Chapter One
Lacette Graham sat on the edge of her bed wrapping a gift for her mother’s birthday, though she didn’t expect more than perfunctory thanks when she gave it to her later that day. The strong, cold wind, unusual for early November, rattled her windows, and she tightened her robe. But neither the temperature nor the blustery wind could take responsibility for the chill that raced through her. Familiar with her premonitions, she began to anticipate something unwanted, and her head snapped up when the door opened without a knock. It surprised her even more to see her father, the Reverend Marshall Graham, enter her bedroom. Wasn’t it one of his strict rules that each family member be accorded privacy at all times?
“I’m leaving your mother,” he said, skipping preliminaries.
“Where do you want her to meet you?” she asked him, assuming that he expected her mother to follow him.
“Lacette, I’m leaving Cynthia for good.”
She sprang from the bed and grabbed the collar of his jacket. “What? What are you talking about? Daddy, what’s going on?”
The easy shrug of his shoulder didn’t fool her; her father preached the sacredness of marriage to his children and regularly from his pulpit. “If you want to know the reasons,” he replied in a voice heavy with tremors, “ask your mother, but I doubt she’ll tell you the truth. I’ll let you know where I am.” His left arm clasped her to him, and he bent and kissed her forehead.
He released her, and she stared at him, speechless, trembling and a little scared, for he had just jerked the carpet of contentment and security from beneath her, stripped her of her safety net. She grabbed the foot of the wooden sleigh bed for support. “You wouldn’t joke about a thing like this. Would you? Today’s Mama’s birthday,” she added, grabbing at a straw of hope. “I mean . . . I was wrapping her present.”
His eyes pitied her. Kind eyes filled with the love that had nurtured her for every day of her thirty-three years. “I know. I also had a nice surprise for her, but . . . well, I’ll call you in a day or so.”
“Did you tell Kellie?” she asked, referring to her twin sister.
“She’s not home, and I’m not staying here another minute. I’ll call her tonight. Be in touch.”
Less than a minute later, she heard the front door close, walked to the window and watched her father load three suitcases into the trunk of his gray Cadillac, a gift from the sisters and brothers of Mount Airy-Hill Baptist Church. To see her father, the person in the world dearest to her, walk out of the home he cherished, with dark clouds hovering and strong winds testing his strength, sent tremors throughout her body as the tragedy of it settled into her psyche. She would remember that scene until the day she died.
For a long while, she pondered what grievance her father could have against her mother, a God-fearing woman and dutiful wife. Realizing that the telephone had been ringing for some time, she got up and answered it, though with reluctance; she didn’t want to talk to anyone.
“Hello.”
“Where’s Marshall going? I just saw him putting three big suitcases in his car,” It was her aunt Nan, her father’s only sister, who lived across the street from the parsonage, which had served as their home since her teenage years.
“I don’t know, Aunt Nan, but he’s left Mama. That’s what he told me a couple of minutes ago. I mean, he’s left her for good.”
“Girl, you go ’way from here. Don’t let no words like that come off your tongue.”
“It’s the truth.”
“I can’t believe it. Did he say why?”
“No, ma’am. He told me to ask her, but he didn’t think she’d tell me the truth.”
“That don’t make a bit of sense. Marshall never did believe in divorce, and he never takes a step without thinking long and hard about what he’s going to do or say. Something happened that he’s not telling.”
“Looks like it.”
“Well, did you ask your mother?”
“I want to, that is, if I get up the nerve to ask her. She’s not home. Can we talk later, Aunt Nan? I’m having a problem with this.”
“I guess you are, child.”
After Lacette hung up, her first thought was what her father would tell his parishioners in church the next day, Sunday, and she made up her mind right then to be there. She moseyed around the room fingering the little wooden statue her father carved for her long before she reached adolescence, glancing toward a window at the deepening gray of the clouds, rummaging among the papers on her desk, doing nothing, aimless. A gust of wind from the front door told her that either Kellie or her mother had entered the house and she rushed to the top of the stairs.
“Kellie. Kellie, something awful has happened. Have you talked with Mama?”
“Haven’t seen her since breakfast. What’s up?”
“Papa left Mama. He’s moved out of our home.” She couldn’t believe Kellie’s careless shrug. She may as well have said she didn’t care. “Doesn’t it matter to you that our father has left home?”
