âA man you profess to admire and revere.â
âWhy wouldnât I be curious about his life?â he asked mildly.
In lieu of an answer, she took a loud slurp of tea. Then she lit a cigarette without asking whether it would bother the baby. Her own mother had smoked like a sailor through both her pregnancies and her childrenâs childhoods, and both she and Oscar had wound up chain-smokers themselves, but so what? Not the end of the world.
âWhy donât you like Teddy?â Henry asked.
âThatâs what youâre really wondering, isnât it,â Maxine said, ânow that youâve met her and been sucked inâ¦. Isnât there anyone you just donât like?â
âOf course.â
âCall it biochemical, call it taste, call it bitchiness. I really donât care what you call it. Unlike everyone else, apparently, I see right through Claire, and what I see I canât stand.â
Henry leaned forward on his elbows, so the steam from his untouched teacup curled up to bathe his sweating face in yet more moisture. âWhat do you see?â
âOh, think whatever you want,â Maxine said. âI have no interest in dredging up all that old shit with Oscarâs little mistress. Thatâs the last thing I feel like talking about. Iâve had a bad day.â
The baby opened his mouth and began to scream.
âSo have I, actually,â said Henry. He picked up the baby and held him against his shoulder, gently patting his back. This looked to Maxine like a plausible solution, but it didnât help. The baby wailed. Henry reached into his bag and pulled out a bottle. He stuck the nipple in the kidâs mouth. The kid fussed initially, then shut up and started to suck. âBreast milk,â Henry said. âExpressed from my wifeâs breast, to be deployed in case of emergency.â
âI never had kids myself,â said Maxine. âAnd I donât envy those who do.â
âIâm in no mood to argue,â said Henry. âBelieve it or not, though,â he added, âitâs not
all
screaming and shitty diapers and sleep deprivation.â
âReally,â said Maxine.
âEvery now and thenâ¦â Henry gave himself over to watching Chesterâs mouth suck at the bottle. âItâs like they say. All the old clichés are true.â
âProbably why theyâre old clichés,â said Maxine. âListen, Iâm sorry to cut this short, but Iâve got to take a nap before I go out tonight. Was there anything elseââ
âWhy donât you like Teddy?â
She blinked at him. âYou are persistent,â she said. âI suppose thatâs an admirable quality.â
Henry waited; she didnât say anything more. He switched to another tack. âWhy did Oscar stay with Abigail?â
âI find it flattering that you credit me with the assumption that I would know the answer to that.â
Again, he waited; again, she clammed up.
âWhy didnât Oscar leave Teddy any of his paintings, or any money?â he asked.
Maxine finished her tea. âI guess because she had no claim to any of it.â
âIâm sorry to keep you,â said Henry. âIâm just trying toââ
âWas there anything else?â
âWhy do you ignore Oscarâs daughters?â
âYou mean Teddyâs daughters,â she said before she could stop herself.
âWhy do I mean Teddyâs daughters?â
âYouâll have to ask them that.â
âBut how do you know what theyâd say if you never see them?â
âI pick things up through the air, like a radio.â
With a victorious expression Maxine didnât care for at all, Henry said, âI will ask Ruby and Samantha. But Iâm very interested to know why you chose not to recognize them as your nieces.â
âChalk it up to a complete lack of
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