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Authors: Lou Jane Temple

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BOOK: Red Beans and Vice
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“Yeah, he only had one tattoo,” the tattoo boy said disapprovingly. “An arm bracelet,” touching his upper arm.

Heaven was excited as she left Verti Mart. She stuffed the macaroni and cheese in the nearest trash container and headed over to the police precinct to give them the news that she’d tracked down the hired killer who killed Truely. Sort of.

“S
o this is the second time in twenty-four hours that I visited the local police station and they were less than happy to see me.”

Nancy Blair handed Heaven the French bread. “I love the bird story. But you forget, the Quarter police are used to dealing with eccentrics. You’re probably not even the only person to come in there with a dead bird this week, or with a tip on a murderer, as far as that goes.”

“You think?” Heaven pondered what it would be like to have the French Quarter as your beat. “I will say that the detectives admitted they had focused on the so-called James Smith as a possible suspect. But they haven’t had any luck finding him so far. I think he’s long gone. Back in New Jersey by now.”

Nancy’s eyebrows went up. “New Jersey? Oh, Heaven, really. Are you trying to imply a gangster hit man?”

Heaven shrugged. “I know. It’s probably just my imagination. I’ve been thinking that maybe Truely was smuggling something into this country in his coffee. Jewels. Drugs. Something that might have gotten him killed.”

“That makes some sense, except for the fact that the customs officers down here are a pretty shrewd bunch. And they are Federal. Not as easy to bribe as you might think.”

Heaven shook her finger at the older woman. “That sounds like it comes from experience. But enough of my wild imagination. Can we move on to another topic?”

“Of course. How do you like your gumbo?” Nancy asked.

“Oh, it’s great,” Heaven said absentmindedly. They were sitting in the courtyard at Commander’s Palace. Heaven could see a birthday party taking place in a glassed-in room to one side of the main house. A passel of twenty something women with blond hair were drinking mimosas and watching one of their own unwrap presents. There were clumps of purple and pink balloons tied on the birthday girl’s chair, waving cheerily in the air currents caused by the air conditioner ducts. “Nancy, have you ever heard of Truely having an affair?”

“You mean with Amelia Hart?” Nancy said slyly, pleased with herself.

“You dog. Why didn’t you tell me if you knew?”

“I don’t know for sure. Rumors are mother’s milk in this town, child. I never saw them together.”

“But?” Heaven said impatiently.

“About a year ago it was the talk. Then, two or three months ago, word was that Truely had broken it off.”

“You mean that right before I came to town for the first meeting, when Amelia showed up and pitched a fit—right before that, Truely broke up with her?”

Nancy wagged her finger. “All just rumors, but yes, it was a couple of weeks before that meeting, if my memory serves me right, and it doesn’t always.”

Heaven thought of the photo burning a hole in her purse. “So Amelia might think that getting rid of Truely at the nun’s party could kill two birds with one stone.”

“But, as I recall, Amelia didn’t show up with her cameraman until after the explosion and after we found Truely,” Nancy said, squinting her eyes as she tried to bring up the sequence of events.

“But think about what I just told you about the guy from Verti Mart who worked the party and now has disappeared. Amelia didn’t have to stab Truely herself to be responsible.”

“I wouldn’t want Amelia mad at me. But she’s a big girl. When you go out with a married man, chances are it will end with him saying ‘see ya.’”

“Were any of your lovers married, Nancy?”

“Honey, you forget what I did for a living. Before I was a landlady, I was a whore. Every John was married, or almost every John.”

“Speaking of married, you haven’t heard from your current husband, have you?”

Nancy looked down as the waiter came and brought their entrees, soft-shell crabs for Heaven and a Cobb salad with crabmeat for Nancy, and poured the wine. A bus-boy refreshed their water. When the servers were gone, she said quietly, “Not a word.”

“I think now is the time to tell me about those other five husbands.” Heaven tore a crispy leg off a crab and ate it.

Nancy shook her head and looked off in the distance. “I can barely remember their names,” she lied. “Andy Blair and I married when I was fifteen. He was the cutest boy in Memphis. We lived in a shack with no indoor plumbing. It was the only time I was happy.”

“So you kept his name?”