“Yeah. You said so. It’ll straighten itself out. Where did he go?”
“I don’t know.” She fought back the tears, not wanting to let Kellie feel that she was the stronger of the two; her sister already had a big enough ego.
“For goodness sake, don’t mope about it. How can anybody break up a thirty-five-year marriage? Besides, Daddy can’t scramble an egg, so how’s he going to get along by himself?”
She hated Kellie’s superior attitude. “Kellie, this is serious. I don’t even know where Mama is.”
“Don’t worry about it. We’d better find a restaurant so we can take her out to dinner. Uh . . . what did you get her for a present?”
Lacette threw up her hands, exasperated. Talking about presents when their family had just been rent apart. “Present? Oh. I bought her a silk gown and a bottle of Azure perfume. She loves that. What did you get?”
“Pew. Whenever I smell Azure, I look around expecting to see Mama. I started smelling it before I was born. Maybe Daddy left because he got tired of it. I bought her a red robe.”
“You what? But Kellie, you know Mama doesn’t like red.”
“I’m sick of seeing her in that drab, green thing she wears around here. She will wear this robe”—she pointed to the shopping bag in her hand—“because I gave it to her.”
Yes. She probably will, Lacette thought, but didn’t bother to articulate the sarcasm. “I have to look up some information on a group of antiques. An expert on those figurines I’m hawking next week, I definitely am not,” Lacette told Kellie. “See you about six.”
Lacette worked as a freelance demonstrator of assorted household products and personal care items, but she had not previously presented valuable antiques. Anxious to open her own marketing firm, she wasn’t choosy about what she demonstrated, so long as the company paid well and the merchandise was legal and decent. Six o’clock came too soon, for she dreaded being with her mother and seeing her unhappy.
“We’re meeting her at the restaurant,” Kellie explained to Lacette “She hasn’t been home.”
Lacette didn’t like that. Her mother had always been a homebody and wasn’t given to staying away from home all day, and especially not on a Saturday when parishioners would occasionally drop in. “Did you tell her about Daddy? Or do you think she knows?”
“Of course, I didn’t tell her,” Kellie said. “It’s her birthday.
“You can hear this engine a mile away,” Kellie said when Lacette moved her old Chevrolet away from the curb, “and it pollutes the whole neighborhood.”
“You’re exaggerating.”
“Not by much. You need a new car.”
“New cars cost money, Kellie, and I’m trying to save to start my own business.”
“If you go around in this broken-down thing, nobody will go near your place when you open it. If you want to get ahead, you have to look like you already have it made.”
She didn’t think much of Kellie’s gospel: Forget the content; what mattered was the way you packaged it. However, since Kellie rarely asked for her opinion and didn’t appreciate it when she got it, Lacette didn’t comment.
Their mother waited at a corner table at Mealey’s, a cozy restaurant with low-beamed ceilings, pink tablecloths, and stone fireplaces that crackled with fire on that cool November evening. After they greeted her, it saddened Lacette to see her mother cross her arms and rub them up and down continually as if she were cold.
“Did your father say he’d be getting home late?”
Kellie, who Lacette thought had both the guts and the audacity to eyeball the Pope, focused her gaze on the pink tablecloth, and didn’t speak.
“Did you see him?” Cynthia asked, looking at Kellie, the family member who most enjoyed carrying news.
“I wasn’t there when he left,” she said. “He talked with Lacette.”
Lacette hated hurting her mother, and she especially didn’t want to do that on her mother’s birthday, but from Cynthia’s demeanor, Lacette could tell that the woman expected the hatchet to fall. “He said he was moving out of the house, and he took three suitcases with him. That’s all I know.”
A groan escaped Cynthia Graham, and she seemed to wilt, slumping in her chair and closing her eyes. “What am I going to do?”
Kellie picked up her menu and began turning its pages. “Keep on living,” she advised. “Cut your hair, shorten your skirts, slap some makeup on your face and show him you don’t give a hoot. Men suck, anyway.”
Cynthia straightened up just a little and focused her gaze on Kellie. “Do you realize you’re talking about your father?” she asked, her voice devoid of the outrage Lacette would have expected.
