Another Margaret (The Randy Craig Mysteries Book 6) Read online




  Another

  Margaret

  other Ravenstone mysteries by Janice MacDonald

  Sticks and Stones

  The Monitor

  Hang Down Your Head

  Condemned to Repeat

  The Roar of the Crowd

  Another

  Margaret

  A Randy Craig Mystery

  By

  Janice MacDonald

  Another Margaret

  copyright © Janice MacDonald 2015

  Published by Ravenstone

  an imprint of Turnstone Press

  Artspace Building

  206-100 Arthur Street

  Winnipeg, MB

  R3B 1H3 Canada

  www.TurnstonePress.com

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or ­transmitted in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or ­mechanical—without the prior ­written permission of the ­publisher. Any request to photocopy any part of this book shall be directed in writing to Access Copyright, Toronto.

  Turnstone Press gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund, and the Province of Manitoba through the Book Publishing Tax Credit and the Book Publisher ­Marketing Assistance Program.

  This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Printed and bound in Canada by Friesens for Turnstone Press.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  MacDonald, Janice E. (Janice Elva), 1959-, author

  Another Margaret / Janice MacDonald.

  (A Randy Craig mystery)

  ISBN 978-0-88801-551-8 (pbk.)

  I. Title. II. Series: MacDonald, Janice E. (Janice Elva), 1959- .

  Randy Craig mystery.

  PS8575.D6325A66 2015 C813’.54 C2015-903094-3

  Not a day goes by when I don’t think of and wish for my mom. Like so much of what I do, this is for her.

  Joyce Elizabeth Jaque MacDonald

  June 12, 1922 – June 1, 2000

  Preface

  In 1987, several monumental things happened in my life.

  I got my Masters of Arts in English, having written a thesis on “Parody and Detective Fiction,” which made me eligible to become the mystery reviewer for the Edmonton Journal for several years. Writing the monthly column “If Words Could Kill” allowed me to read widely across the genre and develop strong feelings and favourites in contemporary writing just as my research into my thesis had grounded me in the classics of the genre.

  That was also the year I became a mother, an occupation which has delighted me twice over, and consistently ever since.

  1987 was notable to me also as that was the year I moved from writing non-fiction for sustenance and radio plays for love into working on my first mystery novel—a work that became The Next Margaret. The novelty and exhaustion of motherhood took its toll, along with the arduousness of finding a publisher, so the first Randy Craig mystery didn’t appear until 1993. It launched well, got good reviews, and went out of print shortly after that, all of the copies presumably being bought up by friends of my mother. It was the story of Randy Craig coming to grad school as a mature student to work on a new Canadian writer, Margaret Ahlers, a writer Randy was sure would carry on the great tradition of Canadian female writers named Margaret (Margaret Laurence, Margaret Atwood… ). Hence the title that I thought was so clever, and everyone else seemed to stumble over.

  By the time Randy reappeared in Sticks and Stones, she was happily housed at Ravenstone Books, the genre imprint of Turnstone Press. A lot of people assume this is the first Randy Craig adventure, and by rights it ought to be. Randy, a sessional lecturer at the University of Alberta, is clearly aware of her place in the world in this book. And it is also the book in which she meets Steve Browning, her handsome police officer. And, if you pick up any of the books, you note that Ravenstone lists it as first, which is only fitting. No publishing house worth their salt advertises for another’s backlist, after all.

  The thing is, I was getting tired of people asking me which was the first book, or better yet, what number the one I was working on was. It always got complicated. And on top of that, more and more people were discovering Randy Craig, and proportionally fewer and fewer of them would ever know how it all began. Since The Next Margaret had always been what my husband considers such a “zippy little mystery,” I began to wonder about finding a way to bring the book back into accessibility.

  My publisher floated the idea of turning it into a print-on-demand e-book, so I went back to the original to check it out. It was still a fun story, but I realized that as the years had gone on, my style had expanded. (I think that I used to write so sparingly for two reasons: training in playwriting and a terrific fear of boring readers. Obviously, I have gotten over the latter.) Elements of the plot were contingent on out-of-date technologies, and might need explaining. Turning it as-is into an e-book would be unfair. I countered with the idea of a revisiting of the novel, incorporating the original into a brand new adventure.

  And that’s how this book came to be. It’s again a dyed-in-the-wool academic mystery, in that reunions and homecomings are what universities are made of—mostly, of course, to make rich alumni cough up funds for their alma maters, but also to allow us to indulge in the “best years of our lives.” The Alumni Association of the University of Alberta turns 100 the same year as this novel’s publication, 2015, which was a delightful coincidence. They also, happily for me, handed out lovely green-and-gold scarves as part of their festivities, which I had blithely created for Leo, anyhow.

  The Next Margaret has been trimmed and tightened and in places commented on from the present, and embedded into the fabric of Another Margaret, the book you are about to read. Randy’s twenty-year reunion is dredging up memories and incidents from her past—a past she thought dead and buried.

  Welcome to the official sixth Randy Craig mystery. I hope those of you who read the long-gone original will enjoy the revisiting and reimagining. If you are coming to this part of Randy’s life for the first time, the look back ought to deepen your understanding of her.

