Read The Darling Dahlias and the Confederate Rose Online
Authors: Susan Wittig Albert
Ruthie shot. And it was a doozey.
The trouble was, Ruthie’s bombshell was all story. And while the story was full of intriguing surprises and fascinating speculations, it suffered from a distinct shortage of facts.
And for the life of him, Charlie couldn’t think of a way to confirm what Ruthie was telling him.
* * *
A half hour later, still thinking about the bombshell Ruthie Brant had dropped in his lap, Charlie put his Panama hat on his head, shrugged into his suit jacket, and locked up the
Dispatch
office. Then he headed over to the Darling library, which was located on the west side of the courthouse square, at the back of Fannie Champaign’s milliner’s shop, Champaign’s Darling Chapeaux. The little library had its own separate entrance, so that patrons did not have to go through the millinery shop, a fact for which Charlie was grateful. He was in no mood to see Fannie Champaign today, or any other day, for that matter.
Not that Fannie had ever actually said no when he asked her to go to a movie or out to dinner. She just hadn’t said anything, which in Charlie’s mind—well, in anybody’s mind—was as good as a no. He had met plenty of stubborn women in his time, but Fannie was the stubbornest by far, with an independent streak a mile wide and two miles deep. He had come to the conclusion that he wasn’t going to get anywhere with her, and he knew it.
So he walked quickly around the building to the back, to the door with the painted sign announcing that he had arrived at the Darling Library (
QUIET PLEASE
). He opened the door and went in.
The library’s small front room contained the librarian’s desk, a rack of narrow wooden drawers that held index cards with the titles and call numbers of every book, and a small table and chair where you could sit and read in front of the window. The desk was occupied by Miss Dorothy Rogers, who was about as stiff an old spinster as Charlie had ever encountered. He’d had one or two run-ins with her about overdue books. The last time, he’d had to pay a sixty-cent fine, which (in his opinion) was more than the book—
The Economic Consequences of the Peace
by John Maynard Keynes—was worth. It had been a good book, but
sixty cents
? He felt sure that Keynes would agree with him.
Miss Rogers looked up. “Oh, Mr. Dickens,” she said, in a sprightlier tone than he had expected. “How nice to see you. What may we help you with today?” She wore, Charlie thought, an oddly hopeful expression and he wondered briefly, with more than a touch of condescension, what she was hoping for.
Hoping to keep her job, he thought then, and his condescension disappeared with a jolt. Miss Rogers struck him as the kind of woman who lived for her part-time job at the little library. But he knew from his attendance at the town council meetings that there wasn’t likely to be a library much longer. City revenues were down all over Alabama, and the libraries were among the first victims to fall to the budget-cutting ax. It was a damned shame, but that’s how things were these days. Unless some sugar daddy came along and bailed them out, Miss Rogers and the library were about to come to the end of the road, at least until the economy turned around. And Charlie hadn’t seen any sugar daddies loitering around outside.
“Thanks,” Charlie said in reply to her question. “I’m not looking for anything special.” He didn’t want to be bothered by a fidgety old lady fussing around, trying to show him this or that just to prove that she was earning her pittance of a salary. “I’ll just browse through the books, if that’s okay.”
She nodded, trying not to look disappointed, and Charlie went into the other, larger room, where floor-to-ceiling bookshelves covered all four walls, with two rows of back-to-back waist-high shelves down the middle. Until last year, the council had always set aside a few dollars for new book purchases. That wasn’t happening this year, but the Ladies Club and the Dahlias’ garden club had got together and raised some money with an auction and variety show. (Charlie didn’t have much use for ladies’ clubs, but occasionally they did something he approved of. Raising money for library books was one of them.)
Miss Rogers had put the money to good use. She had bought
The Sound and the Fury
by William Faulkner (which Charlie had tried to read but got exasperated after the first dozen pages and gave it up);
A Farewell to Arms
by Ernest Hemingway (an easier novel that Charlie had checked out more than once); and
Look Homeward Angel
by Thomas Wolfe, who wrote in something called a stream-of-consciousness style that made Charlie dizzy. If you had a story to tell, just by golly tell the damn thing, he thought, with the impatience of the born newspaperman, and stop meandering around. The other books Miss Rogers had bought were more to Charlie’s liking—a mystery by a novice writer named Ellery Queen,
The Maltese Falcon
by Dashiell Hammett, and a new S. S. Van Dine. It appeared that Miss Rogers was as fond of a good mystery as any of the Darlingians who frequented the little library.
