Shadow Notes Laurel Peterson (best reads TXT) đ
- Author: Laurel Peterson
Book online «Shadow Notes Laurel Peterson (best reads TXT) đ». Author Laurel Peterson
She said, âI recommend the duck, the Caesar salad with chicken and any of the fish dishes, especially the scampi.â By the time the waiter returned to take our order, sheâd finished her drink. She ordered the scampi and another martini. I ordered the Caesar salad.
âSo,â she said. âYouâre still rebelling, is that it? And youâve come to me because Iâm the sure-fire way to get back at your mother. Never mind that sheâs locked up for murder, being gone for fifteen years isnât enough rebellion for you?â
Her sharpness stung. Had I been merely rebelling all this time? I considered it self-protection, not some extended adolescent tantrum. I put part of the truth on the table. âI want to know about my mother and Hugh. She wonât tell me. I also need employment, and if itâs something my mother doesnât approve of, maybe it will annoy her enough to get her to open her mouth.â Which appeared to be sewn shut with braided titanium fishing line.
âThe girl has guts.â She laughed again, with a little meanness. âBut really, Clara, why would I help you? Having her locked up in jail is amusing. And whatâs in it for me, aside from pissing off Constance? I havenât had any trouble doing that for the last thirty years.â
The waiter brought her second martini. She took a long sip, but not as big as the first one. I looked out at the water. The clouds had lowered again, and whitecaps skipped across the tops of the slate waves. I felt more than saw Mary Ellen swing her UGG-fitted foot rhythmically, in sync with the muted music issuing from speakers above our heads. I thought of the blood on Motherâs hands in my dream. I couldnât be fainthearted.
I smiled that good society girl smile again. âBut what a betrayal to have her own daughter working for the woman she hates the most. Can you really top that, Mary Ellen?â
Her lips pinched together, probably to keep her from shrieking yes. She leaned across the table, her eyes feverish and bright. âIâll tell you about your mother on one condition. You give as good as you get.â
I hedged because she would expect it, and to recover my breath at her malice. âIâve been gone for fifteen years.â
Her eyes glittered. âYou know enough. I promise you.â
âFine. But the deal comes with sponsorship into the Womenâs League and invitations to your parties, as well as that job with your politician brother and his campaign.â
âWant a plaid headband, too?â she mocked. She tapped one long nail on the table. âYou donât know what youâre asking, Clara. Some secrets should stay buried, and there are people in this town who will do whatever it takes to make sure they do.â
My heart flip-flopped in a moment of self-doubt. What if I didnât really want to know what Mother had hidden all these years?
The waiter arrived with our meals, setting them carefully in front of us, wiping the edges of the plates of imagined bits of stray food. He bowed slightly and left, but not before Mary Ellen ordered her third martini. I asked for more water. I hadnât even lowered my drink to the level of the olives, and already I felt woozy. Mary Ellen enjoyed her food and ate all of itâunusual for a woman of her skeletal shapeâsopping up the extra sauce, or perhaps the gin, with bread. She seemed to have forgotten what Iâd asked and chatted casually about a garden club open house planned for Christmas and her familyâs upcoming post-holiday trip to Vail. Only when weâd made it to double espressos and chocolate mousse (for Mary EllenâI couldnât eat that much) did she finally say, âAgreed.â
Our conversation had gone so far afield since my initial demands that it took me a minute to figure out what she was referring to, which might also have been influenced by my finishing the martini and her droning voice. She must have seen my confusion, because she said, âFriday at noon, my house. Womenâs League planning meeting for the Christmas Bazaar. We need lots of slave labor, since the event is less than two weeks away. You can interview Saturday evening at my brotherâs campaign fundraiser. Iâll put in a good word for youâyou do have some skills, donât you?â
I described my employment history.
âGood. The moneyâs a pittance, but itâs not like you need it.â She sniffed and waved at the waiter for the check. I started for my wallet, but she said, âOh please.â
I tried one last time through the fog in my head to get information. âWere my mother and Hugh having an affair?â
She looked at me with what seemed like pity, if it were possible for her to feel such a thing. âOf course. For years.â She leaned across the table and tapped that long, red nail on the table again. âBroke it off not long ago, though. I donât think Hugh was happy about that. I heard he kept coming around. Somebody told me Constance was thinking about getting an order of protection.â
âYou âheardâ? âSomebody told youâ?â
She stared at me. âYou really donât understand how much your mother hates me, do you?â The waiter set the bill on the table, and Mary Ellen, without glancing at it, dropped a stack of twenties and handed it back. She threw her wallet into her purse. âWe are enemies, after all. I donât know everything firsthand.â She gave me that malicious smile again. âBut you do.â
Her driving on the way back to the Womenâs League headquarters was no less assured than it had been on the way out. I wondered what neuroscience would have to say about a specimen like her. She parked in
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