actresses who look like they have street-smarts rather than the swankier kind of woman. Take Meryl Streep. I think that Meryl Streep would intimidate the hell out of Mike. Or Cate Blanchet. She’s such a classy-looking woman. But Debra Winger in Officer and a Gentleman or Karen Allen in Raiders of the Lost Ark – he always went for them. Hmm. Maybe he just likes brunettes? Now, isn’t that interesting. I’ll have to ask him.”
I smiled at her as she hopped off the table and headed for the door. “Thanks, Alice. I’ve learned a lot from you and Mike over the years.”
Framed For Murder (An Anna Nolan Mystery) Page 15