Theyâre trying to find me. I didnât want to take a chance, so thatâs why Iâm here.â
Was she lying? Amabel didnât say anything. She merely smiled at her niece, who looked exhausted, her face white and pinched, her lovely blue eyes as faded and worn as an old dress. She was too thin; her sweater and slacks hung on her. In that moment her niece looked very old, as if she had seen too much of the wicked side of life. Well, it was too bad, but there was more wickedness in the world than anyone cared to admit.
She said quietly as she stared down into her teacup, âIf your mama did kill her husband, Iâll bet the bastard deserved it.â
TWO
Sally nearly dropped her cup. She set it carefully down. âYou knew?â
âSure. All of us did. The first time I ever got to see you was when she brought you home. I was passing through. Thatâs all our folks ever wanted me to doâpass through and not say much or show my face much, particularly to all their friends. Anyway, your mama showed up. She was running away from him, she said. She also said sheâd never go back. She was bruised. She cried all the time.
âBut her resolve didnât last long. He called her two nights later and she flew back home the next day, with you all wrapped in a blanket. You werenât even a year old then. She wouldnât talk about it to me. I never could understand why a woman would let herself be beaten whenever a man decided he wanted to do it.â
âI couldnât either. I tried, Aunt Amabel. I really tried, but she wouldnât listen. What did my grandparents say?â
Amabel shrugged, thinking of her horrified father, staring at beautiful Noelle, wondering what the devil he would do if the press got wind of the juicy story that his son-in-law, Amory St. John, was a wife beater. And their mother, shrinking away from her daughter as if she had some sort of vile disease. She hadnât cared either. She just didnât want the press to find out because it would hurt the familyâs reputation.
âThey arenât what youâd call real warm parents, Sally. They pretended not to believe that your papa beat your mama. They looked at Noelle, saw all those bruises, and denied all of it. They told her she shouldnât tell lies like that. Your mama was a real mess, arguing with them, pleading with them to help her.
âBut then he called, and your mama acted like nothing had ever happened. You know what, Sally? My parents were mighty relieved when she left. She would have been a loser, a failure, a millstone around their necks if sheâd left your father. She was special, a daughter to be proud of, when she was with him. Do you ever see your grandparents?â
âThree times a year. Oh, Aunt Amabel, I hated him. But nowââ
âNow youâre afraid the police are looking for you. Donât worry, baby. No one would know you in that disguise.â
He would, Sally thought. In a flash. âI hope not,â she said. âDo you think I should keep wearing the black wig here?â
âNo, I wouldnât worry. Youâre my niece, nothing more, nothing less. No one watches TV except for Thelma Nettro, who owns the bed-and-breakfast, and sheâs so old I donât even know if she can see the screen. She can hear, though. I know that for a fact.
âNo, donât bother with the wigâand leave those contacts in a drawer. Not to worry. Weâll use your married name. Here youâll be Sally Brainerd.â
âI canât use that name anymore, Amabel.â
âAll right then. Weâll use your maiden nameâSally St. John. No, donât worry that anyone would ever tie you to your dead papa. Like I said, no one here pays any attention to what goes on outside the town limits. As for anyone else, why, no one ever comes hereââ
âExcept for people who want to eat the Worldâs Greatest Ice
Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations