He asked about the tea they had been drinking. To him it tasted and smelled like a product of the stables. It was Lapsang souchong, she said.
"Do you grow catnip?" he asked. "I have two Siamese cats."
"I adore Siamese!" she cried. "I've always wanted one, but Mother ..." Suddenly she appeared weary, and he suggested sitting on a stone bench near the herbs, which were aromatic in their way.
He asked, "Where do you live when you're not on the island?"
"Mother likes to spend autumn at our farm, the holidays in the city, and winters in Palm Beach."
"Have you always lived with your mother?"
"Except when I was away at school."
They sat in silence for a few moments, but her eyes wandered, and her thoughts were almost audible. She had an intelligent face, delicate but wide-browed.
Speaking like a kindly uncle, he said, "Did you ever think you'd like a place of your own?"
"Oh, Mother would not approve, and I doubt whether I'd have the courage to break away or the strength to face responsibility. My two older brothers have suggested it, but ..."
"Do you have money of your own?"
"A trust fund from my fatherquite a good one. Mother is trustee, but it's mine, legally."
"Have you ever contemplated a career?"
"Mother says I'm not cut out for anything requiring sustained commitment. She says I'm a dilettante."
"You do have a college degree, don't you?"
She shook her head sheepishly. He felt she was going to say, Mother didn't think it was necessary, or Mother didn't think I could stand the pressure, or Mother-this or Mother-that. To spare her the embarrassment he stood up and said, "Time for me to go home and feed the cats."
They returned to the terrace, and Qwilleran thanked Mrs. Appelhardt for a pleasant afternoon; he commented that she had an interesting family. She mentioned that tea was always poured at four o'clock, and he was always welcome.
Unexpectedly Elizabeth spoke up. Til drive you home, Mr. Qwilleran, and we'll take some fresh herbs for the cook at your inn."
"Henry will drive our guest home," her mother corrected her.
Flinging the hair away from her face, the young woman raised her voice bravely. "Mother, I wish to drive Mr. Qwilleran myself. He has two Siamese cats that I'd like to see."
Other members of the clan listened in hushed wonder.
"Elizabeth, you're not quite yourself," Mrs. Appelhardt said forcefully, "and certainly in no condition to drive. We prefer not to take chances. You're so sensitive to medication ... Richard, don't you agree?"
Before the elder brother could reply, Jack raised his voice. "For God's sake, Mother, let her do what she wantsfor once in her life! If the buggy turns over and she breaks her neck, so be it! It's karma! That's what she's always telling us."
Qwilleran, a reluctant witness to this embarrassing moment in family history, walked over to the daughters-in-law and asked if they had heard about the unsolved lighthouse mystery. Fortunately they had not, so he recounted the story in detail, with a few embellishments of his own. By the time his listeners had speculated on the fate of the lightkeepers, Elizabeth reappeared in culottes, boots, straw sailor hat, and tailored shirt. "The groom is bringing the phaeton around," she said in a voice that trembled slightly.
CHAPTER 13
The groom handed Elizabeth into the driver's seat, and one of the seersucker coats came running with a bouquet of herbs. She sat straight and square, with elbows close to her body and reins between the fingers of her left hand. Her right hand held the whip. She was in perfect control as they drove away from the lodge.
Qwilleran thought, All we need for this climactic scene is some melodramatic background music with full orchestra, as we drive away into the sunset. And what a cast of characters! Autocratic mother, timid daughter, two obedient sons, plus one who's sufficiently cavalier to deliver the defiant punch line.
Seated alongside the frail driver, he said, "Are you sure your injured wrist can handle that whip?"
"It's only a symbol," she replied. "Skip responds to the reins and the driver's voice. Our steward happens to be a wonderful trainer." They had stopped at the gate before turning into the procession of Sunday sightseers. "Walk on, Skip!" Nodding his head as if acknowledging the request, the horse moved forward into a left turn.
"Mother says you write for a newspaper. Which one?" Elizabeth asked.
"The Moose County Something on the mainland."
"Is that really its name? I don't read newspapers. They're too upsetting. What do you write?"
"A column about this and that... If I may ask, where were the peacocks today? It was my understanding that you have peacocks."
"Mother sold them to a zoo after Father died. Their screams made her nervous. Actually they were Father's pets. She sold his telescopes and astronomy books, too. That was his hobby. Did you ever see a UFO? Father said they hang over large bodies of water. If he spotted one, he'd wake us up in the middle of the night, and we'd all go out on the roof with binocularsexcept Mother and Jack. She said it was foolish; Jack said it was boring. Jack is easily bored."
Elizabeth was more talkative than Qwilleran had expected. As she rambled on, he silently classified the family he had just met. Jack and his mother had the same assertive manner, good looks, and inverted smile. It was a safe bet that he was her favorite. He caused her trouble with his marrying addiction, but she kept on bailing him out. The three other siblings probably favored their male parent. They had wide brows, delicate features, and a gentler personality.
Elizabeth was still talking about her father. "He taught me proper driving form when I was quite little. It's more fun than driving a car." She identified two private vehicles returning from the Grand Island Club: a Brewster and a spider phaeton, both restored by William. When they reached the commercial strip, she expressed surprise and sadness at the conversion of private lodges.
Qwilleran said, "You probably remember the birch-bark lodge. It's now the Domino Inn, and I'm staying in a cottage at the rear. It's small and quite confining, but I tell the cats to be patient; it's better than a tent."
"Do you really talk to them like that?"
"All the time. The more you talk to cats, the smarter they become, but it has to be intelligent conversation."
In front of Four Pips, Qwilleran handed her down from the driver's seat. "I hear lovely music! A flute with harp!" Her face was suddenly radiant.
"My next-door neighbor is a musician, and if she isn't playing the piano, she's playing recorded music."
"I wanted so badly to play the flute. I had visions of piping on the nature trail and luring small animals out of the woods. But my mother insisted on piano lessons. I wasn't very" She stopped and squealed with delight as she saw two pairs of blue eyes watching from the front window. Koko and Yum Yum were sitting tall on the domino table with ears alert and eyes popping at the sight of a large beast outside their cottage. Indoors, Elizabeth extended her left hand to them, and they sniffed the fingers that had held the reins.
Qwilleran made the introductions, mentioning that Koko was unusually smart; his latest interest was dominoes.
"He feels the power of numbers," Elizabeth said seriously. "Cats are tuned into mystic elements, and there's magic in numbers. Pythagoras discovered that thousands of years ago. Do you know anything about numerology? I've made an informal study of it. If you write down your full name for me, I'll tell you something about yourself. I don't do fortune-tellingjust character delineation. Write down the cats" names, too, in block letters."