Authors: Stephen Birmingham
âNo,' Barbara said. âActually, Flora, something has happened. There's been an accident here.'
âAn accident?'
âYes. I ought to tell you this before you read it in the papers. My sister's husband was drowned last night.'
There was a long pause. Then Flora's voice cried, âOh my God, how awful!'
âSo you see that's why I must stay a few days longer. The funeral is to be on Wednesday.'
âOh my God, how awful!' Flora said. âHow awful!'
âYes. You have enough food in the house, don't you? Enough until Wednesday? I'll be home Wednesday night. If you need anything you can phoneâ'
âHow awful!'
âLester's. Have them deliverâ'
âHe was a
young
man, wasn't he? A young man?'
âYes.'
âOh,' Flora sobbed. âMy heart goes outâ'
âIt's all right, Floraâdon'tâ'
âMy heart goes outâ'
âThe boys are fine, aren't they?'
âOh, they're fine, Mrs. Greer. Want me to put them on the line?'
âNo,' she said quickly, âdon't bother, pleaseâ'
âHere's Dobie. Wants to talk to you.'
âNo, Iâ'
âHello? Hello?'
âYesâ'
âHello? Mummy?'
âYes, Dobie. How are you, darling?'
âAre you coming home, Mummy?'
âSoon, Dobie. Now good-bye. Now be a good boy. Good-byeâ'
Dobie said a few more words that she couldn't hear.
âYes, yes.'
She heard Flora's voice again saying, âOh, God bless you, Mrs. Greer! And God bless your poor sister. Oh, what you must be going through, Mrs. Greer. Oh, such an awful, awful thing!'
âYes, I'll see you Wednesday, Flora.'
âYes.'
âGood-bye. Good-bye.' She put down the telephone and sat for a while in the morning sunshine.
âMy name is Elizabeth Gage,' the woman said. âLiz Gage, from the Burketown
Evening Eagle
.' She stepped into the garden where Nancy Rafferty was sitting having a drinkâthe first of the day. Miss Gage smiled at Nancy and held out her hand. She was a small, slim womanâthirty-five, perhaps, or a little olderâand she wore a beige linen suit and beige shoes. She was hatless and wore her black hair pulled severely back from her face and tied at the nape of her neck with a black velvet ribbon. Her face was pale, smooth-skinned and oval, but not really pretty. Her deep black and closely spaced eyes were alert and questioning, as she looked at Nancy. âYou're notâ? Oh, no. You're not Mrs. Callahan, are you. I can tell from the description you're not.'
Nancy had not risen. âI'm just a friend of the family,' she said. âIs there anything I can do for you?'
âI'm sorry to intrude,' Miss Gage said. âMy paper sent me, and I'm rather afraid I sneaked in.'
âReally?' Nancy asked. âHow did you manage that?'
âI saw the police car at the foot of the roadâkeeping people away. I knew the cop wouldn't let me in, Press or no, so I parked my car about half a mile beyond and walked in cross-country. Look at my stockings.' She put one leg forward to show Nancy.
Nancy looked at her coldly. âNow, I suggest that you leave the same way you came,' Nancy said.
The woman gave her a brief, amused look. âOh, are you going to be that way? That's too bad. I'm not asking your pardon. I know I'm guilty. But a job is a job. My paper sent me here to get a story, so I came.' She smiled. âSomedayâwho knows?âyou, too, may have a job.'
âThe newspapers have the obituary.'
âI know. I'm here for a human interest story.'
âThere isn't any human interest here.'
The woman smiled, very slightly, again. âMaybe not,' she said. âBut I had to try, didn't I?'
âExcuse me. I'm going to call Mr. Woodcock.'
âGood. I'd like to meet him.'
âI'm going to call him and have him order you away.'
âGood. That'll give me a story!'
Nancy studied her. âWhat is it that you want?'
âFirst, I'd like to sit down. May I? I feel as if I've hiked up Mount Everest.'
Nancy said nothing.
âThanks.' The woman seated herself on one of the garden chairs, crossed her knees and leaned forward. âLet's be friends,' she said pleasantly. âTruly, I mean no harm. I'll ask a few brief questions, then I'll go.'
