know. But it doesnât make much sense. It was something that happened a long time ago, something I thought we had worked out.â
âEvidently not,â she said. âHe was selling all your things through the window when I got here.â
âPlease tell me youâre kidding.â
âIâm not,â Zee said. âHe has re-created Hepzibahâs Cent-Shop in the front room. He was selling all your belongings.â
Melville couldnât help but laugh.
âItâs not funny,â she said.
âNo, but itâs creative,â he said. âForgive me, itâs the only time Iâve even smiled all week.â
âI rescued some of your shirts,â she said.
âFor that I am eternally grateful.â
âThe doctor thinks itâs the new meds,â she offered. âThey were causing hallucinations. We took him off them.â
âWhatâs he doing instead?â
âMore Sinemet. One every three hours with two half doses added in twice a day.â
Melville was quiet.
âAre you still there?â Zee asked.
âYeah.â After another long moment, Melville changed the subject. âI hired a home health aide,â he said. âHer name is Jessina. She doesnât work on Fridays, but sheâll be in tomorrow.â
âI donât understand how youâve been keeping all this from me,â Zee said. âOr why.â
Melville sighed. âFinch didnât want to worry you.â
She thought back to the effort it must have taken them both to keep things from her. âAny other secrets?â
âYou should come over here. We need to figure things out,â he said.
âWhere is âhereâ?â
âIâm house-sitting,â he said. âFriend of a friend. Over by the Athenaeum. Come by tomorrow after Jessina gets there.â
She wrote down the address. After she hung up, she went to the bedroom to check on Finch. He was sleeping soundly. She walked back to the kitchen and dialed Michael.
It rang three times before it went to voice mail.
Â
Z EE TOOK OUT HER ANGER on the kitchen. She cleaned. She scrubbed down stove and counters. She polished the toaster until it shined. As she pulled the canisters away from the wall and began to clean behind them, she found several items meant for decorating cakes: red and blue sugar, some bottles of food coloring, and some spices, including an old amber bottleâall stuff obviously left over from some baking project of Melvilleâs. She opened the amber bottle and looked inside at the tiny silver balls, the kind you might find on a fancy cake or maybe Christmas cookiesâdragées, she thought they were called. They were probably too old to keep, but she didnât want to throw anything out without asking, so she put all the bottles back in the cabinet with the other baking things.
Melville was a great cook, but he had never been great at cleaning or organizing. As she put the cake decorations away, she started reorganizing the cabinets, putting like with like, the canned goods in one cabinet, the spices in another. Her anger was fading, but the energy of adrenaline was not, and so she moved from cabinet to cabinet, wiping down the surfaces as she went, arranging the labels. She became aware that she was being a bit obsessive when she actually considered alphabetizing everything.
When she got to the third cabinet, she was surprised. Hidden behind the boxes of cereal, she found all the wine that Michael had given Finch, every birthday and Christmas for the last four years, all second-growth vintages, really good wines from Michaelâs own collection. They werenât stored on their sides but stood upright, a sure way to ruin the corks. Horrified, she pulled them out and set them on the counter.
Before his diagnosis of Parkinsonâs, from his pirate days on, Finchâs alcohol consumption had been increasing steadily. He had developed
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