“I realize it,” Kellie replied, beckoning for the waiter. “The point is, do you?”
Lacette thought the meal would never end. Birthdays had always been joyous occasions that the family celebrated with fancy meals, gifts, and pranks, catering in thoughtful ways to the birthday celebrant. Without their father, who relished the occasions, their dinner had, for Lacette, a funereal air. An onlooker would have thought that they were mourning the passing of a dear one, and in some ways, they were. She pasted an expression on her face that belied the pain in her heart and hoped that neither Kellie nor her mother detected her hypocrisy.
How in heaven’s name could Kellie and her mother eat with such gusto? Although Kellie’s plate had been piled with short ribs of beef, candied sweet potatoes, and spinach, it looked as if she had sopped it with a piece of bread, and Cynthia’s looked much the same. It occurred to her, not for the first time, that in spite of their apparent differences, her mother and sister not only resembled each other physically, but had very similar personalities and behavior. By the time they reached home, Lacette had exhausted her reservoir of pretense. She gave her mother two packages, kissed her and fled to her room.
“Want some coffee, Mama?” Kellie asked her mother as she watched her sister hasten up the stairs.
“I wouldn’t mind some. Thanks. You know, I just can’t figure out what got into your father.”
Kellie hung their coats in the hall closet, a big one crowded with assorted outer wear, fishing gear, umbrellas that didn’t seem to belong in the neat, elegantly furnished and modernized Federal house that predated the twentieth century.
“We are not going to discuss that, Mama. Okay?” Relief spread over Cynthia’s demeanor, and Kellie headed for the kitchen, not waiting for her mother’s reply.
“I hope you like it,” Kellie said before she handed her mother the box that contained the red robe. “You can use a change. A big change.”
She watched Cynthia’s face as she pushed aside the tissue paper and stared down at the brilliant red fabric. She swallowed hard enough for Kellie to hear her. “You gave me something—”
Kellie interrupted her, ignoring Cynthia’s stammers, ready to drive home her point. “You’re still a young woman, and it’s time you acted like it. Fifty-five isn’t old, Mama. When you’re eighty, you’ll curse yourself for having wasted your youth.”
Cynthia stood, held the garment to her body and walked to the hall mirror. “I guess you’re right. It is nice, but I was raised to believe women wore red to attract men’s attention, so I—”
“Pooh. It looks good on you. Buy yourself a red suit or, better still, a red coat.”
Cynthia’s face bore a horrified expression that caused her daughter to wonder if her mother had been taking acting classes. When she said, “Oh, Kellie, what will people think?” Kellie stared at her, then shrugged.
“Look, Mama. If you get a decent hair style and a pair of shoes with a heel less than two inches wide to go with it, everybody will think you look great. It’s time you came out of the dungeon and got with it.”
Cynthia gazed at herself in the mirror, letting her hand pass slowly over her right cheek before she smoothed her hair and smiled. “I’m not that bad, am I?”
As Kellie had known, her mother would wear the red robe and enjoy it. She loved the scent of gourmet coffee, an aroma that usually gave her a sense of well-being, but at the moment, she couldn’t bring herself to enjoy it. Her mind was on the frivolousness she detected in Cynthia. God forbid it was such gullibility as Cynthia had just displayed that got her into her present trouble. Kellie didn’t want the coffee, but she drank it anyway, cooling it with the wind of her breath and sipping slowly, relieving herself of the necessity of talking. Sucking her teeth was the only evidence she gave of the spurt of anger that shot through her. Sure as hell, her mother didn’t want to hear the words that fought to come out of her. She leaned back and closed her eyes; the time would come, though, when those unspoken words would be her trump card.
She put their cups, saucers, and spoons in the dishwasher and switched off the kitchen lights. “I’m going to bed, Mama. Happy number fifty-five. See you in the morning.”
“Thank you for making my day, honey. Uh . . . You going to church in the morning?”
“Hadn’t planned on it, and I probably won’t.” She headed toward the stairs. “Good night, Mama.”
“Good night, dear.”
Cynthia hadn’t moved from her seat on the living room sofa, a lone figure in the dimly lit, almost eerie setting, with only the whistling of the wind for company. Kellie looked at her mother for a long time before going to her room, getting into her bed and sinking into a deep, restful sleep.