“I became a working girl while I was still married to him. It was my business name and it just made sense to keep it.”

Heaven figured that Nancy kept the name Blair because it symbolized something to her, a more innocent, happier time. But she wouldn’t dream of calling her on it. “Did you move to New Orleans with Andy?” she asked.

“No, to get away from him,” Nancy said, her face clouding up. “Next I married my business partner, Pete Herman. He owned a club over on Conti and I had girls in the rooms above.” She took a sip of wine. “Then a gangster from Chicago, Sam Hunt. Sam died in a shootout outside a bank in Detroit.”

“While you were married?”

“No, years later. In the early sixties.” Nancy’s voice had taken on a dreamy quality.

“Next?”

“Charles McCoy. A cop. We moved across the lake and I tried to go straight. I put up preserves and green beans and Charles tried to raise cattle. What a joke that was.”

“Each of these husbands sounds like he’d be good for a whole book. Keep going, though. I want the full slate.”

“The next one hardly counts. We were only married for three months. Wayne Bernard was his name and he was a gambler. Horses were his thing. We met at a track and he won big and we flew off to Las Vegas. Then he went back to the East Coast and I went back to work. That was it.”

“And then Jimmy, isn’t that his name?”

“Jimmy Stouffert. He turned my head almost as bad as Andy Blair. An old woman’s foolishness,” Nancy murmured.

Heaven wanted to ask a million questions. She could see why the woman from the university was going to write a book about Nancy’s life. “You know, Nancy, you don’t have to be old to make bad decisions about men. I’ll tell you about my husbands sometime. But now, do you mind if I don’t stay for coffee?”

“Not at all and I’ll hold you to that about your men. I bet you’ve had some good ones too. What’s your hurry?”

“Well, I had a list of things to get done today and so far all I’ve crossed off is tracking down a missing dishwasher, or not tracking him down. I want to go to the library and find out about what caused that explosion down the street from the convent Saturday night, the meth thing. And I think I need to talk to Amelia Hart. I’ll tell you one thing. If she did have something to do with Truely’s death, she sure was as cool as a cucumber when the three of us went out for a drink that night. Not a tear in sight.”

“There are plenty of men in their graves because of women they underestimated, Heaven. It wouldn’t be the first time.” Nancy took Heaven’s hand in hers for a moment.

Heaven covered the older woman’s hands with her free one and patted. “Are you coming to Truely’s party Saturday night?”

“I wouldn’t miss it for the world. Then next week I’m going to New York.”

Heaven had slipped the waiter her credit card when they came in. She had motioned to him a minute ago and he appeared with the slip for her to sign.

“Thank you for lunch but I think it was my turn,” Nancy said, frowning at the waiter.

“What’s going on in New York?” Heaven asked.

“I’m going to an auction at Sotheby’s. A couple of my antique dealer chums are going with me. There’s some nice religious articles in the sale.”

What an unusual thing for a former madam to collect. “Do you have much religious art?”

“Oh, a few pieces. I’ve always been fond of the Russian triptychs from the tenth and eleventh centuries.”

“Were you religious even when you were …”

“A landlady? Goodness, no. But you get old and you figure you need a back-up position, just in case.”

“So you reformed and started writing checks to the Catholic Church. That’s just what they count on.” Heaven grinned as she got up from the table.

“Be careful with Amelia. I’ll see you Saturday night,” Nancy said.

“Wish me luck,” Heaven said as she slipped out of the courtyard gate.

Heaven thought she was going to the library in the Central Business District. But her car drove right to the television station instead. “Then let’s get this over with,” Heaven said out loud as she buzzed the outer door. This time when Amelia Hart learned it was Heaven, she told the receptionist to let her come back by herself. Just as she’s getting to trust me, Heaven thought. She picked her way through the warren of cables and lights and found Amelia in her office, sitting in front of her computer. She looked up and smiled a friendly smile. “Hey, Heaven,” she called.

Heaven pulled out the photo and threw it on Amelia’s keyboard. “You really had me fooled. I thought we were becoming buddies. And all the time you hadn’t bothered to tell me you were fucking my friend’s husband, the same husband who just happened to end up dead last week.”

“Where’d you get this?” Amelia said sharply, holding the snapshot.

“Hidden away in Truely’s desk.”

