Read George, Anne Online

Authors: Murder Runs in the Family: A Southern Sisters Mystery

Tags: #Crime & mystery, #Genealogists, #Mary Alice (Fictitious character), #Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Crime & Thriller, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Contemporary Women, #Women detectives - Alabama, #Mystery fiction, #Sisters, #Large type books, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective - General, #Women detectives, #Patricia Anne (Fictitious character), #Mystery & Detective - Series, #Alabama, #Detective, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #General, #Suspense

George, Anne (15 page)

BOOK: George, Anne
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Emily went back to her
Bride
magazine, and I followed Cassie across the room.

"Are the records all on computers?" I asked anxiously.

"Some of them. But there are also copies of the originals.
you
don't have to know how to use a computer. It helps, though." She nodded toward a woman studying a computer screen. "Just about all the professionals use them now. There are some excellent programs available."

That reminded me of Meg. "Did you know Meg Bryan?" I asked.

"Sure. I knew Meg real well. Terrific genealogist. Was she a friend of yours?"

"She was up here for my niece's wedding when she died."

"That was really a shock, wasn't it? I never thought of Meg as suicidal." Cassie Murphy turned left and pointed toward some shelves. "Here are Montgomery's census records, birth and death records, and land transactions. The dates are on the side, and they're in chronological order. My recommendation would be to start with the census records. They're easy and tell you exactly when the family members first arrived there. You can narrow down the birth and death dates that way, too. Hollowell isn't a common name, so you shouldn't have too much trouble. What was your husband's mother's maiden name?"

"Haley. My daughter's named for her." · "That should be a fairly easy one, too." Cassie took down a book of census records dated 1900. "Let's see what we find here."

I followed her out to a table, where she opened the book. "You know," I said, "seeing you as a librarian is just wonderful. You always did love books."

"Oh, I don't work here. I'm a professional genealogist. I'm here doing some research, and saw you when you came in." She smiled. "I started out in computers, but got sidetracked onto genealogy. It's a wide-open field. Interesting."

"Meg Bryan said it was a dog-eat-dog business."

"It can be." She ran her finger down the index. "Here," she said. "Here's a Noah Hollowell. Your husband's grandfather?"

"Yes." I looked where Cassie was pointing.

"Okay," she said. "Get out your pencil and paper. You've started."

Three hours later when I quit for the day, my aching shoulders told me the advantage of working on the computers. Or even the microfiche disks. Lifting those heavy records was hard work. But I had the marriage date of Fred's grandparents, when they had bought the house that still stood on West Jeff Davis Avenue in Montgomery, knew that they had paid $1400 for it. I also had the birth dates of their children and the death date of a son who lived to be eighteen months old.

If my shoulders hadn't been hurting, I don't think I would have quit when I did. One piece of information made you want another. Sister and I had discovered that fact when we happened on the Tree family while we were waiting for Meg at the downtown library. And today's research was even more interesting. My children carried these genes. They would be intertwined with mine from now on.

Awesome thought. I pushed back my chair, stretched, rubbed my shoulders, and started out. At the first table, I noticed a familiar figure poring over a book: Camille Atchison, the blonde who had called Meg a bitch at the wedding reception. Maybe now that Meg was gone, she could find a way to circumvent the bad-apple ancestor who was causing her problems.

Mrs Hollowell? I hope you found some useful information." Cassie Murphy was standing at the front desk, elegant, cool in her green dress, talking to bride-to-be Emily.

"I did. Thank-you, Cassie. And it was wonderful seeing you."

"It was nice seeing you, too. And if you really get interested in doing research and need some help, I'd be happy to help you. Here, here's my card."

"Thanks. I could get hooked," I admitted. I was halfway to my car before I looked at the card.
cassie murphy,
it read,
the family tree,
with an address on Eighteenth Street and two phone numbers. I'll be damned, I thought. Cassie worked with Georgiana Peach.

