“Whatcha see?” I asked.
“Not much,” she said.
“That’s too bad.”
“No, it’s not. If there’s nothing coming to destroy Earth, that’s a good thing.”
“Can’t argue with that.”
“I don’t want anything to happen to you and Mom. If an asteroid was going to hit our house by morning, I’d be able to see it coming by now, so you can rest easy.”
I touched her hair, ran my hand down to her shoulder.
“Dad, you’re bumping my eye,” Grace said.
“Oh, sorry,” I said.
“I think Aunt Tess is sick,” she said.
Oh no. She’d been listening. Instead of being down in the basement, she’d been hiding at the top of the stairs.
“Grace, were you-”
“She just didn’t seem very happy for her birthday,” she said. “I’m way happier than that on my birthday.”
“Sometimes when you get older, having a birthday isn’t quite such a big deal,” I said. “You’ve already had a lot of them. The novelty kind of wears off after a while.”
“What’s novelty?”
“You know how when something’s new, it’s exciting? But then after a while, it gets kind of boring? When it’s new, it’s a novelty.”
“Oh.” She moved her telescope a bit to the left. “The moon is really shiny tonight. You can see all the craters.”
“Get to bed,” I said.
“In a minute,” she protested. “Sleep tight, and don’t worry about asteroids tonight.”
I decided not to be heavy-handed and demand that she get under the covers immediately. Letting a kid stay up past her bedtime to study the solar system didn’t strike me as a crime worthy of intervention by the child welfare authorities. After giving her a gentle kiss on her ear, I slipped out of her room and back down the hall to our bedroom.
Cynthia, who’d already said goodnight to Grace, was sitting up in bed, looking at a magazine, just turning the pages, not paying any real attention to them.
“I have some errands to run at the mall tomorrow,” she said, not taking her eyes away from the pages. “I’ve got to find Grace some new running shoes.”
“Hers don’t look worn out.”
“They’re not, but her toes are jammed up in them. You joining us?”
“Sure,” I said. “I might cut the grass in the morning. We could grab some lunch there.”
“That was nice today,” she said. “We don’t see Tess enough.”
“Why don’t we make it a weekly thing?” I said.
“You think?” She smiled.
“Sure. Have her here for dinner, take her to Knickerbocker’s, maybe out to that seafood place along the Sound. She’d like that.”
“She’d love it. She seemed a bit preoccupied today. And I think she’s starting to get a bit absentminded. I mean, she already had ice cream.”
I took off my shirt, hung my pants over the back of a chair. “Oh well,” I said. “That’s not a big thing.”
Tess had held off telling Cynthia about her health problems. She wouldn’t have wanted to spoil her own birthday celebrations for Cynthia. And while it was certainly up to Tess to decide when to break the news to Cynthia, it felt wrong to know this while my wife was kept in the dark.
But an even greater burden was knowing, for the first time, about the money that had been sent anonymously to Tess over several years. What right did I have to keep that information to myself? Surely Cynthia was more entitled to know about it than I. But Tess had held back from telling because she thought Cynthia was fragile enough these days, and I couldn’t disagree. And yet.
I’d even liked to have asked Cynthia whether she knew her aunt had paid a couple of visits to Dr. Kinzler, but then she’d want to know why Tess had mentioned that to me and not her, so I left it alone.
“You okay?” Cynthia asked.
“Yeah, good. Just kind of beat, that’s all,” I said as I stripped down to my boxers. I brushed my teeth and got into bed, lying on my side, my back to her. Cynthia threw her magazine onto the floor and turned off the light, and a few seconds after that, her arm slipped around me, and she stroked my chest, and then she took me in her hand.
“How beat are you?” she whispered.
“Not that beat,” I said, and turned over.
“I want to be safe with you,” she said, pulling my mouth down to hers.
“No asteroids tonight,” I said, and if the lights had been on, I think I might have seen her smile.
Cynthia fell asleep quickly. I wasn’t so lucky.
I stared at the ceiling, turned over on to my side, glared at the digital clock. When it turned over to a new minute, I started counting to sixty, seeing how close I could come. Then I rolled onto my back and stared at the ceiling some more. Around three in the morning, Cynthia sensed my restlessness and said groggily to me, “You okay?”
“Fine,” I said. “Go back to sleep.”
It was her questions I couldn’t face. If I knew the answers to the questions Cynthia would have about the cash-stuffed envelopes that had been left for Tess to help pay for her upbringing, I might have told her about it right away.
No, that was not true. Having some of the answers would only spark more questions. Suppose I knew the money was being left by someone from her family. Suppose I even knew which one.
I wouldn’t be able to answer why.
Suppose I knew the money was being left by someone outside her family. But who? Who else would feel responsible enough for Cynthia, about what had happened to her mother and father and brother, to leave that kind of money to care for her?
And then I wondered whether I should tell the police. Get Tess to turn over the letter and the envelopes. Maybe, even after all these years, they still held some secrets that someone with the right kind of forensic equipment could unlock.
Assuming, of course, that there was anyone still in the police department who cared about this case. It had gone into the “cold” file a very long time ago.
When they were doing the TV show, they had a hard time even finding anyone still on the force who’d investigated the incident. Which was why they’d had to track down that guy in Arizona, sitting out front of his Airstream, so he could insinuate that Cynthia had had something to do with the disappearance of her brother and her parents, the prick.
And so I lay awake, haunted by the information I had that Cynthia did not, and how it only served to remind me of how much we still didn’t know.
I killed some time in the bookstore while Cynthia and Grace looked at shoes. I had an early Philip Roth, one that I’d never gotten around to reading, in my hand when Grace came running into the store. Cynthia trailed behind her, a shopping bag in hand.
“I’m starving,” Grace said, throwing her arms around me.
“You got some shoes?”
She took a step back and modeled for me, sticking out one foot and then the other. White sneakers with a pink swoosh.
“What’s in the bag?” I asked.
“Her old ones,” Cynthia said. “She had to wear them right away. You hungry?”
I was. I put the Roth book back and we took the escalator up to the food court level. Grace wanted McDonald’s, so I gave her enough money to buy herself something while Cynthia and I went to a different counter to get soup and a sandwich. Cynthia kept glancing back over to the McDonald’s, making sure she could see Grace. The mall was busy on this Sunday afternoon, as was the food court. There were still a few tables free, but they were filling up fast.
Cynthia was so occupied watching Grace that I moved both our plastic trays along, gathered together cutlery and napkins, loaded the sandwiches and soup as they became ready.
“She’s got us a table,” Cynthia said. I scanned the court, spotted Grace at a table for four, waving her arm back and forth long after we’d caught sight of her. She already had her Big Mac out of the box when we joined her, her fries dumped into the other side of the container.
“Eww,” she said when she saw my cream of broccoli soup. A kindly looking, fiftyish woman in a blue coat, sitting alone at the next table, glanced over, smiled, and then went back to her own lunch.