“Miss McDowell - do you mind if I call you Tree? Wonderful name! So avant-garde, don’t you know.”
Avant-garde?
“Let me introduce you to Letty. You will love her; everyone does. Wonderful woman!” He led us across the lobby past the food and drink tables to an excessively round woman in a tight, shiny red satin dress who was galloping past late middle age as fast as her steed could carry her. The green bow on the back of her artificially black hair and the black stockings on her skinny legs completed the image. A candied apple on a stick! Well, this was certainly the right place - a circus if I ever saw one, and Aaron B. and I were the sad, gray hobo clowns amidst the flamboyantly attired aerialists - not only that - I was the clown on stilts.
Fontaine would certainly be the ring master, appropriately dressed in a white satin outfit - not exactly a suit - probably a couturier’s original - with a yellow rose pinned to his chest. For good luck? He had money, talent and admiration. What did he need luck for? As he leaned close to Letty Whoever, whispering in her ear, I wondered if the candied apple was going to stick to his clothes the way those carnival bestsellers always did to mine. She looked up at us, an interested smile on her face.
“Letty Cameron.” She offered a ring embellished hand - to Aaron B. - not to me.
“Aaron takes care of the bookkeeping for the theater - indispensable - and this delicate jewel is Tree McDowell, the notorious private detective.”
What a statement that was! The first half of it was true enough. Aaron B. does keep books for the theater. But as to the part about me - delicate jewel? Delicate anything? And notorious is hardly a word I would use to describe myself. I have been written up in the paper a couple of times, but so has the local locksmith. However, I don’t think anyone would consider either of us as notorious. Even Ridgeboro, Louisiana, has more going on than that!
It was obvious that Letty Cameron wasn’t interested in delicate little ol’ me. She latched onto Aaron B. and steered him across the room toward one of the other circus rings, leaving me with Gregory Fontaine swinging on the trapeze alone. Aaron B. threw me a desperate glance, but I let it fly by. This was my chance to get Nanna’s information.
“Mr. Fontaine….”
“Greg, my dear girl. Greg.” Aaron B. had been a much more important Dear Boy than I was dear girl.
“Greg…uh, was your father’s name William?”
“Yes. William Wordsworth Fontaine. My grandfather undoubtedly had a literary bias. Why do you ask? Did you know him?”
“No, but my grandmother did. She asked me to tell you how fond she’d been of your father when they were in high school together. She regrets that they didn’t stay in touch after graduation.” Just a small white lie - no hovering lightning bolts ready to strike me dead on the spot - not yet, anyway.
“How kind. It is extremely hard for me to think of my father as having even been in high school. He was a terribly quiet, introverted person, don’t you know.”
“Uh, well…my grandmother’s interested in how he got on, whom he married, what he did - all that.”
“My, my. How extraordinary! Difficult to imagine the old man eliciting such curiosity from a lady. Too bad he has passed on. He would, without a doubt, have enjoyed knowing that someone took such an interest in his affairs.
“So, as to my mother - a fragile soul, I was told. Never knew her, unfortunately. Her name was Mary Smith - ordinary sort of name, I have always thought - from Atlanta, don’t you know. Died when I was an infant. I was always glad that at least she did not have to go to her grave with the name Smith. Fontaine sounds so much more distinctive - a name people respect. She was able to go to her reward with the reputation of the Fontaine family backing her up. Reputation - now that is the important thing - the only thing - reputation.” Greg Fontaine seemed to be looking through me to the far wall as he spoke. I wasn’t even sure he was still addressing me. I pulled him back.