I turned to Jack, surprised. “That’s your publisher, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” he said before slugging back his flute of cider. I watched as he eyed the champagne bottle only an arm’s length away. “It is.”
“What a coincidence,” Marc said, his smile showing that he’d been waiting a long time to drop that bomb on Jack. “I’ve found them to be so receptive and enthusiastic so far. They’re even talking about more books already, and this one hasn’t even hit the shelves.”
“How exciting,” said Jack. “I didn’t know there was such a market for picture books.”
“Actually,” Marc said very slowly, as if speaking to a small child, “it’s adult nonfiction. But my publisher has asked me not to discuss anything more, so I’m afraid I’m going to have to leave it at that.”
Without waiting for the wine steward, Jack refilled his cider and threw it back like a shot of whiskey. “What a disappointment,” he said. “I was so looking forward to hearing every detail for the rest of my dinner.”
Both Rebecca and I turned to stare at Jack. That was low, even for Jack. And I didn’t think to remind him that it had been he who’d moved the tables so he could join us.
Marc seemed unfazed. “When’s your next book out, Jack? Maybe you and I can do a double event or something if it’s released around the same time as mine.”
As the waiter approached, Jack looked at the man like a drowning person looks at a sandbar. “Great. I’m starved. Is everybody ready to order?” He gave a cursory glance around the table. “All right then. Let’s have another bottle of the best bubbly you have and another of the sparkling cider for me. And please put this on Mr. Longo’s tab, since he’s a big-deal author now.”
Marc’s eyes widened slightly before he cleared his throat. “I was about to suggest that myself. It’s my celebration, after all.” He lifted his glass again and saluted Jack before sipping, his eyes like those of a cat that had eaten the cream, and the whole bowl, too.
I was mentally exhausted by the time I returned to my mother’s house. The front lights had been left burning, giving me a warm sense of belonging, as if the lights signified that somebody had thought of me. It would be one of the things I’d miss when I returned alone to my house on Tradd Street.
After quietly sliding the dead bolt on the front door and setting the alarm, I turned toward the stairs.
“Melanie?”
I started at the sound of my father’s voice from the front parlor. I walked toward it, the room illuminated by moonlight streaming in through the stained-glass window, painting patches of color along the floors and walls. I felt rather than saw the hulking shadow of the dollhouse on the far side of the room where the light couldn’t reach it. “Daddy? Why are you sitting here in the dark?”
“I didn’t want your mother to know that I was still here. She’d want to keep me company and feed me. Not that I don’t love that, but I just really needed to talk with you.”
I tried not to focus on what he meant by “still here” and moved on to the next subject. “What about?” I asked as I slid onto the sofa next to him.
“There’s something not right about that dollhouse.”
I resisted the impulse to snort and instead waited for him to continue. Until he’d witnessed the ghost of my Hessian soldier, my father had been dismissive at best about my and my mother’s psychic abilities. Even though he was no longer dismissive or derisive, he still wasn’t comfortable with acknowledging that there was something out there that we could see and he couldn’t. When he didn’t say anything else, I said, “What do you mean?”
He paused before answering. “While I was sitting here waiting for you, I could swear I heard it . . . breathe. I actually thought somebody might be in the room, so I switched on a lamp to go look and this is what I found.” Leaning over, he turned on the lamp by the sofa, illuminating the coffee table in front of us. The figures of the boy and the dog lay faceup, their cold eyes staring at the ceiling, the boy’s head at an odd angle and the dog’s skull cracked in half.
“Where were the other figures?” I asked quietly.
His eyes regarded me steadily. “Crowded in front of the turret window.”
I swallowed, the sound loud enough that I’m sure my father heard. He reached over and turned off the light. “Do you know what that’s about?” he asked.
“No. Not yet, anyway. Jack and I are trying to find out what’s going on.”
He was silent again for a moment. “I don’t like this business with the burned stair runner and the scratched walls—and not just because I’m the go-to guy for getting it all fixed. It’s just . . . well, be careful, all right?” His voice was gruff. “I don’t like thinking of the two of you fighting something I can’t. It’s just . . . not right.”
I reached for his hand. “Daddy, Mother and I can handle this. We actually make a pretty good team.”
“And what were you thinking, putting that thing in Nola’s room? She’s young and helpless and can’t be expected to defend herself. . . .”
“She’s hardly helpless,” I said, my warm and fuzzy feelings toward him beginning to cool slightly. “You know we’ll take care of her.”
“I know,” he said, patting my arm with his other hand. “It’s only that with her not having a mother and then Jack . . .” He stopped.
I recalled how he said he was waiting for me when he heard a sound from the dollhouse. “You weren’t waiting for me to talk about the dollhouse, were you?”
He shook his head. “No. I wanted to talk to you about something more . . . personal.”
“Oh.” His words took me by surprise. Our relationship had made leaps and bounds in the last two years, but not to the level where we shared confidences late at night. I just hoped it wasn’t about my mother. Or that I was going to have a little brother or sister. “About what?”
“Jack.”
“Oh,” I said again, surprised. “What about Jack?”
“He called me about an hour ago—he was still at the restaurant with you. Said he wanted to take a drink.”
I went very still. Jack had been my father’s sponsor in AA, and I wasn’t prepared for this role reversal. I remembered Jack excusing himself from the table to make a phone call, but I’d never expected this. “What did you tell him?”