There was a message from Haley on my telephone when I got home. She and Philip were coming for supper and bringing Chinese. If it wasn't all right, call her.

I had no problem with that. I wanted to see more of this man who, obviously, was seeing a lot of our daughter.

There was also a message from Mary Alice asking me to call her.

"I thought you were mad at me," I said when she answered.

"I am. That has nothing to do with this. I think I found some of Meg's backup disks."

"You did? Where?"

"In the glove compartment of my car. Isn't that strange?"

"You're sure they're Meg's?"

"How would I know, Mouse? I just know they're computer disks and they sure aren't mine."

"But why would she put them in your glove compartment?"

"Hell, Patricia Anne. All I know is I needed a Kleenex and figured there were some in the glove compartment. When I opened it, three little blue disks fell out that say Sony Micro floppy disk Double-sided. Okay? And I don't believe the disk fairy left them there."

"You don't have to be so smart aleck." I thought for a minute. "That really is weird, isn't it? Leaving them in your glove compartment. Reckon why she did that?"

"So we would find them?"

"I guess so." Somewhere in the back of my mind, faint alarm bells were sounding. "Are you by yourself?"

"Sure. Why?"

"Because those disks could be important. They could be the reason Meg was killed. Why don't you call Bo Mitchell and tell her about them?"

"Lord, Patricia Anne, you're such an alarmist. I'm not about to call the police to come get these disks. I would like to know what's on them, though." Mary Alice paused. "Probably just a bunch of that genealogy stuff we couldn't make heads or tails of." Mary Alice paused again. "We have got to become computer literate, you know it? We could take those classes at Jeff State for old people. Don't cost a dime. We could sign up for the summer right now, and by the fall we could be on-line. You know? Getting e-mail."

While she was rattling, I was thinking. "Listen," I said, "I've got an idea. Haley is coming over tonight and bringing Philip Nachman. She said he worked on some family history and used a computer. Maybe he could help us."

"What are you having for supper?"

"They're bringing Chinese. Let me check and see if it's okay with Haley if we ask him to bring his computer. She might have other plans for after supper. I'll call you back." I started to hang up. "Sister?"

"What?"

"Don't let anybody know you have those disks."

"Good Lord, Mouse!"

"I mean it!"

"Okay! And tell Haley I want almond chicken."

I hung up and called Haley. She answered on the first ring, and I explained to her about the disks.

"Sure, Mama," she said. "I'm sure he'd like to help. Let me check, though."

In a moment she called back. "He said fine. Are the disks IBM or Apple?"

"They're Sony." I was pleased that I had remembered this bit of information.

"I mean what kind of computer were they formatted for?"

"It makes a difference?"

"I'll tell Philip you don't know. I think he works mainly on a Macintosh. My little one here is an IBM. We'll bring both of them."

I thanked her and hung up. Sister was right. We were going to have to become computer literate.

Woofer was waiting for me. I put several dog treats in my pocket and went to take him for his walk. As we got back, Fred was pulling into the driveway. I could tell by the grin on his face that he had good news.

"The Atlanta girls came through with a great order," he announced, patting Woofer and leaning over to kiss me. "They said, Top, this is because you're cute as a button. Tell your wife we think so.' "

"They did not." I kissed him back happily. "But I'm sure they thought it."

He reached back into the car and brought out a box of Godiva chocolates.
"Pour vous."

"Chocolates! And French with a South Alabama accent! I can't resist."

"I know. Put your canine up, woman. I'll be waiting."

And I did. And he was.

.We were the picture of decorum, though, by the time Haley and Philip arrived.

"Mama!" Haley called down the hall. "We're here."

"Come on back." I was setting the table in the breakfast nook, and Fred was outside filling up the bird feeders.

They came into the kitchen, preceded by the wonderful smell of Chinese takeout from the large sack Haley was carrying.

"Hello, Mrs. Hollowell." Philip Nachman held a notebook computer in each hand.

