โIt is three-thirty when Detective Stark dismisses me from the white room. I walk myself out the station door. No courtesy ride homeย thisโ
time. I havenโt eaten since the morning, and I havenโt had so much as a cup of tea to tide me over.
My stomach roils. The dragon awakes. I have to pause a moment on the sidewalk in front of my building just to keep from fainting.
Itโs my deception, not hunger, thatโs having a deleterious effect on my nerves. Itโs the fact that I havenโt disclosed fully about Giselle nor about what I currently have hidden over my heart. Thatโs what has me in such a state.
Honesty is the only policy.
I can see Granโs face, twisted with disappointment, the day I came home from school at the age of twelve and she asked me how my day was. I told her it was ordinary, nothing to report. That, too, was a lie. The truth was, I ran away at lunchtime, which was far from ordinary. The school called Gran. I confessed to Gran why Iโd run away. My classmates had formed a ring around me in the schoolyard and ordered me to roll around in the mud and eat it, kicking me while I obeyed their order. They were keenly
inventive when it came to tormenting me, and this iteration was no exception.
When the ordeal was over, I went to the community library and spent hours in the bathroom washing the grime off my face and mouth, scraping the earth out from under my fingernails. I watched with satisfaction as the evidence circled down the drain. I was so certain Iโd get away with it, that Gran would never find out.
But she did find out. And she had only one question for me after I confessed to being bullied. โDear girl, why didnโt you just tell the truth right away? To your teacher? To me? To anyone?โ Then she cried and embraced me with such force that I was never able to answer her question. But I had an answer. I did. I didnโt tell the truth because the truth hurt. What happened at school was bad enough, but Gran knowing about my suffering meant she experienced my pain too.
Thatโs the trouble with pain. Itโs as contagious as a disease. It spreads from the person who first endured it to those who love them most. Truth isnโt always the highest ideal; sometimes it must be sacrificed to stop the spread of pain to those you love. Even children know this intuitively.
My stomach settles. Steadiness returns. I cross the street and enter my building. I bound up the stairs to my floor, heading straight for Mr. Rossoโs door. I extricate the wad of bills Iโve placed by my heart for safekeeping. I was aware of them the whole time I was at the police station, but far from being a nuisance, they felt protective, like a shield.
I knock loudly. I hear Mr. Rosso padding down his hallway, then the scratchy squeal of the lock twisting. My landlordโs face appears, ruddy and bulbous. I hold out the bills in my hand.
โHere is the rest of this monthโs rent,โ I say. โAs you can see, I take after my gran. Iโm a woman of my word.โ
He takes the money and counts it. โItโs all there, but I appreciate your diligence,โ I say.
When heโs done counting, he nods slowly. โMolly, letโs not do this every month, okay? I know your grandmother is gone, but you need to pay your rent on time. You need to get your life in order.โ
โIโm well aware of that,โ I say. โAs for order, it is my express wish to live as ordered a life as possible. But the world is filled with random chaos that often bedevils my attempts at arrangement. May I have my receipt for full payment, please?โ
He sighs. I know what this means. Heโs exasperated, which does not seem fair. If someone were to place a wad of bills into my hands, rest assured I would not sigh like this. Iโd be grateful beyond measure.
โIโll fill out a receipt tonight,โ he says, โand give it to you tomorrow.โ
I would much prefer to have that receipt in my handย tout suite, but I defer. โThat would be acceptable. Thank you,โ I say. โAnd have a lovely evening.โ
He closes his door without so much as a mannered โYou too.โ
I go to my own entrance and turn the key. I step across the threshold and lock the door behind me. Our home. My home. Exactly as I left it this morning. Neat. Orderly. Unnervingly quiet, despite Granโs voice in my head.
There are times in life when we must do things we donโt want to. But do them we must.
Normally, I feel a wave of relief flow through me the instant I close the door behind me. Here, Iโm safe. No expressions to interpret. No conversations to decode. No requests. No demands.
