they?â
âThereâs a grand jury. Your father is being investigated by a grand jury,â Barbara said.
Evelyn stood up so fast that the chairâs wooden legs shrieked over the floor. âA grand jury? How long have you known about this?â
âWell, this is an ongoing investigation,â Dale said.
âYes, I understand that. But how long have you known about the grand jury?â
âMonths,â Barbara said.
âBarbara, many grand jury investigations go on for months,â Dale said, his voice sharp. âIt doesnât mean itâs going to go anywhere.â
Evelyn gripped the chairâs back. âThis doesnât make sense.â
âIt doesnât,â Dale said. Heâd modulated his voice now, and it was all brown sugar. âIâm sorry weâre just springing it on you now, honey. We didnât think it would go anywhere, and we still donât, but the governmentâs been leaking things to the press, and it was bound to get out.â
Barbara turned from the window. âThis shouldnât have happened,â she said. Her hand was shaking, but her body was still. âThis shouldnât have happened.â
âWell, it did happen. It is happening.â Evelyn was trying to keep her voice even, but it kept modulating unpredictably as though someone else were controlling the volume knob. âIt happens that Dale Beegan is being investigated by a grand jury. It happens that maybe you should mention that to your child before several months have gone by. Maybe that would be a good idea.â
âWe didnât think it was necessaryââ Dale said.
âWell, it was. It was necessary.â
âEvie, donât get all worked up. The investigation seems stalled in its tracks except for this one unemployed fellow making false claims. We thought weâd talk to you about it in person because we knew you were coming down for the partyââ
âAnd what a lovely party it will be!â Barbara cried, ridding herself of the slight Baltimore accent that she sometimes sank into when tired or angry, and plowing into her Sag Neck chatelaine voice, long Katharine Hepburn vowels mixed with the nasality of Ethel Merman. âNow, Evelyn, what do you say, shall we go to the Channingsâ party in our Fourth dresses and pretend as though nobody knows your father is being investigated forâwhat would it be? Money laundering? Bribery? Doesnât that sound like a lark? Iâm sure Sally Channing will be just delighted to see us there, this trio of Dale Beegan and his wife and daughter, and give us a warm welcome. Sallyâs friends will be delighted to see us, too, after reading the fascinating newspaper accounts of how the United States government says youâve been breaking the law.â
âBarbara. Thatâs enough. I told you, if you want to skip the party, you can,â Dale said.
There was something especially troubling in what they had said, swirling above the upside-down idea that her father was being investigated by a grand jury, above the tension in the room, above the dreadful day that was ahead where Evelyn would either be forced to go to this party or forced to stay home with her furious parents. That was it. Newspaper accounts. If this was getting coverage, all her friends could potentially know about it already. They couldâve been e-mailing it around in the days since Lake James; she could practically see Nickâs message: âLooks like someoneâs life is less perfect than sheâs pretending.â Camilla, too, might be a newspaper reader, and even if she wasnât, with the way everything went online and spread quickly these days, there was no controlling or predicting what would be read by whom. Evelyn would be laughed at. âThis is in the papers?â she said in a small voice.
Her mother let out a high-pitched âHa!â
Her father ran his tongue over
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