“Uh-huh. Tell me about your father.”
She nearly stumbled, but his hand on her elbow steadied her. “There’s nothing to tell. He was an accountant for a company that manufactured paper punches.”
“Smart man?”
“An intelligent man. Not brilliant.”
“I think I’m getting the picture here.”
“I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about.”
“He didn’t have a clue what to do with you, did he?”
She picked up her pace. “He did his best. I really don’t want to discuss it.”
“Did it occur to you that your problems as a kid might have had more to do with your old man’s attitude than with the size of your brain?”
“You don’t know anything.”
“That’s not what my diploma says.”
She couldn’t respond because they had reached the back of the house, and Annie waited for them at the screen door. She glared at her grandson. “What’s wrong with you? You get a pregnant woman upset like that, it’ll put a mark on the baby, for sure.”
“What do you mean?” He bristled with belligerence. “Who told you she’s pregnant?”
“You wouldn’t have married her otherwise. You don’t have that much sense.”
Jane was touched. “Thank you, Annie.”
“And you!” Annie turned on her. “What was in your head carryin’ on like that? If you go berserk every time Calvin upsets you, that baby’s gonna strangle on the cord long before it has a chance to catch its first breath.”
Jane thought about addressing the physiological improbability of that happening, but decided to save her breath. “I’ll be more careful.”
“Next time he makes you mad, just take a shotgun to him.”
“Mind your own business, you old bat,” Cal growled. “She’s got enough ideas of her own for doin’ me in.”
Annie tilted her head toward Jane, and a sadness seemed to come over her. “You listen to me, Janie Bonner. I don’t know what happened between you and Calvin so he ended up marryin’ you, but from what I saw a few minutes ago, the two of you don’t have no love match goin’. He’s married you, and I’m glad about that, but I’m tellin’ you right now that if you did anything havey cavey to bring him around, you’d better make sure Amber Lynn and Jim Bonner never find out about it. They’re not as broad-minded as me, and if they even suspect you’ve hurt their boy, they’ll cut you off at the knees, you understand what I’m sayin’?”
Jane swallowed hard and nodded.
“Good.” She turned to Cal. The sadness faded, and her old eyes grew sly. “I’m surprised somebody with such a bad case of the flu as Janie here had enough strength to walk over the mountain.”
Cal cursed softly under his breath. Jane stared at Annie. “What do you mean? I don’t have the flu?”
Cal grabbed her arm and began to pull her away. “Come on, Jane, you’re going home.”
“Wait a minute! I want to know what she meant by that.”
Cal drew her round the side of the house, but not before she heard Annie’s cackle. “You remember what I told you about that cord gettin’ twisted, Janie Bonner, ’cause I think Calvin’s about to upset you again.”
“You told everybody in your family I had the flu?” Jane said as they drove down off the mountain. It was easier talking about this small deception than the larger one.
“You got a problem with that?”
“I expected to meet your parents. I thought that’s why you brought me here.”
“You’ll meet ’em. When I decide to introduce you.”
His arrogance was like setting a spark to tinder. This was the result of letting him spend the last few weeks calling all the shots, and it was time she put a stop to it. “You’d better decide soon because I’m not going to let you keep me cooped up any longer.”
“What are you talkin’ about, cooped up? Here I’ve gone out of my way to make sure you can work without a lot of people bothering you, and you’re complaining.”
“Don’t you dare act like you’re doing me a favor!”
“I don’t know what else you’d call it.”
“How about imprisonment? Incarceration? Solitary confinement? And just so you don’t accuse me of going behind your back, I’m breaking out of the joint tomorrow to help Annie plant her garden.”
“You’re what?”
Think about Annie and her garden, she told herself, instead of the fact that her child would be another misfit. She snatched off her glasses and began cleaning the dirt from them with a tissue, concentrating on the job as if it were a complicated equation. “Annie wants to get her garden in. If the potatoes aren’t planted in the next few days, they’ll be puny. We’re also planting onions and beets.”