But it wasn’t the newer titles that interested Charlie, not today, anyway. Several years before, Miss Rogers had reshelved all the books according to the Dewey Decimal System. The history books were all in the nine hundreds, so that’s where he started browsing. There were titles on Roman history, British history, and American history. And, yes, as he had expected, there was nearly a full shelf of Civil War history, including a leather-bound copy of a book called
My Imprisonment and the First Year of Abolition Rule at Washington
by R. O’Neale Greenhow, published in London in 1863; a collection of newspaper clippings pasted into a flimsy scrapbook; and a history of Civil War battles written by an obscure Confederate officer. He carried all three books to the desk, expecting that Miss Rogers would object to his taking the scrapbook, which looked as if it might disintegrate when the pages were turned.
But she only gave his gatherings a puzzled look, cautioned him to be
very
careful not to lose any pages of the scrapbook, and wrote his name and the due date on the white cards in the front of the books, then filed them in the tin box on the corner of her desk.
“Two weeks,” she said, handing them back to him and adding, with an enigmatic significance, “I hope you’ll find what you’re looking for, Mr. Dickens.”
Charlie was still trying to figure out what that was supposed to mean as he walked around the building and nearly stumbled over Miss Fannie Champaign, who was kneeling in the path, tending a flower bed. She was wearing a pale green straw garden hat decorated with green silk roses. Beside her was a basket half filled with weeds.
She straightened up and looked at him, and he was struck once again by how pretty she was. Not beautiful, no, not that, but pretty in a comfortable sort of way, with the look of a woman who was at home with who she was and how she had got there. Miss Champaign had come to Darling some two or three years before. Many Darlingians had been deeply curious about her, especially since she was a single woman with no visible means of support and no friends and relations to welcome her to town. People were too polite to ask, but the questions were on everyone’s mind, for she was something of a mystery. Where did she get her money? Why had she come to Darling? Charlie had heard that she had been engaged once, when she was much younger, and that her work as a milliner often took her to Mobile and beyond, where she sold her hats to wealthy customers in fancy shops. More than that, he didn’t know, although of course he was as curious as anybody else.
But then she had opened her hat shop and the Darling ladies fell in love with her romantic creations—floppy-brimmed hats with meringue puffs of ribbon-laced tulle and gardens of silk blossoms. Miss Champaign’s hats were very like those worn by Southern ladies before the War Between the States and very
unlike
the smart, sleek, head-hugging felt cloches that were all the rage just now, and everybody loved them—even the Darling men, who (truth be told) didn’t like those snug felt helmets much, anyway. Charlie agreed. A lady’s hat should make her look like a lady, not like a German artillery officer.
He managed to stop before he actually stepped on her. “Good afternoon, Miss Champaign,” he said, and removed his Panama hat.
She looked back down and pulled a handful of weeds. “Good afternoon, Mr. Dickens,” she said. And that was all.
He took three careful steps around her, then paused, wondering if, after all, it might be worth trying again. Probably not. And if she said no again, it would be the last time. The very last time.
He cleared his throat. “I was thinking of having dinner at the hotel this evening,” he said, although he hadn’t been thinking anything of the sort. “Perhaps you might join me?”
She pulled another batch of weeds. The sunlight glinted on her russet hair. “No, thank you,” she said, and he thought he heard a hint of something like regret in her voice. Just a hint, but enough (despite his resolution) to embolden him.
“Tomorrow, then,” he said, and thought about the Old Alabama’s menus, which were the same for every week. “Tuesday night is chicken night, as I remember. Baked with dressing.”
“I don’t believe so, Mr. Dickens, but thank you for the invitation.”
“You’re welcome,” Charlie said with resignation, and put his hat back on his head. He paused, and then said outright what was in his mind. “Miss Champaign, is there a ghost of a chance you will ever say yes to me—about anything?”
She seemed startled by that but paused to consider for a moment, still holding her handful of weeds. “I don’t know that I can answer that, Mr. Dickens. I suppose it would all depend.”
He leaned forward, watching her. “Depend on what?”
“I have no idea,” she said, and tossed the weeds into her basket.
With a sigh, Charlie walked back to the newspaper office, where he sat down at his desk and began to turn the pages in the old scrapbook, which proved to be clippings from the Richmond, Virginia,
Daily Dispatch
of the early-to-mid-1860s. At the time, Richmond was the capital of the Confederacy, of course. That’s what he was doing when Lizzy walked past the window without seeing him, on her way home from work.
