“What is it?”
“Give me a minute. I’m mulling, okay?”
While Parker looked idly at Cherokee knickknacks, Charlotte prowled the two shelves of books. She skipped the kids’ stories and oversize illustrated volumes and concentrated on the handful of academic studies, chap-books, and pamphlets. She paged through the shop’s complete collection, then chose four that struck her as having potential and took them to the checkout.
“What’s going on?” Parker stood beside her as she counted out the bills and got her change.
“Uncle Mike said there were two sides to every story.”
“Yeah? So what are they?”
“The conquered and the conqueror.”
“It wasn’t about the soldiers. They were the bad guys.”
“They probably didn’t think so.”
“Okay, so I’m blind. I don’t know what the hell you’re talking about.”
“Give me a minute.”
Back inside the car, Charlotte switched on her map light and started paging through one of the pamphlets. A Brief History of Tsali by Dr. Julie Milford.
Parker found a restaurant still open, and they squeezed into a booth and ordered salads. When they arrived, the salads were nothing but iceberg lettuce topped with a pound of shredded cheese, and tomato slices that looked like fried rubber. Parker nibbled at his and drank coffee, and Charlotte pushed hers aside and continued to read.
Parker picked up one of the books and fanned through the pages.
“Minute’s up. Spill it, Charlotte.”
Without looking up from her booklet, she said, “I’m wondering who they were, those soldiers, where they came from. Their families.”
“Why?”
“It’s the other story,” she said. “The one they didn’t tell.”
Charlotte turned the page and skimmed the next one.
Parker took a bite of one of the dinner rolls, then set it aside.
“Okay, here’s something,” Charlotte said. “A contrary opinion.”
Parker shut his pamphlet and fiddled with his salad while she read.
“ ‘Current thinking among most scholars is that Tsali did not give himself up to execution as the popular myth describes. More likely he was betrayed by his own people. After the removal had begun, many Cherokees remaining in the mountainous areas believed that Tsali’s murderous behavior would bring down the Army’s wrath on them, so they voluntarily hunted down Tsali and his family and turned him over to the U.S. military for execution. Most of these Cherokees had already made private covenants with the government to stay in North Carolina. Contrary to the widely held view, Tsali wasn’t their savior at all. He was simply a renegade who threatened their own exclusive arrangements.’ ”
“Big deal,” Parker said. “That’s how historians make their reputations, debunking previous views.”
Charlotte got back to her book. Ten minutes later, as Parker was finishing his salad, she found a passage that punched the breath from her lungs.
“Oh, shit,” she said.
Parker drained the last of his coffee and pushed the mug forward.
“This is a narrative account of Tsali’s capture and the killings. Same author as the other one.” Charlotte read the sentence slowly. “ ‘On October 19, 1838, two U.S. soldiers were struck down by Tsali and his sons. Corporal Morgan Jessups and his superior officer, Sergeant Matthew Tribue.’ ”
The waitress reappeared to fill their mugs. They were silent till she was gone.
Parker took the pamphlet from Charlotte and read it for himself.
“Holy Mother of Christ.”
She looked around the restaurant to see if anybody was paying them any attention. No one was. She eased the booklet from Parker and found her place.
“A couple of pages farther on, there’s this. ‘After Sergeant Tribue’s death, Molly, his wife, who was pregnant with their first child, having no family or means of support, fell into poverty and was forced to suffer a life in sordid circumstances. As tragic as Molly Tribue’s existence was, later generations of the Tribue family managed to transcend these destitute beginnings and gain major prominence, making great social and economic contributions to their communities and their nation.’ ”
“So it’s a puff piece for the congressman. Among other things.”
“I’m interested in those ‘sordid circumstances,’ ” Charlotte said.
“Maybe a saloon girl, something like that.”
Charlotte slid the pamphlet across to Parker. It was opened to a page that showed a black-and-white oval miniature portrait of Molly Tribue. She had curly hair and a fleshy face and pouty lips.
“Not your decorous church lady,” she said. “More like a strumpet.”
