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The Husband's Secret(48)



            “We’re here to see Caroline Otto,” she said. Even when she talked to the receptionist she rounded her vowels.

            As she parked the car, she considered each new fact.

            John-Paul giving Isabel strange, sad, angry looks.

            John-Paul crying in the shower.

            John-Paul losing interest in sex.

            John-Paul lying about something.

            It was all so strange and worrying, but there was something beneath it all that was not actually unpleasant, that was in fact giving her a mild sense of anticipation.

            She turned off the ignition, pulled on the handbrake, undid her seat belt.

            “Let’s go,” she said to Esther, and opened the car door. She knew what was giving her that little blip of pleasure. It was because she’d made a decision. Something was clearly not right. She had a moral obligation to do something immoral. It was the lesser of two evils. She was justified.

            As soon as the girls were in bed tonight, she would do what she’d wanted to do from the very beginning. She was going to open that goddamned letter.





TEN


            There was a knock at the door.

            “Ignore it.” Tess’s mother didn’t look up from her book.

            Liam, Tess and her mother were sitting in separate armchairs in her mother’s front room, reading their books with small bowls full of chocolate raisins resting on their laps. It had been one of Tess’s daily routines as a child: eating chocolate raisins and reading with her mother. They always did star jumps afterward to counteract the chocolate.

            “It might be Dad.” Liam put his book down. Tess was surprised at how readily he’d agreed to sit and read. It must have been the chocolate raisins. She could never get him to do his reading for school.

            And now, bizarrely, he was starting at a new school. Just like that. Tomorrow. It was disconcerting the way that peculiar woman had convinced him to start the very next day, with the promise of an Easter egg hunt.

            “You spoke to your dad in Melbourne just a few hours ago,” she reminded Liam, keeping her voice neutral. He and Will had talked for twenty minutes. “I’ll talk to Daddy later,” Tess had said when Liam went to hand her the phone. She’d already spoken to Will once that morning. Nothing had changed. She didn’t want to hear his horrible serious new voice again. And what could she say? Mention that she’d run into an ex-boyfriend at St. Angela’s? Ask if he was jealous?

            Connor Whitby. It must have been over fifteen years since she’d seen him. They’d gone out for less than a year. She hadn’t even recognized him when he walked into the office. He’d lost all his hair and seemed a much bigger, broader version of the man she remembered. The whole thing had been so awkward. Bad enough that she was sitting across the desk from a woman whose daughter had been murdered.

            “Maybe Daddy got on a plane to surprise us,” said Liam.

            There was a rap on the window right near Tess’s head. “I know you’re all in there!” said a voice.

            “For God’s sake.” Tess’s mother closed her book with a snap.

            Tess turned and saw her aunt’s face pressed flat against the living room window, her hands cupped around her eyes so she could peer inside.

            “Mary, I told you not to come over!” Lucy’s voice rocketed up several octaves. She always sounded forty years younger when she spoke to her twin sister.

            “Open the door!” Aunt Mary rapped again on the glass. “I need to talk to Tess!”

            “Tess doesn’t want to talk to you!” Lucy lifted her crutch and jabbed it in the air in Mary’s direction.