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sick."
"A lovely girl," Inez reiterated wistfully. "Perfectly sensible. Everyone liked her. We should have
continued to visit her, Sister."
Destiny hung on to her patience. "Do you remember what started it all?"
"We were in The Tavern to celebrate Inez's birthday," Velda said. "I remember because we were
wearing party hats."
"It was my sixty-fifth birthday, a true milestone," Inez put in.
Velda rolled her eyes. "It was your seventieth birthday, Inez. You're five years older than you tell
people."
"Why, Sister! Surely not. I am certain of my age."
"You're two years younger than I am."
Inez looked shocked and began to fan herself. "I am certain you're wrong, Sister. I am at least five years
younger."
Velda took a breath, patted her sister lovingly. "Now that you say so, I believe you're right. I was mixed
up for a moment, dear, do forgive me."
"You were telling me about the party hats," Destiny said to redirect the conversation, but she was
looking at Velda with far more respect. There was genuine love and compassion in the woman's eyes as
she looked at her sister.
"Well," Velda went on. "I had tried one of those new perms and my hair was all curly and sticking out
from under the party hat. I was looking at myself in the mirror and laughing. Blythe was laughing with me.
We pointed to each other in the mirror. She'd had a perm, too, but her hair wasn't sticking out like mine.
It looked pretty. Didn't you think so, Inez?" Deliberately she drew her sister into the conversation, taking
her mind off the distressing subject of age. "Didn't you think Blythe's hair was really pretty all curled the
way it was?"
"Oh, yes, Sister, she looked so young."
"But the mirror shattered. It just shattered. Nothing touched it. I was looking right at it." Velda frowned.
"There were slivers of glass everywhere. The mirror must have really meant something to Blythe. Maybe
it was an heirloom. She just went for the closest person. She picked up a chair and smashed it over his
back. Who did she hit, Sister? Do you remember?"
"That tall friend of Harry's. He isn't around much anymore. I haven't seen him but once or twice since,"
Inez answered. "Davissomething."
"Morgan Davis." Velda pounced on the name, proud of her memory. "Of course. I didn't like him, much
too cold for me, but the young girls went for him." She glanced at Destiny. "I didn't like his aura. It was
off color. He worked with Harry on and off for a few months and then left town."
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"That's right.Davis is very tall, and Blythe smashed that chair right over him." Inez grinned at the memory.
"Everyone wanted to laugh, a little thing like her breaking that chair. But then she picked up a piece of the
leg and began to hit him all over. She didn't make a sound and she wouldn't stop. Harry restrained her,
didn't he, Sister?"
"The next day she didn't remember anything at all," Velda said. "When we asked her about it, she denied
it. She cried. I believe she began to think there was a conspiracy against her. None of us could convince
her she had actually hitDavis with a chair. She just seemed to give up after a while. She withdrew from
everyone, and eventually we rarely saw her. There were four incidents about a month or so apart. Finally
Harry took her to the hospital. No one's really talked to her since." Velda's hand trembled as she
reached for the talisman hanging on a chain around her neck. "I was her friend. I should have continued
to visit her." She looked down at the ground. "I all but forgot her."
"Velda," Destiny said in a soothing tone. "Blythe knows you're a good friend. She's unable to cope at
this time, but perhaps we'll find some information that will help her." She was turning Velda's words over
and over in her mind.
A mirror shattered, Nicolae. The other night, just before John Paul's strange behavior, the streetlights
shattered. There must be a connection. She reached for him easily, naturally. Nicolae. Her other half.
I knew you felt that way.
His voice was far too complacent for her liking.You are my other half, I'll admit, but you're the worst
half. The ridiculous, impetuous half that must be monitored continually .
Ah, that word again. Impetuous. Spontaneous, reckless, a lover without measure.
Destiny laughed out loud.Where did that come from? You're dreaming again . "Thank you for telling
me, Velda, I know it isn't easy to bring up difficult memories. You're always so generous." Destiny
studied the two eccentric women. The pink and purple hair. The flashy tennis shoes. Inez with her
overdone makeup and Velda with a cleanly scrubbed face.
"You're extraordinary women." Destiny knew it was true. They gave service to others, watching over
and caring for the people they loved. Some thought them busybodies, others thought them silly, but those
were the people who didn't take time to know them. To see who they really were. "I feel privileged to
have met you."
"We're not extraordinary at all, dear," Velda denied. "We live life very simply, without fear of rejection.
Others don't have to understand us." As if realizing they were getting close to the topic of her hidden
talents, she completely changed the subject, patting Destiny's hand as if that would distract her. "I heard
what you did for that little boy. Father Mulligan came by this morning and mentioned you brought him the
child. Inez and I would gladly give him a home, but we're too old." She glanced at her sister. "I'm too old,
and Inez must take care of me. She has her hands full with that, don't you, Sister?"
"You're never a bother, Velda. Of course we'll take the child if he has no one else. Velda fusses and
spoils them, but I'd see to it that he ate properly and went to school. She'd be useless, taking him for
outings all the time and giving him junk food."
"Father Mulligan has a family in mind," Velda said. "A couple who have always wanted children and
could never have any. He's helping them fill out the necessary paperwork and talking with the social
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workers now. I believe he was meeting your young man and taking him along."
So that's what you're up to, smoothing the way. Hope blossomed in the pit of her stomach, a starburst
she tried hard to squelch. She had lived most of her life without hope, without allowing others into her life. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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