On that Sunday morning, Lacette arose early, cooked breakfast and called Kellie and her mother to eat. When neither responded, she checked their rooms, found nothing untoward, and put their food in the oven. Then, as she had promised herself, she went to her father’s church and sat in her usual seat. She didn’t burden her mind with thoughts of what the parishioners made of her mother’s absence. Cynthia Graham did not miss Sunday morning service unless she was ill. She’d been known to attend service when she had barely enough energy to walk up the half a dozen steps leading to the front door.
Lacette listened for half an hour to her father’s sermon—a very good one considering the radical change he made in his life the previous day—extolling the efficacy of loyalty and trust. She wondered if he was talking about his personal life. At the end of the service, when the people usually gathered to give praise, to share the message they received from the pastor’s sermon, and sometimes to gossip about what someone was wearing and who was in what kind of trouble, Lacette dashed to the women’s room and, seeing that the route was clear, rushed from there to her father’s office and waited for him.
Marshall Graham walked into his office and closed the door, having spent much less time with his parishioners than was usual for him on a Sunday morning. When he saw Lacette, a smile replaced his somber demeanor. She jumped to her feet and met him as he started toward her.
“I’m so glad you came,” he said. “I knew that if a member of my family showed up here this morning, you’d be the one. How are you?”
She let herself enjoy the strength of his embrace as she tried to recall the last time she had experienced the loving warmth of her mother’s arms. She kissed her father’s cheek, moved away from him and voiced the thought she’d just had.
“Don’t ever compare your relationship with your father to your relationship with your mother. You look to us for different things, to me for protection and to her for social identity. When you passed your teens, your mother had to stop mothering you and let you be a woman. My role remains the same; it’s the way I exercise it that has changed. So don’t be so hard on your mother. What’s happened is between her and me, and I don’t want you to take sides.”
“I don’t know if that’s possible, Daddy. I’ve always felt closer to you than to anyone else.”
A half smile flitted across his face. “It’s enough that Kellie will take sides with her. Don’t you be guilty of the same foolishness.”
“I see what you mean,” she said. And she did. Kellie had always wound their mother around her little finger, avoiding guidance when she needed it and punishment when she deserved it. “Have you found a place to stay?”
“Last night I stayed at a motel over in New Market, and I don’t think anyone recognized me. If I let it be known that Cynthia and I are separated, the trustees might expect my family to move out of the parish house, and I don’t want to see you and Kellie without a home.”
She noticed that he did not include her mother in that statement. “Let’s go have lunch somewhere, Daddy. I’m hungry.”
“Me, too. I had a nice supper at a little inn near Lake Linga-nore last night. Why don’t we go there? Stokey’s is nice.”
“You’re on, Daddy. Anywhere as long as the place serves food.”
“Leave your car here in my parking space,” he told her. “There’s no reason why we both should drive. If we go together, we’ll be able to talk.”
They drove along the boundary of Catoctin Mountain Park where leaves that once hung green and heavy on the trees lay thick and beautiful in a gold, orange, and red carpet upon the ground. It was one of the reasons why Lacette loved the autumn.
“It’s so peaceful along here,” she said, glanced at the speedometer and then at her father. “Could you please slow down, Daddy?”
He did as she asked. “I was only doing fifty. Whatever happened to that fellow, Reggie. Was that his name?” She took his question as a sign that he wanted a change of subject. Her father had very little tolerance for criticism, and she had just criticized his driving.
“Reggie neither recognized nor understood the word ‘no’ so I sent him packing. That kind of man is a nuisance.”
He turned off Catoctin Furnace Road into Parks Drive, a romantic lane overhung with branches that formed a mile-long arbor often referred to as lovers’ drive. He stopped in front of a white brick building that was distinguished mainly by the replica of a great elk astride its roof.
Lacette made no move to get out of the car. “Daddy, I have a feeling that if we’re eating here so you won’t see anyone who knows us, you’re going to be disappointed.”
He got out, walked around the car and opened her door. A mark of absentmindedness, she knew, because he usually allowed her to let herself out of the car. “You think so?” he asked.
“Yes, sir.”
He took her arm and made rapid strides to the restaurant. “We’ll see.”
