Alex Cross's Trial (Alex Cross 15)
“And if you don’t mind, what might those terrible shenanigans be?” I asked. “How have I disappointed you?”
“Believe it or not, son, y’all don’t have a lock on every form of human knowledge in that Yankee town you now call home,” he said. “The news does travel down to Mississippi eventually. And everybody I know says you’re the most progressive young lawyer in Washington.” I had never heard that word pronounced with a more audible sneer.
I didn’t answer. All the way down on the train, I had vowed to myself not to react to his temperamental outbursts.
“Your mother enjoyed that about you,” he went on. “Your Yankee free-thinking ways. But she’s gone now, God rest her soul. And I can tell you this, Benjamin. You’re a fool! You’re up to your knees in the sand, and the tide’s approaching. You can keep trying to shovel as hard as you can, but that will not stop the tide from coming in.”
“Thank you for the colorful metaphor,” I said. Then I went upstairs, packed my valise, and went back to Washington.
After that I heard from him only once a year, around Christmas, when a plain white envelope would arrive containing a twenty-dollar bill and the same handwritten note every year:
“Happy Christmas to yourself, Meg, and my granddaughters. Cordially, Judge E. Corbett.”
Cordially.
Chapter 24
NOW HERE I WAS, STANDING at his door again. And as much as it galled me to knock on that door, I could not come home to Eudora without seeing my father. I was sure he already knew that I was back.
Dabney answered the door. He had been my father’s house-man since before I was born.
“Good Lord! Mister Ben! Shoot, I never expected to open this door and find you on the other side of it. The judge is gonna be absolutely de-light-ed to see you.”
“Dabney, it’s good to know you’re still the smoothest liar in Pike County.”
He smiled brightly and gave me a wink. Then I followed him to the dining room, breathing in the old familiar smell of floor wax and accumulated loneliness.
My father sat alone at the long mahogany table, eating a bowl of soup from a fine china bowl. He glanced up, but his face did not change when he saw me—eyes icy blue, his lips thin and unsmiling.
“Why, Benjamin. How nice of you to grace us with your presence. Did somebody die?”
My father’s gift for sarcasm had not diminished. Immediately I found myself wishing I hadn’t come running over to his house my first day in town.
“How are you feeling?” I asked.
“Sound body, sound mind. As far as I can tell. Why? Have you heard otherwise?”
“Not at all. I’m glad to hear you’re well.”
“What wonderful Yankee manners. I trust you are healthy yourself?”
I nodded. The silence between us was almost painful.
“So, Ben, you still busy up there freeing the slaves?”
“I believe it was President Lincoln who did that.”
“Ah, that’s right,” he said, a wisp of a smile coming to his face. “Sometimes I forget my history. Care for some turtle soup?”
Soup? On a ninety-degree night in Mississippi?
“No, thank you.”
“No turtle soup? Yet another in a succession of foolish choices on your part, Benjamin.”
My father did not ask me to take a seat at his table.
He did not ask what brought me to Eudora after six years, and I wondered if it was possible that he knew.