Chapter 15
Cops, Jazz Funerals, and Dashing Through the Pearly Gates
Abel Caine hasn’t called yet to take me up on my offer of a free haircut and massage, but that’s probably for the best. Right now, I’m up to my ears in giving my customers new Christmas hairstyles and making preparations for Wayne’s jazz funeral.
Lovie is ecstatic that he’ll get the jazz funeral, Uncle Charlie is feeling fit and back in charge, and Mama’s raring to show her musical chops with a roaring rendition of “When the Saints Go Marching In.” Though I can’t say I think Wayne was any saint, especially since I found out he was dating my cousin and his ex-wife at the same time.
Still, the Valentines never shirk when it comes to sending the dearly departed through the Pearly Gates. Or in the other direction, as the case may be.
I finish putting Elvis’ pink bowtie on his dog collar, his regular getup for funerals, and am in the midst of pulling on the black Stuart Weitzman boots I prefer for winter funerals when Lovie calls.
“Where are you?”
“Still at home.”
She says a word that would discolor teeth. “Wayne’s ex is acting like she’s lost the love of her life, that crazy old Opal Stokes is wearing her sweet little cookie lady face, and somebody’s stalking me. I’m fixing to arm myself.”
“Don’t do anything rash, Lovie. I’ll be headed to the funeral home in five minutes. Tops.”
“If you’re not here soon, I won’t be responsible for what I do.”
“Stay in the kitchen till I get there, Lovie. Nothing’s going to happen with Uncle Charlie around. Have a cup of Prohibition Punch.”
“I already tried that. It’s not working.”
Jack suddenly appears in the doorway, looking far too handsome and too much like he belongs in this house. He’s made such fast progress with his therapy, you’d never know he was recently in a cast.
“Cal, which tie looks best with this shirt?”
“Do I hear Jack?”
“Yes,” I tell Lovie, and to Jack, I say, “Wear the navy one.” He winks, then heads back across the hall.
“I can see why you’re late.”
“You can see nothing of the sort, Lovie.”
“Then why is he still there?”
“It’s Christmas.” She giggles, and I get defensive. “It would be just plain tacky to send him back to that ugly apartment to spend the holidays by himself. Besides, with the Santa killer still out there, I need Jack here to help out.”
Lovie says a word that would melt the North Pole.
“Don’t start with me, Lovie. I’ve said all I’m going to say on the subject of Jack.”
“It’s not Jack. It’s that heifer.” I don’t even have to ask to know she’s talking about Wayne’s ex. “She looks like a strumpet. If she gets anywhere near me, I’m liable to skewer her and serve her up as kabobs.”
“Holy cow, Lovie. Hide.”
“Where?”
“I don’t care. Anywhere. Just don’t go near her till I get there.”
I yell for Jack, brief him on the dangerous love triangle and the possible stalking. Then the three of us—Jack, Elvis, and me—race off to Eternal Rest in his silver Jag.
We arrive in less time than it takes me to put up a French twist. The parking lot is filled with squad cars.
“Stay close.” Jack grabs my hand, I hang onto Elvis’ leash, and we weave our way through a bevy of cops both outside and inside the funeral home. Naturally, they’re out in force. The killer often shows up at the victim’s funeral. For what purpose, I don’t know, and I don’t want to know. I just want him caught so I can decorate my tree and finish my Christmas shopping in peace.
We make our way to the first parlor, where, thanks to my skills, Wayne is laid out looking as if he might sit up any minute and ask for a piece of pecan pie.
I scan the crowd for Lovie, but she’s nowhere in sight, thank goodness. Nelda Lou is up front near the casket, and though she’s in a black pantsuit that suggests deep mourning, she’s not looking a bit happier to see her former son-in-law dead than she did when she talked about him alive. I make a mental note to keep an eye on her.
So do the cops, it seems. Two of them are standing in the corner near a potted peace lily. One has his eyes peeled on Nelda Lou; the other has a bead on the mall’s manager, Cleveland White.
Uncle Charlie is also near the casket, resplendent in a crisp black pinstriped suit and looking fully recovered, I’m happy to say. He’s talking to none other than Nathan Briggs, the mall’s original Santa.
Fayrene is also near the front, wearing Christmas-tree green from head to toe, but Mama is nowhere in sight. That doesn’t concern me, though. When she’s in charge of the music, she always heads to the chapel early to make sure everything is in order.
My phone vibrates, and Lovie’s name pops up on the ID. I lean over to whisper to Jack, “I’ve got to find Lovie.”
“Stay sharp.”
“Don’t worry about me. You just make sure Uncle Charlie is safe.”
Ordinarily he’d have insisted on coming with me, and I’d have put up a huge fuss. It has been like this ever since his cast came off, though. We’re more considerate of each other. And neither of us has broached the subject of when Jack’s leaving.
Mindful that the eyes of the Tupelo Police Department are also on me as a possible suspect, I stroll casually out of the viewing room and into the hall. It’s packed. Some of the people I know, but most I don’t. Who’d have thought Wayne had so many friends?