âAs I said, the newspapers have a full obituary,' Nancy said.
âBut there's always more, isn't there, to a person's life than what one can read in an obituary? Or don't you agree? I mean, suppose you read an obituary of someone you didn't know. How well would you
know
that person when you'd finished reading it? I don't mean to be mawkish, but there is, isn't there, always more?'
âYes, I suppose there is.'
âThat's all I want,' the woman said. âJust a few of those
more
things. The colour of his hair, for instance. His eyes. A few words to describe this house, here, for instance, where he lived, and the grounds. And the Woodcock family.'
âWhy do you need to know so much about poor Barney?'
Liz Gage shrugged. âFrankly, it isn't so much him as whom he was married to. The Woodcocks are pretty important in this town. This is a Woodcock story.'
âThe Woodcocks deserve a little privacy.'
âWhat's in that pitcher?'
âLemonade.'
âMight I have a glass, too? My throat is like leather.'
âActually,' Nancy said, âit's Tom Collinses. Iâwell, I added a little gin to some lemonade.'
âIs that what you're drinking?' Liz Gage smiled. âWell, you can't get outside of a whole pitcherful, can you? Give me just
half
a glass, then, would you?'
Nancy hesitated, then took a fresh glass from the tray and filled it, from the pitcher, exactly half full. She handed it to the other woman without a word.
Liz Gage sipped it. âI'll say it's got gin in it!' she said cheerfully. âThanks. How well did you know Mr. Callahan?'
âWho? Oh, Barney. Hardly at all.'
âYet you call him by his first name.'
âOnly because I've always heard him referred to as Barney.'
âI see,' said Liz Gage. âHow is his wife taking it?'
âPeggy is being very brave,' Nancy said.
âWell, that's the only way to be, isn't it? Poor girl. They'd been married just a short time.'
âTwo years.'
âWell, that's a short time. By the way. I don't believe you've told me your name.'
âMy name isâ' Nancy hesitated. âAre you taking all this down?'
Liz Gage smiled. âI never take notes,' she said. âA good reporter doesn't need to take notes.'
âI don't want my name mentioned. I had nothing to do with any of this. I'm only a friend of Peggy's sister. I just happened to be here.' Nancy reached for her glass and sipped from it.
âYou're a bundle of nerves,' Liz Gage said. âYour hand is trembling. Here, let me fill your glass for you.'
âNo thank you.'
âThey're really delicious Tom Collinses.'
âI had a frightful headache. I had to have something. It's been awful, worse than you can possibly know.' Nancy touched her forehead with her fingertips.
âThen have another. I'll buoy you up, Missâdid you tell me your name?'
âRafferty. Nancy Rafferty.'
Liz Gage rose and filled Nancy's glass.
âThank you,' Nancy said, and then, âI'm sorry to be like this.'
âI understand perfectly. Were you here when heâ?'
âWhen they found him? Yes. I mean no. I was here, yes, but I hid. I couldn't bear, you knowâto have to see.'
âOf course. But it's fortunate, you know, that the body was found quickly. In some drowning cases, it's taken days â¦'
âPlease. Don't talk about it.'
Liz Gage was silent for a moment. Then she said, âI'm new in Burketown. I've been here only two months. Frankly, before I came here, I'd never heard of the Woodcock family. I mean, truthfully, they aren't a widely known family outside their own little sphere. Of course the minute I came here I was aware of the nameâthe paper company, the library, all the rest.'
âThey're a wonderful family,' Nancy said.
âThey must be. This morning I spent some time going through our clipping file, looking for material on them. Believe it or not, there was very littleâonly one or two rather small items. Considering all the Woodcocks have done for this town, the money they've donated and the things they've supported, that's surprising, isn't it?'
âThey don't believe in making a splash.'
âThat's just what I was leading up to. In a way, it's typical of New England, isn't it? They do good deeds in secret, but the Lord rewards them openly, or however it goes.'
âYes.'
âI ran across one item, though. Oh, it was a number of years ago, and there was a little stir involving the Woodcocks. Someone was fired from the millâa Joseph B. Mountâand he accused Mrs. Callahan's grandfather of political discrimination or some such thing? Had you ever heard that story, Miss Rafferty?'