Almost as soon as they seated themselves, the waitress arrived with two menus. “Lord, Reverend Graham, it sure is an honor to wait on you. This your daughter for sure, cause she looks just like you. No, sir, you can’t disown this one. She’s even got that little dimple in her left cheek.”
Lacette rarely saw her father flustered, but he turned the pages of the menu over and over without looking at them and drank half a glass of water, although he seldom tasted it.
“Do you go to Mount Airy-Hill?” he asked the waitress.
“I did for a while before we moved up here. What y’all having? The ribs are out of sight today. Mouthwatering.”
They placed their orders, and as soon as the woman left them, Marshall rested his elbows on the white tablecloth, made a pyramid of his hands and rested his chin on the tips of his fingers. “How often do you get it right?”
“When I have a premonition like I did earlier, I know to expect something, but I never know what.” Like tomorrow, she thought, but didn’t say, for whatever came would not be welcome. She fingered the little medallion in her purse and prayed for the best.
After lunch, he drove her back to the church. “I hope you and Kellie took your mother out to dinner for her birthday last night.” He parked the Cadillac beside her old Chevrolet. “The Bible tells us, ‘Honor thy father and thy mother,’ and I’ve tried to instill that in you and your sister. She’s your mother, no matter what.”
Was he preparing her for something, or did he have a guilty conscience? Somehow, she didn’t think he was the one nursing guilt. “We took her to Mealey’s, and it was as gloomy an occasion as I have ever witnessed. I thought it would go on forever. I didn’t even enjoy the crab cakes, and that should give you an idea of how miserable an affair it was.”
“I can imagine, and I’m sorry, but I’d have been a liar if I’d had dinner with her. I’m going to run by and see Mama Carrie for a couple of minutes. Then I’m going back to the motel till time for evening prayer.” He wrote his telephone number on the back of his business card and handed it to her. “Call me if you need me,” he said, got into his car and headed to his mother-in-law’s house.
As she drove home, it occurred to her that she should look for a place of her own. Her father had discouraged her attempts to move out of his house, claiming that nice girls stayed home until they married, but he was no longer their family anchor. Besides, she had remained with the family because he would consider it an affront if his unmarried daughters lived alone in a town in which he resided, although he would have accepted their moving to another locality. Male pride was a thing she didn’t think she would ever understand.
The next morning, Lacette awoke suddenly and sat up in bed, startled by the banging on her door. Seconds later, Kellie rushed into the room.
“Ginga just called. She found Gramma unconscious, and the ambulance is taking her to Frederick Memorial.”
Lacette slid off the bed and struggled into her robe. “I’d better call Daddy. He went to see her yesterday afternoon. Where’s Mama?”
“Getting dressed. You talked with Daddy yesterday? Oh, that’s right; you went to church.”
Lacette telephoned her father and gave him the news. “How was she yesterday?”
“She looked great. When I got there, she was watching the Ravens on television. We had a good visit, and I promised to see her next Sunday. I’ll get over to the hospital to see how she’s doing.” An hour later, he approached his mother-in-law’s hospital room as Lacette, Kellie, and Cynthia emerged from it.
“How is . . . What’s the matter?’ he asked, rushing forward, his face ashen. “Is she . . .”
“She’s gone,” Lacette said. “She had an embolism. Nothing could be done.”
He gasped. Then, in a quick recovery, he took her mother’s hand. “I’m terribly sorry, Cynthia. Mama Carrie was a mother to me for more than thirty-five years. When I left her yesterday, her spirits were high, and she was in a good mood. Happy. I’m thankful for that.”
He parked behind Lacette’s car when they reached home, went in with them, surprising Lacette, and sat with them in the living room of what, until the previous morning, had been his home.
She gazed at the people around her, sitting together in total quiet as if they were still a family. Unable to bear it, she rushed from the room, explaining that she would make coffee. After forcing herself to settle down, she made the coffee, for she knew Kellie wouldn’t do it. She let enough time pass for the chill to lift from the living room, put the coffeepot, four mugs, sugar, and a half pint of milk on a tray and took it to her family.
