| "Morning, noon, and
night," I echoed, plucking
my suspenders, and swiveling around once in my chair.
"You betcha. But, by way of background, how did you meet your
husband?"
"Well, I was in the business, of course."
"Of course."
"So I auditioned for Erskine and bingo! I got the part."
"Bingo." I imagined the staging of that little rhumba.
"Then before I knew it, he asked. And bingo! I was his wife."
"Bingo again. Honeymoon Hotel."
"Of course we were happy. What do you think? Until that little
serpent entered the garden."
Somehow I just couldn't see Nellie Dillard as a serpent. A gerbil
perhaps. But not a serpent.
"Was there any recent change in your husband's behavior or attitude,
Mrs. Prescott?" |
 |
"Well, without getting too personal" She pulled a gold
cigarette case from her purse and held it out to me. "He suffered from
terrific headaches. Especially at night. And in the morning he woke so pale
andand"
"Wraith-like."
"Yeah. I thought it was some kind of, you know, iron deficiency
thing, so I pumped him up with every kind of remedy on the market, and some
that weren't. To keep up his strength, you see. But still, every morning
he looked like a cadaver, like the pep and vitality was being drained right
out of him. Why I even let him sleep alone after he begged me. One night
a week, that is. Still, I could see he was fading fast."
"Poor slob. And then bingo! He was gone."
"You said it. Out the door. Both him and the mouse. And without
even a word of goodbye. Just those." |