The Husband's Secret(38)
“We’ve got an appointment with the school secretary,” said Tess. She had no idea of the woman’s name.
“Yes, Rachel Crowley,” said Cecilia. “So efficient. Runs the place like a Swiss watch. She actually shares the job with my mother-in-law, although between you and me and the gatepost, I think Rachel does all the work. Virginia just chats on her days. Not that I can talk. Well, actually, that’s my point—I can talk.” She laughed merrily at herself.
“How is Rachel these days?” asked Tess’s mother significantly.
Cecilia’s ferrety face got all somber. “I don’t know her that well, but I do know she has a beautiful little grandson. Jacob. He just turned two.”
“Ah,” breathed Lucy, as if that solved everything. “That’s good to hear. Jacob.”
“Well, it was so nice to meet you, Tess,” said Cecilia, fixing her again with her unblinking stare. “I must skedaddle. I’ve got to get to my Zumba class—I go to the gym down the road; it’s great, you should try it sometime, just hilarious—and then I’m going straight to this party supply place in Strathfield; it’s a bit of a drive, but it’s worth it because the prices are amazing, seriously, you can get a helium balloon kit for under fifty dollars, and that gives you over a hundred balloons, and I’m doing so many parties over the next few months—Polly’s pirate party, and the Year One parents party, which of course you’ll be invited to as well!—and then I’m dropping off a few Tupperware orders; I do Tupperware by the way, Tess, if you need anything, especially if you’re looking for some early Christmas present ideas. Anyway, all that before school pickup! You know how it is.”
Tess blinked. It was like being buried in an avalanche of detail. The myriad of tiny logistical maneuvers that made up someone else’s life. It wasn’t that it was dull. Although it was a little dull. It was mainly the sheer quantity of words that flowed so effortlessly from Cecilia’s mouth.
Oh God, she’s stopped talking. Tess registered with a start that it was her turn to speak.
“Busy,” she said finally. “You sure are busy.” She forced her lips into something she hoped resembled a smile.
“See you at the pirate party!” called out Cecilia to Liam, who turned from drilling his tree to look at her with that funny, inscrutable, masculine expression he sometimes got, an expression that painfully reminded Tess of Will.
Cecilia lifted her hand like a claw. “Aha, me hearties!”
Liam grinned, as if he couldn’t help himself, and Tess knew she’d be taking him to the pirate party, whatever it cost her.
“Oh my,” said Tess’s mother when Cecilia was out of earshot. “Her mother was exactly the same. Very nice, but exhausting. I always felt like I needed a cup of tea and a lie-down after talking with her.”
“What’s the story with this Rachel Crowley?” asked Tess as they headed toward the school office, she and Liam pushing one handle each of the wheelchair.
Her mother grimaced. “Do you remember the name Janie Crowley?”
“Not the girl they found with the rosary beads—”
“That’s the one. She was Rachel’s daughter.”
Rachel could tell that Lucy O’Leary and her daughter were both thinking about Janie while they enrolled Tess’s little boy in St. Angela’s. They were both being just a little chattier than was obviously natural for them. Tess couldn’t quite meet Rachel’s eyes, while Lucy was doing that tender-eyed, tilted-head thing that so many women of a certain age did when they talked to Rachel, as if they were visiting her in a nursing home.