I should and shouldnât eat, and a pamphlet on abortion. âDo you need to talk to someone?â she asks. âI can recommend a good counselor.â
I canât remember the number of times Iâve said the same thing to my clients. Iâve always prided myself on my ability to manage my own life, to stay out of the kinds of messes my clients seem to get into. I shake my head.
Dora Green is waiting for me in front of my office. I nod to her and unlock the door. âI wanted to know if you made any progress,â she says.
I feel very weary. Itâs far too early for her to expect results. I motion her inside the office and sit at my desk. âIâm sorry,â she says, taking the chair opposite me. Today sheâs wearing a green print dress thatâs even busier than her skirt, more leaves and flowers and what looks like little animals peering through the foliage. âI should have waited.â
âYour daughter seems to have moved, and sheâs stopped going to classes,â I say. âOther than that, I canât tell you anything yet.â
She nods. Her calm expression does not change. I wonder if sheâs had the same thought I had, that her daughter is dead, killed by her husband. Satanic rituals, I think.
âIâm meeting someone for lunch,â she says. âYou must be hungry too. Can I get you something to eat?â
Youâre supposed to eat enough for two when youâre pregnant, but at the same time youâre usually sick to your stomach. Just another example, I think, of how impossible the whole thing is. âIâve already eaten,â I say.
For a moment I think she knows Iâm lying; worse, that she knows everything about me, including where I went this morning. I have never felt this way about any of my clients; usually itâs the clients who feel the need to justify their behavior.
âCome with me anyway,â she says, smiling a little.
The animals on her print dress are moving. I shake my head, trying to focus, but the hallucination doesnât go away. A badger or something shoulders aside a flowering vine and pads forward, its nose twitching.
I look away. Iâd better eat something. âAll right,â I say, and we head out into the street.
She stops at a restaurant a few blocks from my office, and we go inside. I have never seen this place before; probably itâs new. There are posters of flowers on the walls, and vases filled with bright flowers at the table.
Her friend is already there. âThis is Mickey,â Ms. Green says as we sit down. âMickey, this is Liz Keller.â
Mickey nods at me, amused at something. He is slender, with curly blond hair and light gray eyes. There is a slight family resemblance, and for a moment I think he is Carolynâs brother. But surely Ms. Green would have told me if there were others in the family. I wonder who he is, how they know each other.
The waitress comes soon afterward. I study the menu, trying to remember the list of food the doctor gave me. I could use a cup of coffee, but Iâm almost certain the doctor would disapprove. âIâll have some tea,â I say.
The waitress takes the rest of the orders and leaves. âHow do you know Ms. Green?â I ask Mickey.
âWeâre related,â he says. âCousins. What about you? How do you know her?â
âSheâs hired me in a professional capacity,â I say. Itâs all I can tell him without breaking my clientâs confidentiality.
âAh,â Mickey says. âYouâre the new detective.â
âNew detective?â I say, looking at Ms. Green. The animals on her dress are motionless now, thank God. âYou didnât tell me about this. What happened to the old one?â
âShe wasnât very good,â Ms. Green says.
âAnd time is running out, isnât it?â Mickey says.
âWhat do you mean?â I ask.
Weâre
T P Hong
Annah Faulkner
Colleen Houck
Raven Bond
Megan Mitcham
Ngaio Marsh
Madeline Sheehan
Jess Keating
Avril Sabine
Unknown