“Katie’s death has made me realize how important Emily is to me, Paul. I don’t want to end up like poor Mrs. Dunbar. She’ll never be able to hug her daughters again, tell them that she loves them. Never rock her grandchildren to sleep.”
Paul walked over to the window and drew open up the curtains. Sunlight cascaded into the room. “Emily’s not as far away as you think, Hannah.” He bent and kissed the top of my head. “Take your time.” Seconds later the door closed softly behind him.
I remained where I was, with the sun falling full on my body. I stretched in its warmth and felt as if the healing had already begun.
I took a shower and pulled on a pair of shorts and a T-shirt. After yesterday’s adventures my wig looked like road kill, so I settled a hat on my patchy head, dabbed on some makeup, and padded downstairs.
In the kitchen the clock said nine, and Paul was pouring a cup of coffee for his sister. I had just sat down to join them when there was a knock on the door and Dennis walked in, looking as if he hadn’t had much sleep. He extended his hand to Paul, who took it in both of his and pumped it up and down enthusiastically. “Glad you made it. You made good time.”
“Lucky I didn’t get caught speeding on the Jersey Pike. Found a truck cruising along at seventy-five and dogged his tail. I tell you, though, when that trooper knocked on our door in North Truro, I nearly had a heart attack.”
“Sorry, old man. Couldn’t think of any other way to locate you.”
“Glad you did.” He looked at me with such affection that it nearly broke my heart.
I broke the spell. “Coffee?”
“Can’t refuse.” Dennis pulled out a chair and sat down. After he poured milk into his cup and stirred in half a teaspoon of sugar, he took a careful sip. “Chase is going to be okay. He’s confessed to everything, implicating the others. Didn’t want a lawyer, although I insisted one be called. Says he’ll plead guilty to all charges.”
“And?”
“And you were right, Hannah. Old Dr. Chase had prescribed herbs for Katie’s cramps. Frank found the notations on her chart. He says she induced her own abortion by taking two tablespoons of pennyroyal. Dangerous stuff. The usual dose is five drops.”
“Why didn’t she just pay for the abortion with the money Hal gave her?” Connie’s forehead wrinkled in confusion.
“I can guess,” I said. “She spent it all on the dress she wore to the dance. It was meant to dazzle Chip into bed.”
“How foolish and sad.” Paul slumped in his chair, his coffee forgotten.
“How about Liz? And Hal?” Connie wanted to know.
“Still no trace of Liz. But the divers found Hal in the boat.”
I set my mug down on the table, carefully, using both hands. My heart was thumping wildly. “Dead?”
“I’m afraid so. He had a life preserver on, but his foot was wedged in an opening in the bilge. Snapped his ankle.”
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. My hands trembled.
“And I think we’ll need to talk about this.” Dennis pulled a neatly wrapped package out of his pocket, placed it on the table, and unrolled it. It was the silver lure, its tail feathers ragged, but its barbed hook as bright, shiny, and sharp as the day Craig had bought it.
“It was the only weapon I had. I couldn’t think of anything else.” I looked Dennis in the eye. “Did I kill him?”
Dennis rewrapped the deadly lure and returned it to his pocket. “No, Hannah. Looks like he drowned.”
But I felt responsible, either way. Even if the lure hadn’t killed him outright, I was still the one who pulled the plug on Sea Song. I’d have to learn to live with that.
Paul rose and stood behind me, a hand on my shoulder. “My God, that was brave.”
“It didn’t feel very brave at the time. I was scared spitless.”
Dennis poured the coffee remaining in his cup down the sink. “You’ll need to come down to make a formal statement.” He handed the empty mug to Connie. “Both of you.”
Connie looked down at her bathrobe and turned her fashion-critical eyes on me. I must have been a sight in my paint-spattered shorts and a sequin-decorated ball cap perched sideways on my head. “Later this afternoon?”
“That’ll be fine.”
I started to panic. “You’re not going to arrest me?”
Dennis’s face broke into a huge grin. “Don’t be silly! We’ll probably give you a medal.”
Two weeks later, back in Annapolis, we learned that Liz’s body had been discovered by a crabber, caught in a trotline near the mouth of the Patuxent River. I sent a silent prayer to the Dunbars; I could only imagine their anguish at losing both their daughters, and under such horrible circumstances.
At the same time I called my daughter, Emily, in Colorado. I spent an afternoon rehearsing what I was going to say, but when she came on the line, my script flew out the window, I was so relieved to hear her voice.
“Hi, how’s it going, pumpkin?”
“Oh, hi, Ma. I’ve been meaning to call.”
Daniel’s business was going well, she told me. He’d hired another masseur and had completed a year’s training at the Rolf Institute in Boulder. My son-in-law was a certified rolfer, some sort of high-class masseur, I gathered, who could get away with being called simply Dante.
“And, Ma?”
“What?”
“I got a job, Ma.”
“That’s good news. What are you doing?”
“Working in a bookstore. Not one of those big chains. A little store. You’d like it.”
The old me would have mentioned all the money we’d spent on her Bryn Mawr education, just so she could follow some dropout to Colorado and work in a bookstore, but the new me bit my tongue. “I’m sure I would like it,” I said.
“Even has a cappuccino bar.”
“Now I know I’d like it.” I paused. “I don’t think the place where I’ll be working has a cappuccino bar.”