I take off my shoes, wipe them down, and place them neatly in the closet. I pat Granโs serenity pillow on the chair by the door. I take a seat on the sofa in the living room to collect my thoughts. I am all a muddle, even here, in the peace of my own home. I know I must consider my next stepsโ should I call Giselle? Or maybe Rodney, for support and advice? Mr. Snow, to apologize for my absence this afternoon, for leaving my rooms without completing my daily quota?โbut I find myself overwhelmed by the very thought of it all.
I feel out of sorts in a way I havenโt felt in a while, not since Wilbur and the Fabergรฉ, not since the day Gran died.
In that too-bright station room today, Detective Stark laid blame on me, treating me like some sort of common criminal when Iโm nothing of the
sort. All I want is to turn my head and find Gran sitting on the sofa beside me, saying,ย Dear girl. Do not fret yourself into a tizzy. Life has a way of sorting itself out.
I head to the kitchen and put the kettle on. My hands are shaky. I open the fridge and find it mostly bareโjust a couple of crumpets left, which I should save for tomorrowโs breakfast. I find a few biscuits in the cupboard and arrange them neatly on a plate. When the water has boiled, I make my tea, adding two sugars to compensate for the lack of milk. I mean to savor each bite of the biscuits, but instead I find myself devouring them greedily and washing them down with big gulps of tea right at the kitchen counter. My cup is empty before I even know it. Instantly, I feel the tea working. Warm energy flows through me again.
When all else fails, tidy up.
Itโs a good idea. Nothing raises my spirits more than a good tidy. I wash out my teacup, dry it, and put it away. Granโs curio cabinet in the living room could use a bit of attention. I carefully open the glass doors and remove all of her precious treasuresโa menagerie of Swarovski crystal animals, each one paid for with backbreaking overtime hours at the Coldwellsโ mansion. There are spoons, too, silver mostly, collected from thrift shops over the years. And the photosโGran and me baking, Gran and me in front of a water fountain in a park, Gran and me at the Olive Garden, glasses of Chardonnay raised. And the one photo that is not of us but of my mother when she was young.
I pick it up. My hands still arenโt entirely steady. I have to concentrate as I dust and polish the glass frame. If my fingers slip, the frame will fall to the floor, the glass will shatter into hundreds of deadly shards. I get down on my knees to be closer to the ground. Itโs safer this way. Iโm holding the frame in both hands, studying my motherโs image. Iโm surrounded by all of Granโs lovely things.
Another memory surfaces, not a recent one, one I havenโt thought about in a long time. I was about thirteen years old when I walked through the door after school one day to find Gran kneeling on the floor much like Iโm doing now. It was Thursdayโdust we mustโand sheโd started the chore,
her collection strewn about her, a polishing cloth and this photo of my mother in her hands. As soon as I crossed the threshold, I knew something wasnโt quite right. Gran was disheveled. Her hair, which was usually perfectly curled and coiffed, was in disarray. There were stains on her cheeks and her eyes were puffy.
โGran?โ I asked, before even wiping down the bottoms of my shoes. โAre you all right?โ
She didnโt answer. She just stared at me with a glassy, faraway look in her eyes. Then she said, โDear girl, Iโm simply going to tell it to you as it is. Your mother. Sheโs dead.โ
I found myself glued to the spot where I stood. I knew that my mother was out there in the world somewhere, but to me, she was as abstract a figure as the queen. To me, it was as if sheโd died long ago. But to Gran, she meant so much, and this is what had me worried.
Every year as Motherโs Day drew near, Gran would begin her thrice- daily peregrinations to our mailbox. She was hoping thereโd be a card from my mother. In the early years, cards appeared, signed in shaky scrawl. Gran would be so happy.
โSheโs still in there somewhere, my little girl,โ sheโd say.
But for years on end, Motherโs Day after Motherโs Day, no cards arrived and Gran would be glum for the rest of the month. I compensated by splurging on the biggest, cheeriest card I could find, adding a โGranโ before โMother,โ filling the inside with evenly spacedย xโs andย oโs, and red and pink hearts that Iโd color in, careful not to stray outside the lines.
When Gran told me my mother was dead, it wasnโt my own pain that I felt. It was hers.