  Enjoy. And please, buy another copy for any of your friends named Margaret. Wouldn’t that be a nice gesture?

  Janice

  It is the blight man was born for,

  It is Margaret you mourn for.

  —“Spring and Fall”

  Gerard Manley Hopkins

  Another

  Margaret

  1.

  Whoever said “when things get rough, you can always fall back on teaching” probably had not considered the rigours of pedagogy. Of course, they probably had no idea what the word pedagogy meant in the first place.

  What it had meant for me was, after being out of the sessional world for more than a couple of years, I had to do quite a bit of catch-up on the expectations placed on first-year English students, in order to craft a syllabus that would pass muster with the 100-level overseer. There was far more focus on theory in the first-year courses than there had been when I was a student, or even when I’d been teaching for the few years I had found regular work after defending my thesis.

  Then, it was a combination of offering a survey of literary types, examining them with an eye to writing about them in a skilled manner, and determining what literature could tell us about a time period, a culture, or the human condition in general. M
ostly, it was about teaching first-year students how to shore up their opinions with reasoning, in order to craft a sensible and legible essay.

  I hadn’t even grasped literary theory till I was well into the third year of my BA, and I had been immersed in English courses. I wasn’t totally persuaded that the youth of today were somehow more sophisticated thinkers. Half the eighteen-year-olds I’d met were pretty sure a “meme” meant “Internet cat picture.”

  I didn’t complain too much, though. If theory, rhetoric, and literature, in that order, was what they wanted, that is what they would get. And I knuckled under and tossed in a little Derrida, Foucault, and Saussure with my punctuation tips. I must have done something right, because I’d been offered a full roster of courses for this, my second year at Grant MacEwan University.

  I was just so happy to have courses to teach, I probably would have smiled and nodded and agreed to put in two weeks of Russian grammar. My stress nightmare around exam time had always been that I had somehow enrolled in Russian 100 and yet neglected to attend the course, but still had to write the final. Once I began teaching, the nightmares had shifted to me having to teach Russian 100, with no facility for the language beyond the ability to say “thank you” and a vague grasp of the Cyrillic alphabet. In my dreams, I had not taught the class or indeed even found the classroom till the last week of term (somehow it was always situated behind the boiler room in the Biological Sciences Building) and I had to bring a very placid group of students, who had apparently continued to attend hopefully each day, up to speed in time for the final.

  Nightmares where I was beholden to people always made me more anxious than ones where I was being chased down long hallways by a knife-wielding maniac, and the Russian 100 dream never failed to wake me up sweating and shaking. There hadn’t been too much to cause nightmares otherwise. My friend Valerie was two doors down the hall, the Grant MacEwan English Department held full-scale meetings every second month, and the secretaries and the chair, Katherine West, were always very helpful.

  I taught three classes that first term and two the second. I was pretty sure that my schedule had been made up of the courses no one else wanted, since I had two 8 a.m. classes, and a 3:30-till-5 p.m. class on Tuesdays and Thursdays. That meant that my break between classes on those two days was six hours long, which was way more office-hour-timing than anyone required, but I was just so happy to get a foot back into the teaching door that I had agreed to the pickings. It seemed as if I had proved myself worthy, since I wound up with a nicer schedule this fall.

  Denise had been annoyed on my behalf, anyway. “What horrible times for classes. But you know, those kids who do sign up for the 8 a.m. classes will be the lucky ones.”

  She could smile. She had tenure and an office in the Humanities Building at the University of Alberta overlooking the glorious North Saskatchewan River Valley. As far as academe went, Denise was in the catbird seat. Her book on Shakespeare’s fools was being published by Routledge in the fall and she had been awarded a medal of distinction for her teaching earlier in the year. I didn’t begrudge her any of it; she was my best friend, and besides, she’d had a hell of summer the year before.

  I was probably dredging up these memories from last year because we were sitting at the exact same table on the patio of the Highlevel Diner as Denise and I had occupied a short twelve months ago. I checked my watch. As nice as it was to sit in the warm August sun and discuss guaranteed paying work, it would be best to drink my iced tea and head home to get the rest of this year’s syllabi done. Denise waved away my offer to pay.

  “We’re celebrating. Oh, oh, oh, I just about forgot! I have news for you that’s really going to make you want to celebrate!” She rummaged in her elegant green-and-hibiscus-flowers canvas bag, and pulled out a piece of printer paper. “Look what I found in Quill and Quire’s ‘Omni’ this morning! The minute I read it I knew you were going to be thrilled.”

  She pushed the page to me.

  “Undiscovered manuscript found” read the headline and the first line of the article sent a chill up my spine. “Seven Bird Saga marks a fifth book for Margaret Ahlers, the elusive writer who died prior to the release of what was assumed to be her final work, Feathers of Treasure. The new title is being published by Scrimshaw Scripts, an imprint of McKendricks.”

  It was impossible for there to be a fifth book, and I knew it. What the hell was going on?