* * *
Back in the library, Miss Rogers took out the cards she had just filed and studied them. When Bessie Bloodworth had returned from the
Dispatch
office that morning, she had reported that Mr. Dickens seemed to have some interest in the transcription of the symbols and numbers and had promised to look into the matter. When he had come into the library a little while before, Miss Rogers had felt a bright flare of hope, thinking that perhaps he had come to pursue his research into the secret code, if that’s what it was. Miss Bloodworth said that she hadn’t mentioned her name to him, so Mr. Dickens could have absolutely no idea that she was the owner of the embroidered pillow.
She put the three cards on the desk and studied them. She knew the books he had taken, of course. She was intimately acquainted with all the books in her little library and felt toward them as she would have felt toward her children, if she’d had any. She had cataloged each one of them, dusted them daily, and had read a great many (even those that she felt were undeserving, for she hated for any book to feel neglected).
She could tell you where the books had come from, too, for she included that information on their cards.
My Imprisonment
and the scrapbook of clippings had been the gift of a lady from Richmond, Virginia, who had lived out her last years with her Darling daughter. The history of Civil War battles was written by a Confederate captain named Adam Warren and had come from the collection of the founder of the Darling Academy, a nephew of the author. None of the three books, as far as Miss Rogers could see, had anything remotely to do with the transcription of symbols on her grandmother’s pillow. Mr. Dickens must have been exploring some other research topic when he borrowed them.
With a feeling of deep disappointment, she put the three white cards back in the tin box and closed the lid, sighing heavily as she put the box in the drawer. It was time to resign herself to the bitter truth. The mystery of her grandmother’s embroidered pillow—what it meant and why it was made—would never be solved.
Myra May’s large green 1920 Chevrolet touring car, aka Big Bertha, was parked in the ramshackle garage behind the diner. With twenty-five thousand miles under her wheels, Bertha was on her fifth set of tires and her second carburetor and she had a bad case of the rattles. But her green canvas top was still in one piece, the red painted spokes in her wheels were still bright, and she could purr like a kitten when she was feeling good. Lizzy had borrowed the car before, so she felt comfortable driving it. And the way things turned out, she was glad that she hadn’t asked Grady if she could take his Ford. She ended up making two trips out to the Murphy place that evening, one by herself and the other with Coretta Cole. And then there was that midnight adventure at the courthouse. Grady would never have understood.
Lizzy made the first trip right after Coretta left her house. She ate a quick sandwich, then hurried to the diner, got Bertha’s key from Myra May, and drove the four miles out to the Murphys’ place to discuss Coretta’s offer with Verna. As she had expected, it was a hard sell.
At first, Verna refused to even consider talking to Coretta. But at last she threw up her hands and said, “Well, it’s for damn sure that we’re not going to get anywhere the way things stand. I’m stuck out here, without a key to the office and no access to any of the records. So I guess I’m willing to listen to what Coretta has to say, if you think I should. But I don’t want her to know where I am—just in case she’s a double agent.”
“A double agent?” Lizzy asked, mystified.
“A spy who says she’s working for one side but is secretly working for the other,” Verna said. She grinned. “Really, Liz, you should broaden your horizons. Try
The Thirty-Nine Steps.
It’s a great spy novel.”
“But how are you going to talk to Coretta if you don’t want her to know where you are?” Lizzy asked reasonably. “You can’t talk on the phone, it’s a party line. And if I bring her out here—well, she’ll know where you are.”
Verna waved her hand airily. “I’m sure you’ll come up with something, Liz. Use your imagination. I’ll talk to her. But it’s my way or no way.”
It took some thinking, but Lizzy had come up with a solution. By eight fifteen, when the sun had set and the April night had fallen like a dark, sweet-smelling cloak over the streets and houses of Darling, it was time to get started.
Big Bertha made such a clattering racket that Coretta Cole heard the car coming a block away and didn’t wait for Lizzy to squeeze the
ooga-ooga
horn when she pulled up in front of the house. Wearing a dark brown sweater over a print dress, her handbag on her arm, Coretta hurried down her front steps and climbed into the front seat beside Lizzy.
“Here I am,” she announced, adding expectantly, “Where are we going?”
“You have the auditor’s report with you?” Lizzy countered. “Verna asked me to be sure.”
“It’s right here.” Coretta reached into her bag and produced the envelope. Lizzy took Myra May’s flashlight out from under her seat, checked to see if all three pages were there, then handed it back.
“Good enough,” she said. “Now, hold still.” She whipped out a large red-and-blue-striped bandana. “I’m going to tie this over your eyes.”
“A blindfold?” Coretta squawked, holding up her hands. “I don’t want to wear that thing! It’s ridiculous!”
“You don’t have any choice, Coretta,” Lizzy said firmly. “You are wearing this, or you’re going right back into your house and I’m heading home. Which is just fine with me. It’s been a long day. I’d just as soon have the evening to myself.”
