Chapter 65
Luke
Marin comes through the front door and I know before she says a word.
Her face is white. Not angry. Not scared. Something past both of those. The face of a woman who just walked into a room and found the ending she wasn’t expecting.
“Come with me,” she says.
I don’t ask where. I follow her off the porch, across the road, up Mather’s front steps. The porch light is on. The door is open. The house smells like banana bread and chamomile and something final.
Charles is on the couch.
I’ve seen more dead men than I’d like. Enough to know what it looks like when a body stops being a person and starts being a thing. Charles looks like a thing. A well-arranged thing—quilt, folded hands, closed eyes, slippers beside the couch—but a thing.
Mrs. Mather is in the kitchen washing a plate.
“Luke,” she says. The way she’d say it if I came to fix her fence.“Would you like some tea?”
“No ma’am.”
“Banana bread? There’s some left.”
I look at the plate on the coffee table. Half a loaf gone. I look at the tea, gone cold. I look at Charles.
“No ma’am.”
Marin is standing in the middle of the living room.
Not moving. Not speaking. Her arms are crossed and she’s looking at Charles the way you look at something you broke and can’t put back together.
Not grief exactly. Something more complicated than grief.
The particular expression of a woman who did terrible things for a man she loved and lost him to a woman with a kettle and a Bible and no doubt whatsoever.
“The doctor’s on his way,” Mrs. Mather says. She dries the plate. Sets it in the cupboard. “I called right after I called you. He should be here any minute.”
She’s right. There are headlights on the road. A car pulling up. A door opening and closing.
I know the car before I see it. Silver Lexus. I know it by the sound of the engine and the way the door closes—careful, quiet, the door of a man who does everything like he’s trying not to wake someone.
Matthews walks up the porch steps.
He sees me first. Stops. The same face from the gas station—recognition, then assessment. The cut above my eye. The bruises. Then past me to Marin. Then past Marin to the couch.
“Helen called,” he says. To no one in particular. To the room.
“Dr. Matthews,” Mrs. Mather says. She’s already at the door, ushering him in. “Thank you for coming at this hour. I didn’t know who else to call. You’ve always been so good to this town.”
Matthews looks at me. I look at him.
He kneels beside the couch. Checks the pulse he already knows isn’t there. Lifts an eyelid. Touches the skin. Professional. Thorough. The hands of a doctor doing what doctors do.
“How long?” he says.
“A few hours,” Mrs. Mather says. “He went quiet around midnight. I wanted to give his dear wife some time before I called.”
Matthews stands. Looks at Mrs. Mather. Looks at Marin. Looks at me.
“The tumor,” Mrs. Mather says. Steady. Certain.
“We all knew it was going to progress fast. We just never expected it to go this fast. Patricia and I have been praying over him since he took to the basement. The darkness helped with the headaches, Marin said. But tonight he wandered out. Confused. And it was clear—it was very clear we were nearing the end.” She shakes her head. “The things a tumor does to the mind.”
Matthews is quiet for a long time. He’s looking at Charles. But he’s thinking about something else. I can see it—the same calculation he made at the gas station. The math of a man who knows when something doesn’t add up and is deciding whether to count anyway.
“I’ll call the hospital,” he says. “Make some arrangements.”
“Of course,” Mrs. Mather says. “Take your time. I’ll make fresh tea.”
She goes to the kitchen. Puts the kettle on. The sound of water filling a kettle in a house with a dead man on the couch and a doctor who’s deciding what the truth is worth.
Matthews looks at me.
I look at him.
The last time we stood this close, I told him my family was dead regardless of how he felt. The last time we stood this close, my hands were shaking from restraint. They’re not shaking now. They’re steady. The way they are when I’ve already decided something.
He doesn’t ask me what happened. He doesn’t ask Marin.
He looks at Charles on the couch and he looks at the quilt and the folded hands and the banana bread and the tea and he makes a decision the way doctors in small towns have always made decisions—quietly, completely, with the understanding that some truths are more useful than others.
“I’ll sign the death certificate in the morning. Then he’ll be taken to the funeral home, unless you’ve made other arrangements.”
Mrs. Mather comes back with the tea. Sets it on the table. Smiles.
“Such a good man,” she says. “This town is lucky to have you.”
Matthews doesn’t look at her. He looks at me. And in that look is something I never expected to see from the man who killed my wife.
An apology he’ll never say out loud. And a debt he just paid in full.
“I’m sorry for your loss,” he says to Marin.
Marin nods. Doesn’t speak. She’s holding herself together the way she holds everything together—with her jaw and her spine and the sheer force of a woman who refuses to fall apart in front of people.
Matthews leaves. The Lexus pulls away. Mrs. Mather picks up the plate of banana bread. Covers it with plastic wrap. Sets it in the fridge.
“I’ll make a casserole tomorrow,” she says. “People will want to bring food. They always do.”
I stand in that living room with a dead man on the couch and a woman I love who won’t look at me and an old woman wrapping banana bread and I understand—finally, completely—that this is how it ends. Not with a fight. Not with a confession. Not with sirens or handcuffs or the truth.
With a casserole. And a death certificate. And a town that knows exactly what it knows and nothing more.