skipped out of the room behind the nanny.
âPlease, have a seat,â Meredith said, indicating a white sofa behind a mahogany coffee table inlaid with chips of colored glass. As she sat down in a chair opposite the sofa, the gossamer fabric of the sarong floated gracefully around her slim legs.
Her posture was very straight, the lines of her face carefully composed. Except for the tears glistening on her lashes, Meredith Courtland looked rigid and emotionless.
She doesnât dare let herself feel anything, Evangeline thought. Not yet. Not until sheâs alone. And then the pleasant ennui of her once-cosseted existence would pass into memory with the dawning of a stark, cold reality.
She would awaken in the morning, mind swept clean by sleep, and turn, see the empty side of the bed and it would hit her again, that terrible sense of loss. That bottomless pit of despair.
âPaulâs dead, isnât he?â Her voice was flat with acceptance, but there was a glimmer of something that might have been hope in her eyes.
Evangeline dashed that hope with one word. âYes.â
Her eyes fluttered closed. âWhen?â
âHis body was found this morning in an abandoned house in the Lower Ninth Ward. We think heâd been dead for a few days.â
â A few days? Dear Godâ¦â Meredith Courtlandâs neck muscles jumped convulsively as she swallowed. âHow did it happen?â
âWe wonât know the exact cause of death until after the autopsy. But we have reason to believe your husband was the victim of foul play.â
She gave a visible start. âYouâre sayingâ¦he was murdered? â
âIâm very sorry,â Evangeline said softly.
âButâ¦â Her expression went blank again. âThatâs not possible. Itâs just not.â
Murder happened to other people.
âIs there someone youâd like us to call? Family or friends youâd like to have come and stay with you right now?â Evangeline asked.
âStay with me? I donât knowâ¦.â She couldnât seem to form a clear thought. She skimmed her fingers down one arm. âColette and my daughter are hereâ¦.â She closed her eyes briefly. âOh, God. How am I going to tell Maisie? She adores Paulâ¦.â
Her voice cracked and her bottom lip trembled as she lost the struggle for self-control. âGod,â she whispered on a sob and put her hands to her face as if she could somehow forcibly stem the tide of raw emotion that bubbled up her throat and spilled over from her eyes.
Evangeline fumbled for a tissue in her purse and handed it across the coffee table to the crying woman. Meredith Courtland took it gratefully andafter a moment, she dabbed at her eyes as she turned to look out the French doors at her daughter.
In the ensuing silence, every sound in the house seemed magnified. The ticking of the grandfather clock in the foyer. The soft humming of the maid upstairs.
And into that awful silence came the high-pitched laughter of Paul Courtlandâs little girl as she splashed happily in the shallow end of the pool.
Meredith drew a deep, shuddering breath and folded the tissue into a neat little square on one thigh. But her eyes never left her child.
âI wondered if something was wrong when he didnât come by for Maisie on Sunday,â she finally said. âThey always spend the afternoon together, and he never missed a single Sunday. Never. He loved being with her. He was a wonderful father.â She paused to unfold the tissue as painstakingly as she had creased it. âA lousy husband, but a great father.â
Evangeline and Mitchell shared a look.
âYou and Mr. Courtland were divorced, then?â Mitchell asked carefully.
âSeparated. He moved out a few months ago. He has a place in the Warehouse District. A loft. â Her head was still turned away, but there was no mistaking the bitter,
Charles Williams; Franklin W. Dixon
Is Bill Cosby Right?: Or Has the Black Middle Class Lost Its Mind?