sisters that they ought to address us with respect. But that wasn’t why I was so dumbfounded. “I try not to be bad,” I said, to buy some time until I found out what had prompted that question.
Iona made herself mighty busy with her coffee, stirring it with a spoon over and over. I could feel my mouth clamp down in anger, and I was trying to keep the bitter words inside. After a moment, it became clear Iona was going to act like she wasn’t involved in the conversation, so I went on. “I try to be honest with the people I work for,” I said. “I believe in God.” (Not the same God Iona worshipped, apparently.) “I work hard and I pay my taxes. I’m the best person I can be.” And this was all true.
“Because if you take money from people and you can’t really do what you say you can do, that’s bad, right?” Gracie said.
“It sure is,” Tolliver said. “That’s called fraud. And it’s something Harper and I would never, never do.” His dark eyes drilled holes in Iona. Gracie looked at her adoptive mother, too. I was sure they were seeing two different people.
Iona was still not meeting our eyes, still stirring the damn coffee.
Hank came in the garage door then, which was good timing. Hank was a big man, with a broad, high-complexioned face and thinning blond hair. He’d been very handsome when he was younger, and he was a good-looking man still, now that he’d reached forty. His waist was barely thicker than it had been when he and Iona had married.
“Harper, Tolliver! Good to see you! We don’t see you-all enough.”
Liar.
He kissed the top of Gracie’s head and chucked Mariella under the chin. “Hey, you two!” he said to the girls. “Mariella, how was that spelling test today?”
Mariella said, “Hey, Daddy! I got eight out of ten right.”
“That’s my girl,” Hank said. He was pouring some Coca-Cola out of a two-liter bottle. He chunked a few ice cubes into the glass and pulled up a folding chair that stood beside the refrigerator. “Gracie, did you have a good time in chorus today?”
“We sang good,” she said. She seemed relieved to be on familiar conversational ground.
If Hank had noticed the tense atmosphere in the tiny kitchen, he didn’t comment on it.
“How are you two doing?” he asked me. “Find any good bodies lately?” Hank had always talked about our livelihood as if it were a big joke.
I smiled back faintly. “A few,” I said. Evidently, Hank didn’t read the newspapers or watch the news on television. I’d been mentioned more often than I wanted to be in the past month.
“Where you traveled to?” Hank also thought it was amusing that Tolliver and I were always on the road, pursuing this strange living of ours. Hank had been out of Texas when he was in the army, but that was the extent of his traveling experience.
“We were in the mountains of North Carolina,” Tolliver said. He paused to see if either Iona or Hank would pick up on the reference to our last, most notorious, case.
Nope.
“Then we went to another job between here and Texarkana, in Clear Creek. Now here we are in Garland to see you-all.”
“Any big news in the corpse-finding business?” Again with the teasing smile.
“We have other news,” Tolliver said, irritated by Hank’s facetiousness. This happened every time. Every damn time. I looked at Tolliver, saw the intent way his eyes were focused on Hank.
Uh-oh , I thought.
“You found you a girlfriend and you’re going to settle down!” Hank said jocularly, since Tolliver’s lack of a steady girlfriend had long been the subject of many pointed jokes from both Iona and her husband.
“As a matter of fact, I have,” Tolliver said, and the smile on his face made me close my eyes. It was bright and hard.
“Well, listen to that, girls! Your uncle Tolliver has got himself a girl! Who is she, Tol?”
My brother hated it when someone abbreviated his name.
“Harper,” Tolliver said. He reached across the table and