quick explanation, fearing that Rex couldnât be far away. At the mention of Meganâs name she sparked up.
âOh, oh,â she said. âItâs been so long. How is she?â
âI donât know, Mrs French. Iâm trying to find her. You love her?â
âOh, yes. Megan is wonderful. The best thing in my life. But Rex â¦â
âHer natural mother is dying and wants to see her.â
Her thin, blue-veined hands flew up to her face, almost hiding it. This was too much hard-edged information for her to process. She dropped the hands and looked up at me. âThe poor woman.â
âYes. Do you know where Megan might be, Mrs French? People seem to think she might have a place to go to.â
âPeople?â
âPeople who care for her. People who want to help her. Sheâs keeping bad company, Mrs French.â
I could hear some sort of movement inside the house. Rex? I whipped out a card and extended it. She didnât move and I had to grab one of her hands and wrap it around the card. She clutched it like a child with a toy. I asked her again where Megan might go but sheâd heard the sounds herself by now and didnât reply.
The man who entered the room was big and bulky. He was fair, a redhead whoâd turned grey I guessed. His pale skin was blotched with freckles and whitish skin cancers. He towered over his wife and almost shouldered her aside to confront me.
âYou are?â
I told him.
âYour business?â
I told him.
He sensed that his wife was moving so as to be able to look at me and he pushed her towards the door. âIâll handle this, Dora.â
She shot me a quick, hopeless look and left the room.
âMeganâs mother was a whore,â Rex French said. âLike mother, like child.â
It took every atom of self-control I had in me not to hit him. âThatâs not a very Christian attitude,â I said.
âThe word is be-fouled by your use of it.â
He was sixty or thereabouts, flabby and slackbodied in overalls and work boots. A decent punch would destroy him but Iâd met enough fanatics to know how useless it is to argue with or assault them.
âYouâre pathetic,â I said. âShe deserved something better than you.â
âLeave!â
I had to clench my fists to control the impulse to plant one in that soft belly. âIâm going. By the way, your brother Frank doesnât say hello.â
French snorted. âAnother sinner.â
âNo, a human being. Not a sack of self-righteous shit like you.â
âHow dare you,â he shouted.
Pastor John and two other men entered the room. They looked at me as if Iâd shat on the carpet.
âIâm afraid youâve upset Brother Rex,â Pastor John said. âI must ask you to leave before you create more disharmony.â
They represented no physical threat but I was repelled by their self-righteous disapproval. I drove away feeling sorry for Megan whoâd spent something like sixteen years with Rex French, sorry for his wife, sorry for Cyn and sorry for myself. Sorry.
9
âCultists!â Cyn almost screamed at me. âWhat do you mean cultists?â
âApparently they were Catholics â¦â
âThatâs nearly as bad.â
Religion, dislike of it, was one of the few attitudes Cyn and I had had in common and nothing had changed.
We were sitting in the living room of Cynâs flat. Contrary to what sheâd told me, there were no signs of medication and illness. The flat was elegant, as I wouldâve expected. Elegant, but not obsessively so. Cyn had always had good taste and had only let it slip onceâwhen sheâd married me. I couldnât identify the pictures on the walls or tell whoâd designed the furniture, but I knew someone had. I canât tell a leather couch from a vinyl one on sight either, but I was sure what I was sitting on was
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