  “She died when you were doing your thesis, right? How crazy is it that they’d find another posthumous manuscript?” Denise didn’t seem to notice my shock, or was just attributing it to happiness that I would soon have another Ahlers book to read and revel in. After all, I had done my thesis on the woman.

  “What’s more, I just heard that Leo is thinking of coming to town for Homecoming, to celebrate our landmark reunion from grad days. This is going to be a great year, Randy. Just like old times!”

  Just like old times, right. Of course, old times to most folks held no memories of death. Sometimes memories weren’t all they were cracked up to be. I had been leery about agreeing to help Denise with her Twenty Year Class Reunion for Homecoming Week in the first place, since, evidence to the contrary, from all the this-time-last-year reverie I’d just been indulging in, drowning in nostalgia was not something I delighted in.

  Denise had often tried to get me to join her on her treks to antique malls, which were really just zones for organized boomer hoarders, filled as they were with Partridge Family lunchboxes and Etch-a-Sketches. She would flip eagerly through bins of old vinyl and lovingly haul home old Pyrex loaf pans, because they reminded her of ones her grandmother had used. I ended up needing to stop at the pharmacy on the way home for antihistamines from all the dust kicked up on our sojourns down memory lane.

  And now she wanted to invite everyone from our grad years back to revel in the fact that we were all old, but not yet dead. Denise, of course, looked great, but I was pretty sure most of us were going to look a lot more pear-shaped and a little less golden than the last time we had seen each other. After all, we were self-selected readers and researchers, activities mostly done in a sedentary position.

  Some of my past research, that involving the works of Margaret Ahlers, had involved a whole lot more than just sitting around reading, it was true. But all of that, like the author, was long dead and buried, I had assumed.

  But now there was a fifth book? Maybe my research, as unconventional as it had seemed at the time, hadn’t been thorough enough. It had, however, been thorough enough to get someone killed.

  Part of me wanted to delight in the thought of another novel by my favourite writer. After all, everything she had ever written had thrilled me, and the work I had done on my thesis was some of my best effort and achievement ever.

  A new Ahlers was like stumbling across a new Salinger, or another Hammett, or an undiscovered Josephine Tey I had somehow missed reading when I had obsessed about her in high school. It was understandable why Denise was so pleased to bring me this news.

  Only this was a new Margaret Ahlers, and I found myself channeling Han Solo as I thought: “I’ve got a bad feeling about this.”

  2.

  Homecoming, officially titled “Alumni Weekend,” was the University of Alberta’s biggest splash of the year. It was more than merely an attempt to lure rich alumni back to their old stomping grounds, though there were elements of that. Alumni Weekend, which often stretched from the Tuesday prior to the Wednesday after the designated weekend, took place annually at the end of September. There were guest lectures from notable alumni, tours of new centres of excellence in research and additions to the rare books collection, and games, readings, and tea galore in a big tent in the quad. This had been going on for one hundred years now, and this year the Alumni Association was celebrating its own longevity as well as reunions of any special classes.

  As usual, they had sent out feelers to people who had graduated ten, twenty, twenty-five, or thirty years ago, and presumably even longer i
n five-year increments. The ploy was to engage someone who might like to organize a special reunion under the auspices of the Alumni Association, specifically targeting their own class. Dentistry Students of 1952; Agronomists of 1979; that sort of thing. While it was up to any specific group to arrange their own class reunions, if your graduation year fell on a particular decade marker, the Alumni Office usually tried to help out.

  We were at the twenty-year marker, give or take. Grad school was funny that way, since your cohort wasn’t necessarily starting or finishing at the same time you did. You bonded with PhD students who weren’t going to see parchment for another four years while you were defending your thesis the next month. Your officemate could be there for another year, or maybe six if she didn’t time out. Seminars you attended held brand new MA students and seasoned PhD candidates. So, we were approximating on the date, mostly on the connection to a very tight group of us who’d all shared office space in the House, a condemned building across the street from the Humanities Building, in our write-up years. Denise and Leo had got their PhDs, and I my MA, but several other people we were inviting had finished the following year, as well. One of my constant companions in grad school days had been a fellow named Guy Larmour, who had received his PhD the year before I finished. He and I had kept in touch for a few years, and then he had fallen off the grid. I wondered if he was in touch with anyone else, and whether he was planning to attend the English Grad Students’ party.

  Denise, of course, was in charge as the Class Organizer. To my knowledge, it is only ever the prettiest people who think reunions are a good idea to begin with. She had conscripted me to write to people and invite them to come back for a September vacation in Edmonton, a football game, Tuck Shop cinnamon buns and the chance to reunite with people we hadn’t spoken to in over a decade. I had tried to demur, citing the fact that I was up to my elbows in preparing for my new classes, but Denise wasn’t going to allow any of that. And after all, since I had involved her in all sorts of unsavoury projects over the years, the least I could do was help out with hers. Of course, the “least I could do” were my watchwords. I was hoping to have the flu that weekend, and not have to rehash a lot of forced banter and bonhomie. Most of my grad days had been filled with worry that I wasn’t going to snare an advisor, and then when I found one, the fear that she was going to kill me.