Or maybe they’re enemies.
In my eagerness to avoid cops, I almost run over Opal Stokes. She’s left her tough, Santa-slaying persona behind and is back to looking like the sweet little old lady you’d never dream would enter Santa’s Court and dispense cookies laced with Ex-Lax.
She gives me a big smile and leans down to pet Elvis. His hackles come up, and I scoop him off the floor.
“He’s having a bad day,” I say, then hurry off before she recognizes me as the “boy” she ordered to clean up her kitchen floor.
As soon as I’m out of sight of the funeral crowd, I whip out my cell phone and call Lovie.
“Where are you?”
“Downstairs. Your room.”
She means the room where I make up the newly deceased. Keeping a tight rein on Elvis, I head down the stairs. His hackles are still up, and I have the creepy feeling I’m being followed. Whirling around, I glance back up the stairs and glimpse a shadow slipping back into the hall. The dark pants could be either male or female. But the shoes looked like men’s footwear.
I’m torn between racing back upstairs to see who was following me or continuing down to rescue Lovie. My cousin wins. Besides, by the time I’d get back upstairs, whoever was skulking along behind me would have vanished into the crowd.
I push open the door to a room that’s as familiar to me as Hair.Net. Lovie is sitting on the sofa with a cup in one hand and a butcher knife in the other.
“What in the world?”
“Prohibition Punch.” She nods toward another cup and a pitcher on the end table. “Have some.”
If ever I needed something to pick me up, today is the day. I pour myself a cup of Lovie’s cure-all and sit down beside her.
“I’m talking about the knife, Lovie.”
“Somebody’s been tailing me ever since I got here.”
“Me, too.” I tell her about spotting the shadowy figure at the top of the stairs.
“It’s probably Abel Caine,” she says.
“How do you figure that?”
“I saw him earlier, and he’s wearing a black suit just like the stalker. Cleveland White’s wearing gray, and Albert Gordon’s in jail for burning Santas.”
“Still, that doesn’t mean Abel Caine is stalking us.”
“Why do you think he hasn’t called about the free haircut and massage?”
“I haven’t got a clue.”
“If he tried to kill Daddy, he’s bound to know who we are. He wouldn’t just waltz into your shop knowing you’re Daddy’s niece.”
“You have a point about that, Lovie. But Nelda Lou Perkins is also wearing a dark pantsuit. And now that I think about it, she had on lace-up shoes. Very masculine.”
Lovie says a word that would parch peanuts. “If it’s that old biddy, I’ll serve her liver as canapés.”
Upstairs, the organ strikes a big chord—Mama, signaling the service is about to begin.
“We’ve got to get upstairs. Are you going to be all right, Lovie?”
“Just stick by me and keep that ex-wife witch out of my way.”
“You can count on me. Put the butcher knife down, Lovie.”
“What if I keep it hidden in the folds of my skirt?”
“No. Besides, Uncle Charlie and Jack are here. Not to mention two dozen cops. Nothing bad is going to happen today.”
I sincerely hope I’m right. Actually, it’s not a catfight between Lovie and Wayne’s ex that worries me. It’s the horses.
This is only the second jazz funeral we’ve had at Eternal Rest. The main feature of a jazz funeral, of course, is the cortege to the cemetery. The last time we had used nice, friendly horses from Mama’s farm to pull the hearse. This time, though, the family wanted all-white horses.
Miraculously, Uncle Charlie and Bobby found six white horses, but they came from a two-bit circus camped over in Pontotoc County for a Christmas performance. Apparently, they agreed to one last show before they made their way to winter quarters in Florida.
Although we’re only five blocks from the cemetery, we’re dealing with a lot of unfamiliar elements. Too many cops, two jazz trumpets, two rivals (one already showing the effects of too much punch), and too many strange horses.
On the way up the stairs, I pray to the Heavenly Father, the Holy Mother, and Mother Earth. Just to be on the safe side, I add a little plea to Oprah.
Elvis’ Opinion # 13 Funerals, Faulty Planning, and Farts
Nobody asked my opinion about this funeral. If they had I’d have told them the way dogs do it is much more dignified. No fuss, no eulogies, no public displays. Just go off into the woods, lie down on a soft bed of fragrant pine needles, close your eyes, and say sayonara, which means till we meet again. And if it doesn’t, it ought to.
Dogs know we’ll be coming back around again. If we get lucky we might make it back as a famous singer, and if we don’t, we could come back as a cat. Still, there’s always next time.
But I will have to say in defense of my Valentine family that they know how to put on a funeral. Ruby Nell’s making that organ walk and talk with her jazzy spirituals. Backed by Charlie’s superb trumpet and Bobby’s shaky one, this funeral sounds like it might be taking place in the heart of New Orleans.
