Another Dead Republican (13 page)

Read Another Dead Republican Online

Authors: Mark Zubro

Tags: #Gay, #Fiction, #General, #gay mystery, #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: Another Dead Republican
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Scott said, “He confided in you even though you weren’t close any more?”

 

“Edgar and social nuances didn’t go well together. It isn’t likely that he noticed our relationship had changed. No, that time we talked, Edgar kept hinting he could really screw things up for a lot of people. And they’d better watch out, and he better get some respect. We were at some annual country club charity event. His brother, Barry, eventually corralled him and shut him up.”

 

“It doesn’t bother you that the election could be stolen?”

 

“I’m not political. They so desperately care about who is in charge so they could make more money. I went to medical school, which is not as respectable to them as making fountains of money off the backs of hard-working Americans.”

 

“What could Edgar do to screw things up?”

 

“Edgar was big on using veiled threats, always was even as a kid. He never followed through on them. Whether or not he was serious this time, I have no idea.” He shook his head. “As an adult I pretty much kept away from his family and mine. I met Veronica before they got married. She’s a good person. I think Edgar genuinely loved her. She seemed to be a good influence on him, but I was only her doctor. Today, I was worried when I heard she was out of control. Have her call me if she wants anything for herself or the kids. I can prescribe her a sedative, and maybe I’ll check on the kids.”

 

Avery turned to Scott, ducked his head, and sort of blushed. “Can you autograph something for me?”

 

“Sure.”

 

Avery left. Scott stayed to help with the crowd, and I went back to the office.

 

TWENTY-TWO

 

Wednesday 4:25 P.M.

 

I was there about twenty minutes when the office door crashed open. Veronica grabbed the rebound and slammed it shut. She leaned against it, shut her eyes, and breathed deeply. Her voice started as a whisper and rose to near a shriek, “I hate them. I hate them. I hate them. I hate every bone in their bodies. I hate the air they breathe.”

 

I hastened to the door and took her hand. I opened the door quickly and looked up and down the hall. If anyone had heard, they weren’t putting in an appearance.

 

I helped her to a seat then asked, “What’s wrong? Did the Grums do something?”

 

She shuddered, drew deep breaths. Finally calm enough, she said, “If those people pray at me one more time, I swear.” She got up and paced the length of the room, slapped at the grizzly, and turned to face me. “We walked into the funeral home, and right in the entryway, the first thing they wanted us to do is pray. When the funeral director met us, we had to say a prayer with him.”

 

She sat and rubbed her hands across her face for a moment then looked at me. “I’ve never gone to a funeral home to make arrangements for a funeral. I’ve never even thought about it. It was a good thing mom and dad were there.” She wrapped her arms around herself. “When we arrived, the dragon lady was already there. After praying, she began to decree and declare what was going to happen for the funeral. It was awful.” Her voice began to rise. “And Edgar’s father. He was with his odious wife. He told me I didn’t have a choice. I had to have the funeral their way.”

 

I held her close. I never understood this whole shtick about “my-funeral-is-better-than-your-funeral.” And is somebody taking attendance at funerals? The stupidest question I’ve ever heard is, “How would you like it if no one came to your funeral?” Well, I suppose I wouldn’t care much. I’d be dead. And so the living are supposed to count up the mourners? Whoever has the most mourners, wins? Wins what?

 

“What did they want?” I asked.

 

“They wanted this god awful extravaganza. They wanted a Christian rock band. They wanted singing groups. They wanted praise Jesus songs mixed with eulogies by every relative they have.”

 

I asked, “I know eulogies, but how does this praise Jesus stuff work?”

 

She said, “The preacher gives a combination sermon eulogy then someone sings a song. Next somebody gets up and does another eulogy. Then another song. I don’t want to hear all that shit.”

 

“How long does this song/eulogy extravaganza last?”

 

“Hours.”

 

“Really?”

 

“Really. I went to one of Edgar’s uncle’s funerals. In this gargantuan mega-church they had huge screens, stadium size screens, immense flat screen things, hooked up to computers. They showed pictures, every picture in his life, huge twenty-foot pictures of a dead person, rotating from screen to screen, interrupted by songs from groups, some live on stage, some taped, but all shown on those damn screens. They sang endlessly.”

 

“Funeral dirges?”

 

“No, praise songs to god.”

 

“Huh?”

 

“As in, every other word was praise and all the other words were Jesus.”

 

“That’s it?”

 

“There might have been other stuff. It was numbing after about ten seconds. It was awful. Maybe it comforted the afflicted. Maybe it pleased the Dragon Lady and the Dictator.” Her body twitched and shuddered. “Thankfully mom and dad were there today.”

 

“What did they do?”

 

“Dad looked at the old bitch and her despicable husband and said, ‘if that’s what Veronica wants, fine. We are going to do what she wants. This is a hard time for all of us, for you and your family, but we will do what Veronica says. I’m sure we all want to do what is best for Veronica and the children. Don’t you agree?’”

 

I knew well my dad’s trick of ending an oration on our errant behavior with a question that suggested you would be unreasonable to disagree with his last statement. It was a trick I’d most often heard from Margaret Thatcher, a politician my dad would be loath to be identified with.

 

Veronica said, “Mom chimed in right away. You know how she can be. She said, ‘You’re absolutely right dear. I’m sure no one could disagree’. The Grums could have overwhelmed me at a time like this, but mom and dad put an end to their nonsense, and mom and dad didn’t scream, or shout, or carry on, nothing at all like the Grums.” She drew a deep breath, reached for a tissue from the box on the coffee table, dabbed at her eyes. “Thank god for mom and dad.”

