situation.
Diane, who had seemed very fond of the boy and in fact had largely raised himâsheâd married Joel when Victor was very youngâsaid, âIf he needs to talk to me, Iâm okay,â as Joel rose to walk a few feet away, his back to the room, to punch in the number.
âHowâs Victor done here in Memphis?â I asked Felicia, just to be saying something. Victor and I had shared a strange moment when Iâd been trying to find his half sister. The boy had come into the living room of the Morgensternhome and begun to curse a blue streak, evidently thinking he was by himself. When Iâd moved, heâd clutched me, crying on my shoulder, having to bend a little to do so. People werenât given to touching me, and Iâd been startled. But I knew grief, and I knew release, and Iâd held him until he was through. When heâd done crying and my blouse was a blotched mess, Victor had drawn back, appalled at his breakdown. Anything I said would have been wrong, so Iâd just given him a nod. Heâd nodded back, and fled.
Felicia was giving a surprised look. I supposed she was astonished that I remembered Victor at all. âHeâs doneâ¦middling,â she said. âDiane and Joel have sent him to a private school. I help them out a little. Heâs such a fragile kid, hanging in the balance. At that age, they can go either way, you feel, at any moment. And with this new baby comingâ¦â Her voice trailed off, as if she couldnât imagine how to finish the sentence without criticizing Joel and Diane for their ill-timed fertility.
Joel came back and sat down by his wife, and he was frowning. âVictor isnât holding together very well,â he said to us in general. Dianeâs face simply looked exhausted, as if she had no energy to spare for maintaining someone elseâs spirits when her own were so fraught with misery. âHe came home from school early, after we called. We didnât want anyone to see it on the news at noon and tell him when they got back to campus,â he explained.
We all nodded wisely, but my mind was on something entirely different.
âWe never knew you moved,â I said, wanting to get thatabsolutely clear, âso we were astonished when the police said they were contacting you. You donât have anything to do with the faculty at Bingham, do you? Youâre not an alumna, Diane?â
âNo, I went to Vanderbilt, and Joel did, too,â she said, bewildered. âFelicia, didnât you go to Bingham? With David?â
Felicia said, âMore years ago than I care to remember. Yes, David was in my class. I donât believe you met him in Nashville, Harper. Joelâs brother.â
âFeliciaâs parents are here in Memphis, too,â Diane said. âThey both went to Bingham. And so did Joelâs. It was quite a scandal when he decided to go to Vanderbilt. Why are you asking?â
âJust trying to think of some connection between you and the school. Someone put Tabithaâsâ¦Tabitha there, and someone made sure we were hired for this job.â
The couple sat and looked at me wide-eyed. I had the uncharitable thought that this increased Dianeâs resemblance to a lemur. Though the pregnant woman looked as though she were about to bolt, Joel was alert and intense. The man had an overabundance of energy, and it boiled around him, even under these circumstances. Behind them, Felicia was staring at me with an incredulous face.
âSurely itâs just a coincidence,â Felicia said, finally, looking at me as though I were delusional. âYou donât thinkâ¦you canât imagine that someone created such an elaborate plot? How could someone have put Tabitha there, and then find you, get you here, make sure you found Tabitha? Thatâs just incredible.â
We all spent a second or two staring at each other. Art was looking from me to Felicia,
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