He frowned, looking for loopholes in the deal. Teddy would have been proud. “All right,” he said. “But there’s a three-question limit.”
“You strike a hard bargain, Mr. Telemachus. So is that your first question—was I at a job interview?”
“You’re just going to say no, then ask me a question. So let’s make this short-answer: Where did you go?”
“To see a friend.”
“Was it the guy you talk to on the computer?”
“How did you—? And that’s two questions.”
“I’ll use both of them to hear this,” he said. “And it wasn’t hard to figure out. You’re on the computer all the time. I figured it had to be a guy.”
“I could be a lesbian,” she said.
“Really?”
“His name is Joshua.”
“Josh-u-a,” he said. “Josh. The Joshinator.”
“So how is it working with Frankie?” she asked. She could see that he wanted to bolt from the table.
“It’s fine,” he said. Then realized that wasn’t the truth. “It’s…intense.”
“Intense how?”
“Two questions,” he said.
“I also think this answer is worth it.”
“It got…I don’t know. Uncle Frankie expects, like, a lot out of me? I don’t think I can do everything he wants me to do.”
“Oh God, is he trying to rope you into that UltraLife stuff?”
Matty looked embarrassed.
“Jesus, you’re a
“No! I mean, he’s not involving me in that. It’s just that working with him is hard, because he’s so…”
“Intense?” Irene said. “And grandiose?”
“That’s it,” he said. “Intensely grandiose.”
“I shouldn’t have pushed you into working with him,” she said. “I just thought you’d like it.”
“You didn’t push me into it. I want to do it, to make you some money—”
“Make
He flushed again. “Make
“Honey, that’s not your job,” she said. “I make the money. You’re the kid. I don’t want you to go through what I did.”
His eyes widened. “You mean like the ESP stuff?”
“No, I mean—” She wished he wasn’t so excited by the showbiz history. “I had to become an adult before my time. When Mom died, I was just ten, and suddenly I was the one having to take care of Frankie and Buddy. Even your grandfather.”
Matty picked up another cookie, looked at it for a long moment. “Frankie said Grandma Mo was so powerful the Russians had to kill her.”
“Frankie’s a conspiracy theorist. He also says the Astounding Archibald killed her. Or is Archibald a Russian spy now?”
“I know but…”
“But what?”
“She
She worked for Destin Smalls, Irene thought. “She was employed by the government. I’m not quite sure which agency.”
“So did they, like…train her?”
“What?”
“I mean, someone like that, they would have taught her how to—”
Irene’s anger came sudden as the bite of glass under a bare foot. There was something she’d forgotten. Something about Destin Smalls. But the memory refused to show itself.
“Mom?” Matty looked concerned.
“She was a natural talent,” Irene said. She cleared her throat. “They took advantage of her, and used her, and then she got sick. No big mystery.”
Irene remembered that morning, seven months before her mother died, that Irene found her sitting on the edge of the bed, crying. Then she’d wiped away her tears and driven off with Destin Smalls. That memory, at least, was clear and sharp.
“Why are you asking about this stuff?” Irene said.
“No reason,” he said. A lie.
“Stop it. There’s a reason.”
“This isn’t fair,” Matty said. “You have an advantage. But you lie to me and I’ll never know it.”
“I’ve answered all your questions truthfully and to the best of my ability,” she said.
He twisted his mouth into his thinking face. Planning his next move. “Okay, so this Joshua guy. Do you love him?”
She wiped her face with her napkin. “I’ve only met him in person once,” she said. “Just this morning.”
He laughed. “You are really not answering the question.”
“It doesn’t matter if I love him,” she said.
A memory was unspooling out of the dark: Destin Smalls and her father, standing in the living room, both of them looking at her.
“It’s not going to work out,” she said. She recognized doomed romance when she saw it.
Destin Smalls picked up her mother every morning, and dropped her off every afternoon. She learned to hate the arrival of his car, a gleaming hulk with a grill as wide as a whale’s baleen, and the way her mother hurried out to it. Eager. Laughing sometimes. In the afternoons Irene would watch from the front window as her mother sat in the car with Smalls, talking and talking, delaying her return to the house, her return to her children and husband. Her return to her duties.
Her mother seemed exhausted by whatever she did all day with Destin Smalls. When she was too tired to make dinner, she’d sit in the kitchen with Buddy on her lap, and instruct Irene on how to cook, only getting out of her seat in emergencies. When Dad came up out of the basement for the meal, he’d heap praise on Irene. She was happy to do the work, until the day she told her mother she’d rather play with her friend.