“I know it isn’t easy for you, Cynthia,” her father was saying when she walked back into the living room, “but we have to talk about the service. It’s best to have it Saturday morning and the interment directly from the church that afternoon. I’ll have my secretary take care of bulletins, media announcements, ushers and so on, and she’ll E-mail all of the parishioners who are on-line. One of you girls write out a short page on Mama Carrie’s life and E-mail it to Mrs. Watson.” He looked at his estranged wife as if gauging her attitude. “You want to go with me to the funeral home to pick out the casket, or do you want to leave that to me?”
She wiped her eyes. “You’re doing all this after what—”
He cut her off. “This isn’t about you, Cynthia. I’m doing it for Mama Carrie and for my daughters.”
Lacette sucked in her breath and stared first at her mother and then at her father, looking for a clue, anything that would tell her what had gone wrong between them, but the most experienced actors couldn’t have covered their feelings more adeptly.
“Well, for whatever reason you’re doing it,” Cynthia said, “I certainly do thank you. And . . . I’d rather not go pick out the casket. Lord, I can’t even believe she’s gone.” She covered her eyes with a handkerchief, but only for a second. “Don’t worry, Marshall,” she said, sitting up straighter in the chair and crossing her knees, “I’m not going to break down. At least not now.” Without another word, she left them and went up the stairs to the room she once shared with her husband.
Ten days later, Kellie sat in a lawyer’s office along with Lacette, her parents, and Ginga, her grandmother’s friend and cleaning woman, to hear the reading of Carrie Hooper’s will. To her mind, only Lacette, their mother, and she should be there, because they were her grandmother’s descendants and rightful heirs. Instead of dividing what was left by three, it would be shared by five people. She didn’t really object to her father having any of it, but why should he?
Eighteen years earlier, Carrie Hooper would not have had a will; she was poor, a thirty dollar a week cook in Rosewell, North Carolina, a widow who depended on the one hundred and fifty dollars that her son-in-law sent her every month. After a fire burned her wood-frame house beyond repair, Marshall—her son-in-law—brought her to Baltimore where she became a member of his family. Her love for Marshall was obvious to anyone who cared to observe it. Cynthia complained that her mother only cooked foods Marshall liked and favored him over her in many ways. Carrie would reply, “You should be half the daughter to me that he is a son to me. You’re too self-centered.”
No one would have believed that Carrie played the lottery until she hit it for a little more than a million dollars. Everyone who knew her and who heard about it wanted some of it, but Carrie announced that she would give ten percent to the Lord’s work, finance her granddaughters’ college educations should they decide to go, and repay Marshall the thirty thousand dollars he’d sent her in monthly subsidies over the years.
Within a week after Carrie hit the lottery, Marshall received the call to pastor the Mount Airy-Hill Baptist Church in Frederick, Maryland, and moved his family into the church’s parsonage. Carrie bought a Victorian style house, furnished it and lived comfortably about a mile from the parsonage. She often boasted that her son-in-law didn’t let a week pass without dropping by to see her, and complained that she received a visit from her own daughter about once a month, twice if she was fortunate. Rocking in her bentwood rocker, she would almost always add, “Cynthia’s gonna regret her ways, but unfortunately, I won’t be around to see it.”
“This is straightforward,” the lawyer said as soon as he sat down. “You’re all here. Now, let’s get started.” He read the will:
To my daughter, Cynthia, I leave my car, my fur coat, and any of my clothing that she wants;
To my granddaughter, Kellie, I leave my diamond ring and what money remains in my account at Frederick County Bank;
To my granddaughter, Lacette, I leave my diamond brooch . . . He paused at Kellie’s loud gasp. And all the money in my account at First United Bank & Trust, except twenty-five thousand dollars, which I leave to my friend, Ginga Moore;
To my son-in-law, Marshall Graham, I leave my house and all of its contents, except my clothing.
He passed a copy of the will to each of them. “That’s it. Accept my condolences and my best wishes.”
I don’t believe this,” Kellie said. “She knew how I love that brooch. I told her a hundred times that I wanted it, and she gave it to Lacette.”
“Come on. Let’s go,” Cynthia said. “I’ve had enough for one day.”
“I’ll bet that account she left me doesn’t have half as much in it as the one she gave to Lacette.”
“At least she left you some money,” Cynthia said. “How do you think I feel knowing she cared more for my husband than she did for me?”
