convinced me he would have made secret sneering comments to his guests.
'Would Clyde have done something for Felicia if she'd asked him?'
'Yes,' Anne said, pouring some more coffee in my cup. Tolliver had quietly been eating the cookies, Keebler's Fudge Stripes, which he loved. 'Clyde liked doing favors for people, if it would give him traction with them. Felicia is pretty and she has a high-profile job, and she's active in the alumni club, so he would have done what she asked. He's been sorry David Morgenstern doesn't seem to be his friend, anymore, too.'
She was slipping into the present tense, I noticed.
'Do you know why they weren't friends anymore?'
'Clyde made some comment about David's nephew not being Bingham material,' Anne said promptly. Maybe there was Sodium Pentothal in the coffee?
'Would you know why he said that? Why he thought Victor wasn't appropriate for Bingham?'
'He'd seen the boy with another young man at a cinema,' Anne explained. 'He was sure they were, you know, in a relationship. Gay,' she elaborated. 'Though of course, they're not. Gay. They're sad, is what they are.'
If Victor was sad, I didn't think his gayness had much to do with it.
'Of course, that made David angry, and he told Clyde if he ever heard Clyde say anything else about Victor, he'd make sure Clyde never opened his mouth again. Clyde was mad about it, but sorry, too. David had been a friend of his, way back. So, he would have done a favor for David, too, to get him back as a friend.'
Had this woman had any illusions about her husband? Surely you needed some?
Anne had found her way back to the original topic like a homing pigeon, when I'd quite lost track of it. 'So,' she said, 'If you're asking me if I'm sure about Felicia, no, I'm not, and I don't want to be judgmental.'
I bit my lip, and Tolliver looked off in another direction entirely. I didn't know if Anne was being one of the most judgmental people I'd ever met, or simply realistic, but I had a terrible impulse to laugh.
'Have you completed the funeral arrangements?' Tolliver asked.
'Oh, yes, part of Clyde's belief system was preparation for your funerary rites,' she said. 'He's got it all written down somewhere. I just have to find the file.' She pointed to a file cabinet across the hall in Clyde's home office. 'It's in there somewhere. Since he was an anthropology professor, he was really into death rituals, and he put a lot of thought into writing down what he wanted. Most funerals involve a church. And a minister of some kind. At one time, Clyde wanted a gathering of the clan elders with a feast and distribution of his goods.'
'The clan elders being?'
'Professors senior to him in the anthropology and sociology departments,' Anne said, as if it were quite evident.
'You would have to provide the feast, I take it?'
'Yes, dammit. Excuse me for swearing. And then all his office stuff to give out! As if anyone wanted his old pencils! But that's what he wanted, the last time I heard. Maybe he changed his mind after that. He liked to play around with ideas.'
I looked across the hall. The file cabinet and desk sat in disarray with all the drawers pulled open, and files were scattered here and there on the floor. For a crazy moment, I wondered if I should offer to help search for the documents containing Clyde's last funerary wishes, but I decided that was too much. I didn't want to know what Clyde's instructions had been about the final disposition of his body and possessions.
I couldn't think of anything else to ask Anne. I glanced at Tolliver and gave a tiny shrug, to show I was finished. Tolliver thanked her for the cookies and the coffee, and then he said, 'Do you know who told your husband that my sister would be a good person to invite for his course?'
'Oh, yes,' she said. 'I know that.'
'Who was it?' I asked, thinking that at least we were getting somewhere.
'Why, it was me,' she said simply. 'After Felicia met you in Nashville, she talked about you at a party, and I was so interested. She really believed in your powers. So I read about you on-line, and I thought that finally someone would be able to give Clyde some of his own back. He's been teaching that course for two years now, and he just loved exposing all those people as frauds, or at least as less than reliable. It wasn't that Clyde disagreed with their beliefs, either; he just didn't want anyone to be able to do anything different. But you, I knew you were real. I read the articles and I saw some pictures. That day you found the child's body, he was just furious at you. The night he died, he went out once, and then he came back even angrier, and I gathered he'd seen you at your hotel?'
I nodded.
'So then he made a phone call or two on his cell phone, and off he went again,' she said drearily. 'I went to sleep in my room. And that time, he never came home.'
'I'm sorry for your loss,' I said after a moment, when I saw she'd said all she wanted to say. But I wasn't sure she wasn't better off without Clyde Nunley.
Anne remained seated while we showed ourselves out. She was looking down at her hands, and all her manic energy seemed to have faded away, leaving her melancholy. She shook her head when I offered to call a neighbor or friend for her. 'I need to keep looking through Clyde's papers,' she said. 'And that Seth Koenig said he was coming over later. The federal agent.'
We were both quiet for a few minutes after we got in our car.
'He was mean to her,' Tolliver said. 'Surely she'll be better off.'
'Oh, yeah, Clyde was rat poop,' I said. 'But she's going to miss him, anyway.'
I couldn't see any wonderful future for Anne Nunley, but I would have to put that in the file of issues I couldn't do anything about. As we drove, I mentally constructed a future for the widow in which, at Clyde's funeral, she met a wonderful and kind doctor who had a great weakness for thin, needy women who lived in big comfortable houses. He would help her struggle back to emotional health. They would never have parties.