"Hello, Philip. Why don't you just put those on the coffee table in the den?"

"Sure."

Philip had on khaki pants and a navy and khaki striped knit shirt. The casual clothes made him look younger than he had at the wedding. But there was more salt in his hair than pepper, and the knit shirt showed the beginnings of a belly.

Haley put the sack of food on the kitchen counter, tapped on the window, and waved to her father. She was wearing a red jumpsuit that made her waist look incredibly tiny.

"There's beer and wine in the refrigerator," I said.

"Philip? You want a beer?" she called.

"That would be great."

"There's wine if you'd rather."

"Beer."

Haley reached into the cabinet, got a couple of glasses, and poured two beers. I watched her in amazement. This was my daughter who, despite my protests, has drunk from a can all her life. She put pretzels onto a plate (God forbid that Philip eat out of a bag!), put the glasses and plate on a tray, and carried them into the den.

Fred came in the back door, reached in the refrigerator, and got a can of beer. I handed him a glass. "Don't ask," I said.

Philip and Haley were sitting close together on the sofa. Philip jumped up and shook Fred's hand.

"Hear you're an ENT," Fred exclaimed jovially.

"That's right."

"And his office hours are over at 5:00," Haley gave her father a warning look.

"Of course they are, sweetheart." Fred beamed at Philip. "Have a seat, Dr. Nachman."

The back door banged. "I'm here!" Mary Alice called. "Do I have to go back outside and knock?"

"Of course not, Mary Alice." The good day at the office, the greeting when he got home, and Haley's ENT were doing wonders for Fred's disposition. "Come on in."

"Hello, Aunt Sister," both Haley and Philip said as Mary Alice came into the den. The greeting coming from both of them startled me though, of course, Philip would call her "aunt." After all, she had been married to his uncle. I tried to remember how long Sister and Uncle Philip had been married. Ten years?

And wasn't he the one who had the heart attack and dropped dead in the shower? Or was it one of the others? No, it was Philip, because Sister had said he was the neatest man in the world. Right to the end.

I eyed Philip the Second, twenty years Haley's senior with the beginning of a potbelly. Heart problems are genetic.

"Hello, dear children," Mary Alice said, kissing the air toward both Haley and Philip, and handing Philip three blue plastic disks.

"What are those?" Fred said.

"Computer disks that belonged to Meg Bryan, I think," Mary Alice explained. "They were in my glove compartment. Philip's going to read them."

"If I can," he said. He turned to Haley, "They're IBM. We'll have to use your computer."

"I thought you weren't going to get involved in this," Fred said to me.

"She's not." Mary Alice sat down on the sofa beside Philip. "I'm just curious about what's on these disks."

"Well, do you want to eat first, or look at the disks?" I asked.

"This won't take but a minute," Philip said. He handed Haley his beer and moved the plate of pretzels toward Mary Alice, who promptly took a handful. He pulled one of the small computers toward him, reached to the back, and turned it on. The machine groaned and grunted.

"What's wrong?" I asked.

"Nothing. I'm just waiting on the 'A' prompt." In a moment, he slipped a blue disk into the side of the computer and typed something.

"What are you doing?" Sister asked.

"Just typing 'Directory.' Hmmm."

"What?" Sister asked. Both she and Haley were sitting on the edge of the sofa and eying the screen. I moved around so I could see.

"There are eight files listed. But the disk is almost used up." Philip pointed to the screen, which looked impressive. "There's the auto exec file, and another file named 'Genie' that's a big one."

"She told me she was writing a genealogy program," I said.

"Then this is probably the main program, the one she was writing." Philip ran his hand through his still-abundant hair. "Let's see. There are a couple of ways to do this, but I'm going to do a soft boot and see what happens."

Soft boot. Sister and I nodded as if we knew what he was doing. Philip hit some keys, and a totally new display came up on the screen. "Wow, look at this, y'all. Nice graphics.

BOOK: George, Anne
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