say, a little too enthusiastically. âI used to have one above my vegetable garden at my old place.â
He gives me a long, cool look. âI was going to say Iâd build you one. I doubt Eric has money for a Garden City canopy in the budget.â
âNo, of course not. I didnât thinkââ
Angus shakes his head. âNo. You wouldnât.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âNothing.â He lifts the shears and starts hacking at the bush with sharp, aggressive strokes.
I stare at his back. âIs there something you want to say to me, Angus?â
He turns around. âYou probably think you and your daughter got a rough deal, donât you? You lost your big house. Your money. You had to get a job in a residential care facility and have your canopies built instead of boughtââ
I open my mouth.
âMy sister and her husband lost everything because of your husband. Not just money butââ His throat works. ââthey were in the middle of doing IVF. Kellyâs forty-one. Now they canât afford to do it anymore, so sheâll probably never have kids.â
I blink back tears at the unexpected outburst and Angus resumes hacking at the bush. I stay quiet. At least now I know why Angus has been so cold with me. His sister is one of thousands of people harmed by my husband. And, by extension, harmed by me. âIâm sorry,â I say. âBut for the record, I donât think I got a rough deal. I got off lightly. I can live with losing my money and my house. Iâll get used to being a social outcast, to working menial jobs and having no friends. Iâd take all of it, and more, if it meant I could give my daughter back her father. So, say what you want about me, but donât lump my daughter into the same category. My daughter got one hell of a rough deal. And she is as innocent as your poor sister.â
With that, I spin on my heel and march toward the house. As I walk, I think I hear Angus call my name, but I just keep walking.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I find a cart in the housekeeping closet and drive it down the corridor. I shouldnât have said that to Angus, but Clem is my Achillesâ heel. She seems like sheâs okay, but every now and then, I get a glimpse of her grief, and it worries me. Her father was her hero. But what will happen when she finds out he wasnât a hero at all?
Ericâs instructions were that each room and bathroom be given a light âgoing-overâ each day. Empty, clean, and reline wastebaskets. Strip beds on Thursdays and make them on other days. Inner windows should be done weeklyâMondays are best because of grubby fingers from grandchildren on Sundays, when most residents have visitors. Itâs not exactly what I envisioned when I applied for a cook position, but if it keeps Clem out of Butt Road, I can do it for a while.
When I peek into Annaâs room, I see Clara in the armchair by the window.
âOh,â I say. âI thought this was Annaâs room.â
âIt is,â Clara says, nodding toward the bed where Anna is lying. âAnna, honey, Eveâs just here to make the beds and clean up a bit.â
âOh,â Anna says. âOkay.â
I open the door wide and push my cart inside. The room is lovely, small but bright, furnished with just a bed, a couple of armchairs, and a dresser. It reminds me of a hotel room. What is unlike a hotel, though, is that everything is labeledâeach drawer has a sign labeled UNDERWEAR, BRAS, T-SHIRTS, PAJAMAS . The doors to the closet, the bathroom, and the hallway are labeled, too. It stuns me. Really? Does Anna really not know which door goes where?
âThat ⦠thin-jacket suits you,â Anna says to Clara. âItâs the exact blue of your eyes.â
âThanks, honey,â Clara says. âBlueâs my favorite.â
I take a hand cloth and steal a glance at Clara. Her
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