Elysia sighed.
Twenty-three
When
A.J. returned to the living room where Stella was watching TV, Stella glanced at her and said, “Not happy is she?”
“No.”
Stella shrugged.
“It’s the strain of waiting,” A.J. said. “The DA is building his case against her and there’s not much she has in the way of defense. Except that she’s innocent. And that doesn’t seem to count for much. This is such a long shot, but it’s all we’ve got.”
Stella turned back to the TV. “I don’t mind helping her,” she stated.
“It is
really
generous of you,” A.J. admitted. “Given that Mother has never been . . .”
Stella snorted.
They watched the TV for a time, some thriller where the good guy turned out to be the bad guy despite the fact that the bad guy had never given any indication of bad guyness. All the time A.J. was trying to summon the nerve to ask Stella about the supposed affair with her father.
On the one hand she was uncomfortably aware that her parents had a right to their private lives. On the other hand it really bothered her to think that her father had had an affair. She couldn’t help but remember Andy’s affair—and the subsequent destruction of her marriage. She hated thinking these terrible, harsh things about her beloved father.
But perhaps there was no affair?
Elysia seemed convinced that there was. And Elysia should know, right? And would hearing Stella confirm that A.J.’s father had cheated on her mother really help her come to terms with the situation?
Back and forth A.J. went. If there was ever going to be a time to ask, this was it. She and Stella were alone, no one would ever know they had discussed this.
The thriller ended. The news came on. Stella didn’t move and neither did A.J., but A.J. had the sense that Stella wasn’t watching the television any more than she was.
“Stella,” A.J. said suddenly, surprising herself.
She was more startled when Stella made a sound one of her pigs might have recognized. “I know what you’re going to ask, A.J. I’ve been waiting for you to ask for nearly a year now.”
A.J. met Stella’s dark, round eyes, bracing herself for the truth.
Stella said “There wasn’t any affair. Not the way Elysia means it. Your daddy just liked to come and have a quiet drink and talk and think. This was when your ma wasn’t . . . herself.”
“She was herself,” A.J. said. “She just happened to be a drunk.”
Stella smothered a cough. “Well, they were separated and your daddy was pretty miserable. He never cared about anyone like he cared about your mama.”
That was certainly true. As much as A.J.’s father had loved her, Elysia had come first. Elysia had also come first for Elysia at that time in her life, but how long did you continue to blame someone for hurting you once you understood that they were truly sorry and would undo the past if they could?
At some point you had to let go of the old pain and anger.
Stella was still talking. “You have to understand. I’d known your daddy since we were kids. Yes, we were sort of sweet on each other at one time, but that was far in the past. Once he saw Elysia, well that was it. I don’t think he ever looked at another woman. But he liked to come to my place and he liked to talk. And I liked that, too.”
Had Stella loved A.J.’s father? A.J. had no idea and didn’t think she should pry; that truly was not her business. Stella had never married. But that could mean a lot of things, including the fact that no one wanted to live with four cats.
“Did Mother—”
“I tried to tell Elysia the truth a long time ago. She wouldn’t believe me. Didn’t want to hear it. If you want my opinion, I think the betrayal for Elysia was that your daddy was talking to me about private and personal things that Elysia wanted to believe no one else knew about. I don’t think she ever really believed your father and I were having a
romance
.”
There was probably a lot of truth to that.
“Thank you for telling me,” A.J. said.
Stella nodded, rising and tying her thick, plaid bathrobe more tightly around her burly frame. “Busy day tomorrow,” she said.
A.J. nodded.
Stella hesitated. “I don’t like your mother, I won’t pretend I do, but I respect Elysia. I admire the way she pulled herself out of that gutter. It wasn’t easy for her, but she got herself dried out and she made your daddy very happy those last years.”
A.J. blinked back the unexpected sting in her eyes. “I know. Thank you.”
“Sweet dreams,” Stella said.
Shortly
after breakfast the next morning, Stella waved good-bye to A.J. and set off in her rental car to meet Stewie at The Salon.
A.J. spent the morning surfing the Internet trying to find an agent to handle Diantha’s memoirs. She was trying to figure out what was involved in putting together a cover letter when the phone on the desk she was working at began to ring.
A.J. jumped and stared at it trying to remember who, besides Andy, had the number to this house.
Stella.
A.J. glanced at the clock.
Shouldn’t Stella have been back by now? How long did this personal shopping thing take? They weren’t driving to New York for heaven’s sake.
Were
they?
The phone rang again.
Elysia, of course. Elysia had the house number, but Elysia would try A.J.’s cell phone. Except Elysia knew that A.J. had loaned Stella her cell phone for the day. So . . . Elysia?
A.J. picked the phone up and said cautiously, “Hello?”
“What the hell is going on?” Jake demanded.
“Sorry?”
“What exactly do you think you’re doing?” He bit out each word.
A.J. was still trying to assimilate the fact that it was Jake and not Elysia calling. “How did you get this number?”
“From Emma Rice. She said this was the number to call in case of emergency.”
“Is there an emergency?”
“I would say so.
Where
is your mother?”
“At home, isn’t she?”
“No. And she’s not answering her cell phone either. Did the two of you cook up some idiotic scheme like sending her undercover at the damned hair salon?”
“No, of course not,” A.J. said guiltily, thinking of the idiotic scheme they
had
cooked up. “Why?”
“Because I did a little background checking and Mabel G. Chalthoum is the name of one of the owners of The Salon.”
A.J. swallowed so hard she knew Jake could hear it on the end of the line. “Gloria—?”