“You don’t want me to know where Verna is staying,” Coretta accused, pouting. “You don’t trust me to keep it secret.”
“How did you guess?” Lizzy asked grimly. “Now, turn around.”
Awkwardly, still protesting, Coretta turned in the seat. Lizzy folded the bandana over Coretta’s eyes and knotted it securely in the back.
“At least it’s dark and none of the neighbors can see me,” Coretta grumbled, scrunching down in the seat. “I must look like an idiot.”
“You look like somebody who’s about to embark on a dangerous spy mission,” Lizzy said with a laugh. Then she put Big Bertha into gear and they chugged off down the street.
The Murphy place was about four miles outside of town, heading south. Earlier, Lizzy had taken the quickest way, straight out Jericho Road. But that wasn’t the route she took now. She drove out to the north side of town, weaving from one street to another, until she got to Sherman’s sawmill. The freshly sawn pine boards had a distinctive odor, and somebody was running the sawmill, getting out a big order of sawn boards. If Coretta had a lick of sense, she would recognize the smell and the sound and think that they were heading for a destination north of town.
They weren’t. Lizzy circled around and drove back into Darling, making a right turn onto Franklin, past the courthouse, then turning left on Rosemont. By that time, she figured that Coretta must be thoroughly confused, so she took the next right and headed south on Briarwood Road, past the Dance Barn, until she got to Jericho Road. When they reached the Murphys’ place, Lizzy brought Bertha to a stop and turned off the motor. She climbed out and opened the passenger door.
“Can I take this off now?” Coretta asked plaintively, reaching for the blindfold.
“Nope,” Lizzy said, and escorted Coretta up the dirt path to the porch. The old frame house was unpainted and needed some repairs, but after Lucy joined the Dahlias, each member of the club had given her several plants and volunteered to help fix up the yard, badly neglected since the death of Ralph Murphy’s first wife. The weeds had been replaced by a row of rosebushes in front of the porch, some azaleas, and even a few camellias. They had planted gladiolas along the fence and fancy-leaved caladiums and gloriosa lilies under the big trees. Out back, Lucy planted a large vegetable garden, and behind that, she and Ralph had put in an orchard of young green peach trees. Lucy hoped to make a little extra money by selling peaches at the market.
When Lucy answered Lizzy’s knock at the door, Lizzy held her finger to her lips. Lucy stepped back with a conspiratorial nod, a scruffy gray tabby cat winding himself around her ankles. Lizzy was sure that Coretta had never met Lucy and wouldn’t recognize her voice, but there was no point in taking that risk. She led the blindfolded woman inside.
In the front bedroom, Verna was sitting cross-legged on the bed, reading a book. She looked up. “Well, Coretta,” she said pleasantly. “Did you and Lizzy have a nice ride out here?”
“It was a long way,” Coretta said in a complaining tone. “This place must be ten or twelve miles out in the country.” She reached for the blindfold again. “Can I take this off now?”
“Uh-uh,” Lizzy said. “We’ll just leave it on. You don’t need to see Verna to talk to her.” She steered Coretta to a rocking chair near the bed, then opened Coretta’s handbag and took out the manila envelope. “Here, Verna. Take a look at this. Coretta says it’s the auditor’s report.”
Verna spread the pages out on the quilt and spent several long moments looking at them.
“Mmm,” she said, half under her breath. “Fifteen thousand in the red. My, my.” She looked again at the figures, turned a page, and then another. “I think I’m seeing a pattern,” she said after a little while. “And it’s giving me an idea of where else I might look—if I can sit down for an hour or two with a couple of the office ledgers.” She glanced at Coretta, who was sitting stiffly in the rocking chair, her lower lip pushed out like a pouty child. “Liz told me your idea, Coretta. But are you really sure you want to get involved in this? It could be risky.”
“I don’t mind taking a few risks,” Coretta said, almost defiantly. “I just don’t think it’s right that the blame is being pinned on you.”
There was a jagged edge to Verna’s laugh. “I guess it’s dangerous to have money in the bank.” She looked at Lizzy. “Want to know where I got the ten thousand dollars that’s in my account at the Savings and Trust, Liz?”
“If you want to tell,” Lizzy replied quietly, knowing that Verna always kept her private business to herself.
“My aunt Mildred died and left a piece of property to me—an orange grove in Florida. That was six or seven years ago, after the Florida real estate bubble burst. Back then, you couldn’t unload Florida property if you paid somebody to take it off your hands. As far as I knew, it wasn’t worth a plugged nickel.” She tilted her head. “But to my surprise, a buyer came along a few months ago and offered me ten thousand dollars. I sold the orange grove and put the money in the bank.”