Kellie rolled her eyes. “Spare me, Mama.” She glanced around, hoping to cast an accusing look at her father, but was deprived even of that small pleasure, for at that moment he and Lacette walked out of the office.
“She’ll get that brooch over my dead body,” Kellie muttered. “Don’t you care that she left that house to Daddy? It must be worth two or three hundred thousand dollars.”
Cynthia pulled out of Kellie’s grasp and walked ahead of her. “I don’t want to talk about that right now. I’m still dealing with the fact that she’s dead.”
“But they’re getting everything!”
“Leave me alone, Kellie.”
Kellie leaned against a chair, gaping at her mother’s departing back. On an impulse, she crossed the room to where the lawyer spoke on the telephone and waited.
“Do you have the ring and brooch?” she asked him after he hung up.
“I’ll have them tomorrow. Be here around ten.”
“Thank you so much,” she said, softening her demeanor. “It hurts. Like somebody stabbed me. She was my favorite relative, and I loved her more than I loved my parents or my sister. It’s . . . it was so sudden.” She let her left hand graze his forearm. “Gramma was a wonderful person.” He believed her; he had to believe her because she meant to have that brooch, and he was going to help her get it.
Kellie knocked on Attorney Lawrence Bradley’s office door at ten the next morning and, in response to his greeting, pushed the door open and walked straight to his desk. She hoped her gray suit and white blouse with a Peter Pan collar made her appearance suitably prim and ladylike. She extended her hand.
“Thank you for being so kind, Mr. Bradley. I’m still reeling from the shock of my gramma’s death.”
“I can imagine. Have a seat.”
She sucked in her breath and nearly sprang from her seat at the sight of the two-karat, pear-shaped diamond ring banked by four sizeable diamond baguettes.
“It’s beautiful,” he said, “and very expensive. She insured it for ten thousand dollars. Sign here, please.” He smiled, and she thought his expression wistful. Although her mind was on Lawrence Bradley, she managed to sign the receipt and resist the urge to grab the ring. He handed it to her, and she slipped it onto the third finger of her right hand.
When Bradley returned her smile, she decided to test the water. What could she lose? “I’ll take the brooch to Lacette, if you like,” she said.
He leaned back in his chair and looked at her until she felt herself shrinking by the seconds, for he wasn’t cataloguing her feminine assets, but judging her.
“Sorry,” he said after letting her squirm for a couple of minutes. “The brooch wasn’t in Mrs. Hooper’s effects. I’ll have to search for it.”
She forced a smile. Maybe he was toying with her and maybe he wasn’t, so she had to bide her time. “What a pity. My sister will be anxious about it.”
If his shrug was meant to disarm her, it was wide of the mark. This time, she didn’t smile. With his gaze boring into her, he said, “Somehow, I doubt that. She didn’t seem the type to get bent out of shape over a piece of jewelry . . . or much else, for that matter. I’ll call her.”
Make it subtle, girl. This one’s no pushover. “You’re kind. You know, Lacette and I don’t look it, but we’re twins.” She made the comment as a switch from business to personal topics in the hope of getting on intimate terms with him.
“I know. Your grandmother told me.”
Carefully and deliberately, she pushed back the left sleeve of her jacket and the cuff of her blouse and looked at her watch. “I’ve kept you too long, and I have to get over to Walkersville by noon, or I would be very brazen and ask you to have lunch with me.”
He pierced her with a steady gaze, and she couldn’t read him. “Yes,” he said at last. “Another time.”
He walked with her to the door, and she extended her hand. When he took it, she clasped his tightly and looked him in the eye. “I hope to see you again. Soon.” She turned and walked out without giving him a chance to answer her. Her instincts told her she was ahead, and she meant to stay that way.
After leaving the lawyer’s office, Marshall drove Lacette home, parked, and stepped across the street for a visit with his sister, Nan. Maybe she could help him deal with the shock of inheriting one of the most attractive properties in that part of Frederick. Some would say that it rightfully belonged to Cynthia, but he knew how Mama Carrie felt about him and didn’t doubt that she had a reason for distributing her property as she had.
“I’m trying to figure out why Mama Carrie left me her house and everything in it except her clothing,” he said to Nan after telling her about the will. “Nan, that house has to be the bulk of her estate. My Lord, she practically ignored Cynthia. A four-year-old Mercedes and an even older mink coat. I don’t understand it.”
