I is for Innocent (Kinsey Millhone 9)
Page 90
"Milk is fine," I said. I didn't want to tell her about Morley just yet. She was looking back at me with curiosity, clearly troubled by my manner. Bad news is a burden that only sharing seems to lift.
The den was paneled in birch, the furniture upholstered in saddle-colored leather. She resettled herself on the leather sofa where she'd been. She was in the process of reading a hardback, a Fay Weldon novel she'd nearly finished judging by the bookmarker. It had been ages since I was able to take a day off and shut myself in under a quilt with a good book. There was a plump pot of coffee on the brass table to one side. She poured coffee into the mug and passed it over to me. I took it with a murmured "Thank you," which she acknowledged with a wary smile. She pulled a pillow into her lap, holding on to it like a teddy bear.
I noticed she didn't press to find out why I'd stopped by. Finally I said, "I checked Morley's appointment book. According to his notes, you talked to him last week. You should have told me when I asked."
"Oh." She had the good grace to flush and I could see her debate about how to respond. She must have decided the lie wasn't worth telling twice. "I guess I was hoping you wouldn't have to know."
"You want to fill me in?"
"I'm embarrassed about it really, but I called first thing Thursday morning and set it up myself."
There was silence. I said, "And?"
She lifted one shoulder uncomfortably. "I was angry with Kenneth. I'd come across some information… something I'd been unaware of…"
"Which was what?"
"I'll get to that in a minute. You have to understand the context…"
I couldn't wait to hear this. "Context" is what you mention when you're rationalizing bad behavior. You don't need to talk about "context" when you've done something good. "I'm listening."
"I finally realized just how sick I was of Isabelle's murder. I'm sick of the whole subject and all the drama attached. It's been six years and that's all Kenneth talks about. Her murder, her money, her talent. How beautiful she was. The tragedy of her death. He's obsessed with the woman. He's more in love with her dead than he was when she was alive."
"Not necessarily…"
She went on as if I hadn't spoken. "I told Morley I hated Iz, that I was thrilled to pieces when she died. I was just, you know, spewing out all this emotional… garbage. What's weird is when I thought about it later, I understood how twisted my thinking had become. Kenneth's, too. I mean, look at us. This is really a very neurotic relationship."
"You came to this conclusion after talking to Morley?"
"That was part of what triggered the realization that it was time to get out. If I'm ever going to be healthy, I've got to separate myself from Ken, learn to stand on my own two feet for a change-"
"And that's when you decided you were leaving him? Just last week?"
"Well, yes."
"So it had nothing to do with the cancer two years ago."
She shrugged. "I'm sure that played a part. It was like waking up. It was like suddenly understanding what my life was about. Honestly, until I talked to Morley, I thought I was happily married. Really. I thought everything was fine. I mean, more or less. After that, I understood it was all an illusion."
"Must have been a hell of a conversation," I said.
I waited briefly, but she had lapsed into silence.
"What was the 'more or less' part?" I asked.
She looked up at me. "What?"
"You want to tell me what you discovered? You said something made you angry. I gather that's why you got in touch with Morley in the first place."
"Oh. Yes, of course. I was tidying up the study and came across an account Ken had been keeping from me."
"A bank account?"
"Like that. A ledger sheet. He'd been, uhm, assisting someone financially."
"Assisting someone," I repeated blankly.
"You know. Regular cash payments from month to month. This has been going on for three years. Being a good businessman, of course he kept a record. It must not have occurred to him that I'd lay hands on it."
"What's it about? Does Kenneth have a mistress?"
"That's what I thought at first, but in a way it's worse."
"Francesca, would you just quit screwing around and tell me what's going on?"
It took her a moment. "He's been giving money to Curtis McIntyre."