“That I would come get him, but he didn’t want that. He just wanted to talk, so we did. He seemed better after that, and promised that if he felt the urge again he’d call no matter what time it was. But I think . . .” He stopped.
“You think what?” I prompted.
“That you should talk to him. I don’t know whatever this thing between you is, but the two of you drag it behind you like a ball and chain. There’re other things going on in his career, but I think he can handle it if the two of you could just . . .” Again he stopped.
I was afraid he would say, “sleep together,” so I quickly said, “I’ll talk to him. I’ve been meaning to for a while now; I just haven’t had a chance. But I will.”
My father sat up. “Will you do it soon?”
I nodded. “Sure. I promise.”
“Great.” His voice sounded relieved. Patting my knee, he said, “It’s late. Why don’t you go on ahead and get some sleep. I think I’ll stay here for a little while and keep an eye on that . . . dollhouse. I’ll go glue those dolls back together, too, before Nola finds them broken.”
“You don’t have to, Daddy. I can do that.”
“I know. Just let an old man feel useful.”
I snorted. “You’re hardly old, and you’ve re-created a beautiful garden at my house. I think that qualifies as being useful.”
He was silent for a moment, and I knew we were both thinking of all the lost years of my childhood. Finally, he said, “What do you want for your birthday?”
Jack
. It was the first word that came to mind, but I didn’t say it aloud. Instead, I said, “I have everything I need.”
I felt his eyes on me in the dark. “Well, I hope you get everything you want.”
Leaning over, I kissed him on the cheek. “Good night, Daddy.”
“Good night, Melanie.”
I left him on the sofa and made my way toward the stairs, wishing I knew what I was going to say to Jack and feeling more than one set of eyes on my back as I went up the steps.
CHAPTER 17
I
hopped on one foot and then the other as I slipped on my flats, hurrying out of my bedroom door to collect Nola and my mother before heading to Julia Manigault’s house for the first music lesson, currently being referred to as a piano/voice lesson until either Julia or Nola decided which to focus on. I paused outside Nola’s opened door with my arm raised, prepared to knock on the doorframe, as the sound of quiet conversation came from inside. I stuck my head around the corner to get her attention so I could point at my watch to let her know that we were perilously close to being on time instead of early.
Nola sat on the floor with her back to me, her opened backpack in front of her with all of its contents, including her mother’s music, scattered around her. Her new iPhone—upgraded from a generic flip-phone and part of the deal she’d made with Jack in exchange for agreeing to try the music lessons—was held to her ear, and she was speaking very quietly. Assuming it was Alston and not wanting to eavesdrop, I began to back away from the door, but stopped when I heard Nola sniff.
“I told you, she wasn’t working on anything. I would have known.” She shook her head. “Yeah, I guess maybe when I was in school during the day, but she wouldn’t have hidden it from me. She always shared what she was working on, because”—Nola sniffed—“because she said I always had a really good ear.”
She was silent for a moment, listening to the person on the other end. “I told you—I’ve looked through everything and I didn’t find anything. I promise to call you if I do. And would you . . .” She rubbed the heel of her hand into her eye. “Would you please let me know what you find out about Jimmy Gordon? Somebody needs to tell the world what a fake he is.” There was another brief pause and then she said good-bye.
I’d almost made it out of her range of vision when the teddy bear that had been nestled in the sheets of the unmade bed hurled itself across the room, coming to rest at my feet and turning Nola’s head so that she spotted me in the doorway. I bent to pick it up, avoiding Nola’s eyes for a moment while I tried to justify eavesdropping versus my need to know as a parental figure.
I examined the worn teddy bear and his football jersey with what looked like hand-stitched numbers, trying to see with my peripheral vision whether Bonnie was still there, and wondering why she’d thrown the bear at me. I thought I could hear a sweet melody being hummed, but when I turned my head it stopped.
Nola stood and wiped her arms across her face, then glowered at me. “It’s rude to listen to other people’s conversations,” she said.
“You’re right, and I’m sorry. It’s just that I heard you crying and I got concerned. Who was that?”
I thought for a moment that she wasn’t going to tell me. She chewed on her lower lip, then said, “That was Rick Chase. My mom’s last boyfriend. He wanted to know where I was and how I was doing.”
Cautiously, I asked, “How did he get your cell number?”
Nola made a big production of fishing her boots out from under her bed and spent a lot of time focusing on the laces. “Actually, I called him. He found me on Facebook and sent me a message.”
I raised my eyebrows. As of yet, Nola didn’t have a computer and Facebook wasn’t one of the apps allowed on her phone by her father. And he checked regularly.
“Alston let me use her laptop to set up an account.”
“Without the proper security settings, obviously, if he was able to find you and message you.”
She glared at me under lowered eyebrows. “I’m not a moron. I wouldn’t have messaged back if he was a stranger. But I know him—and he left his phone number so I could call him.”
I felt a little better. Still, I’d have to tell Jack so he could set parameters for Nola and her use of social media. If I knew how, I’d probably find out whether she had a Twitter account, too. All stuff we’d deal with later. Softly, I said, “What was that about Jimmy Gordon?”
She stood, her face thunderous. “MYOB. Can we go now and get this stupid music lesson over with?” She stomped past me and I listened to her boots clomp down the stairs while I tried to figure out what MYOB meant.