“Gloria Sunday is the professional name, the stage name, of Mabel G. Chalthoum. Gloria Sunday was Massri’s sponsor into this country.”
Gloria was Madame X.
“Oh my God,” A.J. said. “Jake, Mother is probably at Stella Borin’s farm. She’s been taking care of Stella’s animals while Stella”—she gave another of those little gulps—“tries to gather information at The Salon.”
The silence was deafening.
Then, so tersely she pictured him having to chip the words out, Jake said, “I’ll try the farm,” and hung up.
A.J. dialed Elysia’s cell phone. It rang and went to message.
She tried again. Same result.
But after all, Elysia often left her cell phone at home. This really meant nothing.
Would Elysia leave her cell phone behind when she believed they were in the middle of a big sting operation?
A.J. grabbed her purse, dug out Stella’s phone number, and tried the farm. The circuits were busy. She realized she and Jake were probably calling at the same time. She hung up and counted to ten, then dialed again. The phone rang and rang and then an answering machine came on with Stella’s brusque invitation to leave a message.
“Mother, pick up,” A.J. commanded. “Are you there? Pick up!”
Why did people always say things like that? Obviously if Elysia was there she would pick up. If she wasn’t there, what was the point of asking whether she was there?
A.J. hung up and put her face in her hands.
Next to her elbow the phone rang again and A.J. snatched it up. “Yes?”
“It’s me,” Jake said. “You better explain to me exactly what’s going on. Start at the top.”
“You know most of it already.” A.J. began to explain into the vast and intimidating silence on the other end. She had reached the part about Stella going off with Stewie for a day of shopping when she heard a car outside.
“Hang on,” she said and hurried to the front door, nearly falling over Monster in her haste. She threw open the door in time to see Stella and the tall, elegant form of Stewie Cabot getting out of the rental car.
“Have you talked to Elysia this morning?” Stella called.
A.J. shook her head. “I can’t reach her.”
“Come on,” Stella said. “We’ve got to find her. Stewie thinks she’s in danger.”
Stewie did look pretty worried. His silver hair was standing on end as though he’d been running his fingers through it.
“I’m on the phone to Jake,” A.J. said.
“Tell him to get over to my place,” Stella told her.
“Don’t move.” A.J. flew back to the phone. “Jake, I don’t have all the details yet, but Stella is back and she says Mother may be in danger. She said you should head for Little Peavy Farm. I’m on my way and I’ll call you as soon as I have the details.”
“You stay right where you are,” Jake said. “Call me when you’ve talked to Stella. I’m leaving now.”
He disconnected.
A.J. grabbed her purse and keys, called to Monster, and ran to join Stella and Stewie.
“I
was burned,” Stella said and the rental car, driven by Stewie, tore back down the highway toward Warren County and Stillbrook.
“You were . . . what?” A.J. pushed Monster’s head away as he leaned across her to get to her window. What was wrong with his own window? Only Monster had the answer to that one.
“Burned. My cover was blown yesterday,” Stella, who had clearly been hanging around Elysia too long, explained.
“I’m not following.”
Stella looked at Stewie. Stewie, his gaze on the road ahead, said wearily, “Go on. Tell her everything.”
“I was ‘made’ at The Salon yesterday,” Stella said. “It turns out one of the stylists working there was a kid who’d bought his calf from me a couple of years back when he was in 4-H Club. He didn’t know what was at stake, naturally, but he happened to mention it today in front of Gloria.”
“Oh no,” A.J. said.
“When I got to The Salon this morning, Gloria was acting a little weird, but Stewie got me out of there before I had time to make much out of it.”
Stella looked at Stewie again, but he volunteered nothing.
“Well, it didn’t take me long to see from the way Stewie was acting that something was wrong.”
This time the look Stella gave Stewie was softer. More astonishing was the look Stewie threw Stella. Observing this, A.J. said, “I thought . . .”
“Oh, Stewie’s not gay,” Stella said. “That’s just something he says to keep the ladies at bay.”
“Oh. Oh?” Apparently Stella was not a lady Stewie wanted to keep at bay, even now that he knew the truth about her. “What did Stewie tell you?” A.J. was looking at Stewie but asking Stella.
“He confessed everything.”
“
Everything
?”
The car swerved, and Stella said calmly, “About the blackmail scheme. Stewie and Gloria have been running a blackmail business out of The Salon for the last five years. They got into financial trouble, you see.”
“I know how it looks,” Stewie said. “But you have to understand. Once I got into it, there wasn’t any getting out. Gloria doesn’t take rejection well.”
“I think I see,” A.J. said. “How did it start? Let me take a wild guess: Gloria went on a vacation cruise to Egypt five years ago?”
Stewie’s eyes met hers in the rearview. He nodded glumly. “That’s exactly how it happened. Gloria went on vacation and came back with an idea of how we could get The Salon out of the red. The way she looked at it is we were sort of providing a public service to lonely women, and it was as reasonable to be paid for that as a haircut or a paraffin bath.”
Stella snorted.
Stewie said defensively, “Most of our ladies could easily afford the amount we charged. We weren’t greedy. They enjoyed the attention and the wining and dining and the . . .”
“Sex,” Stella said.
“Yes. And the sex. Most of them thought the social fees were a small price to pay. It’s not like we continued to charge them forever. We always let them off the hook after a couple of years.”
“After a couple of
years,
” A.J. repeated. “You blackmailed them. Social fees? Those were penalty fees for being lonely. What a horrible thing to do to people. And, no, they weren’t all okay with the social fees. Peggy Graham wasn’t okay with the social fees.”
“We didn’t have anything to do with Peggy Graham’s death,” Stewie said quickly.