“Mother! I thought Dad said you were going to take it easy for a while.”
“I’m temping. The job doesn’t start until September anyway. I’ll be working for a law firm somewhere out on West Street, filling in for a secretary on maternity leave.”
“Funny you should mention that.”
“Mention what?”
“Maternity leave.” Emily giggled, then was silent. A light began to dawn.
“Emily! Are you pregnant?”
“Hold on, Ma. I’ve only just found out. Took one of those home pregnancy tests yesterday morning. Damnedest things. Pee on a stick and voila! If the double pink lines are to be believed, you and Dad are going to be grandparents.”
I counted on my fingers. “December?”
“That’s what I figure. A little Christmas package for the old parental units.”
I thought I was saying words like how wonderful and I’m so happy, but what came out was babble. When I could finally put two words together, I said, “Emily, I’d like to come and stay with you, to help out when the baby is born. If that’s okay.”
“I’d like that very much, Mother.”
Many minutes later, after we finally said good-bye, I levitated around the house, picking up newspapers, watering the houseplants, loading the dishwasher. Then I thought about Katie and the precious little life she had carried, both snuffed out before they had a chance to bloom, and I felt guilty about being so happy.
While I waited for Paul to get home so I could deliver the news that he was going to be a grandfather, I strolled down the block and around the corner to Maryland Avenue. At Aurora Gallery, I bought Emily an iridescent dragonfly pin, beautifully crafted by a local artist. As Jean was wrapping it up, I spotted a hand-painted tie. “And I’ll take that, too,” I told her. Forty bucks. What the hell, I’d send it to Daniel. “To Dan, with love,” I wrote on the card when I got it all to the post office. No way was I going to write “Dante.”
On May 22 Jennifer Goodall was graduated with the rest of her class. Paul delivered th
is news upon returning from graduation exercises at the stadium where the reporters were busy snapping pictures of the Blue Angels, the navy band, the president of the United States, and the hat toss, ignoring my husband for a welcome change. Paul hung his academic regalia in a plastic garment bag, zipped it up so hard that the bag tore, then placed a long phone call to his lawyer.
I was suspicious when I heard the news. “Did you change her grade? Pass her after all?”
“Absolutely not.”
“Well, how could she graduate then? Wasn’t it a required course?”
“Apparently the academic board waived the requirement.”
“Why? Was she a star athlete or something?”
“What a cynic you are! No, I suspect somebody browbeat the board. Maybe she cut a deal. Offered to drop the charges against me if the academy would allow her to graduate.”
“How do you feel about that?”
“Outraged. A number of us are planning to write letters of opposition, for all the good it will do. But I’m enormously relieved, and disappointed, too. Relieved that it’s over. Disappointed that the truth about her accusation will never be resolved.” He grasped my shoulders, searching my eyes for understanding. “I wanted to be exonerated, Hannah! I wanted you to know I’d been faithful. Beyond all doubt.”
Beyond doubt. My mother says I have to make up my mind one way or the other—either Paul slept with that woman or he didn’t—and then deal with it on those terms. Better advice than I got from the therapist, and about two hundred dollars less expensive, too.
Speaking of therapy, that’s how I ended up on the beach at Manchineel Bay, eating conch fritters out of a paper container resting on my stomach. Paul sprang the trip on me as a surprise. “I’m taking you to the Virgin Islands. No argument. I’ve chartered a sailboat out of Tortola.”
“A sailboat! Ha! That’s just what I need.”
“It’s therapy, Hannah, like getting back on a horse after you fall off.”
So there I was, waiting for Paul to return from the Cooper Island Beach Bar with two piña coladas. He plopped down on the towel next to me and handed me my drink. I took a sip, moaned with pleasure, then set the glass into the sand next to me, twisting it back and forth, digging a little hole so it wouldn’t fall over. Gentle waves licked at my toes. Another day in paradise. I watched our charter vessel, Visage, bob and sway at anchor in water so crystal clear that it seemed to be suspended in air.
“Paul?” He had returned to his paperback book.
“Umm?”
“After I finish my stint at the law firm, do you think I should go ahead and have that breast reconstruction?”
He laid his book open on the sand and turned to face me, sunglasses askew, propped up on one elbow, sand sugaring his knees. He looked adorable. “Do it for yourself, honey, not for me.”
“I was looking in that little shop up there.” I pointed toward an island boutique behind the Beach Bar where earlier I had spent nearly thirty minutes looking at tropical beach wraps and swimsuits. “There are a couple of bikinis I could wear if I had two decent boobs to hang them on.”
“Hannah, you know I love you no matter what. I want whatever makes you happy.” He reached up and touched my hair, which had blossomed, surprisingly, into a profusion of brownish gold ringlets. “Significant change in hair texture,” Dr. Wilkins had written on my chart after my last examination.
I smiled at my husband, feeling waves of affection wash over me. With his finger, he traced a line along my shoulder and down my arm. When he picked up my right hand and gently kissed my fingers, I knew we wouldn’t be sleeping in separate cabins anymore.
Marcia Talley lives in Annapolis, Maryland, with her husband, a professor at the U.S. Naval Academy, where she is the systems librarian. Sing It to Her Bones, her first novel, won the Malice Domestic Grant for unpublished writers in 1998. When she isn’t traveling or sailing, Marcia Talley is busy working on the next book in the Hannah Ives series.
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