Nan stood and braced her hands against her hips. “Come on in the kitchen with me. I’ll fix us some lunch. Won’t take but a minute.”
“What do you think?” He sat on a stool beside the kitchen window and parted the yellow curtain to get a clear view of the world outside. “Shouldn’t Cynthia have been angry or upset the way Kellie was about Lacette getting the brooch?”
Nan wiped her hands on the apron she wore and leaned against the kitchen counter. “Cynthia is loaded with guilt. Besides, I suspect Miss Carrie told her she was getting practically nothing. She let her poor old mama slave in those white folks’ kitchens for peanuts down there in Rosewell, and didn’t send the woman five cents.” She rolled her eyes toward the ceiling. “And she did that even when she was teaching and making money. A perfectly good mink coat and that nice car are a lot more than she deserved.”
Nan could be right, but her answer didn’t satisfy him. He thought for a while. “When I’m ready to take over that house, Cynthia will have to find a place to live; the deacons won’t let her stay in the parsonage after they learn that we’ve separated. Kellie and Lacette are grown, and they need to be on their own away from their mama’s petticoats, and especially Kellie. If she doesn’t change, she’s going to have a hard life.”
Nan flipped over a mushroom omelet and stuck her left thumb in her mouth to ease the effect of the hot grease that splattered on it. “Tell me ’bout it! You leaving Cynthia for good?”
With his hands cupping his knees and his feet square on the floor, he stared at her. “When did you know me to take a step this serious and then back up and say I made a mistake? Believe me, it’s over.”
“I sure would like to know what happened to make you take such a hard position. You always acted like that woman was the apple of your eye, and she acted like she knew she was.”
“Ask Cynthia. She’s got the whole story.”
Nan put the omelets, several pieces of toast and slices of ripe avocado on their plates and set the food on the kitchen table. “Milk or tea? I’m having tea. You know, Marshall, Miss Carrie was a good Christian woman, but . . . well . . . you think she did the right thing?”
“Lord, we thank you for this food and for each other. Amen.” He put a sliver of omelet in his mouth and savored it. “Mmm. Very good, indeed. I’ll get some milk.” He went to the refrigerator, poured a glass of milk and went back to the table. “Nan, Mama Carrie was shrewd, so I’m not questioning what she did. I expect we’ll eventually have all the answers, and I don’t doubt that what we find out will set tongues wagging like an electronic clapper.”
Nan sipped her tea slowly, a sip now and then as if she didn’t know she was doing it. “You know, I never was crazy about Cynthia. She gave the impression that she served all who needed her, but her main concern is and always has been herself. She was a dutiful housewife, and she was always good to your parishioners. She kept up a good front, all right, but when you went a little deeper, there wasn’t a thing there. She don’t do nothing for nobody ’less something’s coming her way. Still, I feel sorry for her. Miss High-and-Mighty is about to bite the dust, and if you don’t stop Kellie right now, she’ll be right down there in the dust with her mother.”
He heaved a sigh and shook his head as would one perplexed. “I know Kellie has some bad habits. She wants everything Lacette has, and when Lacette gives it to her, she throws it aside or destroys it. She’s been that way since they began to crawl. As soon as she’d see Lacette’s toy, she would throw hers away and demand Lacette’s identical one until Lacette gave it to her.”
Nan rolled her eyes. “It’s not just things. Don’t you remember when she stole Lacette’s high school prom date, and Lacette couldn’t go to her senior prom?”
He put their dishes in the dishwasher and patted his pockets for his car key. “I punished Kellie for that, but it did no good. She was eighteen then, and fifteen years later, she’s going to die trying to get that brooch from Lacette. Thanks for lunch.” He wrote something on a card and handed it to her. “You can reach me at this number.”
He ambled across the street, got into his car and headed for the funeral home to make arrangements for the woman who had mothered him as his own hadn’t had an opportunity to do. Kellie’s antics troubled him. She had refused her grandmother’s offer to send her to college and didn’t attend, but she resented the fact that Lacette had a university degree and that Mama Carrie financed it. She would be determined to get Lacette’s brooch, and he’d be just as determined to prevent her having it.