Monday, March 13
8:30 am
It was my first appointment of
the day. Okay, so it was my only
appointment of the day. Female private
investigators may have case after case in popular fiction, but in slow moving Ridgeboro,
Louisiana, where I’m the only female
private eye in town and the food section of the paper is as widely read as the
front page, things are different. If my
free-spirited grandmother didn’t allow me live in the garage apartment in back
of the Victorian house she and my straight-laced mother share, and if I didn’t
have my office in the rear of their antiques shop in the downstairs section of
said house, I’d be in big financial trouble.
As it is, my financial woes are only middling.
I suppose that at twenty-seven I
should be more independent, and I’m working on it. At night I go to school to earn my Master of
Arts in Counseling. I’d much rather
soothe than sleuth, but for the time being, I’m stuck with snooping.
Fortunately, I’ve never
married. I say fortunately because the men I’ve been with so far have all been
losers. I like to think it has nothing
to do with my personality. I’m a thin,
six-feet, four-inches tall, a challenge for a lot of men, a put-off for a lot
more.
My name is Rose Marie McDowell,
though I’m listed in the yellow pages as Tree McDowell, and that’s what most of
my friends and family call me. More on
that later.
Right on time, I hit the doorbell
of the yellow, period bungalow and waited.
A short, gray haired woman, late seventies, answered the door and invited
me inside, after first making an extensive eye search of the middle-class
neighborhood. I assumed this was Mildred
Bundric, the woman who called. She
didn’t introduce herself.
“This beautiful model is really
your daughter? And she’s missing?” I
asked the frightened old lady seated across from me as I glanced at the
magazine cover.
Maylynn Bundric stared back at me
from the glossy page of the fashion journal, lips slightly pouting, the better
to show off the latest lipstick color being touted that year by Alyce Martin
Cosmetics. The black hair was pulled
sleekly back in a way worn well by few women, the dark eyes fringed by double
thick lashes, a la Liz Taylor.
The magazine lay, along with its
sisters, on an imitation marble-topped coffee table in Mildred Bundric’s cozy
living room, the most recent dated seven years earlier. I gazed back at the face on the colorful page
and then at my own, reflected in the mirror over the couch. The reflection churned up a clabber of
discontent. In comparison with the woman
on the magazine cover, I didn’t fare too well.
Tree, I said to myself, you should go home tonight and put a rinse on
that mousy blonde hair of yours. But
this Maylynn Bundric would be a hard act for any woman to follow, especially a
woman like me with not much going for her but a clever face. Still, as the only female private detective
in town, I don’t have to be model perfect in looks, and my height can be an
advantage. Or a hindrance, depending on
how one views the ability to intimidate.
“Yes. I guess it is hard to ‘magine me havin’ a daughter as pretty as Maylynn.”
“No. It’s just strange to think of someone from
Ridgeboro being on the cover of Le Beau Monde.” But she was
right. It was hard to imagine this frail, dumpy woman, face like a lump of
unbaked cookie dough, having an offspring that gorgeous.
“S’cuse me a minute,” she said
and tottered down the hall toward the bowels of the small house. I could hear water running. I took advantage of her absence to unfold
myself from the butt-sprung chair and take a closer look at a series of
pictures I’d noticed on the paint worn, lace skirted mantel. The beautiful brunette from the magazine
pages was no less attractive in these amateur photographs. Most were of the model with Mrs. Bundric and
a wasted older man. There were also
photos of a dark-haired, smiling youngster with a middle-aged couple - Maylynn
as a child with her parents, I assumed.
The man looked wasted even then.
When I heard the toilet flush in
the back of the house, I turned self-consciously away from my snooping and
returned to the cramped chair. I’ve
never become entirely comfortable with snooping. I do it, but I can always hear my mother’s voice
in the background, chastising me.
“That’s not lady-like, Rose Marie.
Nice girls don’t pry.” My mother
has a lot to learn about nice girls.