“Mary didn’t see this, did she?”

“No way. But should I be looking for more photos around the house so she never does?”

“I had no idea he kept that. What do you want, Heaven?”

“I want to know about you and Truely. And don’t lie to me, please. Don’t insult me further.”

“You’re a smart girl. Surely you understand why I wouldn’t mention this to you, you being Mary’s friend and all. Then, after Truely was killed, I sure wasn’t gonna say a thing, no way,” Amelia said defiantly. “Truely already tore my life apart once. I wasn’t about to let him do it again in death.”

“Was it over, or was it still going on?”

“Over four months ago. Truely told me it had to end. Before that, he’d never said anything about leaving Mary Beth, never made any promises. But I know he did love me. So I was shocked. I tried to get him to tell me why. He said his business needed his attention. That something strange was going on with it.”

“Are you just saying this to divert my attention back to Truely’s business and away from you as a murder suspect?”

Amelia’s eyes flashed with anger. “Do you think I liked losing my boyfriend over his
business?
How insulting. ‘I love my wife.’ ‘I can’t do it to my children’—a girl can understand those lines. But, ‘I have to take care of my business?’ Heaven, I sure wouldn’t tell you this pitiful tale unless it was the truth.”

“You didn’t tell me anything until I came in here with
evidence. In my book, you just became suspect number one. You hated the Sisters of the Holy Trinity, and you’d been scorned by Truely. Why not take him out and make it look like a plot against the sisters?”

“Heaven, I’m sorry you had to find out about our relationship, but I didn’t kill Truely. You know I couldn’t sneak anywhere in this town. I’m too well known. And I didn’t pay someone else to kill Truely either. It was over and my feelings were hurt, that’s all. The whole affair was so typical of this town. The Uptown white guy in the seersucker suit comes callin’ at the beautiful colored girl’s bed, not the coal black girl’s bed you understand, but the one with skin the color of cafe au lait. I was mad at myself for falling for it.”

“You just keep revealing more motive for murder,” Heaven said and got up from the side of the desk where she’d been perched. She reached down, picked up the photo, and turned for the door.

“Heaven, don’t do anything stupid, like showing that to Mary. Please, give me that.”

Heaven put the photo in her purse and held the purse behind her back. “Don’t threaten me, Amelia. If I find out that you’re lying to me about anything else, forget about Mary, I’m going to the police with this. I may go to the police with it anyway,” she said and ran down the hall and out into the reception area. But Amelia didn’t follow.

Heaven had one more thing to do while she was in the Quarter. She walked over to the convent, trying to sort out what Amelia had said and done. Did Amelia have enough of a dark mind, or a broken heart, that she could be behind all this mayhem after all?

Heaven felt betrayed. She thought she was making
friends with Amelia, but it only went so far. Then the lying started. It was true that it would have been difficult for Amelia to bring up her affair with Truely to Heaven. Amelia knew Heaven only as a friend of Mary’s. But Heaven was sure Amelia wasn’t telling her everything about her relationship with Truely. She was sick at heart because now she’d have to lie, too. Mary didn’t need to hear this.

Heaven slipped into the convent at the Chartres Street entrance. She passed the bookstore quickly while the volunteer who worked there was selling some tour tickets to a couple.

She had an idea. It had hatched when Nancy Blair mentioned her interest in religious art. It would only take a minute to eliminate a nasty possibility that was bothering her. She hoped it would be eliminated, that is.

Heaven walked over to the side of the courtyard where the cross had been reinstalled on a raised brick dais. It looked like this time they had sunk it in concrete. Heaven kneeled in front of it, hoping lightning wouldn’t strike her down. She bowed her head and dug around in her purse at the same time to find the key to the rental car, then she leaned forward, threw her arms around the cross and kissed it, while scratching the back side of it near the base with her car key. She peeked around at the tiny gash she’d made. Under the rust and patina there was something wrong. Bright, shiny, new metal sparkled at her. She got up quickly and made a little curtsy at the cross, then went out the way she’d come.

The volunteer was standing in the door, smiling approvingly at Heaven for her piousness. “Yes, we’re all so glad to have the sisters’ cross back where it belongs.”

BOOK: Red Beans and Vice
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