âNever. I'm sorry, but I don't know any of the family history.'
âI wonder if some of the other things I've heard are true. I heard, for instance, that in the old days the Woodcocks really ruled this town like feudal lords. That they owned and operated all the schools and only taught trades connected with paper manufacturing. That they owned horrible little row houses where the workmen lived and rented the houses to the workmen on the condition that no alcohol be drunk on the premises? Had you heard that story? And that the Woodcocks paid the workmen to spy on each other and report any drinking that occurred? I've also heard that the Woodcocks used to run a company store where they kept all the workmen in their debt. This was all before the turn of the century of course.'
âI don't know anything about that sort of thing,' Nancy said.
âIt was told to me as gospel,' Liz Gage said. âBut people do exaggerate.'
âYes.'
âHowever, considering the prominence of the family in this town, there must have been a lot of opposition to the daughter Peggy's marriage.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âWell, he's not, as we say, to the manner born.' She paused. âI mean,
was
not.'
âI don't know anything about his background.'
âIt doesn't matter. I've heard, actually, that there was oppositionâconsiderable of it, but rather tastefully expressedâin the true New England manner. He was a Catholic, for instance, which must have been a bitter pill for the Woodcocks to swallow.'
âLook,' Nancy said, âIâ'
âWhat was your impression of him? What was his single most memorable feature? Did he have a magnetic personality, as I've heard? For instance, from one of the secretaries at the mill, I hear that he had fantastic sex appeal.'
Nancy put her glass down. âLook,' she said. âLook hereâ'
âSorry. I guess that wasn't very nice.' Liz Gage smiled pleasantly. In a different tone she said, âWell, you've been very kind to talk to me. I don't suppose I could talk to Mrs. Callahan, could I?'
âNo. Peggy's lying down. She's exhausted.'
âOf course. She must be. I wonderâ'
âWhat?'
âI wonder if any of the other members of the family would talk to me.'
âI'm afraid everyone's too busy and upset.'
âI see. You mentioned a sister, didn't you, who's your friend?'
âYes, Mrs. Green.'
âIs she here?'
âYes.'
âAnd I couldn't possibly see her?'
âI'm afraid not, Miss Gage.'
âWell, I get A for effort anyway, don't I?' Liz Gage laughed lightly. âTell me about Mrs. Greer.'
âWhat about her?'
âWhat's she like? Is she pretty?'
âBarbara is my oldest friend. My dearest friend.'
âIs she older or younger than Mrs. Callahan?'
âA few years older than Peggyâ'
âI see. Where is her home?'
âIn Locustville, Pennsylvania.'
âOh, yes. Is she up here with her husband?'
âHer husband is in England on a business trip.'
âDo they have children?'
âTwo boys. Goodness, you ask a lot of questions.'
Liz Gage laughed again. âOf course.'
âIt must be fun to be a reporter.'
âIt is.'
âI wanted to be one once.'
Liz Gage smiled at her intently. âYou would have made a good one, dear.'
âWhy, thank you!' Nancy sipped her drink.
âTo get back to Mrs. Greerâdid she bring the children up here with her?'
âNo, they're home.'
âI wonder why she came?'
âWhat?'
âWhy did she come up here all alone?'
âTo visit her parents, of course. Why else?'
âBut doesn't, it seem strangeâ' Liz Gage looked across the terrace toward the house. âWell, it doesn't matter. I suppose she likes it up here.'
âShe does.'
âTell me,' Liz Gage said slowly, âwould you describe Mr. and Mrs. Callahan as having been a devoted couple?'
âI'm sure they were.'
âReally? What outward signs were thereâof their devotion? Of their love?'
âReally,' Nancy said, âI wish you wouldn't ask me questions like that. I don't know how to answer them, and besides I think they're in rather bad taste.'
âSorry,' Liz Gage said. Slowly she withdrew a package of cigarettes from her purse. She offered the pack to Nancy.
âNo thank you.'
She removed also a long, gold-stemmed cigarette holder. Deftly she screwed a cigarette into it, placed the holder between her teeth, and lighted the cigarette with a small gold lighter, âTell me just a bit about last night?' she said.