He flipped through the pages for several minutes, working his way to the end. He read for a moment, then handed the book back to Charlotte.
“The bio,” he said. “Did you see it?”
It was a few sentences about Professor Milford’s academic background, followed by a brief acknowledgment of gratitude. Undergraduate degree from Emory University with a master’s and Ph.D. from Duke in American history. The professor was now affiliated with Asheville Women’s College as the executive director of the Tribue Institute, whose generous sponsorship by Roberta Tribue provided both time and other forms of support necessary to complete the research for this book.
“Which one is Roberta?” Parker said.
“I don’t know. But apparently the Tribues have their own vanity press.”
Charlotte flipped to the last page, the list of Milford’s other publications.
“Tracing Your Cherokee Roots,” she said. “Also by Dr. Julie Milford and also published by Tribue Institute.”
“That’s what we legal types call a nexus. Tsali, Tribue, Cherokee ancestors. Some serious overlapping with our own concerns.”
“We flatfoots call it suspicious.”
“So we have a family who appear to be the ancestors of the soldier Tsali killed. The Tribues apparently govern this little corner of the universe, but they’re getting knocked off one by one. Martin, Uncle Mike. And these are the same people who have singled out Jacob Panther as their target, the fall guy for some kind of insurance swindle.”
“I don’t know, Parker. The insurance thing, it doesn’t fit.”
“Money always fits. It’s the great motivator. The everlasting why.”
“Not this time,” she said. “Think about it. That ax was chosen for a reason that had nothing to do with money. Why go to the trouble to steal a murder weapon from a museum unless it was to send a message? That ax is about history. About something that happened a long time ago. This is about Tsali and the man he killed. I don’t know where we fit, or how Jacob enters the picture, but we’re closing in on that part. I feel it.”
“The way your mind works,” he said, “so tidy and rational, you could make a damn fine attorney, Charlotte.”
She closed the pamphlet and laid her hand over it like it might fly away.
“I believe we already have all the lawyers we can handle in this family.”
The smile they shared at that moment seemed imported directly from the old days, when their connection was unshakable and everything was effortless and clear.
Thirty
Gracey and Lucy Panther sat in a white Lincoln in the shadowy parking lot of the Holiday Inn, waiting for Jacob to return to the car.
Lucy was behind the wheel, with Gracey huddled in the backseat listening to Steven Spielberg going over the entire movie scene by scene.
While Steven brainstormed, changing things on the fly like he did, Gracey was speechless, honored he’d try out something as important as this on her before putting it down in a script.
Steven was more excited than she’d heard him before.
This was going to be a major departure for him. No more goody-goody E.T.-phone-home bullshit. Forget dinosaurs or sharks gobbling people down, this film was going to make all that look like a Goldilocks te
a party.
This was going to be edgy and mean and hot, and Gracey was going to be right in the thick of it. A teenage femme fatale swept up in a complicated plot with lowlife bad guys the likes of which the film industry had never seen. Forget Maltese Falcon, Body Heat, Scarface, Joan Crawford’s Sudden Fear.
This was going to be violent, dark, and dangerous, but very hip, smart, cool, full of dissonance. She knew about dissonance, didn’t she? Of course, Gracey told him. Mr. Underwood did a whole class on it last semester. It was like when your teeth didn’t line up right. Things grated, got off center, weird, over the top. Like when someone was about to die with an avalanche coming down on top of them and they were making ironic jokes.
Close enough, Steven said. So what did she think? She’d seen Scarface, right?
Over and over, Gracey said. It was on Mr. Underwood’s top-ten list.
Good, so there’s your model. Michelle Pfeiffer, that icy blonde look, eyes way out there on the horizon. Coasting above it all, but talons ready.
Barbara Stanwyck whispered to Gracey. That Pfeiffer bitch, she stole me blind from Double Indemnity. Everything but my ankle bracelet.
I have an idea, Gracey said. What if instead of the femme fatale thing, which is done to death, the girl in the movie is a schizophrenic?