 

“They can be wonderful. It all worked out?”

 

“It’s going to be a simple ceremony, the way I wanted it.”

 

“Did she have the dog with her?”

 

“Yes.”

 

“I feel sorry for it.”

 

She managed a grim smile.

 

I said, “What I don’t get is how they can just barge into the funeral home. You can’t just co-opt someone else’s funeral. How did they think they were going to get away with that?”

 

“They know the funeral home director, family connections, political connections. It’s this damn county and who knows who. The Grums just tried to take over. They led him to believe they were in charge of the funeral. The first five minutes were pure hell. I was in shock. I’m still in shock. Numb. Daddy was a treasure. Thank god that’s over with so I don’t have to talk about it or think about it.”

 

Dad was the quietest of all of us, but it did no good to cross him for all his mildness.

 

I said, “Good for mom and dad. I talked to Azure Grum earlier.”

 

“She’s the best of them. Drinks a little much, but in this family, I can’t blame her.”

 

“She mentioned Mary Mallon used to date Edgar.”

 

“Mallon is dangerous. She’d date a corpse if it would help her career. She knew the Grums had money and power. It was just a way for an in when she was younger. But she married a Ducharmé. She may be vile, but she has the instincts to go where the most cash is.” She crushed the tissue and wedged it between the paws of a dead beaver on the coffee table.

 

“Did Edgar ever talk about Mallon?”

 

“Maybe a long time ago. It wasn’t a big deal.”

 

“I checked on the kids before I came in here. I kept it together in front of them. I don’t want to think. I want to keep moving. Am I broke? Am I indebted to the goddamn Grums?”

 

“This is preliminary. We still have a lot of boxes to go through.” I went over all the financial records we’d found so far. Showed how I’d set it up on a spread sheet on the computer. I increased the font size and then printed it out when she didn’t seem to understand. By printing it out, she could hold it in her hand. This seemed to help her.

 

I asked her the same questions I’d asked Scott earlier. “Where did he get the deposits to his accounts if he had such lousy jobs?”

 

I showed her the bank statements.

 

“I don’t know.”

 

“If they were electronically deposited, there’d have been records. If he was depositing them with cash, why and where was he dealing in that much currency?”

 

“I never saw that much cash.”

 

I found her lack of knowledge appalling, but I kept my mouth shut.

 

When we finished she said, “I’m not broke?”

 

“Far from it.”

 

“I get the house?”

 

“For sure.”

 

“And I can get money? Yes, I know you told me this stuff, Tom, but I’m just saying it again to reassure myself. I’m going to have to learn so much. And taxes are due next week.”

 

“He’s got an accountant listed here. Or if you want a different one, you can probably find one who could file an extension. You could call the one Scott and I use or find one locally. If you want, I can call ours and make an introduction, get you started.”

 

“Yes, please do.”

 

She slumped against the back of the chair, sighed, and said, “Thank you. Thank you. I could never have done this financial stuff.”

 

I said, “Scott helped.” I didn’t say, sure you could have, you’re tough, you’re smart, sometimes you just have to deal with crap.

 

“He’s a dear. You have such a good marriage.”

 

“You never complained about Edgar.”

 

“I did the best I could.”

 

I let it drop. “Among the stuff we found were books on building guns. Did he go about armed?”

 

“As far as I know, he only carried a weapon when he went hunting although he loved the new concealed weapon law here in the state.”

 

TWENTY-THREE

 

Wednesday 5:15 P.M.

 

The rest of the afternoon was a swirl of activity. No cops and none of the major Grum players put in an appearance. Maybe the funeral home fracas had stopped them. Friends of Veronica’s and relatives of ours appeared along with minor politicians of all sorts, Republicans and Democrats, state reps, state senators, county board members, library board members. Many of them seemed to expect Charles and/or Beulah Grum to be present. Many said, be sure to convey our condolences to the Grums. I hope most of them were sincere. I hoped my cynical interpretation of their presence was untrue, “make sure the Grums know I was here to get my suck-up points.”

 

About six I wandered into the kitchen. Someone had ordered buckets of chicken from a local place, and these were set out with the tons of stuff that had been brought in during the day. Scott and the kids were not in evidence. Around sunset I went to look for them.

 

TWENTY-FOUR

 

Wednesday 7:00 P.M.

 

I found Scott and the kids in the backyard. Floodlights illumined the darkening scene. Clutching a tattered stuffed panda, Patricia sat on a swing. Her brother Gerald gently pushed her. I saw David, the oldest, swoop to the top of the skate board ramp, twist, and swoop back down. Then Scott swooped upward and did a flip and landed smoothly. Scott and David wore helmets, knee pads, and elbow pads.

 

I walked to the edge of the mini-skateboard park. It looked sort of like a swimming pool but with more curved sides and extensions of curving cement above ground as well.

 

David had a look of intense concentration. Scott was trying to explain a trick to David and suggesting he take several smaller steps first in learning to do what Scott just did.

 

I was going to suggest that if Scott’s doctor knew what he was doing, or if the team knew how many clauses in his contract he’d just violated, he’d be in huge trouble. He wasn’t that far removed from his surgery, and he was certainly risking doing harm to his rehab, or reinjuring himself.

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