“Ah,” Lizzy said, and smiled. “I’m sure you can prove that to the sheriff, when he asks. And to Mr. Scroggins. So maybe we don’t need to worry about you getting arrested. We can all go home and—”
“Proving it might be a little difficult,” Verna broke in. Her face was dark. “The deed was lost years ago, and I had to get Aunt Mildred’s lawyer to research the title before the sale went through. I don’t have all the paperwork yet. Anyway, even if I could prove it, they would suspect me as long as they feel like it.” Her voice was determined. “I have to find out what happened to that missing money.”
“But maybe you don’t have to do that now,” Lizzy said. “Tonight, I mean.”
“You’re wrong, Liz.” Verna shook her head emphatically. “I didn’t take that money. But somebody needs a fall guy, and I’m convenient. Until the real thief is found, I’ll always be a suspect in some people’s minds. And in the meantime, I’m out of a job—and my bank account is likely to be frozen.” She turned to Coretta. “Coretta, I’m sorry to disappoint you, but we don’t really need a spy. What we need is for you to go to Musgroves and get a copy of that new key. Then—”
“Actually, I did that already,” Coretta said, sounding smug.
“You did?” Verna asked, surprised. “Why?”
Below the bandana, Coretta’s mouth turned down. “Well, to be honest, I’ve been known to lose a key every now and then. So I thought it would be a good idea to have a spare. I don’t intend to let Mr. Scroggins know I copied it. But I don’t mind telling you, Verna. In fact, I don’t mind showing you.” She groped around blindly. “Where’s my handbag, Liz?”
Lizzy handed her the bag and Coretta felt inside. Finding a key, she held it up. “This is what you’re asking for?”
“You bet!” Verna jumped off the bed and snatched the key. She sat back again, the bedsprings creaking. “Liz, on second thought, let’s take that blindfold off. It must be uncomfortable for Coretta.”
“Oh, but I don’t think—” Lizzy began. She still wasn’t convinced that Coretta was on the level. But Verna gave her a meaningful look and she got the point. It was impossible to judge Coretta’s sincerity when her eyes were covered and they couldn’t see the expression on her face. She got up to do as Verna asked.
“Oh, thank you!” Coretta exclaimed, as Lizzy untied the knot and pulled the bandana off. She looked around, blinking against the light and rubbing her eyes with the back of her hand, smearing her mascara. “Whew! What a relief. That feels so much better.”
Verna leaned forward. “I want to thank you for the key, Coretta. It’s going to come in handy.”
“Oh, but I didn’t mean for you to
have
it,” Coretta protested, frowning. “I just meant to show it to you.” She held out her hand. “I’ll need to have it back. Mr. Scroggins made it very clear that I’m not supposed to—”
“No to that, Coretta.” Verna waved off her gesture and put the key under the pillow. “I’m keeping it. And this way, you see, you don’t have to be involved at all. I can go to the office at night by myself and—”
“But I
want
to be involved!” Coretta’s tone was earnest. “And I can help, too. You may want different ledgers. I know where they are and I can get them for you. I’ll save you time. I’ll be useful. You’ll see, Verna. I’ll be a
big
help.”
Lizzy felt a shiver of apprehension and her suspicions—which had never been entirely eased—ratcheted up another notch. Coretta certainly sounded sincere, but why was she so anxious to get involved in something that didn’t concern her? What if she really
was
a double agent? What if she was helping the sheriff or Mr. Scroggins set a trap?
Verna was silent for a moment, considering. Then she spoke. “Since you feel that way about it, Coretta, let’s do it tonight.”
“Tonight?” Coretta asked uncertainly.
“Verna,” Lizzy said, “I really don’t think—”
“Tonight.” Verna sat forward on the edge of the bed, her eyes intent. “Let’s get it over with—the sooner the better, don’t you think?”
“But I wasn’t expecting—That is, I didn’t plan to—” Coretta swallowed and looked away. “Actually, I promised Ted I wouldn’t be out late this evening. So if you don’t mind, I’d prefer to put it off. How about tomorrow night? That would really be better for me. Much, much better. I—” She stopped, looking from one of them to the other.
Lizzy thought there was a cornered look in her eyes, and with good reason. If Coretta was on the up-and-up, it shouldn’t matter to her when they did it. If she was a double agent (to use Verna’s term), she would want time to set the trap—that is, to notify whoever she was working for. Since they couldn’t be sure of Coretta’s loyalty, they ought not to give her that chance.