Alwyn moved closer to the railing and looked down at the inky, swirling water. “If you’d asked me two weeks ago, I could have given you an answer, but Nadine has been broken by this. I can’t predict anything about the woman you’re going to meet tomorrow.”
“What was she like before?”
“Complex,” Alwyn said. “As most interesting people are. She was a boarder at TCS from the time she was in Grade Five, and after university she came back and taught with us. I’ve been acquainted with her for much of her life, but Nadine doesn’t encourage intimacy.”
“Her attachment to the school must have been powerful to bring her back to teach,” I said.
“It was – it is for a lot of our students. Our Web site trots out the usual stirring phrases about developing hearts and minds, offering academic challenges, and building leadership skills. That’s for the parents; a lot of our students just want to find a place where they belong, and that’s what Nadine found with us. When she first arrived, she was like a skittish colt that would bolt if you extended a hand to it. The school calmed her. Whatever had happened in the past, being part of the school taught her to trust. Then when Peggy and Hugh realized how close she and Abby were, they welcomed her into their family.”
“And they were aware that the girls’ relationship went beyond friendship?” I said.
“The girls were discreet, but they made no secret of their feelings for one another,” Alwyn said. “Hugh and Peggy accepted the situation. They loved Nadine because Abby loved her and that seemed to ease any problems the town might have had about the relationship.”
“Their deaths must have been terrible for Nadine,” I said.
“They were, but she and Abby were both practising Roman Catholics, and they seemed to find consolation in their faith.”
“So Hugh and Peggy were Catholic, then,” I said.
Alwyn hooted. “God no! Hugh was a staunch Darwinist. Every February 12th, he hosted a luncheon to commemorate Darwin’s birth and celebrate science, reason, and humanity. Peggy had her own religion.” Alwyn’s lips twitched. “I believe it had something to do with wood nymphs. The Catholicism came from Nadine. Abby was a convert.”
“If the conversion got them through the loss of Hugh and Peggy Michaels, it must have taken,” I said.
“It did,” Alwyn said. “Nadine and Abby were both devastated, but they seemed to feel they could survive, because they had their faith, one another, and Jacob.” Alwyn gazed at the water. “I wonder what Nadine’s position on God is now?” she said.
It had been a long day, and Zack and I slept well under our canopy. We awoke at eight – which for both of us was very late.
“Let’s get room service,” I said. “It’s too cold to sit on the balcony, but we can pull back the curtains and watch Port Hope spring into action.”
Zack sneezed. “Fair enough,” he said. “But this is a holiday – no steel-cut oatmeal and 600-grain toast. I want a manly breakfast: bacon, sausage, eggs, and home fries.”
“The defibrillator special.” I picked up the phone. “I’ll see what I can do.”
Zack and Delia were meeting the Michaelses’ family lawyer at nine-thirty to discuss the will; after that, they were meeting Nadine Perrault’s lawyer. Alwyn and I had both finished our Christmas shopping, but the town’s antique and specialty stores were seductive, and we were willing to be seduced.
When I found a leaf-shaped mercury-glass relish dish that I knew my friend Ed Mariani would treasure, I pulled out my credit card. “I hate shopping,” I said. “But shopping here with you is actually fun.”
“The stores are open year-round,” Alwyn said. “And you appear to have conquered your fear of flying.”
“Appearance is not reality,” I said. “I’m already starting to count down the hours till we’re in the air again.”
“Does Zack mind that you don’t fly?”
“No. Travel’s not easy for him either.”
“Because of the wheelchair?”
“That’s an indignity – there’s other stuff that’s harder to manage.”
“I like him,” Alwyn said.
“So do I,” I said.
The drive from Port Hope to the house in which Abby had grown up took fifteen minutes. The Michaels property was situated in a valley among gentle hills with ponds and ditches that filled with wildflowers in summer. The soil was rich and the water supply so abundant that legend had it a toddler with a stick could stumble and find water. For years, most of the houses in the area had been century homes – over a hundred years old, solid brick, built to last, quiet and unprepossessing, close to the road. But Toronto money had moved to the country. Now the hills were crested with new homes that boasted spectacular views, triple garages, winding driveways, and million-dollar price tags.
The Michaels’ house had been built on thirty acres of land that was now considered prime real estate. One hour’s commute from the city, the property was treed and private with a tributary of the Ganaraska running through it. The house was a solid red-brick Georgian with shuttered windows and an oak front door with a transom and sidelights. Mercifully, there was only one step, so Zack managed to manoeuvre his chair onto the porch area without help before Nadine Perrault opened the door to greet us.
She was a slender, fine-featured natural blonde with deep-set hazel eyes that were red from weeping. When she came face to face with Delia, her intake of breath was audible. “I’m sorry,” she said, “It’s just… the physical resemblance is overwhelming.” She recovered quickly, inviting us in although she had trouble taking her eyes from Delia’s face. “You probably should leave your coats on,” she said. Her voice was low and commanding – a teacher’s voice. “I don’t live here,” she said, “so I’m keeping the thermostat low. I should have thought about it this morning, but the memorial service yesterday was very difficult for me. I apologize.” She threw her hands up in a gesture of impotence.
“We’re fine,” I said.
“We won’t stay long here,” Nadine said. Her hair was centre-parted in a good mid-length cut. She wore no makeup, but she didn’t need any. She led us into the room on the left. “Don’t worry about your boots,” she said. “These rugs have endured a great deal over the years.” She shrugged. “As you can see, this house has been well lived in.”
The wood in the living room gleamed and the plants in the windows were thriving, but the fabric on the furniture was worn and faded. There were books everywhere. Over the fireplace was a family portrait. Delia was drawn to it immediately. Hugh Michaels was a bald, rumpled-looking man with grey eyes, heavy brows, and the quarter-smile of the ironist; his wife, tanned and blonde, had the sleepily content smile of a woman who revelled in the sensual. The eyes of both parents were on Abby, who stood in front of them, pale, intense, and impatient.
“I could look at that painting forever,” Nadine said softly. “It is so like them. Abby was fourteen. The artist wanted her to put on a dress, but she refused. Peggy insisted on wearing her garden hat and having a cigarette in her hand because she was never without a cigarette. And Hugh, of course, wore his invariable four-in-hand tie and three-piece suit.”
“Abby looks just like Isobel,” Zack said. “Same hair. Same eyes. Same focus.”
I turned to Nadine. “Isobel is Delia’s daughter. She’s the same age as Abby was in that painting.”
Nadine’s voice was dreamy. “Abby had a very happy life with them,” she said. “I thought you’d like to see that.”
Delia’s lips tightened. “I’ve seen enough,” she said.
Nadine raised an eyebrow. “You don’t want to look at the rest of the house? Abby’s old room is filled with things that were important to her – things that I know she wanted Jacob to cherish some day.”
Delia’s headshake was violent. “No.”
Zack turned his chair to face Nadine. His voice was gentle. “Was there anything special you wanted to show us?”
Nadine nodded. “There’s a spot by the river that Abby loved. We talked about taking Jacob there next summer and letting him paddle in the water. Abby and I spent hours there, swimming and doing homework and reading and dreaming.” She smiled at the memory. “It’s a magical place for a child.”
Delia turned away sharply. “I forgot something in the car,” she said, and she walked out. When we heard the door slam, Zack pointed his chair towards the hall. “I’ll talk to her,” he said.