She cried and cried and cried, which was so unlike her that it unsettled me to my core.
I hurried to her side and placed a hand on her back.
โWhat you need is a good cup of tea,โ I said. โThereโs almost nothing that a good cup of tea canโt cure.โ
I rushed to the kitchen and put the kettle on, my hands shaking. I could hear Gran sobbing on the sitting-room floor. Once the water had boiled, I
made two perfect cups and brought them to the living room on Granโs silver tray.
โThere we are,โ I said. โWhy donโt we have a wee sit on the sofa.โ
But Gran wouldnโt move. The polishing cloth was balled up in one of her hands.
I stepped through the obstacle course of treasures and cleared myself a spot beside her on the floor. I put the tray down to one side, picked up both teacups, and positioned them in front of us. I put one hand on Granโs shoulder again.
โGran?โ I said. โWill you sit up? Will you join me for tea?โ My voice was trembling. I was terrified. Iโd never seen Gran so weak and diminished, as fragile as a baby bird.
Gran eventually sat up. She dabbed at her eyes with the polishing cloth. โOh,โ she said. โTea.โ
We sat like that, Gran and me, on the floor, drinking tea, surrounded by Swarovski crystal animals and silver spoons. My motherโs photo was beside us, the absent third person at our tea party.
When Gran spoke next, her voice had returned, composed and steady. โDear girl,โ she said. โIโm sorry I was so upset. But not to worry, Iโm feeling much better now.โ She took a small sip from her cup and smiled at me. It was not her usual smile. It traveled only halfway across her face.
A question occurred to me. โDid she ever ask about me? My mother?โ โOf course she did, dear. When sheโd call out of the blue, it was often to
ask about you. Iโd update her, of course. For as long as sheโd listen. Sometimes that wasnโt very long.โ
โBecause she was unwell?โ I asked. This was the word Gran always used to explain why my mother had left in the first place.
โYes, because she was terribly unwell. When she called me, it was usually from the streets. But when I stopped providing funds, she stopped calling.โ
โAnd my father?โ I asked. โWhat happened to him?โ
โLike Iโve said before, he was not a good egg. I tried to help your mother see this. I even called old friends to help me coax her away from
him, but that proved ineffective.โ
Gran paused and took another sip of tea. โYou must promise me, dear girl, to never get mixed up with drugs.โ Her eyes filled with tears.
โI promise, Gran,โ I said.
I didnโt know what else to say, so I reached out and hugged her. I could feel her holding on to me in a whole new way. It was the only time I ever felt that I was giving her a hug, rather than the other way around.
When we separated, I didnโt know what the correct etiquette was. I said, โWhat do you say, Gran? When all else fails, tidy up?โ
She nodded. โMy dear girl, youโre a treasure to me. That you are. Shall we tackle this mess together?โ
And with that, Gran was back. Perhaps she was dissimulating, but as we arranged all of her trinkets, freshly cleaned and polished, and put them back in the curio cabinet, she chirped and chattered on as though it were an ordinary day.
We never spoke of my mother again after that.
Here I am now, in the same spot as I was that day, surrounded by a menagerie of mementoes. But this time, Iโm dreadfully alone.
โGran,โ I say to the empty room, โI think Iโm in trouble.โ
I arrange the photos on top of the curio cabinet. I polish each of Granโs treasures and stow them safely behind the glass. I stand in front of the cabinet looking at everything inside. I donโt know what to do.
Youโre never alone as long as you have a friend.
Iโve been managing on my own through most of this, but perhaps it really is time to call for help.
I go to the front door where I left my phone. I pick it up and dial Rodney.
He answers after the second ring. โHello?โ
โHello, Rodney,โ I say. โI hope I havenโt caught you at an inopportune moment.โ
โAll good,โ he says. โWhatโs up? I saw you leave the hotel with the cops. Everyoneโs talking, saying youโre in trouble.โ
โIโm sorry to report that in this particular case, the gossip may be correct.โ
โWhat did the police want?โ
โThe truth,โ I say. โAbout me. About Giselle. Mr. Black didnโt die of an overdose. Not exactly.โ
โOh, thank God for that. What did he die of?โ
โThey donโt know yet. But itโs clear they suspect me. And maybe Giselle too.โ
โButโฆyou didnโt tell them anything about her, did you?โ โNot much,โ I say.