Which is where Charlie spent many of his early years. His shady past, I call it. Let me tell you, he picked up a few skills besides trumpet playing, and not all of them you’d want to whistle along to. Strip away his fine suit, his Southern manners, and his community spirit, and he’s not the kind of man you’d want to cross.
The easy part of the funeral is winding down. That would be the indoors part where I get to sit on the pew between my human mom and my human dad with two rows of policemen in the back watching over the proceedings. Looking for a killer.
The Santa killer is here, all right. It didn’t take me three minutes to pick up that scent. It’s the same one I picked up in the robing room at the mall. The killer stalked my human mom and was probably the one stalking Lovie, though I wasn’t here when that happened.
If they’d turn me loose, I’d have the Santa killer collared before the first stupid white horse lets out a fart. And it’s sure to happen. You mark my words. When you’re dealing with big dumb animals, you can expect to get your shoes dirty.
Now if Charlie had found some nice big Saint Bernards to pull the hearse, or even some of those lanky Great Danes, he wouldn’t have a minute’s trouble. But like I said, nobody asked me.
They’re saying the final prayer now, and the pallbearers are putting poor old Wayne up behind a bunch of crazy circus horses. The mourners file out and take their places in a motley parade somewhere south of the business end of the horses, and we clomp off toward the cemetery.
Wayne’s ex starts bawling like a newborn calf. If looks could kill, the one Lovie shoots her way would fell her on the spot. The next thing I know, Lovie has pulled out a handkerchief and is trying to out-bawl the Queen of Mourn.
All over the neighborhood, dogs take up the howl. If I weren’t so busy taking care of Callie and trying to keep order on the street and keeping my nose to the ground for the scent of a killer, I’d march my iconic self across a few fences and teach those lesser dogs a lesson. They’ve got such a poor grasp of funeral protocol, this is either their first time around or they’ve been reincarnated from cats.
“Do something,” Ruby tells Charlie, and he puts his trumpet to his lips to drown out the dogs with a rip-roaring rendition of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.”
I guess circus horses are used to this kind of ruckus, because for two blocks they lead this jazz funeral as smoothly as I led my former recording sessions.
Looks like I’m going to have to eat my words.
Suddenly shots ring out. Or so everybody seems to believe. Mourners scream, and Jack pulls Callie and Lovie to the pavement. Then he and the cops take off in the direction of the shots.
The horses rear up on their hind legs, the hearse tilts, and the deceased shoots out the back door. Bless’a my soul. There goes Wayne rolling down the street in a runaway casket. Who knows? Maybe he didn’t like jazz as much as Lovie thought.
Mourners leap out of the way, and Lovie says a word that’s going to get her on the prayer list of every church in town, while Charlie tries to rein in the horses.
“I’ve got him,” Bobby yells.
With his lanky legs pumping double time and his psychic eye jumping, Eternal Rest’s assistant undertaker single-handedly collars the late mall Santa Claus. Who’d have thought it?
Ruby Nell leads the applause. Then as Charlie and Bobby load Wayne back into the hearse, Lovie says, “That Wayne! What will he do next? He was always a show-off.”
Laughter ripples through the crowd, Wayne’s ex gives Lovie the evil eye, and yours truly helps herd everybody back in line so the procession can continue. Callie helps, of course, but I’m the one in charge.
One of the things I do is prance around Wayne’s family (not his silly ex-wife, but his only brother and his ancient mother). Looking adorable and cuddly, I frolic around them long enough to satisfy myself they’re not going to sue Charlie. If I have to, I’ll be the first one to remind the family that this jazz funeral was free.
Meanwhile, my human mom keeps searching the crowd for signs of my human daddy. She might as well settle down and enjoy the rest of the show. Jack won’t be back till he’s collared the one who fired the so-called shots.
With Charlie and Bobby on either side of the horses doing a trumpet duet of Dixieland jazz and making sure there are no further incidents, we finally arrive at the cemetery. Mostly in one piece, though I imagine Wayne’s attempted getaway has him “All Shook Up.”
As the crowd gathers around the open grave, Fayrene can be heard all over the block telling Ruby Nell, “The infirma-ment is my favorite part.”
Let the malapropisms roll is what I say. Anything to keep Callie’s mind off the fact that Jack and most of the cops are still missing and the crowd’s collective mind off the fact that there’s a murderer loose in the graveyard.
The scent is coming from the direction of a massive monument featuring an angel comforting Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. If Callie would let me off this leash I’d corner the Santa killer, and everybody could go back to shopping and baking Christmas cookies and bickering over whose turn it is to feed the in-laws.
Well, bless’a my soul. Here comes Jack. Callie perks up like she’s been trapped in a dark room and he knows the whereabouts of the only light.
He takes her elbow, then leans down to whisper, “Kids with firecrackers.”
I could have told them that in the first place. Discharged guns don’t smell a thing like firecrackers. But nobody bothered to ask me.
If I’d come back as Marie Antoinette, I’d say, Let them eat cake.
Now I say, Ignorance is not bliss. But it takes a dog of my intelligence to figure that out.