What, like nuts? A split personality?
Not nuts, Gracey had to tell him. And multiple personality disorder is something else completely. Schizophrenics are a whole different ball game. They hear voices, can’t tell what’s real from what’s not sometimes. Though sometimes they can act just fine, get by, nobody knows what’s going on.
Never work, Spielberg said.
And this little schizophrenic girl, Gracey said, she goes through the whole movie and everybody thinks, poor girl, she’s all screwed up, but it turns out, bingo, she sees things more clearly than anybody else and solves the whole deal, and is, you know, kind of redeemed in the end.
Steven was silent, considering it or fuming. You could never tell with him.
Gracey knew redemption was uncool. It was one of Mr. Underwood’s pet peeves. He was always mocking movies with epiphanies. Where somebody found peace or landed on a new planet of understanding.
But the truth was, Gracey kind of liked them. She liked to believe people could hack their way through the jungle and come at last to a sunny beach, transformed. She never admitted it out loud, but she liked those movies. They made her cry, gave her hope. But she knew they were totally unhip. Usually she kept quiet about it or scoffed at what she secretly loved.
Fuck redemption, Steven said. Fuck redemption and the lame horse it rode in on.
I could maybe live with a troubled teen, Spielberg said. But a schizoid, no, that’s over the top. Too extreme. Mainstream audiences, no way, unless it’s the bad guy. Psychotic bad guy, that could work. But a teenage girl, no, it’s too much. Too much of a downer. Bleak, depressing.
So Gracey just shut up.
Truth was, she had major doubts about the whole project, the story line, so complicated, so many twists. Not to mention there was way way way too much gore for her taste. More Tarantino than Maltese Falcon or Sudden Fear. Very graphic, slice and dice, shotguns blowing people inside out. Bullyboy writing, one tough guy getting in another tough guy’s face, backing him down. Motherfucker this, motherfucker that.
It wasn’t like Gracey was into girly-girl romantic comedies, and she wasn’t prudish, but all the guns bothered her, all the people murdering each other without any good reason, blink-you’re-dead, and Gracey’s character was caught in the middle of everything, also for no reason she could see. Young girl put at risk. Like nothing had changed in a hundred years since virgins were lashed to train tracks with the locomotive bearing down.
Gathering her nerve, Gracey went ahead and told Steven about her doubts. Did it in a quiet way, trying to sound adult, not be sarcastic or super critical. Not wanting to hurt his feelings, but she told him the truth, that the whole thing lacked heart. Where were the people to care about? The story was just a lot of sharp knives and shotgun blasts and bad guys going after badder guys. Had he forgotten about normal people? It made her brain numb. None of the characters mattered. They could’ve been hand puppets.
And then, with all due respect and everything, there was an even bigger problem. The nudity thing. Half the time Gracey’s character is on screen, she’s topless, or else totally naked. Just like she’d told Steven she wouldn’t do.
She couldn’t believe he’d gone ahead and put it in, like she didn’t have a say, or he hadn’t cared about her feelings. Well, she might be just starting out in her acting career, but she had her values.
Sure you do, kid, Barbara Stanwyck told her. Stick to your guns. Show as much tit as you’re comfortable with. Or none at all. I mean, hell, a little cleavage can be sexier than the whole enchilada. And then Joan chimed in with, didn’t I tell you this was going to happen? I saw it coming from the start. This business never changes. Actresses come and go, but it’s always about tight flesh and sex appeal. Nipples, honey. They got to have their dose of hard little pinkies.
All of it was churning around and around in Gracey’s head. She sat there waiting for Steven to say something, defend himself, convince her she was wrong. But he was silent. Doing the passive-aggressive thing.
Meanwhile, Lucy Panther wasn’t saying a word, just sat staring ahead out the windshield of the big white Lincoln that Jacob stole in Asheville, and taking worried looks every now and then in the rearview mirror. Like Gracey had just cursed out loud, which maybe she had.