โAnd you didnโt mention Juan Manuel or any of that, right?โ โWhat does he have to do with anything?โ
โNothing. Nothing at all. Soโฆwhy are you calling me?โ
โRodney, I need help.โ My voice cracks and I find it difficult to maintain my composure.
He goes quiet for a moment, then asks, โDid youโฆdidย youย kill Mr.
Black?โ
โNo! Of course not. How could you evenโโ
โSorry, sorry. Forget I even said that. So how are you in trouble exactly?โ
โGiselle, she had me go back into the suite because sheโd left something behind. A gun. She wanted it back. And sheโs my friend, so Iโฆโ
โJesus.โ Thereโs a pause on the other end of the line. โRight.โ โRodney?โ
โYes, Iโm here,โ he says. โSo whereโs that gun now?โ โIn my vacuum cleaner. By my locker.โ
โWe have to get that gun,โ Rodney says. I can hear the agitation in his voice. โWe have to make it disappear.โ
โYes! Exactly,โ I say. โOh Rodney, Iโm so sorry to involve you in all of this. And please, if the police ever talk to you, you have to tell them Iโm not a bad person, that I would never hurt anyone.โ
โDonโt worry, Molly. Iโll take care of everything.โ
I feel raw gratitude climbing up my chest, threatening to spill out of me in blubbering tears, but I wonโt let that happen in case Rodney finds it unbecoming. I want this experience to draw us closer, not break us apart. I take a deep breath and push my sentiments back down.
โThank you, Rodney,โ I say. โYouโre a good friend. More than that, even. I donโt know what Iโd do without you.โ
โIโve got your back,โ he says.
But thereโs more. I fear that when he hears the rest, he may turn away from me forever.
โThereโs another spot ofโฆinformation,โ I say. โMr. Blackโs wedding ring. I found it in the suite. And, wellโฆ. This is very hard for me to admit, but Iโve recently found myself in some acute financial distress. I took the ring to a pawn shop today so that I could pay my rent.โ
โYouโฆyouย what?โ
โItโs on display in a shop window downtown.โ
โI canโt believe it. I really canโt believe it,โ he replies. I can hear him almost laughing, as if this is the most wonderful news. Surely he doesnโt find this funny. It strikes me that laughs are just like smiles. People use them to express an array of confounding emotions.
โIโve made a terrible mistake,โ I say. โI never thought theyโd interrogate me again. I thought my part in all of this was over. If the police find out I pawned Mr. Blackโs ring, it will appear as though I killed him for financial gain. Can you see that?โ
โAbsolutely I can,โ says Rodney. โWow. Itโsโฆincredible. Listen, everythingโs going to turn out just fine. Leave everything to me.โ
โWill you make the gun go away? And the ring? I should never have taken it. It was wrong. Will you buy it back and make sure that no one ever sees it again? Iโll pay you back someday. You have my word.โ
โLike I said, Molly. Leave everything in my hands. Youโre at home now?โ
โYes,โ I say.
โDonโt go out tonight. Okay? Donโt go anywhere.โ
โI never do. Rodney,โ I say. โI canโt thank you enough.โ
โThatโs what friends are for, right? To help each other out of binds?โ โRight,โ I say. โThatโs what friends are for.โ
โRodney?โ I say into the receiver. Iโm about to add that I most desperately would like to be more than just a friend to him, but itโs too late. Heโs hung up without saying goodbye. Iโve left him with quite a mess to tidy, and heโs not wasting a moment.
When all of this is over, Iโm going to take him on an all-expenses-paid Tour of Italy. We will sit in our private booth at the Olive Garden under the warm glow of the pendant light, and we will eat mountains of salad and bread, followed by a universe of pasta and topped by a smorgasbord of sweet desserts. Somehow, when weโre done, I will pick up the bill.
I will pay for all of this. I know I will.





