we could consider perhaps â¦â He paused. âThe thing is, thereâs no way I can contest this will through the courts. I had a long chat with Andrew Reynolds and he says that Mother was perfectly composed and sane when he saw her, and her nurses and the doctor havenât said a word about any â well, any change in how she normally was. So the thing is, itâs up to you, Justin. To do what I reckon would be the right thing. Have you thought, for instance, about the possibility of selling the property and dividing up the proceeds? If everyoneâs honest, neither you nor Nessa actually wants to live in a huge old pile miles away from any of your businesses or work concerns. Isnât that true?â
âWell, no, as a matter of fact.â Justin pushed the hair out of his eyes and leaned back in his chair so that he was balanced on its back legs. Nessa wondered how long Phyl would last before she asked him to stop doing that. During their childhood it had been one of her more predictable exhortations and the ghost of
if you canât sit properly at the table, then please just leave and go to your room
was practically visible, floating over them all. Nessa caught her stepmotherâs eye and wondered if she could see it too. Obviously not, as she looked away at once and went on eating without much enthusiasm.
âI havenât thought about dividing it up. Of course not. Dâyou think Iâm mad? Iâm going to live there and Iâm going to do great things, you see.â Justin was smiling now. Iâm very sorry that Nessa is pissed off and itâs bloody awful that Louâs been cut out altogether, but hey, thatâs none of my doing so I donât see why Iâm the one thatâs got to be punished for it.â
âWhat about you, Nessa?â Matt looked at her.
âWhat about me? What have I got to do with anything? It seems that Justinâs made up his mind and if he wonât listen to reason then weâre stymied.â
âI get it.â Justinâs face was going red. âWhat you think, and what Dad thinks, is reason and what I think is crap. Is that it?â He never could argue calmly. He always lost it, Nessa thought, mentally patting herself on the back for at least staying cool during an argument.
âThatâs just typical,â he continued. âItâs what youâve always done, Nessa, our whole life. You just sit there looking superior and as if you donât care and you do ⦠I know you do. Itâs eating you up, the fact that Iâve got the house and you havenât. And if you ask me,
thatâs
not fair. Anyone would think sheâd cut you off without a farthing the way youâre carrying on. You always do carry on, though, donât you? Nothingâs ever good enough.â
âFor heavenâs sake, Justin. Youâre acting like a child. In fact, thatâs your problem.â Nessa leaned towards her brother to make her point more forcefully. âYouâve never grown up!â
âEnough of that!â Phyl spoke for the first time since the beginning of the meal, sounding exactly as she used to long ago when she was settling stupid disputes between the two of them. âBoth of you are behaving like kids, and you arenât the ones who are hard done by, either of you. Why isnât Lou making a fuss? Sheâs the one with grounds for complaint, Iâd have thought.â
âSorry, Phyl,â said Nessa.
âYeah, sorry â¦â said Justin, and his sister heard him putting a smile into his voice and saw the effort it took to transfer the smile to his face. Still, you had to hand it to him, he was good at pretending. Everyone else, Nessa felt sure, would be thinking sweetness and light had been restored, but she could tell that Justin was still fuming and whatâs more, longing to be out of there. Well, welcome to the club,little brother,
Peter Geye
Louis Shalako
Margaret Wrinkle
Maureen O'Donnell
T. K. Madrid
Hailey Edwards
Heather McVea
Marjorie Farrell
Jeremy Laszlo, Ronnell Porter
Reggie Oliver