She wasn’t sure. That’s how it happened sometimes. That membrane started leaking, the one that was supposed to keep outside out and inside in. It got perforations in it and then what Gracey was thinking was sometimes coming out of her mouth and sometimes it wasn’t.
Sometimes it stayed sealed up tight inside her brain, but from how Lucy kept frowning at her, Gracey figured she must be babbling.
But hell, how could she stop something she didn’t even know for sure was happening?
Screw redemption, Spielberg said. Redemption is so last century. So faith-based bullshit, high-carb goofy. Irony is what’s happening. Dark irony, human misery, the inherent corruption of the human spirit. You know about tragic irony, right, Gracey? I’m not talking to an uninformed little girl, am I?
“Are you okay?” Lucy Panther said from the front seat.
Gracey had to think about it for a few seconds, sorting through the voices, before she figured out it was Lucy.
“I’m okay, yeah, I’m fine. What’s Jacob doing?”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Who’s worried? I’m just asking.”
“He’s doing a job,” Lucy said. “It’ll be finished in a minute or two.”
“What job?”
“What he should’ve done in Miami if he hadn’t gotten run off by your mother.”
“Tell me.”
“You sure you’re okay? You’re making noises like you’re not right.”
“You just figuring that out?” Gracey said. “Of course I’m not right. Who would want to be right in a screwed-up world like this?”
“Good point,” Lucy said. “Very good point.”
Then Spielberg was back, sounding grim. Telling her straight out that the nudity was absolutely essential to the plot. A girl tied up with all her clothes on was simply not the same thing as a girl tied up naked. The vulnerability, the pathos were totally different with the naked girl. The film’s entire artistic integrity was at stake.
They all say that, Joan Crawford said. They been saying that since the Stone Age. Artistic integrity my ass. It’s tits, pure and simple. I told you, Gracey, I told you how it was. You wouldn’t listen.
Their parking space outside Room 118 was still vacant, and Parker eased in and shut off the ignition. They sat there for a moment. Parker seemed as exhausted as she was. They’d been working it over for the last hour but had gotten nowhere. Their situation was con
nected to Tsali and the Tribues. But the rest of it was a muddle. Bank bombings, insurance fraud, blowguns, axes, and a sniper in the woods. Jacob Panther, Martin Tribue, and Uncle Mike and Diana Monroe. They tried to wrestle the ingredients into some coherent tale, but there was no thread that seemed to weave it all together.
Finally, Charlotte shut off further discussion, saying there was only so much they could understand by sorting and re-sorting the data they already had. They were missing some crucial pieces. What they needed was to turn over some different damn rocks. Like this Milford woman for one thing, Asheville Women’s College, pick her brains, And hear what Marie Salzedo and Parker’s investigator, Miriam Cardoza, came back with.
Though she didn’t admit it to Parker, Charlotte was still fixed on Standingdog’s trial, the fire at Camp Tsali, Diana’s status as a Beloved Woman. With growing certainty she felt that something happened the night Parker’s father died that was central to what was unfolding now. But that part was all too raw for Parker to hash it out. So she kept silent on the issue.
“You all right?” she said. “That had to be rough on you back there, seeing Uncle Mike shot down. A guy you used to respect so much.”
“Rough, no. Rough doesn’t begin to cover it.”
“You’re feeling numb, spacey. Startle reflex on high alert.”
He gave her a feeble grin.
“And you?”
“Ditto.”
“So where’s the tough cop?”
“Huddled up in here.” Charlotte tapped on her sternum. “With a temporary case of the shakes. It’ll pass.”
He leaned over and kissed her on the lips. Drew away and smiled faintly.
“We’ll get Gracey back. I know we will.”
She held his eyes and nodded, hoping he couldn’t read her dread.
They were getting out of the car when Charlotte saw the man stalking across the parking lot. In the shadows she could tell he was medium height and thick-bodied, then he entered the light and she saw he’d trimmed his blond hair into a short military cut and dyed it dark, but even in the murkiness there was no mistaking that bone structure, those hard, probing eyes.
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