Whispers

Hilary leaned back on the couch, no longer worried about rumpling the afghans that were draped across it.

Joshua said, “This is all quite fascinating, but what does it have to do with Katherine Frye?”

“Her father regularly visited my place in San Francisco,” Rita Yancy said.

“Leo Frye?”

“Yes. A very strange man. I was never with him myself. I never serviced him. After I became a madam, I did very little bedwork; I was busy with the management details. But I heard all the stories that my girls told about him. He sounded like a first-class bastard. He liked his women docile, subservient. He liked to insult them and call them dirty names while he was using them. He was a strong disciplinarian, if you know what I mean. He had some nasty things he liked to do, and he paid a high price for the right to do them with my girls. Anyway, in April of 1940, Leo’s daughter, Katherine, showed up on my doorstep. I’d never met her, I didn’t even know he had a child. But he’d told her about me. He’d sent her to me so that she could have her baby in total secrecy.”

Joshua blinked, “Her baby?”

“She was pregnant.”

“Bruno was her baby?”

“What about Mary Gunther?” Hilary asked.

“There never was such a person as Mary Gunther,” the old woman said. “That was just a cover story that Katherine and Leo made up.”

“I knew it!” Tony said. “Too smooth. It was just too damn smooth.”

“Nobody in St. Helena knew she was pregnant,” Rita Yancy said. “She was wearing several girdles. You wouldn’t believe how that poor girl had bound herself up. It was horrible. From the time she missed her first period, long before she ever began to swell up, she started wearing tighter and tighter and tighter girdles, then one girdle on top of another. And she starved herself, trying to keep off all the weight she could. It’s a miracle she didn’t either have a miscarriage or kill herself.”

“And you took her in?” Tony asked.

“I’m not going to claim I did it out of the goodness of my heart,” Mrs. Yancy said. “I can’t stand old women when they’re smug and self-righteous, like a lot of the ones I see when I go to the bridge games at the church. Katherine didn’t touch my heart or anything like that. And I didn’t take her in because I felt I had an obligation to her father. I didn’t owe him a thing. Because of what I’d heard about him from my girls, I didn’t even like him. And he’d been dead six weeks when Katherine showed up. I took her in for one reason, and I’m not going to pretend otherwise. She had three thousand bucks with her to cover room and board and the doctor’s fee. That was a good deal more money then than it is today.”

Joshua shook his head. “I can’t understand it. She had a reputation as a cold fish. She didn’t care for men. She didn’t have a lover that anyone knew about. Who was the father?”

“Leo,” Mrs. Yancy said.

“Oh, my God,” Hilary said softly.

“Are you sure?” Joshua asked Rita Yancy.

“Positive,” the old woman said. “He’d been fooling around with his own daughter since she was four years old. He forced her to perform oral sex when she was a small child. Later, as she grew up, he did everything to her. Everything.”

***

Bruno had hoped that a good night’s sleep would clear his befuddled mind, wash away the confusion and the disorientation that had plagued him last night and early this morning. But now, as he stood in front of the broken attic window, basking in the gray October light, he was no more in command of himself than he had been six hours ago. His mind was writhing with chaotic thoughts and doubts and questions and fears; pleasant and ugly memories tangled like worms; mental images shifted and changed like puddles of quicksilver.

He knew what was wrong with him. He was alone. All alone. He was only half a man. Torn in half. That’s what was wrong with him. Ever since the other half of him had been killed, he’d been increasingly nervous, increasingly unsure of himself. He no longer had the resources that he’d had when both halves of him had been alive. And now, trying to stumble along as only half a person, he was unable to cope; even the smallest problems were beginning to seem insoluble.

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